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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!bcc.ac.uk!link-1.ts.bcc.ac.uk!ucacmsu
- From: ucacmsu@ucl.ac.uk (Mr Stephen R Usher)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.m68k
- Subject: Re: MC68008 cross/gnu/or whatever compiler!
- Message-ID: <1992Jul23.084044.26505@bas-a.bcc.ac.uk>
- Date: 23 Jul 92 08:40:44 GMT
- References: <MEF.92Jul20081725@ehsl.mitre.org> <MEF.92Jul22081401@ehsl.mitre.org>
- Sender: news@ucl.ac.uk (Usenet News System)
- Distribution: comp
- Organization: Bloomsbury Computing Consortium, London
- Lines: 38
-
- In article <MEF.92Jul22081401@ehsl.mitre.org> mef@ehsl.mitre.org (Marc E. Fiucznski) writes:
- >Hi,
- >
- >Thanks for your replies and suggestions. As usual, I should have
- >researched a bit more before asking a 'somewhat' obvious question. It
- >turns out that simply using the gnu c compiler (gcc) and setting it up
- >to compile 68k code will do the trick.
- >
- >The only problem that I face now is that the 68k systems that they
- >list are somewhat tailed to the various versions of UN*X out there.
- >
- >Someone told me that there exists a 'plain' 68K definition for the
- >gnu compiler. Any hints?
-
- You should get the sources to the Atari ST/TT version. By default it
- generates plain 68000 code with 32 bit integers, but with flags it can
- produce the full 680X0 instruction set code and/or use 16 bit integers.
-
- It's available using anonymous FTP from atari.archive.umich.edu in the
- directory (I think) atari/gnustuff/tos/gcc.
-
- Both GCC 1.40.1 and GCC 2.1.2 are in there.
-
- >
- >Thanks,
- >
- >Marc
- >
- >ps. I pulled in gcc.1-40. Does it already include plain 68K definition?
-
-
- I hope this is useful.
-
- Steve
- --
- Addresses:-
- JANET:- ucacmsu@uk.ac.ucl or steve@uk.ac.ox.earth (preferable)
- Internet:- ucacmsu@ucl.ac.uk or steve@earth.ox.ac.uk (preferable)
-