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I've recently upgraded my Ubuntu installation from Jaunty to Karmic. This apparently includes an update of the GNU C compiler, because code that compiled previously no longer does.

Running cc 4.4.1 (Ubuntu 4.4.1-4ubuntu8) now produces the following error, on code that worked fine in the cc 4.3.3 (Ubuntu 4.3.3-5ubuntu4):

$ make
cc -c -MMD -MG -MP -MF lex.d -g -Wall -O -o lex.o lex.c
cc1: error: -MG may only be used with -M or -MM

Adding either the -M or -MM flag resulted in the following message:

[...]
flex -o lex.c lex.l
cc -c -MM -MG -MP -MF lex.d -g -Wall -O -o lex.o lex.c
[...]
cc -g -Wall -O -o translate lex.o grammar.tab.o main.o list.o salloc.o suffixed.o expr.o emit.o optimize.o -lfl
lex.o: file not recognized: File truncated
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
make: *** [translate] Error 1

I've been told that the various -Mx tell flags make how the various c files depend on .h files. My best fix so far is to tell make explicitly that all .c files depend on all .h files, to make sure everything stays up to date. However, this does induce a lot of unnecessary work at compile time.

My question therefore is: How do I need to adjust the flags for cc to have it handle dependencies automatically again?

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Welcome at Super User! This question seems related to software development, and hence will probably be moved to Stack Overflow. Just to be sure: please don't post the same question on Stack Overflow yourself as well, it will be moved automatically if needed. If it has moved, login to stackoverflow.com using the same OpenID and associate your accounts at superuser.com/users/18508?tab=accounts Meanwhile don't forget to read the FAQs! Success. (And maybe I am wrong and you'll see good answers here at Super User after all!) – Arjan Nov 18 '09 at 17:04
I put it here because it was related to the upgrade from Jaunty to Karmic, but on second thought you're right. It's probably a better fit over at Stack Overflow :) – Evanesco Nov 18 '09 at 19:36
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migrated from superuser.com Nov 19 '09 at 5:34

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2 Answers

The -MMD switch appears to be the problem. Try changing that to -MM which should allow the -MG switch to work. According to the GCC documentation at http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.1.2/gcc/Preprocessor-Options.html, -MMD is the same as -MM with an impllicit -MF option, and since you've got an output file specified already with -MF, you should be able to use the simpler form.

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Thanks for your suggestion. Unfortunately, replacing the -MMD flag by -MM yields the error "file not recognized: File truncated" :(. I've updated the question with the context of the error, perhaps that information can help? – Evanesco Nov 20 '09 at 18:26
The problem is that -MM is used in a first pass compilation for generating dependency... usually you then run gcc again to actually make the object file. Using -MM with -o is problematic, as you're writing that dependency info to the .o file and make thinks it's updated. But what you've got in the .o is invalid. – Ben Combee Nov 20 '09 at 23:25
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The purpose of the -MG switch is to allow the auto-dependency generator to work correctly even if the actual header files are yet to be created. However, when you are actually trying to compile the code it is important that the headers exist; so that they can be compiled.

For this reason -MG can only be used in conjunction with -MM or -M, both of which imply the -E flag - which means they don't actually compile the code.

So if you want to use -MG, then you'll have to use separate commands for generating dependencies and compiling. For example

cc -MM -MG -MP -MF lex.d lex.c
cc -c -g -Wall -O -o lex.o lex.c

Or, write the make file in such a way that headers are generated first. eg

GENERATED=(list of headers that get created during the build process)

lex.o: lex.c | $(GENERATED)
    cc -c -MMD -MP -MF lex.d -g -Wall -O -o lex.o lex.c
##...
## individual build rules for generated headers.

Note that the '|' means that lex.o must be built after the generated files, but it doesn't necessarily actually depend on the generated files. ie. it will be built after the headers, but it won't be rebuilt if the headers change unless explicitly specified.

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