I need to set up the Git client on a cheap shared hosting, with a no-name 32-bit Linux distribution. GCC isn't available so I can't compile it on the server. I do have at my disposal 2 other 64-bit Linux servers and an OSX laptop which I could try to cross-compile a binary on. But I can't seem to get it to compile correctly; when I push the binaries to the 32-bit server it says it can't run the executable. It looks from other sources like I need to add "-arch i386" and/or "-m32" to the ./configure or make commands to work for 32-bit, but I guess I'm not using them correctly. Anyone know how to do this, or alternately, where to find a universal 32-bit Git binary?

Thanks

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What's the reason to compile it yourself and not just download some binary package? – Sven Marnach Nov 10 '10 at 18:31
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You should check if the host provider mounted your home directory with the noexec option. When this is the case, you can't run any binary program from there. – Rudi Nov 11 '10 at 6:53
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3 Answers

Your best bet is trying to compile git as a static binary. Your binary probably have different shared libraries versions (or even, not all dependencies installed).

This link:

How to build git for a host with no compiler

Provides information on how to build git as a static binary.

This stackoverflow answer provides information on how to cross compile it from a 64 bit host.

Hope this helps.

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Honestly, if it were me, I would just fire up 32-bit Linux in a VM and compile there.

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OS X isn't going to work - its geared to produce Mach-O binaries with the OS X syscall interface, not Linux ELF binaries.

Using -m32 on the CLFAGS is going to help, but most importantly, use -static as well. Static binaries are much more portable.

If that fails, please provide exactly how it failed.

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