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I know you can compile to a 32 bit target on 64 bit Linux by using the -m32 flag, but is it also possible to compile to 64 bit on a 32 bit machine by using the -m64 flag?

Or alternatively, do you need to set up a cross gcc tool chain that supports 64 bit targets and is this possible on a 32 bit machine?

Regards, Johan

4 Answers 4

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As MarkR said, it will be a lot easier to run a 64-bit VM and build from there. Otherwise, yes, you will need to build a gcc cross toolchain.

Good ressources for building a gcc cross toolchain :

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yes, its possible and actually quite simple. Just install gcc-multilib.

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  • Many distros don't package a 32bit gcc-multilib though.
    – remmy
    Jun 24, 2013 at 12:06
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Yes, this should be possible. It's certainly possible on Mac OS X, where Apple's gcc toolchain supports x86, x86-64, ppc and ppc64, and you can compile for all 4 targets from a development machine that is 32 bit or 64 bit.

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You'd need to set up a cross compiler. And don't bother. Just run a 64-bit VM instead. You can run 64-bit VMs on a 32-bit host OS provided the CPU supports it (which it will, unless it's ancient).

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