| Installing the GNU C Library |
| **************************** |
| |
| Before you do anything else, you should read the FAQ at |
| <https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/FAQ>. It answers common questions |
| and describes problems you may experience with compilation and |
| installation. |
| |
| You will need recent versions of several GNU tools: definitely GCC |
| and GNU Make, and possibly others. *Note Tools for Compilation::, |
| below. |
| |
| Configuring and compiling the GNU C Library |
| =========================================== |
| |
| The GNU C Library cannot be compiled in the source directory. You must |
| build it in a separate build directory. For example, if you have |
| unpacked the GNU C Library sources in '/src/gnu/glibc-VERSION', create a |
| directory '/src/gnu/glibc-build' to put the object files in. This |
| allows removing the whole build directory in case an error occurs, which |
| is the safest way to get a fresh start and should always be done. |
| |
| From your object directory, run the shell script 'configure' located |
| at the top level of the source tree. In the scenario above, you'd type |
| |
| $ ../glibc-VERSION/configure ARGS... |
| |
| Please note that even though you're building in a separate build |
| directory, the compilation may need to create or modify files and |
| directories in the source directory. |
| |
| 'configure' takes many options, but the only one that is usually |
| mandatory is '--prefix'. This option tells 'configure' where you want |
| the GNU C Library installed. This defaults to '/usr/local', but the |
| normal setting to install as the standard system library is |
| '--prefix=/usr' for GNU/Linux systems and '--prefix=' (an empty prefix) |
| for GNU/Hurd systems. |
| |
| It may also be useful to set the CC and CFLAGS variables in the |
| environment when running 'configure'. CC selects the C compiler that |
| will be used, and CFLAGS sets optimization options for the compiler. |
| |
| The following list describes all of the available options for |
| 'configure': |
| |
| '--prefix=DIRECTORY' |
| Install machine-independent data files in subdirectories of |
| 'DIRECTORY'. The default is to install in '/usr/local'. |
| |
| '--exec-prefix=DIRECTORY' |
| Install the library and other machine-dependent files in |
| subdirectories of 'DIRECTORY'. The default is to the '--prefix' |
| directory if that option is specified, or '/usr/local' otherwise. |
| |
| '--with-headers=DIRECTORY' |
| Look for kernel header files in DIRECTORY, not '/usr/include'. The |
| GNU C Library needs information from the kernel's header files |
| describing the interface to the kernel. The GNU C Library will |
| normally look in '/usr/include' for them, but if you specify this |
| option, it will look in DIRECTORY instead. |
| |
| This option is primarily of use on a system where the headers in |
| '/usr/include' come from an older version of the GNU C Library. |
| Conflicts can occasionally happen in this case. You can also use |
| this option if you want to compile the GNU C Library with a newer |
| set of kernel headers than the ones found in '/usr/include'. |
| |
| '--enable-kernel=VERSION' |
| This option is currently only useful on GNU/Linux systems. The |
| VERSION parameter should have the form X.Y.Z and describes the |
| smallest version of the Linux kernel the generated library is |
| expected to support. The higher the VERSION number is, the less |
| compatibility code is added, and the faster the code gets. |
| |
| '--with-binutils=DIRECTORY' |
| Use the binutils (assembler and linker) in 'DIRECTORY', not the |
| ones the C compiler would default to. You can use this option if |
| the default binutils on your system cannot deal with all the |
| constructs in the GNU C Library. In that case, 'configure' will |
| detect the problem and suppress these constructs, so that the |
| library will still be usable, but functionality may be lost--for |
| example, you can't build a shared libc with old binutils. |
| |
| '--disable-shared' |
| Don't build shared libraries even if it is possible. Not all |
| systems support shared libraries; you need ELF support and |
| (currently) the GNU linker. |
| |
| '--enable-static-pie' |
| Enable static position independent executable (static PIE) support. |
| Static PIE is similar to static executable, but can be loaded at |
| any address without help from a dynamic linker. All static |
| programs as well as static tests are built as static PIE, except |
| for those marked with no-pie. The resulting glibc can be used with |
| the GCC option, -static-pie, which is available with GCC 8 or |
| above, to create static PIE. This option also implies that glibc |
| programs and tests are created as dynamic position independent |
| executables (PIE) by default. |
| |
| '--disable-profile' |
| Don't build libraries with profiling information. You may want to |
| use this option if you don't plan to do profiling. |
| |
| '--enable-static-nss' |
| Compile static versions of the NSS (Name Service Switch) libraries. |
| This is not recommended because it defeats the purpose of NSS; a |
| program linked statically with the NSS libraries cannot be |
| dynamically reconfigured to use a different name database. |
| |
| '--enable-hardcoded-path-in-tests' |
| By default, dynamic tests are linked to run with the installed C |
| library. This option hardcodes the newly built C library path in |
| dynamic tests so that they can be invoked directly. |
| |
| '--disable-timezone-tools' |
| By default, timezone related utilities ('zic', 'zdump', and |
| 'tzselect') are installed with the GNU C Library. If you are |
| building these independently (e.g. by using the 'tzcode' package), |
| then this option will allow disabling the install of these. |
| |
| Note that you need to make sure the external tools are kept in sync |
| with the versions that the GNU C Library expects as the data |
| formats may change over time. Consult the 'timezone' subdirectory |
| for more details. |
| |
| '--enable-stack-protector' |
| '--enable-stack-protector=strong' |
| '--enable-stack-protector=all' |
| Compile the C library and all other parts of the glibc package |
| (including the threading and math libraries, NSS modules, and |
| transliteration modules) using the GCC '-fstack-protector', |
| '-fstack-protector-strong' or '-fstack-protector-all' options to |
| detect stack overruns. Only the dynamic linker and a small number |
| of routines called directly from assembler are excluded from this |
| protection. |
| |
| '--enable-bind-now' |
| Disable lazy binding for installed shared objects. This provides |
| additional security hardening because it enables full RELRO and a |
| read-only global offset table (GOT), at the cost of slightly |
| increased program load times. |
| |
| '--enable-pt_chown' |
| The file 'pt_chown' is a helper binary for 'grantpt' (*note |
| Pseudo-Terminals: Allocation.) that is installed setuid root to fix |
| up pseudo-terminal ownership. It is not built by default because |
| systems using the Linux kernel are commonly built with the 'devpts' |
| filesystem enabled and mounted at '/dev/pts', which manages |
| pseudo-terminal ownership automatically. By using |
| '--enable-pt_chown', you may build 'pt_chown' and install it setuid |
| and owned by 'root'. The use of 'pt_chown' introduces additional |
| security risks to the system and you should enable it only if you |
| understand and accept those risks. |
| |
| '--disable-werror' |
| By default, the GNU C Library is built with '-Werror'. If you wish |
| to build without this option (for example, if building with a newer |
| version of GCC than this version of the GNU C Library was tested |
| with, so new warnings cause the build with '-Werror' to fail), you |
| can configure with '--disable-werror'. |
| |
| '--disable-mathvec' |
| By default for x86_64, the GNU C Library is built with the vector |
| math library. Use this option to disable the vector math library. |
| |
| '--enable-tunables' |
| Tunables support allows additional library parameters to be |
| customized at runtime. This feature is enabled by default. This |
| option can take the following values: |
| |
| 'yes' |
| This is the default if no option is passed to configure. This |
| enables tunables and selects the default frontend (currently |
| 'valstring'). |
| |
| 'no' |
| This option disables tunables. |
| |
| 'valstring' |
| This enables tunables and selects the 'valstring' frontend for |
| tunables. This frontend allows users to specify tunables as a |
| colon-separated list in a single environment variable |
| 'GLIBC_TUNABLES'. |
| |
| '--enable-obsolete-nsl' |
| By default, libnsl is only built as shared library for backward |
| compatibility and the NSS modules libnss_compat, libnss_nis and |
| libnss_nisplus are not built at all. Use this option to enable |
| libnsl with all depending NSS modules and header files. |
| |
| '--disable-experimental-malloc' |
| By default, a per-thread cache is enabled in 'malloc'. While this |
| cache can be disabled on a per-application basis using tunables |
| (set glibc.malloc.tcache_count to zero), this option can be used to |
| remove it from the build completely. |
| |
| '--build=BUILD-SYSTEM' |
| '--host=HOST-SYSTEM' |
| These options are for cross-compiling. If you specify both options |
| and BUILD-SYSTEM is different from HOST-SYSTEM, 'configure' will |
| prepare to cross-compile the GNU C Library from BUILD-SYSTEM to be |
| used on HOST-SYSTEM. You'll probably need the '--with-headers' |
| option too, and you may have to override CONFIGURE's selection of |
| the compiler and/or binutils. |
| |
| If you only specify '--host', 'configure' will prepare for a native |
| compile but use what you specify instead of guessing what your |
| system is. This is most useful to change the CPU submodel. For |
| example, if 'configure' guesses your machine as 'i686-pc-linux-gnu' |
| but you want to compile a library for 586es, give |
| '--host=i586-pc-linux-gnu' or just '--host=i586-linux' and add the |
| appropriate compiler flags ('-mcpu=i586' will do the trick) to |
| CFLAGS. |
| |
| If you specify just '--build', 'configure' will get confused. |
| |
| '--with-pkgversion=VERSION' |
| Specify a description, possibly including a build number or build |
| date, of the binaries being built, to be included in '--version' |
| output from programs installed with the GNU C Library. For |
| example, '--with-pkgversion='FooBar GNU/Linux glibc build 123''. |
| The default value is 'GNU libc'. |
| |
| '--with-bugurl=URL' |
| Specify the URL that users should visit if they wish to report a |
| bug, to be included in '--help' output from programs installed with |
| the GNU C Library. The default value refers to the main |
| bug-reporting information for the GNU C Library. |
| |
| To build the library and related programs, type 'make'. This will |
| produce a lot of output, some of which may look like errors from 'make' |
| but aren't. Look for error messages from 'make' containing '***'. |
| Those indicate that something is seriously wrong. |
| |
| The compilation process can take a long time, depending on the |
| configuration and the speed of your machine. Some complex modules may |
| take a very long time to compile, as much as several minutes on slower |
| machines. Do not panic if the compiler appears to hang. |
| |
| If you want to run a parallel make, simply pass the '-j' option with |
| an appropriate numeric parameter to 'make'. You need a recent GNU |
| 'make' version, though. |
| |
| To build and run test programs which exercise some of the library |
| facilities, type 'make check'. If it does not complete successfully, do |
| not use the built library, and report a bug after verifying that the |
| problem is not already known. *Note Reporting Bugs::, for instructions |
| on reporting bugs. Note that some of the tests assume they are not |
| being run by 'root'. We recommend you compile and test the GNU C |
| Library as an unprivileged user. |
| |
| Before reporting bugs make sure there is no problem with your system. |
| The tests (and later installation) use some pre-existing files of the |
| system such as '/etc/passwd', '/etc/nsswitch.conf' and others. These |
| files must all contain correct and sensible content. |
| |
| Normally, 'make check' will run all the tests before reporting all |
| problems found and exiting with error status if any problems occurred. |
| You can specify 'stop-on-test-failure=y' when running 'make check' to |
| make the test run stop and exit with an error status immediately when a |
| failure occurs. |
| |
| The GNU C Library pretty printers come with their own set of scripts |
| for testing, which run together with the rest of the testsuite through |
| 'make check'. These scripts require the following tools to run |
| successfully: |
| |
| * Python 2.7.6/3.4.3 or later |
| |
| Python is required for running the printers' test scripts. |
| |
| * PExpect 4.0 |
| |
| The printer tests drive GDB through test programs and compare its |
| output to the printers'. PExpect is used to capture the output of |
| GDB, and should be compatible with the Python version in your |
| system. |
| |
| * GDB 7.8 or later with support for Python 2.7.6/3.4.3 or later |
| |
| GDB itself needs to be configured with Python support in order to |
| use the pretty printers. Notice that your system having Python |
| available doesn't imply that GDB supports it, nor that your |
| system's Python and GDB's have the same version. |
| |
| If these tools are absent, the printer tests will report themselves as |
| 'UNSUPPORTED'. Notice that some of the printer tests require the GNU C |
| Library to be compiled with debugging symbols. |
| |
| To format the 'GNU C Library Reference Manual' for printing, type |
| 'make dvi'. You need a working TeX installation to do this. The |
| distribution builds the on-line formatted version of the manual, as Info |
| files, as part of the build process. You can build them manually with |
| 'make info'. |
| |
| The library has a number of special-purpose configuration parameters |
| which you can find in 'Makeconfig'. These can be overwritten with the |
| file 'configparms'. To change them, create a 'configparms' in your |
| build directory and add values as appropriate for your system. The file |
| is included and parsed by 'make' and has to follow the conventions for |
| makefiles. |
| |
| It is easy to configure the GNU C Library for cross-compilation by |
| setting a few variables in 'configparms'. Set 'CC' to the |
| cross-compiler for the target you configured the library for; it is |
| important to use this same 'CC' value when running 'configure', like |
| this: 'CC=TARGET-gcc configure TARGET'. Set 'BUILD_CC' to the compiler |
| to use for programs run on the build system as part of compiling the |
| library. You may need to set 'AR' to cross-compiling versions of 'ar' |
| if the native tools are not configured to work with object files for the |
| target you configured for. When cross-compiling the GNU C Library, it |
| may be tested using 'make check |
| test-wrapper="SRCDIR/scripts/cross-test-ssh.sh HOSTNAME"', where SRCDIR |
| is the absolute directory name for the main source directory and |
| HOSTNAME is the host name of a system that can run the newly built |
| binaries of the GNU C Library. The source and build directories must be |
| visible at the same locations on both the build system and HOSTNAME. |
| |
| In general, when testing the GNU C Library, 'test-wrapper' may be set |
| to the name and arguments of any program to run newly built binaries. |
| This program must preserve the arguments to the binary being run, its |
| working directory and the standard input, output and error file |
| descriptors. If 'TEST-WRAPPER env' will not work to run a program with |
| environment variables set, then 'test-wrapper-env' must be set to a |
| program that runs a newly built program with environment variable |
| assignments in effect, those assignments being specified as 'VAR=VALUE' |
| before the name of the program to be run. If multiple assignments to |
| the same variable are specified, the last assignment specified must take |
| precedence. Similarly, if 'TEST-WRAPPER env -i' will not work to run a |
| program with an environment completely empty of variables except those |
| directly assigned, then 'test-wrapper-env-only' must be set; its use has |
| the same syntax as 'test-wrapper-env', the only difference in its |
| semantics being starting with an empty set of environment variables |
| rather than the ambient set. |
| |
| Installing the C Library |
| ======================== |
| |
| To install the library and its header files, and the Info files of the |
| manual, type 'make install'. This will build things, if necessary, |
| before installing them; however, you should still compile everything |
| first. If you are installing the GNU C Library as your primary C |
| library, we recommend that you shut the system down to single-user mode |
| first, and reboot afterward. This minimizes the risk of breaking things |
| when the library changes out from underneath. |
| |
| 'make install' will do the entire job of upgrading from a previous |
| installation of the GNU C Library version 2.x. There may sometimes be |
| headers left behind from the previous installation, but those are |
| generally harmless. If you want to avoid leaving headers behind you can |
| do things in the following order. |
| |
| You must first build the library ('make'), optionally check it ('make |
| check'), switch the include directories and then install ('make |
| install'). The steps must be done in this order. Not moving the |
| directory before install will result in an unusable mixture of header |
| files from both libraries, but configuring, building, and checking the |
| library requires the ability to compile and run programs against the old |
| library. The new '/usr/include', after switching the include |
| directories and before installing the library should contain the Linux |
| headers, but nothing else. If you do this, you will need to restore any |
| headers from libraries other than the GNU C Library yourself after |
| installing the library. |
| |
| You can install the GNU C Library somewhere other than where you |
| configured it to go by setting the 'DESTDIR' GNU standard make variable |
| on the command line for 'make install'. The value of this variable is |
| prepended to all the paths for installation. This is useful when |
| setting up a chroot environment or preparing a binary distribution. The |
| directory should be specified with an absolute file name. Installing |
| with the 'prefix' and 'exec_prefix' GNU standard make variables set is |
| not supported. |
| |
| The GNU C Library includes a daemon called 'nscd', which you may or |
| may not want to run. 'nscd' caches name service lookups; it can |
| dramatically improve performance with NIS+, and may help with DNS as |
| well. |
| |
| One auxiliary program, '/usr/libexec/pt_chown', is installed setuid |
| 'root' if the '--enable-pt_chown' configuration option is used. This |
| program is invoked by the 'grantpt' function; it sets the permissions on |
| a pseudoterminal so it can be used by the calling process. If you are |
| using a Linux kernel with the 'devpts' filesystem enabled and mounted at |
| '/dev/pts', you don't need this program. |
| |
| After installation you might want to configure the timezone and |
| locale installation of your system. The GNU C Library comes with a |
| locale database which gets configured with 'localedef'. For example, to |
| set up a German locale with name 'de_DE', simply issue the command |
| 'localedef -i de_DE -f ISO-8859-1 de_DE'. To configure all locales that |
| are supported by the GNU C Library, you can issue from your build |
| directory the command 'make localedata/install-locales'. |
| |
| To configure the locally used timezone, set the 'TZ' environment |
| variable. The script 'tzselect' helps you to select the right value. |
| As an example, for Germany, 'tzselect' would tell you to use |
| 'TZ='Europe/Berlin''. For a system wide installation (the given paths |
| are for an installation with '--prefix=/usr'), link the timezone file |
| which is in '/usr/share/zoneinfo' to the file '/etc/localtime'. For |
| Germany, you might execute 'ln -s /usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/Berlin |
| /etc/localtime'. |
| |
| Recommended Tools for Compilation |
| ================================= |
| |
| We recommend installing the following GNU tools before attempting to |
| build the GNU C Library: |
| |
| * GNU 'make' 3.79 or newer |
| |
| You need the latest version of GNU 'make'. Modifying the GNU C |
| Library to work with other 'make' programs would be so difficult |
| that we recommend you port GNU 'make' instead. *Really.* We |
| recommend GNU 'make' version 3.79. All earlier versions have |
| severe bugs or lack features. |
| |
| * GCC 4.9 or newer |
| |
| GCC 4.9 or higher is required. In general it is recommended to use |
| the newest version of the compiler that is known to work for |
| building the GNU C Library, as newer compilers usually produce |
| better code. As of release time, GCC 7.3 is the newest compiler |
| verified to work to build the GNU C Library. |
| |
| For PowerPC 64-bits little-endian (powerpc64le), GCC 6.2 or higher |
| is required. This compiler version is the first to provide the |
| features required for building the GNU C Library with support for |
| '_Float128'. |
| |
| For multi-arch support it is recommended to use a GCC which has |
| been built with support for GNU indirect functions. This ensures |
| that correct debugging information is generated for functions |
| selected by IFUNC resolvers. This support can either be enabled by |
| configuring GCC with '--enable-gnu-indirect-function', or by |
| enabling it by default by setting 'default_gnu_indirect_function' |
| variable for a particular architecture in the GCC source file |
| 'gcc/config.gcc'. |
| |
| You can use whatever compiler you like to compile programs that use |
| the GNU C Library. |
| |
| Check the FAQ for any special compiler issues on particular |
| platforms. |
| |
| * GNU 'binutils' 2.25 or later |
| |
| You must use GNU 'binutils' (as and ld) to build the GNU C Library. |
| No other assembler or linker has the necessary functionality at the |
| moment. As of release time, GNU 'binutils' 2.29.1 is the newest |
| verified to work to build the GNU C Library. |
| |
| * GNU 'texinfo' 4.7 or later |
| |
| To correctly translate and install the Texinfo documentation you |
| need this version of the 'texinfo' package. Earlier versions do |
| not understand all the tags used in the document, and the |
| installation mechanism for the info files is not present or works |
| differently. As of release time, 'texinfo' 6.5 is the newest |
| verified to work to build the GNU C Library. |
| |
| * GNU 'awk' 3.1.2, or higher |
| |
| 'awk' is used in several places to generate files. Some 'gawk' |
| extensions are used, including the 'asorti' function, which was |
| introduced in version 3.1.2 of 'gawk'. As of release time, 'gawk' |
| version 4.2.0 is the newest verified to work to build the GNU C |
| Library. |
| |
| * GNU 'bison' 2.7 or later |
| |
| 'bison' is used to generate the 'yacc' parser code in the 'intl' |
| subdirectory. As of release time, 'bison' version 3.0.4 is the |
| newest verified to work to build the GNU C Library. |
| |
| * Perl 5 |
| |
| Perl is not required, but it is used if present to test the |
| installation. We may decide to use it elsewhere in the future. |
| |
| * GNU 'sed' 3.02 or newer |
| |
| 'Sed' is used in several places to generate files. Most scripts |
| work with any version of 'sed'. As of release time, 'sed' version |
| 4.4 is the newest verified to work to build the GNU C Library. |
| |
| If you change any of the 'configure.ac' files you will also need |
| |
| * GNU 'autoconf' 2.69 (exactly) |
| |
| and if you change any of the message translation files you will need |
| |
| * GNU 'gettext' 0.10.36 or later |
| |
| You may also need these packages if you upgrade your source tree using |
| patches, although we try to avoid this. |
| |
| Specific advice for GNU/Linux systems |
| ===================================== |
| |
| If you are installing the GNU C Library on GNU/Linux systems, you need |
| to have the header files from a 3.2 or newer kernel around for |
| reference. (For the ia64 architecture, you need version 3.2.18 or newer |
| because this is the first version with support for the 'accept4' system |
| call.) These headers must be installed using 'make headers_install'; |
| the headers present in the kernel source directory are not suitable for |
| direct use by the GNU C Library. You do not need to use that kernel, |
| just have its headers installed where the GNU C Library can access them, |
| referred to here as INSTALL-DIRECTORY. The easiest way to do this is to |
| unpack it in a directory such as '/usr/src/linux-VERSION'. In that |
| directory, run 'make headers_install |
| INSTALL_HDR_PATH=INSTALL-DIRECTORY'. Finally, configure the GNU C |
| Library with the option '--with-headers=INSTALL-DIRECTORY/include'. Use |
| the most recent kernel you can get your hands on. (If you are |
| cross-compiling the GNU C Library, you need to specify |
| 'ARCH=ARCHITECTURE' in the 'make headers_install' command, where |
| ARCHITECTURE is the architecture name used by the Linux kernel, such as |
| 'x86' or 'powerpc'.) |
| |
| After installing the GNU C Library, you may need to remove or rename |
| directories such as '/usr/include/linux' and '/usr/include/asm', and |
| replace them with copies of directories such as 'linux' and 'asm' from |
| 'INSTALL-DIRECTORY/include'. All directories present in |
| 'INSTALL-DIRECTORY/include' should be copied, except that the GNU C |
| Library provides its own version of '/usr/include/scsi'; the files |
| provided by the kernel should be copied without replacing those provided |
| by the GNU C Library. The 'linux', 'asm' and 'asm-generic' directories |
| are required to compile programs using the GNU C Library; the other |
| directories describe interfaces to the kernel but are not required if |
| not compiling programs using those interfaces. You do not need to copy |
| kernel headers if you did not specify an alternate kernel header source |
| using '--with-headers'. |
| |
| The Filesystem Hierarchy Standard for GNU/Linux systems expects some |
| components of the GNU C Library installation to be in '/lib' and some in |
| '/usr/lib'. This is handled automatically if you configure the GNU C |
| Library with '--prefix=/usr'. If you set some other prefix or allow it |
| to default to '/usr/local', then all the components are installed there. |
| |
| Reporting Bugs |
| ============== |
| |
| There are probably bugs in the GNU C Library. There are certainly |
| errors and omissions in this manual. If you report them, they will get |
| fixed. If you don't, no one will ever know about them and they will |
| remain unfixed for all eternity, if not longer. |
| |
| It is a good idea to verify that the problem has not already been |
| reported. Bugs are documented in two places: The file 'BUGS' describes |
| a number of well known bugs and the central GNU C Library bug tracking |
| system has a WWW interface at <https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/>. The |
| WWW interface gives you access to open and closed reports. A closed |
| report normally includes a patch or a hint on solving the problem. |
| |
| To report a bug, first you must find it. With any luck, this will be |
| the hard part. Once you've found a bug, make sure it's really a bug. A |
| good way to do this is to see if the GNU C Library behaves the same way |
| some other C library does. If so, probably you are wrong and the |
| libraries are right (but not necessarily). If not, one of the libraries |
| is probably wrong. It might not be the GNU C Library. Many historical |
| Unix C libraries permit things that we don't, such as closing a file |
| twice. |
| |
| If you think you have found some way in which the GNU C Library does |
| not conform to the ISO and POSIX standards (*note Standards and |
| Portability::), that is definitely a bug. Report it! |
| |
| Once you're sure you've found a bug, try to narrow it down to the |
| smallest test case that reproduces the problem. In the case of a C |
| library, you really only need to narrow it down to one library function |
| call, if possible. This should not be too difficult. |
| |
| The final step when you have a simple test case is to report the bug. |
| Do this at <http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/bugs.html>. |
| |
| If you are not sure how a function should behave, and this manual |
| doesn't tell you, that's a bug in the manual. Report that too! If the |
| function's behavior disagrees with the manual, then either the library |
| or the manual has a bug, so report the disagreement. If you find any |
| errors or omissions in this manual, please report them to the bug |
| database. If you refer to specific sections of the manual, please |
| include the section names for easier identification. |