【待完善】make: command not found,以及libtool.m4 and ltmain.sh have a version mismatch问题的解决方案...

之前为了使用一个库,都是去下载源码,然后根据开发者提供的README手动用GCC编译,一直不能使用Makefile感觉很蛋痛,比如最近使用的ZThread

还是怪自己以前过于依赖IDE

 

最近发现用Cygwin就可以使用诸如./configure, make这样的命令,感觉灰常欣喜,尝试去编译ZThread库(因为我发现虽然之前我用GCC手动编译了ZThread但是在使用的过程中,ZThread总是往控制台上打印诸多的DEBUG信息,想必是编译选项的问题,我又不知道到哪个头文件中去找#define DEBUG,所以就想使用make,看使用ZThread作者写的configuration文件以及Makefile来编译能不能解决问题)

 

刚刚下载下来Cygwin就等着上去configure+make呢,问题就来了,输入./configure之后,等了一段时间报错(见红色文字):

$ ./configure
checking build system type... i686-pc-cygwin
checking host system type... i686-pc-cygwin
checking target system type... i686-pc-cygwin
checking for a BSD-compatible install... /usr/bin/install -c
checking whether build environment is sane... yes
checking for gawk... gawk
checking whether make sets $(MAKE)... yes
Loading m4 macros from share
checking for g++... g++
checking for C++ compiler default output file name... a.exe
checking whether the C++ compiler works... yes
checking whether we are cross compiling... no
checking for suffix of executables... .exe
checking for suffix of object files... o
checking whether we are using the GNU C++ compiler... yes
checking whether g++ accepts -g... yes
checking for style of include used by make... GNU
checking dependency style of g++... gcc3
checking for gcc... gcc
checking whether we are using the GNU C compiler... yes
checking whether gcc accepts -g... yes
checking for gcc option to accept ANSI C... none needed
checking dependency style of gcc... gcc3
checking how to run the C preprocessor... gcc -E
checking for egrep... grep -E
checking for ANSI C header files... yes
checking for sys/types.h... yes
checking for sys/stat.h... yes
checking for stdlib.h... yes
checking for string.h... yes
checking for memory.h... yes
checking for strings.h... yes
checking for inttypes.h... yes
checking for stdint.h... yes
checking for unistd.h... yes
checking pthread.h usability... no
checking pthread.h presence... no
checking for pthread.h... no
checking for sched_get_priority_max in -lrt... no
checking for sched_yield... no
checking for pthread_yield... no
checking for pthread_key_create... no
checking for pthread_keycreate... no
checking for doxygen... no
detecting for ftime() function
checking sys/time.h usability... yes
checking sys/time.h presence... yes
checking for sys/time.h... yes
checking for _ftime()... yes
checking how to run the C++ preprocessor... g++ -E
checking for ANSI C header files... (cached) yes
checking errno.h usability... yes
checking errno.h presence... yes
checking for errno.h... yes
checking for target implementation... compile-time guess
checking for sigsetjmp()... no
checking for _beginthreadex()... no
checking for a sed that does not truncate output... /usr/bin/sed
checking for ld used by gcc... d:/mingw/mingw32/bin/ld.exe
checking if the linker (d:/mingw/mingw32/bin/ld.exe) is GNU ld... yes
checking for d:/mingw/mingw32/bin/ld.exe option to reload object files... -r
checking for BSD-compatible nm... /cygdrive/d/MinGW/bin/nm -B
checking whether ln -s works... yes
checking how to recognise dependent libraries... file_magic ^x86 archive import|^x86 DLL
checking dlfcn.h usability... no
checking dlfcn.h presence... no
checking for dlfcn.h... no
checking how to run the C++ preprocessor... g++ -E
checking for g77... no
checking for f77... no
checking for xlf... no
checking for frt... no
checking for pgf77... no
checking for fort77... no
checking for fl32... no
checking for af77... no
checking for f90... no
checking for xlf90... no
checking for pgf90... no
checking for epcf90... no
checking for f95... no
checking for fort... no
checking for xlf95... no
checking for ifc... no
checking for efc... no
checking for pgf95... no
checking for lf95... no
checking for gfortran... no
checking whether we are using the GNU Fortran 77 compiler... no
checking whether  accepts -g... no
checking the maximum length of command line arguments... 8192
checking command to parse /cygdrive/d/MinGW/bin/nm -B output from gcc object... ok
checking for objdir... .libs
checking for ar... ar
checking for ranlib... ranlib
checking for strip... strip
checking for correct ltmain.sh version... grep: character class syntax is [[:space:]], not [:space:]
no

*** Gentoo sanity check failed! ***
*** libtool.m4 and ltmain.sh have a version mismatch! ***
*** (libtool.m4 = 1.5.10, ltmain.sh = ) ***

Please run:

  libtoolize --copy --force

if appropriate, please contact the maintainer of this
package (or your distribution) for help.

输入:libtoolize --copy --force提示libtoolize: command not found

咋办?搜了一下相关的问题,原来是因为安装Cygwin的时候没有安装libtool

重新运行Cygwin-setup(注意,无需卸载,重新运行setup,选择你没有安装的package即可),搜索libtool,勾选并安装,问题解决

 

然后再次运行libtoolize --copy --force,又报错:

$ libtoolize --copy --force
libtoolize: putting auxiliary files in `.'.
libtoolize: copying file `./ltmain.sh'
libtoolize: You should add the contents of the following files to `aclocal.m4':
libtoolize:   `/usr/share/aclocal/libtool.m4'
libtoolize:   `/usr/share/aclocal/ltoptions.m4'
libtoolize:   `/usr/share/aclocal/ltversion.m4'
libtoolize:   `/usr/share/aclocal/ltsugar.m4'
libtoolize:   `/usr/share/aclocal/lt~obsolete.m4'
libtoolize: Consider adding `AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR([m4])' to configure.ac and
libtoolize: rerunning libtoolize, to keep the correct libtool macros in-tree.
libtoolize: Consider adding `-I m4' to ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS in Makefile.am.

又搜了一下,在这篇BLOG说是因为没安装autoconf的原因,再回去安装autoconf,如图

 

再试一次libtoolize --copy --force

结果还是报同样的错误,回头去看(上面有图,就是libtool那张)原来是libtool-debuginfo和cygwin64-libtool没有安装

于是安装libtool-debuginfo和cygwin64-libtool

再试一次libtoolize --copy --force,成功运行

好了,继续:./configure --prefix D:/ZThread/bin #--prefix指定编译时输出二进制文件的目录

然后还是报错,又运行libtoolize --copy --force,还是报错,无语了

然后,上网搜了半天,在这里找到提示说使用:autoreconf --force --install --symlink

然后又报错Can't exec "aclocal"

继续搜,在这里找到提示说要安装automake(然后我就去Cygwin-setup安装了automake-1.8,注意不要重复安装多个版本,否则会出问题)

 

然后输入make install又提示make: command not found

还是同样的套路,把make package给勾选安装就行了

 

  • 0
    点赞
  • 1
    收藏
    觉得还不错? 一键收藏
  • 0
    评论
SQUASHFS 1.3r3 - A squashed read-only filesystem for Linux Copyright 2004 Phillip Lougher ([email protected]) Released under the GPL licence (version 2 or later). Squashfs is currently at version 1.3 release 3. Please see the CHANGES file for recent changes to squashfs. Squashfs is a highly compressed read-only filesystem for Linux. It uses zlib compression to compress both files, inodes and directories. Inodes in the system are very small and all blocks are packed to minimise data overhead. Block sizes greater than 4K are supported up to a maximum of 32K. Squashfs is intended for general read-only filesystem use, for archival use (i.e. in cases where a .tar.gz file may be used), and in constrained block device/memory systems (e.g. embedded systems) where low overhead is needed. The section 'mksquashfs' gives information on using the mksquashfs tool to create and append to squashfs filesystems. The 'using squashfs' section gives information on mounting and using squashfs filesystems stored on block devices and as normal files using the loopback device. 1. Squashfs overview -------------------- 1. Data, inodes and directories are compressed. 2. Squashfs stores full uid/gids (32 bits), and file creation time. 3. Files up to 2^32 bytes are supported. Filesystems can be up to 2^32 bytes. 4. Inode and directory data are highly compacted, and packed on byte boundaries. Each compressed inode is on average 8 bytes in length (the exact length varies on file type, i.e. regular file, directory, symbolic link, and block/char device inodes have different sizes). 5. Squashfs can use block sizes up to 32K (the default size is 32K). Using 32K blocks achieves greater compression ratios than the normal 4K block size. 6. File duplicates are detected and removed. 7. Both big and little endian architectures are supported. Squashfs can mount filesystems created on different byte order machines. 2. mksquashfs ------------- As squashfs is a read-only filesystem, the mksquashfs program must be used to create populated squashfs filesystems. Beginning with Squashfs 1.2, mksquashfs will also append directories and files to pre-existing squashfs filesystems, see the following 'appending to squashfs filesystems' subsection. SYNTAX:mksquashfs source1 source2 ... dest [options] [-e list of exclude dirs/files] Options are -info print files written to filesystem -b block size size of blocks in filesystem, default 32768 -noappend Do not append to existing filesystem on dest, write a new filesystem This is the default action if dest does not exist, or if no filesystem is on it -keep-as-directory If one source directory is specified, create a root directory containing that directory, rather than the contents of the directory -root-becomes name When appending source files/directories, make the original root become a subdirectory in the new root called name, rather than adding the new source items to the original root -noI -noInodeCompression do not compress inode table -noD -noDataCompression do not compress data blocks -nopad do not pad filesystem to a multiple of 4K -check_data add checkdata for greater filesystem checks -le create a little endian filesystem -be create a big endian filesystem -ef exclude file file is a list of exclude dirs/files - one per line -version print version, licence and copyright message Source1 source2 ... are the source directories/files containing the files/directories that will form the squashfs filesystem. If a single directory is specified (i.e. mksquashfs source output_fs) the squashfs filesystem will consist of that directory, with the top-level root directory corresponding to the source directory. If multiple source directories or files are specified, mksquashfs will merge the specified sources into a single filesystem, with the root directory containing each of the source files/directories. The name of each directory entry will be the basename of the source path. If more than one source entry maps to the same name, the conflicts are named xxx_1, xxx_2, etc. where xxx is the original name. To make this clear, take two example directories. Source directory "/home/phillip/test" contains "file1", "file2" and "dir1". Source directory "goodies" contains "goodies1", "goodies2" and "goodies3". usage example 1: %mksquashfs /home/phillip/test output_fs This will generate a squashfs filesystem with root entries "file1", "file2" and "dir1". example 2: %mksquashfs /home/phillip/test goodies output_fs This will create a squashfs filesystem with the root containing entries "test" and "goodies" corresponding to the source directories "/home/phillip/test" and "goodies". example 3: %mksquashfs /home/phillip/test goodies test output_fs This is the same as the previous example, except a third source directory "test" has been specified. This conflicts with the first directory named "test" and will be renamed "test_1". Multiple sources allow filesystems to be generated without needing to copy all source files into a common directory. This simplifies creating filesystems. The -keep-as-directory option can be used when only one source directory is specified, and you wish the root to contain that directory, rather than the contents of the directory. For example: example 4: %mksquashfs /home/phillip/test output_fs -keep-as-directory This is the same as example 1, except for -keep-as-directory. This will generate a root directory containing directory "test", rather than the "test" directory contents "file1", "file2" and "dir1". The Dest argument is the destination where the squashfs filesystem will be written. This can either be a conventional file or a block device. If the file doesn't exist it will be created, if it does exist and a squashfs filesystem exists on it, mksquashfs will append. The -noappend option will write a new filesystem irrespective of whether an existing filesystem is present. The -e and -ef options allow files/directories to be specified which are excluded from the output filesystem. The -e option takes the exclude files/directories from the command line, the -ef option takes the exlude files/directories from the specified exclude file, one file/directory per line. If an exclude file/directory is absolute (i.e. prefixed with /, ../, or ./) the entry is treated as absolute, however, if an exclude file/directory is relative, it is treated as being relative to each of the sources in turn, i.e. %mksquashfs /tmp/source1 source2 output_fs -e ex1 /tmp/source1/ex2 out/ex3 Will generate exclude files /tmp/source1/ex2, /tmp/source1/ex1, source2/ex1, /tmp/source1/out/ex3 and source2/out/ex3. The -e and -ef exclude options are usefully used in archiving the entire filesystem, where it is wished to avoid archiving /proc, and the filesystem being generated, i.e. %mksquashfs / /tmp/root.sqsh -e proc /tmp/root.sqsh Multiple -ef options can be specified on the command line, and the -ef option can be used in conjuction with the -e option. The -info option displays the files/directories as they are compressed and added to the filesystem. The compression percentage achieved is printed, with the original uncompressed size. If the compression percentage is listed as 0% it means the file is a duplicate. The -b option allows the block size to be selected, this can be either 512, 1024, 2048, 4096, 8192, 16384, or 32768 bytes. The -noI and -noD options (also -noInodeCompression and -noDataCompression) can be used to force mksquashfs to not compress inodes/directories and data respectively. Giving both options generates an uncompressed filesystem. The -le and -be options can be used to force mksquashfs to generate a little endian or big endian filesystem. Normally mksquashfs will generate a filesystem in the host byte order. Squashfs, for portability, will mount different ordered filesystems (i.e. it can mount big endian filesystems running on a little endian machine), but these options can be used for greater optimisation. The -nopad option informs mksquashfs to not pad the filesystem to a 4K multiple. This is performed by default to enable the output filesystem file to be mounted by loopback, which requires files to be a 4K multiple. If the filesystem is being written to a block device, or is to be stored in a bootimage, the extra pad bytes are not needed. 2.1 appending to squashfs filesystems ------------------------------------- Beginning with squashfs1.2, mksquashfs can append to existing squashfs filesystems. Three extra options "-noappend", "-keep-as-directory", and "root-becomes" have been added. Running squashfs with the destination directory containing an existing filesystem, will add the source items to the existing filesystem. By default, the source items are added to the existing root directory. To make this clear... An existing filesystem "image" contains root entries "old1", and "old2". Source directory "/home/phillip/test" contains "file1", "file2" and "dir1". example 1: %mksquashfs /home/phillip/test image Will create a new "image" with root entries "old1", "old2", "file1", "file2" and "dir1" example 2: %mksquashfs /home/phillip/test image -keep-as-directory Will create a new "image" with root entries "old1", "old2", and "test". As shown in the previous section, for single source directories '-keep-as-directory' adds the source directory rather than the contents of the directory. example 3: %mksquashfs /home/phillip/test image -keep-as-directory -root-becomes original-root Will create a new "image" with root entries "original-root", and "test". The '-root-becomes' option specifies that the original root becomes a subdirectory in the new root, with the specified name. The append option with file duplicate detection, means squashfs can be used as a simple versioning archiving filesystem. A squashfs filesystem can be created with for example the linux-2.4.19 source. Appending the linux-2.4.20 source will create a filesystem with the two source trees, but only the changed files will take extra room, the unchanged files will be detected as duplicates. 3. Using squashfs ----------------- Squashfs filesystems should be mounted with 'mount' with the filesystem type 'squashfs'. If the filesystem is on a block device, the filesystem can be mounted directly, e.g. %mount -t squashfs /dev/sda1 /mnt Will mount the squashfs filesystem on "/dev/sda1" under the directory "/mnt". If the squashfs filesystem has been written to a file, the loopback device can be used to mount it (loopback support must be in the kernel), e.g. %mount -t squashfs image /mnt -o loop Will mount the squashfs filesystem in the file "image" under the directory "/mnt". 4. Filesystem layout -------------------- Brief filesystem design notes follow. A squashfs filesystem consists of five parts, packed together on a byte alignment: --------------- | superblock | |---------------| | data | | blocks | |---------------| | inodes | |---------------| | directories | |---------------| | uid/gid | | lookup table | --------------- Compressed data blocks are written to the filesystem as files are read from the source directory, and checked for duplicates. Once all file data has been written the completed inode, directory and uid/gid lookup tables are written. 4.1 Metadata ------------ Metadata (inodes and directories) are compressed in 8Kbyte blocks. Each compressed block is prefixed by a two byte length, the top bit is set if the block is uncompressed. A block will be uncompressed if the -noI option is set, or if the compressed block was larger than the uncompressed block. Inodes are packed into the metadata blocks, and are not aligned to block boundaries, therefore inodes overlap compressed blocks. An inode is identified by a two field tuple <start address of compressed block : offset into de-compressed block>. Inode contents vary depending on the file type. The base inode consists of: base inode: Inode type Mode uid index gid index The inode type is 4 bits in size, and the mode is 12 bits. The uid and gid indexes are 4 bits in length. Ordinarily, this will allow 16 unique indexes into the uid table. To minimise overhead, the uid index is used in conjunction with the spare bit in the file type to form a 48 entry index as follows: inode type 1 - 5: uid index = uid inode type 5 -10: uid index = 16 + uid inode type 11 - 15: uid index = 32 + uid In this way 48 unique uids are supported using 4 bits, minimising data inode overhead. The 4 bit gid index is used to index into a 15 entry gid table. Gid index 15 is used to indicate that the gid is the same as the uid. This prevents the 15 entry gid table filling up with the common case where the uid/gid is the same. The data contents of symbolic links are stored immediately after the symbolic link inode, inside the inode table. This allows the normally small symbolic link to be compressed as part of the inode table, achieving much greater compression than if the symbolic link was compressed individually. Similarly, the block index for regular files is stored immediately after the regular file inode. The block index is a list of block lengths (two bytes each), rather than block addresses, saving two bytes per block. The block address for a given block is computed by the summation of the previous block lengths. This takes advantage of the fact that the blocks making up a file are stored contiguously in the filesystem. The top bit of each block length is set if the block is uncompressed, either because the -noD option is set, or if the compressed block was larger than the uncompressed block. 4.2 Directories --------------- Like inodes, directories are packed into the metadata blocks, and are not aligned on block boundaries, therefore directories can overlap compressed blocks. A directory is, again, identified by a two field tuple <start address of compressed block containing directory start : offset into de-compressed block>. Directories are organised in a slightly complex way, and are not simply a list of file names and inode tuples. The organisation takes advantage of the observation that in most cases, the inodes of the files in the directory will be in the same compressed metadata block, and therefore, the inode tuples will have the same start block. Directories are therefore organised in a two level list, a directory header containing the shared start block value, and a sequence of directory entries, each of which share the shared start block. A new directory header is written once/if the inode start block changes. The directory header/directory entry list is repeated as many times as necessary. The organisation is as follows: directory_header: count (8 bits) inode start block (24 bits) directory entry: * count inode offset (13 bits) inode type (3 bits) filename size (8 bits) filename This organisation saves on average 3 bytes per filename. 4.3 File data ------------- File data is compressed on a block by block basis and written to the filesystem. The filesystem supports up to 32K blocks, which achieves greater compression ratios than the Linux 4K page size. The disadvantage with using greater than 4K blocks (and the reason why most filesystems do not), is that the VFS reads data in 4K pages. The filesystem reads and decompresses a larger block containing that page (e.g. 32K). However, only 4K can be returned to the VFS, resulting in a very inefficient filesystem, as 28K must be thrown away. Squashfs, solves this problem by explicitly pushing the extra pages into the page cache. 5. Author info -------------- Squashfs was written by Phillip Lougher, email [email protected], in Chepstow, Wales, UK. If you like the program, or have any problems, then please email me, as it's nice to get feedback!

“相关推荐”对你有帮助么?

  • 非常没帮助
  • 没帮助
  • 一般
  • 有帮助
  • 非常有帮助
提交
评论
添加红包

请填写红包祝福语或标题

红包个数最小为10个

红包金额最低5元

当前余额3.43前往充值 >
需支付:10.00
成就一亿技术人!
领取后你会自动成为博主和红包主的粉丝 规则
hope_wisdom
发出的红包
实付
使用余额支付
点击重新获取
扫码支付
钱包余额 0

抵扣说明:

1.余额是钱包充值的虚拟货币,按照1:1的比例进行支付金额的抵扣。
2.余额无法直接购买下载,可以购买VIP、付费专栏及课程。

余额充值