help!
Troy Noble
troy.noble@channelpoint.com
Wed Aug 15 07:30:00 GMT 2001
stdio.h is in /usr/include
An explicit -I/usr/include should pick it up. But
you shouldn't need to do that. gcc searches /usr/include
by default.
What do your mount points look like?
bash$ mount
c:\cygwin\bin on /usr/bin type user (textmode)
c:\cygwin\lib on /usr/lib type user (textmode)
c:\cygwin on / type user (textmode)
Also try a gcc --verbose hello.c -o hello
and see what include directories gcc is trying to use,
and make sure they map to valid mount points.
I guess you could have forgotten to install a package?
Did you install all packages via setup as recommended by the
instructions?
Troy
-----Original Message-----
From: Liu Wang [ mailto:Wang@sigprowireless.com ]
Sent: Wednesday, August 15, 2001 8:20 AM
To: 'cygwin@cygwin.com'
Subject: help!
Dear Sir/Madam,
I've just installed the cygwin with "setup" .
I failed to compile the "Hello world" with the following information:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------
c:\cygwin\bin\>gcc hello.c -o hello.exe
hello.c:1: stdio.h: No such file or directory.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------
May I expect somebody's help in configuring the make file ?
Sincerely,
Liu
Software Engineer
Sigpro Wireless Inc.
Tel: 7271161 Ext.117
wang@sigprowireless.com
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