compilation with -mno-cygwin

Hans Horn hannes@2horns.com
Wed Apr 14 18:31:00 GMT 2004


Hi Chris,

I have no used mingw per se for this.
I just happened to have a spare time slot when I was reading the posting
about the compiler performance comparison.
So I simply added -mno-cygwin to the compile flags used to compile my
sources (which btw, don't use anything cygwin specific - I think)
are tried to compile.

Right now I don't have more time than it took to write this - but I pick up
on the issue later.

Hans
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Chris Jefferson" <caj@cs.york.ac.uk>
To: "Hans Horn" <hannes@2horns.com>
Cc: <cygwin@cygwin.com>
Sent: Tuesday, April 13, 2004 10:24 AM
Subject: Re: compilation with -mno-cygwin


> Hans Horn wrote:
>
> >I light of the recent gcc performance comparison, I tried to compile a
> >number crunching application (for which I have noticed a significant
> >performance degradation of a factor 2-3 since the days of gcc2.9.x) using
> >the -mno-cygwin flag.
> >I get a shitload of crap like the following :
> >
>
>g++ -c -mno-cygwin -ansi -DGCC3X -DLINUX -DINLINE=inline -fno-default-inlin
e
>
> -W -Wno-deprecated -fomit-frame-pointer -ffast-math -mcpu=pentium4 -march=
p
> >entium4 -mfpmath=sse -O2 -I./ -o xyz.o xyz.cpp
> >
> >
> <snip>
>
> For a start, you shouldn't treat -mno-cygwin like linux (-DLINUX).
> -mno-cygwin turns g++ into a "pure" windows C++ compiler (hence the name
> of the flag).
>
> -mno-cygwin should end up with files identical(ish) to those obtained by
> mingw I think.. what compile line did you use for that?
>
> Chris
> --
> Badger, Badger, Badger, Badger, Badger, Badger, Badger, Badger...
> Mushroom! Mushroom!


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