1.1 --- a/config/toolchain.in Mon Nov 28 18:35:17 2011 +0100
1.2 +++ b/config/toolchain.in Mon Apr 16 15:29:06 2012 +0200
1.3 @@ -303,55 +303,6 @@
1.4
1.5 endif # CANADIAN
1.6
1.7 -if CROSS_NATIVE || CANADIAN
1.8 -
1.9 -comment "Target system"
1.10 -
1.11 -config TARGET_PREFIX
1.12 - string
1.13 - prompt "| Tools prefix (READ HELP!)"
1.14 - default ""
1.15 - help
1.16 - If you have your *target system* tools in a weird location, and/or
1.17 - they have an unusual prefix, enter it here.
1.18 -
1.19 - Usually, you should leave that empty!
1.20 -
1.21 - Eg.:
1.22 - If your *target* gcc is /opt/target-tools/bin/weird-gcc then you
1.23 - should enter:
1.24 - /opt/target-tools/bin/weird-
1.25 -
1.26 - If your *target* gcc is /opt/target-tools/bin/weird-gcc and
1.27 - /opt/target-tools/bin is in your PATH, you should enter:
1.28 - weird-
1.29 -
1.30 - If your *target* gcc is /opt/target-tools/bin/gcc then you
1.31 - should enter (do not forget to add the trailing '/'):
1.32 - /opt/target-tools/bin/
1.33 -
1.34 -config TARGET_SUFFIX
1.35 - string
1.36 - prompt "| Tools suffix (READ HELP!)"
1.37 - default ""
1.38 - help
1.39 - If your *target system* tools have an unusual suffix, enter it
1.40 - here.
1.41 -
1.42 - Usually, you should leave that empty!
1.43 -
1.44 - Eg.:
1.45 - If your 'default' gcc is gcc 4.3.1, but you also have gcc-3.4.2
1.46 - installed as gcc-3.4, then you should enter:
1.47 - -3.4
1.48 -
1.49 - It can happen that some of the tools have a suffix, when others
1.50 - don't, eg. you can have 'gcc-3.4' and 'ar'. crosstool-NG accounts
1.51 - for that by checking the tools without the suffix in case it can
1.52 - not find some of the tool.
1.53 -
1.54 -endif # CROSS_NATIVE || CANADIAN
1.55 -
1.56 comment "Misc options"
1.57
1.58 config TOOLCHAIN_ENABLE_NLS