Welcome! Log In Create A New Profile

Advanced

Re: error: can not define uint64_t when running ./configure

Igor Sysoev
November 26, 2009 01:00AM
On Wed, Nov 25, 2009 at 04:31:39PM -0500, ppragin wrote:

> I am trying to build ngnix-0.7.64 on CentOS release 5.2 64bit. I am getting this error when running ./configure. I am not able to find anything on google. Please help.
>
>
> ./configure
> checking for OS
> + Linux 2.6.18-92.1.22.el5 x86_64
> checking for C compiler ... found
> + using GNU C compiler
> + gcc version: 4.1.2 20071124 (Red Hat 4.1.2-42)
> checking for gcc -pipe switch ... found
> ------snip------
> checking for PCRE library ... found
> checking for system md library ... not found
> checking for system md5 library ... not found
> checking for OpenSSL md5 crypto library ... found
> checking for zlib library ... found
> creating objs/Makefile
> checking for int size ... 4 bytes
> checking for long size ... 8 bytes
> checking for long long size ... 8 bytes
> checking for void * size ... 8 bytes
> checking for uint64_t ... uint64_t not found u_int64_t not found
> ./configure: error: can not define uint64_t

What is in objs/autoconf.err near "checking for uint64_t" ?


--
Igor Sysoev
http://sysoev.ru/en/

_______________________________________________
nginx mailing list
nginx@nginx.org
http://nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginx
Subject Author Posted

error: can not define uint64_t when running ./configure

ppragin November 25, 2009 04:31PM

Re: error: can not define uint64_t when running ./configure

Igor Sysoev November 26, 2009 01:00AM

Re: error: can not define uint64_t when running ./configure

yang January 06, 2011 01:34AM

Re: error: can not define uint64_t when running ./configure

Maxim Dounin January 06, 2011 02:40AM



Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.

Click here to login

Online Users

Guests: 239
Record Number of Users: 8 on April 13, 2023
Record Number of Guests: 421 on December 02, 2018
Powered by nginx      Powered by FreeBSD      PHP Powered      Powered by MariaDB      ipv6 ready