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openSUSE:Backports:SLE-15-SP4:FactoryCandidates
gcc-13-image
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File README.md of Package gcc-13-image
# openSUSE Tumbleweed BCI GNU Compiler Collection container image (GCC) ![Redistributable](https://img.shields.io/badge/Redistributable-Yes-green) # Description The GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) is an optimizing compiler for various architectures and operating systems. It is the default compiler in the GNU project and most Linux distributions, including SUSE Linux Enterprise and openSUSE. ## Usage ### Compile an application with a `Dockerfile` Normally, you'd want to compile an application and distribute it as part of a custom container image. To do this, create a `Dockerfile` similar to the one below. The `Dockerfile` uses this image to build a custom container image, copies the sources to a working directory, and compiles the application: ```Dockerfile FROM registry.opensuse.org/opensuse/bci/gcc:13 WORKDIR /src/ COPY . /src/ RUN gcc main.c src1.c src2.c CMD ["./a.out"] ``` It is also possible to compile a static binary with gcc as part of a multistage build: ```Dockerfile FROM registry.opensuse.org/opensuse/bci/gcc:13 as builder WORKDIR /src/ COPY . /src/ RUN gcc -o app main.c src1.c src2.c FROM registry.opensuse.org/opensuse/bci/bci-micro:latest WORKDIR /build/ COPY --from=builder /src/app /build/ CMD ["/build/app"] ``` Note that you must build a static binary to deploy it into bci-micro; otherwise shared libraries might be missing. You cannot deploy such an app into a `scratch` image, as it is not possible to statically link glibc. ### Available build systems The container image comes with `make` by default. Other build systems and related utilities are available in the repository, and they can be installed using `zypper`. This includes the following: - `meson` - `cmake` - `ninja` - `autoconf` & `automake` ### Available compiler frontends The GNU Compiler Collections supports a wide range of frontends. The container image ships the C, C++ and fortran frontends available as `gcc`, `g++` and `gfortran` respectively. The following additional frontends can be installed from the repository: - `gcc13-ada` for the Ada frontend (GNAT) - `gcc13-go` for the Go frontend - `gcc13-objc` and `gcc13-obj-c++` for the Objective C and Objective C++ - `gcc13-d` for the frontend to the D Language - `gcc13-m2` for the Modula 2 compiler frontend ### Using the container image interactively You can use the image to create ephemeral containers that execute only gcc. This can be useful in situations, where building a full container image is not practical. One way to do this is to mount the working directory of an application into the launched container and compile the application there: ```bash podman run --rm -it -v $(pwd):/src/:Z registry.opensuse.org/opensuse/bci/gcc:13 \ gcc -o /src/app.out /src/*.c ``` or by invoking `make` ```bash podman run --rm -it -v $(pwd):/src/:Z --workdir /src/ \ registry.opensuse.org/opensuse/bci/gcc:13 \ make ``` Note that the binary built using this approach are unlikely to work on a local machine. They only work on operating systems that are binary-compatible to openSUSE Tumbleweed. ## Licensing `SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-or-later` This documentation and the build recipe are licensed as GPL-3.0-or-later. The container itself contains various software components under various open source licenses listed in the associated Software Bill of Materials (SBOM). This image is based on [openSUSE Tumbleweed](https://get.opensuse.org/tumbleweed/).
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