On 2007-02-25 11:12:48 -0500, Salvatore Domenick Desiano wrote:
Peering into the minds of Apple's documentation writers (I know, my eyes will be burned), there may be a reason for this. -O turns on optimization. The default is -O0 (no optimization), and there are libraries that actually fail when built that way. The compiler is designed and tested mostly at -O1, so Apple may know something we don't.
Do you mean that -O2 (which normally produces faster and smaller code) should not be used?
As for -g, Tiger has debugging facilities that send information to Apple, and I could see this as providing hooks for Apple fetching that information.
This is not specific to Apple. -g allows the compiler to produce debugging information. Such information is useful in bug reports when a program crashes and a backtrace is included in the report. But it takes more disk space. Similarly, one may choose to strip binaries or not. IMHO, the choice to do that or not should be a global option. Therefore those who have plenty of disk space could choose to keep debugging information (in case a program crashes), and those who are short of disk space could choose to remove them. -- Vincent Lefèvre <vincent@vinc17.org> - Web: <http://www.vinc17.org/> 100% accessible validated (X)HTML - Blog: <http://www.vinc17.org/blog/> Work: CR INRIA - computer arithmetic / Arenaire project (LIP, ENS-Lyon)