Oh bugger, I should have added that I'm cross-compiling from amd64 to ARM. I think that is important and probably would help clear things up.

And so for more completeness:
Build machine:
  config.log
    $ ./configure --prefix=/arm-linux-gnueabihf --build=x86_64-cross-linux-gnu --host=arm-linux-gnueabihf --without-included-regex --quiet CFLAGS=-O3 -pipe -mfpu=neon -mtune=cortex-a9 -march=armv7-a -mfloat-abi=hard CXXFLAGS=-O3 -pipe -mfpu=neon -mtune=cortex-a9 -march=armv7-a -mfloat-abi=hard LDFLAGS=-L/arm-linux-gnueabihf/lib -Wl,-rpath -Wl,/arm-linux-gnueabihf/lib CPPFLAGS=-I/arm-linux-gnueabihf/include

What I ended up doing was just sed-ing configure to wipe out Wcast-align.


On Thu, May 15, 2014 at 9:19 PM, Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> wrote:
Unless you're on a weird machine (e.g., not byte addressible), I wouldn't worry about that.  I'd worry more about why 'configure' decided that memchr doesn't work on your machine.  What's up with that?  What does config.log say?

I suggest running 'configure' without using the '--enable-gcc-warnings' option, and/or building without -Werror.  --enable-gcc-warnings and/or -Werror work only on reasonably-recent-and-reliable platforms.