.. _GCC wiki entry:
http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/InstallingGCC
-Once you have a GCC toolchain, use it as your host compiler. Things should
-generally "just work". You may need to pass a special linker flag,
-``-Wl,-rpath,$HOME/toolchains/lib`` or some variant thereof to get things to
-find the libstdc++ DSO in this toolchain.
+Once you have a GCC toolchain, configure your build of LLVM to use the new
+toolchain for your host compiler and C++ standard library. Because the new
+version of libstdc++ is not on the system library search path, you need to pass
+extra linker flags so that it can be found at link time (``-L``) and at runtime
+(``-rpath``). If you are using CMake, this invocation should produce working
+binaries:
+
+.. code-block:: console
+
+ % mkdir build
+ % cd build
+ % CC=$HOME/toolchains/bin/gcc CXX=$HOME/toolchains/bin/g++ \
+ cmake .. -DCMAKE_CXX_LINK_FLAGS="-Wl,-rpath,$HOME/toolchains/lib64 -L$HOME/toolchains/lib64"
+
+If you fail to set rpath, most LLVM binaries will fail on startup with a message
+from the loader similar to ``libstdc++.so.6: version `GLIBCXX_3.4.20' not
+found``. This means you need to tweak the -rpath linker flag.
When you build Clang, you will need to give *it* access to modern C++11
standard library in order to use it as your new host in part of a bootstrap.