Commit 5bd8f59c authored by dscho's avatar dscho

more macros included for older autoconf/automake

parent 5030d53f
......@@ -651,3 +651,127 @@ for am_file in $1; do
done])
])]) # AM_CONFIG_HEADER
# AM_MISSING_PROG(NAME, PROGRAM)
# ------------------------------
AC_DEFUN([AM_MISSING_PROG],
[AC_REQUIRE([AM_MISSING_HAS_RUN])
$1=${$1-"${am_missing_run}$2"}
AC_SUBST($1)])
# AM_MISSING_HAS_RUN
# ------------------
# Define MISSING if not defined so far and test if it supports --run.
# If it does, set am_missing_run to use it, otherwise, to nothing.
AC_DEFUN([AM_MISSING_HAS_RUN],
[AC_REQUIRE([AM_AUX_DIR_EXPAND])dnl
test x"${MISSING+set}" = xset || MISSING="\${SHELL} $am_aux_dir/missing"
# Use eval to expand $SHELL
if eval "$MISSING --run true"; then
am_missing_run="$MISSING --run "
else
am_missing_run=
am_backtick='`'
AC_MSG_WARN([${am_backtick}missing' script is too old or missing])
fi
])
# AM_AUX_DIR_EXPAND
# For projects using AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR([foo]), Autoconf sets
# $ac_aux_dir to `$srcdir/foo'. In other projects, it is set to
# `$srcdir', `$srcdir/..', or `$srcdir/../..'.
#
# Of course, Automake must honor this variable whenever it calls a
# tool from the auxiliary directory. The problem is that $srcdir (and
# therefore $ac_aux_dir as well) can be either absolute or relative,
# depending on how configure is run. This is pretty annoying, since
# it makes $ac_aux_dir quite unusable in subdirectories: in the top
# source directory, any form will work fine, but in subdirectories a
# relative path needs to be adjusted first.
#
# $ac_aux_dir/missing
# fails when called from a subdirectory if $ac_aux_dir is relative
# $top_srcdir/$ac_aux_dir/missing
# fails if $ac_aux_dir is absolute,
# fails when called from a subdirectory in a VPATH build with
# a relative $ac_aux_dir
#
# The reason of the latter failure is that $top_srcdir and $ac_aux_dir
# are both prefixed by $srcdir. In an in-source build this is usually
# harmless because $srcdir is `.', but things will broke when you
# start a VPATH build or use an absolute $srcdir.
#
# So we could use something similar to $top_srcdir/$ac_aux_dir/missing,
# iff we strip the leading $srcdir from $ac_aux_dir. That would be:
# am_aux_dir='\$(top_srcdir)/'`expr "$ac_aux_dir" : "$srcdir//*\(.*\)"`
# and then we would define $MISSING as
# MISSING="\${SHELL} $am_aux_dir/missing"
# This will work as long as MISSING is not called from configure, because
# unfortunately $(top_srcdir) has no meaning in configure.
# However there are other variables, like CC, which are often used in
# configure, and could therefore not use this "fixed" $ac_aux_dir.
#
# Another solution, used here, is to always expand $ac_aux_dir to an
# absolute PATH. The drawback is that using absolute paths prevent a
# configured tree to be moved without reconfiguration.
AC_DEFUN([AM_AUX_DIR_EXPAND], [
# expand $ac_aux_dir to an absolute path
am_aux_dir=`CDPATH=:; cd $ac_aux_dir && pwd`
])
# AM_PROG_INSTALL_SH
# ------------------
# Define $install_sh.
AC_DEFUN([AM_PROG_INSTALL_SH],
[AC_REQUIRE([AM_AUX_DIR_EXPAND])dnl
install_sh=${install_sh-"$am_aux_dir/install-sh"}
AC_SUBST(install_sh)])
# One issue with vendor `install' (even GNU) is that you can't
# specify the program used to strip binaries. This is especially
# annoying in cross-compiling environments, where the build's strip
# is unlikely to handle the host's binaries.
# Fortunately install-sh will honor a STRIPPROG variable, so we
# always use install-sh in `make install-strip', and initialize
# STRIPPROG with the value of the STRIP variable (set by the user).
AC_DEFUN([AM_PROG_INSTALL_STRIP],
[AC_REQUIRE([AM_PROG_INSTALL_SH])dnl
INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM="\${SHELL} \$(install_sh) -c -s"
AC_SUBST([INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM])])
# AM_DEP_TRACK
# ------------
AC_DEFUN([AM_DEP_TRACK],
[AC_ARG_ENABLE(dependency-tracking,
[ --disable-dependency-tracking Speeds up one-time builds
--enable-dependency-tracking Do not reject slow dependency extractors])
if test "x$enable_dependency_tracking" != xno; then
am_depcomp="$ac_aux_dir/depcomp"
AMDEPBACKSLASH='\'
fi
AM_CONDITIONAL([AMDEP], [test "x$enable_dependency_tracking" != xno])
pushdef([subst], defn([AC_SUBST]))
subst(AMDEPBACKSLASH)
popdef([subst])
])
# AM_SET_DEPDIR
# -------------
# Choose a directory name for dependency files.
# This macro is AC_REQUIREd in _AM_DEPENDENCIES
AC_DEFUN([AM_SET_DEPDIR],
[rm -f .deps 2>/dev/null
mkdir .deps 2>/dev/null
if test -d .deps; then
DEPDIR=.deps
else
# MS-DOS does not allow filenames that begin with a dot.
DEPDIR=_deps
fi
rmdir .deps 2>/dev/null
AC_SUBST(DEPDIR)
])
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