1
0
mirror of https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/emacs.git synced 2024-12-22 10:26:20 +00:00
emacs/configure1.in
1994-10-26 23:19:16 +00:00

1813 lines
49 KiB
Plaintext
Executable File
Raw Blame History

This file contains invisible Unicode characters

This file contains invisible Unicode characters that are indistinguishable to humans but may be processed differently by a computer. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

dnl This is an autoconf script.
dnl To rebuild the `configure' script from this, execute the command
dnl autoconf
dnl in the directory containing this script.
[#!/bin/sh
#### Configuration script for GNU Emacs
#### Copyright (C) 1992, 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
#### This script requires autoconf version 1.9 or later.
### Don't edit this script!
### This script was automatically generated by the `autoconf' program
### from the file `./configure.in'.
### To rebuild it, execute the command
### autoconf
### in the this directory.
### This file is part of GNU Emacs.
### GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
### it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
### the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
### any later version.
### GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
### but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
### MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
### GNU General Public License for more details.
### You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
### along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
### the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
### Since Emacs has configuration requirements that autoconf can't
### meet, this file is an unholy marriage of custom-baked
### configuration code and autoconf macros.
###
### We use the m4 quoting characters [ ] (as established by the
### autoconf system) to include large sections of raw sewage - Oops, I
### mean, shell code - in the final configuration script.
###
### Usage: configure config_name
###
### If configure succeeds, it leaves its status in config.status.
### If configure fails after disturbing the status quo,
### config.status is removed.
### Remove any more than one leading "." element from the path name.
### If we don't remove them, then another "./" will be prepended to
### the file name each time we use config.status, and the program name
### will get larger and larger. This wouldn't be a problem, except
### that since progname gets recorded in all the Makefiles this script
### produces, move-if-change thinks they're different when they're
### not.
###
### It would be nice if we could put the ./ in a \( \) group and then
### apply the * operator to that, so we remove as many leading ./././'s
### as are present, but some seds (like Ultrix's sed) don't allow you to
### apply * to a \( \) group. Bleah.
progname="`echo $0 | sed 's:^\./\./:\./:'`"
### Establish some default values.
run_in_place=
single_tree=
prefix='/usr/local'
exec_prefix='${prefix}'
bindir='${exec_prefix}/bin'
datadir='${prefix}/share'
sharedstatedir='${prefix}/com'
libexecdir='${exec_prefix}/libexec'
mandir='${prefix}/man/man1'
infodir='${prefix}/info'
lispdir='${datadir}/emacs/${version}/lisp'
locallisppath='${datadir}/emacs/site-lisp'
lisppath='${locallisppath}:${lispdir}'
etcdir='${datadir}/emacs/${version}/etc'
lockdir='${sharedstatedir}/emacs/lock'
archlibdir='${libexecdir}/emacs/${version}/${configuration}'
docdir='${datadir}/emacs/${version}/etc'
# On Sun systems, people sometimes set up the variable CPP
# with a value that is a directory, not an executable at all.
# Detect that case, and ignore that value.
if [ "x$CPP" != x ] && [ -d "$CPP" ];
then
CPP=
fi
# We cannot use this variable in the case statement below, because many
# /bin/sh's have broken semantics for "case". Unfortunately, you must
# actually edit the clause itself.
# path_options="prefix | exec_prefix | bindir | libexecdir | etcdir | datadir"
# path_options="$path_options | archlibdir | sharedstatedir | mandir | infodir"
# path_options="$path_options | lispdir | lockdir | lisppath | locallisppath"
#### Usage messages.
short_usage="Usage: ${progname} CONFIGURATION [-OPTION[=VALUE] ...]
Set compilation and installation parameters for GNU Emacs, and report.
CONFIGURATION specifies the machine and operating system to build for.
--with-x Support the X Window System.
--with-x=no Don't support X.
--with-x-toolkit=yes Use the X toolkit. Default to Lucid/Athena widgets.
--with-x-toolkit=athena Use the X toolkit with Athena widgets.
--with-x-toolkit=lucid Use the X toolkit with Lucid widgets.
--with-x-toolkit=motif Use the X toolkit with Motif widgets.
--with-x-toolkit=no Don't use an X toolkit.
--with-gcc Use GCC to compile Emacs.
--with-gcc=no Don't use GCC to compile Emacs.
--x-includes=DIR Search for X header files in DIR.
--x-libraries=DIR Search for X libraries in DIR.
--run-in-place Use libraries and data files directly out of the
source tree.
--single-tree=DIR Has the effect of creating a directory tree at DIR
which looks like:
.../DIR/bin/CONFIGNAME (emacs, etags, etc.)
.../DIR/bin/CONFIGNAME/etc (movemail, etc.)
.../DIR/common/lisp (emacs' lisp files)
.../DIR/common/site-lisp (local lisp files)
.../DIR/common/lib (DOC, TUTORIAL, etc.)
.../DIR/common/lock (lockfiles)
--srcdir=DIR Look for the Emacs source files in DIR.
--prefix=DIR Install files below DIR. Defaults to \`${prefix}'.
You may also specify any of the \`path' variables found in Makefile.in,
including --bindir, --libexecdir, --etcdir, --infodir, and so on. This allows
you to override a single default location when configuring.
If successful, ${progname} leaves its status in config.status. If
unsuccessful after disturbing the status quo, it removes config.status."
#### Option processing.
### Record all the arguments, so we can save them in config.status.
arguments="$@"
### Shell Magic: Quote the quoted arguments in ARGUMENTS. At a later date,
### in order to get the arguments back in $@, we have to do an
### `eval set x "$quoted_arguments"; shift'.
quoted_arguments=
for i in "$@"; do
quoted_arguments="$quoted_arguments '$i'"
done
### Don't use shift -- that destroys the argument list, which autoconf needs
### to produce config.status. It turns out that "set - ${arguments}" doesn't
### work portably.
### However, it also turns out that many shells cannot expand ${10} at all.
### So using an index variable doesn't work either. It is possible to use
### some shell magic to make 'set x "$arguments"; shift' work portably.
config_options="$*"
while [ $# != 0 ]; do
arg="$1"; shift
case "${arg}" in
## Anything starting with a hyphen we assume is an option.
-* )
## Separate the switch name from the value it's being given.
case "${arg}" in
-*=*)
opt=`echo ${arg} | sed 's:^-*\([^=]*\)=.*$:\1:'`
val=`echo ${arg} | sed 's:^-*[^=]*=\(.*\)$:\1:'`
valomitted=no
;;
-*)
## If FOO is a boolean argument, --FOO is equivalent to
## --FOO=yes. Otherwise, the value comes from the next
## argument - see below.
opt=`echo ${arg} | sed 's:^-*::'`
val="yes"
valomitted=yes
;;
esac
## Change `-' in the option name to `_'.
optname="${opt}"
opt="`echo ${opt} | tr - _`"
## Process the option.
case "${opt}" in
## Has the user specified which window systems they want to support?
"with_x" | "with_x11" | "with_x10" )
## Make sure the value given was either "yes" or "no".
case "${val}" in
y | ye | yes ) val=yes ;;
n | no ) val=no ;;
* )
(echo "${progname}: the \`--${optname}' option is supposed to have a boolean value.
Set it to either \`yes' or \`no'."
echo "${short_usage}") >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
eval "${opt}=\"${val}\""
;;
## Has the user specified which toolkit they want to support?
"with_x_toolkit" )
case "${val}" in
y | ye | yes ) val=athena ;;
n | no ) val=no ;;
l | lu | luc | luci | lucid ) val=lucid ;;
a | at | ath | athe | athena ) val=athena ;;
m | mo | mot | moti | motif ) val=motif ;;
# These don't currently work.
# o | op | ope | open | open- | open-l | open-lo \
# | open-loo | open-look ) val=open-look ;;
* )
(
#echo "${progname}: the \`--${optname}' option is supposed to have a value
#which is \`yes', \`no', \`lucid', \`athena', \`motif' or \`open-look'."
echo "${progname}: the \`--${optname}' option is supposed to have a value
which is \`yes', \`no', \`lucid', \`athena', or \`motif'.
Currently, \`yes', \`athena' and \`lucid' are synonyms."
echo "${short_usage}") >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
eval "${opt}=\"${val}\""
;;
## Has the user specified whether or not they want GCC?
"with_gcc" | "with_gnu_cc" )
## Make sure the value given was either "yes" or "no".
case "${val}" in
y | ye | yes ) val=yes ;;
n | no ) val=no ;;
* )
(echo "${progname}: the \`--${optname}' option is supposed to have a boolean value.
Set it to either \`yes' or \`no'."
echo "${short_usage}") >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
eval "${opt}=\"${val}\""
;;
## Has the user specified a source directory?
"srcdir" )
## If the value was omitted, get it from the next argument.
if [ "${valomitted}" = "yes" ]; then
## Get the next argument from the argument list, if there is one.
if [ $# = 0 ]; then
(echo "${progname}: You must give a value for the \`--${optname}' option, as in
\`--${optname}=FOO'."
echo "${short_usage}") >&2
exit 1
fi
val="$1"; shift
fi
srcdir="${val}"
;;
## Has the user tried to tell us where the X files are?
## I think these are dopey, but no less than three alpha
## testers, at large sites, have said they have their X files
## installed in odd places.
"x_includes" )
## If the value was omitted, get it from the next argument.
if [ "${valomitted}" = "yes" ]; then
## Get the next argument from the argument list, if there is one.
if [ $# = 0 ]; then
(echo "${progname}: You must give a value for the \`--${optname}' option, as in
\`--${optname}=/usr/local/X11/include'."
echo "${short_usage}") >&2
exit 1
fi
val="$1"; shift
fi
x_includes="${val}"
;;
"x_libraries" )
## If the value was omitted, get it from the next argument.
if [ "${valomitted}" = "yes" ]; then
## Get the next argument from the argument list, if there is one.
if [ $# = 0 ]; then
(echo "${progname}: You must give a value for the \`--${optname}' option, as in
\`--${optname}=/usr/local/X11/lib'."
echo "${short_usage}") >&2
exit 1
fi
val="$1"; shift
fi
x_libraries="${val}"
;;
## Should this use the "development" file organization?
"run_in_place" )
single_tree=
run_in_place=1
;;
## Should this use the "single tree" file organization?
"single_tree" )
run_in_place=
single_tree=1
;;
## Has the user specified one of the path options?
prefix | exec_prefix | bindir | libexecdir | etcdir | datadir | \
archlibdir | sharedstatedir | mandir | infodir | lispdir | lockdir | \
lisppath | locallisppath | docdir )
## If the value was omitted, get it from the next argument.
if [ "${valomitted}" = "yes" ]; then
if [ $# = 0 ]; then
(echo \
"$progname: You must give a value for the \`--${optname}' option,";
echo \
"as in \`--${optname}=`eval echo '$'$optname`.'"
echo "$short_usage") >&2
exit 1
fi
val="$1"; shift
fi
eval "${opt}=\"${val}\""
eval "${opt}_specified=1"
;;
## Verbose flag, tested by autoconf macros.
"verbose" )
verbose=yes
;;
## Has the user asked for some help?
"usage" | "help" )
if [ "x$PAGER" = x ]
then
echo "${short_usage}" | more
else
echo "${short_usage}" | $PAGER
fi
exit
;;
## We ignore all other options silently.
esac
;;
## Anything not starting with a hyphen we assume is a
## configuration name.
*)
configuration=${arg}
;;
esac
done
### Get the arguments back. See the diatribe on Shell Magic above.
eval set x "$quoted_arguments"; shift
if [ "${configuration}" = "" ]; then
echo '- You did not tell me what kind of host system you want to configure.
- I will attempt to guess the kind of system this is.' 1>&2
guesssys=`echo ${progname} | sed 's/configure$/config.guess/'`
if configuration=`${guesssys}` ; then
echo "- Looks like this is a ${configuration}" 1>&2
else
echo '- Failed to guess the system type. You need to tell me.' 1>&2
echo "${short_usage}" >&2
exit 1
fi
fi
#### Decide where the source is.
case "${srcdir}" in
## If it's not specified, see if `.' or `..' might work.
"" )
confdir=`echo $0 | sed 's|//|/|' | sed 's|/[^/]*$||'`
if [ -f $confdir/src/lisp.h -a -f $confdir/lisp/version.el ]; then
srcdir="${confdir}"
else
if [ -f "./src/lisp.h" -a -f "./lisp/version.el" ]; then
srcdir='.'
else
if [ -f "../src/lisp.h" -a -f "../lisp/version.el" ]; then
srcdir='..'
else
(echo "\
${progname}: Neither the current directory nor its parent seem to
contain the Emacs sources. If you do not want to build Emacs in its
source tree, you should run \`${progname}' in the directory in which
you wish to build Emacs, using its \`--srcdir' option to say where the
sources may be found."
echo "${short_usage}") >&2
exit 1
fi
fi
fi
;;
## Otherwise, check if the directory they specified is okay.
* )
if [ ! -d "${srcdir}" -o ! -f "${srcdir}/src/lisp.h" -o ! -f "${srcdir}/lisp/version.el" ]; then
(echo "\
${progname}: The directory specified with the \`--srcdir' option,
\`${srcdir}', doesn't seem to contain the Emacs sources. You should
either run the \`${progname}' script at the top of the Emacs source
tree, or use the \`--srcdir' option to specify where the Emacs sources
are."
echo "${short_usage}") >&2
exit 1
fi
;;
esac
#### Make srcdir absolute, if it isn't already. It's important to
#### avoid running the path through pwd unnecessary, since pwd can
#### give you automounter prefixes, which can go away.
case "${srcdir}" in
/* ) ;;
. )
## We may be able to use the $PWD environment variable to make this
## absolute. But sometimes PWD is inaccurate.
if [ "${PWD}" != "" ] && [ "`(cd ${PWD} ; sh -c pwd)`" = "`pwd`" ] ; then
srcdir="$PWD"
else
srcdir="`(cd ${srcdir}; pwd)`"
fi
;;
* ) srcdir="`(cd ${srcdir}; pwd)`" ;;
esac
### Remove trailing slashes.
srcdir=`echo "${srcdir}" | sed 's,\([^/]\)/*$,\1,'`
#### Check if the source directory already has a configured system in it.
if [ `pwd` != `(cd ${srcdir} && pwd)` ] \
&& [ -f "${srcdir}/src/config.h" ] ; then
(echo "${progname}: WARNING: The directory tree \`${srcdir}' is being used"
echo " as a build directory right now; it has been configured in its own"
echo " right. To configure in another directory as well, you MUST"
echo " use GNU make. If you do not have GNU make, then you must"
echo " now do \`make distclean' in ${srcdir},"
echo " and then run ${progname} again.") >&2
extrasub='/^VPATH[ ]*=/c\
vpath %.c $(srcdir)\
vpath %.h $(srcdir)\
vpath %.y $(srcdir)\
vpath %.l $(srcdir)\
vpath %.s $(srcdir)\
vpath %.in $(srcdir)'
fi
### Make the necessary directories, if they don't exist.
for dir in ./src ./lib-src ./cpp ./oldXMenu ./lwlib ./etc ; do
if [ ! -d ${dir} ]; then
mkdir ${dir}
fi
done
#### Given the configuration name, set machfile and opsysfile to the
#### names of the m/*.h and s/*.h files we should use.
### Canonicalize the configuration name.
echo "Checking the configuration name"
if canonical=`${srcdir}/config.sub "${configuration}"` ; then : ; else
exit $?
fi
### If you add support for a new configuration, add code to this
### switch statement to recognize your configuration name and select
### the appropriate operating system and machine description files.
### You would hope that you could choose an m/*.h file pretty much
### based on the machine portion of the configuration name, and an s-
### file based on the operating system portion. However, it turns out
### that each m/*.h file is pretty manufacturer-specific - for
### example, apollo.h, hp9000s300.h, mega68k, news.h, and tad68k are
### all 68000 machines; mips.h, pmax.h, and news-risc are all MIPS
### machines. So we basically have to have a special case for each
### configuration name.
###
### As far as handling version numbers on operating systems is
### concerned, make sure things will fail in a fixable way. If
### /etc/MACHINES doesn't say anything about version numbers, be
### prepared to handle anything reasonably. If version numbers
### matter, be sure /etc/MACHINES says something about it.
###
### Eric Raymond says we should accept strings like "sysvr4" to mean
### "System V Release 4"; he writes, "The old convention encouraged
### confusion between `system' and `release' levels'."
machine='' opsys='' unported='false'
case "${canonical}" in
## NetBSD ports
*-*-netbsd* )
opsys=netbsd
case "${canonical}" in
i[345]86-*-netbsd*) machine=intel386 ;;
m68k-*-netbsd*)
# This is somewhat bogus.
machine=hp9000s300 ;;
mips-*-netbsd*) machine=pmax ;;
ns32k-*-netbsd*) machine=ns32000 ;;
sparc-*-netbsd*) machine=sparc ;;
esac
;;
## Acorn RISCiX:
arm-acorn-riscix1.1* )
machine=acorn opsys=riscix1-1
;;
arm-acorn-riscix1.2* | arm-acorn-riscix )
machine=acorn opsys=riscix1-2
;;
## Alliant machines
## Strictly speaking, we need the version of the alliant operating
## system to choose the right machine file, but currently the
## configuration name doesn't tell us enough to choose the right
## one; we need to give alliants their own operating system name to
## do this right. When someone cares, they can help us.
fx80-alliant-* )
machine=alliant4 opsys=bsd4-2
;;
i860-alliant-* )
machine=alliant-2800 opsys=bsd4-3
;;
alpha-dec-osf* )
machine=alpha opsys=osf1
;;
## Altos 3068
m68*-altos-sysv* )
machine=altos opsys=usg5-2
;;
## Amdahl UTS
580-amdahl-sysv* )
machine=amdahl opsys=usg5-2-2
;;
## Appallings - I mean, Apollos - running Domain
m68*-apollo* )
machine=apollo opsys=bsd4-2
;;
## AT&T 3b2, 3b5, 3b15, 3b20
we32k-att-sysv* )
machine=att3b opsys=usg5-2-2
;;
## AT&T 3b1 - The Mighty Unix PC!
m68*-att-sysv* )
machine=7300 opsys=usg5-2-2
;;
## Bull dpx20
rs6000-bull-bosx* )
machine=ibmrs6000 opsys=aix3-2
;;
## Bull dpx2
m68*-bull-sysv3* )
machine=dpx2 opsys=usg5-3
;;
## Bull sps7
m68*-bull-sysv2* )
machine=sps7 opsys=usg5-2
;;
## CCI 5/32, 6/32 -- see "Tahoe".
## Celerity
## I don't know what configuration name to use for this; config.sub
## doesn't seem to know anything about it. Hey, Celerity users, get
## in touch with us!
celerity-celerity-bsd* )
machine=celerity opsys=bsd4-2
;;
## Clipper
## What operating systems does this chip run that Emacs has been
## tested on?
clipper-* )
machine=clipper
## We'll use the catch-all code at the bottom to guess the
## operating system.
;;
## Convex
*-convex-bsd* | *-convex-convexos* )
machine=convex opsys=bsd4-3
## Prevents suprious white space in makefiles - d.m.cooke@larc.nasa.gov
NON_GNU_CPP="cc -E -P"
;;
## Cubix QBx/386
i[345]86-cubix-sysv* )
machine=intel386 opsys=usg5-3
;;
## Cydra 5
cydra*-cydrome-sysv* )
machine=cydra5 opsys=usg5-3
;;
## Data General AViiON Machines
m88k-dg-dgux5.4R3* | m88k-dg-dgux5.4.3* )
machine=aviion opsys=dgux5-4r3
;;
m88k-dg-dgux5.4R2* | m88k-dg-dgux5.4.2* )
machine=aviion opsys=dgux5-4r2
;;
m88k-dg-dgux* )
machine=aviion opsys=dgux
;;
## DECstations
mips-dec-ultrix[0-3].* | mips-dec-ultrix4.0* | mips-dec-bsd4.2* )
machine=pmax opsys=bsd4-2
;;
mips-dec-ultrix* | mips-dec-bsd* )
machine=pmax opsys=bsd4-3
;;
mips-dec-osf* )
machine=pmax opsys=osf1
;;
## Motorola Delta machines
m68k-motorola-sysv* | m68000-motorola-sysv* )
machine=delta opsys=usg5-3
if [ -z "`type gnucc | grep 'not found'`" ]
then CC=gnucc
else
if [ -z "`type gcc | grep 'not found'`" ]
then CC=gcc
else CC=cc
fi
fi
;;
m88k-motorola-sysv4* )
machine=delta88k opsys=usg5-4
;;
m88k-motorola-sysv* | m88k-motorola-m88kbcs* )
machine=delta88k opsys=usg5-3
;;
## Dual machines
m68*-dual-sysv* )
machine=dual opsys=usg5-2
;;
m68*-dual-uniplus* )
machine=dual opsys=unipl5-2
;;
## Elxsi 6400
elxsi-elxsi-sysv* )
machine=elxsi opsys=usg5-2
;;
## Encore machines
ns16k-encore-bsd* )
machine=ns16000 opsys=umax
;;
## The GEC 93 - apparently, this port isn't really finished yet.
## Gould Power Node and NP1
pn-gould-bsd4.2* )
machine=gould opsys=bsd4-2
;;
pn-gould-bsd4.3* )
machine=gould opsys=bsd4-3
;;
np1-gould-bsd* )
machine=gould-np1 opsys=bsd4-3
;;
## Harris Night Hawk machines running CX/UX (a 5000 looks just like a 4000
## as far as Emacs is concerned).
m88k-harris-cxux* )
# Build needs to be different on 7.0 and later releases
case "`uname -r`" in
[56].[0-9] ) machine=nh4000 opsys=cxux ;;
[7].[0-9] ) machine=nh4000 opsys=cxux7 ;;
esac
;;
## Harris ecx or gcx running CX/UX (Series 1200, Series 3000)
m68k-harris-cxux* )
machine=nh3000 opsys=cxux
;;
## Honeywell XPS100
xps*-honeywell-sysv* )
machine=xps100 opsys=usg5-2
;;
## HP 9000 series 200 or 300
m68*-hp-bsd* )
machine=hp9000s300 opsys=bsd4-3
;;
## HP/UX 7, 8 and 9 are supported on these machines.
m68*-hp-hpux* )
case "`uname -r`" in
## Someone's system reports A.B8.05 for this.
## I wonder what other possibilities there are.
*.B8.* ) machine=hp9000s300 opsys=hpux8 ;;
*.08.* ) machine=hp9000s300 opsys=hpux8 ;;
*.09.* ) machine=hp9000s300 opsys=hpux9 ;;
*) machine=hp9000s300 opsys=hpux ;;
esac
;;
## HP 9000 series 700 and 800, running HP/UX
hppa*-hp-hpux7* )
machine=hp800 opsys=hpux
;;
hppa*-hp-hpux8* )
machine=hp800 opsys=hpux8
;;
hppa*-hp-hpux9shr* )
machine=hp800 opsys=hpux9shr
;;
hppa*-hp-hpux9* )
machine=hp800 opsys=hpux9
;;
## HP 9000 series 700 and 800, running HP/UX
hppa*-hp-hpux* )
## Cross-compilation? Nah!
case "`uname -r`" in
## Someone's system reports A.B8.05 for this.
## I wonder what other possibilities there are.
*.B8.* ) machine=hp800 opsys=hpux8 ;;
*.08.* ) machine=hp800 opsys=hpux8 ;;
*.09.* ) machine=hp800 opsys=hpux9 ;;
*) machine=hp800 opsys=hpux ;;
esac
;;
## Orion machines
orion-orion-bsd* )
machine=orion opsys=bsd4-2
;;
clipper-orion-bsd* )
machine=orion105 opsys=bsd4-2
;;
## IBM machines
i[345]86-ibm-aix1.1* )
machine=ibmps2-aix opsys=usg5-2-2
;;
i[345]86-ibm-aix1.[23]* | i[345]86-ibm-aix* )
machine=ibmps2-aix opsys=usg5-3
;;
i370-ibm-aix*)
machine=ibm370aix opsys=usg5-3
;;
rs6000-ibm-aix3.1* | powerpc-ibm-aix3.1* )
machine=ibmrs6000 opsys=aix3-1
;;
rs6000-ibm-aix3.2.5 | powerpc-ibm-aix3.2.5 )
machine=ibmrs6000 opsys=aix3-2-5
;;
rs6000-ibm-aix* | powerpc-ibm-aix* )
machine=ibmrs6000 opsys=aix3-2
;;
romp-ibm-bsd4.3* )
machine=ibmrt opsys=bsd4-3
;;
romp-ibm-bsd4.2* )
machine=ibmrt opsys=bsd4-2
;;
romp-ibm-aos4.3* )
machine=ibmrt opsys=bsd4-3
;;
romp-ibm-aos4.2* )
machine=ibmrt opsys=bsd4-2
;;
romp-ibm-aos* )
machine=ibmrt opsys=bsd4-3
;;
romp-ibm-bsd* )
machine=ibmrt opsys=bsd4-3
;;
romp-ibm-aix* )
machine=ibmrt-aix opsys=usg5-2-2
;;
## Integrated Solutions `Optimum V'
m68*-isi-bsd4.2* )
machine=isi-ov opsys=bsd4-2
;;
m68*-isi-bsd4.3* )
machine=isi-ov opsys=bsd4-3
;;
## Intel 386 machines where we do care about the manufacturer
i[345]86-intsys-sysv* )
machine=is386 opsys=usg5-2-2
;;
## Prime EXL
i[345]86-prime-sysv* )
machine=i386 opsys=usg5-3
;;
## Sequent Symmetry running Dynix
i[345]86-sequent-bsd* )
machine=symmetry opsys=bsd4-3
;;
## Sequent Symmetry running DYNIX/ptx
## Use the old cpp rather than the newer ANSI one.
i[345]86-sequent-ptx* )
machine=sequent-ptx opsys=ptx
NON_GNU_CPP="/lib/cpp"
;;
## Unspecified sysv on an ncr machine defaults to svr4.2.
## (Plain usg5-4 doesn't turn on POSIX signals, which we need.)
i[345]86-ncr-sysv* )
machine=intel386 opsys=usg5-4-2
;;
## Intel 860
i860-*-sysv4* )
machine=i860 opsys=usg5-4
NON_GNU_CC="/bin/cc" # Ie, not the one in /usr/ucb/cc.
NON_GNU_CPP="/usr/ccs/lib/cpp" # cc -E tokenizes macro expansion.
;;
## Masscomp machines
m68*-masscomp-rtu* )
machine=masscomp opsys=rtu
;;
## Megatest machines
m68*-megatest-bsd* )
machine=mega68 opsys=bsd4-2
;;
## Workstations sold by MIPS
## This is not necessarily all workstations using the MIPS processor -
## Irises are produced by SGI, and DECstations by DEC.
## etc/MACHINES lists mips.h and mips4.h as possible machine files,
## and usg5-2-2 and bsd4-3 as possible OS files. The only guidance
## it gives for choosing between the alternatives seems to be "Use
## -machine=mips4 for RISCOS version 4; use -opsystem=bsd4-3 with
## the BSD world." I'll assume that these are instructions for
## handling two odd situations, and that every other situation
## should use mips.h and usg5-2-2, they being listed first.
mips-mips-usg* )
machine=mips4
## Fall through to the general code at the bottom to decide on the OS.
;;
mips-mips-riscos4* )
machine=mips4 opsys=bsd4-3
NON_GNU_CC="cc -systype bsd43"
NON_GNU_CPP="cc -systype bsd43 -E"
;;
mips-mips-bsd* )
machine=mips opsys=bsd4-3
;;
mips-mips-* )
machine=mips opsys=usg5-2-2
;;
## NeXT
m68*-next-* | i[345]86-next-* )
machine=next opsys=mach2
;;
## The complete machine from National Semiconductor
ns32k-ns-genix* )
machine=ns32000 opsys=usg5-2
;;
## NCR machines
m68*-ncr-sysv2* | m68*-ncr-sysvr2* )
machine=tower32 opsys=usg5-2-2
;;
m68*-ncr-sysv3* | m68*-ncr-sysvr3* )
machine=tower32v3 opsys=usg5-3
;;
## Nixdorf Targon 31
m68*-nixdorf-sysv* )
machine=targon31 opsys=usg5-2-2
;;
## Nu (TI or LMI)
m68*-nu-sysv* )
machine=nu opsys=usg5-2
;;
## Plexus
m68*-plexus-sysv* )
machine=plexus opsys=usg5-2
;;
## Pyramid machines
## I don't really have any idea what sort of processor the Pyramid has,
## so I'm assuming it is its own architecture.
pyramid-pyramid-bsd* )
machine=pyramid opsys=bsd4-2
;;
## Sequent Balance
ns32k-sequent-bsd4.2* )
machine=sequent opsys=bsd4-2
;;
ns32k-sequent-bsd4.3* )
machine=sequent opsys=bsd4-3
;;
## Siemens Nixdorf
mips-siemens-sysv* )
machine=mips-siemens opsys=usg5-4
NON_GNU_CC=/usr/ccs/bin/cc
NON_GNU_CPP=/usr/ccs/lib/cpp
;;
## Silicon Graphics machines
## Iris 2500 and Iris 2500 Turbo (aka the Iris 3030)
m68*-sgi-iris3.5* )
machine=irist opsys=iris3-5
;;
m68*-sgi-iris3.6* | m68*-sgi-iris*)
machine=irist opsys=iris3-6
;;
## Iris 4D
mips-sgi-irix3* )
machine=iris4d opsys=irix3-3
;;
mips-sgi-irix5* )
machine=iris4d opsys=irix5-0
;;
mips-sgi-irix4* | mips-sgi-irix* )
machine=iris4d opsys=irix4-0
;;
## SONY machines
m68*-sony-bsd4.2* )
machine=news opsys=bsd4-2
;;
m68*-sony-bsd4.3* )
machine=news opsys=bsd4-3
;;
m68*-sony-newsos3*)
machine=news opsys=bsd4-3
;;
mips-sony-bsd* | mips-sony-newsos4* )
machine=news-risc opsys=bsd4-3
;;
mips-sony-newsos* )
machine=news-risc opsys=newsos5
;;
## Stride
m68*-stride-sysv* )
machine=stride opsys=usg5-2
;;
## Suns
*-sun-sunos* | *-sun-bsd* | *-sun-solaris* | i[345]86-*-solaris2* | i[345]86-*-sunos5* )
case "${canonical}" in
m68*-sunos1* ) machine=sun1 ;;
m68*-sunos2* ) machine=sun2 ;;
m68* ) machine=sun3 ;;
i[345]86-sun-sunos[34]* ) machine=sun386 ;;
i[345]86-*-* ) machine=intel386 ;;
sparc* ) machine=sparc ;;
* ) unported=true ;;
esac
case "${canonical}" in
## The Sun386 didn't get past 4.0.
i[345]86-*-sunos4 ) opsys=sunos4-0 ;;
*-sunos4.0* ) opsys=sunos4-0 ;;
*-sunos4.1.3* ) opsys=sunos4-1-3
NON_GCC_TEST_OPTIONS=-Bstatic
GCC_TEST_OPTIONS=-static
;;
*-sunos4shr* ) opsys=sunos4shr ;;
*-sunos4* | *-sunos ) opsys=sunos4-1
NON_GCC_TEST_OPTIONS=-Bstatic
GCC_TEST_OPTIONS=-static
;;
*-sunos5.3* | *-solaris2.3* )
opsys=sol2-3
NON_GNU_CPP=/usr/ccs/lib/cpp
;;
*-sunos5.4* | *-solaris2.4* )
opsys=sol2-4
NON_GNU_CPP=/usr/ccs/lib/cpp
;;
*-sunos5* | *-solaris* )
opsys=sol2
NON_GNU_CPP=/usr/ccs/lib/cpp
;;
* ) opsys=bsd4-2 ;;
esac
;;
## Tadpole 68k
m68*-tadpole-sysv* )
machine=tad68k opsys=usg5-3
;;
## Tahoe machines
tahoe-tahoe-bsd4.2* )
machine=tahoe opsys=bsd4-2
;;
tahoe-tahoe-bsd4.3* )
machine=tahoe opsys=bsd4-3
;;
## Tandem Integrity S2
mips-tandem-sysv* )
machine=tandem-s2 opsys=usg5-3
;;
## Tektronix XD88
m88k-tektronix-sysv3* )
machine=tekxd88 opsys=usg5-3
;;
## Tektronix 16000 box (6130?)
ns16k-tektronix-bsd* )
machine=ns16000 opsys=bsd4-2
;;
## Tektronix 4300
## src/m/tek4300.h hints that this is a m68k machine.
m68*-tektronix-bsd* )
machine=tek4300 opsys=bsd4-3
;;
## Titan P2 or P3
## We seem to have lost the machine-description file titan.h!
titan-titan-sysv* )
machine=titan opsys=usg5-3
;;
## Ustation E30 (SS5E)
m68*-unisys-uniplus* )
machine=ustation opsystem=unipl5-2
;;
## Vaxen.
vax-dec-* )
machine=vax
case "${canonical}" in
*-bsd4.1* ) opsys=bsd4-1 ;;
*-bsd4.2* | *-ultrix[0-3].* | *-ultrix4.0* ) opsys=bsd4-2 ;;
*-bsd4.3* | *-ultrix* ) opsys=bsd4-3 ;;
*-bsd386* | *-bsdi* ) opsys=bsd386 ;;
*-sysv[01]* | *-sysvr[01]* ) opsys=usg5-0 ;;
*-sysv2* | *-sysvr2* ) opsys=usg5-2 ;;
*-vms* ) opsys=vms ;;
* ) unported=true
esac
;;
## Whitechapel MG1
ns16k-whitechapel-* )
machine=mg1
## We don't know what sort of OS runs on these; we'll let the
## operating system guessing code below try.
;;
## Wicat
m68*-wicat-sysv* )
machine=wicat opsys=usg5-2
;;
## Intel 386 machines where we don't care about the manufacturer
i[345]86-*-* )
machine=intel386
case "${canonical}" in
*-isc1.* | *-isc2.[01]* ) opsys=386-ix ;;
*-isc2.2* ) opsys=isc2-2 ;;
*-isc4.0* ) opsys=isc4-0 ;;
*-isc* ) opsys=isc3-0 ;;
*-esix5* ) opsys=esix5r4; NON_GNU_CPP=/usr/lib/cpp ;;
*-esix* ) opsys=esix ;;
*-xenix* ) opsys=xenix ;;
*-linux* ) opsys=linux ;;
*-sco3.2v4* ) opsys=sco4 ; NON_GNU_CPP=/lib/cpp ;;
*-bsd386* | *-bsdi* ) opsys=bsd386 ;;
*-386bsd* ) opsys=386bsd ;;
*-freebsd* ) opsys=freebsd ;;
*-nextstep* ) opsys=mach2 ;;
## Otherwise, we'll fall through to the generic opsys code at the bottom.
esac
;;
* )
unported=true
;;
esac
### If the code above didn't choose an operating system, just choose
### an operating system based on the configuration name. You really
### only want to use this when you have no idea what the right
### operating system is; if you know what operating systems a machine
### runs, it's cleaner to make it explicit in the case statement
### above.
if [ x"${opsys}" = x ]; then
case "${canonical}" in
*-gnu* ) opsys=gnu ;;
*-bsd4.[01] ) opsys=bsd4-1 ;;
*-bsd4.2 ) opsys=bsd4-2 ;;
*-bsd4.3 ) opsys=bsd4-3 ;;
*-sysv0 | *-sysvr0 ) opsys=usg5-0 ;;
*-sysv2 | *-sysvr2 ) opsys=usg5-2 ;;
*-sysv2.2 | *-sysvr2.2 ) opsys=usg5-2-2 ;;
*-sysv3 | *-sysvr3 ) opsys=usg5-3 ;;
*-sysv4 | *-sysvr4 ) opsys=usg5-4 ;;
*-sysv4.1 | *-sysvr4.1 )
NON_GNU_CPP=/usr/lib/cpp
opsys=usg5-4 ;;
*-sysv4.2 | *-sysvr4.2 ) opsys=usg5-4-2 ;;
* )
unported=true
;;
esac
fi
if $unported ; then
(echo "${progname}: Emacs hasn't been ported to \`${canonical}' systems."
echo "${progname}: Check \`etc/MACHINES' for recognized configuration names."
) >&2
exit 1
fi
machfile="m/${machine}.h"
opsysfile="s/${opsys}.h"
]
AC_PREPARE(lisp)
AC_CONFIG_HEADER(src/config.h)
[
#### Choose a compiler.
if [ "x$CC" = x ]
then true
else cc_specified=1
fi
case ${with_gcc} in
"yes" ) CC="gcc" GCC=1 ;;
"no" )
if [ "x$CC" = x ]
then CC=cc;
else true;
fi
;;
* )
] AC_PROG_CC [
esac
#### Some systems specify a CPP to use unless we are using GCC.
#### Now that we know whether we are using GCC, we can decide whether
#### to use that one.
if [ "x$NON_GNU_CPP" = x ] || [ x$GCC = x1 ] || [ "x$CPP" != x ]
then true
else
CPP="$NON_GNU_CPP"
fi
#### Some systems specify a CC to use unless we are using GCC.
#### Now that we know whether we are using GCC, we can decide whether
#### to use that one.
if [ "x$NON_GNU_CC" = x ] || [ x$GCC = x1 ] || [ x$cc_specified = x1 ]
then true
else
CC="$NON_GNU_CC"
fi
if [ x$GCC = x1 ] && [ "x$GCC_TEST_OPTIONS" != x ]
then
CC="$CC $GCC_TEST_OPTIONS"
fi
if [ x$GCC = x ] && [ "x$NON_GCC_TEST_OPTIONS" != x ]
then
CC="$CC $NON_GCC_TEST_OPTIONS"
fi
#### Some other nice autoconf tests. If you add a test here which
#### should make an entry in src/config.h, don't forget to add an
#### #undef clause to src/config.h.in for autoconf to modify.
]
dnl checks for programs
AC_LN_S
AC_PROG_CPP
AC_PROG_INSTALL
AC_PROG_YACC
dnl checks for UNIX variants that set `DEFS'
AC_AIX
dnl checks for header files
AC_HAVE_HEADERS(sys/timeb.h sys/time.h unistd.h utime.h)
AC_STDC_HEADERS
AC_TIME_WITH_SYS_TIME
dnl In Autoconf 1.8 use AC_SYS_SIGLIST_DECLARED instead of this.
AC_COMPILE_CHECK(sys_siglist declaration in signal.h or unistd.h,
[#include <signal.h>
/* NetBSD declares sys_siglist in <unistd.h>. */
#ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
#include <unistd.h>
#endif], [char *msg = *(sys_siglist + 1);],
AC_DEFINE(SYS_SIGLIST_DECLARED))
dnl Some systems have utime.h but don't declare the struct anyplace.
AC_COMPILE_CHECK(struct utimbuf, [#ifdef TIME_WITH_SYS_TIME
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <time.h>
#else
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_TIME_H
#include <sys/time.h>
#else
#include <time.h>
#endif
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_UTIME_H
#include <utime.h>
#endif], [static struct utimbuf x; x.actime = x.modtime;],
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_STRUCT_UTIMBUF))
dnl checks for typedefs
AC_RETSIGTYPE
AC_COMPILE_CHECK(struct timeval, [#ifdef TIME_WITH_SYS_TIME
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <time.h>
#else
#ifdef HAVE_SYS_TIME_H
#include <sys/time.h>
#else
#include <time.h>
#endif
#endif], [static struct timeval x; x.tv_sec = x.tv_usec;],
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_TIMEVAL))
dnl checks for structure members
AC_STRUCT_TM
AC_TIMEZONE
dnl checks for compiler characteristics
AC_CONST
dnl check for Make feature
AC_SET_MAKE
dnl checks for operating system services
AC_LONG_FILE_NAMES
dnl other checks for UNIX variants
[
#### Choose a window system.
echo "checking for specified window system"
window_system=''
case "${with_x}" in
yes )
window_system=${window_system}x11
;;
no )
window_system=${window_system}none
;;
esac
case "${window_system}" in
.* )
;;
* )
case "${with_x11}" in
yes )
window_system=x11
;;
no )
window_system=none
;;
esac
case "${with_x10}" in
yes )
window_system=x10
;;
no )
window_system=none
;;
esac
;;
esac
case "${window_system}" in
"none" | "x11" | "x10" ) ;;
"" )
# --x-includes or --x-libraries implies --with-x11.
if [ -n "${x_includes}" ] || [ -n "${x_libraries}" ]; then
window_system=x11
else
echo " No window system specified. Looking for X11."
# If the user didn't specify a window system and we found X11, use it.
if [ -r /usr/lib/libX11.a \
-o -d /usr/include/X11 \
-o -d /usr/X386/include \
-o -d ${x_includes}/X11 ]; then
window_system=x11
fi
fi
;;
* )
echo "Don't specify a window system more than once." >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
case "${window_system}" in
"" | "x11" )
### If the user hasn't specified where we should find X, try
### letting autoconf figure that out.
if [ -z "${x_includes}" ] && [ -z "${x_libraries}" ]; then
]
AC_FIND_X
[
fi
if [ -n "${x_includes}" ] || [ -n "${x_libraries}" ]; then
window_system=x11
fi
;;
esac
[ -z "${window_system}" ] && window_system=none
[ -n "${x_libraries}" ] && LD_SWITCH_X_SITE="-L${x_libraries}"
[ -n "${x_libraries}" ] && LD_SWITCH_X_SITE_AUX="-R${x_libraries}"
[ -n "${x_includes}" ] && C_SWITCH_X_SITE="-I${x_includes}"
if [ x"${x_includes}" = x ]; then
bitmapdir=/usr/include/X11/bitmaps;
else
bitmapdir="${x_includes}/bitmaps";
fi
# Avoid forcing the search of /usr/include before fixed include files.
if [ "$C_SWITCH_X_SITE" = "-I/usr/include" ]; then
C_SWITCH_X_SITE=" "
fi
case "${window_system}" in
x11 )
HAVE_X_WINDOWS=yes
HAVE_X11=yes
echo " Using X11."
case "${with_x_toolkit}" in
athena | lucid )
USE_X_TOOLKIT=LUCID
echo " Using Xt toolkit."
;;
motif )
USE_X_TOOLKIT=MOTIF
echo " Using Motif toolkit."
;;
open-look )
USE_X_TOOLKIT=OPEN_LOOK
echo " Using Open-Look toolkit."
;;
* )
USE_X_TOOLKIT=none
echo " Using Xlib directly."
;;
esac
;;
x10 )
HAVE_X_WINDOWS=yes
HAVE_X11=no
USE_X_TOOLKIT=none
echo " Using X10."
;;
none )
HAVE_X_WINDOWS=no
HAVE_X11=no
USE_X_TOOLKIT=none
echo " Using no window system."
;;
esac
X_TOOLKIT_TYPE=$USE_X_TOOLKIT
### If we're using X11, we should use the X menu package.
HAVE_X_MENU=no
case ${HAVE_X11} in
yes )
HAVE_X_MENU=yes
;;
esac
#### Extract some information from the operating system and machine files.
echo "examining the machine- and system-dependent files to find out"
echo " - which libraries the lib-src programs will want, and"
echo " - whether the GNU malloc routines are usable"
### First figure out CFLAGS (which we use for running the compiler here)
### and REAL_CFLAGS (which we use for real compilation).
### The two are the same except on a few systems, where they are made
### different to work around various lossages. For example,
### GCC 2.5 on Linux needs them to be different because it treats -g
### as implying static linking.
### If the CFLAGS env var is specified, we use that value
### instead of the default.
### It's not important that this name contain the PID; you can't run
### two configures in the same directory and have anything work
### anyway.
tempcname="conftest.c"
echo '
#include "'${srcdir}'/src/'${opsysfile}'"
#include "'${srcdir}'/src/'${machfile}'"
#ifndef LIBS_MACHINE
#define LIBS_MACHINE
#endif
#ifndef LIBS_SYSTEM
#define LIBS_SYSTEM
#endif
#ifndef C_SWITCH_SYSTEM
#define C_SWITCH_SYSTEM
#endif
#ifndef C_SWITCH_MACHINE
#define C_SWITCH_MACHINE
#endif
configure___ libsrc_libs=LIBS_MACHINE LIBS_SYSTEM
configure___ c_switch_system=C_SWITCH_SYSTEM
configure___ c_switch_machine=C_SWITCH_MACHINE
#ifndef LIB_X11_LIB
#define LIB_X11_LIB -lX11
#endif
#ifndef LIBX11_MACHINE
#define LIBX11_MACHINE
#endif
#ifndef LIBX11_SYSTEM
#define LIBX11_SYSTEM
#endif
configure___ LIBX=LIB_X11_LIB LIBX11_MACHINE LIBX11_SYSTEM
#ifdef UNEXEC
configure___ unexec=UNEXEC
#else
configure___ unexec=unexec.o
#endif
#ifdef SYSTEM_MALLOC
configure___ system_malloc=yes
#else
configure___ system_malloc=no
#endif
#ifndef C_DEBUG_SWITCH
#define C_DEBUG_SWITCH -g
#endif
#ifndef C_OPTIMIZE_SWITCH
#define C_OPTIMIZE_SWITCH -O
#endif
#ifdef THIS_IS_CONFIGURE
/* Get the CFLAGS for tests in configure. */
#ifdef __GNUC__
configure___ CFLAGS=C_DEBUG_SWITCH C_OPTIMIZE_SWITCH '${CFLAGS}'
#else
configure___ CFLAGS=C_DEBUG_SWITCH '${CFLAGS}'
#endif
#else /* not THIS_IS_CONFIGURE */
/* Get the CFLAGS for real compilation. */
#ifdef __GNUC__
configure___ REAL_CFLAGS=C_DEBUG_SWITCH C_OPTIMIZE_SWITCH '${CFLAGS}'
#else
configure___ REAL_CFLAGS=C_DEBUG_SWITCH '${CFLAGS}'
#endif
#endif /* not THIS_IS_CONFIGURE */
' > ${tempcname}
# The value of CPP is a quoted variable reference, so we need to do this
# to get its actual value...
CPP=`eval "echo $CPP"`
eval `${CPP} -Isrc ${tempcname} \
| grep 'configure___' \
| sed -e 's/^configure___ \([^=]*=\)\(.*\)$/\1"\2"/'`
if [ "x$CFLAGS" = x ]; then
eval `${CPP} -Isrc -DTHIS_IS_CONFIGURE ${tempcname} \
| grep 'configure___' \
| sed -e 's/^configure___ \([^=]*=\)\(.*\)$/\1"\2"/'`
else
REAL_CFLAGS="$CFLAGS"
fi
rm ${tempcname}
### Compute the unexec source name from the object name.
UNEXEC_SRC="`echo ${unexec} | sed 's/\.o/.c/'`"
# Do the opsystem or machine files prohibit the use of the GNU malloc?
# Assume not, until told otherwise.
GNU_MALLOC=yes
if [ "${system_malloc}" = "yes" ]; then
GNU_MALLOC=no
GNU_MALLOC_reason="
(The GNU allocators don't work with this system configuration.)"
fi
if [ x"${REL_ALLOC}" = x ]; then
REL_ALLOC=${GNU_MALLOC}
fi
LISP_FLOAT_TYPE=yes
#### Add the libraries to LIBS and check for some functions.
]
DEFS="$c_switch_system $c_switch_machine $DEFS"
LIBS="$libsrc_libs"
dnl If found, this defines HAVE_LIBDNET, which m/pmax.h checks,
dnl and also adds -ldnet to LIBS, which Autoconf uses for checks.
AC_HAVE_LIBRARY(-ldnet)
dnl This causes -lresolv to get used in subsequent tests,
dnl which causes failures on some systems such as HPUX 9.
dnl AC_HAVE_LIBRARY(-lresolv)
AC_HAVE_LIBRARY(-lXbsd, LD_SWITCH_X_SITE="$LD_SWITCH_X_SITE -lXbsd")
echo checking for XFree86
if test -d /usr/X386/include; then
HAVE_XFREE386=yes
test -z "${C_SWITCH_X_SITE}" && C_SWITCH_X_SITE="-I/usr/X386/include"
fi
# We change CFLAGS temporarily so that C_SWITCH_X_SITE gets used
# for the tests that follow.
if test "${HAVE_X11}" = "yes"; then
DEFS="$C_SWITCH_X_SITE $DEFS"
LIBS="$LD_SWITCH_X_SITE $LIBX $LIBS"
CFLAGS="$C_SWITCH_X_SITE $CFLAGS"
AC_HAVE_FUNCS(XrmSetDatabase XScreenResourceString \
XScreenNumberOfScreen XSetWMProtocols)
fi
if test "${USE_X_TOOLKIT}" != "none"; then
AC_COMPILE_CHECK(X11 toolkit version,
[#include <X11/Intrinsic.h>],
[
#if XtSpecificationRelease < 6
fail;
#endif
],
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_X11XTR6))
fi
# If netdb.h doesn't declare h_errno, we must declare it by hand.
AC_COMPILE_CHECK(declaration of h_errno in netdb.h,
[#include <netdb.h>],
[
int
foo ()
{
return h_errno;
}
],
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_H_ERRNO))
AC_ALLOCA
# logb and frexp are found in -lm on most systems.
AC_HAVE_LIBRARY(-lm)
AC_HAVE_FUNCS(gettimeofday gethostname dup2 rename closedir mkdir rmdir \
random lrand48 bcopy bcmp logb frexp fmod drem ftime res_init setsid \
strerror fpathconf select mktime eaccess getpagesize)
ok_so_far=true
AC_FUNC_CHECK(socket, , ok_so_far=)
if test -n "$ok_so_far"; then
AC_HEADER_CHECK(netinet/in.h, , ok_so_far=)
fi
if test -n "$ok_so_far"; then
AC_HEADER_CHECK(arpa/inet.h, , ok_so_far=)
fi
if test -n "$ok_so_far"; then
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_INET_SOCKETS)
fi
# Set up the CFLAGS for real compilation, so we can substitute it.
CFLAGS="$REAL_CFLAGS"
[
#### Find out which version of Emacs this is.
version=`grep 'defconst[ ]*emacs-version' ${srcdir}/lisp/version.el \
| sed -e 's/^[^"]*"\([^"]*\)".*$/\1/'`
if [ x"${version}" = x ]; then
echo "${progname}: can't find current emacs version in
\`${srcdir}/lisp/version.el'." >&2
exit 1
fi
if [ -f /usr/lpp/X11/bin/smt.exp ]; then
]
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_AIX_SMT_EXP)
[
fi
#### Specify what sort of things we'll be editing into Makefile and config.h.
### Use configuration here uncanonicalized to avoid exceeding size limits.
]
AC_SUBST(version)
AC_SUBST(configuration)
AC_SUBST(canonical)
AC_SUBST(srcdir)
AC_SUBST(prefix)
AC_SUBST(exec_prefix)
AC_SUBST(bindir)
AC_SUBST(datadir)
AC_SUBST(sharedstatedir)
AC_SUBST(libexecdir)
AC_SUBST(mandir)
AC_SUBST(infodir)
AC_SUBST(lispdir)
AC_SUBST(locallisppath)
AC_SUBST(lisppath)
AC_SUBST(etcdir)
AC_SUBST(lockdir)
AC_SUBST(archlibdir)
AC_SUBST(docdir)
AC_SUBST(bitmapdir)
AC_SUBST(c_switch_system)
AC_SUBST(c_switch_machine)
AC_SUBST(LD_SWITCH_X_SITE)
AC_SUBST(LD_SWITCH_X_SITE_AUX)
AC_SUBST(C_SWITCH_X_SITE)
AC_SUBST(CFLAGS)
AC_SUBST(X_TOOLKIT_TYPE)
AC_SUBST(machfile)
AC_SUBST(opsysfile)
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(EMACS_CONFIGURATION, "\"${canonical}\"")
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(EMACS_CONFIG_OPTIONS, "\"${config_options}\"")
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(config_machfile, "\"${machfile}\"")
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(config_opsysfile, "\"${opsysfile}\"")
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(LD_SWITCH_X_SITE, ${LD_SWITCH_X_SITE})
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(LD_SWITCH_X_SITE_AUX, ${LD_SWITCH_X_SITE_AUX})
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(C_SWITCH_X_SITE, ${C_SWITCH_X_SITE})
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(UNEXEC_SRC, ${UNEXEC_SRC})
[
if [ "${HAVE_X_WINDOWS}" = "yes" ] ; then
] AC_DEFINE(HAVE_X_WINDOWS) [
fi
if [ "${USE_X_TOOLKIT}" != "none" ] ; then
] AC_DEFINE(USE_X_TOOLKIT) [
fi
if [ "${HAVE_X11}" = "yes" ] ; then
] AC_DEFINE(HAVE_X11) [
fi
if [ "${HAVE_XFREE386}" = "yes" ] ; then
] AC_DEFINE(HAVE_XFREE386) [
fi
if [ "${HAVE_X_MENU}" = "yes" ] ; then
] AC_DEFINE(HAVE_X_MENU) [
fi
if [ "${GNU_MALLOC}" = "yes" ] ; then
] AC_DEFINE(GNU_MALLOC) [
fi
if [ "${REL_ALLOC}" = "yes" ] ; then
] AC_DEFINE(REL_ALLOC) [
fi
if [ "${LISP_FLOAT_TYPE}" = "yes" ] ; then
] AC_DEFINE(LISP_FLOAT_TYPE) [
fi
# ====================== Developer's configuration =======================
# The following assignments make sense if you're running Emacs on a single
# machine, one version at a time, and you want changes to the lisp and etc
# directories in the source tree to show up immediately in your working
# environment. It saves a great deal of disk space by not duplicating the
# lisp and etc directories.
if [ "$run_in_place" = "1" ]; then
lispdir='${srcdir}/lisp'
locallisppath='${srcdir}/site-lisp'
etcdir='${srcdir}/etc'
lockdir='${srcdir}/lock'
# We used to make archlibdir and docdir absolute,
# but that caused trouble with automounters.
archlibdir='${srcdir}/lib-src'
docdir='${srcdir}/etc'
infodir='${srcdir}/info'
elif [ "$single_tree" = "1" ]; then
if [ "$exec_prefix_specified" = "" ]; then
exec_prefix='${prefix}'
fi
if [ "$bindir_specified" = "" ]; then
bindir='${exec_prefix}/bin/${configuration}'
fi
if [ "$datadir_specified" = "" ]; then
datadir='${prefix}/common'
fi
if [ "$sharedstatedir_specified" = "" ]; then
sharedstatedir='${prefix}/common'
fi
if [ "$libexecdir_specified" = "" ]; then
libexecdir='${bindir}'
fi
if [ "$lispdir_specified" = "" ]; then
lispdir='${prefix}/common/lisp'
fi
if [ "$locallisppath_specified" = "" ]; then
locallisppath='${prefix}/common/site-lisp'
fi
if [ "$lockdir_specified" = "" ]; then
lockdir='${prefix}/common/lock'
fi
if [ "$archlibdir_specified" = "" ]; then
archlibdir='${libexecdir}/etc'
fi
if [ "$etcdir_specified" = "" ]; then
etcdir='${prefix}/common/data'
fi
if [ "$docdir_specified" = "" ]; then
docdir='${prefix}/common/data'
fi
fi
#### Report on what we decided to do.
echo "
Configured for \`${canonical}'.
Where should the build process find the source code? ${srcdir}
What operating system and machine description files should Emacs use?
\`${opsysfile}' and \`${machfile}'
What compiler should emacs be built with? ${CC} ${CFLAGS}
Should Emacs use the GNU version of malloc? ${GNU_MALLOC}${GNU_MALLOC_reason}
Should Emacs use the relocating allocator for buffers? ${REL_ALLOC}
What window system should Emacs use? ${window_system}
What toolkit should Emacs use? ${USE_X_TOOLKIT}${x_includes+
Where do we find X Windows header files? }${x_includes}${x_libraries+
Where do we find X Windows libraries? }${x_libraries}
"
# Remove any trailing slashes in these variables.
test -n "${prefix}" &&
prefix=`echo "${prefix}" | sed 's,\([^/]\)/*$,\1,'`
test -n "${exec_prefix}" &&
exec_prefix=`echo "${exec_prefix}" | sed 's,\([^/]\)/*$,\1,'`
]
AC_OUTPUT(Makefile lib-src/Makefile.in oldXMenu/Makefile lwlib/Makefile src/Makefile.in, [
# Build src/Makefile from ${srcdir}/src/Makefile.in. This must be done
# after src/config.h is built, since we rely on that file.
changequote(,)dnl The horror, the horror.
# Now get this: Some word that is part of the ${srcdir} directory name
# or the ${configuration} value might, just might, happen to be an
# identifier like `sun4' or `i386' or something, and be predefined by
# the C preprocessor to some helpful value like 1, or maybe the empty
# string. Needless to say consequent macro substitutions are less
# than conducive to the makefile finding the correct directory.
undefs="`echo $top_srcdir $configuration $canonical |
sed -e 's/[^a-zA-Z0-9_]/ /g' -e 's/^/ /' -e 's/ *$//' \
-e 's/ */ -U/g' -e 's/-U[0-9][^ ]*//g' \
`"
changequote([,])dnl
echo creating lib-src/Makefile
( cd lib-src
rm -f junk.c junk1.c junk2.c
sed -e '/start of cpp stuff/q' \
< Makefile.in > junk1.c
sed -e '1,/start of cpp stuff/d'\
-e 's@/\*\*/#\(.*\)$@/* \1 */@' \
< Makefile.in > junk.c
$CPP $undefs -I. -I$top_srcdir/src $CPPFLAGS junk.c | \
sed -e 's/^ / /' -e '/^#/d' -e '/^[ ]*$/d' > junk2.c
cat junk1.c junk2.c > Makefile.new
rm -f junk.c junk1.c junk2.c
chmod 444 Makefile.new
mv -f Makefile.new Makefile
)
echo creating src/Makefile
( cd src
rm -f junk.c junk1.c junk2.c
sed -e '/start of cpp stuff/q' \
< Makefile.in > junk1.c
sed -e '1,/start of cpp stuff/d'\
-e 's@/\*\*/#\(.*\)$@/* \1 */@' \
< Makefile.in > junk.c
$CPP $undefs -I. -I$top_srcdir/src $CPPFLAGS junk.c | \
sed -e 's/^ / /' -e '/^#/d' -e '/^[ ]*$/d' > junk2.c
cat junk1.c junk2.c > Makefile.new
rm -f junk.c junk1.c junk2.c
chmod 444 Makefile.new
mv -f Makefile.new Makefile
)])