57e22627f9
Update libpcap from 1.9.0 to 1.9.1. MFC after: 2 weeks
1080 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
1080 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
dnl Copyright (c) 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998
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dnl The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
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dnl
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dnl Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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dnl modification, are permitted provided that: (1) source code distributions
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dnl retain the above copyright notice and this paragraph in its entirety, (2)
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dnl distributions including binary code include the above copyright notice and
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dnl this paragraph in its entirety in the documentation or other materials
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dnl provided with the distribution, and (3) all advertising materials mentioning
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dnl features or use of this software display the following acknowledgement:
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dnl ``This product includes software developed by the University of California,
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dnl Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and its contributors.'' Neither the name of
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dnl the University nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse
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dnl or promote products derived from this software without specific prior
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dnl written permission.
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dnl THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
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dnl WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
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dnl MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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dnl
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dnl LBL autoconf macros
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dnl
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dnl
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dnl Do whatever AC_LBL_C_INIT work is necessary before using AC_PROG_CC.
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dnl
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dnl It appears that newer versions of autoconf (2.64 and later) will,
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dnl if you use AC_TRY_COMPILE in a macro, stick AC_PROG_CC at the
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dnl beginning of the macro, even if the macro itself calls AC_PROG_CC.
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dnl See the "Prerequisite Macros" and "Expanded Before Required" sections
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dnl in the Autoconf documentation.
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dnl
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dnl This causes a steaming heap of fail in our case, as we were, in
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dnl AC_LBL_C_INIT, doing the tests we now do in AC_LBL_C_INIT_BEFORE_CC,
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dnl calling AC_PROG_CC, and then doing the tests we now do in
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dnl AC_LBL_C_INIT. Now, we run AC_LBL_C_INIT_BEFORE_CC, AC_PROG_CC,
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dnl and AC_LBL_C_INIT at the top level.
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dnl
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AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_C_INIT_BEFORE_CC,
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[
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AC_BEFORE([$0], [AC_LBL_C_INIT])
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AC_BEFORE([$0], [AC_PROG_CC])
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AC_BEFORE([$0], [AC_LBL_FIXINCLUDES])
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AC_BEFORE([$0], [AC_LBL_DEVEL])
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AC_ARG_WITH(gcc, [ --without-gcc don't use gcc])
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$1=""
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if test "${srcdir}" != "." ; then
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$1="-I\$(srcdir)"
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fi
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if test "${CFLAGS+set}" = set; then
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LBL_CFLAGS="$CFLAGS"
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fi
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if test -z "$CC" ; then
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case "$host_os" in
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bsdi*)
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AC_CHECK_PROG(SHLICC2, shlicc2, yes, no)
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if test $SHLICC2 = yes ; then
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CC=shlicc2
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export CC
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fi
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;;
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esac
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fi
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if test -z "$CC" -a "$with_gcc" = no ; then
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CC=cc
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export CC
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fi
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])
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dnl
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dnl Determine which compiler we're using (cc or gcc)
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dnl If using gcc, determine the version number
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dnl If using cc:
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dnl require that it support ansi prototypes
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dnl use -O (AC_PROG_CC will use -g -O2 on gcc, so we don't need to
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dnl do that ourselves for gcc)
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dnl add -g flags, as appropriate
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dnl explicitly specify /usr/local/include
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dnl
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dnl NOTE WELL: with newer versions of autoconf, "gcc" means any compiler
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dnl that defines __GNUC__, which means clang, for example, counts as "gcc".
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dnl
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dnl usage:
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dnl
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dnl AC_LBL_C_INIT(copt, incls)
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dnl
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dnl results:
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dnl
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dnl $1 (copt set)
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dnl $2 (incls set)
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dnl CC
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dnl LDFLAGS
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dnl LBL_CFLAGS
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dnl
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AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_C_INIT,
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[
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AC_BEFORE([$0], [AC_LBL_FIXINCLUDES])
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AC_BEFORE([$0], [AC_LBL_DEVEL])
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AC_BEFORE([$0], [AC_LBL_SHLIBS_INIT])
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if test "$GCC" = yes ; then
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#
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# -Werror forces warnings to be errors.
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#
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ac_lbl_cc_force_warning_errors=-Werror
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#
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# Try to have the compiler default to hiding symbols,
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# so that only symbols explicitly exported with
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# PCAP_API will be visible outside (shared) libraries.
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#
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AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -fvisibility=hidden)
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else
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$2="$$2 -I/usr/local/include"
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LDFLAGS="$LDFLAGS -L/usr/local/lib"
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case "$host_os" in
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darwin*)
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#
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# This is assumed either to be GCC or clang, both
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# of which use -Werror to force warnings to be errors.
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#
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ac_lbl_cc_force_warning_errors=-Werror
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#
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# Try to have the compiler default to hiding symbols,
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# so that only symbols explicitly exported with
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# PCAP_API will be visible outside (shared) libraries.
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#
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AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -fvisibility=hidden)
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;;
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hpux*)
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#
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# HP C, which is what we presume we're using, doesn't
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# exit with a non-zero exit status if we hand it an
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# invalid -W flag, can't be forced to do so even with
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# +We, and doesn't handle GCC-style -W flags, so we
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# don't want to try using GCC-style -W flags.
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#
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ac_lbl_cc_dont_try_gcc_dashW=yes
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;;
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irix*)
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#
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# MIPS C, which is what we presume we're using, doesn't
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# necessarily exit with a non-zero exit status if we
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# hand it an invalid -W flag, can't be forced to do
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# so, and doesn't handle GCC-style -W flags, so we
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# don't want to try using GCC-style -W flags.
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#
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ac_lbl_cc_dont_try_gcc_dashW=yes
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#
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# It also, apparently, defaults to "char" being
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# unsigned, unlike most other C implementations;
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# I suppose we could say "signed char" whenever
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# we want to guarantee a signed "char", but let's
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# just force signed chars.
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#
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# -xansi is normally the default, but the
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# configure script was setting it; perhaps -cckr
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# was the default in the Old Days. (Then again,
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# that would probably be for backwards compatibility
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# in the days when ANSI C was Shiny and New, i.e.
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# 1989 and the early '90's, so maybe we can just
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# drop support for those compilers.)
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#
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# -g is equivalent to -g2, which turns off
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# optimization; we choose -g3, which generates
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# debugging information but doesn't turn off
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# optimization (even if the optimization would
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# cause inaccuracies in debugging).
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#
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$1="$$1 -xansi -signed -g3"
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;;
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osf*)
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#
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# Presumed to be DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX, or
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# Tru64 UNIX.
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#
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# The DEC C compiler, which is what we presume we're
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# using, doesn't exit with a non-zero exit status if we
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# hand it an invalid -W flag, can't be forced to do
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# so, and doesn't handle GCC-style -W flags, so we
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# don't want to try using GCC-style -W flags.
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#
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ac_lbl_cc_dont_try_gcc_dashW=yes
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#
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# -g is equivalent to -g2, which turns off
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# optimization; we choose -g3, which generates
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# debugging information but doesn't turn off
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# optimization (even if the optimization would
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# cause inaccuracies in debugging).
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#
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$1="$$1 -g3"
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;;
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solaris*)
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#
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# Assumed to be Sun C, which requires -errwarn to force
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# warnings to be treated as errors.
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#
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ac_lbl_cc_force_warning_errors=-errwarn
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#
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# Try to have the compiler default to hiding symbols,
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# so that only symbols explicitly exported with
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# PCAP_API will be visible outside (shared) libraries.
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#
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AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -xldscope=hidden)
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;;
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ultrix*)
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AC_MSG_CHECKING(that Ultrix $CC hacks const in prototypes)
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AC_CACHE_VAL(ac_cv_lbl_cc_const_proto,
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AC_TRY_COMPILE(
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[#include <sys/types.h>],
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[struct a { int b; };
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void c(const struct a *)],
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ac_cv_lbl_cc_const_proto=yes,
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ac_cv_lbl_cc_const_proto=no))
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AC_MSG_RESULT($ac_cv_lbl_cc_const_proto)
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if test $ac_cv_lbl_cc_const_proto = no ; then
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AC_DEFINE(const,[],
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[to handle Ultrix compilers that don't support const in prototypes])
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fi
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;;
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esac
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$1="$$1 -O"
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fi
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])
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dnl
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dnl Check whether, if you pass an unknown warning option to the
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dnl compiler, it fails or just prints a warning message and succeeds.
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dnl Set ac_lbl_unknown_warning_option_error to the appropriate flag
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dnl to force an error if it would otherwise just print a warning message
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dnl and succeed.
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dnl
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AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_CHECK_UNKNOWN_WARNING_OPTION_ERROR,
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[
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AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether the compiler fails when given an unknown warning option])
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save_CFLAGS="$CFLAGS"
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CFLAGS="$CFLAGS -Wxyzzy-this-will-never-succeed-xyzzy"
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AC_TRY_COMPILE(
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[],
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[return 0],
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[
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AC_MSG_RESULT([no])
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#
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# We're assuming this is clang, where
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# -Werror=unknown-warning-option is the appropriate
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# option to force the compiler to fail.
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#
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ac_lbl_unknown_warning_option_error="-Werror=unknown-warning-option"
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],
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[
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AC_MSG_RESULT([yes])
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])
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CFLAGS="$save_CFLAGS"
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])
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dnl
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dnl Check whether the compiler option specified as the second argument
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dnl is supported by the compiler and, if so, add it to the macro
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dnl specified as the first argument
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dnl
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dnl If a third argument is supplied, treat it as C code to be compiled
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dnl with the flag in question, and the "treat warnings as errors" flag
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dnl set, and don't add the flag to the first argument if the compile
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dnl fails; this is for warning options cause problems that can't be
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dnl worked around. If a third argument is supplied, a fourth argument
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dnl should also be supplied; it's a message desribing what the test
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dnl program is checking.
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dnl
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AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT,
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[
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AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether the compiler supports the $2 option])
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save_CFLAGS="$CFLAGS"
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if expr "x$2" : "x-W.*" >/dev/null
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then
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CFLAGS="$CFLAGS $ac_lbl_unknown_warning_option_error $2"
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elif expr "x$2" : "x-f.*" >/dev/null
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then
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CFLAGS="$CFLAGS -Werror $2"
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elif expr "x$2" : "x-m.*" >/dev/null
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then
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CFLAGS="$CFLAGS -Werror $2"
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else
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CFLAGS="$CFLAGS $2"
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fi
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AC_TRY_COMPILE(
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[],
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[return 0],
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[
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AC_MSG_RESULT([yes])
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can_add_to_cflags=yes
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#
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# The compile supports this; do we have some C code for
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# which the warning should *not* appear?
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# We test the fourth argument because the third argument
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# could contain quotes, breaking the test.
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#
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if test "x$4" != "x"
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then
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CFLAGS="$CFLAGS $ac_lbl_cc_force_warning_errors"
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AC_MSG_CHECKING(whether $2 $4)
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AC_COMPILE_IFELSE(
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[AC_LANG_SOURCE($3)],
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[
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#
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# Not a problem.
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#
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AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
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],
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[
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#
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# A problem.
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#
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AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
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can_add_to_cflags=no
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])
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fi
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CFLAGS="$save_CFLAGS"
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if test x"$can_add_to_cflags" = "xyes"
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then
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$1="$$1 $2"
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fi
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],
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[
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AC_MSG_RESULT([no])
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CFLAGS="$save_CFLAGS"
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])
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])
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dnl
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dnl Check whether the compiler supports an option to generate
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dnl Makefile-style dependency lines
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dnl
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dnl GCC uses -M for this. Non-GCC compilers that support this
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dnl use a variety of flags, including but not limited to -M.
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dnl
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dnl We test whether the flag in question is supported, as older
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dnl versions of compilers might not support it.
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dnl
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dnl We don't try all the possible flags, just in case some flag means
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dnl "generate dependencies" on one compiler but means something else
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dnl on another compiler.
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dnl
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dnl Most compilers that support this send the output to the standard
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dnl output by default. IBM's XLC, however, supports -M but sends
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dnl the output to {sourcefile-basename}.u, and AIX has no /dev/stdout
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dnl to work around that, so we don't bother with XLC.
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dnl
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AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_CHECK_DEPENDENCY_GENERATION_OPT,
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[
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AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether the compiler supports generating dependencies])
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if test "$GCC" = yes ; then
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#
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# GCC, or a compiler deemed to be GCC by AC_PROG_CC (even
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# though it's not); we assume that, in this case, the flag
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# would be -M.
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#
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ac_lbl_dependency_flag="-M"
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else
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#
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# Not GCC or a compiler deemed to be GCC; what platform is
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# this? (We're assuming that if the compiler isn't GCC
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# it's the compiler from the vendor of the OS; that won't
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# necessarily be true for x86 platforms, where it might be
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# the Intel C compiler.)
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#
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case "$host_os" in
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irix*|osf*|darwin*)
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#
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# MIPS C for IRIX, DEC C, and clang all use -M.
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#
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ac_lbl_dependency_flag="-M"
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;;
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solaris*)
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#
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# Sun C uses -xM.
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#
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ac_lbl_dependency_flag="-xM"
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;;
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hpux*)
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#
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# HP's older C compilers don't support this.
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# HP's newer C compilers support this with
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# either +M or +Make; the older compilers
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# interpret +M as something completely
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# different, so we use +Make so we don't
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# think it works with the older compilers.
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#
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ac_lbl_dependency_flag="+Make"
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;;
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*)
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#
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# Not one of the above; assume no support for
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# generating dependencies.
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#
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ac_lbl_dependency_flag=""
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;;
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esac
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fi
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|
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#
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# Is ac_lbl_dependency_flag defined and, if so, does the compiler
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# complain about it?
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#
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# Note: clang doesn't seem to exit with an error status when handed
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# an unknown non-warning error, even if you pass it
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# -Werror=unknown-warning-option. However, it always supports
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# -M, so the fact that this test always succeeds with clang
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# isn't an issue.
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#
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if test ! -z "$ac_lbl_dependency_flag"; then
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AC_LANG_CONFTEST(
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[AC_LANG_SOURCE([[int main(void) { return 0; }]])])
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if AC_RUN_LOG([eval "$CC $ac_lbl_dependency_flag conftest.c >/dev/null 2>&1"]); then
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AC_MSG_RESULT([yes, with $ac_lbl_dependency_flag])
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DEPENDENCY_CFLAG="$ac_lbl_dependency_flag"
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MKDEP='${srcdir}/mkdep'
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else
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AC_MSG_RESULT([no])
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#
|
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# We can't run mkdep, so have "make depend" do
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# nothing.
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#
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MKDEP='${srcdir}/nomkdep'
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fi
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rm -rf conftest*
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else
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AC_MSG_RESULT([no])
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#
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# We can't run mkdep, so have "make depend" do
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# nothing.
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#
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MKDEP='${srcdir}/nomkdep'
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fi
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AC_SUBST(DEPENDENCY_CFLAG)
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AC_SUBST(MKDEP)
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])
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dnl
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dnl Determine what options are needed to build a shared library
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dnl
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dnl usage:
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dnl
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dnl AC_LBL_SHLIBS_INIT
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dnl
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dnl results:
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dnl
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dnl V_SHLIB_CCOPT (modified to build position-independent code)
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dnl V_SHLIB_CMD
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dnl V_SHLIB_OPT
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dnl V_SONAME_OPT
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dnl V_RPATH_OPT
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dnl
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AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_SHLIBS_INIT,
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[AC_PREREQ(2.50)
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if test "$GCC" = yes ; then
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#
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# On platforms where we build a shared library:
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#
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# add options to generate position-independent code,
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# if necessary (it's the default in AIX and Darwin/macOS);
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#
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# define option to set the soname of the shared library,
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# if the OS supports that;
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#
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# add options to specify, at link time, a directory to
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# add to the run-time search path, if that's necessary.
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#
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V_SHLIB_CMD="\$(CC)"
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V_SHLIB_OPT="-shared"
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case "$host_os" in
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aix*)
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;;
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freebsd*|netbsd*|openbsd*|dragonfly*|linux*|osf*|midipix*)
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#
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# Platforms where the linker is the GNU linker
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# or accepts command-line arguments like
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# those the GNU linker accepts.
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#
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# Some instruction sets require -fPIC on some
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# operating systems. Check for them. If you
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# have a combination that requires it, add it
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# here.
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#
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PIC_OPT=-fpic
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case "$host_cpu" in
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sparc64*)
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case "$host_os" in
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freebsd*|openbsd*|linux*)
|
|
PIC_OPT=-fPIC
|
|
;;
|
|
esac
|
|
;;
|
|
esac
|
|
V_SHLIB_CCOPT="$V_SHLIB_CCOPT $PIC_OPT"
|
|
V_SONAME_OPT="-Wl,-soname,"
|
|
V_RPATH_OPT="-Wl,-rpath,"
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
hpux*)
|
|
V_SHLIB_CCOPT="$V_SHLIB_CCOPT -fpic"
|
|
#
|
|
# XXX - this assumes GCC is using the HP linker,
|
|
# rather than the GNU linker, and that the "+h"
|
|
# option is used on all HP-UX platforms, both .sl
|
|
# and .so.
|
|
#
|
|
V_SONAME_OPT="-Wl,+h,"
|
|
#
|
|
# By default, directories specifed with -L
|
|
# are added to the run-time search path, so
|
|
# we don't add them in pcap-config.
|
|
#
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
solaris*)
|
|
V_SHLIB_CCOPT="$V_SHLIB_CCOPT -fpic"
|
|
#
|
|
# XXX - this assumes GCC is using the Sun linker,
|
|
# rather than the GNU linker.
|
|
#
|
|
V_SONAME_OPT="-Wl,-h,"
|
|
V_RPATH_OPT="-Wl,-R,"
|
|
;;
|
|
esac
|
|
else
|
|
#
|
|
# Set the appropriate compiler flags and, on platforms
|
|
# where we build a shared library:
|
|
#
|
|
# add options to generate position-independent code,
|
|
# if necessary (it's the default in Darwin/macOS);
|
|
#
|
|
# if we generate ".so" shared libraries, define the
|
|
# appropriate options for building the shared library;
|
|
#
|
|
# add options to specify, at link time, a directory to
|
|
# add to the run-time search path, if that's necessary.
|
|
#
|
|
# Note: spaces after V_SONAME_OPT are significant; on
|
|
# some platforms the soname is passed with a GCC-like
|
|
# "-Wl,-soname,{soname}" option, with the soname part
|
|
# of the option, while on other platforms the C compiler
|
|
# driver takes it as a regular option with the soname
|
|
# following the option. The same applies to V_RPATH_OPT.
|
|
#
|
|
case "$host_os" in
|
|
|
|
aix*)
|
|
V_SHLIB_CMD="\$(CC)"
|
|
V_SHLIB_OPT="-G -bnoentry -bexpall"
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
freebsd*|netbsd*|openbsd*|dragonfly*|linux*)
|
|
#
|
|
# "cc" is GCC.
|
|
#
|
|
V_SHLIB_CCOPT="$V_SHLIB_CCOPT -fpic"
|
|
V_SHLIB_CMD="\$(CC)"
|
|
V_SHLIB_OPT="-shared"
|
|
V_SONAME_OPT="-Wl,-soname,"
|
|
V_RPATH_OPT="-Wl,-rpath,"
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
hpux*)
|
|
V_SHLIB_CCOPT="$V_SHLIB_CCOPT +z"
|
|
V_SHLIB_CMD="\$(LD)"
|
|
V_SHLIB_OPT="-b"
|
|
V_SONAME_OPT="+h "
|
|
#
|
|
# By default, directories specifed with -L
|
|
# are added to the run-time search path, so
|
|
# we don't add them in pcap-config.
|
|
#
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
osf*)
|
|
#
|
|
# Presumed to be DEC OSF/1, Digital UNIX, or
|
|
# Tru64 UNIX.
|
|
#
|
|
V_SHLIB_CMD="\$(CC)"
|
|
V_SHLIB_OPT="-shared"
|
|
V_SONAME_OPT="-soname "
|
|
V_RPATH_OPT="-rpath "
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
solaris*)
|
|
V_SHLIB_CCOPT="$V_SHLIB_CCOPT -Kpic"
|
|
V_SHLIB_CMD="\$(CC)"
|
|
V_SHLIB_OPT="-G"
|
|
V_SONAME_OPT="-h "
|
|
V_RPATH_OPT="-R"
|
|
;;
|
|
esac
|
|
fi
|
|
])
|
|
|
|
#
|
|
# Try compiling a sample of the type of code that appears in
|
|
# gencode.c with "inline", "__inline__", and "__inline".
|
|
#
|
|
# Autoconf's AC_C_INLINE, at least in autoconf 2.13, isn't good enough,
|
|
# as it just tests whether a function returning "int" can be inlined;
|
|
# at least some versions of HP's C compiler can inline that, but can't
|
|
# inline a function that returns a struct pointer.
|
|
#
|
|
# Make sure we use the V_CCOPT flags, because some of those might
|
|
# disable inlining.
|
|
#
|
|
AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_C_INLINE,
|
|
[AC_MSG_CHECKING(for inline)
|
|
save_CFLAGS="$CFLAGS"
|
|
CFLAGS="$V_CCOPT"
|
|
AC_CACHE_VAL(ac_cv_lbl_inline, [
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_inline=""
|
|
ac_lbl_cc_inline=no
|
|
for ac_lbl_inline in inline __inline__ __inline
|
|
do
|
|
AC_TRY_COMPILE(
|
|
[#define inline $ac_lbl_inline
|
|
static inline struct iltest *foo(void);
|
|
struct iltest {
|
|
int iltest1;
|
|
int iltest2;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
static inline struct iltest *
|
|
foo()
|
|
{
|
|
static struct iltest xxx;
|
|
|
|
return &xxx;
|
|
}],,ac_lbl_cc_inline=yes,)
|
|
if test "$ac_lbl_cc_inline" = yes ; then
|
|
break;
|
|
fi
|
|
done
|
|
if test "$ac_lbl_cc_inline" = yes ; then
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_inline=$ac_lbl_inline
|
|
fi])
|
|
CFLAGS="$save_CFLAGS"
|
|
if test ! -z "$ac_cv_lbl_inline" ; then
|
|
AC_MSG_RESULT($ac_cv_lbl_inline)
|
|
else
|
|
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
|
|
fi
|
|
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(inline, $ac_cv_lbl_inline, [Define as token for inline if inlining supported])])
|
|
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl If using gcc, make sure we have ANSI ioctl definitions
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl usage:
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl AC_LBL_FIXINCLUDES
|
|
dnl
|
|
AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_FIXINCLUDES,
|
|
[if test "$GCC" = yes ; then
|
|
AC_MSG_CHECKING(for ANSI ioctl definitions)
|
|
AC_CACHE_VAL(ac_cv_lbl_gcc_fixincludes,
|
|
AC_TRY_COMPILE(
|
|
[/*
|
|
* This generates a "duplicate case value" when fixincludes
|
|
* has not be run.
|
|
*/
|
|
# include <sys/types.h>
|
|
# include <sys/time.h>
|
|
# include <sys/ioctl.h>
|
|
# ifdef HAVE_SYS_IOCCOM_H
|
|
# include <sys/ioccom.h>
|
|
# endif],
|
|
[switch (0) {
|
|
case _IO('A', 1):;
|
|
case _IO('B', 1):;
|
|
}],
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_gcc_fixincludes=yes,
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_gcc_fixincludes=no))
|
|
AC_MSG_RESULT($ac_cv_lbl_gcc_fixincludes)
|
|
if test $ac_cv_lbl_gcc_fixincludes = no ; then
|
|
# Don't cache failure
|
|
unset ac_cv_lbl_gcc_fixincludes
|
|
AC_MSG_ERROR(see the INSTALL for more info)
|
|
fi
|
|
fi])
|
|
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl Checks to see if union wait is used with WEXITSTATUS()
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl usage:
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl AC_LBL_UNION_WAIT
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl results:
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl DECLWAITSTATUS (defined)
|
|
dnl
|
|
AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_UNION_WAIT,
|
|
[AC_MSG_CHECKING(if union wait is used)
|
|
AC_CACHE_VAL(ac_cv_lbl_union_wait,
|
|
AC_TRY_COMPILE([
|
|
# include <sys/types.h>
|
|
# include <sys/wait.h>],
|
|
[int status;
|
|
u_int i = WEXITSTATUS(status);
|
|
u_int j = waitpid(0, &status, 0);],
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_union_wait=no,
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_union_wait=yes))
|
|
AC_MSG_RESULT($ac_cv_lbl_union_wait)
|
|
if test $ac_cv_lbl_union_wait = yes ; then
|
|
AC_DEFINE(DECLWAITSTATUS,union wait,[type for wait])
|
|
else
|
|
AC_DEFINE(DECLWAITSTATUS,int,[type for wait])
|
|
fi])
|
|
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl Checks to see if -R is used
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl usage:
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl AC_LBL_HAVE_RUN_PATH
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl results:
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl ac_cv_lbl_have_run_path (yes or no)
|
|
dnl
|
|
AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_HAVE_RUN_PATH,
|
|
[AC_MSG_CHECKING(for ${CC-cc} -R)
|
|
AC_CACHE_VAL(ac_cv_lbl_have_run_path,
|
|
[echo 'main(){}' > conftest.c
|
|
${CC-cc} -o conftest conftest.c -R/a1/b2/c3 >conftest.out 2>&1
|
|
if test ! -s conftest.out ; then
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_have_run_path=yes
|
|
else
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_have_run_path=no
|
|
fi
|
|
rm -f -r conftest*])
|
|
AC_MSG_RESULT($ac_cv_lbl_have_run_path)
|
|
])
|
|
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl Checks to see if unaligned memory accesses fail
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl usage:
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl AC_LBL_UNALIGNED_ACCESS
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl results:
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl LBL_ALIGN (DEFINED)
|
|
dnl
|
|
AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_UNALIGNED_ACCESS,
|
|
[AC_MSG_CHECKING(if unaligned accesses fail)
|
|
AC_CACHE_VAL(ac_cv_lbl_unaligned_fail,
|
|
[case "$host_cpu" in
|
|
|
|
#
|
|
# These are CPU types where:
|
|
#
|
|
# the CPU faults on an unaligned access, but at least some
|
|
# OSes that support that CPU catch the fault and simulate
|
|
# the unaligned access (e.g., Alpha/{Digital,Tru64} UNIX) -
|
|
# the simulation is slow, so we don't want to use it;
|
|
#
|
|
# the CPU, I infer (from the old
|
|
#
|
|
# XXX: should also check that they don't do weird things (like on arm)
|
|
#
|
|
# comment) doesn't fault on unaligned accesses, but doesn't
|
|
# do a normal unaligned fetch, either (e.g., presumably, ARM);
|
|
#
|
|
# for whatever reason, the test program doesn't work
|
|
# (this has been claimed to be the case for several of those
|
|
# CPUs - I don't know what the problem is; the problem
|
|
# was reported as "the test program dumps core" for SuperH,
|
|
# but that's what the test program is *supposed* to do -
|
|
# it dumps core before it writes anything, so the test
|
|
# for an empty output file should find an empty output
|
|
# file and conclude that unaligned accesses don't work).
|
|
#
|
|
# This run-time test won't work if you're cross-compiling, so
|
|
# in order to support cross-compiling for a particular CPU,
|
|
# we have to wire in the list of CPU types anyway, as far as
|
|
# I know, so perhaps we should just have a set of CPUs on
|
|
# which we know it doesn't work, a set of CPUs on which we
|
|
# know it does work, and have the script just fail on other
|
|
# cpu types and update it when such a failure occurs.
|
|
#
|
|
alpha*|arm*|bfin*|hp*|mips*|sh*|sparc*|ia64|nv1)
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_unaligned_fail=yes
|
|
;;
|
|
|
|
*)
|
|
cat >conftest.c <<EOF
|
|
# include <sys/types.h>
|
|
# include <sys/wait.h>
|
|
# include <stdio.h>
|
|
unsigned char a[[5]] = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
|
|
main() {
|
|
unsigned int i;
|
|
pid_t pid;
|
|
int status;
|
|
/* avoid "core dumped" message */
|
|
pid = fork();
|
|
if (pid < 0)
|
|
exit(2);
|
|
if (pid > 0) {
|
|
/* parent */
|
|
pid = waitpid(pid, &status, 0);
|
|
if (pid < 0)
|
|
exit(3);
|
|
exit(!WIFEXITED(status));
|
|
}
|
|
/* child */
|
|
i = *(unsigned int *)&a[[1]];
|
|
printf("%d\n", i);
|
|
exit(0);
|
|
}
|
|
EOF
|
|
${CC-cc} -o conftest $CFLAGS $CPPFLAGS $LDFLAGS \
|
|
conftest.c $LIBS >/dev/null 2>&1
|
|
if test ! -x conftest ; then
|
|
dnl failed to compile for some reason
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_unaligned_fail=yes
|
|
else
|
|
./conftest >conftest.out
|
|
if test ! -s conftest.out ; then
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_unaligned_fail=yes
|
|
else
|
|
ac_cv_lbl_unaligned_fail=no
|
|
fi
|
|
fi
|
|
rm -f -r conftest* core core.conftest
|
|
;;
|
|
esac])
|
|
AC_MSG_RESULT($ac_cv_lbl_unaligned_fail)
|
|
if test $ac_cv_lbl_unaligned_fail = yes ; then
|
|
AC_DEFINE(LBL_ALIGN,1,[if unaligned access fails])
|
|
fi])
|
|
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl If the file .devel exists:
|
|
dnl Add some warning flags if the compiler supports them
|
|
dnl If an os prototype include exists, symlink os-proto.h to it
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl usage:
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl AC_LBL_DEVEL(copt)
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl results:
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl $1 (copt appended)
|
|
dnl HAVE_OS_PROTO_H (defined)
|
|
dnl os-proto.h (symlinked)
|
|
dnl
|
|
AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_DEVEL,
|
|
[rm -f os-proto.h
|
|
if test "${LBL_CFLAGS+set}" = set; then
|
|
$1="$$1 ${LBL_CFLAGS}"
|
|
fi
|
|
if test -f .devel ; then
|
|
#
|
|
# Skip all the warning option stuff on some compilers.
|
|
#
|
|
if test "$ac_lbl_cc_dont_try_gcc_dashW" != yes; then
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_UNKNOWN_WARNING_OPTION_ERROR()
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -W)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wall)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wcomma)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wdeclaration-after-statement)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wdocumentation)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wformat-nonliteral)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wmissing-noreturn)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wmissing-prototypes)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wmissing-variable-declarations)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wshadow)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wsign-compare)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wstrict-prototypes)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wunused-parameter)
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wused-but-marked-unused)
|
|
# Warns about safeguards added in case the enums are
|
|
# extended
|
|
# AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wcovered-switch-default)
|
|
#
|
|
# This can cause problems with ntohs(), ntohl(),
|
|
# htons(), and htonl() on some platforms, such
|
|
# as OpenBSD 6.3 with Clang 5.0.1. I guess the
|
|
# problem is that the macro that ultimately does
|
|
# the byte-swapping involves a conditional
|
|
# expression that tests whether the value being
|
|
# swapped is a compile-time constant or not,
|
|
# using __builtin_constant_p(), and, depending
|
|
# on whether it is, does a compile-time swap or
|
|
# a run-time swap; perhaps the compiler always
|
|
# considers one of the two results of the
|
|
# conditional expressin is never evaluated,
|
|
# because the conditional check is done at
|
|
# compile time, and thus always says "that
|
|
# expression is never executed".
|
|
#
|
|
# (Perhaps there should be a way of flagging
|
|
# an expression that you *want* evaluated at
|
|
# compile time, so that the compiler 1) warns
|
|
# if it *can't* be evaluated at compile time
|
|
# and 2) *doesn't* warn that the true or false
|
|
# branch will never be reached.)
|
|
#
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_COMPILER_OPT($1, -Wunreachable-code,
|
|
[
|
|
#include <arpa/inet.h>
|
|
|
|
unsigned short
|
|
testme(unsigned short a)
|
|
{
|
|
return ntohs(a);
|
|
}
|
|
],
|
|
[generates warnings from ntohs()])
|
|
fi
|
|
AC_LBL_CHECK_DEPENDENCY_GENERATION_OPT()
|
|
#
|
|
# We used to set -n32 for IRIX 6 when not using GCC (presumed
|
|
# to mean that we're using MIPS C or MIPSpro C); it specified
|
|
# the "new" faster 32-bit ABI, introduced in IRIX 6.2. I'm
|
|
# not sure why that would be something to do *only* with a
|
|
# .devel file; why should the ABI for which we produce code
|
|
# depend on .devel?
|
|
#
|
|
os=`echo $host_os | sed -e 's/\([[0-9]][[0-9]]*\)[[^0-9]].*$/\1/'`
|
|
name="lbl/os-$os.h"
|
|
if test -f $name ; then
|
|
ln -s $name os-proto.h
|
|
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_OS_PROTO_H, 1,
|
|
[if there's an os_proto.h for this platform, to use additional prototypes])
|
|
else
|
|
AC_MSG_WARN(can't find $name)
|
|
fi
|
|
fi])
|
|
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl Improved version of AC_CHECK_LIB
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl Thanks to John Hawkinson (jhawk@mit.edu)
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl usage:
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl AC_LBL_CHECK_LIB(LIBRARY, FUNCTION [, ACTION-IF-FOUND [,
|
|
dnl ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND [, OTHER-LIBRARIES]]])
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl results:
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl LIBS
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl XXX - "AC_LBL_LIBRARY_NET" was redone to use "AC_SEARCH_LIBS"
|
|
dnl rather than "AC_LBL_CHECK_LIB", so this isn't used any more.
|
|
dnl We keep it around for reference purposes in case it's ever
|
|
dnl useful in the future.
|
|
dnl
|
|
|
|
define(AC_LBL_CHECK_LIB,
|
|
[AC_MSG_CHECKING([for $2 in -l$1])
|
|
dnl Use a cache variable name containing the library, function
|
|
dnl name, and extra libraries to link with, because the test really is
|
|
dnl for library $1 defining function $2, when linked with potinal
|
|
dnl library $5, not just for library $1. Separate tests with the same
|
|
dnl $1 and different $2's or $5's may have different results.
|
|
ac_lib_var=`echo $1['_']$2['_']$5 | sed 'y%./+- %__p__%'`
|
|
AC_CACHE_VAL(ac_cv_lbl_lib_$ac_lib_var,
|
|
[ac_save_LIBS="$LIBS"
|
|
LIBS="-l$1 $5 $LIBS"
|
|
AC_TRY_LINK(dnl
|
|
ifelse([$2], [main], , dnl Avoid conflicting decl of main.
|
|
[/* Override any gcc2 internal prototype to avoid an error. */
|
|
]ifelse(AC_LANG, CPLUSPLUS, [#ifdef __cplusplus
|
|
extern "C"
|
|
#endif
|
|
])dnl
|
|
[/* We use char because int might match the return type of a gcc2
|
|
builtin and then its argument prototype would still apply. */
|
|
char $2();
|
|
]),
|
|
[$2()],
|
|
eval "ac_cv_lbl_lib_$ac_lib_var=yes",
|
|
eval "ac_cv_lbl_lib_$ac_lib_var=no")
|
|
LIBS="$ac_save_LIBS"
|
|
])dnl
|
|
if eval "test \"`echo '$ac_cv_lbl_lib_'$ac_lib_var`\" = yes"; then
|
|
AC_MSG_RESULT(yes)
|
|
ifelse([$3], ,
|
|
[changequote(, )dnl
|
|
ac_tr_lib=HAVE_LIB`echo $1 | sed -e 's/[^a-zA-Z0-9_]/_/g' \
|
|
-e 'y/abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz/ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ/'`
|
|
changequote([, ])dnl
|
|
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED($ac_tr_lib)
|
|
LIBS="-l$1 $LIBS"
|
|
], [$3])
|
|
else
|
|
AC_MSG_RESULT(no)
|
|
ifelse([$4], , , [$4
|
|
])dnl
|
|
fi
|
|
])
|
|
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl AC_LBL_LIBRARY_NET
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl This test is for network applications that need socket functions and
|
|
dnl getaddrinfo()/getnameinfo()-ish functions. We now require
|
|
dnl getaddrinfo() and getnameinfo(). We also prefer versions of
|
|
dnl recvmsg() that conform to the Single UNIX Specification, so that we
|
|
dnl can check whether a datagram received with recvmsg() was truncated
|
|
dnl when received due to the buffer being too small.
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl On most operating systems, they're available in the system library.
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl Under Solaris, we need to link with libsocket and libnsl to get
|
|
dnl getaddrinfo() and getnameinfo() and, if we have libxnet, we need to
|
|
dnl link with libxnet before libsocket to get a version of recvmsg()
|
|
dnl that conforms to the Single UNIX Specification.
|
|
dnl
|
|
dnl We use getaddrinfo() because we want a portable thread-safe way
|
|
dnl of getting information for a host name or port; there exist _r
|
|
dnl versions of gethostbyname() and getservbyname() on some platforms,
|
|
dnl but not on all platforms.
|
|
dnl
|
|
AC_DEFUN(AC_LBL_LIBRARY_NET, [
|
|
#
|
|
# Most operating systems have getaddrinfo() in the default searched
|
|
# libraries (i.e. libc). Check there first.
|
|
#
|
|
AC_CHECK_FUNC(getaddrinfo,,
|
|
[
|
|
#
|
|
# Not found in the standard system libraries.
|
|
# Try libsocket, which requires libnsl.
|
|
#
|
|
AC_CHECK_LIB(socket, getaddrinfo,
|
|
[
|
|
#
|
|
# OK, we found it in libsocket.
|
|
#
|
|
LIBS="-lsocket -lnsl $LIBS"
|
|
],
|
|
[
|
|
#
|
|
# We didn't find it.
|
|
#
|
|
AC_MSG_ERROR([getaddrinfo is required, but wasn't found])
|
|
], -lnsl)
|
|
|
|
#
|
|
# OK, do we have recvmsg() in libxnet?
|
|
# We also link with libsocket and libnsl.
|
|
#
|
|
AC_CHECK_LIB(xnet, recvmsg,
|
|
[
|
|
#
|
|
# Yes - link with it as well.
|
|
#
|
|
LIBS="-lxnet $LIBS"
|
|
], , -lsocket -lnsl)
|
|
])
|
|
# DLPI needs putmsg under HPUX so test for -lstr while we're at it
|
|
AC_SEARCH_LIBS(putmsg, str)
|
|
])
|