mirror_zfs/config/lib-prefix.m4
Rafael Kitover e8864b1b28 config: libintl/libiconv for gettext() detection
Detect in autoconf whether `-lintl` and possibly `-liconv` are necessary
for translation functions like `gettext()`.

The actual autoconf code is just:

```
AM_ICONV
AM_GNU_GETTEXT([external])
LIBS="$LIBS $LTLIBINTL $LTLIBICONV"
```

References:

https://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/manual/html_node/AM_005fGNU_005fGETTEXT.html
https://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/manual/html_node/AM_005fICONV.html

The reason to check for `libiconv` and add it separately is that this is
sometimes necessary if users are linking statically.

The `config/*.m4` files were added by running `gettextize` and removing
everything else.

The empty file `config/config.rpath` is necessary to avoid an error with
some versions of autotools, see:

http://ramblingfoo.blogspot.com/2007/07/required-file-configrpath-not-found.html

The `config.rpath` copied by `gettextize` does not currently work, there
is some kind of missing interaction with `libtool` and it tries to apply
`libtool` flags to the compiler.

Reviewed-by: Brian Behlendorf <behlendorf1@llnl.gov>
Reviewed-by: Richard Laager <rlaager@wiktel.com>
Signed-off-by: Rafael Kitover <rkitover@gmail.com>
Closes #8554
2019-04-19 12:09:29 -07:00

250 lines
9.5 KiB
Plaintext

# lib-prefix.m4 serial 14
dnl Copyright (C) 2001-2005, 2008-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
dnl This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
dnl gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
dnl with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
dnl From Bruno Haible.
dnl AC_LIB_PREFIX adds to the CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS the flags that are needed
dnl to access previously installed libraries. The basic assumption is that
dnl a user will want packages to use other packages he previously installed
dnl with the same --prefix option.
dnl This macro is not needed if only AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS is used to locate
dnl libraries, but is otherwise very convenient.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_PREFIX],
[
AC_BEFORE([$0], [AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_PROG_CC])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_PREPARE_MULTILIB])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_PREPARE_PREFIX])
dnl By default, look in $includedir and $libdir.
use_additional=yes
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([
eval additional_includedir=\"$includedir\"
eval additional_libdir=\"$libdir\"
])
AC_ARG_WITH([lib-prefix],
[[ --with-lib-prefix[=DIR] search for libraries in DIR/include and DIR/lib
--without-lib-prefix don't search for libraries in includedir and libdir]],
[
if test "X$withval" = "Xno"; then
use_additional=no
else
if test "X$withval" = "X"; then
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([
eval additional_includedir=\"$includedir\"
eval additional_libdir=\"$libdir\"
])
else
additional_includedir="$withval/include"
additional_libdir="$withval/$acl_libdirstem"
fi
fi
])
if test $use_additional = yes; then
dnl Potentially add $additional_includedir to $CPPFLAGS.
dnl But don't add it
dnl 1. if it's the standard /usr/include,
dnl 2. if it's already present in $CPPFLAGS,
dnl 3. if it's /usr/local/include and we are using GCC on Linux,
dnl 4. if it doesn't exist as a directory.
if test "X$additional_includedir" != "X/usr/include"; then
haveit=
for x in $CPPFLAGS; do
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([eval x=\"$x\"])
if test "X$x" = "X-I$additional_includedir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
if test "X$additional_includedir" = "X/usr/local/include"; then
if test -n "$GCC"; then
case $host_os in
linux* | gnu* | k*bsd*-gnu) haveit=yes;;
esac
fi
fi
if test -z "$haveit"; then
if test -d "$additional_includedir"; then
dnl Really add $additional_includedir to $CPPFLAGS.
CPPFLAGS="${CPPFLAGS}${CPPFLAGS:+ }-I$additional_includedir"
fi
fi
fi
fi
dnl Potentially add $additional_libdir to $LDFLAGS.
dnl But don't add it
dnl 1. if it's the standard /usr/lib,
dnl 2. if it's already present in $LDFLAGS,
dnl 3. if it's /usr/local/lib and we are using GCC on Linux,
dnl 4. if it doesn't exist as a directory.
if test "X$additional_libdir" != "X/usr/$acl_libdirstem"; then
haveit=
for x in $LDFLAGS; do
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([eval x=\"$x\"])
if test "X$x" = "X-L$additional_libdir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
if test "X$additional_libdir" = "X/usr/local/$acl_libdirstem"; then
if test -n "$GCC"; then
case $host_os in
linux*) haveit=yes;;
esac
fi
fi
if test -z "$haveit"; then
if test -d "$additional_libdir"; then
dnl Really add $additional_libdir to $LDFLAGS.
LDFLAGS="${LDFLAGS}${LDFLAGS:+ }-L$additional_libdir"
fi
fi
fi
fi
fi
])
dnl AC_LIB_PREPARE_PREFIX creates variables acl_final_prefix,
dnl acl_final_exec_prefix, containing the values to which $prefix and
dnl $exec_prefix will expand at the end of the configure script.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_PREPARE_PREFIX],
[
dnl Unfortunately, prefix and exec_prefix get only finally determined
dnl at the end of configure.
if test "X$prefix" = "XNONE"; then
acl_final_prefix="$ac_default_prefix"
else
acl_final_prefix="$prefix"
fi
if test "X$exec_prefix" = "XNONE"; then
acl_final_exec_prefix='${prefix}'
else
acl_final_exec_prefix="$exec_prefix"
fi
acl_save_prefix="$prefix"
prefix="$acl_final_prefix"
eval acl_final_exec_prefix=\"$acl_final_exec_prefix\"
prefix="$acl_save_prefix"
])
dnl AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([statement]) evaluates statement, with the
dnl variables prefix and exec_prefix bound to the values they will have
dnl at the end of the configure script.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX],
[
acl_save_prefix="$prefix"
prefix="$acl_final_prefix"
acl_save_exec_prefix="$exec_prefix"
exec_prefix="$acl_final_exec_prefix"
$1
exec_prefix="$acl_save_exec_prefix"
prefix="$acl_save_prefix"
])
dnl AC_LIB_PREPARE_MULTILIB creates
dnl - a variable acl_libdirstem, containing the basename of the libdir, either
dnl "lib" or "lib64" or "lib/64",
dnl - a variable acl_libdirstem2, as a secondary possible value for
dnl acl_libdirstem, either the same as acl_libdirstem or "lib/sparcv9" or
dnl "lib/amd64".
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_PREPARE_MULTILIB],
[
dnl There is no formal standard regarding lib and lib64.
dnl On glibc systems, the current practice is that on a system supporting
dnl 32-bit and 64-bit instruction sets or ABIs, 64-bit libraries go under
dnl $prefix/lib64 and 32-bit libraries go under $prefix/lib. We determine
dnl the compiler's default mode by looking at the compiler's library search
dnl path. If at least one of its elements ends in /lib64 or points to a
dnl directory whose absolute pathname ends in /lib64, we assume a 64-bit ABI.
dnl Otherwise we use the default, namely "lib".
dnl On Solaris systems, the current practice is that on a system supporting
dnl 32-bit and 64-bit instruction sets or ABIs, 64-bit libraries go under
dnl $prefix/lib/64 (which is a symlink to either $prefix/lib/sparcv9 or
dnl $prefix/lib/amd64) and 32-bit libraries go under $prefix/lib.
AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST])
AC_REQUIRE([gl_HOST_CPU_C_ABI_32BIT])
case "$host_os" in
solaris*)
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for 64-bit host], [gl_cv_solaris_64bit],
[AC_COMPILE_IFELSE(
[AC_LANG_SOURCE(
[[#ifdef _LP64
int ok;
#else
error fail
#endif
]])],
[gl_cv_solaris_64bit=yes],
[gl_cv_solaris_64bit=no])
]);;
esac
dnl Allow the user to override the result by setting acl_cv_libdirstems.
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for the common suffixes of directories in the library search path],
[acl_cv_libdirstems],
[acl_libdirstem=lib
acl_libdirstem2=
case "$host_os" in
solaris*)
dnl See Solaris 10 Software Developer Collection > Solaris 64-bit Developer's Guide > The Development Environment
dnl <https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E19253-01/816-5138/dev-env/index.html>.
dnl "Portable Makefiles should refer to any library directories using the 64 symbolic link."
dnl But we want to recognize the sparcv9 or amd64 subdirectory also if the
dnl symlink is missing, so we set acl_libdirstem2 too.
if test $gl_cv_solaris_64bit = yes; then
acl_libdirstem=lib/64
case "$host_cpu" in
sparc*) acl_libdirstem2=lib/sparcv9 ;;
i*86 | x86_64) acl_libdirstem2=lib/amd64 ;;
esac
fi
;;
*)
dnl If $CC generates code for a 32-bit ABI, the libraries are
dnl surely under $prefix/lib, not $prefix/lib64.
if test "$HOST_CPU_C_ABI_32BIT" != yes; then
dnl The result is a property of the system. However, non-system
dnl compilers sometimes have odd library search paths. Therefore
dnl prefer asking /usr/bin/gcc, if available, rather than $CC.
searchpath=`(if test -f /usr/bin/gcc \
&& LC_ALL=C /usr/bin/gcc -print-search-dirs >/dev/null 2>/dev/null; then \
LC_ALL=C /usr/bin/gcc -print-search-dirs; \
else \
LC_ALL=C $CC -print-search-dirs; \
fi) 2>/dev/null \
| sed -n -e 's,^libraries: ,,p' | sed -e 's,^=,,'`
if test -n "$searchpath"; then
acl_save_IFS="${IFS= }"; IFS=":"
for searchdir in $searchpath; do
if test -d "$searchdir"; then
case "$searchdir" in
*/lib64/ | */lib64 ) acl_libdirstem=lib64 ;;
*/../ | */.. )
# Better ignore directories of this form. They are misleading.
;;
*) searchdir=`cd "$searchdir" && pwd`
case "$searchdir" in
*/lib64 ) acl_libdirstem=lib64 ;;
esac ;;
esac
fi
done
IFS="$acl_save_IFS"
fi
fi
;;
esac
test -n "$acl_libdirstem2" || acl_libdirstem2="$acl_libdirstem"
acl_cv_libdirstems="$acl_libdirstem,$acl_libdirstem2"
])
# Decompose acl_cv_libdirstems into acl_libdirstem and acl_libdirstem2.
acl_libdirstem=`echo "$acl_cv_libdirstems" | sed -e 's/,.*//'`
acl_libdirstem2=`echo "$acl_cv_libdirstems" | sed -e '/,/s/.*,//'`
])