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The --gnu option (or gnu in the
AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS
variable) causes automake
to check
the following:
If the --add-missing option is given, automake
will
add a generic version of the INSTALL file as well as the
COPYING file containing the text of the current version of the
GNU General Public License existing at the time of this Automake release
(version 3 as this is written, http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html).
However, an existing COPYING file will never be overwritten by
automake
.
Note that this option will be extended in the future to do even more
checking; it is advisable to be familiar with the precise requirements
of the GNU standards. Also, --gnu can require certain
non-standard GNU programs to exist for use by various maintainer-only
rules; for instance, in the future pathchk
might be required for
‘make dist’.
The --gnits option does everything that --gnu does, and checks the following as well:
VERSION
is checked to make sure its format complies with Gnits
standards.
VERSION
indicates that this is an alpha release, and the file
README-alpha appears in the topmost directory of a package, then
it is included in the distribution. This is done in --gnits
mode, and no other, because this mode is the only one where version
number formats are constrained, and hence the only mode where Automake
can automatically determine whether README-alpha should be
included.
Next: The effect of --cygnus, Previous: Silencing make
, Up: GNU Automake [Contents][Index]