Next: Miscellaneous Rules, Previous: Support for test suites, Up: GNU Automake [Contents][Index]
Various features of Automake can be controlled by options in the
Makefile.am. Such options are applied on a per-Makefile
basis when listed in a special Makefile variable named
AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS
. They are applied globally to all processed
Makefiles when listed in the first argument of
AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE
in configure.in. Currently understood
options are:
gnits
¶gnu
foreign
cygnus
Set the strictness as appropriate. The gnits
option also implies
readme-alpha
and check-news
.
ansi2knr
¶path/ansi2knr
Turn on automatic de-ANSI-fication. See Automatic de-ANSI-fication. If preceded by a path, the generated Makefile.in will look in the specified directory to find the ansi2knr program. The path should be a relative path to another directory in the same distribution (Automake currently does not check this).
check-news
¶Cause make dist
to fail unless the current version number appears
in the first few lines of the NEWS file.
dejagnu
¶Cause dejagnu
-specific rules to be generated. See Support for test suites.
dist-bzip2
¶Generate a dist-bzip2
target, creating a bzip2 tar archive of the
distribution. dist
will create it in addition to the other
formats. bzip2 archives are frequently smaller than gzipped archives.
dist-shar
¶Generate a dist-shar
target, creating a shar archive of the
distribution. dist
will create it in addition to the other
formats.
dist-zip
¶Generate a dist-zip
target, creating a zip archive of the
distribution. dist
will create it in addition to the other
formats.
dist-tarZ
¶Generate a dist-tarZ
target, creating a compressed tar archive of
the distribution. dist
will create it in addition to the other
formats.
no-define
¶This options is meaningful only when passed as an argument to
AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE
. It will prevent the PACKAGE
and
VERSION
variables to be AC_DEFINE
d.
no-dependencies
¶This is similar to using ‘--include-deps’ on the command line, but is useful for those situations where you don’t have the necessary bits to make automatic dependency tracking work See Automatic dependency tracking. In this case the effect is to effectively disable automatic dependency tracking.
no-exeext
¶If your Makefile.am defines a target ‘foo’, it will override
a target named ‘foo$(EXEEXT)’. This is necessary when
EXEEXT
is found to be empty. However, by default automake will
generate an error for this use. The no-exeext
option will
disable this error. This is intended for use only where it is known in
advance that the package will not be ported to Windows, or any other
operating system using extensions on executables.
no-installinfo
¶The generated Makefile.in will not cause info pages to be built
or installed by default. However, info
and install-info
targets will still be available. This option is disallowed at
‘GNU’ strictness and above.
no-installman
¶The generated Makefile.in will not cause man pages to be
installed by default. However, an install-man
target will still
be available for optional installation. This option is disallowed at
‘GNU’ strictness and above.
nostdinc
¶This option can be used to disable the standard ‘-I’ options which are ordinarily automatically provided by Automake.
no-texinfo.tex
¶Don’t require texinfo.tex, even if there are texinfo files in this directory.
readme-alpha
¶If this release is an alpha release, and the file README-alpha exists, then it will be added to the distribution. If this option is given, version numbers are expected to follow one of two forms. The first form is ‘MAJOR.MINOR.ALPHA’, where each element is a number; the final period and number should be left off for non-alpha releases. The second form is ‘MAJOR.MINORALPHA’, where ALPHA is a letter; it should be omitted for non-alpha releases.
std-options
¶Make the installcheck
target check that installed scripts and
programs support the --help
and --version
options.
This also provides a basic check that the program’s
run-time dependencies are satisfied after installation.
In a few situations, programs (or scripts) have to be exempted from this
test. For instance false
(from GNU sh-utils) is never
successful, even for --help
or --version
. You can list
such programs in the variable AM_INSTALLCHECK_STD_OPTIONS_EXEMPT
.
Programs (not scripts) listed in this variable should be suffixed by
$(EXEEXT)
for the sake of Win32 or OS/2. For instance suppose we
build false
as a program but true.sh
as a script, and that
neither of them support --help
or --version
:
AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS = std-options bin_PROGRAMS = false ... bin_SCRIPTS = true.sh ... AM_INSTALLCHECK_STD_OPTIONS_EXEMPT = false$(EXEEXT) true.sh
subdir-objects
If this option is specified, then objects are placed into the subdirectory of the build directory corresponding to the subdirectory of the source file. For instance if the source file is subdir/file.cxx, then the output file would be subdir/file.o.
A version number (e.g. ‘0.30’) can be specified. If Automake is not newer than the version specified, creation of the Makefile.in will be suppressed.
-Wcategory
or --warnings=category
¶These options behave exactly like their command-line counterpart
(see Creating a Makefile.in). This allows you to enable or disable some
warning categories on a per-file basis. You can also setup some warnings
for your entire project; for instance try AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE([-Wall])
in your configure.in.
Unrecognized options are diagnosed by automake
.
If you want an option to apply to all the files in the tree, you can use
the AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE
macro in configure.in.
See Autoconf macros supplied with Automake.
Next: Miscellaneous Rules, Previous: Support for test suites, Up: GNU Automake [Contents][Index]