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The following macros check for the presence of certain C, C++, Fortran, or Go library archive files.
Test whether the library library is available by trying to link a test program that calls function function with the library. function should be a function provided by the library. Use the base name of the library; e.g., to check for -lmp, use ‘mp’ as the library argument.
action-if-found is a list of shell commands to run if the link
with the library succeeds; action-if-not-found is a list of shell
commands to run if the link fails. If action-if-found is not
specified, the default action prepends -llibrary to
LIBS
and defines ‘HAVE_LIBlibrary’ (in all
capitals). This macro is intended to support building LIBS
in
a right-to-left (least-dependent to most-dependent) fashion such that
library dependencies are satisfied as a natural side effect of
consecutive tests. Linkers are sensitive to library ordering
so the order in which LIBS
is generated is important to reliable
detection of libraries.
If linking with library results in unresolved symbols that would
be resolved by linking with additional libraries, give those libraries
as the other-libraries argument, separated by spaces:
e.g., -lXt -lX11. Otherwise, this macro may fail to detect
that library is present, because linking the test program can
fail with unresolved symbols. The other-libraries argument
should be limited to cases where it is desirable to test for one library
in the presence of another that is not already in LIBS
.
AC_CHECK_LIB
requires some care in usage, and should be avoided
in some common cases. Many standard functions like gethostbyname
appear in the standard C library on some hosts, and in special libraries
like nsl
on other hosts. On some hosts the special libraries
contain variant implementations that you may not want to use. These
days it is normally better to use AC_SEARCH_LIBS([gethostbyname],
[nsl])
instead of AC_CHECK_LIB([nsl], [gethostbyname])
.
The result of this test is cached in the
ac_cv_lib_library_function
variable.
Search for a library defining function if it’s not already available. This equates to calling ‘AC_LINK_IFELSE([AC_LANG_CALL([], [function])])’ first with no libraries, then for each library listed in search-libs.
Prepend -llibrary to LIBS
for the first library found
to contain function, and run action-if-found. If the
function is not found, run action-if-not-found.
If linking with library results in unresolved symbols that would be resolved by linking with additional libraries, give those libraries as the other-libraries argument, separated by spaces: e.g., -lXt -lX11. Otherwise, this macro fails to detect that function is present, because linking the test program always fails with unresolved symbols.
The result of this test is cached in the
ac_cv_search_function
variable as ‘none required’ if
function is already available, as ‘no’ if no library
containing function was found, otherwise as the
-llibrary option that needs to be prepended to LIBS
.
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