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configure is designed so that it appears to do everything itself, but there is actually a hidden slave: config.status. configure is in charge of examining your system, but it is config.status that actually takes the proper actions based on the results of configure. The most typical task of config.status is to instantiate files.
This section describes the common behavior of the four standard
instantiating macros: AC_CONFIG_FILES
, AC_CONFIG_HEADERS
,
AC_CONFIG_COMMANDS
and AC_CONFIG_LINKS
. They all
have this prototype:
AC_CONFIG_ITEMS(tag…, [commands], [init-cmds])
where the arguments are:
A blank-or-newline-separated list of tags, which are typically the names of the files to instantiate.
You are encouraged to use literals as tags. In particular, you should avoid
… && my_foos="$my_foos fooo" … && my_foos="$my_foos foooo" AC_CONFIG_ITEMS([$my_foos])
and use this instead:
… && AC_CONFIG_ITEMS([fooo]) … && AC_CONFIG_ITEMS([foooo])
The macros AC_CONFIG_FILES
and AC_CONFIG_HEADERS
use
special tag values: they may have the form ‘output’ or
‘output:inputs’. The file output is instantiated
from its templates, inputs (defaulting to ‘output.in’).
‘AC_CONFIG_FILES([Makefile:boiler/top.mk:boiler/bot.mk])’, for example, asks for the creation of the file Makefile that contains the expansion of the output variables in the concatenation of boiler/top.mk and boiler/bot.mk.
The special value ‘-’ might be used to denote the standard output when used in output, or the standard input when used in the inputs. You most probably don’t need to use this in configure.ac, but it is convenient when using the command line interface of ./config.status, see config.status Invocation, for more details.
The inputs may be absolute or relative file names. In the latter case they are first looked for in the build tree, and then in the source tree. Input files should be text files, and a line length below 2000 bytes should be safe.
Shell commands output literally into config.status, and associated with a tag that the user can use to tell config.status which commands to run. The commands are run each time a tag request is given to config.status, typically each time the file tag is created.
The variables set during the execution of configure
are
not available here: you first need to set them via the
init-cmds. Nonetheless the following variables are pre-computed:
srcdir
¶The name of the top source directory, assuming that the working
directory is the top build directory. This
is what configure
’s --srcdir option sets.
ac_top_srcdir
¶The name of the top source directory, assuming that the working directory is the current build directory.
ac_top_build_prefix
¶The name of the top build directory, assuming that the working directory is the current build directory. It can be empty, or else ends with a slash, so that you may concatenate it.
ac_srcdir
¶The name of the corresponding source directory, assuming that the working directory is the current build directory.
tmp
¶The name of a temporary directory within the build tree, which you
can use if you need to create additional temporary files. The
directory is cleaned up when config.status
is done or
interrupted. Please use package-specific file name prefixes to
avoid clashing with files that config.status
may use
internally.
The current directory refers to the directory (or pseudo-directory) containing the input part of tags. For instance, running
AC_CONFIG_COMMANDS([deep/dir/out:in/in.in], […], […])
with --srcdir=../package produces the following values:
# Argument of --srcdir srcdir='../package' # Reversing deep/dir ac_top_build_prefix='../../' # Concatenation of $ac_top_build_prefix and srcdir ac_top_srcdir='../../../package' # Concatenation of $ac_top_srcdir and deep/dir ac_srcdir='../../../package/deep/dir'
independently of ‘in/in.in’.
Shell commands output unquoted near the beginning of
config.status, and executed each time config.status runs
(regardless of the tag). Because they are unquoted, for example,
‘$var’ is output as the value of var
. init-cmds
is typically used by configure to give config.status some
variables it needs to run the commands.
You should be extremely cautious in your variable names: all the init-cmds share the same name space and may overwrite each other in unpredictable ways. Sorry...
All these macros can be called multiple times, with different tag values, of course!
Next: Creating Configuration Files, Previous: Outputting Files, Up: Initialization and Output Files [Contents][Index]