binutils-gdb/configure.in

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##############################################################################
## This file is a shell script fragment that supplies the information
## necessary to tailor a template configure script into the configure
## script appropriate for this directory. For more information, check
## any existing configure script.
## Be warned, there are two types of configure.in files. There are those
## used by Autoconf, which are macros which are expanded into a configure
## script by autoconf. The other sort, of which this is one, is executed
## by Cygnus configure.
## For more information on these two systems, check out the documentation
## for 'Autoconf' (autoconf.texi) and 'Configure' (configure.texi).
##############################################################################
### To add a new directory to the tree, first choose whether it is a target
### or a host dependent tool. Then put it into the appropriate list
### (library or tools, host or target), doing a dependency sort. For
### example, gdb requires that byacc (or bison) be built first, so it is in
### the ${host_tools} list after byacc and bison.
# these libraries are used by various programs built for the host environment
#
host_libs="mmalloc libiberty opcodes bfd readline glob gash tcl tk tclX"
# these tools are built for the host environment
#
host_tools="texinfo byacc flex bison binutils ld gas gcc gdb make patch
prms send-pr gprof gdbtest tgas etc expect dejagnu sim
m4 autoconf ispell grep diff rcs cvs fileutils shellutils
textutils wdiff find emacs uudecode hello tar gzip indent
recode release sed utils"
# these libraries are built for the target environment, and are built after
# the host libraries and the host tools (which may be a cross compiler)
#
target_libs="libm xiberty newlib libio libg++"
## start-sanitize-chill
target_libs="${target_libs} chill chillrt"
## end-sanitize-chill
# these tools are built using the target libs, and are intended to run only
# in the target environment. we currently have none.
#
# note: any program that *uses* libraries that are in the "target_libs"
# list belongs in this list. those programs are also very likely
# candidates for the "native_only" list which follows
#
target_tools="groff"
################################################################################
## These two lists are of directories that are to be removed from the
## ${configdirs} list for either cross-compilations or for native-
## compilations. For example, it doesn't make that much sense to
## cross-compile Emacs, nor is it terribly useful to compile xiberty in
## a native environment.
# directories to be built in the native environment only
#
native_only="autoconf cvs emacs fileutils find grep groff gzip hello indent
ispell m4 rcs recode sed shellutils tar textutils gash tk uudecode wdiff
gprof"
# directories to be built in a cross environment only
#
cross_only="xiberty newlib"
## All tools belong in one of the four categories, and are assigned above
#
configdirs="${host_libs} ${host_tools} ${target_libs} ${target_tools}"
################################################################################
srctrigger=move-if-change
srcname="gnu development package"
# per-host:
case "${host}" in
m68k-hp-hpux*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-hp300 ;;
m68k-apollo-sysv*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-apollo68 ;;
m68k-apollo-bsd*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-a68bsd ;;
m88k-motorola-sysv*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-delta88;;
m88k-dg-dgux*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-dgux ;;
mips*-dec-ultrix*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-decstation ;;
mips*-sgi-irix4*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-irix4 ;;
mips*-sgi-irix3*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-sysv ;;
mips*-*-sysv*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-riscos ;;
i[34]86-ncr-sysv4*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-ncr3000 ;;
i[34]86-*-sco*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-sco ;;
i[34]86-*-isc*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-sysv ;;
i[34]86-*-linux*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-linux ;;
i[34]86-*-solaris2*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-sysv4 ;;
i[34]86-*-aix*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-aix386 ;;
vax-*-ultrix2*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-vaxult2 ;;
*-ibm-aix*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-aix ;;
*-bull-bosx*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-aix ;;
*-*-solaris2*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-solaris ;;
m68k-sun-*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-sun3 ;;
*-sun-*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-sun ;;
*-hp-hpux*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-hpux ;;
*-*-hiux*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-hpux ;;
*-*-lynxos*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-lynxos
cross_only="xiberty" ;;
*-*-sysv4*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-sysv4 ;;
*-*-sysv*) host_makefile_frag=config/mh-sysv ;;
esac
# per-target:
gasdir=gas
use_gnu_ld=
use_gnu_as=
case "${target}" in
hppa*-hp-hpux*) target_makefile_frag=config/mt-hppa ;;
esac
# some tools are so dependent upon X11 that if we're not building with X,
# it's not even worth trying to configure, much less build, that tool.
case ${with_x} in
yes | "") # the default value for this tree is that X11 is available
;;
no)
configdirs=`echo ${configdirs} | sed -e 's/tk//;/gash//'`
;;
*)
echo "*** bad value \"${with_x}\" for -with-x flag; ignored" 1>&2
;;
esac
# Some tools are only suitable for building in a "native" situation.
# Those are added when we have a host==target configuration. For cross
# toolchains, we add some directories that should only be useful in a
# cross-compiler.
if [ x"${host}" = x"${target}" ] ; then
# when doing a native toolchain, don't build the targets
# that are in the 'cross only' list
for i in ${cross_only} ; do
configdirs=`echo ${configdirs} | sed -e "s/$i//"`
done
else
# similarly, don't build the targets in the 'native only'
# list when building a cross compiler
for i in ${native_only} ; do
configdirs=`echo ${configdirs} | sed -e "s/$i//"`
done
fi
# Remove more programs from consideration, based on the host or
# target this usually means that a port of the program doesn't
# exist yet.
noconfigdirs=""
case "${host}" in
i[34]86-*-go32)
noconfigdirs="tcl expect deja-gnu make texinfo bison patch flex byacc send-pr gprof uudecode dejagnu diff"
;;
esac
case "${target}" in
alpha-dec-osf1*)
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs gas emacs fileutils grep libg++ libio"
;;
h8300*-*-* | \
h8500-*-*)
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs libg++ libio"
## start-sanitize-chill
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs chillrt"
## end-sanitize-chill
;;
hppa*-*-osf)
# Do configure ld/binutils/gas for this case.
;;
hppa*-*-*)
# HP's C compiler doesn't handle Emacs correctly (but on BSD and Mach
# cc is gcc, and on any system a user should be able to link cc to
# whatever they want. FIXME, emacs).
case "${CC}" in
"" | cc*) noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs emacs" ;;
*) ;;
esac
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs ld binutils shellutils"
if [ -f ${srcdir}/pagas/configure.in ]; then
configdirs=`echo ${configdirs} | sed -e 's/gas /pagas /'`
else
# It'll still DTRT if "gas" directory isn't here either.
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs gas"
fi
gasdir=pagas
;;
i[34]86-*-go32)
# add the go32 support tools to the list
configdirs=`echo go32 ${configdirs}`
;;
i[34]86-*-solaris2*)
# The linker does static linking correctly, but the Solaris C library
# has bugs such that some important functions won't work when statically
# linked. (See man pages for getpwuid, for example.)
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs ld"
;;
i[34]86-*-sysv4*)
# The SYSV4 C compiler doesn't handle Emacs correctly
case "${CC}" in
"" | cc*) noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs emacs" ;;
*) ;;
esac
# but that's okay since emacs doesn't work anyway
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs emacs"
;;
rs6000-*-*)
# a gcc built textutils will cause the linker to hang on 'join'
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs ld binutils gas gprof textutils"
;;
mips-*-*)
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs gprof"
;;
sh-*-*)
case "${host}" in
i[34]86-*-go32) ;; # don't add gprof back in
*) configdirs=`echo gprof ${configdirs}` ;;
esac
;;
sparc-*-sunos4*)
use_gnu_ld=no
;;
sparc-*-solaris2*)
# See i386-*-solaris2* above.
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs ld"
;;
i[34]86-*-sco*)
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs gprof"
;;
*-*-sysv4)
use_gnu_ld=no
;;
*-*-vms)
noconfigdirs="$noconfigdirs bfd ld binutils gdb"
;;
esac
notsupp=""
for dir in . $noconfigdirs ; do
if [ $dir != . ] && echo ${configdirs} | grep "${dir} " >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then
configdirs=`echo $configdirs | sed -e "s/${dir} / /"`
if [ -r $srcdir/$dir/configure ] || [ -r $srcdir/$dir/configure.in ]; then
notsupp="$notsupp $dir"
fi
fi
done
# Produce a warning message for the subdirs we can't configure.
# This isn't especially interesting in the Cygnus tree, but in the individual
# FSF releases, it's important to let people know when their machine isn't
# supported by the one or two programs in a package.
if [ x"${notsupp}" != x ]; then
echo "*** This configuration is not supported in the following subdirectories:" 1>&2
echo " ${notsupp}" 1>&2
echo " (Any other directories should still work fine.)" 1>&2
fi
# Set with_gnu_as and with_gnu_ld as appropriate.
#
# This is done by determining whether or not the appropriate directory
# is available, and by checking whether or not specific configurations
# have requested that this magic not happen.
#
# The command line options always override the explicit settings in
# configure.in, and the settings in configure.in override this magic.
#
# If the default for a toolchain is to use GNU as and ld, and you don't
# want to do that, then you should use the --without-gnu-as and
# --without-gnu-ld options for the configure script.
if [ x${use_gnu_as} = x ] ; then
if [ x${with_gnu_as} != xno ] && echo ${configdirs} | grep "${gasdir} " > /dev/null 2>&1 && [ -d ${srcdir}/${gasdir} ] ; then
with_gnu_as=yes
withoptions="$withoptions --with-gnu-as"
fi
fi
if [ x${use_gnu_ld} = x ] ; then
if [ x${with_gnu_ld} != xno ] && echo ${configdirs} | grep ld > /dev/null 2>&1 && [ -d ${srcdir}/ld ] ; then
with_gnu_ld=yes
withoptions="$withoptions --with-gnu-ld"
fi
fi
#
# Local Variables:
# fill-column: 131
# End:
#