1 \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
3 @setfilename automake.info
12 This manual is for @acronym{GNU} Automake (version @value{VERSION},
13 @value{UPDATED}), a program which creates GNU standards-compliant
14 Makefiles from template files. This edition documents version
17 Copyright @copyright{} 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002,
18 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
21 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
22 under the terms of the @acronym{GNU} Free Documentation License,
23 Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software
24 Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts
25 being ``A @acronym{GNU} Manual,'' and with the Back-Cover Texts as in
26 (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
27 ``@acronym{GNU} Free Documentation License.''
29 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have freedom to copy and
30 modify this @acronym{GNU} Manual, like @acronym{GNU} software. Copies
31 published by the Free Software Foundation raise funds for
32 @acronym{GNU} development.''
36 @dircategory Software development
38 * automake: (automake). Making Makefile.in's.
41 @dircategory Individual utilities
43 * aclocal: (automake)Invoking aclocal. Generating aclocal.m4.
48 @subtitle For version @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED}
49 @author David MacKenzie
51 @author Alexandre Duret-Lutz
53 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
57 @c Define an index of configure output variables.
59 @c Define an index of configure variables.
61 @c Define an index of options.
63 @c Define an index of targets.
65 @c Define an index of commands.
68 @c Put the macros and variables into their own index.
69 @c @syncodeindex fn cp
74 @c Put everything else into one index (arbitrarily chosen to be the concept index).
81 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
84 This file documents the GNU Automake package. Automake is a program
85 which creates GNU standards-compliant Makefiles from template files.
86 This edition documents version @value{VERSION}.
89 * Introduction:: Automake's purpose
90 * Generalities:: General ideas
91 * Examples:: Some example packages
92 * Invoking Automake:: Creating a Makefile.in
93 * configure:: Scanning configure.ac or configure.in
94 * Top level:: The top-level Makefile.am
95 * Alternative:: An alternative approach to subdirectories
96 * Programs:: Building programs and libraries
97 * Other objects:: Other derived objects
98 * Other GNU Tools:: Other GNU Tools
99 * Documentation:: Building documentation
100 * Install:: What gets installed
101 * Clean:: What gets cleaned
102 * Dist:: What goes in a distribution
103 * Tests:: Support for test suites
104 * Rebuilding:: Automatic rebuilding of Makefile
105 * Options:: Changing Automake's behavior
106 * Miscellaneous:: Miscellaneous rules
107 * Include:: Including extra files in an Automake template.
108 * Conditionals:: Conditionals
109 * Gnits:: The effect of @code{--gnu} and @code{--gnits}
110 * Cygnus:: The effect of @code{--cygnus}
111 * Extending:: Extending Automake
112 * Distributing:: Distributing the Makefile.in
113 * API versioning:: About compatibility between Automake versions
114 * FAQ:: Frequently Asked Questions
115 * Copying This Manual:: How to make copies of this manual
116 * Indices:: Indices of variables, macros, and concepts
123 @chapter Introduction
125 Automake is a tool for automatically generating @file{Makefile.in}s from
126 files called @file{Makefile.am}. Each @file{Makefile.am} is basically a
127 series of @code{make} variable definitions@footnote{These variables are
128 also called @dfn{make macros} in Make terminology, however in this
129 manual we reserve the term @dfn{macro} for Autoconf's macros.}, with
130 rules being thrown in occasionally. The generated @file{Makefile.in}s
131 are compliant with the GNU Makefile standards.
133 @cindex GNU Makefile standards
135 The GNU Makefile Standards Document
136 (@pxref{Makefile Conventions, , , standards, The GNU Coding Standards})
137 is long, complicated, and subject to change. The goal of Automake is to
138 remove the burden of Makefile maintenance from the back of the
139 individual GNU maintainer (and put it on the back of the Automake
142 The typical Automake input file is simply a series of variable definitions.
143 Each such file is processed to create a @file{Makefile.in}. There
144 should generally be one @file{Makefile.am} per directory of a project.
146 @cindex Constraints of Automake
147 @cindex Automake constraints
149 Automake does constrain a project in certain ways; for instance it
150 assumes that the project uses Autoconf (@pxref{Top, , Introduction,
151 autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}), and enforces certain restrictions on
152 the @file{configure.ac} contents@footnote{Older Autoconf versions used
153 @file{configure.in}. Autoconf 2.50 and greater promotes
154 @file{configure.ac} over @file{configure.in}. The rest of this
155 documentation will refer to @file{configure.ac}, but Automake also
156 supports @file{configure.in} for backward compatibility.}.
158 @cindex Automake requirements
159 @cindex Requirements, Automake
161 Automake requires @code{perl} in order to generate the
162 @file{Makefile.in}s. However, the distributions created by Automake are
163 fully GNU standards-compliant, and do not require @code{perl} in order
166 @cindex BUGS, reporting
167 @cindex Reporting BUGS
168 @cindex E-mail, bug reports
170 Mail suggestions and bug reports for Automake to
171 @email{bug-automake@@gnu.org}.
175 @chapter General ideas
177 The following sections cover a few basic ideas that will help you
178 understand how Automake works.
181 * General Operation:: General operation of Automake
182 * Strictness:: Standards conformance checking
183 * Uniform:: The Uniform Naming Scheme
184 * Canonicalization:: How derived variables are named
185 * User Variables:: Variables reserved for the user
186 * Auxiliary Programs:: Programs automake might require
190 @node General Operation
191 @section General Operation
193 Automake works by reading a @file{Makefile.am} and generating a
194 @file{Makefile.in}. Certain variables and rules defined in the
195 @file{Makefile.am} instruct Automake to generate more specialized code;
196 for instance, a @samp{bin_PROGRAMS} variable definition will cause rules
197 for compiling and linking programs to be generated.
199 @cindex Non-standard targets
200 @cindex cvs-dist, non-standard example
203 The variable definitions and rules in the @file{Makefile.am} are
204 copied verbatim into the generated file. This allows you to add
205 arbitrary code into the generated @file{Makefile.in}. For instance
206 the Automake distribution includes a non-standard rule for the
207 @code{cvs-dist} target, which the Automake maintainer uses to make
208 distributions from his source control system.
210 @cindex GNU make extensions
212 Note that most GNU make extensions are not recognized by Automake. Using
213 such extensions in a @file{Makefile.am} will lead to errors or confusing
216 @cindex Append operator
217 A special exception is that the GNU make append operator, @samp{+=}, is
218 supported. This operator appends its right hand argument to the variable
219 specified on the left. Automake will translate the operator into
220 an ordinary @samp{=} operator; @samp{+=} will thus work with any make program.
222 Automake tries to keep comments grouped with any adjoining rules or
223 variable definitions.
225 @cindex Make targets, overriding
226 @cindex Make rules, overriding
227 @cindex Overriding make rules
228 @cindex Overriding make targets
230 A rule defined in @file{Makefile.am} generally overrides any such
231 rule of a similar name that would be automatically generated by
232 @code{automake}. Although this is a supported feature, it is generally
233 best to avoid making use of it, as sometimes the generated rules are
236 @cindex Variables, overriding
237 @cindex Overriding make variables
239 Similarly, a variable defined in @file{Makefile.am} or
240 @code{AC_SUBST}'ed from @file{configure.ac} will override any
241 definition of the variable that @code{automake} would ordinarily
242 create. This feature is more often useful than the ability to
243 override a rule. Be warned that many of the variables generated by
244 @code{automake} are considered to be for internal use only, and their
245 names might change in future releases.
247 @cindex Recursive operation of Automake
248 @cindex Automake, recursive operation
249 @cindex Example of recursive operation
251 When examining a variable definition, Automake will recursively examine
252 variables referenced in the definition. For example, if Automake is
253 looking at the content of @code{foo_SOURCES} in this snippet
257 foo_SOURCES = c.c $(xs)
260 it would use the files @file{a.c}, @file{b.c}, and @file{c.c} as the
261 contents of @code{foo_SOURCES}.
263 @cindex ## (special Automake comment)
264 @cindex Special Automake comment
265 @cindex Comment, special to Automake
267 Automake also allows a form of comment which is @emph{not} copied into
268 the output; all lines beginning with @samp{##} (leading spaces allowed)
269 are completely ignored by Automake.
271 It is customary to make the first line of @file{Makefile.am} read:
273 @cindex Makefile.am, first line
274 @cindex First line of Makefile.am
277 ## Process this file with automake to produce Makefile.in
280 @c FIXME discuss putting a copyright into Makefile.am here? I would but
281 @c I don't know quite what to say.
283 @c FIXME document customary ordering of Makefile.am here!
289 @cindex Non-GNU packages
291 While Automake is intended to be used by maintainers of GNU packages, it
292 does make some effort to accommodate those who wish to use it, but do
293 not want to use all the GNU conventions.
295 @cindex Strictness, defined
296 @cindex Strictness, foreign
297 @cindex foreign strictness
298 @cindex Strictness, gnu
299 @cindex gnu strictness
300 @cindex Strictness, gnits
301 @cindex gnits strictness
303 To this end, Automake supports three levels of @dfn{strictness}---the
304 strictness indicating how stringently Automake should check standards
307 The valid strictness levels are:
311 Automake will check for only those things which are absolutely
312 required for proper operations. For instance, whereas GNU standards
313 dictate the existence of a @file{NEWS} file, it will not be required in
314 this mode. The name comes from the fact that Automake is intended to be
315 used for GNU programs; these relaxed rules are not the standard mode of
319 Automake will check---as much as possible---for compliance to the GNU
320 standards for packages. This is the default.
323 Automake will check for compliance to the as-yet-unwritten @dfn{Gnits
324 standards}. These are based on the GNU standards, but are even more
325 detailed. Unless you are a Gnits standards contributor, it is
326 recommended that you avoid this option until such time as the Gnits
327 standard is actually published (which may never happen).
330 For more information on the precise implications of the strictness
331 level, see @ref{Gnits}.
333 Automake also has a special ``cygnus'' mode which is similar to
334 strictness but handled differently. This mode is useful for packages
335 which are put into a ``Cygnus'' style tree (e.g., the GCC tree). For
336 more information on this mode, see @ref{Cygnus}.
340 @section The Uniform Naming Scheme
342 @cindex Uniform naming scheme
344 Automake variables generally follow a @dfn{uniform naming scheme} that
345 makes it easy to decide how programs (and other derived objects) are
346 built, and how they are installed. This scheme also supports
347 @code{configure} time determination of what should be built.
349 @cindex _PROGRAMS primary variable
350 @cindex PROGRAMS primary variable
351 @cindex Primary variable, PROGRAMS
352 @cindex Primary variable, defined
354 At @code{make} time, certain variables are used to determine which
355 objects are to be built. The variable names are made of several pieces
356 which are concatenated together.
358 The piece which tells automake what is being built is commonly called
359 the @dfn{primary}. For instance, the primary @code{PROGRAMS} holds a
360 list of programs which are to be compiled and linked.
363 @cindex pkglibdir, defined
364 @cindex pkgincludedir, defined
365 @cindex pkgdatadir, defined
368 @vindex pkgincludedir
371 A different set of names is used to decide where the built objects
372 should be installed. These names are prefixes to the primary which
373 indicate which standard directory should be used as the installation
374 directory. The standard directory names are given in the GNU standards
375 (@pxref{Directory Variables, , , standards, The GNU Coding Standards}).
376 Automake extends this list with @code{pkglibdir}, @code{pkgincludedir},
377 and @code{pkgdatadir}; these are the same as the non-@samp{pkg}
378 versions, but with @samp{$(PACKAGE)} appended. For instance,
379 @code{pkglibdir} is defined as @code{$(libdir)/$(PACKAGE)}.
380 @cvindex PACKAGE, directory
382 @cindex EXTRA_, prepending
384 For each primary, there is one additional variable named by prepending
385 @samp{EXTRA_} to the primary name. This variable is used to list
386 objects which may or may not be built, depending on what
387 @code{configure} decides. This variable is required because Automake
388 must statically know the entire list of objects that may be built in
389 order to generate a @file{Makefile.in} that will work in all cases.
391 @cindex EXTRA_PROGRAMS, defined
392 @cindex Example, EXTRA_PROGRAMS
395 For instance, @code{cpio} decides at configure time which programs are
396 built. Some of the programs are installed in @code{bindir}, and some
397 are installed in @code{sbindir}:
400 EXTRA_PROGRAMS = mt rmt
401 bin_PROGRAMS = cpio pax
402 sbin_PROGRAMS = $(MORE_PROGRAMS)
405 Defining a primary without a prefix as a variable, e.g.,
406 @code{PROGRAMS}, is an error.
408 Note that the common @samp{dir} suffix is left off when constructing the
409 variable names; thus one writes @samp{bin_PROGRAMS} and not
410 @samp{bindir_PROGRAMS}.
412 Not every sort of object can be installed in every directory. Automake
413 will flag those attempts it finds in error.
414 Automake will also diagnose obvious misspellings in directory names.
416 @cindex Extending list of installation directories
417 @cindex Installation directories, extending list
419 Sometimes the standard directories---even as augmented by Automake---
420 are not enough. In particular it is sometimes useful, for clarity, to
421 install objects in a subdirectory of some predefined directory. To this
422 end, Automake allows you to extend the list of possible installation
423 directories. A given prefix (e.g. @samp{zar}) is valid if a variable of
424 the same name with @samp{dir} appended is defined (e.g. @code{zardir}).
426 @cindex HTML installation, example
428 For instance, installation of HTML files is part of Automake, you could
429 use this to install raw HTML documentation:
432 htmldir = $(prefix)/html
433 html_DATA = automake.html
436 @cindex noinst primary prefix, definition
438 The special prefix @samp{noinst} indicates that the objects in question
439 should be built but not installed at all. This is usually used for
440 objects required to build the rest of your package, for instance static
441 libraries (@pxref{A Library}), or helper scripts.
443 @cindex check primary prefix, definition
445 The special prefix @samp{check} indicates that the objects in question
446 should not be built until the @code{make check} command is run. Those
447 objects are not installed either.
449 The current primary names are @samp{PROGRAMS}, @samp{LIBRARIES},
450 @samp{LISP}, @samp{PYTHON}, @samp{JAVA}, @samp{SCRIPTS}, @samp{DATA},
451 @samp{HEADERS}, @samp{MANS}, and @samp{TEXINFOS}.
463 Some primaries also allow additional prefixes which control other
464 aspects of @code{automake}'s behavior. The currently defined prefixes
465 are @samp{dist_}, @samp{nodist_}, and @samp{nobase_}. These prefixes
466 are explained later (@pxref{Program and Library Variables}).
469 @node Canonicalization
470 @section How derived variables are named
472 @cindex canonicalizing Automake variables
474 Sometimes a Makefile variable name is derived from some text the
475 maintainer supplies. For instance, a program name listed in
476 @samp{_PROGRAMS} is rewritten into the name of a @samp{_SOURCES}
477 variable. In cases like this, Automake canonicalizes the text, so that
478 program names and the like do not have to follow Makefile variable naming
479 rules. All characters in the name except for letters, numbers, the
480 strudel (@@), and the underscore are turned into underscores when making
483 For example, if your program is named @code{sniff-glue}, the derived
484 variable name would be @code{sniff_glue_SOURCES}, not
485 @code{sniff-glue_SOURCES}. Similarly the sources for a library named
486 @code{libmumble++.a} should be listed in the
487 @code{libmumble___a_SOURCES} variable.
489 The strudel is an addition, to make the use of Autoconf substitutions in
490 variable names less obfuscating.
494 @section Variables reserved for the user
496 @cindex variables, reserved for the user
497 @cindex user variables
499 Some @code{Makefile} variables are reserved by the GNU Coding Standards
500 for the use of the ``user'' -- the person building the package. For
501 instance, @code{CFLAGS} is one such variable.
503 Sometimes package developers are tempted to set user variables such as
504 @code{CFLAGS} because it appears to make their job easier. However,
505 the package itself should never set a user variable, particularly not
506 to include switches which are required for proper compilation of the
507 package. Since these variables are documented as being for the
508 package builder, that person rightfully expects to be able to override
509 any of these variables at build time.
511 To get around this problem, automake introduces an automake-specific
512 shadow variable for each user flag variable. (Shadow variables are not
513 introduced for variables like @code{CC}, where they would make no
514 sense.) The shadow variable is named by prepending @samp{AM_} to the
515 user variable's name. For instance, the shadow variable for
516 @code{YFLAGS} is @code{AM_YFLAGS}.
519 @node Auxiliary Programs
520 @section Programs automake might require
522 @cindex Programs, auxiliary
523 @cindex Auxiliary programs
525 Automake sometimes requires helper programs so that the generated
526 @file{Makefile} can do its work properly. There are a fairly large
527 number of them, and we list them here.
532 These two files are used by the automatic de-ANSI-fication support
536 This is a wrapper for compilers which don't accept both @samp{-c} and
537 @samp{-o} at the same time. It is only used when absolutely required.
538 Such compilers are rare.
542 These programs compute the canonical triplets for the given build, host,
543 or target architecture. These programs are updated regularly to support
544 new architectures and fix probes broken by changes in new kernel
545 versions. You are encouraged to fetch the latest versions of these
546 files from @url{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/config/} before making a release.
549 This program understands how to run a compiler so that it will generate
550 not only the desired output but also dependency information which is
551 then used by the automatic dependency tracking feature.
554 This program is used to byte-compile Emacs Lisp code.
557 This is a replacement for the @code{install} program which works on
558 platforms where @code{install} is unavailable or unusable.
561 This script is used to generate a @file{version.texi} file. It examines
562 a file and prints some date information about it.
565 This wraps a number of programs which are typically only required by
566 maintainers. If the program in question doesn't exist, @code{missing}
567 prints an informative warning and attempts to fix things so that the
571 This script used to be a wrapper around @code{mkdir -p}, which is not
572 portable. Now we use prefer to use @code{install-sh -d} when configure
573 finds that @code{mkdir -p} does not work, this makes one less script to
576 For backward compatibility @code{mkinstalldirs} is still used and
577 distributed when @code{automake} finds it in a package. But it is no
578 longer installed automatically, and it should be safe to remove it.
581 This is used to byte-compile Python scripts.
584 Not a program, this file is required for @code{make dvi}, @code{make ps}
585 and @code{make pdf} to work when Texinfo sources are in the package.
588 This program wraps @code{lex} and @code{yacc} and ensures that, for
589 instance, multiple @code{yacc} instances can be invoked in a single
590 directory in parallel.
596 @chapter Some example packages
599 * Complete:: A simple example, start to finish
600 * Hello:: A classic program
601 * true:: Building true and false
606 @section A simple example, start to finish
608 @cindex Complete example
610 Let's suppose you just finished writing @code{zardoz}, a program to make
611 your head float from vortex to vortex. You've been using Autoconf to
612 provide a portability framework, but your @file{Makefile.in}s have been
613 ad-hoc. You want to make them bulletproof, so you turn to Automake.
615 @cindex AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE, example use
617 The first step is to update your @file{configure.ac} to include the
618 commands that @code{automake} needs. The way to do this is to add an
619 @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE} call just after @code{AC_INIT}:
627 Since your program doesn't have any complicating factors (e.g., it
628 doesn't use @code{gettext}, it doesn't want to build a shared library),
629 you're done with this part. That was easy!
631 @cindex aclocal program, introduction
632 @cindex aclocal.m4, preexisting
633 @cindex acinclude.m4, defined
635 Now you must regenerate @file{configure}. But to do that, you'll need
636 to tell @code{autoconf} how to find the new macro you've used. The
637 easiest way to do this is to use the @code{aclocal} program to generate
638 your @file{aclocal.m4} for you. But wait@dots{} maybe you already have an
639 @file{aclocal.m4}, because you had to write some hairy macros for your
640 program. The @code{aclocal} program lets you put your own macros into
641 @file{acinclude.m4}, so simply rename and then run:
644 mv aclocal.m4 acinclude.m4
649 @cindex zardoz example
651 Now it is time to write your @file{Makefile.am} for @code{zardoz}.
652 Since @code{zardoz} is a user program, you want to install it where the
653 rest of the user programs go: @code{bindir}. Additionally,
654 @code{zardoz} has some Texinfo documentation. Your @file{configure.ac}
655 script uses @code{AC_REPLACE_FUNCS}, so you need to link against
656 @samp{$(LIBOBJS)}. So here's what you'd write:
659 bin_PROGRAMS = zardoz
660 zardoz_SOURCES = main.c head.c float.c vortex9.c gun.c
661 zardoz_LDADD = $(LIBOBJS)
663 info_TEXINFOS = zardoz.texi
666 Now you can run @code{automake --add-missing} to generate your
667 @file{Makefile.in} and grab any auxiliary files you might need, and
672 @section A classic program
674 @cindex Example, GNU Hello
675 @cindex Hello example
676 @cindex GNU Hello, example
678 @uref{ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/hello-1.3.tar.gz, GNU hello} is
679 renowned for its classic simplicity and versatility. This section shows
680 how Automake could be used with the GNU Hello package. The examples
681 below are from the latest beta version of GNU Hello, but with all of the
682 maintainer-only code stripped out, as well as all copyright comments.
684 Of course, GNU Hello is somewhat more featureful than your traditional
685 two-liner. GNU Hello is internationalized, does option processing, and
686 has a manual and a test suite.
688 @cindex configure.ac, from GNU Hello
689 @cindex GNU Hello, configure.ac
690 @cindex Hello, configure.ac
692 Here is the @file{configure.ac} from GNU Hello.
693 @strong{Please note:} The calls to @code{AC_INIT} and @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE}
694 in this example use a deprecated syntax. For the current approach,
695 see the description of @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE} in @ref{Public macros}.
697 @c FIXME: This definitely requires an update, e.g. to GNU Hello 2.1.1.
700 dnl Process this file with autoconf to produce a configure script.
702 AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE(hello, 1.3.11)
703 AM_CONFIG_HEADER(config.h)
705 dnl Set of available languages.
706 ALL_LINGUAS="de fr es ko nl no pl pt sl sv"
708 dnl Checks for programs.
712 dnl Checks for libraries.
714 dnl Checks for header files.
716 AC_HAVE_HEADERS(string.h fcntl.h sys/file.h sys/param.h)
718 dnl Checks for library functions.
721 dnl Check for st_blksize in struct stat
724 dnl internationalization macros
726 AC_OUTPUT([Makefile doc/Makefile intl/Makefile po/Makefile.in \
727 src/Makefile tests/Makefile tests/hello],
728 [chmod +x tests/hello])
731 The @samp{AM_} macros are provided by Automake (or the Gettext library);
732 the rest are standard Autoconf macros.
735 The top-level @file{Makefile.am}:
738 EXTRA_DIST = BUGS ChangeLog.O
739 SUBDIRS = doc intl po src tests
742 As you can see, all the work here is really done in subdirectories.
744 The @file{po} and @file{intl} directories are automatically generated
745 using @code{gettextize}; they will not be discussed here.
747 @cindex Texinfo file handling example
748 @cindex Example, handling Texinfo files
750 In @file{doc/Makefile.am} we see:
753 info_TEXINFOS = hello.texi
754 hello_TEXINFOS = gpl.texi
757 This is sufficient to build, install, and distribute the GNU Hello
760 @cindex Regression test example
761 @cindex Example, regression test
763 Here is @file{tests/Makefile.am}:
767 EXTRA_DIST = hello.in testdata
770 The script @file{hello} is generated by @code{configure}, and is the
771 only test case. @code{make check} will run this test.
773 @cindex INCLUDES, example usage
775 Last we have @file{src/Makefile.am}, where all the real work is done:
776 @c FIXME: As all the Hello World excerpts in this manual, this
777 @c shows deprecated features (here: $(INCLUDES)).
781 hello_SOURCES = hello.c version.c getopt.c getopt1.c getopt.h system.h
782 hello_LDADD = $(INTLLIBS) $(ALLOCA)
783 localedir = $(datadir)/locale
784 INCLUDES = -I../intl -DLOCALEDIR=\"$(localedir)\"
789 @section Building true and false
791 @cindex Example, false and true
792 @cindex false Example
795 Here is another, trickier example. It shows how to generate two
796 programs (@code{true} and @code{false}) from the same source file
797 (@file{true.c}). The difficult part is that each compilation of
798 @file{true.c} requires different @code{cpp} flags.
801 bin_PROGRAMS = true false
803 false_LDADD = false.o
806 $(COMPILE) -DEXIT_CODE=0 -c true.c
809 $(COMPILE) -DEXIT_CODE=1 -o false.o -c true.c
812 Note that there is no @code{true_SOURCES} definition. Automake will
813 implicitly assume that there is a source file named @file{true.c}, and
814 define rules to compile @file{true.o} and link @file{true}. The
815 @code{true.o: true.c} rule supplied by the above @file{Makefile.am},
816 will override the Automake generated rule to build @file{true.o}.
818 @code{false_SOURCES} is defined to be empty---that way no implicit value
819 is substituted. Because we have not listed the source of
820 @file{false}, we have to tell Automake how to link the program. This is
821 the purpose of the @code{false_LDADD} line. A @code{false_DEPENDENCIES}
822 variable, holding the dependencies of the @file{false} target will be
823 automatically generated by Automake from the content of
826 The above rules won't work if your compiler doesn't accept both
827 @samp{-c} and @samp{-o}. The simplest fix for this is to introduce a
828 bogus dependency (to avoid problems with a parallel @code{make}):
831 true.o: true.c false.o
832 $(COMPILE) -DEXIT_CODE=0 -c true.c
835 $(COMPILE) -DEXIT_CODE=1 -c true.c && mv true.o false.o
838 Also, these explicit rules do not work if the de-ANSI-fication feature
839 is used (@pxref{ANSI}). Supporting de-ANSI-fication requires a little
843 true._o: true._c false.o
844 $(COMPILE) -DEXIT_CODE=0 -c true.c
847 $(COMPILE) -DEXIT_CODE=1 -c true.c && mv true._o false.o
850 As it turns out, there is also a much easier way to do this same task.
851 Some of the above techniques are useful enough that we've kept the
852 example in the manual. However if you were to build @code{true} and
853 @code{false} in real life, you would probably use per-program
854 compilation flags, like so:
857 bin_PROGRAMS = false true
859 false_SOURCES = true.c
860 false_CPPFLAGS = -DEXIT_CODE=1
862 true_SOURCES = true.c
863 true_CPPFLAGS = -DEXIT_CODE=0
866 In this case Automake will cause @file{true.c} to be compiled twice,
867 with different flags. De-ANSI-fication will work automatically. In
868 this instance, the names of the object files would be chosen by
869 automake; they would be @file{false-true.o} and @file{true-true.o}.
870 (The name of the object files rarely matters.)
873 @node Invoking Automake
874 @chapter Creating a @file{Makefile.in}
876 @cindex Multiple configure.ac files
877 @cindex Invoking Automake
878 @cindex Automake, invoking
880 To create all the @file{Makefile.in}s for a package, run the
881 @code{automake} program in the top level directory, with no arguments.
882 @code{automake} will automatically find each appropriate
883 @file{Makefile.am} (by scanning @file{configure.ac}; @pxref{configure})
884 and generate the corresponding @file{Makefile.in}. Note that
885 @code{automake} has a rather simplistic view of what constitutes a
886 package; it assumes that a package has only one @file{configure.ac}, at
887 the top. If your package has multiple @file{configure.ac}s, then you
888 must run @code{automake} in each directory holding a
889 @file{configure.ac}. (Alternatively, you may rely on Autoconf's
890 @code{autoreconf}, which is able to recurse your package tree and run
891 @code{automake} where appropriate.)
893 You can optionally give @code{automake} an argument; @file{.am} is
894 appended to the argument and the result is used as the name of the input
895 file. This feature is generally only used to automatically rebuild an
896 out-of-date @file{Makefile.in}. Note that @code{automake} must always
897 be run from the topmost directory of a project, even if being used to
898 regenerate the @file{Makefile.in} in some subdirectory. This is
899 necessary because @code{automake} must scan @file{configure.ac}, and
900 because @code{automake} uses the knowledge that a @file{Makefile.in} is
901 in a subdirectory to change its behavior in some cases.
904 Automake will run @code{autoconf} to scan @file{configure.ac} and its
905 dependencies (@file{aclocal.m4}), therefore @code{autoconf} must be in
906 your @code{PATH}. If there is an @code{AUTOCONF} variable in your
907 environment it will be used instead of @code{autoconf}, this allows you
908 to select a particular version of Autoconf. By the way, don't
909 misunderstand this paragraph: Automake runs @code{autoconf} to
910 @strong{scan} your @file{configure.ac}, this won't build
911 @file{configure} and you still have to run @code{autoconf} yourself for
914 @cindex Automake options
915 @cindex Options, Automake
916 @cindex Strictness, command line
918 @code{automake} accepts the following options:
920 @cindex Extra files distributed with Automake
921 @cindex Files distributed with Automake
928 @opindex --add-missing
929 Automake requires certain common files to exist in certain situations;
930 for instance @file{config.guess} is required if @file{configure.ac} runs
931 @code{AC_CANONICAL_HOST}. Automake is distributed with several of these
932 files (@pxref{Auxiliary Programs}); this option will cause the missing
933 ones to be automatically added to the package, whenever possible. In
934 general if Automake tells you a file is missing, try using this option.
935 By default Automake tries to make a symbolic link pointing to its own
936 copy of the missing file; this can be changed with @code{--copy}.
938 Many of the potentially-missing files are common scripts whose
939 location may be specified via the @code{AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR} macro.
940 Therefore, @code{AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR}'s setting affects whether a
941 file is considered missing, and where the missing file is added
944 @item --libdir=@var{dir}
946 Look for Automake data files in directory @var{dir} instead of in the
947 installation directory. This is typically used for debugging.
953 When used with @code{--add-missing}, causes installed files to be
954 copied. The default is to make a symbolic link.
958 Causes the generated @file{Makefile.in}s to follow Cygnus rules, instead
959 of GNU or Gnits rules. For more information, see @ref{Cygnus}.
963 @itemx --force-missing
964 @opindex --force-missing
965 When used with @code{--add-missing}, causes standard files to be reinstalled
966 even if they already exist in the source tree. This involves removing
967 the file from the source tree before creating the new symlink (or, with
968 @code{--copy}, copying the new file).
972 Set the global strictness to @samp{foreign}. For more information, see
977 Set the global strictness to @samp{gnits}. For more information, see
982 Set the global strictness to @samp{gnu}. For more information, see
983 @ref{Gnits}. This is the default strictness.
987 Print a summary of the command line options and exit.
992 This disables the dependency tracking feature in generated
993 @file{Makefile}s; see @ref{Dependencies}.
996 @opindex --include-deps
997 This enables the dependency tracking feature. This feature is enabled
998 by default. This option is provided for historical reasons only and
999 probably should not be used.
1003 Ordinarily @code{automake} creates all @file{Makefile.in}s mentioned in
1004 @file{configure.ac}. This option causes it to only update those
1005 @file{Makefile.in}s which are out of date with respect to one of their
1009 @itemx --output-dir=@var{dir}
1011 @opindex --output-dir
1012 Put the generated @file{Makefile.in} in the directory @var{dir}.
1013 Ordinarily each @file{Makefile.in} is created in the directory of the
1014 corresponding @file{Makefile.am}. This option is deprecated and will be
1015 removed in a future release.
1021 Cause Automake to print information about which files are being read or
1026 Print the version number of Automake and exit.
1029 @item --warnings=@var{category}
1032 Output warnings falling in @var{category}. @var{category} can be
1036 warnings related to the GNU Coding Standards
1037 (@pxref{Top, , , standards, The GNU Coding Standards}).
1039 obsolete features or constructions
1041 user redefinitions of Automake rules or variables
1043 portability issues (e.g., use of Make features which are known not portable)
1045 weird syntax, unused variables, typos
1047 unsupported or incomplete features
1051 turn off all the warnings
1053 treat warnings as errors
1056 A category can be turned off by prefixing its name with @samp{no-}. For
1057 instance @samp{-Wno-syntax} will hide the warnings about unused
1060 The categories output by default are @samp{syntax} and
1061 @samp{unsupported}. Additionally, @samp{gnu} is enabled in @samp{--gnu} and
1062 @samp{--gnits} strictness.
1064 @samp{portability} warnings are currently disabled by default, but they
1065 will be enabled in @samp{--gnu} and @samp{--gnits} strictness in a
1069 The environment variable @samp{WARNINGS} can contain a comma separated
1070 list of categories to enable. It will be taken into account before the
1071 command-line switches, this way @samp{-Wnone} will also ignore any
1072 warning category enabled by @samp{WARNINGS}. This variable is also used
1073 by other tools like @command{autoconf}; unknown categories are ignored
1080 @chapter Scanning @file{configure.ac}
1082 @cindex configure.ac, scanning
1083 @cindex Scanning configure.ac
1085 Automake scans the package's @file{configure.ac} to determine certain
1086 information about the package. Some @code{autoconf} macros are required
1087 and some variables must be defined in @file{configure.ac}. Automake
1088 will also use information from @file{configure.ac} to further tailor its
1091 Automake also supplies some Autoconf macros to make the maintenance
1092 easier. These macros can automatically be put into your
1093 @file{aclocal.m4} using the @code{aclocal} program.
1096 * Requirements:: Configuration requirements
1097 * Optional:: Other things Automake recognizes
1098 * Invoking aclocal:: Auto-generating aclocal.m4
1099 * aclocal options:: aclocal command line arguments
1100 * Macro search path:: Modifying aclocal's search path
1101 * Macros:: Autoconf macros supplied with Automake
1102 * Extending aclocal:: Writing your own aclocal macros
1103 * Local Macros:: Organizing local macros
1104 * Future of aclocal:: aclocal's scheduled death
1109 @section Configuration requirements
1111 @cindex Automake requirements
1112 @cindex Requirements of Automake
1114 The one real requirement of Automake is that your @file{configure.ac}
1115 call @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE}. This macro does several things which are
1116 required for proper Automake operation (@pxref{Macros}).
1117 @cvindex AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE
1119 Here are the other macros which Automake requires but which are not run
1120 by @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE}:
1123 @item AC_CONFIG_FILES
1125 Automake uses these to determine which files to create (@pxref{Output, ,
1126 Creating Output Files, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}). A listed file
1127 is considered to be an Automake generated @file{Makefile} if there
1128 exists a file with the same name and the @file{.am} extension appended.
1129 Typically, @code{AC_CONFIG_FILES([foo/Makefile])} will cause Automake to
1130 generate @file{foo/Makefile.in} if @file{foo/Makefile.am} exists.
1132 When using @code{AC_CONFIG_FILES} with multiple input files, as in
1133 @code{AC_CONFIG_FILES([Makefile:top.in:Makefile.in:bot.in])}, Automake
1134 will generate the first @file{.in} input file for which a @file{.am}
1135 file exists. If no such file exists the output file is not considered
1136 to be Automake generated.
1138 Files created by @code{AC_CONFIG_FILES} are removed by @code{make distclean}.
1139 @cvindex AC_CONFIG_FILES
1145 @section Other things Automake recognizes
1147 @cindex Macros Automake recognizes
1148 @cindex Recognized macros by Automake
1150 Every time Automake is run it calls Autoconf to trace
1151 @file{configure.ac}. This way it can recognize the use of certain
1152 macros and tailor the generated @file{Makefile.in} appropriately.
1153 Currently recognized macros and their effects are:
1156 @item AC_CONFIG_HEADERS
1157 Automake will generate rules to rebuild these headers. Older versions
1158 of Automake required the use of @code{AM_CONFIG_HEADER}
1159 (@pxref{Macros}); this is no longer the case today.
1160 @cvindex AC_CONFIG_HEADERS
1162 @item AC_CONFIG_LINKS
1163 Automake will generate rules to remove @file{configure} generated links on
1164 @code{make distclean} and to distribute named source files as part of
1166 @cvindex AC_CONFIG_LINKS
1168 @item AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR
1169 Automake will look for various helper scripts, such as
1170 @file{install-sh}, in the directory named in this macro invocation.
1171 @c This list is accurate relative to version 1.8
1172 (The full list of scripts is: @file{config.guess}, @file{config.sub},
1173 @file{depcomp}, @file{elisp-comp}, @file{compile}, @file{install-sh},
1174 @file{ltmain.sh}, @file{mdate-sh}, @file{missing}, @file{mkinstalldirs},
1175 @file{py-compile}, @file{texinfo.tex}, and @file{ylwrap}.) Not all
1176 scripts are always searched for; some scripts will only be sought if the
1177 generated @file{Makefile.in} requires them.
1178 @cvindex AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR
1180 If @code{AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR} is not given, the scripts are looked for in
1181 their @samp{standard} locations. For @file{mdate-sh},
1182 @file{texinfo.tex}, and @file{ylwrap}, the standard location is the
1183 source directory corresponding to the current @file{Makefile.am}. For
1184 the rest, the standard location is the first one of @file{.}, @file{..},
1185 or @file{../..} (relative to the top source directory) that provides any
1186 one of the helper scripts. @xref{Input, , Finding `configure' Input,
1187 autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}.
1189 Required files from @code{AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR} are automatically
1190 distributed, even if there is no @file{Makefile.am} in this directory.
1192 @item AC_CANONICAL_HOST
1193 Automake will ensure that @file{config.guess} and @file{config.sub}
1194 exist. Also, the @file{Makefile} variables @samp{host_alias} and
1195 @samp{host_triplet} are introduced. See @ref{Canonicalizing, ,
1196 Getting the Canonical System Type, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}.
1197 @cvindex AC_CANONICAL_HOST
1199 @vindex host_triplet
1201 @item AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM
1202 This is similar to @code{AC_CANONICAL_HOST}, but also defines the
1203 @file{Makefile} variables @samp{build_alias} and @samp{target_alias}.
1204 @xref{Canonicalizing, , Getting the Canonical System Type, autoconf, The
1206 @cvindex AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM
1208 @vindex target_alias
1211 @itemx AC_LIBSOURCES
1213 Automake will automatically distribute any file listed in
1214 @code{AC_LIBSOURCE} or @code{AC_LIBSOURCES}.
1216 Note that the @code{AC_LIBOBJ} macro calls @code{AC_LIBSOURCE}. So if
1217 an Autoconf macro is documented to call @code{AC_LIBOBJ([file])}, then
1218 @file{file.c} will be distributed automatically by Automake. This
1219 encompasses many macros like @code{AC_FUNC_ALLOCA},
1220 @code{AC_FUNC_MEMCMP}, @code{AC_REPLACE_FUNCS}, and others.
1222 @cvindex AC_LIBSOURCE
1223 @cvindex AC_LIBSOURCES
1225 By the way, direct assignments to @code{LIBOBJS} are no longer
1226 supported. You should always use @code{AC_LIBOBJ} for this purpose.
1227 @xref{AC_LIBOBJ vs LIBOBJS, , @code{AC_LIBOBJ} vs. @code{LIBOBJS},
1228 autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}.
1231 @item AC_PROG_RANLIB
1232 This is required if any libraries are built in the package.
1233 @xref{Particular Programs, , Particular Program Checks, autoconf, The
1235 @cvindex AC_PROG_RANLIB
1238 This is required if any C++ source is included. @xref{Particular
1239 Programs, , Particular Program Checks, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}.
1240 @cvindex AC_PROG_CXX
1243 This is required if any Fortran 77 source is included. This macro is
1244 distributed with Autoconf version 2.13 and later. @xref{Particular
1245 Programs, , Particular Program Checks, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}.
1246 @cvindex AC_PROG_F77
1248 @item AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS
1249 This is required for programs and shared libraries that are a mixture of
1250 languages that include Fortran 77 (@pxref{Mixing Fortran 77 With C and
1251 C++}). @xref{Macros, , Autoconf macros supplied with Automake}.
1252 @cvindex AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS
1254 @item AC_PROG_LIBTOOL
1255 Automake will turn on processing for @code{libtool} (@pxref{Top, ,
1256 Introduction, libtool, The Libtool Manual}).
1257 @cvindex AC_PROG_LIBTOOL
1260 If a Yacc source file is seen, then you must either use this macro or
1261 define the variable @samp{YACC} in @file{configure.ac}. The former is
1262 preferred (@pxref{Particular Programs, , Particular Program Checks,
1263 autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}).
1264 @cvindex AC_PROG_YACC
1268 If a Lex source file is seen, then this macro must be used.
1269 @xref{Particular Programs, , Particular Program Checks, autoconf, The
1271 @cvindex AC_PROG_LEX
1275 The first argument is automatically defined as a variable in each
1276 generated @file{Makefile.in}. @xref{Setting Output Variables, , Setting
1277 Output Variables, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}.
1279 If the Autoconf manual says that a macro calls @code{AC_SUBST} for
1280 @var{var}, or defines the output variable @var{var} then @var{var} will
1281 be defined in each @file{Makefile.in} generated by Automake.
1282 E.g. @code{AC_PATH_XTRA} defines @code{X_CFLAGS} and @code{X_LIBS}, so
1283 you can use these variables in any @file{Makefile.am} if
1284 @code{AC_PATH_XTRA} is called.
1286 @item AM_C_PROTOTYPES
1287 This is required when using automatic de-ANSI-fication; see @ref{ANSI}.
1288 @cvindex AM_C_PROTOTYPES
1290 @item AM_GNU_GETTEXT
1291 This macro is required for packages which use GNU gettext
1292 (@pxref{gettext}). It is distributed with gettext. If Automake sees
1293 this macro it ensures that the package meets some of gettext's
1295 @cvindex AM_GNU_GETTEXT
1297 @item AM_MAINTAINER_MODE
1298 @opindex --enable-maintainer-mode
1299 This macro adds a @samp{--enable-maintainer-mode} option to
1300 @code{configure}. If this is used, @code{automake} will cause
1301 @samp{maintainer-only} rules to be turned off by default in the
1302 generated @file{Makefile.in}s. This macro defines the
1303 @samp{MAINTAINER_MODE} conditional, which you can use in your own
1305 @cvindex AM_MAINTAINER_MODE
1309 Files included by @file{configure.ac} using this macro will be
1310 detected by Automake and automatically distributed. They will also
1311 appear as dependencies in @file{Makefile} rules.
1313 @code{m4_include} is seldom used by @file{configure.ac} authors, but
1314 can appear in @file{aclocal.m4} when @command{aclocal} detects that
1315 some required macros come from files local to your package (as
1316 opposed to macros installed in a system-wide directory, see
1317 @ref{Invoking aclocal}).
1322 @node Invoking aclocal
1323 @section Auto-generating aclocal.m4
1325 @cindex Invoking aclocal
1326 @cindex aclocal, Invoking
1328 Automake includes a number of Autoconf macros which can be used in
1329 your package (@pxref{Macros}); some of them are actually required by
1330 Automake in certain situations. These macros must be defined in your
1331 @file{aclocal.m4}; otherwise they will not be seen by
1334 The @command{aclocal} program will automatically generate
1335 @file{aclocal.m4} files based on the contents of @file{configure.ac}.
1336 This provides a convenient way to get Automake-provided macros,
1337 without having to search around. The @command{aclocal} mechanism
1338 allows other packages to supply their own macros (@pxref{Extending
1339 aclocal}). You can also use it to maintain your own set of custom
1340 macros (@pxref{Local Macros}).
1342 At startup, @command{aclocal} scans all the @file{.m4} files it can
1343 find, looking for macro definitions (@pxref{Macro search path}). Then
1344 it scans @file{configure.ac}. Any mention of one of the macros found
1345 in the first step causes that macro, and any macros it in turn
1346 requires, to be put into @file{aclocal.m4}.
1348 @emph{Putting} the file that contains the macro definition into
1349 @file{aclocal.m4} is usually done by copying the entire text of this
1350 file, including unused macro definitions as well as both @samp{#} and
1351 @samp{dnl} comments. If you want to make a comment which will be
1352 completely ignored by @command{aclocal}, use @samp{##} as the comment
1355 When @command{aclocal} detects that the file containing the macro
1356 definition is in a subdirectory of your package, it will use
1357 @code{m4_include} instead of copying it; this makes the package
1358 smaller and eases dependency tracking. This only works if the
1359 subdirectory containing the macro was specified as a relative search
1360 path with @command{aclocal}'s @code{-I} argument. (@pxref{Local
1361 Macros} for an example.) Any macro which is found in a system-wide
1362 directory, or via an absolute search path will be copied.
1364 The contents of @file{acinclude.m4}, if it exists, are also
1365 automatically included in @file{aclocal.m4}. We recommend against
1366 using @file{acinclude.m4} in new packages (@pxref{Local Macros}).
1369 While computing @file{aclocal.m4}, @code{aclocal} runs @code{autom4te}
1370 (@pxref{Using autom4te, , Using @code{Autom4te}, autoconf, The
1371 Autoconf Manual}) in order to trace the macros which are really used,
1372 and omit from @file{aclocal.m4} all macros which are mentioned but
1373 otherwise unexpanded (this can happen when a macro is called
1374 conditionally). @code{autom4te} is expected to be in the @code{PATH},
1375 just as @code{autoconf}. Its location can be overridden using the
1376 @code{AUTOM4TE} environment variable.
1379 * aclocal options:: Options supported by aclocal
1380 * Macro search path:: How aclocal finds .m4 files
1383 @node aclocal options
1384 @section aclocal options
1386 @cindex aclocal, Options
1387 @cindex Options, aclocal
1389 @code{aclocal} accepts the following options:
1392 @item --acdir=@var{dir}
1394 Look for the macro files in @var{dir} instead of the installation
1395 directory. This is typically used for debugging.
1399 Print a summary of the command line options and exit.
1403 Add the directory @var{dir} to the list of directories searched for
1408 Always overwrite the output file. The default is to overwrite the output
1409 file only when really needed, i.e., when its contents changes or if one
1410 of its dependencies is younger.
1412 @item --output=@var{file}
1414 Cause the output to be put into @var{file} instead of @file{aclocal.m4}.
1416 @item --print-ac-dir
1417 @opindex --print-ac-dir
1418 Prints the name of the directory which @code{aclocal} will search to
1419 find third-party @file{.m4} files. When this option is given, normal
1420 processing is suppressed. This option can be used by a package to
1421 determine where to install a macro file.
1425 Print the names of the files it examines.
1429 Print the version number of Automake and exit.
1432 @node Macro search path
1433 @section Macro search path
1435 @cindex Macro search path
1436 @cindex aclocal search path
1438 By default, @command{aclocal} searches for @file{.m4} files in the following
1439 directories, in this order:
1442 @item @var{acdir-APIVERSION}
1443 This is where the @file{.m4} macros distributed with automake itself
1444 are stored. @var{APIVERSION} depends on the automake release used;
1445 for automake 1.6.x, @var{APIVERSION} = @code{1.6}.
1448 This directory is intended for third party @file{.m4} files, and is
1449 configured when @command{automake} itself is built. This is
1450 @file{@@datadir@@/aclocal/}, which typically
1451 expands to @file{$@{prefix@}/share/aclocal/}. To find the compiled-in
1452 value of @var{acdir}, use the @code{--print-ac-dir} option
1453 (@pxref{aclocal options}).
1456 As an example, suppose that automake-1.6.2 was configured with
1457 @code{--prefix=/usr/local}. Then, the search path would be:
1460 @item @file{/usr/local/share/aclocal-1.6/}
1461 @item @file{/usr/local/share/aclocal/}
1464 As explained in (@pxref{aclocal options}), there are several options that
1465 can be used to change or extend this search path.
1467 @subsection Modifying the macro search path: @code{--acdir}
1469 The most obvious option to modify the search path is
1470 @code{--acdir=@var{dir}}, which changes default directory and
1471 drops the @var{APIVERSION} directory. For example, if one specifies
1472 @code{--acdir=/opt/private/}, then the search path becomes:
1475 @item @file{/opt/private/}
1478 Note that this option, @code{--acdir}, is intended for use
1479 by the internal automake test suite only; it is not ordinarily
1480 needed by end-users.
1482 @subsection Modifying the macro search path: @code{-I @var{dir}}
1484 Any extra directories specified using @code{-I} options
1485 (@pxref{aclocal options}) are @emph{prepended} to this search list. Thus,
1486 @code{aclocal -I /foo -I /bar} results in the following search path:
1491 @item @var{acdir}-@var{APIVERSION}
1495 @subsection Modifying the macro search path: @file{dirlist}
1496 @cindex @file{dirlist}
1498 There is a third mechanism for customizing the search path. If a
1499 @file{dirlist} file exists in @var{acdir}, then that file is assumed to
1500 contain a list of directories, one per line, to be added to the search
1501 list. These directories are searched @emph{after} all other
1504 For example, suppose
1505 @file{@var{acdir}/dirlist} contains the following:
1513 and that @code{aclocal} was called with the @code{-I /foo -I /bar} options.
1514 Then, the search path would be
1519 @item @var{acdir}-@var{APIVERSION}
1525 If the @code{--acdir=@var{dir}} option is used, then @command{aclocal}
1526 will search for the @file{dirlist} file in @var{dir}. In the
1527 @code{--acdir=/opt/private/} example above, @command{aclocal} would look
1528 for @file{/opt/private/dirlist}. Again, however, the @code{--acdir}
1529 option is intended for use by the internal automake test suite only;
1530 @code{--acdir} is not ordinarily needed by end-users.
1532 @file{dirlist} is useful in the following situation: suppose that
1533 @code{automake} version @code{1.6.2} is installed with
1534 $prefix=/usr by the system vendor. Thus, the default search
1538 @item @file{/usr/share/aclocal-1.6/}
1539 @item @file{/usr/share/aclocal/}
1542 However, suppose further that many packages have been manually
1543 installed on the system, with $prefix=/usr/local, as is typical.
1544 In that case, many of these ``extra'' @file{.m4} files are in
1545 @file{/usr/local/share/aclocal}. The only way to force
1546 @file{/usr/bin/aclocal} to find these ``extra'' @file{.m4} files
1547 is to always call @code{aclocal -I /usr/local/share/aclocal}.
1548 This is inconvenient. With @file{dirlist}, one may create the file
1550 @file{/usr/share/aclocal/dirlist}
1553 which contains only the single line
1555 @file{/usr/local/share/aclocal}
1557 Now, the ``default'' search path on the affected system is
1560 @item @file{/usr/share/aclocal-1.6/}
1561 @item @file{/usr/share/aclocal/}
1562 @item @file{/usr/local/share/aclocal/}
1565 without the need for @code{-I} options; @code{-I} options can be reserved
1566 for project-specific needs (@file{my-source-dir/m4/}), rather than
1567 using it to work around local system-dependent tool installation
1570 Similarly, @file{dirlist} can be handy if you have installed a local
1571 copy Automake on your account and want @command{aclocal} to look for
1572 macros installed at other places on the system.
1576 @section Autoconf macros supplied with Automake
1578 Automake ships with several Autoconf macros that you can use from your
1579 @file{configure.ac}. When you use one of them it will be included by
1580 @code{aclocal} in @file{aclocal.m4}.
1583 * Public macros:: Macros that you can use.
1584 * Private macros:: Macros that you should not use.
1587 @c consider generating the following subsections automatically from m4 files.
1590 @subsection Public macros
1593 @item AM_CONFIG_HEADER
1594 Automake will generate rules to automatically regenerate the config
1595 header. This obsolete macro is a synonym of @code{AC_CONFIG_HEADERS}
1596 today (@pxref{Optional}).
1597 @cvindex AM_CONFIG_HEADER
1599 @item AM_ENABLE_MULTILIB
1600 This is used when a ``multilib'' library is being built. The first
1601 optional argument is the name of the @file{Makefile} being generated; it
1602 defaults to @samp{Makefile}. The second option argument is used to find
1603 the top source directory; it defaults to the empty string (generally
1604 this should not be used unless you are familiar with the internals).
1607 @item AM_C_PROTOTYPES
1608 Check to see if function prototypes are understood by the compiler. If
1609 so, define @samp{PROTOTYPES} and set the output variables @samp{U} and
1610 @samp{ANSI2KNR} to the empty string. Otherwise, set @samp{U} to
1611 @samp{_} and @samp{ANSI2KNR} to @samp{./ansi2knr}. Automake uses these
1612 values to implement automatic de-ANSI-fication.
1613 @cvindex AM_C_PROTOTYPES
1615 @item AM_HEADER_TIOCGWINSZ_NEEDS_SYS_IOCTL
1616 If the use of @code{TIOCGWINSZ} requires @file{<sys/ioctl.h>}, then
1617 define @code{GWINSZ_IN_SYS_IOCTL}. Otherwise @code{TIOCGWINSZ} can be
1618 found in @file{<termios.h>}.
1619 @cvindex AM_HEADER_TIOCGWINSZ_NEEDS_SYS_IOCTL
1621 @item AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE([OPTIONS])
1622 @itemx AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE(PACKAGE, VERSION, [NO-DEFINE])
1623 Runs many macros required for proper operation of the generated Makefiles.
1625 This macro has two forms, the first of which is preferred.
1626 In this form, @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE} is called with a
1627 single argument --- a space-separated list of Automake options which should
1628 be applied to every @file{Makefile.am} in the tree. The effect is as if
1629 each option were listed in @code{AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS}.
1631 The second, deprecated, form of @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE} has two required
1632 arguments: the package and the version number. This form is
1633 obsolete because the @var{package} and @var{version} can be obtained
1634 from Autoconf's @code{AC_INIT} macro (which itself has an old and a new
1637 If your @file{configure.ac} has:
1640 AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE(mumble, 1.5)
1642 you can modernize it as follows:
1644 AC_INIT(mumble, 1.5)
1645 AC_CONFIG_SRCDIR(src/foo.c)
1649 Note that if you're upgrading your @file{configure.ac} from an earlier
1650 version of Automake, it is not always correct to simply move the package
1651 and version arguments from @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE} directly to
1652 @code{AC_INIT}, as in the example above. The first argument to
1653 @code{AC_INIT} should be the name of your package (e.g. @samp{GNU Automake}),
1654 not the tarball name (e.g. @samp{automake}) that you used to pass to
1655 @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE}. Autoconf tries to derive a tarball name from
1656 the package name, which should work for most but not all package names.
1657 (If it doesn't work for yours, you can use the
1658 four-argument form of @code{AC_INIT} --- supported in Autoconf versions
1659 greater than 2.52g --- to provide the tarball name explicitly).
1661 By default this macro @code{AC_DEFINE}'s @samp{PACKAGE} and
1662 @samp{VERSION}. This can be avoided by passing the @samp{no-define}
1665 AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE([gnits 1.5 no-define dist-bzip2])
1667 or by passing a third non-empty argument to the obsolete form.
1669 @cvindex PACKAGE, prevent definition
1670 @cvindex VERSION, prevent definition
1673 @item AM_PATH_LISPDIR
1674 Searches for the program @code{emacs}, and, if found, sets the output
1675 variable @code{lispdir} to the full path to Emacs' site-lisp directory.
1677 Note that this test assumes the @code{emacs} found to be a version that
1678 supports Emacs Lisp (such as @sc{gnu} Emacs or XEmacs). Other emacsen
1679 can cause this test to hang (some, like old versions of MicroEmacs,
1680 start up in interactive mode, requiring @samp{C-x C-c} to exit, which
1681 is hardly obvious for a non-emacs user). In most cases, however, you
1682 should be able to use @samp{C-c} to kill the test. In order to avoid
1683 problems, you can set @code{EMACS} to ``no'' in the environment, or
1684 use the @samp{--with-lispdir} option to @command{configure} to
1685 explicitly set the correct path (if you're sure you have an @code{emacs}
1686 that supports Emacs Lisp.
1687 @cvindex AM_PATH_LISPDIR
1690 Use this macro when you have assembly code in your project. This will
1691 choose the assembler for you (by default the C compiler) and set
1692 @code{CCAS}, and will also set @code{CCASFLAGS} if required.
1694 @item AM_PROG_CC_C_O
1695 This is like @code{AC_PROG_CC_C_O}, but it generates its results in the
1696 manner required by automake. You must use this instead of
1697 @code{AC_PROG_CC_C_O} when you need this functionality.
1700 @cindex HP-UX 10, lex problems
1701 @cindex lex problems with HP-UX 10
1702 Like @code{AC_PROG_LEX} (@pxref{Particular Programs, , Particular
1703 Program Checks, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}), but uses the
1704 @code{missing} script on systems that do not have @code{lex}.
1705 @samp{HP-UX 10} is one such system.
1708 This macro finds the @code{gcj} program or causes an error. It sets
1709 @samp{GCJ} and @samp{GCJFLAGS}. @code{gcj} is the Java front-end to the
1710 GNU Compiler Collection.
1711 @cvindex AM_PROG_GCJ
1713 @item AM_SYS_POSIX_TERMIOS
1714 @cvindex am_cv_sys_posix_termios
1715 @cindex POSIX termios headers
1716 @cindex termios POSIX headers
1717 Check to see if POSIX termios headers and functions are available on the
1718 system. If so, set the shell variable @code{am_cv_sys_posix_termios} to
1719 @samp{yes}. If not, set the variable to @samp{no}.
1721 @item AM_WITH_DMALLOC
1722 @cvindex WITH_DMALLOC
1723 @cindex dmalloc, support for
1724 @opindex --with-dmalloc
1726 @uref{ftp://ftp.letters.com/src/dmalloc/dmalloc.tar.gz, dmalloc}
1727 package. If the user configures with @samp{--with-dmalloc}, then define
1728 @code{WITH_DMALLOC} and add @samp{-ldmalloc} to @code{LIBS}.
1732 @opindex --with-regex
1733 @cindex regex package
1735 Adds @samp{--with-regex} to the @code{configure} command line. If
1736 specified (the default), then the @samp{regex} regular expression
1737 library is used, @file{regex.o} is put into @samp{LIBOBJS}, and
1738 @samp{WITH_REGEX} is defined. If @samp{--without-regex} is given, then
1739 the @samp{rx} regular expression library is used, and @file{rx.o} is put
1740 into @samp{LIBOBJS}.
1744 @node Private macros
1745 @subsection Private macros
1747 The following macros are private macros you should not call directly.
1748 They are called by the other public macros when appropriate. Do not
1749 rely on them, as they might be changed in a future version. Consider
1750 them as implementation details; or better, do not consider them at all:
1754 @item _AM_DEPENDENCIES
1755 @itemx AM_SET_DEPDIR
1757 @itemx AM_OUTPUT_DEPENDENCY_COMMANDS
1758 These macros are used to implement Automake's automatic dependency
1759 tracking scheme. They are called automatically by automake when
1760 required, and there should be no need to invoke them manually.
1762 @item AM_MAKE_INCLUDE
1763 This macro is used to discover how the user's @code{make} handles
1764 @code{include} statements. This macro is automatically invoked when
1765 needed; there should be no need to invoke it manually.
1767 @item AM_PROG_INSTALL_STRIP
1768 This is used to find a version of @code{install} which can be used to
1769 @code{strip} a program at installation time. This macro is
1770 automatically included when required.
1772 @item AM_SANITY_CHECK
1773 This checks to make sure that a file created in the build directory is
1774 newer than a file in the source directory. This can fail on systems
1775 where the clock is set incorrectly. This macro is automatically run
1776 from @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE}.
1781 @node Extending aclocal
1782 @section Writing your own aclocal macros
1784 @cindex aclocal, extending
1785 @cindex Extending aclocal
1787 The @command{aclocal} program doesn't have any built-in knowledge of any
1788 macros, so it is easy to extend it with your own macros.
1790 This can be used by libraries which want to supply their own Autoconf
1791 macros for use by other programs. For instance the @command{gettext}
1792 library supplies a macro @code{AM_GNU_GETTEXT} which should be used by
1793 any package using @command{gettext}. When the library is installed, it
1794 installs this macro so that @command{aclocal} will find it.
1796 A macro file's name should end in @file{.m4}. Such files should be
1797 installed in @file{$(datadir)/aclocal}. This is as simple as writing:
1800 aclocaldir = $(datadir)/aclocal
1801 aclocal_DATA = mymacro.m4 myothermacro.m4
1804 A file of macros should be a series of properly quoted
1805 @code{AC_DEFUN}'s (@pxref{Macro Definitions, , , autoconf, The
1806 Autoconf Manual}). The @command{aclocal} programs also understands
1807 @code{AC_REQUIRE} (@pxref{Prerequisite Macros, , , autoconf, The
1808 Autoconf Manual}), so it is safe to put each macro in a separate file.
1809 Each file should have no side effects but macro definitions.
1810 Especially, any call to @code{AC_PREREQ} should be done inside the
1811 defined macro, not at the beginning of the file.
1813 @cindex underquoted AC_DEFUN
1817 Starting with Automake 1.8, @command{aclocal} will warn about all
1818 underquoted calls to @code{AC_DEFUN}. We realize this will annoy a
1819 lot of people, because @command{aclocal} was not so strict in the past
1820 and many third party macros are underquoted; and we have to apologize
1821 for this temporary inconvenience. The reason we have to be stricter
1822 is that a future implementation of @command{aclocal} (@pxref{Future of
1823 aclocal}) will have to temporary include all these third party
1824 @file{.m4} files, maybe several times, even those which are not
1825 actually needed. Doing so should alleviate many problem of the
1826 current implementation, however it requires a stricter style from the
1827 macro authors. Hopefully it is easy to revise the existing macros.
1833 [AC_REQUIRE([AX_SOMETHING])dnl
1839 should be rewritten as
1841 AC_DEFUN([AX_FOOBAR],
1843 AC_REQUIRE([AX_SOMETHING])dnl
1849 Wrapping the @code{AC_PREREQ} call inside the macro ensures that
1850 Autoconf 2.57 will not be required if @code{AX_FOOBAR} is not actually
1851 used. Most importantly, quoting the first argument of @code{AC_DEFUN}
1852 allows the macro to be redefined or included twice (otherwise this
1853 first argument would be expansed during the second definition).
1855 If you have been directed here by the @command{aclocal} diagnostic but
1856 are not the maintainer of the implicated macro, you will want to
1857 contact the maintainer of that macro. Please make sure you have the
1858 last version of the macro and that the problem already hasn't been
1859 reported before doing so: people tend to work faster when they aren't
1862 Another situation where @command{aclocal} is commonly used is to
1863 manage macros which are used locally by the package, @ref{Local
1867 @section Handling Local Macros
1869 Feature tests offered by Autoconf do not cover all needs. People
1870 often have to supplement existing tests with their own macros, or
1871 with third-party macros.
1873 There are two ways to organize custom macros in a package.
1875 The first possibility (the historical practice) is to list all your
1876 macros in @file{acinclude.m4}. This file will be included in
1877 @file{aclocal.m4} when you run @command{aclocal}, and its macro(s) will
1878 henceforth be visible to @command{autoconf}. However if it contains
1879 numerous macros, it will rapidly become difficult to maintain, and it
1880 will be almost impossible to share macros between packages.
1882 @vindex ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS
1883 The second possibility, which we do recommend, is to write each macro
1884 in its own file and gather all these files in a directory. This
1885 directory is usually called @file{m4/}. To build @file{aclocal.m4},
1886 one should therefore instruct @command{aclocal} to scan @file{m4/}.
1887 From the command line, this is done with @code{aclocal -I m4}. The
1888 top-level @file{Makefile.am} should also be updated to define
1891 ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS = -I m4
1894 @code{ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS} contains options to pass to @command{aclocal}
1895 when @file{aclocal.m4} is to be rebuilt by @code{make}. This line is
1896 also used by @command{autoreconf} (@pxref{autoreconf Invocation, ,
1897 Using @command{autoreconf} to Update @file{configure} Scripts,
1898 autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}) to run @command{aclocal} with suitable
1899 options, or by @command{autopoint} (@pxref{autopoint Invocation, ,
1900 Invoking the @command{autopoint} Program, gettext, GNU gettext tools})
1901 and @command{gettextize} (@pxref{gettextize Invocation, , Invoking the
1902 @command{gettextize} Program, gettext, GNU gettext tools}) to locate
1903 the place where Gettext's macros should be installed. So even if you
1904 do not really care about the rebuild rules, you should define
1905 @code{ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS}.
1907 When @code{aclocal -I m4} is run, it will build a @code{aclocal.m4}
1908 that @code{m4_include}s any file from @file{m4/} that defines a
1909 required macro. Macros not found locally will still be searched in
1910 system-wide directories, as explained in @ref{Macro search path}.
1912 Custom macros should be distributed for the same reason that
1913 @file{configure.ac} is: so that other people have all the sources of
1914 your package if they want to work on it. Actually, this distribution
1915 happens automatically because all @code{m4_include}d files are
1918 However there is no consensus on the distribution of third-party
1919 macros that your package may use. Many libraries install their own
1920 macro in the system-wide @command{aclocal} directory (@pxref{Extending
1921 aclocal}). For instance Guile ships with a file called
1922 @file{guile.m4} that contains the macro @code{GUILE_FLAGS} which can
1923 be used to define setup compiler and linker flags appropriate for
1924 using Guile. Using @code{GUILE_FLAGS} in @file{configure.ac} will
1925 cause @command{aclocal} to copy @file{guile.m4} into
1926 @file{aclocal.m4}, but as @file{guile.m4} is not part of the project,
1927 it will not be distributed. Technically, that means a user which
1928 needs to rebuild @file{aclocal.m4} will have to install Guile first.
1929 This is probably OK, if Guile already is a requirement to build the
1930 package. However, if Guile is only an optional feature, or if your
1931 package might run on architectures where Guile cannot be installed,
1932 this requirement will hinder development. An easy solution is to copy
1933 such third-party macros in your local @file{m4/} directory so they get
1936 @node Future of aclocal
1937 @section The Future of @command{aclocal}
1938 @cindex aclocal's scheduled death
1940 @command{aclocal} is expected to disappear. This feature really
1941 should not be offered by Automake. Automake should focus on generating
1942 @file{Makefile}s; dealing with M4 macros really is Autoconf's job.
1943 That some people install Automake just to use @command{aclocal}, but
1944 do not use @command{automake} otherwise is an indication of how that
1945 feature is misplaced.
1947 The new implementation will probably be done slightly differently.
1948 For instance it could enforce the @file{m4/}-style layout discussed in
1949 @ref{Local Macros}, and take care of copying (or even updating)
1950 third-party macro into this directory.
1952 We have no idea when and how this will happen. This has been
1953 discussed several times in the past, but someone still has to commit
1954 itself to that non-trivial task.
1956 From the user point of view, @command{aclocal}'s removal might turn
1957 out to be painful. There is a simple precaution that you may take to
1958 make that switch more seamless: never call @command{aclocal} yourself.
1959 Keep this guy under the exclusive control of @command{autoreconf} and
1960 Automake's rebuild rules. Hopefully you won't need to worry about
1961 things breaking, when @command{aclocal} disappears, because everything
1962 will have been taken care of. If otherwise you used to call
1963 @command{aclocal} directly yourself or from some script, you will
1964 quickly notice the change.
1966 Many packages come with a script called @file{bootstrap.sh} or
1967 @file{autogen.sh}, that will just call @command{aclocal},
1968 @command{libtoolize}, @command{gettextize} or @command{autopoint},
1969 @command{autoconf}, @command{autoheader}, and @command{automake} in
1970 the right order. Actually this is precisely what @command{autoreconf}
1971 can do for you. If your package has such a @file{bootstrap.sh} or
1972 @file{autogen.sh} script, consider using @command{autoreconf}. That
1973 should simplify its logic a lot (less things to maintain, yum!), it's
1974 even likely you will not need the script anymore, and more to the point
1975 you will not call @command{aclocal} directly anymore.
1979 @chapter The top-level @file{Makefile.am}
1981 @section Recursing subdirectories
1983 @cindex SUBDIRS, explained
1985 In packages with subdirectories, the top level @file{Makefile.am} must
1986 tell Automake which subdirectories are to be built. This is done via
1987 the @code{SUBDIRS} variable.
1990 The @code{SUBDIRS} variable holds a list of subdirectories in which
1991 building of various sorts can occur. The rules for many targets
1992 (e.g. @code{all}) in the generated @file{Makefile} will run commands
1993 both locally and in all specified subdirectories. Note that the
1994 directories listed in @code{SUBDIRS} are not required to contain
1995 @file{Makefile.am}s; only @file{Makefile}s (after configuration).
1996 This allows inclusion of libraries from packages which do not use
1997 Automake (such as @code{gettext}).
1999 In packages that use subdirectories, the top-level @file{Makefile.am} is
2000 often very short. For instance, here is the @file{Makefile.am} from the
2001 GNU Hello distribution:
2004 EXTRA_DIST = BUGS ChangeLog.O README-alpha
2005 SUBDIRS = doc intl po src tests
2008 When Automake invokes @code{make} in a subdirectory, it uses the value
2009 of the @code{MAKE} variable. It passes the value of the variable
2010 @code{AM_MAKEFLAGS} to the @code{make} invocation; this can be set in
2011 @file{Makefile.am} if there are flags you must always pass to
2016 The directories mentioned in @code{SUBDIRS} must be direct children of
2017 the current directory. For instance, you cannot put @samp{src/subdir}
2018 into @code{SUBDIRS}. Instead you should put @code{SUBDIRS = subdir}
2019 into @file{src/Makefile.am}. Automake can be used to construct packages
2020 of arbitrary depth this way.
2022 By default, Automake generates @file{Makefiles} which work depth-first
2023 (@samp{postfix}). However, it is possible to change this ordering.
2024 You can do this by putting @samp{.} into @code{SUBDIRS}. For
2025 instance, putting @samp{.} first will cause a @samp{prefix} ordering
2026 of directories. All @samp{clean} rules are run in reverse
2027 order of build rules.
2029 @section Conditional subdirectories
2030 @cindex Subdirectories, building conditionally
2031 @cindex Conditional subdirectories
2032 @cindex @code{SUBDIRS}, conditional
2033 @cindex Conditional @code{SUBDIRS}
2035 It is possible to define the @code{SUBDIRS} variable conditionally if,
2036 like in the case of GNU @code{Inetutils}, you want to only build a
2037 subset of the entire package.
2039 To illustrate how this works, let's assume we have two directories
2040 @file{src/} and @file{opt/}. @file{src/} should always be built, but we
2041 want to decide in @code{./configure} whether @file{opt/} will be built
2042 or not. (For this example we will assume that @file{opt/} should be
2043 built when the variable @code{$want_opt} was set to @code{yes}.)
2045 Running @code{make} should thus recurse into @file{src/} always, and
2046 then maybe in @file{opt/}.
2048 However @code{make dist} should always recurse into both @file{src/} and
2049 @file{opt/}. Because @file{opt/} should be distributed even if it is
2050 not needed in the current configuration. This means @file{opt/Makefile}
2051 should be created unconditionally. @footnote{Don't try seeking a
2052 solution where @file{opt/Makefile} is created conditionally, this is a
2053 lot trickier than the solutions presented here.}
2055 There are two ways to setup a project like this. You can use Automake
2056 conditionals (@pxref{Conditionals}) or use Autoconf @code{AC_SUBST}
2057 variables (@pxref{Setting Output Variables, , Setting Output Variables,
2058 autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}). Using Automake conditionals is the
2061 @subsection Conditional subdirectories with @code{AM_CONDITIONAL}
2062 @cindex @code{SUBDIRS} and @code{AM_CONDITIONAL}
2063 @cindex @code{AM_CONDITIONAL} and @code{SUBDIRS}
2065 @c The test case for the setup described here is
2066 @c test/subdircond2.test
2067 @c Try to keep it in sync.
2069 @file{configure} should output the @file{Makefile} for each directory
2070 and define a condition into which @file{opt/} should be built.
2074 AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_OPT], [test "$want_opt" = yes])
2075 AC_CONFIG_FILES([Makefile src/Makefile opt/Makefile])
2079 Then @code{SUBDIRS} can be defined in the top-level @file{Makefile.am}
2086 SUBDIRS = src $(MAYBE_OPT)
2089 As you can see, running @code{make} will rightly recurse into
2090 @file{src/} and maybe @file{opt/}.
2092 @vindex DIST_SUBDIRS
2093 As you can't see, running @code{make dist} will recurse into both
2094 @file{src/} and @file{opt/} directories because @code{make dist}, unlike
2095 @code{make all}, doesn't use the @code{SUBDIRS} variable. It uses the
2096 @code{DIST_SUBDIRS} variable.
2098 In this case Automake will define @code{DIST_SUBDIRS = src opt}
2099 automatically because it knows that @code{MAYBE_OPT} can contain
2100 @code{opt} in some condition.
2102 @subsection Conditional subdirectories with @code{AC_SUBST}
2103 @cindex @code{SUBDIRS} and @code{AC_SUBST}
2104 @cindex @code{AC_SUBST} and @code{SUBDIRS}
2106 @c The test case for the setup described here is
2107 @c test/subdircond3.test
2108 @c Try to keep it in sync.
2110 Another idea is to define @code{MAYBE_OPT} from @file{./configure} using
2115 if test "$want_opt" = yes; then
2120 AC_SUBST([MAYBE_OPT])
2121 AC_CONFIG_FILES([Makefile src/Makefile opt/Makefile])
2125 In this case the top-level @file{Makefile.am} should look as follows.
2128 SUBDIRS = src $(MAYBE_OPT)
2129 DIST_SUBDIRS = src opt
2132 The drawback is that since Automake cannot guess what the possible
2133 values of @code{MAYBE_OPT} are, it is necessary to define
2134 @code{DIST_SUBDIRS}.
2136 @subsection How @code{DIST_SUBDIRS} is used
2137 @cindex @code{DIST_SUBDIRS}, explained
2139 As shown in the above examples, @code{DIST_SUBDIRS} is used in rules
2140 that need to recurse in all directories, even those which have been
2141 conditionally left out of the build.
2143 Precisely, @code{DIST_SUBDIRS} is used by @code{make dist}, @code{make
2144 distclean}, and @code{make maintainer-clean}. All other recursive
2145 rules use @code{SUBDIRS}.
2147 Automake will define @code{DIST_SUBDIRS} automatically from the
2148 possibles values of @code{SUBDIRS} in all conditions.
2150 If @code{SUBDIRS} contains @code{AC_SUBST} variables,
2151 @code{DIST_SUBDIRS} will not be defined correctly because Automake
2152 doesn't know the possible values of these variables. In this case
2153 @code{DIST_SUBDIRS} needs to be defined manually.
2157 @chapter An Alternative Approach to Subdirectories
2159 If you've ever read Peter Miller's excellent paper,
2160 @uref{http://www.pcug.org.au/~millerp/rmch/recu-make-cons-harm.html,
2161 Recursive Make Considered Harmful}, the preceding section on the use of
2162 subdirectories will probably come as unwelcome advice. For those who
2163 haven't read the paper, Miller's main thesis is that recursive
2164 @code{make} invocations are both slow and error-prone.
2166 Automake provides sufficient cross-directory support @footnote{We
2167 believe. This work is new and there are probably warts.
2168 @xref{Introduction}, for information on reporting bugs.} to enable you
2169 to write a single @file{Makefile.am} for a complex multi-directory
2173 By default an installable file specified in a subdirectory will have its
2174 directory name stripped before installation. For instance, in this
2175 example, the header file will be installed as
2176 @file{$(includedir)/stdio.h}:
2179 include_HEADERS = inc/stdio.h
2183 @cindex Path stripping, avoiding
2184 @cindex Avoiding path stripping
2186 However, the @samp{nobase_} prefix can be used to circumvent this path
2187 stripping. In this example, the header file will be installed as
2188 @file{$(includedir)/sys/types.h}:
2191 nobase_include_HEADERS = sys/types.h
2194 @cindex nobase_ and dist_ or nodist_
2195 @cindex dist_ and nobase_
2196 @cindex nodist_ and nobase_
2198 @samp{nobase_} should be specified first when used in conjunction with
2199 either @samp{dist_} or @samp{nodist_} (@pxref{Dist}). For instance:
2202 nobase_dist_pkgdata_DATA = images/vortex.pgm
2206 @chapter Building Programs and Libraries
2208 A large part of Automake's functionality is dedicated to making it easy
2209 to build programs and libraries.
2212 * A Program:: Building a program
2213 * A Library:: Building a library
2214 * A Shared Library:: Building a Libtool library
2215 * Program and Library Variables:: Variables controlling program and
2217 * Default _SOURCES:: Default source files
2218 * LIBOBJS:: Special handling for LIBOBJS and ALLOCA
2219 * Program variables:: Variables used when building a program
2220 * Yacc and Lex:: Yacc and Lex support
2222 * Assembly Support::
2223 * Fortran 77 Support::
2225 * Support for Other Languages::
2226 * ANSI:: Automatic de-ANSI-fication
2227 * Dependencies:: Automatic dependency tracking
2228 * EXEEXT:: Support for executable extensions
2233 @section Building a program
2235 In order to build a program, you need to tell Automake which sources
2236 are part of it, and which libraries it should be linked with.
2238 This section also covers conditional compilation of sources or
2239 programs. Most of the comments about these also apply to libraries
2240 (@pxref{A Library}) and libtool libraries (@pxref{A Shared Library}).
2243 * Program Sources:: Defining program sources
2244 * Linking:: Linking with libraries or extra objects
2245 * Conditional Sources:: Handling conditional sources
2246 * Conditional Programs:: Building program conditionally
2249 @node Program Sources
2250 @subsection Defining program sources
2252 @cindex PROGRAMS, bindir
2253 @vindex bin_PROGRAMS
2254 @vindex sbin_PROGRAMS
2255 @vindex libexec_PROGRAMS
2256 @vindex pkglib_PROGRAMS
2257 @vindex noinst_PROGRAMS
2258 @vindex check_PROGRAMS
2260 In a directory containing source that gets built into a program (as
2261 opposed to a library or a script), the @samp{PROGRAMS} primary is used.
2262 Programs can be installed in @code{bindir}, @code{sbindir},
2263 @code{libexecdir}, @code{pkglibdir}, or not at all (@samp{noinst}).
2264 They can also be built only for @code{make check}, in which case the
2265 prefix is @samp{check}.
2270 bin_PROGRAMS = hello
2273 In this simple case, the resulting @file{Makefile.in} will contain code
2274 to generate a program named @code{hello}.
2276 Associated with each program are several assisting variables which are
2277 named after the program. These variables are all optional, and have
2278 reasonable defaults. Each variable, its use, and default is spelled out
2279 below; we use the ``hello'' example throughout.
2281 The variable @code{hello_SOURCES} is used to specify which source files
2282 get built into an executable:
2285 hello_SOURCES = hello.c version.c getopt.c getopt1.c getopt.h system.h
2288 This causes each mentioned @samp{.c} file to be compiled into the
2289 corresponding @samp{.o}. Then all are linked to produce @file{hello}.
2291 @cindex _SOURCES primary, defined
2292 @cindex SOURCES primary, defined
2293 @cindex Primary variable, SOURCES
2295 If @samp{hello_SOURCES} is not specified, then it defaults to the single
2296 file @file{hello.c} (@pxref{Default _SOURCES}).
2300 Multiple programs can be built in a single directory. Multiple programs
2301 can share a single source file, which must be listed in each
2302 @samp{_SOURCES} definition.
2304 @cindex Header files in _SOURCES
2305 @cindex _SOURCES and header files
2307 Header files listed in a @samp{_SOURCES} definition will be included in
2308 the distribution but otherwise ignored. In case it isn't obvious, you
2309 should not include the header file generated by @file{configure} in a
2310 @samp{_SOURCES} variable; this file should not be distributed. Lex
2311 (@samp{.l}) and Yacc (@samp{.y}) files can also be listed; see @ref{Yacc
2316 @subsection Linking the program
2318 If you need to link against libraries that are not found by
2319 @code{configure}, you can use @code{LDADD} to do so. This variable is
2320 used to specify additional objects or libraries to link with; it is
2321 inappropriate for specifying specific linker flags, you should use
2322 @code{AM_LDFLAGS} for this purpose.
2326 @cindex prog_LDADD, defined
2328 Sometimes, multiple programs are built in one directory but do not share
2329 the same link-time requirements. In this case, you can use the
2330 @samp{@var{prog}_LDADD} variable (where @var{prog} is the name of the
2331 program as it appears in some @samp{_PROGRAMS} variable, and usually
2332 written in lowercase) to override the global @code{LDADD}. If this
2333 variable exists for a given program, then that program is not linked
2337 For instance, in GNU cpio, @code{pax}, @code{cpio} and @code{mt} are
2338 linked against the library @file{libcpio.a}. However, @code{rmt} is
2339 built in the same directory, and has no such link requirement. Also,
2340 @code{mt} and @code{rmt} are only built on certain architectures. Here
2341 is what cpio's @file{src/Makefile.am} looks like (abridged):
2344 bin_PROGRAMS = cpio pax $(MT)
2345 libexec_PROGRAMS = $(RMT)
2346 EXTRA_PROGRAMS = mt rmt
2348 LDADD = ../lib/libcpio.a $(INTLLIBS)
2351 cpio_SOURCES = @dots{}
2352 pax_SOURCES = @dots{}
2353 mt_SOURCES = @dots{}
2354 rmt_SOURCES = @dots{}
2357 @cindex _LDFLAGS, defined
2359 @samp{@var{prog}_LDADD} is inappropriate for passing program-specific
2360 linker flags (except for @samp{-l}, @samp{-L}, @samp{-dlopen} and
2361 @samp{-dlpreopen}). So, use the @samp{@var{prog}_LDFLAGS} variable for
2365 @cindex _DEPENDENCIES, defined
2367 It is also occasionally useful to have a program depend on some other
2368 target which is not actually part of that program. This can be done
2369 using the @samp{@var{prog}_DEPENDENCIES} variable. Each program depends
2370 on the contents of such a variable, but no further interpretation is
2373 If @samp{@var{prog}_DEPENDENCIES} is not supplied, it is computed by
2374 Automake. The automatically-assigned value is the contents of
2375 @samp{@var{prog}_LDADD}, with most configure substitutions, @samp{-l},
2376 @samp{-L}, @samp{-dlopen} and @samp{-dlpreopen} options removed. The
2377 configure substitutions that are left in are only @samp{$(LIBOBJS)} and
2378 @samp{$(ALLOCA)}; these are left because it is known that they will not
2379 cause an invalid value for @samp{@var{prog}_DEPENDENCIES} to be
2383 @node Conditional Sources
2384 @subsection Conditional compilation of sources
2386 You can't put a configure substitution (e.g., @samp{@@FOO@@} or
2387 @samp{$(FOO)} where @code{FOO} is defined via @code{AC_SUBST}) into a
2388 @samp{_SOURCES} variable. The reason for this is a bit hard to
2389 explain, but suffice to say that it simply won't work. Automake will
2390 give an error if you try to do this.
2392 Fortunately there are two other ways to achieve the same result. One is
2393 to use configure substitutions in @code{_LDADD} variables, the other is
2394 to use an Automake conditional.
2396 @subsubsection Conditional compilation using @code{_LDADD} substitutions
2398 @cindex EXTRA_prog_SOURCES, defined
2400 Automake must know all the source files that could possibly go into a
2401 program, even if not all the files are built in every circumstance. Any
2402 files which are only conditionally built should be listed in the
2403 appropriate @samp{EXTRA_} variable. For instance, if
2404 @file{hello-linux.c} or @file{hello-generic.c} were conditionally included
2405 in @code{hello}, the @file{Makefile.am} would contain:
2408 bin_PROGRAMS = hello
2409 hello_SOURCES = hello-common.c
2410 EXTRA_hello_SOURCES = hello-linux.c hello-generic.c
2411 hello_LDADD = $(HELLO_SYSTEM)
2412 hello_DEPENDENCIES = $(HELLO_SYSTEM)
2416 You can then setup the @code{$(HELLO_SYSTEM)} substitution from
2417 @file{configure.ac}:
2422 *linux*) HELLO_SYSTEM='hello-linux.$(OBJEXT)' ;;
2423 *) HELLO_SYSTEM='hello-generic.$(OBJEXT)' ;;
2425 AC_SUBST([HELLO_SYSTEM])
2429 In this case, @code{HELLO_SYSTEM} should be replaced by
2430 @file{hello-linux.o} or @file{hello-bsd.o}, and added to
2431 @code{hello_DEPENDENCIES} and @code{hello_LDADD} in order to be built
2434 @subsubsection Conditional compilation using Automake conditionals
2436 An often simpler way to compile source files conditionally is to use
2437 Automake conditionals. For instance, you could use this
2438 @file{Makefile.am} construct to build the same @file{hello} example:
2441 bin_PROGRAMS = hello
2443 hello_SOURCES = hello-linux.c hello-common.c
2445 hello_SOURCES = hello-generic.c hello-common.c
2449 In this case, your @file{configure.ac} should setup the @code{LINUX}
2450 conditional using @code{AM_CONDITIONAL} (@pxref{Conditionals}).
2452 When using conditionals like this you don't need to use the
2453 @samp{EXTRA_} variable, because Automake will examine the contents of
2454 each variable to construct the complete list of source files.
2456 If your program uses a lot of files, you will probably prefer a
2457 conditional @code{+=}.
2460 bin_PROGRAMS = hello
2461 hello_SOURCES = hello-common.c
2463 hello_SOURCES += hello-linux.c
2465 hello_SOURCES += hello-generic.c
2469 @node Conditional Programs
2470 @subsection Conditional compilation of programs
2471 @cindex Conditional programs
2472 @cindex Programs, conditional
2474 Sometimes it is useful to determine the programs that are to be built
2475 at configure time. For instance, GNU @code{cpio} only builds
2476 @code{mt} and @code{rmt} under special circumstances. The means to
2477 achieve conditional compilation of programs are the same you can use
2478 to compile source files conditionally: substitutions or conditionals.
2480 @subsubsection Conditional programs using @code{configure} substitutions
2482 In this case, you must notify Automake of all the programs that can
2483 possibly be built, but at the same time cause the generated
2484 @file{Makefile.in} to use the programs specified by @code{configure}.
2485 This is done by having @code{configure} substitute values into each
2486 @samp{_PROGRAMS} definition, while listing all optionally built programs
2487 in @code{EXTRA_PROGRAMS}.
2488 @vindex EXTRA_PROGRAMS
2489 @cindex EXTRA_PROGRAMS, defined
2492 bin_PROGRAMS = cpio pax $(MT)
2493 libexec_PROGRAMS = $(RMT)
2494 EXTRA_PROGRAMS = mt rmt
2497 As explained in @ref{EXEEXT}, Automake will rewrite
2498 @code{bin_PROGRAMS}, @code{libexec_PROGRAMS}, and
2499 @code{EXTRA_PROGRAMS}, appending @code{$(EXEEXT)} to each binary.
2500 Obviously it cannot rewrite values obtained at run-time through
2501 @code{configure} substitutions, therefore you should take care of
2502 appending @code{$(EXEEXT)} yourself, as in @code{AC_SUBST([MT],
2503 ['mt$@{EXEEXT@}'])}.
2505 @subsubsection Conditional programs using Automake conditionals
2507 You can also use Automake conditionals (@pxref{Conditionals}) to
2508 select programs to be built. In this case you don't have to worry
2509 about @code{$(EXEEXT)} or @code{EXTRA_PROGRAMS}.
2512 bin_PROGRAMS = cpio pax
2517 libexec_PROGRAMS = rmt
2523 @section Building a library
2525 @cindex _LIBRARIES primary, defined
2526 @cindex LIBRARIES primary, defined
2527 @cindex Primary variable, LIBRARIES
2529 @vindex lib_LIBRARIES
2530 @vindex pkglib_LIBRARIES
2531 @vindex noinst_LIBRARIES
2533 Building a library is much like building a program. In this case, the
2534 name of the primary is @samp{LIBRARIES}. Libraries can be installed in
2535 @code{libdir} or @code{pkglibdir}.
2537 @xref{A Shared Library}, for information on how to build shared
2538 libraries using libtool and the @samp{LTLIBRARIES} primary.
2540 Each @samp{_LIBRARIES} variable is a list of the libraries to be built.
2541 For instance to create a library named @file{libcpio.a}, but not install
2542 it, you would write:
2545 noinst_LIBRARIES = libcpio.a
2548 The sources that go into a library are determined exactly as they are
2549 for programs, via the @samp{_SOURCES} variables. Note that the library
2550 name is canonicalized (@pxref{Canonicalization}), so the @samp{_SOURCES}
2551 variable corresponding to @file{liblob.a} is @samp{liblob_a_SOURCES},
2552 not @samp{liblob.a_SOURCES}.
2554 @cindex _LIBADD primary, defined
2555 @cindex LIBADD primary, defined
2556 @cindex Primary variable, LIBADD
2558 Extra objects can be added to a library using the
2559 @samp{@var{library}_LIBADD} variable. This should be used for objects
2560 determined by @code{configure}. Again from @code{cpio}:
2565 libcpio_a_LIBADD = $(LIBOBJS) $(ALLOCA)
2568 In addition, sources for extra objects that will not exist until
2569 configure-time must be added to the @code{BUILT_SOURCES} variable
2572 Building a static library is done by compiling all object files, then
2573 by invoking @code{$(AR) $(ARFLAGS)} followed by the name of the
2574 library and the list of objects, and finally by calling
2575 @code{$(RANLIB)} on that library. You should call
2576 @code{AC_PROG_RANLIB} from your @file{configure.ac} to define
2577 @code{RANLIB} (Automake will complain otherwise). @code{AR} and
2578 @code{ARFLAGS} default to @code{ar} and @code{cru} respectively; you
2579 can override these two variables my setting them in your
2580 @file{Makefile.am}, by @code{AC_SUBST}ing them from your
2581 @file{configure.ac}, or by defining a per-library @code{maude_AR}
2582 variable (@pxref{Program and Library Variables}).
2584 @node A Shared Library
2585 @section Building a Shared Library
2587 @cindex Shared libraries, support for
2589 Building shared libraries portably is a relatively complex matter.
2590 For this reason, GNU Libtool (@pxref{Top, , Introduction, libtool, The
2591 Libtool Manual}) was created to help build shared libraries in a
2592 platform-independent way.
2595 * Libtool Concept:: Introducing Libtool
2596 * Libtool Libraries:: Declaring Libtool Libraries
2597 * Conditional Libtool Libraries:: Building Libtool Libraries Conditionally
2598 * Conditional Libtool Sources:: Choosing Library Sources Conditionally
2599 * Libtool Convenience Libraries:: Building Convenience Libtool Libraries
2600 * Libtool Modules:: Building Libtool Modules
2601 * Libtool Flags:: Using _LIBADD and _LDFLAGS
2602 * LTLIBOBJ:: Using $(LTLIBOBJ)
2603 * Libtool Issues:: Common Issues Related to Libtool's Use
2606 @node Libtool Concept
2607 @subsection The Libtool Concept
2609 @cindex libtool, introduction
2610 @cindex libtool library, definition
2611 @cindex suffix .la, defined
2612 @cindex .la suffix, defined
2614 Libtool abstracts shared and static libraries into a unified
2615 concept henceforth called @dfn{libtool libraries}. Libtool libraries
2616 are files using the @file{.la} suffix, and can designate a static
2617 library, a shared library, or maybe both. Their exact nature cannot
2618 be determined until @file{./configure} is run: not all platforms
2619 support all kinds of libraries, and users can explicitly select which
2620 libraries should be built. (However the package's maintainers can
2621 tune the default, @xref{AC_PROG_LIBTOOL, , The @code{AC_PROG_LIBTOOL}
2622 macro, libtool, The Libtool Manual}.)
2624 @cindex suffix .lo, defined
2625 Because object files for shared and static libraries must be compiled
2626 differently, libtool is also used during compilation. Object files
2627 built by libtool are called @dfn{libtool objects}: these are files
2628 using the @file{.lo} suffix. Libtool libraries are built from these
2631 You should not assume anything about the structure of @file{.la} or
2632 @file{.lo} files and how libtool constructs them: this is libtool's
2633 concern, and the last thing one wants is to learn about libtool's
2634 guts. However the existence of these files matters, because they are
2635 used as targets and dependencies in @file{Makefile}s rules when
2636 building libtool libraries. There are situations where you may have
2637 to refer to these, for instance when expressing dependencies for
2638 building source files conditionally (@pxref{Conditional Libtool
2641 @cindex libltdl, introduction
2643 People considering writing a plug-in system, with dynamically loaded
2644 modules, should look into @file{libltdl}: libtool's dlopening library
2645 (@pxref{Using libltdl, , Using libltdl, libtool, The Libtool Manual}).
2646 This offers a portable dlopening facility to load libtool libraries
2647 dynamically, and can also achieve static linking where unavoidable.
2649 Before we discuss how to use libtool with Automake in details, it
2650 should be noted that the libtool manual also has a section about how
2651 to use Automake with libtool (@pxref{Using Automake, , Using Automake
2652 with Libtool, libtool, The Libtool Manual}).
2654 @node Libtool Libraries
2655 @subsection Building Libtool Libraries
2657 @cindex _LTLIBRARIES primary, defined
2658 @cindex LTLIBRARIES primary, defined
2659 @cindex Primary variable, LTLIBRARIES
2660 @cindex Example of shared libraries
2661 @vindex lib_LTLIBRARIES
2662 @vindex pkglib_LTLIBRARIES
2664 Automake uses libtool to build libraries declared with the
2665 @samp{LTLIBRARIES} primary. Each @samp{_LTLIBRARIES} variable is a
2666 list of libtool libraries to build. For instance, to create a libtool
2667 library named @file{libgettext.la}, and install it in @samp{libdir},
2671 lib_LTLIBRARIES = libgettext.la
2672 libgettext_la_SOURCES = gettext.c gettext.h @dots{}
2675 Automake predefines the variable @samp{pkglibdir}, so you can use
2676 @code{pkglib_LTLIBRARIES} to install libraries in
2677 @code{$(libdir)/@@PACKAGE@@/}.
2679 @node Conditional Libtool Libraries
2680 @subsection Building Libtool Libraries Conditionally
2681 @cindex libtool libraries, conditional
2682 @cindex conditional libtool libraries
2684 Like conditional programs (@pxref{Conditional Programs}), there are
2685 two main ways to build conditional libraries: using Automake
2686 conditionals or using Autoconf @code{AC_SUBST}itutions.
2688 The important implementation detail you have to be aware of is that
2689 the place where a library will be installed matters to libtool: it
2690 needs to be indicated @emph{at link-time} using the @code{-rpath}
2693 For libraries whose destination directory is known when Automake runs,
2694 Automake will automatically supply the appropriate @samp{-rpath}
2695 option to libtool. This is the case for libraries listed explicitly in
2696 some installable @code{_LTLIBRARIES} variables such as
2697 @code{lib_LTLIBRARIES}.
2699 However, for libraries determined at configure time (and thus
2700 mentioned in @code{EXTRA_LTLIBRARIES}), Automake does not know the
2701 final installation directory. For such libraries you must add the
2702 @samp{-rpath} option to the appropriate @samp{_LDFLAGS} variable by
2705 The examples below illustrate the differences between these two methods.
2707 Here is an example where @code{$(WANTEDLIBS)} is an @code{AC_SUBST}ed
2708 variable set at @file{./configure}-time to either @file{libfoo.la},
2709 @file{libbar.la}, both, or none. Although @code{$(WANTEDLIBS)}
2710 appears in the @code{lib_LTLIBRARIES}, Automake cannot guess it
2711 relates to @file{libfoo.la} or @file{libbar.la} by the time it creates
2712 the link rule for these two libraries. Therefore the @code{-rpath}
2713 argument must be explicitly supplied.
2716 EXTRA_LTLIBRARIES = libfoo.la libbar.la
2717 lib_LTLIBRARIES = $(WANTEDLIBS)
2718 libfoo_la_SOURCES = foo.c @dots{}
2719 libfoo_la_LDFLAGS = -rpath '$(libdir)'
2720 libbar_la_SOURCES = bar.c @dots{}
2721 libbar_la_LDFLAGS = -rpath '$(libdir)'
2724 Here is how the same @file{Makefile.am} would look using Automake
2725 conditionals named @code{WANT_LIBFOO} and @code{WANT_LIBBAR}. Now
2726 Automake is able to compute the @code{-rpath} setting itself, because
2727 it's clear that both libraries will end up in @code{$(libdir)} if they
2733 lib_LTLIBRARIES += libfoo.la
2736 lib_LTLIBRARIES += libbar.la
2738 libfoo_la_SOURCES = foo.c @dots{}
2739 libbar_la_SOURCES = bar.c @dots{}
2742 @node Conditional Libtool Sources
2743 @subsection Libtool Libraries with Conditional Sources
2745 Conditional compilation of sources in a library can be achieved in the
2746 same way as conditional compilation of sources in a program
2747 (@pxref{Conditional Sources}). The only difference is that
2748 @code{_LIBADD} should be used instead of @code{_LDADD} and that it
2749 should mention libtool objects (@file{.lo} files).
2751 So, to mimic the @file{hello} example from @ref{Conditional Sources},
2752 we could build a @file{libhello.la} library using either
2753 @file{hello-linux.c} or @file{hello-generic.c} with the following
2757 lib_LTLIBRARIES = libhello.la
2758 libhello_la_SOURCES = hello-common.c
2759 EXTRA_libhello_la_SOURCES = hello-linux.c hello-generic.c
2760 libhello_la_LIBADD = $(HELLO_SYSTEM)
2761 libhello_la_DEPENDENCIES = $(HELLO_SYSTEM)
2765 And make sure @code{$(HELLO_SYSTEM)} is set to either
2766 @file{hello-linux.lo} or @file{hello-generic.lo} in
2769 Or we could simply use an Automake conditional as follows.
2772 lib_LTLIBRARIES = libhello.la
2773 libhello_la_SOURCES = hello-common.c
2775 libhello_la_SOURCES += hello-linux.c
2777 libhello_la_SOURCES += hello-generic.c
2781 @node Libtool Convenience Libraries
2782 @subsection Libtool Convenience Libraries
2783 @cindex convenience libraries, libtool
2784 @cindex libtool convenience libraries
2785 @vindex noinst_LTLIBRARIES
2786 @vindex check_LTLIBRARIES
2788 Sometimes you want to build libtool libraries which should not be
2789 installed. These are called @dfn{libtool convenience libraries} and
2790 are typically used to encapsulate many sublibraries, later gathered
2791 into one big installed library.
2793 Libtool convenience libraries are declared by
2794 @code{noinst_LTLIBRARIES}, @code{check_LTLIBRARIES}, or even
2795 @code{EXTRA_LTLIBRARIES}. Unlike installed libtool libraries they do
2796 not need an @code{-rpath} flag at link time (actually this is the only
2799 Convenience libraries listed in @code{noinst_LTLIBRARIES} are always
2800 built. Those listed in @code{check_LTLIBRARIES} are built only upon
2801 @code{make check}. Finally, libraries listed in
2802 @code{EXTRA_LTLIBRARIES} are never built explicitly: Automake outputs
2803 rules to build them, but if the library does not appear as a Makefile
2804 dependency anywhere it won't be built (this is why
2805 @code{EXTRA_LTLIBRARIES} is used for conditional compilation).
2807 Here is a sample setup merging libtool convenience libraries from
2808 subdirectories into one main @file{libtop.la} library.
2811 # -- Top-level Makefile.am --
2812 SUBDIRS = sub1 sub2 @dots{}
2813 lib_LTLIBRARIES = libtop.la
2815 libtop_la_LIBADD = \
2820 # -- sub1/Makefile.am --
2821 noinst_LTLIBRARIES = libsub1.la
2822 libsub1_la_SOURCES = @dots{}
2824 # -- sub2/Makefile.am --
2825 # showing nested convenience libraries
2826 SUBDIRS = sub2.1 sub2.2 @dots{}
2827 noinst_LTLIBRARIES = libsub2.la
2828 libsub2_la_SOURCES =
2829 libsub2_la_LIBADD = \
2835 @node Libtool Modules
2836 @subsection Libtool Modules
2837 @cindex modules, libtool
2838 @cindex libtool modules
2839 @cindex -module, libtool
2841 These are libtool libraries meant to be dlopened. They are
2842 indicated to libtool by passing @code{-module} at link-time.
2845 pkglib_LTLIBRARIES = mymodule.la
2846 mymodule_la_SOURCES = doit.c
2847 mymodule_LDFLAGS = -module
2850 Ordinarily, Automake requires that a Library's name starts with
2851 @samp{lib}. However, when building a dynamically loadable module you
2852 might wish to use a "nonstandard" name.
2854 If @samp{mymodule_la_SOURCES} is not specified, then it defaults to the single
2855 file @file{mymodule.c} (@pxref{Default _SOURCES}).
2858 @subsection _LIBADD and _LDFLAGS
2859 @cindex _LIBADD, libtool
2860 @cindex _LDFLAGS, libtool
2862 As shown in previous sections, the @samp{@var{library}_LIBADD}
2863 variable should be used to list extra libtool objects (@file{.lo}
2864 files) or libtool libraries (@file{.la}) to add to @var{library}.
2866 The @samp{@var{library}_LDFLAGS} variable is the place to list
2867 additional libtool flags, such as @samp{-version-info},
2868 @samp{-static}, and a lot more. See @xref{Link mode, , Using libltdl,
2869 libtool, The Libtool Manual}.
2871 @node LTLIBOBJ, Libtool Issues, Libtool Flags, A Shared Library
2872 @subsection @code{LTLIBOBJS}
2873 @cindex @code{LTLIBOBJS}, special handling
2878 Where an ordinary library might include @code{$(LIBOBJS)}, a libtool
2879 library must use @code{$(LTLIBOBJS)}. This is required because the
2880 object files that libtool operates on do not necessarily end in
2883 Nowadays, the computation of @code{LTLIBOBJS} from @code{LIBOBJS} is
2884 performed automatically by Autoconf (@pxref{AC_LIBOBJ vs LIBOBJS, ,
2885 @code{AC_LIBOBJ} vs. @code{LIBOBJS}, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}).
2887 @node Libtool Issues
2888 @subsection Common Issues Related to Libtool's Use
2890 @subsubsection @code{required file `./ltmain.sh' not found}
2891 @cindex ltmain.sh not found
2892 @cindex libtoolize, no longer run by Automake
2893 @cindex libtoolize and autoreconf
2894 @cindex autoreconf and libtoolize
2895 @cindex bootstrap.sh and autoreconf
2896 @cindex autogen.sh and autoreconf
2898 Libtool comes with a tool called @command{libtoolize} that will
2899 install libtool's supporting files into a package. Running this
2900 command will install @file{ltmain.sh}. You should execute it before
2901 @command{aclocal} and @command{automake}.
2903 People upgrading old packages to newer autotools are likely to face
2904 this issue because older Automake versions used to call
2905 @command{libtoolize}. Therefore old build scripts do not call
2906 @command{libtoolize}.
2908 Since Automake 1.6, it has been decided that running
2909 @command{libtoolize} was none of Automake's business. Instead, that
2910 functionality has been moved into the @command{autoreconf} command
2911 (@pxref{autoreconf Invocation, , Using @command{autoreconf}, autoconf,
2912 The Autoconf Manual}). If you do not want to remember what to run and
2913 when, just learn the @command{autoreconf} command. Hopefully,
2914 replacing existing @file{bootstrap.sh} or @file{autogen.sh} scripts by
2915 a call to @command{autoreconf} should also free you from any similar
2916 incompatible change in the future.
2918 @subsubsection Objects @code{created with both libtool and without}
2920 Sometimes, the same source file is used both to build a libtool
2921 library and to build another non-libtool target (be it a program or
2924 Let's consider the following @file{Makefile.am}.
2928 prog_SOURCES = prog.c foo.c @dots{}
2930 lib_LTLIBRARIES = libfoo.la
2931 libfoo_la_SOURCES = foo.c @dots{}
2935 (In this trivial case the issue could be avoided by linking
2936 @file{libfoo.la} with @file{prog} instead of listing @file{foo.c} in
2937 @code{prog_SOURCES}. But let's assume we really want to keep
2938 @file{prog} and @file{libfoo.la} separate.)
2940 Technically, it means that we should build @file{foo.$(OBJEXT)} for
2941 @file{prog}, and @file{foo.lo} for @file{libfoo.la}. The problem is
2942 that in the course of creating @file{foo.lo}, libtool may erase (or
2943 replace) @file{foo.$(OBJEXT)} -- and this cannot be avoided.
2945 Therefore, when Automake detects this situation it will complain
2946 with a message such as
2948 object `foo.$(OBJEXT)' created both with libtool and without
2951 A workaround for this issue is to ensure that these two objects get
2952 different basenames. As explained in @ref{renamed objects}, this
2953 happens automatically when per-targets flags are used.
2957 prog_SOURCES = prog.c foo.c @dots{}
2958 prog_CFLAGS = $(AM_CFLAGS)
2960 lib_LTLIBRARIES = libfoo.la
2961 libfoo_la_SOURCES = foo.c @dots{}
2965 Adding @code{prog_CFLAGS = $(AM_CFLAGS)} is almost a no-op, because
2966 when the @code{prog_CFLAGS} is defined, it is used instead of
2967 @code{AM_CFLAGS}. However as a side effect it will cause
2968 @file{prog.c} and @file{foo.c} to be compiled as
2969 @file{prog-prog.$(OBJEXT)} and @file{prog-foo.$(OBJEXT)} which solves
2972 @node Program and Library Variables
2973 @section Program and Library Variables
2975 Associated with each program are a collection of variables which can be
2976 used to modify how that program is built. There is a similar list of
2977 such variables for each library. The canonical name of the program (or
2978 library) is used as a base for naming these variables.
2980 In the list below, we use the name ``maude'' to refer to the program or
2981 library. In your @file{Makefile.am} you would replace this with the
2982 canonical name of your program. This list also refers to ``maude'' as a
2983 program, but in general the same rules apply for both static and dynamic
2984 libraries; the documentation below notes situations where programs and
2989 This variable, if it exists, lists all the source files which are
2990 compiled to build the program. These files are added to the
2991 distribution by default. When building the program, Automake will cause
2992 each source file to be compiled to a single @file{.o} file (or
2993 @file{.lo} when using libtool). Normally these object files are named
2994 after the source file, but other factors can change this. If a file in
2995 the @samp{_SOURCES} variable has an unrecognized extension, Automake
2996 will do one of two things with it. If a suffix rule exists for turning
2997 files with the unrecognized extension into @file{.o} files, then
2998 automake will treat this file as it will any other source file
2999 (@pxref{Support for Other Languages}). Otherwise, the file will be
3000 ignored as though it were a header file.
3002 The prefixes @samp{dist_} and @samp{nodist_} can be used to control
3003 whether files listed in a @samp{_SOURCES} variable are distributed.
3004 @samp{dist_} is redundant, as sources are distributed by default, but it
3005 can be specified for clarity if desired.
3007 It is possible to have both @samp{dist_} and @samp{nodist_} variants of
3008 a given @samp{_SOURCES} variable at once; this lets you easily
3009 distribute some files and not others, for instance:
3012 nodist_maude_SOURCES = nodist.c
3013 dist_maude_SOURCES = dist-me.c
3016 By default the output file (on Unix systems, the @file{.o} file) will be
3017 put into the current build directory. However, if the option
3018 @code{subdir-objects} is in effect in the current directory then the
3019 @file{.o} file will be put into the subdirectory named after the source
3020 file. For instance, with @code{subdir-objects} enabled,
3021 @file{sub/dir/file.c} will be compiled to @file{sub/dir/file.o}. Some
3022 people prefer this mode of operation. You can specify
3023 @code{subdir-objects} in @code{AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS} (@pxref{Options}).
3024 @cindex Subdirectory, objects in
3025 @cindex Objects in subdirectory
3028 @item EXTRA_maude_SOURCES
3029 Automake needs to know the list of files you intend to compile
3030 @emph{statically}. For one thing, this is the only way Automake has of
3031 knowing what sort of language support a given @file{Makefile.in}
3032 requires. @footnote{There are other, more obscure reasons reasons for
3033 this limitation as well.} This means that, for example, you can't put a
3034 configure substitution like @samp{@@my_sources@@} into a @samp{_SOURCES}
3035 variable. If you intend to conditionally compile source files and use
3036 @file{configure} to substitute the appropriate object names into, e.g.,
3037 @samp{_LDADD} (see below), then you should list the corresponding source
3038 files in the @samp{EXTRA_} variable.
3040 This variable also supports @samp{dist_} and @samp{nodist_} prefixes,
3041 e.g., @samp{nodist_EXTRA_maude_SOURCES}.
3044 A static library is created by default by invoking @code{$(AR)
3045 $(ARFLAGS)} followed by the name of the library and then the objects
3046 being put into the library. You can override this by setting the
3047 @samp{_AR} variable. This is usually used with C++; some C++
3048 compilers require a special invocation in order to instantiate all the
3049 templates which should go into a library. For instance, the SGI C++
3050 compiler likes this variable set like so:
3052 libmaude_a_AR = $(CXX) -ar -o
3056 Extra objects can be added to a @emph{library} using the @samp{_LIBADD}
3057 variable. For instance this should be used for objects determined by
3058 @code{configure} (@pxref{A Library}).
3061 Extra objects can be added to a @emph{program} by listing them in the
3062 @samp{_LDADD} variable. For instance this should be used for objects
3063 determined by @code{configure} (@pxref{Linking}).
3065 @samp{_LDADD} and @samp{_LIBADD} are inappropriate for passing
3066 program-specific linker flags (except for @samp{-l}, @samp{-L},
3067 @samp{-dlopen} and @samp{-dlpreopen}). Use the @samp{_LDFLAGS} variable
3070 For instance, if your @file{configure.ac} uses @code{AC_PATH_XTRA}, you
3071 could link your program against the X libraries like so:
3074 maude_LDADD = $(X_PRE_LIBS) $(X_LIBS) $(X_EXTRA_LIBS)
3078 This variable is used to pass extra flags to the link step of a program
3079 or a shared library.
3081 @item maude_DEPENDENCIES
3082 It is also occasionally useful to have a program depend on some other
3083 target which is not actually part of that program. This can be done
3084 using the @samp{_DEPENDENCIES} variable. Each program depends on the
3085 contents of such a variable, but no further interpretation is done.
3087 If @samp{_DEPENDENCIES} is not supplied, it is computed by Automake.
3088 The automatically-assigned value is the contents of @samp{_LDADD} or
3089 @samp{_LIBADD}, with most configure substitutions, @samp{-l}, @samp{-L},
3090 @samp{-dlopen} and @samp{-dlpreopen} options removed. The configure
3091 substitutions that are left in are only @samp{$(LIBOBJS)} and
3092 @samp{$(ALLOCA)}; these are left because it is known that they will not
3093 cause an invalid value for @samp{_DEPENDENCIES} to be generated.
3096 You can override the linker on a per-program basis. By default the
3097 linker is chosen according to the languages used by the program. For
3098 instance, a program that includes C++ source code would use the C++
3099 compiler to link. The @samp{_LINK} variable must hold the name of a
3100 command which can be passed all the @file{.o} file names as arguments.
3101 Note that the name of the underlying program is @emph{not} passed to
3102 @samp{_LINK}; typically one uses @samp{$@@}:
3105 maude_LINK = $(CCLD) -magic -o $@@
3108 @item maude_CCASFLAGS
3110 @itemx maude_CPPFLAGS
3111 @itemx maude_CXXFLAGS
3113 @itemx maude_GCJFLAGS
3115 @itemx maude_OBJCFLAGS
3118 @cindex per-target compilation flags, defined
3119 Automake allows you to set compilation flags on a per-program (or
3120 per-library) basis. A single source file can be included in several
3121 programs, and it will potentially be compiled with different flags for
3122 each program. This works for any language directly supported by
3123 Automake. These @dfn{per-target compilation flags} are
3135 When using a per-target compilation flag, Automake will choose a
3136 different name for the intermediate object files. Ordinarily a file
3137 like @file{sample.c} will be compiled to produce @file{sample.o}.
3138 However, if the program's @samp{_CFLAGS} variable is set, then the
3139 object file will be named, for instance, @file{maude-sample.o}.
3140 (See also @ref{renamed objects}.)
3142 In compilations with per-target flags, the ordinary @samp{AM_} form of
3143 the flags variable is @emph{not} automatically included in the
3144 compilation (however, the user form of the variable @emph{is} included).
3145 So for instance, if you want the hypothetical @file{maude} compilations
3146 to also use the value of @samp{AM_CFLAGS}, you would need to write:
3149 maude_CFLAGS = @dots{} your flags @dots{} $(AM_CFLAGS)
3153 @item maude_SHORTNAME
3154 On some platforms the allowable file names are very short. In order to
3155 support these systems and per-target compilation flags at the same
3156 time, Automake allows you to set a ``short name'' which will influence
3157 how intermediate object files are named. For instance, in the following
3161 bin_PROGRAMS = maude
3162 maude_CPPFLAGS = -DSOMEFLAG
3164 maude_SOURCES = sample.c @dots{}
3168 the object file would be named @file{m-sample.o} rather than
3169 @file{maude-sample.o}.
3171 This facility is rarely needed in practice,
3172 and we recommend avoiding it until you find it is required.
3175 @node Default _SOURCES
3176 @section Default @code{_SOURCES}
3180 @cindex @code{_SOURCES}, default
3181 @cindex default @code{_SOURCES}
3183 @code{_SOURCES} variables are used to specify source files of programs
3184 (@pxref{A Program}), libraries (@pxref{A Library}), and Libtool
3185 libraries (@pxref{A Shared Library}).
3187 When no such variable is specified for a target, Automake will define
3188 one itself. The default is to compile a single C file whose base name
3189 is the name of the target itself, with any extension replaced by
3190 @file{.c}. (Defaulting to C is terrible but we are stuck with it for
3191 historical reasons.)
3193 For example if you have the following somewhere in your
3194 @file{Makefile.am} with no corresponding @samp{libfoo_a_SOURCES}:
3197 lib_LIBRARIES = libfoo.a sub/libc++.a
3201 @file{libfoo.a} will be built using a default source file named
3202 @file{libfoo.c}, and @file{sub/libc++.a} will be built from
3203 @file{sub/libc++.c}. (In older versions @file{sub/libc++.a}
3204 would be built from @file{sub_libc___a.c}, i.e., the default source
3205 was the canonized name of the target, with @file{.c} appended.
3206 Be believe the new behavior is more sensible, but for backward
3207 compatibility automake will use the old name if a file or a rule
3208 with that name exist.)
3210 @cindex @code{check_PROGRAMS} example
3211 @vindex check_PROGRAMS
3212 Default sources are mainly useful in test suites, when building many
3213 tests programs each from a single source. For instance in
3216 check_PROGRAMS = test1 test2 test3
3220 @file{test1}, @file{test2}, and @file{test3} will be built
3221 from @file{test1.c}, @file{test2.c}, and @file{test3.c}.
3223 @cindex Libtool modules, default source example
3224 @cindex default source, Libtool modules example
3225 Another case where is this convenient is building many Libtool modules
3226 (@file{moduleN.la}), each defined in its own file (@file{moduleN.c}).
3229 AM_LDFLAGS = -module
3230 lib_LTLIBRARIES = module1.la module2.la module3.la
3233 @cindex empty @code{_SOURCES}
3234 @cindex @code{_SOURCES}, empty
3235 Finally, there is one situation where this default source computation
3236 needs to be avoided: when a target should not be built from sources.
3237 We already saw such an example in @ref{true}; this happens when all
3238 the constituents of a target have already been compiled and need just
3239 to be combined using a @code{_LDADD} variable. Then it is necessary
3240 to define an empty @code{_SOURCES} variable, so that automake does not
3244 bin_PROGRAMS = target
3246 target_LDADD = libmain.a libmisc.a
3250 @section Special handling for LIBOBJS and ALLOCA
3252 @cindex @code{LIBOBJS}, special handling
3253 @cindex @code{ALLOCA}, special handling
3255 Automake explicitly recognizes the use of @code{$(LIBOBJS)} and
3256 @code{$(ALLOCA)}, and uses this information, plus the list of
3257 @code{LIBOBJS} files derived from @file{configure.ac} to automatically
3258 include the appropriate source files in the distribution (@pxref{Dist}).
3259 These source files are also automatically handled in the
3260 dependency-tracking scheme; see @xref{Dependencies}.
3262 @code{$(LIBOBJS)} and @code{$(ALLOCA)} are specially recognized in any
3263 @samp{_LDADD} or @samp{_LIBADD} variable.
3266 @node Program variables
3267 @section Variables used when building a program
3269 Occasionally it is useful to know which @file{Makefile} variables
3270 Automake uses for compilations; for instance you might need to do your
3271 own compilation in some special cases.
3273 Some variables are inherited from Autoconf; these are @code{CC},
3274 @code{CFLAGS}, @code{CPPFLAGS}, @code{DEFS}, @code{LDFLAGS}, and
3283 There are some additional variables which Automake itself defines:
3287 The contents of this variable are passed to every compilation which invokes
3288 the C preprocessor; it is a list of arguments to the preprocessor. For
3289 instance, @samp{-I} and @samp{-D} options should be listed here.
3291 Automake already provides some @samp{-I} options automatically. In
3292 particular it generates @samp{-I$(srcdir)}, @samp{-I.}, and a @samp{-I}
3293 pointing to the directory holding @file{config.h} (if you've used
3294 @code{AC_CONFIG_HEADERS} or @code{AM_CONFIG_HEADER}). You can disable
3295 the default @samp{-I} options using the @samp{nostdinc} option.
3297 @code{AM_CPPFLAGS} is ignored in preference to a per-executable (or
3298 per-library) @code{_CPPFLAGS} variable if it is defined.
3301 This does the same job as @samp{AM_CPPFLAGS} (or any per-target
3302 @samp{_CPPFLAGS} variable if it is used). It is an older name for the
3303 same functionality. This variable is deprecated; we suggest using
3304 @samp{AM_CPPFLAGS} and per-target @samp{_CPPFLAGS} instead.
3307 This is the variable which the @file{Makefile.am} author can use to pass
3308 in additional C compiler flags. It is more fully documented elsewhere.
3309 In some situations, this is not used, in preference to the
3310 per-executable (or per-library) @code{_CFLAGS}.
3313 This is the command used to actually compile a C source file. The
3314 filename is appended to form the complete command line.
3317 This is the variable which the @file{Makefile.am} author can use to pass
3318 in additional linker flags. In some situations, this is not used, in
3319 preference to the per-executable (or per-library) @code{_LDFLAGS}.
3322 This is the command used to actually link a C program. It already
3323 includes @samp{-o $@@} and the usual variable references (for instance,
3324 @code{CFLAGS}); it takes as ``arguments'' the names of the object files
3325 and libraries to link in.
3330 @section Yacc and Lex support
3332 Automake has somewhat idiosyncratic support for Yacc and Lex.
3334 Automake assumes that the @file{.c} file generated by @code{yacc} (or
3335 @code{lex}) should be named using the basename of the input file. That
3336 is, for a yacc source file @file{foo.y}, Automake will cause the
3337 intermediate file to be named @file{foo.c} (as opposed to
3338 @file{y.tab.c}, which is more traditional).
3340 The extension of a yacc source file is used to determine the extension
3341 of the resulting @samp{C} or @samp{C++} file. Files with the extension
3342 @samp{.y} will be turned into @samp{.c} files; likewise, @samp{.yy} will
3343 become @samp{.cc}; @samp{.y++}, @samp{c++}; and @samp{.yxx},
3346 Likewise, lex source files can be used to generate @samp{C} or
3347 @samp{C++}; the extensions @samp{.l}, @samp{.ll}, @samp{.l++}, and
3348 @samp{.lxx} are recognized.
3350 You should never explicitly mention the intermediate (@samp{C} or
3351 @samp{C++}) file in any @samp{SOURCES} variable; only list the source
3354 The intermediate files generated by @code{yacc} (or @code{lex}) will be
3355 included in any distribution that is made. That way the user doesn't
3356 need to have @code{yacc} or @code{lex}.
3358 If a @code{yacc} source file is seen, then your @file{configure.ac} must
3359 define the variable @samp{YACC}. This is most easily done by invoking
3360 the macro @samp{AC_PROG_YACC} (@pxref{Particular Programs, , Particular
3361 Program Checks, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}).
3363 When @code{yacc} is invoked, it is passed @samp{YFLAGS} and
3364 @samp{AM_YFLAGS}. The former is a user variable and the latter is
3365 intended for the @file{Makefile.am} author.
3367 @samp{AM_YFLAGS} is usually used to pass the @code{-d} option to
3368 @code{yacc}. Automake knows what this means and will automatically
3369 adjust its rules to update and distribute the header file built by
3370 @code{yacc -d}. What Automake cannot guess, though, is where this
3371 header will be used: it is up to you to ensure the header gets built
3372 before it is first used. Typically this is necessary in order for
3373 dependency tracking to work when the header is included by another
3374 file. The common solution is listing the header file in
3375 @code{BUILT_SOURCES} (@pxref{Sources}) as follows.
3378 BUILT_SOURCES = parser.h
3381 foo_SOURCES = @dots{} parser.y @dots{}
3384 If a @code{lex} source file is seen, then your @file{configure.ac}
3385 must define the variable @samp{LEX}. You can use @samp{AC_PROG_LEX}
3386 to do this (@pxref{Particular Programs, , Particular Program Checks,
3387 autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}), but using @code{AM_PROG_LEX} macro
3388 (@pxref{Macros}) is recommended.
3390 When @code{lex} is invoked, it is passed @samp{LFLAGS} and
3391 @samp{AM_LFLAGS}. The former is a user variable and the latter is
3392 intended for the @file{Makefile.am} author.
3397 @cindex yacc, multiple parsers
3398 @cindex Multiple yacc parsers
3399 @cindex Multiple lex lexers
3400 @cindex lex, multiple lexers
3403 Automake makes it possible to include multiple @code{yacc} (or
3404 @code{lex}) source files in a single program. When there is more than
3405 one distinct @code{yacc} (or @code{lex}) source file in a directory,
3406 Automake uses a small program called @code{ylwrap} to run @code{yacc}
3407 (or @code{lex}) in a subdirectory. This is necessary because yacc's
3408 output filename is fixed, and a parallel make could conceivably invoke
3409 more than one instance of @code{yacc} simultaneously. The @code{ylwrap}
3410 program is distributed with Automake. It should appear in the directory
3411 specified by @samp{AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR} (@pxref{Input, , Finding
3412 `configure' Input, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}), or the current
3413 directory if that macro is not used in @file{configure.ac}.
3415 For @code{yacc}, simply managing locking is insufficient. The output of
3416 @code{yacc} always uses the same symbol names internally, so it isn't
3417 possible to link two @code{yacc} parsers into the same executable.
3419 We recommend using the following renaming hack used in @code{gdb}:
3421 #define yymaxdepth c_maxdepth
3422 #define yyparse c_parse
3424 #define yyerror c_error
3425 #define yylval c_lval
3426 #define yychar c_char
3427 #define yydebug c_debug
3428 #define yypact c_pact
3435 #define yyexca c_exca
3436 #define yyerrflag c_errflag
3437 #define yynerrs c_nerrs
3441 #define yy_yys c_yys
3442 #define yystate c_state
3445 #define yy_yyv c_yyv
3447 #define yylloc c_lloc
3448 #define yyreds c_reds
3449 #define yytoks c_toks
3450 #define yylhs c_yylhs
3451 #define yylen c_yylen
3452 #define yydefred c_yydefred
3453 #define yydgoto c_yydgoto
3454 #define yysindex c_yysindex
3455 #define yyrindex c_yyrindex
3456 #define yygindex c_yygindex
3457 #define yytable c_yytable
3458 #define yycheck c_yycheck
3459 #define yyname c_yyname
3460 #define yyrule c_yyrule
3463 For each define, replace the @samp{c_} prefix with whatever you like.
3464 These defines work for @code{bison}, @code{byacc}, and traditional
3465 @code{yacc}s. If you find a parser generator that uses a symbol not
3466 covered here, please report the new name so it can be added to the list.
3470 @section C++ Support
3473 @cindex Support for C++
3475 Automake includes full support for C++.
3477 Any package including C++ code must define the output variable
3478 @samp{CXX} in @file{configure.ac}; the simplest way to do this is to use
3479 the @code{AC_PROG_CXX} macro (@pxref{Particular Programs, , Particular
3480 Program Checks, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}).
3482 A few additional variables are defined when a C++ source file is seen:
3486 The name of the C++ compiler.
3489 Any flags to pass to the C++ compiler.
3492 The maintainer's variant of @code{CXXFLAGS}.
3495 The command used to actually compile a C++ source file. The file name
3496 is appended to form the complete command line.
3499 The command used to actually link a C++ program.
3503 @node Assembly Support
3504 @section Assembly Support
3506 Automake includes some support for assembly code.
3508 The variable @code{CCAS} holds the name of the compiler used to build
3509 assembly code. This compiler must work a bit like a C compiler; in
3510 particular it must accept @samp{-c} and @samp{-o}. The value of
3511 @code{CCASFLAGS} is passed to the compilation.
3515 You are required to set @code{CCAS} and @code{CCASFLAGS} via
3516 @file{configure.ac}. The autoconf macro @code{AM_PROG_AS} will do this
3517 for you. Unless they are already set, it simply sets @code{CCAS} to the
3518 C compiler and @code{CCASFLAGS} to the C compiler flags.
3520 Only the suffixes @samp{.s} and @samp{.S} are recognized by
3521 @code{automake} as being files containing assembly code.
3524 @node Fortran 77 Support
3525 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
3526 @section Fortran 77 Support
3528 @cindex Fortran 77 support
3529 @cindex Support for Fortran 77
3531 Automake includes full support for Fortran 77.
3533 Any package including Fortran 77 code must define the output variable
3534 @samp{F77} in @file{configure.ac}; the simplest way to do this is to use
3535 the @code{AC_PROG_F77} macro (@pxref{Particular Programs, , Particular
3536 Program Checks, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}). @xref{Fortran 77 and
3539 A few additional variables are defined when a Fortran 77 source file is
3545 The name of the Fortran 77 compiler.
3548 Any flags to pass to the Fortran 77 compiler.
3551 The maintainer's variant of @code{FFLAGS}.
3554 Any flags to pass to the Ratfor compiler.
3557 The maintainer's variant of @code{RFLAGS}.
3560 The command used to actually compile a Fortran 77 source file. The file
3561 name is appended to form the complete command line.
3564 The command used to actually link a pure Fortran 77 program or shared
3569 Automake can handle preprocessing Fortran 77 and Ratfor source files in
3570 addition to compiling them@footnote{Much, if not most, of the
3571 information in the following sections pertaining to preprocessing
3572 Fortran 77 programs was taken almost verbatim from @ref{Catalogue of
3573 Rules, , Catalogue of Rules, make, The GNU Make Manual}.}. Automake
3574 also contains some support for creating programs and shared libraries
3575 that are a mixture of Fortran 77 and other languages (@pxref{Mixing
3576 Fortran 77 With C and C++}).
3578 These issues are covered in the following sections.
3581 * Preprocessing Fortran 77::
3582 * Compiling Fortran 77 Files::
3583 * Mixing Fortran 77 With C and C++::
3584 * Fortran 77 and Autoconf::
3588 @node Preprocessing Fortran 77
3589 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
3590 @subsection Preprocessing Fortran 77
3592 @cindex Preprocessing Fortran 77
3593 @cindex Fortran 77, Preprocessing
3594 @cindex Ratfor programs
3596 @file{N.f} is made automatically from @file{N.F} or @file{N.r}. This
3597 rule runs just the preprocessor to convert a preprocessable Fortran 77
3598 or Ratfor source file into a strict Fortran 77 source file. The precise
3599 command used is as follows:
3604 @code{$(F77) -F $(DEFS) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(AM_FFLAGS) $(FFLAGS)}
3607 @code{$(F77) -F $(AM_FFLAGS) $(FFLAGS) $(AM_RFLAGS) $(RFLAGS)}
3612 @node Compiling Fortran 77 Files
3613 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
3614 @subsection Compiling Fortran 77 Files
3616 @file{N.o} is made automatically from @file{N.f}, @file{N.F} or
3617 @file{N.r} by running the Fortran 77 compiler. The precise command used
3623 @code{$(F77) -c $(AM_FFLAGS) $(FFLAGS)}
3626 @code{$(F77) -c $(DEFS) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(AM_FFLAGS) $(FFLAGS)}
3629 @code{$(F77) -c $(AM_FFLAGS) $(FFLAGS) $(AM_RFLAGS) $(RFLAGS)}
3634 @node Mixing Fortran 77 With C and C++
3635 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
3636 @subsection Mixing Fortran 77 With C and C++
3638 @cindex Fortran 77, mixing with C and C++
3639 @cindex Mixing Fortran 77 with C and C++
3640 @cindex Linking Fortran 77 with C and C++
3642 @cindex Mixing Fortran 77 with C and/or C++
3644 Automake currently provides @emph{limited} support for creating programs
3645 and shared libraries that are a mixture of Fortran 77 and C and/or C++.
3646 However, there are many other issues related to mixing Fortran 77 with
3647 other languages that are @emph{not} (currently) handled by Automake, but
3648 that are handled by other packages@footnote{For example,
3649 @uref{http://www-zeus.desy.de/~burow/cfortran/, the cfortran package}
3650 addresses all of these inter-language issues, and runs under nearly all
3651 Fortran 77, C and C++ compilers on nearly all platforms. However,
3652 @code{cfortran} is not yet Free Software, but it will be in the next
3656 Automake can help in two ways:
3660 Automatic selection of the linker depending on which combinations of
3664 Automatic selection of the appropriate linker flags (e.g. @samp{-L} and
3665 @samp{-l}) to pass to the automatically selected linker in order to link
3666 in the appropriate Fortran 77 intrinsic and run-time libraries.
3668 @cindex FLIBS, defined
3669 These extra Fortran 77 linker flags are supplied in the output variable
3670 @code{FLIBS} by the @code{AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS} Autoconf macro
3671 supplied with newer versions of Autoconf (Autoconf version 2.13 and
3672 later). @xref{Fortran 77 Compiler Characteristics, , , autoconf, The
3676 If Automake detects that a program or shared library (as mentioned in
3677 some @code{_PROGRAMS} or @code{_LTLIBRARIES} primary) contains source
3678 code that is a mixture of Fortran 77 and C and/or C++, then it requires
3679 that the macro @code{AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS} be called in
3680 @file{configure.ac}, and that either @code{$(FLIBS)}
3681 appear in the appropriate @code{_LDADD} (for programs) or @code{_LIBADD}
3682 (for shared libraries) variables. It is the responsibility of the
3683 person writing the @file{Makefile.am} to make sure that @code{$(FLIBS)}
3684 appears in the appropriate @code{_LDADD} or
3685 @code{_LIBADD} variable.
3687 @cindex Mixed language example
3688 @cindex Example, mixed language
3690 For example, consider the following @file{Makefile.am}:
3694 foo_SOURCES = main.cc foo.f
3695 foo_LDADD = libfoo.la $(FLIBS)
3697 pkglib_LTLIBRARIES = libfoo.la
3698 libfoo_la_SOURCES = bar.f baz.c zardoz.cc
3699 libfoo_la_LIBADD = $(FLIBS)
3702 In this case, Automake will insist that @code{AC_F77_LIBRARY_LDFLAGS}
3703 is mentioned in @file{configure.ac}. Also, if @code{$(FLIBS)} hadn't
3704 been mentioned in @code{foo_LDADD} and @code{libfoo_la_LIBADD}, then
3705 Automake would have issued a warning.
3710 * How the Linker is Chosen::
3713 @node How the Linker is Chosen
3714 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
3715 @subsubsection How the Linker is Chosen
3717 @cindex Automatic linker selection
3718 @cindex Selecting the linker automatically
3720 The following diagram demonstrates under what conditions a particular
3721 linker is chosen by Automake.
3723 For example, if Fortran 77, C and C++ source code were to be compiled
3724 into a program, then the C++ linker will be used. In this case, if the
3725 C or Fortran 77 linkers required any special libraries that weren't
3726 included by the C++ linker, then they must be manually added to an
3727 @code{_LDADD} or @code{_LIBADD} variable by the user writing the
3733 code \ C C++ Fortran
3734 ----------------- +---------+---------+---------+
3738 +---------+---------+---------+
3742 +---------+---------+---------+
3746 +---------+---------+---------+
3750 +---------+---------+---------+
3752 C + Fortran | | | x |
3754 +---------+---------+---------+
3756 C++ + Fortran | | x | |
3758 +---------+---------+---------+
3760 C + C++ + Fortran | | x | |
3762 +---------+---------+---------+
3766 @node Fortran 77 and Autoconf
3767 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
3768 @subsection Fortran 77 and Autoconf
3770 The current Automake support for Fortran 77 requires a recent enough
3771 version of Autoconf that also includes support for Fortran 77. Full
3772 Fortran 77 support was added to Autoconf 2.13, so you will want to use
3773 that version of Autoconf or later.
3777 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
3778 @section Java Support
3780 @cindex Java support
3781 @cindex Support for Java
3783 Automake includes support for compiled Java, using @code{gcj}, the Java
3784 front end to the GNU Compiler Collection.
3786 Any package including Java code to be compiled must define the output
3787 variable @samp{GCJ} in @file{configure.ac}; the variable @samp{GCJFLAGS}
3788 must also be defined somehow (either in @file{configure.ac} or
3789 @file{Makefile.am}). The simplest way to do this is to use the
3790 @code{AM_PROG_GCJ} macro.
3794 By default, programs including Java source files are linked with
3797 As always, the contents of @samp{AM_GCJFLAGS} are passed to every
3798 compilation invoking @code{gcj} (in its role as an ahead-of-time
3799 compiler -- when invoking it to create @file{.class} files,
3800 @samp{AM_JAVACFLAGS} is used instead). If it is necessary to pass
3801 options to @code{gcj} from @file{Makefile.am}, this variable, and not
3802 the user variable @samp{GCJFLAGS}, should be used.
3806 @code{gcj} can be used to compile @file{.java}, @file{.class},
3807 @file{.zip}, or @file{.jar} files.
3809 When linking, @code{gcj} requires that the main class be specified
3810 using the @samp{--main=} option. The easiest way to do this is to use
3811 the @code{_LDFLAGS} variable for the program.
3814 @node Support for Other Languages
3815 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
3816 @section Support for Other Languages
3818 Automake currently only includes full support for C, C++ (@pxref{C++
3819 Support}), Fortran 77 (@pxref{Fortran 77 Support}), and Java
3820 (@pxref{Java Support}). There is only rudimentary support for other
3821 languages, support for which will be improved based on user demand.
3823 Some limited support for adding your own languages is available via the
3824 suffix rule handling; see @ref{Suffixes}.
3828 @section Automatic de-ANSI-fication
3830 @cindex de-ANSI-fication, defined
3832 Although the GNU standards allow the use of ANSI C, this can have the
3833 effect of limiting portability of a package to some older compilers
3834 (notably the SunOS C compiler).
3836 Automake allows you to work around this problem on such machines by
3837 @dfn{de-ANSI-fying} each source file before the actual compilation takes
3840 @vindex AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS
3843 If the @file{Makefile.am} variable @code{AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS}
3844 (@pxref{Options}) contains the option @code{ansi2knr} then code to
3845 handle de-ANSI-fication is inserted into the generated
3848 This causes each C source file in the directory to be treated as ANSI C@.
3849 If an ANSI C compiler is available, it is used. If no ANSI C compiler
3850 is available, the @code{ansi2knr} program is used to convert the source
3851 files into K&R C, which is then compiled.
3853 The @code{ansi2knr} program is simple-minded. It assumes the source
3854 code will be formatted in a particular way; see the @code{ansi2knr} man
3857 Support for de-ANSI-fication requires the source files @file{ansi2knr.c}
3858 and @file{ansi2knr.1} to be in the same package as the ANSI C source;
3859 these files are distributed with Automake. Also, the package
3860 @file{configure.ac} must call the macro @code{AM_C_PROTOTYPES}
3862 @cvindex AM_C_PROTOTYPES
3864 Automake also handles finding the @code{ansi2knr} support files in some
3865 other directory in the current package. This is done by prepending the
3866 relative path to the appropriate directory to the @code{ansi2knr}
3867 option. For instance, suppose the package has ANSI C code in the
3868 @file{src} and @file{lib} subdirectories. The files @file{ansi2knr.c} and
3869 @file{ansi2knr.1} appear in @file{lib}. Then this could appear in
3870 @file{src/Makefile.am}:
3873 AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS = ../lib/ansi2knr
3876 If no directory prefix is given, the files are assumed to be in the
3879 Note that automatic de-ANSI-fication will not work when the package is
3880 being built for a different host architecture. That is because automake
3881 currently has no way to build @code{ansi2knr} for the build machine.
3883 @c FIXME: this paragraph might be better moved to an `upgrading' section.
3884 @cindex @code{LTLIBOBJS} and @code{ansi2knr}
3885 @cindex @code{LIBOBJS} and @code{ansi2knr}
3886 @cindex @code{ansi2knr} and @code{LTLIBOBJS}
3887 @cindex @code{ansi2knr} and @code{LIBOBJS}
3888 Using @code{LIBOBJS} with source de-ANSI-fication used to require
3889 hand-crafted code in @file{configure} to append @code{$U} to basenames
3890 in @code{LIBOBJS}. This is no longer true today. Starting with version
3891 2.54, Autoconf takes care of rewriting @code{LIBOBJS} and
3892 @code{LTLIBOBJS}. (@pxref{AC_LIBOBJ vs LIBOBJS, , @code{AC_LIBOBJ}
3893 vs. @code{LIBOBJS}, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual})
3896 @section Automatic dependency tracking
3898 As a developer it is often painful to continually update the
3899 @file{Makefile.in} whenever the include-file dependencies change in a
3900 project. Automake supplies a way to automatically track dependency
3903 @cindex Dependency tracking
3904 @cindex Automatic dependency tracking
3906 Automake always uses complete dependencies for a compilation, including
3907 system headers. Automake's model is that dependency computation should
3908 be a side effect of the build. To this end, dependencies are computed
3909 by running all compilations through a special wrapper program called
3910 @code{depcomp}. @code{depcomp} understands how to coax many different C
3911 and C++ compilers into generating dependency information in the format
3912 it requires. @code{automake -a} will install @code{depcomp} into your
3913 source tree for you. If @code{depcomp} can't figure out how to properly
3914 invoke your compiler, dependency tracking will simply be disabled for
3919 Experience with earlier versions of Automake @footnote{See
3920 @uref{http://sources.redhat.com/automake/dependencies.html} for more
3921 information on the history and experiences with automatic dependency
3922 tracking in Automake} taught us that it is not reliable to generate
3923 dependencies only on the maintainer's system, as configurations vary too
3924 much. So instead Automake implements dependency tracking at build time.
3926 Automatic dependency tracking can be suppressed by putting
3927 @code{no-dependencies} in the variable @code{AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS}, or
3928 passing @code{no-dependencies} as an argument to @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE}
3929 (this should be the preferred way). Or, you can invoke @code{automake}
3930 with the @code{-i} option. Dependency tracking is enabled by default.
3932 @vindex AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS
3933 @opindex no-dependencies
3935 The person building your package also can choose to disable dependency
3936 tracking by configuring with @code{--disable-dependency-tracking}.
3938 @cindex Disabling dependency tracking
3939 @cindex Dependency tracking, disabling
3943 @section Support for executable extensions
3945 @cindex Executable extension
3946 @cindex Extension, executable
3949 On some platforms, such as Windows, executables are expected to have an
3950 extension such as @samp{.exe}. On these platforms, some compilers (GCC
3951 among them) will automatically generate @file{foo.exe} when asked to
3952 generate @file{foo}.
3954 Automake provides mostly-transparent support for this. Unfortunately
3955 @emph{mostly} doesn't yet mean @emph{fully}. Until the English
3956 dictionary is revised, you will have to assist Automake if your package
3957 must support those platforms.
3959 One thing you must be aware of is that, internally, Automake rewrites
3960 something like this:
3963 bin_PROGRAMS = liver
3969 bin_PROGRAMS = liver$(EXEEXT)
3972 The targets Automake generates are likewise given the @samp{$(EXEEXT)}
3973 extension. @code{EXEEXT}
3975 However, Automake cannot apply this rewriting to @code{configure}
3976 substitutions. This means that if you are conditionally building a
3977 program using such a substitution, then your @file{configure.ac} must
3978 take care to add @samp{$(EXEEXT)} when constructing the output variable.
3980 With Autoconf 2.13 and earlier, you must explicitly use @code{AC_EXEEXT}
3981 to get this support. With Autoconf 2.50, @code{AC_EXEEXT} is run
3982 automatically if you configure a compiler (say, through
3985 Sometimes maintainers like to write an explicit link rule for their
3986 program. Without executable extension support, this is easy---you
3987 simply write a rule whose target is the name of the program. However,
3988 when executable extension support is enabled, you must instead add the
3989 @samp{$(EXEEXT)} suffix.
3991 Unfortunately, due to the change in Autoconf 2.50, this means you must
3992 always add this extension. However, this is a problem for maintainers
3993 who know their package will never run on a platform that has
3994 executable extensions. For those maintainers, the @code{no-exeext}
3995 option (@pxref{Options}) will disable this feature. This works in a
3996 fairly ugly way; if @code{no-exeext} is seen, then the presence of a
3997 rule for a target named @code{foo} in @file{Makefile.am} will override
3998 an automake-generated rule for @code{foo$(EXEEXT)}. Without
3999 the @code{no-exeext} option, this use will give a diagnostic.
4003 @chapter Other Derived Objects
4005 Automake can handle derived objects which are not C programs. Sometimes
4006 the support for actually building such objects must be explicitly
4007 supplied, but Automake will still automatically handle installation and
4011 * Scripts:: Executable scripts
4012 * Headers:: Header files
4013 * Data:: Architecture-independent data files
4014 * Sources:: Derived sources
4019 @section Executable Scripts
4021 @cindex _SCRIPTS primary, defined
4022 @cindex SCRIPTS primary, defined
4023 @cindex Primary variable, SCRIPTS
4025 It is possible to define and install programs which are scripts. Such
4026 programs are listed using the @samp{SCRIPTS} primary name. Automake
4027 doesn't define any dependencies for scripts; the @file{Makefile.am}
4028 should include the appropriate rules.
4031 Automake does not assume that scripts are derived objects; such objects
4032 must be deleted by hand (@pxref{Clean}).
4034 The @code{automake} program itself is a Perl script that is generated
4035 from @file{automake.in}. Here is how this is handled:
4038 bin_SCRIPTS = automake
4039 CLEANFILES = $(bin_SCRIPTS)
4041 do_subst = sed -e 's,[@@]datadir[@@],$(datadir),g' \
4042 -e 's,[@@]PERL[@@],$(PERL),g' \
4043 -e 's,[@@]PACKAGE[@@],$(PACKAGE),g' \
4044 -e 's,[@@]VERSION[@@],$(VERSION),g' \
4047 automake: automake.in Makefile
4048 $(do_subst) < $(srcdir)/automake.in > automake
4052 Because---as we have just seen---scripts can be built, they are not
4053 distributed by default. Scripts that should be distributed can be
4054 specified using a @code{dist_} prefix as in other primaries. For
4055 instance the following @file{Makefile.am} declares that
4056 @file{my_script} should be distributed and installed in
4060 dist_sbin_SCRIPTS = my_script
4063 @cindex SCRIPTS, installation directories
4064 @cindex Installing scripts
4067 @vindex sbin_SCRIPTS
4068 @vindex libexec_SCRIPTS
4069 @vindex pkgdata_SCRIPTS
4070 @vindex noinst_SCRIPTS
4071 @vindex check_SCRIPTS
4073 Script objects can be installed in @code{bindir}, @code{sbindir},
4074 @code{libexecdir}, or @code{pkgdatadir}.
4076 Scripts that need not being installed can be listed in
4077 @code{noinst_SCRIPTS}, and among them, those which are needed only by
4078 @code{make check} should go in @code{check_SCRIPTS}.
4082 @section Header files
4084 @cindex _HEADERS primary, defined
4085 @cindex HEADERS primary, defined
4086 @cindex Primary variable, HEADERS
4088 @vindex noinst_HEADERS
4090 Header files are specified by the @samp{HEADERS} family of variables.
4091 Generally header files are not installed, so the @code{noinst_HEADERS}
4092 variable will be the most used. @footnote{However, for the case of a
4093 non-installed header file that is actually used by a particular program,
4094 we recommend listing it in the program's @samp{_SOURCES} variable
4095 instead of in @code{noinst_HEADERS}. We believe this is more clear.}
4098 All header files must be listed somewhere; missing ones will not appear
4099 in the distribution. Often it is clearest to list uninstalled headers
4100 with the rest of the sources for a program. @xref{A Program}. Headers
4101 listed in a @samp{_SOURCES} variable need not be listed in any
4102 @samp{_HEADERS} variable.
4104 @cindex HEADERS, installation directories
4105 @cindex Installing headers
4107 @vindex include_HEADERS
4108 @vindex oldinclude_HEADERS
4109 @vindex pkginclude_HEADERS
4111 Headers can be installed in @code{includedir}, @code{oldincludedir}, or
4112 @code{pkgincludedir}.
4116 @section Architecture-independent data files
4118 @cindex _DATA primary, defined
4119 @cindex DATA primary, defined
4120 @cindex Primary variable, DATA
4122 Automake supports the installation of miscellaneous data files using the
4123 @samp{DATA} family of variables.
4127 @vindex sysconf_DATA
4128 @vindex sharedstate_DATA
4129 @vindex localstate_DATA
4130 @vindex pkgdata_DATA
4132 Such data can be installed in the directories @code{datadir},
4133 @code{sysconfdir}, @code{sharedstatedir}, @code{localstatedir}, or
4136 By default, data files are @emph{not} included in a distribution. Of
4137 course, you can use the @samp{dist_} prefix to change this on a
4140 Here is how Automake declares its auxiliary data files:
4143 dist_pkgdata_DATA = clean-kr.am clean.am @dots{}
4148 @section Built sources
4150 Because Automake's automatic dependency tracking works as a side-effect
4151 of compilation (@pxref{Dependencies}) there is a bootstrap issue: a
4152 target should not be compiled before its dependencies are made, but
4153 these dependencies are unknown until the target is first compiled.
4155 Ordinarily this is not a problem, because dependencies are distributed
4156 sources: they preexist and do not need to be built. Suppose that
4157 @file{foo.c} includes @file{foo.h}. When it first compiles
4158 @file{foo.o}, @command{make} only knows that @file{foo.o} depends on
4159 @file{foo.c}. As a side-effect of this compilation @code{depcomp}
4160 records the @file{foo.h} dependency so that following invocations of
4161 @command{make} will honor it. In these conditions, it's clear there is
4162 no problem: either @file{foo.o} doesn't exist and has to be built
4163 (regardless of the dependencies), either accurate dependencies exist and
4164 they can be used to decide whether @file{foo.o} should be rebuilt.
4166 It's a different story if @file{foo.h} doesn't exist by the first
4167 @command{make} run. For instance there might be a rule to build
4168 @file{foo.h}. This time @file{file.o}'s build will fail because the
4169 compiler can't find @file{foo.h}. @command{make} failed to trigger the
4170 rule to build @file{foo.h} first by lack of dependency information.
4172 @vindex BUILT_SOURCES
4173 @cindex BUILT_SOURCES, defined
4175 The @code{BUILT_SOURCES} variable is a workaround for this problem. A
4176 source file listed in @code{BUILT_SOURCES} is made on @code{make all}
4177 or @code{make check} (or even @code{make install}) before other
4178 targets are processed. However, such a source file is not
4179 @emph{compiled} unless explicitly requested by mentioning it in some
4180 other @samp{_SOURCES} variable.
4182 So, to conclude our introductory example, we could use
4183 @code{BUILT_SOURCES = foo.h} to ensure @file{foo.h} gets built before
4184 any other target (including @file{foo.o}) during @code{make all} or
4187 @code{BUILT_SOURCES} is actually a bit of a misnomer, as any file which
4188 must be created early in the build process can be listed in this
4189 variable. Moreover, all built sources do not necessarily have to be
4190 listed in @code{BUILT_SOURCES}. For instance a generated @file{.c} file
4191 doesn't need to appear in @code{BUILT_SOURCES} (unless it is included by
4192 another source), because it's a known dependency of the associated
4195 It might be important to emphasize that @code{BUILT_SOURCES} is
4196 honored only by @code{make all}, @code{make check} and @code{make
4197 install}. This means you cannot build a specific target (e.g.,
4198 @code{make foo}) in a clean tree if it depends on a built source.
4199 However it will succeed if you have run @code{make all} earlier,
4200 because accurate dependencies are already available.
4202 The next section illustrates and discusses the handling of built sources
4206 * Built sources example:: Several ways to handle built sources.
4209 @node Built sources example
4210 @subsection Built sources example
4212 Suppose that @file{foo.c} includes @file{bindir.h}, which is
4213 installation-dependent and not distributed: it needs to be built. Here
4214 @file{bindir.h} defines the preprocessor macro @code{bindir} to the
4215 value of the @command{make} variable @code{bindir} (inherited from
4218 We suggest several implementations below. It's not meant to be an
4219 exhaustive listing of all ways to handle built sources, but it will give
4220 you a few ideas if you encounter this issue.
4222 @unnumberedsubsec First try
4224 This first implementation will illustrate the bootstrap issue mentioned
4225 in the previous section (@pxref{Sources}).
4227 Here is a tentative @file{Makefile.am}.
4233 nodist_foo_SOURCES = bindir.h
4234 CLEANFILES = bindir.h
4236 echo '#define bindir "$(bindir)"' >$@@
4239 This setup doesn't work, because Automake doesn't know that @file{foo.c}
4240 includes @file{bindir.h}. Remember, automatic dependency tracking works
4241 as a side-effect of compilation, so the dependencies of @file{foo.o} will
4242 be known only after @file{foo.o} has been compiled (@pxref{Dependencies}).
4243 The symptom is as follows.
4247 source='foo.c' object='foo.o' libtool=no \
4248 depfile='.deps/foo.Po' tmpdepfile='.deps/foo.TPo' \
4249 depmode=gcc /bin/sh ./depcomp \
4250 gcc -I. -I. -g -O2 -c `test -f 'foo.c' || echo './'`foo.c
4251 foo.c:2: bindir.h: No such file or directory
4252 make: *** [foo.o] Error 1
4255 @unnumberedsubsec Using @code{BUILT_SOURCES}
4257 A solution is to require @file{bindir.h} to be built before anything
4258 else. This is what @code{BUILT_SOURCES} is meant for (@pxref{Sources}).
4263 BUILT_SOURCES = bindir.h
4264 CLEANFILES = bindir.h
4266 echo '#define bindir "$(bindir)"' >$@@
4269 See how @file{bindir.h} get built first:
4273 echo '#define bindir "/usr/local/bin"' >bindir.h
4275 make[1]: Entering directory `/home/adl/tmp'
4276 source='foo.c' object='foo.o' libtool=no \
4277 depfile='.deps/foo.Po' tmpdepfile='.deps/foo.TPo' \
4278 depmode=gcc /bin/sh ./depcomp \
4279 gcc -I. -I. -g -O2 -c `test -f 'foo.c' || echo './'`foo.c
4280 gcc -g -O2 -o foo foo.o
4281 make[1]: Leaving directory `/home/adl/tmp'
4284 However, as said earlier, @code{BUILT_SOURCES} applies only to the
4285 @code{all}, @code{check}, and @code{install} targets. It still fails
4286 if you try to run @code{make foo} explicitly:
4290 test -z "bindir.h" || rm -f bindir.h
4291 test -z "foo" || rm -f foo
4293 % : > .deps/foo.Po # Suppress previously recorded dependencies
4295 source='foo.c' object='foo.o' libtool=no \
4296 depfile='.deps/foo.Po' tmpdepfile='.deps/foo.TPo' \
4297 depmode=gcc /bin/sh ./depcomp \
4298 gcc -I. -I. -g -O2 -c `test -f 'foo.c' || echo './'`foo.c
4299 foo.c:2: bindir.h: No such file or directory
4300 make: *** [foo.o] Error 1
4303 @unnumberedsubsec Recording dependencies manually
4305 Usually people are happy enough with @code{BUILT_SOURCES} because they
4306 never build targets such as @code{make foo} before @code{make all}, as
4307 in the previous example. However if this matters to you, you can
4308 avoid @code{BUILT_SOURCES} and record such dependencies explicitly in
4309 the @file{Makefile.am}.
4314 foo.$(OBJEXT): bindir.h
4315 CLEANFILES = bindir.h
4317 echo '#define bindir "$(bindir)"' >$@@
4320 You don't have to list @emph{all} the dependencies of @code{foo.o}
4321 explicitly, only those which might need to be built. If a dependency
4322 already exists, it will not hinder the first compilation and will be
4323 recorded by the normal dependency tracking code. (Note that after this
4324 first compilation the dependency tracking code will also have recorded
4325 the dependency between @code{foo.o} and @code{bindir.h}; so our explicit
4326 dependency is really useful to the first build only.)
4328 Adding explicit dependencies like this can be a bit dangerous if you are
4329 not careful enough. This is due to the way Automake tries not to
4330 overwrite your rules (it assumes you know better than it).
4331 @code{foo.$(OBJEXT): bindir.h} supersedes any rule Automake may want to
4332 output to build @code{foo.$(OBJEXT)}. It happens to work in this case
4333 because Automake doesn't have to output any @code{foo.$(OBJEXT):}
4334 target: it relies on a suffix rule instead (i.e., @code{.c.$(OBJEXT):}).
4335 Always check the generated @file{Makefile.in} if you do this.
4337 @unnumberedsubsec Build @file{bindir.h} from @file{configure}
4339 It's possible to define this preprocessor macro from @file{configure},
4340 either in @file{config.h} (@pxref{Defining Directories, , Defining
4341 Directories, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}), or by processing a
4342 @file{bindir.h.in} file using @code{AC_CONFIG_FILES}
4343 (@pxref{Configuration Actions, ,Configuration Actions, autoconf, The
4346 At this point it should be clear that building @file{bindir.h} from
4347 @file{configure} work well for this example. @file{bindir.h} will exist
4348 before you build any target, hence will not cause any dependency issue.
4350 The Makefile can be shrunk as follows. We do not even have to mention
4358 However, it's not always possible to build sources from
4359 @file{configure}, especially when these sources are generated by a tool
4360 that needs to be built first...
4362 @unnumberedsubsec Build @file{bindir.c}, not @file{bindir.h}.
4364 Another attractive idea is to define @code{bindir} as a variable or
4365 function exported from @file{bindir.o}, and build @file{bindir.c}
4366 instead of @file{bindir.h}.
4369 noinst_PROGRAMS = foo
4370 foo_SOURCES = foo.c bindir.h
4371 nodist_foo_SOURCES = bindir.c
4372 CLEANFILES = bindir.c
4374 echo 'const char bindir[] = "$(bindir)";' >$@
4377 @file{bindir.h} contains just the variable's declaration and doesn't
4378 need to be built, so it won't cause any trouble. @file{bindir.o} is
4379 always dependent on @file{bindir.c}, so @file{bindir.c} will get built
4382 @unnumberedsubsec Which is best?
4384 There is no panacea, of course. Each solution has its merits and
4387 You cannot use @code{BUILT_SOURCES} if the ability to run @code{make
4388 foo} on a clean tree is important to you.
4390 You won't add explicit dependencies if you are leery of overriding
4391 an Automake rule by mistake.
4393 Building files from @file{./configure} is not always possible, neither
4394 is converting @file{.h} files into @file{.c} files.
4397 @node Other GNU Tools
4398 @chapter Other GNU Tools
4400 Since Automake is primarily intended to generate @file{Makefile.in}s for
4401 use in GNU programs, it tries hard to interoperate with other GNU tools.
4404 * Emacs Lisp:: Emacs Lisp
4415 @cindex _LISP primary, defined
4416 @cindex LISP primary, defined
4417 @cindex Primary variable, LISP
4423 Automake provides some support for Emacs Lisp. The @samp{LISP} primary
4424 is used to hold a list of @file{.el} files. Possible prefixes for this
4425 primary are @samp{lisp_} and @samp{noinst_}. Note that if
4426 @code{lisp_LISP} is defined, then @file{configure.ac} must run
4427 @code{AM_PATH_LISPDIR} (@pxref{Macros}).
4429 Automake will byte-compile all Emacs Lisp source files using the Emacs
4430 found by @code{AM_PATH_LISPDIR}, if any was found.
4432 Byte-compiled Emacs Lisp files are not portable among all versions of
4433 Emacs, so it makes sense to turn this off if you expect sites to have
4434 more than one version of Emacs installed. Furthermore, many packages
4435 don't actually benefit from byte-compilation. Still, we recommend
4436 that you byte-compile your Emacs Lisp sources. It is probably better
4437 for sites with strange setups to cope for themselves than to make the
4438 installation less nice for everybody else.
4440 There are two ways to avoid byte-compiling. Historically, we have
4441 recommended the following construct.
4443 lisp_LISP = file1.el file2.el
4447 @code{ELCFILES} is an internal Automake variables that normally lists
4448 all @file{.elc} files that must be byte-compiled. Automake defines
4449 @code{ELCFILES} automatically from @code{lisp_LISP}. Emptying this
4450 variables explicitly prevents byte-compilation to occur.
4452 Since Automake 1.8, we now recommend using @code{lisp_DATA} instead. As
4455 lisp_DATA = file1.el file2.el
4458 Note that these two constructs are not equivalent. @code{_LISP} will
4459 not install a file if Emacs is not installed, while @code{_DATA} will
4460 always install its files.
4465 @cindex GNU Gettext support
4466 @cindex Gettext support
4467 @cindex Support for GNU Gettext
4469 If @code{AM_GNU_GETTEXT} is seen in @file{configure.ac}, then Automake
4470 turns on support for GNU gettext, a message catalog system for
4471 internationalization
4472 (@pxref{GNU Gettext, , , gettext, GNU gettext utilities}).
4474 The @code{gettext} support in Automake requires the addition of two
4475 subdirectories to the package, @file{intl} and @file{po}. Automake
4476 insures that these directories exist and are mentioned in
4479 @vindex dist_lisp_LISP
4480 @vindex dist_noinst_LISP
4481 Lisp sources are not distributed by default. You can prefix the
4482 @code{LISP} primary with @code{dist_}, as in @code{dist_lisp_LISP} or
4483 @code{dist_noinst_LISP}, to indicate that these files should be
4489 Automake provides support for GNU Libtool (@pxref{Top, , Introduction,
4490 libtool, The Libtool Manual}) with the @samp{LTLIBRARIES} primary.
4491 @xref{A Shared Library}.
4497 @cindex _JAVA primary, defined
4498 @cindex JAVA primary, defined
4499 @cindex Primary variable, JAVA
4501 Automake provides some minimal support for Java compilation with the
4502 @samp{JAVA} primary.
4504 Any @file{.java} files listed in a @samp{_JAVA} variable will be
4505 compiled with @code{JAVAC} at build time. By default, @file{.class}
4506 files are not included in the distribution.
4508 @cindex JAVA restrictions
4509 @cindex Restrictions for JAVA
4511 Currently Automake enforces the restriction that only one @samp{_JAVA}
4512 primary can be used in a given @file{Makefile.am}. The reason for this
4513 restriction is that, in general, it isn't possible to know which
4514 @file{.class} files were generated from which @file{.java} files -- so
4515 it would be impossible to know which files to install where. For
4516 instance, a @file{.java} file can define multiple classes; the resulting
4517 @file{.class} file names cannot be predicted without parsing the
4520 There are a few variables which are used when compiling Java sources:
4524 The name of the Java compiler. This defaults to @samp{javac}.
4527 The flags to pass to the compiler. This is considered to be a user
4528 variable (@pxref{User Variables}).
4531 More flags to pass to the Java compiler. This, and not
4532 @code{JAVACFLAGS}, should be used when it is necessary to put Java
4533 compiler flags into @file{Makefile.am}.
4536 The value of this variable is passed to the @samp{-d} option to
4537 @code{javac}. It defaults to @samp{$(top_builddir)}.
4540 This variable is an @code{sh} expression which is used to set the
4541 @code{CLASSPATH} environment variable on the @code{javac} command line.
4542 (In the future we will probably handle class path setting differently.)
4549 @cindex _PYTHON primary, defined
4550 @cindex PYTHON primary, defined
4551 @cindex Primary variable, PYTHON
4554 Automake provides support for Python compilation with the @samp{PYTHON}
4557 Any files listed in a @samp{_PYTHON} variable will be byte-compiled with
4558 @code{py-compile} at install time. @code{py-compile} actually creates
4559 both standard (@file{.pyc}) and byte-compiled (@file{.pyo}) versions of
4560 the source files. Note that because byte-compilation occurs at install
4561 time, any files listed in @samp{noinst_PYTHON} will not be compiled.
4562 Python source files are included in the distribution by default.
4564 Automake ships with an Autoconf macro called @code{AM_PATH_PYTHON} which
4565 will determine some Python-related directory variables (see below). If
4566 you have called @code{AM_PATH_PYTHON} from @file{configure.ac}, then you
4567 may use the following variables to list you Python source files in your
4568 variables: @samp{python_PYTHON}, @samp{pkgpython_PYTHON},
4569 @samp{pyexecdir_PYTHON}, @samp{pkgpyexecdir_PYTHON}, depending where you
4570 want your files installed.
4572 @code{AM_PATH_PYTHON([@var{VERSION}], [@var{ACTION-IF-FOUND}],
4573 [@var{ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND}])} takes three optional arguments. It will
4574 search a Python interpreter on the system. The first argument, if
4575 present, is the minimum version of Python required for this package:
4576 @code{AM_PATH_PYTHON} will skip any Python interpreter which is older
4577 than @var{VERSION}. If an interpreter is found and satisfies
4578 @var{VERSION}, then @var{ACTION-IF-FOUND} is run. Otherwise,
4579 @var{ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND} is run.
4581 If @var{ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND} is not specified, the default is to abort
4582 configure. This is fine when Python is an absolute requirement for the
4583 package. Therefore if Python >= 2.2 is only @emph{optional} to the
4584 package, @code{AM_PATH_PYTHON} could be called as follows.
4587 AM_PATH_PYTHON(2.2,, :)
4590 @code{AM_PATH_PYTHON} creates several output variables based on the
4591 Python installation found during configuration.
4595 The name of the Python executable, or @code{:} if no suitable
4596 interpreter could be found.
4598 Assuming @var{ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND} is used (otherwise @file{./configure}
4599 will abort if Python is absent), the value of @code{PYTHON} can be used
4600 to setup a conditional in order to disable the relevant part of a build
4604 AM_PATH_PYTHON(,, :)
4605 AM_CONDITIONAL([HAVE_PYTHON], [test "$PYTHON" != :])
4609 If the @var{ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND}
4612 @item PYTHON_VERSION
4613 The Python version number, in the form @var{major}.@var{minor}
4614 (e.g. @samp{1.5}). This is currently the value of
4615 @code{sys.version[:3]}.
4618 The string @code{$@{prefix@}}. This term may be used in future work
4619 which needs the contents of Python's @code{sys.prefix}, but general
4620 consensus is to always use the value from configure.
4622 @item PYTHON_EXEC_PREFIX
4623 The string @code{$@{exec_prefix@}}. This term may be used in future work
4624 which needs the contents of Python's @code{sys.exec_prefix}, but general
4625 consensus is to always use the value from configure.
4627 @item PYTHON_PLATFORM
4628 The canonical name used by Python to describe the operating system, as
4629 given by @code{sys.platform}. This value is sometimes needed when
4630 building Python extensions.
4633 The directory name for the @file{site-packages} subdirectory of the
4634 standard Python install tree.
4637 This is is the directory under @code{pythondir} which is named after the
4638 package. That is, it is @samp{$(pythondir)/$(PACKAGE)}. It is provided
4642 This is the directory where Python extension modules (shared libraries)
4643 should be installed.
4646 This is a convenience variable which is defined as
4647 @samp{$(pyexecdir)/$(PACKAGE)}.
4650 All these directory variables have values that start with either
4651 @code{$@{prefix@}} or @code{$@{exec_prefix@}} unexpanded. This works
4652 fine in @file{Makefiles}, but it makes these variables hard to use in
4653 @file{configure}. This is mandated by the GNU coding standards, so
4654 that the user can run @code{make prefix=/foo install}. The Autoconf
4655 manual has a section with more details on this topic
4656 (@pxref{Installation Directory Variables, , Installation Directory
4657 Variables, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}).
4661 @chapter Building documentation
4663 Currently Automake provides support for Texinfo and man pages.
4667 * Man pages:: Man pages
4674 @cindex _TEXINFOS primary, defined
4675 @cindex TEXINFOS primary, defined
4676 @cindex Primary variable, TEXINFOS
4677 @cindex HTML output using Texinfo
4678 @cindex PDF output using Texinfo
4679 @cindex PS output using Texinfo
4680 @cindex DVI output using Texinfo
4682 If the current directory contains Texinfo source, you must declare it
4683 with the @samp{TEXINFOS} primary. Generally Texinfo files are converted
4684 into info, and thus the @code{info_TEXINFOS} variable is most commonly used
4685 here. Any Texinfo source file must end in the @file{.texi},
4686 @file{.txi}, or @file{.texinfo} extension. We recommend @file{.texi}
4689 @vindex info_TEXINFOS
4691 Automake generates rules to build @file{.info}, @file{.dvi}, @file{.ps},
4692 @file{.pdf} and @file{.html} files from your Texinfo sources.
4693 The @file{.info} files are built by @code{make all} and installed
4694 by @code{make install} (unless you use @code{no-installinfo}, see below).
4695 The other files can be built on request by @code{make dvi}, @code{make ps},
4696 @code{make pdf} and @code{make html}.
4698 @cindex Texinfo flag, VERSION
4699 @cindex Texinfo flag, UPDATED
4700 @cindex Texinfo flag, EDITION
4701 @cindex Texinfo flag, UPDATED-MONTH
4703 @cindex VERSION Texinfo flag
4704 @cindex UPDATED Texinfo flag
4705 @cindex EDITION Texinfo flag
4706 @cindex UPDATED-MONTH Texinfo flag
4710 If the @file{.texi} file @code{@@include}s @file{version.texi}, then
4711 that file will be automatically generated. The file @file{version.texi}
4712 defines four Texinfo flag you can reference using
4713 @code{@@value@{EDITION@}}, @code{@@value@{VERSION@}},
4714 @code{@@value@{UPDATED@}}, and @code{@@value@{UPDATED-MONTH@}}.
4719 Both of these flags hold the version number of your program. They are
4720 kept separate for clarity.
4723 This holds the date the primary @file{.texi} file was last modified.
4726 This holds the name of the month in which the primary @file{.texi} file
4730 The @file{version.texi} support requires the @code{mdate-sh} program;
4731 this program is supplied with Automake and automatically included when
4732 @code{automake} is invoked with the @code{--add-missing} option.
4734 If you have multiple Texinfo files, and you want to use the
4735 @file{version.texi} feature, then you have to have a separate version
4736 file for each Texinfo file. Automake will treat any include in a
4737 Texinfo file that matches @samp{vers*.texi} just as an automatically
4738 generated version file.
4740 Sometimes an info file actually depends on more than one @file{.texi}
4741 file. For instance, in GNU Hello, @file{hello.texi} includes the file
4742 @file{gpl.texi}. You can tell Automake about these dependencies using
4743 the @code{@var{texi}_TEXINFOS} variable. Here is how GNU Hello does it:
4748 info_TEXINFOS = hello.texi
4749 hello_TEXINFOS = gpl.texi
4754 By default, Automake requires the file @file{texinfo.tex} to appear in
4755 the same directory as the Texinfo source (this can be changed using the
4756 @code{TEXINFO_TEX} variable, see below). However, if you used
4757 @code{AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR} in @file{configure.ac} (@pxref{Input, , Finding
4758 `configure' Input, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}), then
4759 @file{texinfo.tex} is looked for there. Automake supplies
4760 @file{texinfo.tex} if @samp{--add-missing} is given.
4762 @opindex no-texinfo.tex
4764 The option @samp{no-texinfo.tex} can be used to eliminate the
4765 requirement for @file{texinfo.tex}. Use of the variable
4766 @code{TEXINFO_TEX} is preferable, however, because that allows the
4767 @code{dvi}, @code{ps}, and @code{pdf} targets to still work.
4769 @cindex Rule, install-info
4770 @cindex Rule, noinstall-info
4771 @cindex Target, install-info
4772 @cindex Target, noinstall-info
4773 @cindex install-info target
4774 @cindex noinstall-info target
4776 @opindex no-installinfo
4777 @trindex install-info
4779 Automake generates an @code{install-info} rule; some people apparently
4780 use this. By default, info pages are installed by @samp{make install}.
4781 This can be prevented via the @code{no-installinfo} option.
4783 The following variables are used by the Texinfo build rules.
4787 The name of the program invoked to build @file{.info} files. This
4788 variable is defined by Automake. If the @code{makeinfo} program is
4789 found on the system then it will be used by default; otherwise
4790 @code{missing} will be used instead.
4793 The command invoked to build @file{.html} files. Automake
4794 defines this to @code{$(MAKEINFO) --html}.
4797 User flags passed to each invocation of @code{$(MAKEINFO)} and
4798 @code{$(MAKEINFOHTML)}. This user variable (@pxref{User Variables}) is
4799 not expected to be defined in any @file{Makefile}; it can be used by
4800 users to pass extra flags to suit their needs.
4802 @item AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS
4803 @itemx AM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS
4804 Maintainer flags passed to each @code{makeinfo} invocation. These
4805 are maintainer variables that can be overridden in @file{Makefile.am}.
4806 @code{$(AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS)} is passed to @code{makeinfo} when building
4807 @file{.info} files; and @code{$(AM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS)} is used when
4808 building @file{.html} files.
4810 For instance the following setting can be used to obtain one single
4811 @file{.html} file per manual, without node separators.
4813 AM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS = --no-headers --no-split
4816 By default, @code{$(AM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS)} is set to
4817 @code{$(AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS)}. This means that defining
4818 @code{$(AM_MAKEINFOFLAGS)} without defining
4819 @code{$(AM_MAKEINFOHTMLFLAGS)} will impact builds of both @file{.info}
4820 and @file{.html} files.
4823 The name of the command that converts a @file{.texi} file into a
4824 @file{.dvi} file. This defaults to @code{texi2dvi}, a script that ships
4825 with the Texinfo package.
4828 The name of the command that translates a @file{.texi} file into a
4829 @file{.pdf} file. This defaults to @code{$(TEXI2DVI) --pdf --batch}.
4832 The name of the command that build a @file{.ps} file out of a
4833 @file{.dvi} file. This defaults to @code{dvips}.
4837 If your package has Texinfo files in many directories, you can use the
4838 variable @code{TEXINFO_TEX} to tell Automake where to find the canonical
4839 @file{texinfo.tex} for your package. The value of this variable should
4840 be the relative path from the current @file{Makefile.am} to
4844 TEXINFO_TEX = ../doc/texinfo.tex
4852 @cindex _MANS primary, defined
4853 @cindex MANS primary, defined
4854 @cindex Primary variable, MANS
4856 A package can also include man pages (but see the GNU standards on this
4857 matter, @ref{Man Pages, , , standards, The GNU Coding Standards}.) Man
4858 pages are declared using the @samp{MANS} primary. Generally the
4859 @code{man_MANS} variable is used. Man pages are automatically installed in
4860 the correct subdirectory of @code{mandir}, based on the file extension.
4864 File extensions such as @samp{.1c} are handled by looking for the valid
4865 part of the extension and using that to determine the correct
4866 subdirectory of @code{mandir}. Valid section names are the digits
4867 @samp{0} through @samp{9}, and the letters @samp{l} and @samp{n}.
4869 Sometimes developers prefer to name a man page something like
4870 @file{foo.man} in the source, and then rename it to have the correct
4871 suffix, e.g. @file{foo.1}, when installing the file. Automake also
4872 supports this mode. For a valid section named @var{SECTION}, there is a
4873 corresponding directory named @samp{man@var{SECTION}dir}, and a
4874 corresponding @samp{_MANS} variable. Files listed in such a variable
4875 are installed in the indicated section. If the file already has a
4876 valid suffix, then it is installed as-is; otherwise the file suffix is
4877 changed to match the section.
4879 For instance, consider this example:
4881 man1_MANS = rename.man thesame.1 alsothesame.1c
4884 In this case, @file{rename.man} will be renamed to @file{rename.1} when
4885 installed, but the other files will keep their names.
4887 @cindex Rule, install-man
4888 @cindex Rule, noinstall-man
4889 @cindex Target, install-man
4890 @cindex Target, noinstall-man
4891 @cindex install-man target
4892 @cindex noinstall-man target
4894 @c Use @samp{make install} per documentation: (texi)code.
4895 By default, man pages are installed by @samp{make install}. However,
4896 since the GNU project does not require man pages, many maintainers do
4897 not expend effort to keep the man pages up to date. In these cases, the
4898 @code{no-installman} option will prevent the man pages from being
4899 installed by default. The user can still explicitly install them via
4900 @samp{make install-man}.
4901 @opindex no-installman
4902 @trindex install-man
4904 Here is how the man pages are handled in GNU @code{cpio} (which includes
4905 both Texinfo documentation and man pages):
4908 man_MANS = cpio.1 mt.1
4909 EXTRA_DIST = $(man_MANS)
4912 Man pages are not currently considered to be source, because it is not
4913 uncommon for man pages to be automatically generated. Therefore they
4914 are not automatically included in the distribution. However, this can
4915 be changed by use of the @samp{dist_} prefix.
4917 The @samp{nobase_} prefix is meaningless for man pages and is
4922 @chapter What Gets Installed
4924 @cindex Installation support
4925 @cindex make install support
4927 @section Basics of installation
4929 Naturally, Automake handles the details of actually installing your
4930 program once it has been built. All files named by the various
4931 primaries are automatically installed in the appropriate places when the
4932 user runs @code{make install}.
4934 A file named in a primary is installed by copying the built file into
4935 the appropriate directory. The base name of the file is used when
4939 bin_PROGRAMS = hello subdir/goodbye
4942 In this example, both @samp{hello} and @samp{goodbye} will be installed
4943 in @code{$(bindir)}.
4945 Sometimes it is useful to avoid the basename step at install time. For
4946 instance, you might have a number of header files in subdirectories of
4947 the source tree which are laid out precisely how you want to install
4948 them. In this situation you can use the @samp{nobase_} prefix to
4949 suppress the base name step. For example:
4952 nobase_include_HEADERS = stdio.h sys/types.h
4955 Will install @file{stdio.h} in @code{$(includedir)} and @file{types.h}
4956 in @code{$(includedir)/sys}.
4958 @section The two parts of install
4960 Automake generates separate @code{install-data} and @code{install-exec}
4961 rules, in case the installer is installing on multiple machines which
4962 share directory structure---these targets allow the machine-independent
4963 parts to be installed only once. @code{install-exec} installs
4964 platform-dependent files, and @code{install-data} installs
4965 platform-independent files. The @code{install} target depends on both
4966 of these targets. While Automake tries to automatically segregate
4967 objects into the correct category, the @file{Makefile.am} author is, in
4968 the end, responsible for making sure this is done correctly.
4969 @trindex install-data
4970 @trindex install-exec
4972 @cindex Install, two parts of
4974 Variables using the standard directory prefixes @samp{data},
4975 @samp{info}, @samp{man}, @samp{include}, @samp{oldinclude},
4976 @samp{pkgdata}, or @samp{pkginclude} (e.g. @samp{data_DATA}) are
4977 installed by @samp{install-data}.
4979 Variables using the standard directory prefixes @samp{bin}, @samp{sbin},
4980 @samp{libexec}, @samp{sysconf}, @samp{localstate}, @samp{lib}, or
4981 @samp{pkglib} (e.g. @samp{bin_PROGRAMS}) are installed by
4982 @samp{install-exec}.
4984 Any variable using a user-defined directory prefix with @samp{exec} in
4985 the name (e.g. @samp{myexecbin_PROGRAMS} is installed by
4986 @samp{install-exec}. All other user-defined prefixes are installed by
4987 @samp{install-data}.
4989 @section Extending installation
4991 It is possible to extend this mechanism by defining an
4992 @code{install-exec-local} or @code{install-data-local} rule. If these
4993 rules exist, they will be run at @samp{make install} time. These
4994 rules can do almost anything; care is required.
4995 @trindex install-exec-local
4996 @trindex install-data-local
4998 Automake also supports two install hooks, @code{install-exec-hook} and
4999 @code{install-data-hook}. These hooks are run after all other install
5000 rules of the appropriate type, exec or data, have completed. So, for
5001 instance, it is possible to perform post-installation modifications
5002 using an install hook.
5003 @cindex Install hook
5005 @section Staged installs
5008 Automake generates support for the @samp{DESTDIR} variable in all
5009 install rules. @samp{DESTDIR} is used during the @samp{make install}
5010 step to relocate install objects into a staging area. Each object and
5011 path is prefixed with the value of @samp{DESTDIR} before being copied
5012 into the install area. Here is an example of typical DESTDIR usage:
5015 make DESTDIR=/tmp/staging install
5018 This places install objects in a directory tree built under
5019 @file{/tmp/staging}. If @file{/gnu/bin/foo} and
5020 @file{/gnu/share/aclocal/foo.m4} are to be installed, the above command
5021 would install @file{/tmp/staging/gnu/bin/foo} and
5022 @file{/tmp/staging/gnu/share/aclocal/foo.m4}.
5024 This feature is commonly used to build install images and packages. For
5025 more information, see @ref{Makefile Conventions, , , standards, The GNU
5028 Support for @samp{DESTDIR} is implemented by coding it directly into the
5029 install rules. If your @file{Makefile.am} uses a local install rule
5030 (e.g., @code{install-exec-local}) or an install hook, then you must
5031 write that code to respect @samp{DESTDIR}.
5033 @section Rules for the user
5035 Automake also generates rules for targets @code{uninstall},
5036 @code{installdirs}, and @code{install-strip}.
5038 @trindex installdirs
5039 @trindex install-strip
5041 Automake supports @code{uninstall-local} and @code{uninstall-hook}.
5042 There is no notion of separate uninstalls for ``exec'' and ``data'', as
5043 these features would not provide additional functionality.
5045 Note that @code{uninstall} is not meant as a replacement for a real
5050 @chapter What Gets Cleaned
5052 @cindex make clean support
5054 The GNU Makefile Standards specify a number of different clean rules.
5055 See @xref{Standard Targets, , Standard Targets for Users, standards,
5056 The GNU Coding Standards}.
5058 Generally the files that can be cleaned are determined automatically by
5059 Automake. Of course, Automake also recognizes some variables that can
5060 be defined to specify additional files to clean. These variables are
5061 @code{MOSTLYCLEANFILES}, @code{CLEANFILES}, @code{DISTCLEANFILES}, and
5062 @code{MAINTAINERCLEANFILES}.
5063 @vindex MOSTLYCLEANFILES
5065 @vindex DISTCLEANFILES
5066 @vindex MAINTAINERCLEANFILES
5068 As the GNU Standards aren't always explicit as to which files should be
5069 removed by which rule, we've adopted a heuristic which we believe was
5070 first formulated by Fran@,{c}ois Pinard:
5074 If @code{make} built it, and it is commonly something that one would
5075 want to rebuild (for instance, a @file{.o} file), then
5076 @code{mostlyclean} should delete it.
5079 Otherwise, if @code{make} built it, then @code{clean} should delete it.
5082 If @code{configure} built it, then @code{distclean} should delete it.
5085 If the maintainer built it (for instance, a @file{.info} file), then
5086 @code{maintainer-clean} should delete it. However
5087 @code{maintainer-clean} should not delete anything that needs to exist
5088 in order to run @code{./configure && make}.
5091 We recommend that you follow this same set of heuristics in your
5096 @chapter What Goes in a Distribution
5098 @section Basics of distribution
5102 The @code{dist} rule in the generated @file{Makefile.in} can be used
5103 to generate a gzip'd @code{tar} file and other flavors of archive for
5104 distribution. The files is named based on the @samp{PACKAGE} and
5105 @samp{VERSION} variables defined by @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE}
5106 (@pxref{Macros}); more precisely the gzip'd @code{tar} file is named
5107 @samp{@var{package}-@var{version}.tar.gz}.
5111 You can use the @code{make} variable @samp{GZIP_ENV} to control how gzip
5112 is run. The default setting is @samp{--best}.
5114 For the most part, the files to distribute are automatically found by
5115 Automake: all source files are automatically included in a distribution,
5116 as are all @file{Makefile.am}s and @file{Makefile.in}s. Automake also
5117 has a built-in list of commonly used files which are automatically
5118 included if they are found in the current directory (either physically,
5119 or as the target of a @file{Makefile.am} rule). This list is printed by
5120 @samp{automake --help}. Also, files which are read by @code{configure}
5121 (i.e. the source files corresponding to the files specified in various
5122 Autoconf macros such as @code{AC_CONFIG_FILES} and siblings) are
5123 automatically distributed. Files included in @file{Makefile.am}s (using
5124 @code{include}) or in @file{configure.ac} (using @code{m4_include}), and
5125 helper scripts installed with @samp{automake --add-missing} are also
5128 @cvindex m4_include, distribution
5130 Still, sometimes there are files which must be distributed, but which
5131 are not covered in the automatic rules. These files should be listed in
5132 the @code{EXTRA_DIST} variable. You can mention files from
5133 subdirectories in @code{EXTRA_DIST}.
5135 You can also mention a directory in @code{EXTRA_DIST}; in this case the
5136 entire directory will be recursively copied into the distribution.
5137 Please note that this will also copy @emph{everything} in the directory,
5138 including CVS/RCS version control files. We recommend against using
5142 If you define @code{SUBDIRS}, Automake will recursively include the
5143 subdirectories in the distribution. If @code{SUBDIRS} is defined
5144 conditionally (@pxref{Conditionals}), Automake will normally include all
5145 directories that could possibly appear in @code{SUBDIRS} in the
5146 distribution. If you need to specify the set of directories
5147 conditionally, you can set the variable @code{DIST_SUBDIRS} to the exact
5148 list of subdirectories to include in the distribution (@pxref{Top level}).
5149 @vindex DIST_SUBDIRS
5152 @section Fine-grained distribution control
5154 Sometimes you need tighter control over what does @emph{not} go into the
5155 distribution; for instance you might have source files which are
5156 generated and which you do not want to distribute. In this case
5157 Automake gives fine-grained control using the @samp{dist} and
5158 @samp{nodist} prefixes. Any primary or @samp{_SOURCES} variable can be
5159 prefixed with @samp{dist_} to add the listed files to the distribution.
5160 Similarly, @samp{nodist_} can be used to omit the files from the
5165 As an example, here is how you would cause some data to be distributed
5166 while leaving some source code out of the distribution:
5169 dist_data_DATA = distribute-this
5171 nodist_foo_SOURCES = do-not-distribute.c
5174 @section The dist hook
5178 Occasionally it is useful to be able to change the distribution before
5179 it is packaged up. If the @code{dist-hook} rule exists, it is run
5180 after the distribution directory is filled, but before the actual tar
5181 (or shar) file is created. One way to use this is for distributing
5182 files in subdirectories for which a new @file{Makefile.am} is overkill:
5186 mkdir $(distdir)/random
5187 cp -p $(srcdir)/random/a1 $(srcdir)/random/a2 $(distdir)/random
5190 Another way to to use this is for removing unnecessary files that get
5191 recursively included by specifying a directory in EXTRA_DIST:
5197 rm -rf `find $(distdir)/doc -name CVS`
5202 Two variables that come handy when writing @code{dist-hook} rules are
5203 @code{$(distdir)} and @code{$(top_distdir)}.
5205 @code{$(distdir)} points to the directory where the @code{dist} rule
5206 will copy files from the current directory before creating the
5207 tarball. If you are at the top-level directory, then @code{distdir =
5208 $(PACKAGE)-$(VERSION)}. When used from subdirectory named
5209 @file{foo/}, then @code{distdir = ../$(PACKAGE)-$(VERSION)/foo}.
5211 @code{$(top_distdir)} always points to the root directory of the
5212 distributed tree. At the top-level it's equal to @code{$(distdir)}.
5213 In the @file{foo/} subdirectory
5214 @code{top_distdir = ../$(PACKAGE)-$(VERSION)}.
5216 Note that when packages are nested using @code{AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS}
5217 (@pxref{Subdirectories, AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS, Configuring Other Packages
5218 in Subdirectories, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}), then
5219 @code{$(distdir)} and @code{$(top_distdir)} are relative to the
5220 package where @code{make dist} was run, not to any sub-packages
5223 @section Checking the distribution
5225 @cindex make distcheck
5226 @cindex make distcleancheck
5227 @vindex distcleancheck_listfiles
5228 @cindex make distuninstallcheck
5229 @vindex distuninstallcheck_listfiles
5231 Automake also generates a @code{distcheck} rule which can be of help
5232 to ensure that a given distribution will actually work.
5233 @code{distcheck} makes a distribution, then tries to do a @code{VPATH}
5234 build, run the test suite, and finally make another tarfile to ensure the
5235 distribution is self-contained.
5238 Building the package involves running @code{./configure}. If you need
5239 to supply additional flags to @code{configure}, define them in the
5240 @code{DISTCHECK_CONFIGURE_FLAGS} variable, either in your top-level
5241 @file{Makefile.am}, or on the command line when invoking @code{make}.
5242 @vindex DISTCHECK_CONFIGURE_FLAGS
5244 If the @code{distcheck-hook} rule is defined in your
5245 @file{Makefile.am}, then it will be invoked by @code{distcheck} after
5246 the new distribution has been unpacked, but before the unpacked copy
5247 is configured and built. Your @code{distcheck-hook} can do almost
5248 anything, though as always caution is advised. Generally this hook is
5249 used to check for potential distribution errors not caught by the
5252 Speaking about potential distribution errors, @code{distcheck} will also
5253 ensure that the @code{distclean} rule actually removes all built
5254 files. This is done by running @code{make distcleancheck} at the end of
5255 the @code{VPATH} build. By default, @code{distcleancheck} will run
5256 @code{distclean} and then make sure the build tree has been emptied by
5257 running @code{$(distcleancheck_listfiles)}. Usually this check will
5258 find generated files that you forgot to add to the @code{DISTCLEANFILES}
5259 variable (@pxref{Clean}).
5260 @trindex distcleancheck
5262 The @code{distcleancheck} behavior should be OK for most packages,
5263 otherwise you have the possibility to override the definition of
5264 either the @code{distcleancheck} rule, or the
5265 @code{$(distcleancheck_listfiles)} variable. For instance to disable
5266 @code{distcleancheck} completely, add the following rule to your
5267 top-level @file{Makefile.am}:
5268 @vindex distcleancheck_listfiles
5275 If you want @code{distcleancheck} to ignore built files which have not
5276 been cleaned because they are also part of the distribution, add the
5277 following definition instead:
5280 distcleancheck_listfiles = \
5281 find -type f -exec sh -c 'test -f $(srcdir)/@{@} || echo @{@}' ';'
5284 The above definition is not the default because it's usually an error if
5285 your Makefiles cause some distributed files to be rebuilt when the user
5286 build the package. (Think about the user missing the tool required to
5287 build the file; or if the required tool is built by your package,
5288 consider the cross-compilation case where it can't be run.) There is
5289 a FAQ entry about this (@pxref{distcleancheck}), make sure you read it
5290 before playing with @code{distcleancheck_listfiles}.
5292 @code{distcheck} also checks that the @code{uninstall} rule works
5293 properly, both for ordinary and @samp{DESTDIR} builds. It does this
5294 by invoking @code{make uninstall}, and then it checks the install tree
5295 to see if any files are left over. This check will make sure that you
5296 correctly coded your @code{uninstall}-related rules.
5298 By default, the checking is done by the @code{distuninstallcheck} rule,
5299 and the list of files in the install tree is generated by
5300 @code{$(distuninstallcheck_listfiles}) (this is a variable whose value is
5301 a shell command to run that prints the list of files to stdout).
5303 Either of these can be overridden to modify the behavior of
5304 @code{distcheck}. For instance, to disable this check completely, you
5312 @section The types of distributions
5314 Automake generates rules to provide archives of the project for
5315 distributions in various formats. Their targets are:
5318 @item @code{dist-bzip2}
5319 Generate a bzip2 tar archive of the distribution. bzip2 archives are
5320 frequently smaller than gzipped archives.
5323 @item @code{dist-gzip}
5324 Generate a gzip tar archive of the distribution.
5327 @item @code{dist-shar}
5328 Generate a shar archive of the distribution.
5331 @item @code{dist-zip}
5332 Generate a zip archive of the distribution.
5335 @item @code{dist-tarZ}
5336 Generate a compressed tar archive of
5341 The rule @code{dist} (and its historical synonym @code{dist-all}) will
5342 create archives in all the enabled formats, @ref{Options}. By
5343 default, only the @code{dist-gzip} target is hooked to @code{dist}.
5347 @chapter Support for test suites
5352 Automake supports two forms of test suites.
5354 @section Simple Tests
5356 If the variable @code{TESTS} is defined, its value is taken to be a list
5357 of programs to run in order to do the testing. The programs can either
5358 be derived objects or source objects; the generated rule will look both
5359 in @code{srcdir} and @file{.}. Programs needing data files should look
5360 for them in @code{srcdir} (which is both an environment variable and a
5361 make variable) so they work when building in a separate directory
5362 (@pxref{Build Directories, , Build Directories , autoconf, The Autoconf
5363 Manual}), and in particular for the @code{distcheck} rule
5366 @cindex Exit status 77, special interpretation
5368 The number of failures will be printed at the end of the run. If a
5369 given test program exits with a status of 77, then its result is ignored
5370 in the final count. This feature allows non-portable tests to be
5371 ignored in environments where they don't make sense.
5373 The variable @code{TESTS_ENVIRONMENT} can be used to set environment
5374 variables for the test run; the environment variable @code{srcdir} is
5375 set in the rule. If all your test programs are scripts, you can also
5376 set @code{TESTS_ENVIRONMENT} to an invocation of the shell (e.g.
5377 @samp{$(SHELL) -x}); this can be useful for debugging the tests.
5379 @vindex TESTS_ENVIRONMENT
5381 @cindex Tests, expected failure
5382 @cindex Expected test failure
5384 You may define the variable @code{XFAIL_TESTS} to a list of tests
5385 (usually a subset of @code{TESTS}) that are expected to fail. This will
5386 reverse the result of those tests.
5389 Automake ensures that each program listed in @code{TESTS} is built
5390 before any tests are run; you can list both source and derived programs
5391 in @code{TESTS}. For instance, you might want to run a C program as a
5392 test. To do this you would list its name in @code{TESTS} and also in
5393 @code{check_PROGRAMS}, and then specify it as you would any other
5396 @section DejaGnu Tests
5398 If @uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/dejagnu/, @samp{dejagnu}} appears in
5399 @code{AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS}, then a @code{dejagnu}-based test suite is
5400 assumed. The variable @code{DEJATOOL} is a list of names which are
5401 passed, one at a time, as the @code{--tool} argument to @code{runtest}
5402 invocations; it defaults to the name of the package.
5404 The variable @code{RUNTESTDEFAULTFLAGS} holds the @code{--tool} and
5405 @code{--srcdir} flags that are passed to dejagnu by default; this can be
5406 overridden if necessary.
5407 @vindex RUNTESTDEFAULTFLAGS
5409 The variables @code{EXPECT} and @code{RUNTEST} can
5410 also be overridden to provide project-specific values. For instance,
5411 you will need to do this if you are testing a compiler toolchain,
5412 because the default values do not take into account host and target
5419 The contents of the variable @code{RUNTESTFLAGS} are passed to the
5420 @code{runtest} invocation. This is considered a ``user variable''
5421 (@pxref{User Variables}). If you need to set @code{runtest} flags in
5422 @file{Makefile.am}, you can use @code{AM_RUNTESTFLAGS} instead.
5423 @vindex RUNTESTFLAGS
5424 @vindex AM_RUNTESTFLAGS
5426 @cindex @file{site.exp}
5427 Automake will generate rules to create a local @file{site.exp} file,
5428 defining various variables detected by @code{./configure}. This file
5429 is automatically read by DejaGnu. It is OK for the user of a package
5430 to edit this file in order to tune the test suite. However this is
5431 not the place where the test suite author should define new variables:
5432 this should be done elsewhere in the real test suite code.
5433 Especially, @file{site.exp} should not be distributed.
5435 For more information regarding DejaGnu test suites, see @xref{Top, , ,
5436 dejagnu, The DejaGnu Manual}.
5438 In either case, the testing is done via @samp{make check}.
5440 @section Install Tests
5442 The @code{installcheck} target is available to the user as a way to
5443 run any tests after the package has been installed. You can add tests
5444 to this by writing an @code{installcheck-local} rule.
5448 @chapter Rebuilding Makefiles
5449 @cindex rebuild rules
5451 Automake generates rules to automatically rebuild @file{Makefile}s,
5452 @file{configure}, and other derived files like @file{Makefile.in}.
5454 @cvindex AM_MAINTAINER_MODE
5455 If you are using @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE} in @file{configure.ac}, then
5456 these automatic rebuilding rules are only enabled in maintainer mode.
5458 @vindex ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS
5459 Sometimes you need to run @code{aclocal} with an argument like @code{-I}
5460 to tell it where to find @file{.m4} files. Since sometimes @code{make}
5461 will automatically run @code{aclocal}, you need a way to specify these
5462 arguments. You can do this by defining @code{ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS}; this
5463 holds arguments which are passed verbatim to @code{aclocal}. This variable
5464 is only useful in the top-level @file{Makefile.am}.
5466 @vindex CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES
5467 @vindex CONFIGURE_DEPENDENCIES
5468 @cindex @file{version.sh}, example
5469 @cindex @file{version.m4}, example
5471 Sometimes it is convenient to supplement the rebuild rules for
5472 @file{configure} or @file{config.status} with additional dependencies.
5473 The variables @code{CONFIGURE_DEPENDENCIES} and
5474 @code{CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES} can be used to list these extra
5475 dependencies. These variable should be defined in all
5476 @file{Makefile}s of the tree (because these two rebuild rules are
5477 output in all them), so it is safer and easier to @code{AC_SUBST} them
5478 from @file{configure.ac}. For instance the following statement will
5479 cause @file{configure} to be rerun each time @file{version.sh} is
5482 AC_SUBST([CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES], ['$(top_srcdir)/version.sh'])
5485 Note the @code{$(top_srcdir)/} in the filename. Since this variable
5486 is to be used in all @file{Makefile}s, its value must be sensible at
5487 any level in the build hierarchy.
5489 Beware not to mistake @code{CONFIGURE_DEPENDENCIES} for
5490 @code{CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES}.
5492 @code{CONFIGURE_DEPENDENCIES} adds dependencies to the
5493 @file{configure} rule, whose effect is to run @code{autoconf}. This
5494 variable should be seldom used, because @code{automake} already tracks
5495 @code{m4_include}d files. However it can be useful when playing
5496 tricky games with @code{m4_esyscmd} or similar non-recommendable
5497 macros with side effects.
5499 @code{CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES} adds dependencies to the
5500 @file{config.status} rule, whose effect is to run @file{configure}.
5501 This variable should therefore carry any non-standard source that may
5502 be read as a side effect of running configure, like @file{version.sh}
5503 in the example above.
5505 Speaking of @file{version.sh} scripts, we recommend against them
5506 today. They are mainly used when the version of a package is updated
5507 automatically by a script (e.g., in daily builds). Here is what some
5508 old-style @file{configure.ac}s may look like:
5511 . $srcdir/version.sh
5512 AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE([name], $VERSION_NUMBER)
5516 Here, @file{version.sh} is a shell fragment that sets
5517 @code{VERSION_NUMBER}. The problem with this example is that
5518 @code{automake} cannot track dependencies (listing @file{version.sh}
5519 in @code{CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES}, and distributing this file is up
5520 to the user), and that it uses the obsolete form of @code{AC_INIT} and
5521 @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE}. Upgrading to the new syntax is not
5522 straightforward, because shell variables are not allowed in
5523 @code{AC_INIT}'s arguments. We recommend that @file{version.sh} be
5524 replaced by an M4 file that is included by @file{configure.ac}:
5526 m4_include([version.m4])
5527 AC_INIT([name], VERSION_NUMBER)
5532 Here @file{version.m4} could contain something like
5533 @code{m4_define([VERSION_NUMBER], [1.2])}. The advantage of this
5534 second form is that @code{automake} will take care of the dependencies
5535 when defining the rebuild rule, and will also distribute the file
5536 automatically. An inconvenient is that @code{autoconf} will now be
5537 rerun each time the version number is bumped, when only
5538 @file{configure} had to be rerun in the previous setup.
5542 @chapter Changing Automake's Behavior
5544 Various features of Automake can be controlled by options in the
5545 @file{Makefile.am}. Such options are applied on a per-@file{Makefile}
5546 basis when listed in a special @file{Makefile} variable named
5547 @code{AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS}. They are applied globally to all processed
5548 @file{Makefiles} when listed in the first argument of
5549 @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE} in @file{configure.ac}. Currently understood
5551 @vindex AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS
5556 @itemx @code{foreign}
5557 @itemx @code{cygnus}
5558 @cindex Option, gnits
5560 @cindex Option, foreign
5561 @cindex Option, cygnus
5563 Set the strictness as appropriate. The @code{gnits} option also implies
5564 @code{readme-alpha} and @code{check-news}.
5566 @item @code{ansi2knr}
5567 @itemx @code{@var{path}/ansi2knr}
5568 @cindex Option, ansi2knr
5569 Turn on automatic de-ANSI-fication. @xref{ANSI}. If preceded by a
5570 path, the generated @file{Makefile.in} will look in the specified
5571 directory to find the @file{ansi2knr} program. The path should be a
5572 relative path to another directory in the same distribution (Automake
5573 currently does not check this).
5575 @item @code{check-news}
5576 @cindex Option, check-news
5577 Cause @code{make dist} to fail unless the current version number appears
5578 in the first few lines of the @file{NEWS} file.
5580 @item @code{dejagnu}
5581 @cindex Option, dejagnu
5582 Cause @code{dejagnu}-specific rules to be generated. @xref{Tests}.
5584 @item @code{dist-bzip2}
5585 @cindex Option, dist-bzip2
5586 Hook @code{dist-bzip2} to @code{dist}.
5589 @item @code{dist-shar}
5590 @cindex Option, dist-shar
5591 Hook @code{dist-shar} to @code{dist}.
5594 @item @code{dist-zip}
5595 @cindex Option, dist-zip
5596 Hook @code{dist-zip} to @code{dist}.
5599 @item @code{dist-tarZ}
5600 @cindex Option, dist-tarZ
5601 Hook @code{dist-tarZ} to @code{dist}.
5604 @item @code{no-define}
5605 @cindex Option, no-define
5606 This options is meaningful only when passed as an argument to
5607 @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE}. It will prevent the @code{PACKAGE} and
5608 @code{VERSION} variables to be @code{AC_DEFINE}d.
5610 @item @code{no-dependencies}
5611 @cindex Option, no-dependencies
5612 This is similar to using @samp{--include-deps} on the command line, but
5613 is useful for those situations where you don't have the necessary bits
5614 to make automatic dependency tracking work @xref{Dependencies}. In this
5615 case the effect is to effectively disable automatic dependency tracking.
5617 @item @code{no-dist}
5618 @cindex Option, no-dist
5619 Don't emit any code related to @code{dist} target. This is useful
5620 when a package has its own method for making distributions.
5622 @item @code{no-dist-gzip}
5623 @cindex Option, no-dist-gzip
5624 Do not hook @code{dist-gzip} to @code{dist}.
5625 @trindex no-dist-gzip
5627 @item @code{no-exeext}
5628 @cindex Option, no-exeext
5629 If your @file{Makefile.am} defines a rule for target @samp{foo}, it
5630 will override a rule for a target named @samp{foo$(EXEEXT)}. This is
5631 necessary when @code{EXEEXT} is found to be empty. However, by
5632 default automake will generate an error for this use. The
5633 @code{no-exeext} option will disable this error. This is intended for
5634 use only where it is known in advance that the package will not be
5635 ported to Windows, or any other operating system using extensions on
5638 @item @code{no-installinfo}
5639 @cindex Option, no-installinfo
5640 The generated @file{Makefile.in} will not cause info pages to be built
5641 or installed by default. However, @code{info} and @code{install-info}
5642 targets will still be available. This option is disallowed at
5643 @samp{GNU} strictness and above.
5645 @trindex install-info
5647 @item @code{no-installman}
5648 @cindex Option, no-installman
5649 The generated @file{Makefile.in} will not cause man pages to be
5650 installed by default. However, an @code{install-man} target will still
5651 be available for optional installation. This option is disallowed at
5652 @samp{GNU} strictness and above.
5653 @trindex install-man
5655 @item @code{nostdinc}
5656 @cindex Option, nostdinc
5657 This option can be used to disable the standard @samp{-I} options which
5658 are ordinarily automatically provided by Automake.
5660 @item @code{no-texinfo.tex}
5661 @cindex Option, no-texinfo
5662 Don't require @file{texinfo.tex}, even if there are texinfo files in
5665 @item @code{readme-alpha}
5666 @cindex Option, readme-alpha
5667 If this release is an alpha release, and the file @file{README-alpha}
5668 exists, then it will be added to the distribution. If this option is
5669 given, version numbers are expected to follow one of two forms. The
5670 first form is @samp{@var{MAJOR}.@var{MINOR}.@var{ALPHA}}, where each
5671 element is a number; the final period and number should be left off for
5672 non-alpha releases. The second form is
5673 @samp{@var{MAJOR}.@var{MINOR}@var{ALPHA}}, where @var{ALPHA} is a
5674 letter; it should be omitted for non-alpha releases.
5676 @item @code{std-options}
5677 @cindex Options, std-options
5678 @cindex make installcheck
5679 Make the @code{installcheck} rule check that installed scripts and
5680 programs support the @code{--help} and @code{--version} options.
5681 This also provides a basic check that the program's
5682 run-time dependencies are satisfied after installation.
5684 @vindex AM_INSTALLCHECK_STD_OPTIONS_EXEMPT
5685 In a few situations, programs (or scripts) have to be exempted from this
5686 test. For instance @command{false} (from GNU sh-utils) is never
5687 successful, even for @code{--help} or @code{--version}. You can list
5688 such programs in the variable @code{AM_INSTALLCHECK_STD_OPTIONS_EXEMPT}.
5689 Programs (not scripts) listed in this variable should be suffixed by
5690 @code{$(EXEEXT)} for the sake of Win32 or OS/2. For instance suppose we
5691 build @code{false} as a program but @code{true.sh} as a script, and that
5692 neither of them support @code{--help} or @code{--version}:
5695 AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS = std-options
5696 bin_PROGRAMS = false ...
5697 bin_SCRIPTS = true.sh ...
5698 AM_INSTALLCHECK_STD_OPTIONS_EXEMPT = false$(EXEEXT) true.sh
5701 @item @code{subdir-objects}
5702 If this option is specified, then objects are placed into the
5703 subdirectory of the build directory corresponding to the subdirectory of
5704 the source file. For instance if the source file is
5705 @file{subdir/file.cxx}, then the output file would be
5706 @file{subdir/file.o}.
5709 @cindex Option, version
5710 A version number (e.g. @samp{0.30}) can be specified. If Automake is not
5711 newer than the version specified, creation of the @file{Makefile.in}
5714 @item @code{-W@var{category}} or @code{--warnings=@var{category}}
5715 @cindex Option, warnings
5716 These options behave exactly like their command-line counterpart
5717 (@pxref{Invoking Automake}). This allows you to enable or disable some
5718 warning categories on a per-file basis. You can also setup some warnings
5719 for your entire project; for instance try @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE([-Wall])}
5720 in your @file{configure.ac}.
5724 Unrecognized options are diagnosed by @code{automake}.
5726 If you want an option to apply to all the files in the tree, you can use
5727 the @code{AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE} macro in @file{configure.ac}.
5732 @chapter Miscellaneous Rules
5734 There are a few rules and variables that didn't fit anywhere else.
5737 * Tags:: Interfacing to etags and mkid
5738 * Suffixes:: Handling new file extensions
5739 * Multilibs:: Support for multilibs.
5744 @section Interfacing to @code{etags}
5746 @cindex TAGS support
5748 Automake will generate rules to generate @file{TAGS} files for use with
5749 GNU Emacs under some circumstances.
5751 If any C, C++ or Fortran 77 source code or headers are present, then
5752 @code{tags} and @code{TAGS} rules will be generated for the directory.
5755 At the topmost directory of a multi-directory package, a @code{tags}
5756 rule will be output which, when run, will generate a @file{TAGS} file
5757 that includes by reference all @file{TAGS} files from subdirectories.
5759 The @code{tags} rule will also be generated if the variable
5760 @code{ETAGS_ARGS} is defined. This variable is intended for use in
5761 directories which contain taggable source that @code{etags} does not
5762 understand. The user can use the @code{ETAGSFLAGS} to pass additional
5763 flags to @code{etags}; @code{AM_ETAGSFLAGS} is also available for use
5764 in @file{Makefile.am}.
5767 @vindex AM_ETAGSFLAGS
5769 Here is how Automake generates tags for its source, and for nodes in its
5773 ETAGS_ARGS = automake.in --lang=none \
5774 --regex='/^@@node[ \t]+\([^,]+\)/\1/' automake.texi
5777 If you add filenames to @samp{ETAGS_ARGS}, you will probably also
5778 want to set @samp{TAGS_DEPENDENCIES}. The contents of this variable
5779 are added directly to the dependencies for the @code{tags} rule.
5780 @vindex TAGS_DEPENDENCIES
5782 Automake also generates a @code{ctags} rule which can be used to
5783 build @command{vi}-style @file{tags} files. The variable @code{CTAGS}
5784 is the name of the program to invoke (by default @samp{ctags});
5785 @code{CTAGSFLAGS} can be used by the user to pass additional flags,
5786 and @code{AM_CTAGSFLAGS} can be used by the @file{Makefile.am}.
5788 Automake will also generate an @code{ID} rule which will run
5789 @code{mkid} on the source. This is only supported on a
5790 directory-by-directory basis.
5793 Automake also supports the @uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/global/,
5794 GNU Global Tags program}. The @code{GTAGS} rule runs Global Tags
5795 automatically and puts the result in the top build directory. The
5796 variable @code{GTAGS_ARGS} holds arguments which are passed to
5802 @section Handling new file extensions
5804 @cindex Adding new SUFFIXES
5805 @cindex SUFFIXES, adding
5808 It is sometimes useful to introduce a new implicit rule to handle a file
5809 type that Automake does not know about.
5811 For instance, suppose you had a compiler which could compile @samp{.foo}
5812 files to @samp{.o} files. You would simply define an suffix rule for
5820 Then you could directly use a @samp{.foo} file in a @samp{_SOURCES}
5821 variable and expect the correct results:
5825 doit_SOURCES = doit.foo
5828 This was the simpler and more common case. In other cases, you will
5829 have to help Automake to figure which extensions you are defining your
5830 suffix rule for. This usually happens when your extensions does not
5831 start with a dot. Then, all you have to do is to put a list of new
5832 suffixes in the @code{SUFFIXES} variable @strong{before} you define your
5835 For instance the following definition prevents Automake to misinterpret
5836 @samp{.idlC.cpp:} as an attempt to transform @samp{.idlC} into
5840 SUFFIXES = .idl C.cpp
5845 As you may have noted, the @code{SUFFIXES} variable behaves like the
5846 @code{.SUFFIXES} special target of @code{make}. You should not touch
5847 @code{.SUFFIXES} yourself, but use @code{SUFFIXES} instead and let
5848 Automake generate the suffix list for @code{.SUFFIXES}. Any given
5849 @code{SUFFIXES} go at the start of the generated suffixes list, followed
5850 by Automake generated suffixes not already in the list.
5853 @section Support for Multilibs
5855 Automake has support for an obscure feature called multilibs. A
5856 @dfn{multilib} is a library which is built for multiple different ABIs
5857 at a single time; each time the library is built with a different target
5858 flag combination. This is only useful when the library is intended to
5859 be cross-compiled, and it is almost exclusively used for compiler
5862 The multilib support is still experimental. Only use it if you are
5863 familiar with multilibs and can debug problems you might encounter.
5870 @cindex Including Makefile fragment
5871 @cindex Makefile fragment, including
5873 Automake supports an @code{include} directive which can be used to
5874 include other @file{Makefile} fragments when @code{automake} is run.
5875 Note that these fragments are read and interpreted by @code{automake},
5876 not by @code{make}. As with conditionals, @code{make} has no idea that
5877 @code{include} is in use.
5879 There are two forms of @code{include}:
5882 @item include $(srcdir)/file
5883 Include a fragment which is found relative to the current source
5886 @item include $(top_srcdir)/file
5887 Include a fragment which is found relative to the top source directory.
5890 Note that if a fragment is included inside a conditional, then the
5891 condition applies to the entire contents of that fragment.
5893 Makefile fragments included this way are always distributed because
5894 there are needed to rebuild @file{Makefile.in}.
5897 @chapter Conditionals
5899 @cindex Conditionals
5901 Automake supports a simple type of conditionals.
5903 @cvindex AM_CONDITIONAL
5904 Before using a conditional, you must define it by using
5905 @code{AM_CONDITIONAL} in the @code{configure.ac} file (@pxref{Macros}).
5907 @defmac AM_CONDITIONAL (@var{conditional}, @var{condition})
5908 The conditional name, @var{conditional}, should be a simple string
5909 starting with a letter and containing only letters, digits, and
5910 underscores. It must be different from @samp{TRUE} and @samp{FALSE}
5911 which are reserved by Automake.
5913 The shell @var{condition} (suitable for use in a shell @code{if}
5914 statement) is evaluated when @code{configure} is run. Note that you
5915 must arrange for @emph{every} @code{AM_CONDITIONAL} to be invoked every
5916 time @code{configure} is run -- if @code{AM_CONDITIONAL} is run
5917 conditionally (e.g., in a shell @code{if} statement), then the result
5918 will confuse automake.
5921 @cindex --enable-debug, example
5922 @cindex Example conditional --enable-debug
5923 @cindex Conditional example, --enable-debug
5925 Conditionals typically depend upon options which the user provides to
5926 the @code{configure} script. Here is an example of how to write a
5927 conditional which is true if the user uses the @samp{--enable-debug}
5931 AC_ARG_ENABLE(debug,
5932 [ --enable-debug Turn on debugging],
5933 [case "$@{enableval@}" in
5936 *) AC_MSG_ERROR(bad value $@{enableval@} for --enable-debug) ;;
5937 esac],[debug=false])
5938 AM_CONDITIONAL(DEBUG, test x$debug = xtrue)
5941 Here is an example of how to use that conditional in @file{Makefile.am}:
5953 noinst_PROGRAMS = $(DBG)
5956 This trivial example could also be handled using EXTRA_PROGRAMS
5957 (@pxref{Conditional Programs}).
5959 You may only test a single variable in an @code{if} statement, possibly
5960 negated using @samp{!}. The @code{else} statement may be omitted.
5961 Conditionals may be nested to any depth. You may specify an argument to
5962 @code{else} in which case it must be the negation of the condition used
5963 for the current @code{if}. Similarly you may specify the condition
5964 which is closed by an @code{end}:
5975 Unbalanced conditions are errors.
5977 Note that conditionals in Automake are not the same as conditionals in
5978 GNU Make. Automake conditionals are checked at configure time by the
5979 @file{configure} script, and affect the translation from
5980 @file{Makefile.in} to @file{Makefile}. They are based on options passed
5981 to @file{configure} and on results that @file{configure} has discovered
5982 about the host system. GNU Make conditionals are checked at @code{make}
5983 time, and are based on variables passed to the make program or defined
5984 in the @file{Makefile}.
5986 Automake conditionals will work with any make program.
5990 @chapter The effect of @code{--gnu} and @code{--gnits}
5992 @cindex --gnu, required files
5993 @cindex --gnu, complete description
5995 The @samp{--gnu} option (or @samp{gnu} in the @samp{AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS}
5996 variable) causes @code{automake} to check the following:
6000 The files @file{INSTALL}, @file{NEWS}, @file{README}, @file{AUTHORS},
6001 and @file{ChangeLog}, plus one of @file{COPYING.LIB}, @file{COPYING.LESSER}
6002 or @file{COPYING}, are required at the topmost directory of the package.
6005 The options @samp{no-installman} and @samp{no-installinfo} are
6009 Note that this option will be extended in the future to do even more
6010 checking; it is advisable to be familiar with the precise requirements
6011 of the GNU standards. Also, @samp{--gnu} can require certain
6012 non-standard GNU programs to exist for use by various maintainer-only
6013 rules; for instance in the future @code{pathchk} might be required for
6016 @cindex --gnits, complete description
6018 The @samp{--gnits} option does everything that @samp{--gnu} does, and
6019 checks the following as well:
6023 @samp{make installcheck} will check to make sure that the @code{--help}
6024 and @code{--version} really print a usage message and a version string,
6025 respectively. This is the @code{std-options} option (@pxref{Options}).
6028 @samp{make dist} will check to make sure the @file{NEWS} file has been
6029 updated to the current version.
6032 @samp{VERSION} is checked to make sure its format complies with Gnits
6034 @c FIXME xref when standards are finished
6037 @cindex README-alpha
6038 If @samp{VERSION} indicates that this is an alpha release, and the file
6039 @file{README-alpha} appears in the topmost directory of a package, then
6040 it is included in the distribution. This is done in @samp{--gnits}
6041 mode, and no other, because this mode is the only one where version
6042 number formats are constrained, and hence the only mode where Automake
6043 can automatically determine whether @file{README-alpha} should be
6047 The file @file{THANKS} is required.
6052 @chapter The effect of @code{--cygnus}
6054 @cindex Cygnus strictness
6056 Some packages, notably GNU GCC and GNU gdb, have a build environment
6057 originally written at Cygnus Support (subsequently renamed Cygnus
6058 Solutions, and then later purchased by Red Hat). Packages with this
6059 ancestry are sometimes referred to as ``Cygnus'' trees.
6061 A Cygnus tree has slightly different rules for how a @file{Makefile.in}
6062 is to be constructed. Passing @samp{--cygnus} to @code{automake} will
6063 cause any generated @file{Makefile.in} to comply with Cygnus rules.
6065 Here are the precise effects of @samp{--cygnus}:
6069 Info files are always created in the build directory, and not in the
6073 @file{texinfo.tex} is not required if a Texinfo source file is
6074 specified. The assumption is that the file will be supplied, but in a
6075 place that Automake cannot find. This assumption is an artifact of how
6076 Cygnus packages are typically bundled.
6079 @samp{make dist} is not supported, and the rules for it are not
6080 generated. Cygnus-style trees use their own distribution mechanism.
6083 Certain tools will be searched for in the build tree as well as in the
6084 user's @samp{PATH}. These tools are @code{runtest}, @code{expect},
6085 @code{makeinfo} and @code{texi2dvi}.
6088 @code{--foreign} is implied.
6091 The options @samp{no-installinfo} and @samp{no-dependencies} are
6095 The macros @samp{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE} and @samp{AM_CYGWIN32} are
6099 The @code{check} target doesn't depend on @code{all}.
6102 GNU maintainers are advised to use @samp{gnu} strictness in preference
6103 to the special Cygnus mode. Some day, perhaps, the differences between
6104 Cygnus trees and GNU trees will disappear (for instance, as GCC is made
6105 more standards compliant). At that time the special Cygnus mode will be
6110 @chapter When Automake Isn't Enough
6112 With some minor exceptions (like @code{_PROGRAMS} variables being
6113 rewritten to append @code{$(EXEEXT)}), the contents of a
6114 @file{Makefile.am} is copied to @file{Makefile.in} verbatim.
6116 @cindex copying semantics
6118 These copying semantics means that many problems can be worked around
6119 by simply adding some @code{make} variables and rules to
6120 @file{Makefile.am}. Automake will ignore these additions.
6122 @cindex conflicting definitions
6123 @cindex rules, conflicting
6124 @cindex variables, conflicting
6125 @cindex definitions, conflicts
6127 Since a @file{Makefile.in} is built from data gathered from three
6128 different places (@file{Makefile.am}, @file{configure.ac}, and
6129 @command{automake} itself), it is possible to have conflicting
6130 definitions of rules or variables. When building @file{Makefile.in}
6131 the following priorities are respected by @command{automake} to ensure
6132 the user always have the last word. User defined variables in
6133 @file{Makefile.am} have priority over variables @code{AC_SUBST}ed from
6134 @file{configure.ac}, and @code{AC_SUBST}ed variables have priority
6135 over @command{automake}-defined variables. As far rules are
6136 concerned, a user-defined rule overrides any
6137 @command{automake}-defined rule for the same target.
6139 @cindex overriding rules
6140 @cindex overriding semantics
6141 @cindex rules, overriding
6143 These overriding semantics make it possible to fine tune some default
6144 settings of Automake, or replace some of its rules. Overriding
6145 Automake rules is often inadvisable, particularly in the topmost
6146 directory of a package with subdirectories. The @code{-Woverride}
6147 option (@pxref{Invoking Automake}) comes handy to catch overridden
6150 Note that Automake does not make any difference between rules with
6151 commands and rules that only specify dependencies. So it is not
6152 possible to append new dependencies to an @code{automake}-defined
6153 target without redefining the entire rule.
6155 @cindex -local targets
6156 @cindex local targets
6158 However, various useful targets have a @samp{-local} version you can
6159 specify in your @file{Makefile.in}. Automake will supplement the
6160 standard target with these user-supplied targets.
6175 @trindex check-local
6177 @trindex install-data-local
6178 @trindex install-exec
6179 @trindex install-exec-local
6181 @trindex uninstall-local
6182 @trindex mostlyclean
6183 @trindex mostlyclean-local
6185 @trindex clean-local
6187 @trindex distclean-local
6188 @trindex installdirs
6189 @trindex installdirs-local
6190 @trindex installcheck
6191 @trindex installcheck-local
6193 The targets that support a local version are @code{all}, @code{info},
6194 @code{dvi}, @code{ps}, @code{pdf}, @code{html}, @code{check},
6195 @code{install-data}, @code{install-exec}, @code{uninstall},
6196 @code{installdirs}, @code{installcheck} and the various @code{clean} targets
6197 (@code{mostlyclean}, @code{clean}, @code{distclean}, and
6198 @code{maintainer-clean}). Note that there are no
6199 @code{uninstall-exec-local} or @code{uninstall-data-local} targets; just
6200 use @code{uninstall-local}. It doesn't make sense to uninstall just
6201 data or just executables.
6203 For instance, here is one way to install a file in @file{/etc}:
6207 $(INSTALL_DATA) $(srcdir)/afile $(DESTDIR)/etc/afile
6210 @cindex -hook targets
6211 @cindex hook targets
6213 Some rule also have a way to run another rule, called a @dfn{hook},
6214 after their work is done. The hook is named after the principal target,
6215 with @samp{-hook} appended. The targets allowing hooks are
6216 @code{install-data}, @code{install-exec}, @code{uninstall}, @code{dist},
6217 and @code{distcheck}.
6218 @trindex install-data-hook
6219 @trindex install-exec-hook
6220 @trindex uninstall-hook
6223 For instance, here is how to create a hard link to an installed program:
6227 ln $(DESTDIR)$(bindir)/program$(EXEEXT) \
6228 $(DESTDIR)$(bindir)/proglink$(EXEEXT)
6231 Although cheaper and more portable than symbolic links, hard links
6232 will not work everywhere (for instance OS/2 does not have
6233 @command{ln}). Ideally you should fall back to @code{cp -p} when
6234 @code{ln} does not work. An easy way, if symbolic links are
6235 acceptable to you, is to add @code{AC_PROG_LN_S} to
6236 @file{configure.ac} (@pxref{Particular Programs, , Particular Program
6237 Checks, autoconf, The Autoconf Manual}) and use @code{$(LN_S)} in
6240 @cindex versioned binaries, installing
6241 @cindex installing versioned binaries
6242 @cindex LN_S example
6243 For instance, here is how you could install a versioned copy of a
6244 program using @code{$(LN_S)}:
6248 cd $(DESTDIR)$(bindir) && \
6249 mv -f prog$(EXEEXT) prog-$(VERSION)$(EXEEXT) && \
6250 $(LN_S) prog-$(VERSION)$(EXEEXT) prog$(EXEEXT)
6253 Note that we rename the program so that a new version will erase the
6254 symbolic link, not the real binary. Also we @code{cd} into the
6255 destination directory in order to create relative links.
6257 @c FIXME should include discussion of variables you can use in these
6261 @chapter Distributing @file{Makefile.in}s
6263 Automake places no restrictions on the distribution of the resulting
6264 @file{Makefile.in}s. We still encourage software authors to distribute
6265 their work under terms like those of the GPL, but doing so is not
6266 required to use Automake.
6268 Some of the files that can be automatically installed via the
6269 @code{--add-missing} switch do fall under the GPL@. However, these also
6270 have a special exception allowing you to distribute them with your
6271 package, regardless of the licensing you choose.
6274 @node API versioning
6275 @chapter Automake API versioning
6277 New Automake releases usually include bug fixes and new features.
6278 Unfortunately they may also introduce new bugs and incompatibilities.
6279 This makes four reasons why a package may require a particular Automake
6282 Things get worse when maintaining a large tree of packages, each one
6283 requiring a different version of Automake. In the past, this meant that
6284 any developer (and sometime users) had to install several versions of
6285 Automake in different places, and switch @samp{$PATH} appropriately for
6288 Starting with version 1.6, Automake installs versioned binaries. This
6289 means you can install several versions of Automake in the same
6290 @samp{$prefix}, and can select an arbitrary Automake version by running
6291 @samp{automake-1.6} or @samp{automake-1.7} without juggling with
6292 @samp{$PATH}. Furthermore, @file{Makefile}'s generated by Automake 1.6
6293 will use @samp{automake-1.6} explicitly in their rebuild rules.
6295 Note that @samp{1.6} in @samp{automake-1.6} is Automake's API version,
6296 not Automake's version. If a bug fix release is made, for instance
6297 Automake 1.6.1, the API version will remain 1.6. This means that a
6298 package which work with Automake 1.6 should also work with 1.6.1; after
6299 all, this is what people expect from bug fix releases.
6301 Note that if your package relies on a feature or a bug fix introduced in
6302 a release, you can pass this version as an option to Automake to ensure
6303 older releases will not be used. For instance, use this in your
6304 @file{configure.ac}:
6307 AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE(1.6.1) dnl Require Automake 1.6.1 or better.
6310 or, in a particular @file{Makefile.am}:
6313 AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS = 1.6.1 # Require Automake 1.6.1 or better.
6316 Automake will print an error message if its version is
6317 older than the requested version.
6320 @heading What is in the API
6322 Automake's programming interface is not easy to define. Basically it
6323 should include at least all @strong{documented} variables and targets
6324 that a @samp{Makefile.am} author can use, any behavior associated with
6325 them (e.g. the places where @samp{-hook}'s are run), the command line
6326 interface of @samp{automake} and @samp{aclocal}, @dots{}
6328 @heading What is not in the API
6330 Every undocumented variable, target, or command line option, is not part
6331 of the API@. You should avoid using them, as they could change from one
6332 version to the other (even in bug fix releases, if this helps to fix a
6335 If it turns out you need to use such a undocumented feature, contact
6336 @email{automake@@gnu.org} and try to get it documented and exercised by
6340 @chapter Frequently Asked Questions about Automake
6342 This chapter covers some questions that often come up on the mailing
6346 * CVS:: CVS and generated files
6347 * maintainer-mode:: missing and AM_MAINTAINER_MODE
6348 * wildcards:: Why doesn't Automake support wildcards?
6349 * distcleancheck:: Files left in build directory after distclean
6350 * renamed objects:: Why are object files sometimes renamed?
6354 @section CVS and generated files
6356 @subsection Background: distributed generated files
6357 @cindex generated files, distributed
6358 @cindex rebuild rules
6360 Packages made with Autoconf and Automake ship with some generated
6361 files like @file{configure} or @file{Makefile.in}. These files were
6362 generated on the developer's host and are distributed so that
6363 end-users do not have to install the maintainer tools required to
6364 rebuild them. Other generated files like Lex scanners, Yacc parsers,
6365 or Info documentation, are usually distributed on similar grounds.
6367 Automake outputs rules in @file{Makefile}s to rebuild these files. For
6368 instance @command{make} will run @command{autoconf} to rebuild
6369 @file{configure} whenever @file{configure.ac} is changed. This makes
6370 development safer by ensuring a @file{configure} is never out-of-date
6371 with respect to @file{configure.ac}.
6373 As generated files shipped in packages are up-to-date, and because
6374 @command{tar} preserves times-tamps, these rebuild rules are not
6375 triggered when a user unpacks and builds a package.
6377 @subsection Background: CVS and timestamps
6378 @cindex timestamps and CVS
6379 @cindex CVS and timestamps
6381 Unless you use CVS keywords (in which case files must be updated at
6382 commit time), CVS preserves timestamp during @code{cvs commit} and
6383 @code{cvs import -d} operations.
6385 When you check out a file using @code{cvs checkout} its timestamp is
6386 set to that of the revision which is being checked out.
6388 However, during @command{cvs update}, files will have the date of the
6389 update, not the original timestamp of this revision. This is meant to
6390 make sure that @command{make} notices sources files have been updated.
6392 This times tamp shift is troublesome when both sources and generated
6393 files are kept under CVS. Because CVS processes files in alphabetical
6394 order, @file{configure.ac} will appear older than @file{configure}
6395 after a @command{cvs update} that updates both files, even if
6396 @file{configure} was newer than @file{configure.ac} when it was
6397 checked in. Calling @code{make} will then trigger a spurious rebuild
6398 of @file{configure}.
6400 @subsection Living with CVS in Autoconfiscated projects
6401 @cindex CVS and generated files
6402 @cindex generated files and CVS
6404 There are basically two clans amongst maintainers: those who keep all
6405 distributed files under CVS, including generated files, and those who
6406 keep generated files @emph{out} of CVS.
6408 @subsubheading All files in CVS
6412 The CVS repository contains all distributed files so you know exactly
6413 what is distributed, and you can checkout any prior version entirely.
6416 Maintainers can see how generated files evolve (for instance you can
6417 see what happens to your @file{Makefile.in}s when you upgrade Automake
6418 and make sure they look OK).
6421 Users do not need the autotools to build a checkout of the project, it
6422 works just like a released tarball.
6425 If users use @command{cvs update} to update their copy, instead of
6426 @command{cvs checkout} to fetch a fresh one, timestamps will be
6427 inaccurate. Some rebuild rules will be triggered and attempt to
6428 run developer tools such as @command{autoconf} or @command{automake}.
6430 Actually, calls to such tools are all wrapped into a call to the
6431 @command{missing} script discussed later (@pxref{maintainer-mode}).
6432 @command{missing} will take care of fixing the timestamps when these
6433 tools are not installed, so that the build can continue.
6436 In distributed development, developers are likely to have different
6437 version of the maintainer tools installed. In this case rebuilds
6438 triggered by timestamp lossage will lead to spurious changes
6439 to generated files. There are several solutions to this:
6443 All developers should use the same versions, so that the rebuilt files
6444 are identical to files in CVS. (This starts to be difficult when each
6445 project you work on uses different versions.)
6447 Or people use a script to fix the timestamp after a checkout (the GCC
6448 folks have such a script).
6450 Or @file{configure.ac} uses @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE}, which will
6451 disable all these rebuild rules by default. This is further discussed
6452 in @ref{maintainer-mode}.
6456 Although we focused on spurious rebuilds, the converse can also
6457 happen. CVS's timestamp handling can also let you think an
6458 out-of-date file is up-to-date.
6460 For instance, suppose a developer has modified @file{Makefile.am} and
6461 rebuilt @file{Makefile.in}, and then decide to do a last-minute change
6462 to @file{Makefile.am} right before checking in both files (without
6463 rebuilding @file{Makefile.in} to account for the change).
6465 This last change to @file{Makefile.am} make the copy of
6466 @file{Makefile.in} out-of-date. Since CVS processes files
6467 alphabetically, when another developer @code{cvs update} his or her
6468 tree, @file{Makefile.in} will happen to be newer than
6469 @file{Makefile.am}. This other developer will not see
6470 @file{Makefile.in} is out-of-date.
6474 @subsubheading Generated files out of CVS
6476 One way to get CVS and @code{make} working peacefully is to never
6477 store generated files in CVS, i.e., do not CVS-control files which
6478 are @code{Makefile} targets (also called @emph{derived} files).
6480 This way developers are not annoyed by changes to generated files. It
6481 does not matter if they all have different versions (assuming they are
6482 compatible, of course). And finally, timestamps are not lost, changes
6483 to sources files can't be missed as in the
6484 @file{Makefile.am}/@file{Makefile.in} example discussed earlier.
6486 The drawback is that the CVS repository is not an exact copy of what
6487 is distributed and that users now need to install various development
6488 tools (maybe even specific versions) before they can build a checkout.
6489 But, after all, CVS's job is versioning, not distribution.
6491 Allowing developers to use different versions of their tools can also
6492 hide bugs during distributed development. Indeed, developers will be
6493 using (hence testing) their own generated files, instead of the
6494 generated files that will be released actually. The developer who
6495 prepares the tarball might be using a version of the tool that
6496 produces bogus output (for instance a non-portable C file), something
6497 other developers could have noticed if they weren't using their own
6498 versions of this tool.
6500 @subsection Third-party files
6501 @cindex CVS and third-party files
6502 @cindex third-party files and CVS
6504 Another class of files not discussed here (because they do not cause
6505 timestamp issues) are files which are shipped with a package, but
6506 maintained elsewhere. For instance tools like @command{gettextize}
6507 and @command{autopoint} (from Gettext) or @command{libtoolize} (from
6508 Libtool), will install or update files in your package.
6510 These files, whether they are kept under CVS or not, raise similar
6511 concerns about version mismatch between developers' tools. The
6512 Gettext manual has a section about this, see @ref{CVS Issues, CVS
6513 Issues, Integrating with CVS, gettext, GNU gettext tools}.
6515 @node maintainer-mode
6516 @section @command{missing} and @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE}
6518 @subsection @command{missing}
6519 @cindex missing, purpose
6521 The @command{missing} script is a wrapper around several maintainer
6522 tools, designed to warn users if a maintainer tool is required but
6523 missing. Typical maintainer tools are @command{autoconf},
6524 @command{automake}, @command{bison}, etc. Because file generated by
6525 these tools are shipped with the other sources of a package, these
6526 tools shouldn't be required during a user build and they are not
6527 checked for in @file{configure}.
6529 However, if for some reason a rebuild rule is triggered and involves a
6530 missing tool, @command{missing} will notice it and warn the user.
6531 Besides the warning, when a tool is missing, @command{missing} will
6532 attempt to fix timestamps in a way which allow the build to continue.
6533 For instance @command{missing} will touch @file{configure} if
6534 @command{autoconf} is not installed. When all distributed files are
6535 kept under CVS, this feature of @command{missing} allows user
6536 @emph{with no maintainer tools} to build a package off CVS, bypassing
6537 any timestamp inconsistency implied by @code{cvs update}.
6539 If the required tool is installed, @command{missing} will run it and
6540 won't attempt to continue after failures. This is correct during
6541 development: developers love fixing failures. However, users with
6542 wrong versions of maintainer tools may get an error when the rebuild
6543 rule is spuriously triggered, halting the build. This failure to let
6544 the build continue is one of the arguments of the
6545 @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE} advocates.
6547 @subsection @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE}
6548 @cindex AM_MAINTAINER_MODE, purpose
6549 @cvindex AM_MAINTAINER_MODE
6551 @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE} disables the so called "rebuild rules" by
6552 default. If you have @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE} in
6553 @file{configure.ac}, and run @code{./configure && make}, then
6554 @command{make} will *never* attempt to rebuilt @file{configure},
6555 @file{Makefile.in}s, Lex or Yacc outputs, etc. I.e., this disables
6556 build rules for files which are usually distributed and that users
6557 should normally not have to update.
6559 If you run @code{./configure --enable-maintainer-mode}, then these
6560 rebuild rules will be active.
6562 People use @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE} either because they do want their
6563 users (or themselves) annoyed by timestamps lossage (@pxref{CVS}), or
6564 because they simply can't stand the rebuild rules and prefer running
6565 maintainer tools explicitly.
6567 @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE} also allows you to disable some custom build
6568 rules conditionally. Some developers use this feature to disable
6569 rules that need exotic tools that users may not have available.
6571 Several years ago Fran@,{c}ois Pinard pointed out several arguments
6572 against @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE}. Most of them relate to insecurity.
6573 By removing dependencies you get non-dependable builds: change to
6574 sources files can have no effect on generated files and this can be
6575 very confusing when unnoticed. He adds that security shouldn't be
6576 reserved to maintainers (what @code{--enable-maintainer-mode}
6577 suggests), on the contrary. If one user has to modify a
6578 @file{Makefile.am}, then either @file{Makefile.in} should be updated
6579 or a warning should be output (this is what Automake uses
6580 @code{missing} for) but the last thing you want is that nothing
6581 happens and the user doesn't notice it (this is what happens when
6582 rebuild rules are disabled by @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE}).
6584 Jim Meyering, the inventor of the @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE} macro was
6585 swayed by Fran@,{c}ois's arguments, and got rid of
6586 @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE} in all of his packages.
6588 Still many people continue to use @code{AM_MAINTAINER_MODE}, because
6589 it helps them working on projects where all files are kept under CVS,
6590 and because @command{missing} isn't enough if you have the wrong
6591 version of the tools.
6595 @section Why doesn't Automake support wildcards?
6598 Developers are lazy. They often would like to use wildcards in
6599 @file{Makefile.am}s, so they don't need to remember they have to
6600 update @file{Makefile.am}s every time they add, delete, or rename a
6603 There are several objections to this:
6606 When using CVS (or similar) developers need to remember they have to
6607 run @code{cvs add} or @code{cvs rm} anyway. Updating
6608 @file{Makefile.am} accordingly quickly becomes a reflex.
6610 Conversely, if your application doesn't compile
6611 because you forgot to add a file in @file{Makefile.am}, it will help
6612 you remember to @code{cvs add} it.
6615 Using wildcards makes easy to distribute files by mistake. For
6616 instance some code a developer is experimenting with (a test case,
6617 say) but which should not be part of the distribution.
6620 Using wildcards it's easy to omit some files by mistake. For
6621 instance one developer creates a new file, uses it at many places,
6622 but forget to commit it. Another developer then checkout the
6623 incomplete project and is able to run `make dist' successfully,
6624 even though a file is missing.
6627 Listing files, you control *exactly* what you distribute.
6628 If some file that should be distributed is missing from your
6629 tree, @code{make dist} will complain. Besides, you don't distribute
6630 more than what you listed.
6633 Finally it's really hard to @file{forget} adding a file to
6634 @file{Makefile.am}, because if you don't add it, it doesn't get
6635 compiled nor installed, so you can't even test it.
6638 Still, these are philosophical objections, and as such you may disagree,
6639 or find enough value in wildcards to dismiss all of them. Before you
6640 start writing a patch against Automake to teach it about wildcards,
6641 let's see the main technical issue: portability.
6643 Although @code{$(wildcard ...)} works with GNU @command{make}, it is
6644 not portable to other @command{make} implementations.
6646 The only way Automake could support @command{$(wildcard ...)} is by
6647 expending @command{$(wildcard ...)} when @command{automake} is run.
6648 Resulting @file{Makefile.in}s would be portable since they would
6649 list all files and not use @code{$(wildcard ...)}. However that
6650 means developers need to remember they must run @code{automake} each
6651 time they add, delete, or rename files.
6653 Compared to editing @file{Makefile.am}, this is really little win. Sure,
6654 it's easier and faster to type @code{automake; make} than to type
6655 @code{emacs Makefile.am; make}. But nobody bothered enough to write a
6656 patch add support for this syntax. Some people use scripts to
6657 generated file lists in @file{Makefile.am} or in separate
6658 @file{Makefile} fragments.
6660 Even if you don't care about portability, and are tempted to use
6661 @code{$(wildcard ...)} anyway because you target only GNU Make, you
6662 should know there are many places where Automake need to know exactly
6663 which files should be processed. As Automake doesn't know how to
6664 expand @code{$(wildcard ...)}, you cannot use it in these places.
6665 @code{$(wildcard ...)} is a black box comparable to @code{AC_SUBST}ed
6666 variables as far Automake is concerned.
6668 You can get warnings about @code{$(wildcard ...}) constructs using the
6669 @code{-Wportability} flag.
6671 @node distcleancheck
6672 @section Files left in build directory after distclean
6673 @cindex distclean, diagnostic
6674 @cindex dependencies and distributed files
6676 @trindex distcleancheck
6678 This is a diagnostic you might encounter while running @code{make
6681 As explained in @ref{Dist}, @code{make distcheck} attempts to build
6682 and check your package for errors like this one.
6684 @code{make distcheck} will perform a @code{VPATH} build of your
6685 package, and then call @code{make distclean}. Files left in the build
6686 directory after @code{make distclean} has run are listed after this
6689 This diagnostic really covers two kinds of errors:
6693 files that are forgotten by distclean;
6695 distributed files that are erroneously rebuilt.
6698 The former left-over files are not distributed, so the fix is to mark
6699 them for cleaning (@pxref{Clean}), this is obvious and doesn't deserve
6702 The latter bug is not always easy to understand and fix, so let's
6703 proceed with an example. Suppose our package contains a program for
6704 which we want to build a man page using @command{help2man}. GNU
6705 @command{help2man} produces simple manual pages from the @code{--help}
6706 and @code{--version} output of other commands (@pxref{Top, , Overview,
6707 help2man, The Help2man Manual}). Because we don't to force want our
6708 users to install @command{help2man}, we decide to distribute the
6709 generated man page using the following setup.
6712 # This Makefile.am is bogus.
6715 dist_man_MANS = foo.1
6718 help2man --output=foo.1 ./foo$(EXEEXT)
6721 This will effectively distribute the man page. However,
6722 @code{make distcheck} will fail with:
6725 ERROR: files left in build directory after distclean:
6729 Why was @file{foo.1} rebuilt? Because although distributed,
6730 @file{foo.1} depends on a non-distributed built file:
6731 @file{foo$(EXEEXT)}. @file{foo$(EXEEXT)} is built by the user, so it
6732 will always appear to be newer than the distributed @file{foo.1}.
6734 @code{make distcheck} caught an inconsistency in our package. Our
6735 intent was to distribute @file{foo.1} so users do not need installing
6736 @command{help2man}, however since this our rule causes this file to be
6737 always rebuilt, users @emph{do} need @command{help2man}. Either we
6738 should ensure that @file{foo.1} is not rebuilt by users, or there is
6739 no point in distributing @file{foo.1}.
6741 More generally, the rule is that distributed files should never depend
6742 on non-distributed built files. If you distribute something
6743 generated, distribute its sources.
6745 One way to fix the above example, while still distributing
6746 @file{foo.1} is to not depend on @file{foo$(EXEEXT)}. For instance,
6747 assuming @command{foo --version} and @command{foo --help} do not
6748 change unless @file{foo.c} or @file{configure.ac} change, we could
6749 write the following @file{Makefile.am}:
6754 dist_man_MANS = foo.1
6756 foo.1: foo.c $(top_srcdir)/configure.ac
6757 $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) foo$(EXEEXT)
6758 help2man --output=foo.1 ./foo$(EXEEXT)
6761 This way, @file{foo.1} will not get rebuilt every time
6762 @file{foo$(EXEEXT)} changes. The @command{make} call makes sure
6763 @file{foo$(EXEEXT)} is up-to-date before @command{help2man}. Another
6764 way to ensure this would be to use separate directories for binaries
6765 and man pages, and set @code{SUBDIRS} so that binaries are built
6768 We could also decide not to distribute @file{foo.1}. In
6769 this case it's fine to have @file{foo.1} dependent upon
6770 @file{foo$(EXEEXT)}, since both will have to be rebuilt.
6771 However it would be impossible to build the package in a
6772 cross-compilation, because building @file{foo.1} involves
6773 an @emph{execution} of @file{foo$(EXEEXT)}.
6775 Another context where such errors are common is when distributed files
6776 are built by tools which are built by the package. The pattern is similar:
6779 distributed-file: built-tools distributed-sources
6784 should be changed to
6787 distributed-file: distributed-sources
6788 $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) built-tools
6793 or you could choose not to distribute @file{distributed-file}, if
6794 cross-compilation does not matter.
6796 The points made through these examples are worth a summary:
6801 Distributed files should never depend upon non-distributed built
6804 Distributed files should be distributed will all their dependencies.
6806 If a file is @emph{intended} be rebuilt by users, there is no point in
6811 @vrindex distcleancheck_listfiles
6812 For desperate cases, it's always possible to disable this check by
6813 setting @code{distcleancheck_listfiles} as documented in @ref{Dist}.
6814 Make sure you do understand the reason why @code{make distcheck}
6815 complains before you do this. @code{distcleancheck_listfiles} is a
6816 way to @emph{hide} errors, not to fix them. You can always do better.
6818 @node renamed objects
6819 @section Why are object files sometimes renamed?
6821 This happens when per-target compilation flags are used. Object
6822 files need to be renamed just in case they would clash with object
6823 files compiled from the same sources, but with different flags.
6824 Consider the following example.
6827 bin_PROGRAMS = true false
6828 true_SOURCES = generic.c
6829 true_CPPFLAGS = -DEXIT_CODE=0
6830 false_SOURCES = generic.c
6831 false_CPPFLAGS = -DEXIT_CODE=1
6834 Obviously the two programs are built from the same source, but it
6835 would be bad if they shared the same object, because @file{generic.o}
6836 cannot be built with both @code{-DEXIT_CODE=0} *and*
6837 @code{-DEXIT_CODE=1}. Therefore @command{automake} outputs rules to
6838 build two different objects: @file{true-generic.o} and
6839 @file{false-generic.o}.
6841 @command{automake} doesn't actually look whether sources files are
6842 shared to decide if it must rename objects. It will just rename all
6843 objects of a target as soon as it sees per-target compilation flags
6846 It's OK to share object files when per-target compilation flags are not
6847 used. For instance @file{true} and @file{false} will both use
6848 @file{version.o} in the following example.
6851 AM_CPPFLAGS = -DVERSION=1.0
6852 bin_PROGRAMS = true false
6853 true_SOURCES = true.c version.c
6854 false_SOURCES = false.c version.c
6857 Note that the renaming of objects is also affected by the
6858 @code{_SHORTNAME} variable (@pxref{Program and Library Variables}).
6860 @c ========================================================== Appendices
6863 @node Copying This Manual
6864 @appendix Copying This Manual
6867 * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual
6877 * Macro and Variable Index:: Index of Autoconf macros and Automake variables
6878 * General Index:: General index
6881 @node Macro and Variable Index
6882 @appendixsec Macro and Variable Index
6887 @appendixsec General Index
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