Revonzy Mini Shell
## automake - create Makefile.in from Makefile.am
## Copyright (C) 2001-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
## This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
## it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
## the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
## any later version.
## This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
## but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
## MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
## GNU General Public License for more details.
## You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
## along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
DISTFILES = $(DIST_COMMON) $(DIST_SOURCES) $(TEXINFOS) $(EXTRA_DIST)
if %?TOPDIR_P%
distdir = $(PACKAGE)-$(VERSION)
top_distdir = $(distdir)
am__remove_distdir = \
if test -d "$(distdir)"; then \
find "$(distdir)" -type d ! -perm -200 -exec chmod u+w {} ';' \
&& rm -rf "$(distdir)" \
## On MSYS (1.0.17) it is not possible to remove a directory that is in
## use; so, if the first rm fails, we sleep some seconds and retry, to
## give pending processes some time to exit and "release" the directory
## before we remove it. The value of "some seconds" is 5 for the moment,
## which is mostly an arbitrary value, but seems high enough in practice.
## See automake bug#10470.
|| { sleep 5 && rm -rf "$(distdir)"; }; \
else :; fi
am__post_remove_distdir = $(am__remove_distdir)
endif %?TOPDIR_P%
if %?SUBDIRS%
## computes a relative pathname RELDIR such that DIR1/RELDIR = DIR2.
## Input:
## - DIR1 relative pathname, relative to the current directory
## - DIR2 relative pathname, relative to the current directory
## Output:
## - reldir relative pathname of DIR2, relative to DIR1
am__relativize = \
dir0=`pwd`; \
sed_first='s,^\([^/]*\)/.*$$,\1,'; \
sed_rest='s,^[^/]*/*,,'; \
sed_last='s,^.*/\([^/]*\)$$,\1,'; \
sed_butlast='s,/*[^/]*$$,,'; \
while test -n "$$dir1"; do \
first=`echo "$$dir1" | sed -e "$$sed_first"`; \
if test "$$first" != "."; then \
if test "$$first" = ".."; then \
dir2=`echo "$$dir0" | sed -e "$$sed_last"`/"$$dir2"; \
dir0=`echo "$$dir0" | sed -e "$$sed_butlast"`; \
else \
first2=`echo "$$dir2" | sed -e "$$sed_first"`; \
if test "$$first2" = "$$first"; then \
dir2=`echo "$$dir2" | sed -e "$$sed_rest"`; \
else \
dir2="../$$dir2"; \
fi; \
dir0="$$dir0"/"$$first"; \
fi; \
fi; \
dir1=`echo "$$dir1" | sed -e "$$sed_rest"`; \
done; \
reldir="$$dir2"
endif %?SUBDIRS%
.PHONY: distdir
if %?SUBDIRS%
AM_RECURSIVE_TARGETS += distdir
endif %?SUBDIRS%
distdir: $(DISTFILES)
##
## For Gnits users, this is pretty handy. Look at 15 lines
## in case some explanatory text is desirable.
##
if %?TOPDIR_P%
if %?CK-NEWS%
@case `sed 15q $(srcdir)/NEWS` in \
*"$(VERSION)"*) : ;; \
*) \
echo "NEWS not updated; not releasing" 1>&2; \
exit 1;; \
esac
endif %?CK-NEWS%
endif %?TOPDIR_P%
##
## Only for the top dir.
##
if %?TOPDIR_P%
$(am__remove_distdir)
test -d "$(distdir)" || mkdir "$(distdir)"
endif %?TOPDIR_P%
##
##
@srcdirstrip=`echo "$(srcdir)" | sed 's/[].[^$$\\*]/\\\\&/g'`; \
topsrcdirstrip=`echo "$(top_srcdir)" | sed 's/[].[^$$\\*]/\\\\&/g'`; \
##
## Yet another hack to support SUN make.
##
## Let's assume 'foo' appears in DISTFILES and is not a built file.
## When building with VPATH=$(srcdir), SUN make and OSF1/Tru64 will
## rewrite 'foo' as '$(srcdir)/foo'. An attempt to install the file
## with
## cp $file $(distdir)/$file
## will thus install $(srcdir)/foo as $(distdir)/$(srcdir)/foo
## instead of $(distdir)/foo.
##
## So let's strip this leading $(srcdir)/ when it exists. (As far we
## know, only SUN make and OSF1/Tru64 make add it.) Searching whether
## the file is to be found in the source or build directory will be
## done later.
##
## In case we are _not_ using SUN or OSF1/Tru64 make, how can we be sure
## we are not stripping a legitimate filename that starts with the
## same pattern as $(srcdir)?
## Well, it can't happen without the Makefile author distributing
## something out of the distribution (which is bad). As an example,
## consider "EXTRA_DIST = ../bar". This is an issue if $srcdir is
## '..', however getting this value for srcdir is impossible:
## "EXTRA_DIST = ../bar" implies we are in a subdirectory (so '../bar'
## is within the package), hence '$srcdir' is something like
## '../../subdir'.
##
## There is more to say about files which are above the current directory,
## like '../bar' in the previous example. The OSF1/Tru64 make
## implementation can simplify filenames resulting from a VPATH lookup.
## For instance if "VPATH = ../../subdir" and '../bar' is found in that
## VPATH directory, then occurrences of '../bar' will be replaced by
## '../../bar' (instead of '../../subdir/../bar'). This obviously defeats
## any attempt to strip a leading $srcdir. Presently we have no workaround
## for this. We avoid this issue by writing "EXTRA_DIST = $(srcdir)/../bar"
## instead of "EXTRA_DIST = ../bar". This prefixing is needed only for files
## above the current directory. Fortunately, apart from auxdir files which
## can be located in .. or ../.., this situation hardly occurs in practice.
##
## Also rewrite $(top_srcdir) (which sometimes appears in DISTFILES, and can
## be absolute) by $(top_builddir) (which is always relative). $(srcdir) will
## be prepended later.
list='$(DISTFILES)'; \
dist_files=`for file in $$list; do echo $$file; done | \
sed -e "s|^$$srcdirstrip/||;t" \
-e "s|^$$topsrcdirstrip/|$(top_builddir)/|;t"`; \
## (The second 't' command clears the flag for the next round.)
##
## Make the subdirectories for the files.
##
case $$dist_files in \
*/*) $(MKDIR_P) `echo "$$dist_files" | \
sed '/\//!d;s|^|$(distdir)/|;s,/[^/]*$$,,' | \
sort -u` ;; \
esac; \
##
##
for file in $$dist_files; do \
##
## Always look for the file in the build directory first. That way
## for something like yacc output we will correctly pick up the latest
## version. Also check for directories in the build directory first,
## so one can ship generated directories.
##
if test -f $$file || test -d $$file; then d=.; else d=$(srcdir); fi; \
##
## Use cp, not ln. There are situations in which "ln" can fail. For
## instance a file to distribute could actually be a cross-filesystem
## symlink -- this can easily happen if "gettextize" was run on the
## distribution.
##
if test -d $$d/$$file; then \
## Don't mention $$file in the destination argument, since this fails if
## the destination directory already exists. Also, use '-R' and not '-r'.
## '-r' is almost always incorrect.
##
## If a directory exists both in '.' and $(srcdir), then we copy the
## files from $(srcdir) first and then install those from '.'. This
## can help people who distribute directories made of source files
## *and* generated files. It is also important when the directory
## exists only in $(srcdir), because some vendor Make (such as Tru64)
## will magically create an empty directory in '.'.
dir=`echo "/$$file" | sed -e 's,/[^/]*$$,,'`; \
## If the destination directory already exists, it may contain read-only
## files, e.g., during "make distcheck".
if test -d "$(distdir)/$$file"; then \
find "$(distdir)/$$file" -type d ! -perm -700 -exec chmod u+rwx {} \;; \
fi; \
if test -d $(srcdir)/$$file && test $$d != $(srcdir); then \
cp -fpR $(srcdir)/$$file "$(distdir)$$dir" || exit 1; \
find "$(distdir)/$$file" -type d ! -perm -700 -exec chmod u+rwx {} \;; \
fi; \
cp -fpR $$d/$$file "$(distdir)$$dir" || exit 1; \
else \
## Test for file existence because sometimes a file gets included in
## DISTFILES twice. For example this happens when a single source
## file is used in building more than one program.
## See also test 'dist-repeated.sh'.
test -f "$(distdir)/$$file" \
|| cp -p $$d/$$file "$(distdir)/$$file" \
|| exit 1; \
fi; \
done
##
## Test for directory existence here because previous automake
## invocation might have created some directories. Note that we
## explicitly set distdir for the subdir make; that lets us mix-n-match
## many automake-using packages into one large package, and have "dist"
## at the top level do the right thing. If we're in the topmost
## directory, then we use 'distdir' instead of 'top_distdir'; this lets
## us work correctly with an enclosing package.
if %?SUBDIRS%
@list='$(DIST_SUBDIRS)'; for subdir in $$list; do \
if test "$$subdir" = .; then :; else \
$(am__make_dryrun) \
|| test -d "$(distdir)/$$subdir" \
|| $(MKDIR_P) "$(distdir)/$$subdir" \
|| exit 1; \
dir1=$$subdir; dir2="$(distdir)/$$subdir"; \
$(am__relativize); \
new_distdir=$$reldir; \
dir1=$$subdir; dir2="$(top_distdir)"; \
$(am__relativize); \
new_top_distdir=$$reldir; \
echo " (cd $$subdir && $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) top_distdir="$$new_top_distdir" distdir="$$new_distdir" \\"; \
echo " am__remove_distdir=: am__skip_length_check=: am__skip_mode_fix=: distdir)"; \
($(am__cd) $$subdir && \
$(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) \
top_distdir="$$new_top_distdir" \
distdir="$$new_distdir" \
## Disable am__remove_distdir so that sub-packages do not clear a
## directory we have already cleared and might even have populated
## (e.g. shared AUX dir in the sub-package).
am__remove_distdir=: \
## Disable filename length check:
am__skip_length_check=: \
## No need to fix modes more than once:
am__skip_mode_fix=: \
distdir) \
|| exit 1; \
fi; \
done
endif %?SUBDIRS%
##
## We might have to perform some last second updates, such as updating
## info files.
## We must explicitly set distdir and top_distdir for these sub-makes.
##
if %?DIST-TARGETS%
$(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) \
top_distdir="$(top_distdir)" distdir="$(distdir)" \
%DIST-TARGETS%
endif %?DIST-TARGETS%
##
## This complex find command will try to avoid changing the modes of
## links into the source tree, in case they're hard-linked.
##
## Ignore return result from chmod, because it might give an error
## if we chmod a symlink.
##
## Another nastiness: if the file is unreadable by us, we make it
## readable regardless of the number of links to it. This only
## happens in perverse cases.
##
## We use $(install_sh) because that is a known-portable way to modify
## the file in place in the source tree.
##
## If we are being invoked recursively, then there is no need to walk
## the whole subtree again. This is a complexity reduction for a deep
## hierarchy of subpackages.
##
if %?TOPDIR_P%
-test -n "$(am__skip_mode_fix)" \
|| find "$(distdir)" -type d ! -perm -755 \
-exec chmod u+rwx,go+rx {} \; -o \
! -type d ! -perm -444 -links 1 -exec chmod a+r {} \; -o \
! -type d ! -perm -400 -exec chmod a+r {} \; -o \
! -type d ! -perm -444 -exec $(install_sh) -c -m a+r {} {} \; \
|| chmod -R a+r "$(distdir)"
if %?FILENAME_FILTER%
@if test -z "$(am__skip_length_check)" && find "$(distdir)" -type f -print | \
grep '^%FILENAME_FILTER%' 1>&2; then \
echo 'error: the above filenames are too long' 1>&2; \
exit 1; \
else :; fi
endif %?FILENAME_FILTER%
endif %?TOPDIR_P%
## --------------------------------------- ##
## Building various distribution flavors. ##
## --------------------------------------- ##
## Note that we don't use GNU tar's '-z' option. One reason (but not
## the only reason) is that some versions of tar (e.g., OSF1)
## interpret '-z' differently.
##
## The -o option of GNU tar used to exclude empty directories. This
## behavior was fixed in tar 1.12 (released on 1997-04-25). But older
## versions of tar are still used (for instance NetBSD 1.6.1 ships
## with tar 1.11.2). We do not do anything specific w.r.t. this
## incompatibility since packages where empty directories need to be
## present in the archive are really unusual.
##
## We order DIST_TARGETS by expected duration of the compressors,
## slowest first, for better parallelism in "make dist". Do not
## reorder DIST_ARCHIVES, users may expect gzip to be first.
if %?TOPDIR_P%
?GZIP?DIST_ARCHIVES += $(distdir).tar.gz
GZIP_ENV = --best
.PHONY: dist-gzip
dist-gzip: distdir
tardir=$(distdir) && $(am__tar) | GZIP=$(GZIP_ENV) gzip -c >$(distdir).tar.gz
$(am__post_remove_distdir)
?BZIP2?DIST_ARCHIVES += $(distdir).tar.bz2
.PHONY: dist-bzip2
dist-bzip2: distdir
tardir=$(distdir) && $(am__tar) | BZIP2=$${BZIP2--9} bzip2 -c >$(distdir).tar.bz2
$(am__post_remove_distdir)
?LZIP?DIST_ARCHIVES += $(distdir).tar.lz
.PHONY: dist-lzip
dist-lzip: distdir
tardir=$(distdir) && $(am__tar) | lzip -c $${LZIP_OPT--9} >$(distdir).tar.lz
$(am__post_remove_distdir)
?XZ?DIST_ARCHIVES += $(distdir).tar.xz
.PHONY: dist-xz
dist-xz: distdir
tardir=$(distdir) && $(am__tar) | XZ_OPT=$${XZ_OPT--e} xz -c >$(distdir).tar.xz
$(am__post_remove_distdir)
?COMPRESS?DIST_ARCHIVES += $(distdir).tar.Z
.PHONY: dist-tarZ
dist-tarZ: distdir
tardir=$(distdir) && $(am__tar) | compress -c >$(distdir).tar.Z
$(am__post_remove_distdir)
?SHAR?DIST_ARCHIVES += $(distdir).shar.gz
.PHONY: dist-shar
dist-shar: distdir
shar $(distdir) | GZIP=$(GZIP_ENV) gzip -c >$(distdir).shar.gz
$(am__post_remove_distdir)
?ZIP?DIST_ARCHIVES += $(distdir).zip
.PHONY: dist-zip
dist-zip: distdir
-rm -f $(distdir).zip
zip -rq $(distdir).zip $(distdir)
$(am__post_remove_distdir)
?LZIP?DIST_TARGETS += dist-lzip
?XZ?DIST_TARGETS += dist-xz
?SHAR?DIST_TARGETS += dist-shar
?BZIP2?DIST_TARGETS += dist-bzip2
?GZIP?DIST_TARGETS += dist-gzip
?ZIP?DIST_TARGETS += dist-zip
?COMPRESS?DIST_TARGETS += dist-tarZ
endif %?TOPDIR_P%
## ------------------------------------------------- ##
## Building all the requested distribution flavors. ##
## ------------------------------------------------- ##
## Currently we cannot use if/endif inside a rule. The file_contents
## parser needs work.
if %?TOPDIR_P%
.PHONY: dist dist-all
if %?SUBDIRS%
AM_RECURSIVE_TARGETS += dist dist-all
endif %?SUBDIRS%
dist dist-all:
$(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) $(DIST_TARGETS) am__post_remove_distdir='@:'
$(am__post_remove_distdir)
endif %?TOPDIR_P%
## ------------------------- ##
## Checking a distribution. ##
## ------------------------- ##
if %?TOPDIR_P%
if %?SUBDIRS%
AM_RECURSIVE_TARGETS += distcheck
endif %?SUBDIRS%
# This target untars the dist file and tries a VPATH configuration. Then
# it guarantees that the distribution is self-contained by making another
# tarfile.
.PHONY: distcheck
distcheck: dist
case '$(DIST_ARCHIVES)' in \
*.tar.gz*) \
GZIP=$(GZIP_ENV) gzip -dc $(distdir).tar.gz | $(am__untar) ;;\
*.tar.bz2*) \
bzip2 -dc $(distdir).tar.bz2 | $(am__untar) ;;\
*.tar.lz*) \
lzip -dc $(distdir).tar.lz | $(am__untar) ;;\
*.tar.xz*) \
xz -dc $(distdir).tar.xz | $(am__untar) ;;\
*.tar.Z*) \
uncompress -c $(distdir).tar.Z | $(am__untar) ;;\
*.shar.gz*) \
GZIP=$(GZIP_ENV) gzip -dc $(distdir).shar.gz | unshar ;;\
*.zip*) \
unzip $(distdir).zip ;;\
esac
## Make the new source tree read-only. Distributions ought to work in
## this case. However, make the top-level directory writable so we
## can make our new subdirs.
chmod -R a-w $(distdir)
chmod u+w $(distdir)
mkdir $(distdir)/_build $(distdir)/_inst
## Undo the write access.
chmod a-w $(distdir)
## With GNU make, the following command will be executed even with "make -n",
## due to the presence of '$(MAKE)'. That is normally all well (and '$(MAKE)'
## is necessary for things like parallel distcheck), but here we don't want
## execution. To avoid MAKEFLAGS parsing hassles, use a witness file that a
## non-'-n' run would have just created.
test -d $(distdir)/_build || exit 0; \
## Compute the absolute path of '_inst'. Strip any leading DOS drive
## to allow DESTDIR installations. Otherwise "$(DESTDIR)$(prefix)" would
## expand to "c:/temp/am-dc-5668/c:/src/package/package-1.0/_inst".
dc_install_base=`$(am__cd) $(distdir)/_inst && pwd | sed -e 's,^[^:\\/]:[\\/],/,'` \
## We will attempt a DESTDIR install in $dc_destdir. We don't
## create this directory under $dc_install_base, because it would
## create very long directory names.
&& dc_destdir="$${TMPDIR-/tmp}/am-dc-$$$$/" \
?DISTCHECK-HOOK? && $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) distcheck-hook \
## Parallel BSD make may not start a new shell for each command in a recipe,
## so be sure to 'cd' back to the original directory after this.
&& am__cwd=`pwd` \
&& $(am__cd) $(distdir)/_build \
&& ../configure --srcdir=.. --prefix="$$dc_install_base" \
?GETTEXT? --with-included-gettext \
## Additional flags for configure. Keep this last in the configure
## invocation so the developer and user can override previous options,
## and let the user's flags take precedence over the developer's ones.
$(AM_DISTCHECK_CONFIGURE_FLAGS) \
$(DISTCHECK_CONFIGURE_FLAGS) \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) dvi \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) check \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) install \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) installcheck \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) uninstall \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) distuninstallcheck_dir="$$dc_install_base" \
distuninstallcheck \
## Make sure the package has proper DESTDIR support (we could not test this
## in the previous install/installcheck/uninstall test, because it's reasonable
## for installcheck to fail in a DESTDIR install).
## We make the '$dc_install_base' read-only because this is where files
## with missing DESTDIR support are likely to be installed.
&& chmod -R a-w "$$dc_install_base" \
## The logic here is quite convoluted because we must clean $dc_destdir
## whatever happens (it won't be erased by the next run of distcheck like
## $(distdir) is).
&& ({ \
## Build the directory, so we can cd into it even if "make install"
## didn't create it. Use mkdir, not $(MKDIR_P) because we want to
## fail if the directory already exists (PR/413).
(cd ../.. && umask 077 && mkdir "$$dc_destdir") \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) DESTDIR="$$dc_destdir" install \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) DESTDIR="$$dc_destdir" uninstall \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) DESTDIR="$$dc_destdir" \
distuninstallcheck_dir="$$dc_destdir" distuninstallcheck; \
} || { rm -rf "$$dc_destdir"; exit 1; }) \
&& rm -rf "$$dc_destdir" \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) dist \
## Make sure to remove the dists we created in the test build directory.
&& rm -rf $(DIST_ARCHIVES) \
&& $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) distcleancheck \
## Cater to parallel BSD make (see above).
&& cd "$$am__cwd" \
|| exit 1
$(am__post_remove_distdir)
@(echo "$(distdir) archives ready for distribution: "; \
list='$(DIST_ARCHIVES)'; for i in $$list; do echo $$i; done) | \
sed -e 1h -e 1s/./=/g -e 1p -e 1x -e '$$p' -e '$$x'
## Define distuninstallcheck_listfiles and distuninstallcheck separately
## from distcheck, so that they can be overridden by the user.
.PHONY: distuninstallcheck
distuninstallcheck_listfiles = find . -type f -print
## The 'dir' file (created by install-info) might still exist after
## uninstall, so we must be prepared to account for it. The following
## check is not 100% strict, but is definitely good enough, and even
## accounts for overridden $(infodir).
am__distuninstallcheck_listfiles = $(distuninstallcheck_listfiles) \
| sed 's|^\./|$(prefix)/|' | grep -v '$(infodir)/dir$$'
distuninstallcheck:
@test -n '$(distuninstallcheck_dir)' || { \
echo 'ERROR: trying to run $@ with an empty' \
'$$(distuninstallcheck_dir)' >&2; \
exit 1; \
}; \
$(am__cd) '$(distuninstallcheck_dir)' || { \
echo 'ERROR: cannot chdir into $(distuninstallcheck_dir)' >&2; \
exit 1; \
}; \
test `$(am__distuninstallcheck_listfiles) | wc -l` -eq 0 \
|| { echo "ERROR: files left after uninstall:" ; \
if test -n "$(DESTDIR)"; then \
echo " (check DESTDIR support)"; \
fi ; \
$(distuninstallcheck_listfiles) ; \
exit 1; } >&2
## Define distcleancheck_listfiles and distcleancheck separately
## from distcheck, so that they can be overridden by the user.
.PHONY: distcleancheck
distcleancheck_listfiles = find . -type f -print
distcleancheck: distclean
@if test '$(srcdir)' = . ; then \
echo "ERROR: distcleancheck can only run from a VPATH build" ; \
exit 1 ; \
fi
@test `$(distcleancheck_listfiles) | wc -l` -eq 0 \
|| { echo "ERROR: files left in build directory after distclean:" ; \
$(distcleancheck_listfiles) ; \
exit 1; } >&2
endif %?TOPDIR_P%
EliteHackz.ORG
Revonzy Mini Shell
root@revonzy.com