Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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We publish bzip2 compressed tarballs starting with the 1.8.x releases.
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Disabling the regex check seems to be required during cross-compiles,
where it's not possible to test the target's regex library at
compile time.
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The configure would fail when cross compiling due to the regex check
automatically failing for cross compilation. Since you can't run the
regex binary check, assuming the regex library on the target platform is
working would be the only way to get the build working, or adding a
force for people to control based on their build environment.
Signed-off-by: Michael Adam <obnox@samba.org>
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asciidoc is necessary as the version number is added during
configure into the asciidoc manpage sources. So simply bundling
a pre-generated manpage won't do.
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Michael
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This is so that if this variable name changes in the future,
Tinyproxy would still build without aborting on -Werror.
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Automake 1.11 (and I think 1.10b already) offers the AM_SILENT_RULES macro.
This adds switches --quiet, --enable-silent-rules and --disable-silent-rules
to configure.
--quiet makes the configure run itself quite.
--enable-silent-rules makes the compile process less verbose:
for a file that is compiled without errors or warnings, a simple
"CC main.o" is printed (e.g.). Compiler warnings and errors
are printed of course.
This makes it much easier (IMHO) to spot build problems.
--disable-silent-rules turns the silent rules off
I have set it up such that the default for tinyproxy is to build
in verbose mode (i.e. with silent rules disabled). This prints
the whole compile call command line for each source file compiled,
precisely as before.
You can also control verbose/non-verbose mode at "make" time, i.e.
after configure has run, by calling "make V=0 ..." or "make V=1 ..."
for running in silent and verbose mode, respectively.
If the version automake used to create configure is too old,
the result is unaltered, compared to the result before this change.
Wow - this is a long commit message for a 1-liner.
But since I discussed this with Mukund earlier, and he did
not seem to be too fond if this, I felt the need to justify
this change... :-)
Michael
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Michael
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C89 compilers use void return type for signal handler functions.
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The compiler inlines static functions as necessary anyway.
No more inline keywords exist in Tinyproxy source code. We want to
avoid using this keyword anyway.
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These can be specified manually by a developer when necessary. Such flags
do not belong in a generic distribution.
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Also, enable all warnings by default, whether it is a debug
build or not.
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If we require information about the runtime environment, it can be
found using the uname program. And binutils can tell about what the
tinyproxy binary contains. Tinyproxy doesn't have to report this
information.
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This feature will only confuse us during support, if users come to
us with a Tinyproxy build which has a differently named default config
file. This feature is not that useful anyway.
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These were probably never supported, and we shouldn't claim that
we support SOCKS when we don't.
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Michael
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Michael
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The following errors occurred when running ./autogen.sh :
$ ./autogen.sh
+ aclocal
configure.ac:18: warning: AC_COMPILE_IFELSE was called before AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS
../../lib/autoconf/specific.m4:386: AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS is expanded from...
../../lib/autoconf/specific.m4:332: AC_GNU_SOURCE is expanded from...
configure.ac:18: the top level
configure.ac:18: warning: AC_RUN_IFELSE was called before AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS
configure.ac:19: warning: AC_COMPILE_IFELSE was called before AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS
../../lib/autoconf/specific.m4:459: AC_MINIX is expanded from...
configure.ac:19: the top level
configure.ac:19: warning: AC_RUN_IFELSE was called before AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS
and so on for autoheader and friends.
According to the autotools docs, the proper way to handle this
is to just call AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS.
Michael
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