Autoconf version 2 is mostly backward compatible with version 1.
However, it introduces better ways to do some things, and doesn't
support some of the ugly things in version 1. So, depending on how
sophisticated your `configure.in' files are, you might have to do
some manual work in order to upgrade to version 2. This chapter points
out some problems to watch for when upgrading. Also, perhaps your
configure
scripts could benefit from some of the new features in
version 2; the changes are summarized in the file `NEWS' in the
Autoconf distribution.
First, make sure you have GNU m4
version 1.1 or higher installed,
preferably 1.3 or higher. Versions before 1.1 have bugs that prevent
them from working with Autoconf version 2. Versions 1.3 and later are
much faster than earlier versions, because as of version 1.3, GNU
m4
has a more efficient implementation of diversions and can
freeze its internal state in a file that it can read back quickly.
If you have an `aclocal.m4' installed with Autoconf (as opposed to
in a particular package's source directory), you must rename it to
`acsite.m4'. See section Using autoconf
to Create configure
.
If you distribute `install.sh' with your package, rename it to
`install-sh' so make
builtin rules won't inadvertently
create a file called `install' from it. AC_PROG_INSTALL
looks for the script under both names, but it is best to use the new name.
If you were using `config.h.top' or `config.h.bot', you still
can, but you will have less clutter if you merge them into
`acconfig.h'. See section Using autoheader
to Create `config.h.in'.
Add `@CFLAGS@', `@CPPFLAGS@', and `@LDFLAGS@' in
your `Makefile.in' files, so they can take advantage of the values
of those variables in the environment when configure
is run.
Doing this isn't necessary, but it's a convenience for users.
Also add `@configure_input@' in a comment to each non-`Makefile'
input file for
AC_OUTPUT
, so that the output files will contain a comment saying
they were produced by configure
. Automatically selecting the
right comment syntax for all the kinds of files that people call
AC_OUTPUT
on became too much work.
Add `config.log' and `config.cache' to the list of files you
remove in distclean
targets.
If you have the following in `Makefile.in':
prefix = /usr/local exec_prefix = ${prefix}
you must change it to:
prefix = @prefix@ exec_prefix = @exec_prefix@
The old behavior of replacing those variables without `@' characters around them has been removed.
Many of the macros were renamed in Autoconf version 2. You can still
use the old names, but the new ones are clearer, and it's easier to find
the documentation for them. See section Old Macro Names, for a table showing
the new names for the old macros. Use the autoupdate
program to
convert your `configure.in' to using the new macro names.
See section Using autoupdate
to Modernize configure
.
Some macros have been superseded by similar ones that do the job better,
but are not call-compatible. If you get warnings about calling obsolete
macros while running autoconf
, you may safely ignore them, but
your configure
script will generally work better if you follow
the advice it prints about what to replace the obsolete macros with. In
particular, the mechanism for reporting the results of tests has
changed. If you were using echo
or AC_VERBOSE
(perhaps
via AC_COMPILE_CHECK
), your configure
script's output will
look better if you switch to AC_MSG_CHECKING
and
AC_MSG_RESULT
. See section Printing Messages. Those macros work best
in conjunction with cache variables. See section Caching Results.
autoupdate
to Modernize configure
The autoupdate
program updates a `configure.in' file that
calls Autoconf macros by their old names to use the current macro names.
In version 2 of Autoconf, most of the macros were renamed to use a more
uniform and descriptive naming scheme. See section Macro Names, for a
description of the new scheme. Although the old names still work
(see section Old Macro Names, for a list of the old macro names and the
corresponding new names), you can make your `configure.in' files
more readable and make it easier to use the current Autoconf
documentation if you update them to use the new macro names.
If given no arguments, autoupdate
updates `configure.in',
backing up the original version with the suffix `~' (or the value
of the environment variable SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX
, if that is
set). If you give autoupdate
an argument, it reads that file
instead of `configure.in' and writes the updated file to the
standard output.
autoupdate
accepts the following options:
--help
-h
--macrodir=dir
-m dir
AC_MACRODIR
environment variable to a directory; this option overrides the
environment variable.
--version
autoupdate
and exit.
If you were checking the results of previous tests by examining the
shell variable DEFS
, you need to switch to checking the values of
the cache variables for those tests. DEFS
no longer exists while
configure
is running; it is only created when generating output
files. This difference from version 1 is because properly quoting the
contents of that variable turned out to be too cumbersome and
inefficient to do every time AC_DEFINE
is called. See section Cache Variable Names.
For example, here is a `configure.in' fragment written for Autoconf version 1:
AC_HAVE_FUNCS(syslog) case "$DEFS" in *-DHAVE_SYSLOG*) ;; *) # syslog is not in the default libraries. See if it's in some other. saved_LIBS="$LIBS" for lib in bsd socket inet; do AC_CHECKING(for syslog in -l$lib) LIBS="$saved_LIBS -l$lib" AC_HAVE_FUNCS(syslog) case "$DEFS" in *-DHAVE_SYSLOG*) break ;; *) ;; esac LIBS="$saved_LIBS" done ;; esac
Here is a way to write it for version 2:
AC_CHECK_FUNCS(syslog) if test $ac_cv_func_syslog = no; then # syslog is not in the default libraries. See if it's in some other. for lib in bsd socket inet; do AC_CHECK_LIB($lib, syslog, [AC_DEFINE(HAVE_SYSLOG) LIBS="$LIBS $lib"; break]) done fi
If you were working around bugs in AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED
by adding
backslashes before quotes, you need to remove them. It now works
predictably, and does not treat quotes (except backquotes) specially.
See section Setting Output Variables.
All of the boolean shell variables set by Autoconf macros now use `yes' for the true value. Most of them use `no' for false, though for backward compatibility some use the empty string instead. If you were relying on a shell variable being set to something like 1 or `t' for true, you need to change your tests.
When defining your own macros, you should now use AC_DEFUN
instead of define
. AC_DEFUN
automatically calls
AC_PROVIDE
and ensures that macros called via AC_REQUIRE
do not interrupt other macros, to prevent nested `checking...'
messages on the screen. There's no actual harm in continuing to use the
older way, but it's less convenient and attractive. See section Macro Definitions.
You probably looked at the macros that came with Autoconf as a guide for how to do things. It would be a good idea to take a look at the new versions of them, as the style is somewhat improved and they take advantage of some new features.
If you were doing tricky things with undocumented Autoconf internals (macros, variables, diversions), check whether you need to change anything to account for changes that have been made. Perhaps you can even use an officially supported technique in version 2 instead of kludging. Or perhaps not.
To speed up your locally written feature tests, add caching to them. See whether any of your tests are of general enough usefulness to encapsulate into macros that you can share.
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