With ./configure, you'll have an alternate method to
prepare the source distribution for building. This support is
experimental, and I'd like to receive feedback and patches for your
operating system. If a build with autoconf doesn't work, you can
always revert to the original Makefile which is saved by configure to
Makefile.dist. make mrproper will undo
everything that has been modified by ./configure.
Please note that the autoconf support is not James', but my
responsibility: bother me with flames and patches, and I'll try tomake
sure that the next release gets fixed where necessary. James cannot do
more than forward everything to me, so please save his precious
time.
Check the invocation of ld in Makefile.comm for the exact semantics
of LDFLAGS and LIBS.
Tested platforms
SuSE Linux 5.3 (gcc 2.7.2.1, libc 5.5.46)
Solaris 2.6 (gcc 2.8.1)
Shared library support
By default, ./configure attempts to build shared
libraries and link against them. This is done via the
libtool utility, a utility that knows how to build shared
libraries on a number of platforms.
By default, only shared libraries are built. If you have
difficulties building shared libraries, or you want to build static
versions, you can use the
--{enable,disable}{shared,static} options to configure
libtool to your likings.
According to the libtool 1.2 docs, shared libraries work on:
All ELF targets that use both the GNU C compiler (gcc) and GNU ld
One more note from the libtool documentation: the HP/UX sed seems
to be badly broken, install GNU sed before attempting to build -
libtool depends on a working sed.