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authorWerner Koch <[email protected]>2015-01-19 16:25:57 +0000
committerWerner Koch <[email protected]>2015-01-19 18:00:44 +0000
commit397987c33233bd672b29e3c607577c8d93ed48ed (patch)
tree1e11cf8665496ab471ecdc18a683a111724a7b29
parentModernize to automake 1.14. (diff)
downloadgnupg-397987c33233bd672b29e3c607577c8d93ed48ed.tar.gz
gnupg-397987c33233bd672b29e3c607577c8d93ed48ed.zip
Update automake helper files.
--
-rw-r--r--INSTALL261
-rwxr-xr-xscripts/compile99
-rwxr-xr-xscripts/config.guess164
-rwxr-xr-xscripts/config.sub26
-rwxr-xr-xscripts/depcomp471
-rwxr-xr-xscripts/install-sh552
-rwxr-xr-xscripts/mdate-sh113
-rwxr-xr-xscripts/missing450
-rwxr-xr-xscripts/mkinstalldirs36
-rw-r--r--scripts/texinfo.tex521
10 files changed, 1565 insertions, 1128 deletions
diff --git a/INSTALL b/INSTALL
index 095b1eb40..209984075 100644
--- a/INSTALL
+++ b/INSTALL
@@ -1,16 +1,25 @@
Installation Instructions
*************************
-Copyright (C) 1994, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004 Free
-Software Foundation, Inc.
+Copyright (C) 1994-1996, 1999-2002, 2004-2013 Free Software Foundation,
+Inc.
-This file is free documentation; the Free Software Foundation gives
-unlimited permission to copy, distribute and modify it.
+ Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification,
+are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright
+notice and this notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is,
+without warranty of any kind.
Basic Installation
==================
-These are generic installation instructions.
+ Briefly, the shell command `./configure && make && make install'
+should configure, build, and install this package. The following
+more-detailed instructions are generic; see the `README' file for
+instructions specific to this package. Some packages provide this
+`INSTALL' file but do not implement all of the features documented
+below. The lack of an optional feature in a given package is not
+necessarily a bug. More recommendations for GNU packages can be found
+in *note Makefile Conventions: (standards)Makefile Conventions.
The `configure' shell script attempts to guess correct values for
various system-dependent variables used during compilation. It uses
@@ -23,9 +32,9 @@ debugging `configure').
It can also use an optional file (typically called `config.cache'
and enabled with `--cache-file=config.cache' or simply `-C') that saves
-the results of its tests to speed up reconfiguring. (Caching is
+the results of its tests to speed up reconfiguring. Caching is
disabled by default to prevent problems with accidental use of stale
-cache files.)
+cache files.
If you need to do unusual things to compile the package, please try
to figure out how `configure' could check whether to do them, and mail
@@ -35,30 +44,37 @@ some point `config.cache' contains results you don't want to keep, you
may remove or edit it.
The file `configure.ac' (or `configure.in') is used to create
-`configure' by a program called `autoconf'. You only need
-`configure.ac' if you want to change it or regenerate `configure' using
-a newer version of `autoconf'.
+`configure' by a program called `autoconf'. You need `configure.ac' if
+you want to change it or regenerate `configure' using a newer version
+of `autoconf'.
-The simplest way to compile this package is:
+ The simplest way to compile this package is:
1. `cd' to the directory containing the package's source code and type
- `./configure' to configure the package for your system. If you're
- using `csh' on an old version of System V, you might need to type
- `sh ./configure' instead to prevent `csh' from trying to execute
- `configure' itself.
+ `./configure' to configure the package for your system.
- Running `configure' takes awhile. While running, it prints some
- messages telling which features it is checking for.
+ Running `configure' might take a while. While running, it prints
+ some messages telling which features it is checking for.
2. Type `make' to compile the package.
3. Optionally, type `make check' to run any self-tests that come with
- the package.
+ the package, generally using the just-built uninstalled binaries.
4. Type `make install' to install the programs and any data files and
- documentation.
-
- 5. You can remove the program binaries and object files from the
+ documentation. When installing into a prefix owned by root, it is
+ recommended that the package be configured and built as a regular
+ user, and only the `make install' phase executed with root
+ privileges.
+
+ 5. Optionally, type `make installcheck' to repeat any self-tests, but
+ this time using the binaries in their final installed location.
+ This target does not install anything. Running this target as a
+ regular user, particularly if the prior `make install' required
+ root privileges, verifies that the installation completed
+ correctly.
+
+ 6. You can remove the program binaries and object files from the
source code directory by typing `make clean'. To also remove the
files that `configure' created (so you can compile the package for
a different kind of computer), type `make distclean'. There is
@@ -67,65 +83,120 @@ The simplest way to compile this package is:
all sorts of other programs in order to regenerate files that came
with the distribution.
+ 7. Often, you can also type `make uninstall' to remove the installed
+ files again. In practice, not all packages have tested that
+ uninstallation works correctly, even though it is required by the
+ GNU Coding Standards.
+
+ 8. Some packages, particularly those that use Automake, provide `make
+ distcheck', which can by used by developers to test that all other
+ targets like `make install' and `make uninstall' work correctly.
+ This target is generally not run by end users.
+
Compilers and Options
=====================
-Some systems require unusual options for compilation or linking that the
-`configure' script does not know about. Run `./configure --help' for
-details on some of the pertinent environment variables.
+ Some systems require unusual options for compilation or linking that
+the `configure' script does not know about. Run `./configure --help'
+for details on some of the pertinent environment variables.
You can give `configure' initial values for configuration parameters
by setting variables in the command line or in the environment. Here
is an example:
- ./configure CC=c89 CFLAGS=-O2 LIBS=-lposix
+ ./configure CC=c99 CFLAGS=-g LIBS=-lposix
*Note Defining Variables::, for more details.
Compiling For Multiple Architectures
====================================
-You can compile the package for more than one kind of computer at the
+ You can compile the package for more than one kind of computer at the
same time, by placing the object files for each architecture in their
-own directory. To do this, you must use a version of `make' that
-supports the `VPATH' variable, such as GNU `make'. `cd' to the
+own directory. To do this, you can use GNU `make'. `cd' to the
directory where you want the object files and executables to go and run
the `configure' script. `configure' automatically checks for the
-source code in the directory that `configure' is in and in `..'.
+source code in the directory that `configure' is in and in `..'. This
+is known as a "VPATH" build.
+
+ With a non-GNU `make', it is safer to compile the package for one
+architecture at a time in the source code directory. After you have
+installed the package for one architecture, use `make distclean' before
+reconfiguring for another architecture.
- If you have to use a `make' that does not support the `VPATH'
-variable, you have to compile the package for one architecture at a
-time in the source code directory. After you have installed the
-package for one architecture, use `make distclean' before reconfiguring
-for another architecture.
+ On MacOS X 10.5 and later systems, you can create libraries and
+executables that work on multiple system types--known as "fat" or
+"universal" binaries--by specifying multiple `-arch' options to the
+compiler but only a single `-arch' option to the preprocessor. Like
+this:
+
+ ./configure CC="gcc -arch i386 -arch x86_64 -arch ppc -arch ppc64" \
+ CXX="g++ -arch i386 -arch x86_64 -arch ppc -arch ppc64" \
+ CPP="gcc -E" CXXCPP="g++ -E"
+
+ This is not guaranteed to produce working output in all cases, you
+may have to build one architecture at a time and combine the results
+using the `lipo' tool if you have problems.
Installation Names
==================
-By default, `make install' will install the package's files in
-`/usr/local/bin', `/usr/local/man', etc. You can specify an
-installation prefix other than `/usr/local' by giving `configure' the
-option `--prefix=PREFIX'.
+ By default, `make install' installs the package's commands under
+`/usr/local/bin', include files under `/usr/local/include', etc. You
+can specify an installation prefix other than `/usr/local' by giving
+`configure' the option `--prefix=PREFIX', where PREFIX must be an
+absolute file name.
You can specify separate installation prefixes for
architecture-specific files and architecture-independent files. If you
-give `configure' the option `--exec-prefix=PREFIX', the package will
-use PREFIX as the prefix for installing programs and libraries.
-Documentation and other data files will still use the regular prefix.
+pass the option `--exec-prefix=PREFIX' to `configure', the package uses
+PREFIX as the prefix for installing programs and libraries.
+Documentation and other data files still use the regular prefix.
In addition, if you use an unusual directory layout you can give
options like `--bindir=DIR' to specify different values for particular
kinds of files. Run `configure --help' for a list of the directories
-you can set and what kinds of files go in them.
+you can set and what kinds of files go in them. In general, the
+default for these options is expressed in terms of `${prefix}', so that
+specifying just `--prefix' will affect all of the other directory
+specifications that were not explicitly provided.
+
+ The most portable way to affect installation locations is to pass the
+correct locations to `configure'; however, many packages provide one or
+both of the following shortcuts of passing variable assignments to the
+`make install' command line to change installation locations without
+having to reconfigure or recompile.
+
+ The first method involves providing an override variable for each
+affected directory. For example, `make install
+prefix=/alternate/directory' will choose an alternate location for all
+directory configuration variables that were expressed in terms of
+`${prefix}'. Any directories that were specified during `configure',
+but not in terms of `${prefix}', must each be overridden at install
+time for the entire installation to be relocated. The approach of
+makefile variable overrides for each directory variable is required by
+the GNU Coding Standards, and ideally causes no recompilation.
+However, some platforms have known limitations with the semantics of
+shared libraries that end up requiring recompilation when using this
+method, particularly noticeable in packages that use GNU Libtool.
+
+ The second method involves providing the `DESTDIR' variable. For
+example, `make install DESTDIR=/alternate/directory' will prepend
+`/alternate/directory' before all installation names. The approach of
+`DESTDIR' overrides is not required by the GNU Coding Standards, and
+does not work on platforms that have drive letters. On the other hand,
+it does better at avoiding recompilation issues, and works well even
+when some directory options were not specified in terms of `${prefix}'
+at `configure' time.
+
+Optional Features
+=================
If the package supports it, you can cause programs to be installed
with an extra prefix or suffix on their names by giving `configure' the
option `--program-prefix=PREFIX' or `--program-suffix=SUFFIX'.
-Optional Features
-=================
-
-Some packages pay attention to `--enable-FEATURE' options to
+ Some packages pay attention to `--enable-FEATURE' options to
`configure', where FEATURE indicates an optional part of the package.
They may also pay attention to `--with-PACKAGE' options, where PACKAGE
is something like `gnu-as' or `x' (for the X Window System). The
@@ -137,14 +208,58 @@ find the X include and library files automatically, but if it doesn't,
you can use the `configure' options `--x-includes=DIR' and
`--x-libraries=DIR' to specify their locations.
+ Some packages offer the ability to configure how verbose the
+execution of `make' will be. For these packages, running `./configure
+--enable-silent-rules' sets the default to minimal output, which can be
+overridden with `make V=1'; while running `./configure
+--disable-silent-rules' sets the default to verbose, which can be
+overridden with `make V=0'.
+
+Particular systems
+==================
+
+ On HP-UX, the default C compiler is not ANSI C compatible. If GNU
+CC is not installed, it is recommended to use the following options in
+order to use an ANSI C compiler:
+
+ ./configure CC="cc -Ae -D_XOPEN_SOURCE=500"
+
+and if that doesn't work, install pre-built binaries of GCC for HP-UX.
+
+ HP-UX `make' updates targets which have the same time stamps as
+their prerequisites, which makes it generally unusable when shipped
+generated files such as `configure' are involved. Use GNU `make'
+instead.
+
+ On OSF/1 a.k.a. Tru64, some versions of the default C compiler cannot
+parse its `<wchar.h>' header file. The option `-nodtk' can be used as
+a workaround. If GNU CC is not installed, it is therefore recommended
+to try
+
+ ./configure CC="cc"
+
+and if that doesn't work, try
+
+ ./configure CC="cc -nodtk"
+
+ On Solaris, don't put `/usr/ucb' early in your `PATH'. This
+directory contains several dysfunctional programs; working variants of
+these programs are available in `/usr/bin'. So, if you need `/usr/ucb'
+in your `PATH', put it _after_ `/usr/bin'.
+
+ On Haiku, software installed for all users goes in `/boot/common',
+not `/usr/local'. It is recommended to use the following options:
+
+ ./configure --prefix=/boot/common
+
Specifying the System Type
==========================
-There may be some features `configure' cannot figure out automatically,
-but needs to determine by the type of machine the package will run on.
-Usually, assuming the package is built to be run on the _same_
-architectures, `configure' can figure that out, but if it prints a
-message saying it cannot guess the machine type, give it the
+ There may be some features `configure' cannot figure out
+automatically, but needs to determine by the type of machine the package
+will run on. Usually, assuming the package is built to be run on the
+_same_ architectures, `configure' can figure that out, but if it prints
+a message saying it cannot guess the machine type, give it the
`--build=TYPE' option. TYPE can either be a short name for the system
type, such as `sun4', or a canonical name which has the form:
@@ -152,14 +267,15 @@ type, such as `sun4', or a canonical name which has the form:
where SYSTEM can have one of these forms:
- OS KERNEL-OS
+ OS
+ KERNEL-OS
See the file `config.sub' for the possible values of each field. If
`config.sub' isn't included in this package, then this package doesn't
need to know the machine type.
If you are _building_ compiler tools for cross-compiling, you should
-use the `--target=TYPE' option to select the type of system they will
+use the option `--target=TYPE' to select the type of system they will
produce code for.
If you want to _use_ a cross compiler, that generates code for a
@@ -170,9 +286,9 @@ eventually be run) with `--host=TYPE'.
Sharing Defaults
================
-If you want to set default values for `configure' scripts to share, you
-can create a site shell script called `config.site' that gives default
-values for variables like `CC', `cache_file', and `prefix'.
+ If you want to set default values for `configure' scripts to share,
+you can create a site shell script called `config.site' that gives
+default values for variables like `CC', `cache_file', and `prefix'.
`configure' looks for `PREFIX/share/config.site' if it exists, then
`PREFIX/etc/config.site' if it exists. Or, you can set the
`CONFIG_SITE' environment variable to the location of the site script.
@@ -181,7 +297,7 @@ A warning: not all `configure' scripts look for a site script.
Defining Variables
==================
-Variables not defined in a site shell script can be set in the
+ Variables not defined in a site shell script can be set in the
environment passed to `configure'. However, some packages may run
configure again during the build, and the customized values of these
variables may be lost. In order to avoid this problem, you should set
@@ -189,17 +305,31 @@ them in the `configure' command line, using `VAR=value'. For example:
./configure CC=/usr/local2/bin/gcc
-will cause the specified gcc to be used as the C compiler (unless it is
+causes the specified `gcc' to be used as the C compiler (unless it is
overridden in the site shell script).
+Unfortunately, this technique does not work for `CONFIG_SHELL' due to
+an Autoconf limitation. Until the limitation is lifted, you can use
+this workaround:
+
+ CONFIG_SHELL=/bin/bash ./configure CONFIG_SHELL=/bin/bash
+
`configure' Invocation
======================
-`configure' recognizes the following options to control how it operates.
+ `configure' recognizes the following options to control how it
+operates.
`--help'
`-h'
- Print a summary of the options to `configure', and exit.
+ Print a summary of all of the options to `configure', and exit.
+
+`--help=short'
+`--help=recursive'
+ Print a summary of the options unique to this package's
+ `configure', and exit. The `short' variant lists options used
+ only in the top level, while the `recursive' variant lists options
+ also present in any nested packages.
`--version'
`-V'
@@ -226,6 +356,15 @@ overridden in the site shell script).
Look for the package's source code in directory DIR. Usually
`configure' can determine that directory automatically.
+`--prefix=DIR'
+ Use DIR as the installation prefix. *note Installation Names::
+ for more details, including other options available for fine-tuning
+ the installation locations.
+
+`--no-create'
+`-n'
+ Run the configure checks, but stop before creating any output
+ files.
+
`configure' also accepts some other, not widely useful, options. Run
`configure --help' for more details.
-
diff --git a/scripts/compile b/scripts/compile
index b1f474915..531136b06 100755
--- a/scripts/compile
+++ b/scripts/compile
@@ -1,10 +1,9 @@
#! /bin/sh
# Wrapper for compilers which do not understand '-c -o'.
-scriptversion=2012-01-04.17; # UTC
+scriptversion=2012-10-14.11; # UTC
-# Copyright (C) 1999, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2009, 2010, 2012 Free
-# Software Foundation, Inc.
+# Copyright (C) 1999-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# Written by Tom Tromey <[email protected]>.
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
@@ -79,6 +78,53 @@ func_file_conv ()
esac
}
+# func_cl_dashL linkdir
+# Make cl look for libraries in LINKDIR
+func_cl_dashL ()
+{
+ func_file_conv "$1"
+ if test -z "$lib_path"; then
+ lib_path=$file
+ else
+ lib_path="$lib_path;$file"
+ fi
+ linker_opts="$linker_opts -LIBPATH:$file"
+}
+
+# func_cl_dashl library
+# Do a library search-path lookup for cl
+func_cl_dashl ()
+{
+ lib=$1
+ found=no
+ save_IFS=$IFS
+ IFS=';'
+ for dir in $lib_path $LIB
+ do
+ IFS=$save_IFS
+ if $shared && test -f "$dir/$lib.dll.lib"; then
+ found=yes
+ lib=$dir/$lib.dll.lib
+ break
+ fi
+ if test -f "$dir/$lib.lib"; then
+ found=yes
+ lib=$dir/$lib.lib
+ break
+ fi
+ if test -f "$dir/lib$lib.a"; then
+ found=yes
+ lib=$dir/lib$lib.a
+ break
+ fi
+ done
+ IFS=$save_IFS
+
+ if test "$found" != yes; then
+ lib=$lib.lib
+ fi
+}
+
# func_cl_wrapper cl arg...
# Adjust compile command to suit cl
func_cl_wrapper ()
@@ -109,43 +155,34 @@ func_cl_wrapper ()
;;
esac
;;
+ -I)
+ eat=1
+ func_file_conv "$2" mingw
+ set x "$@" -I"$file"
+ shift
+ ;;
-I*)
func_file_conv "${1#-I}" mingw
set x "$@" -I"$file"
shift
;;
+ -l)
+ eat=1
+ func_cl_dashl "$2"
+ set x "$@" "$lib"
+ shift
+ ;;
-l*)
- lib=${1#-l}
- found=no
- save_IFS=$IFS
- IFS=';'
- for dir in $lib_path $LIB
- do
- IFS=$save_IFS
- if $shared && test -f "$dir/$lib.dll.lib"; then
- found=yes
- set x "$@" "$dir/$lib.dll.lib"
- break
- fi
- if test -f "$dir/$lib.lib"; then
- found=yes
- set x "$@" "$dir/$lib.lib"
- break
- fi
- done
- IFS=$save_IFS
-
- test "$found" != yes && set x "$@" "$lib.lib"
+ func_cl_dashl "${1#-l}"
+ set x "$@" "$lib"
shift
;;
+ -L)
+ eat=1
+ func_cl_dashL "$2"
+ ;;
-L*)
- func_file_conv "${1#-L}"
- if test -z "$lib_path"; then
- lib_path=$file
- else
- lib_path="$lib_path;$file"
- fi
- linker_opts="$linker_opts -LIBPATH:$file"
+ func_cl_dashL "${1#-L}"
;;
-static)
shared=false
diff --git a/scripts/config.guess b/scripts/config.guess
index 9afd67620..1f5c50c0d 100755
--- a/scripts/config.guess
+++ b/scripts/config.guess
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
#! /bin/sh
# Attempt to guess a canonical system name.
-# Copyright 1992-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+# Copyright 1992-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-timestamp='2013-11-29'
+timestamp='2014-03-23'
# This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
# under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ version="\
GNU config.guess ($timestamp)
Originally written by Per Bothner.
-Copyright 1992-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+Copyright 1992-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE."
@@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ Linux|GNU|GNU/*)
LIBC=gnu
#endif
EOF
- eval `$CC_FOR_BUILD -E $dummy.c 2>/dev/null | grep '^LIBC'`
+ eval `$CC_FOR_BUILD -E $dummy.c 2>/dev/null | grep '^LIBC' | sed 's, ,,g'`
;;
esac
@@ -826,7 +826,7 @@ EOF
*:MINGW*:*)
echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-mingw32
exit ;;
- i*:MSYS*:*)
+ *:MSYS*:*)
echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-pc-msys
exit ;;
i*:windows32*:*)
@@ -969,10 +969,10 @@ EOF
eval `$CC_FOR_BUILD -E $dummy.c 2>/dev/null | grep '^CPU'`
test x"${CPU}" != x && { echo "${CPU}-unknown-linux-${LIBC}"; exit; }
;;
- or1k:Linux:*:*)
- echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-${LIBC}
+ openrisc*:Linux:*:*)
+ echo or1k-unknown-linux-${LIBC}
exit ;;
- or32:Linux:*:*)
+ or32:Linux:*:* | or1k*:Linux:*:*)
echo ${UNAME_MACHINE}-unknown-linux-${LIBC}
exit ;;
padre:Linux:*:*)
@@ -1371,154 +1371,6 @@ EOF
exit ;;
esac
-eval $set_cc_for_build
-cat >$dummy.c <<EOF
-#ifdef _SEQUENT_
-# include <sys/types.h>
-# include <sys/utsname.h>
-#endif
-main ()
-{
-#if defined (sony)
-#if defined (MIPSEB)
- /* BFD wants "bsd" instead of "newsos". Perhaps BFD should be changed,
- I don't know.... */
- printf ("mips-sony-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-#else
-#include <sys/param.h>
- printf ("m68k-sony-newsos%s\n",
-#ifdef NEWSOS4
- "4"
-#else
- ""
-#endif
- ); exit (0);
-#endif
-#endif
-
-#if defined (__arm) && defined (__acorn) && defined (__unix)
- printf ("arm-acorn-riscix\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-
-#if defined (hp300) && !defined (hpux)
- printf ("m68k-hp-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-
-#if defined (NeXT)
-#if !defined (__ARCHITECTURE__)
-#define __ARCHITECTURE__ "m68k"
-#endif
- int version;
- version=`(hostinfo | sed -n 's/.*NeXT Mach \([0-9]*\).*/\1/p') 2>/dev/null`;
- if (version < 4)
- printf ("%s-next-nextstep%d\n", __ARCHITECTURE__, version);
- else
- printf ("%s-next-openstep%d\n", __ARCHITECTURE__, version);
- exit (0);
-#endif
-
-#if defined (MULTIMAX) || defined (n16)
-#if defined (UMAXV)
- printf ("ns32k-encore-sysv\n"); exit (0);
-#else
-#if defined (CMU)
- printf ("ns32k-encore-mach\n"); exit (0);
-#else
- printf ("ns32k-encore-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-#endif
-#endif
-
-#if defined (__386BSD__)
- printf ("i386-pc-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-
-#if defined (sequent)
-#if defined (i386)
- printf ("i386-sequent-dynix\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-#if defined (ns32000)
- printf ("ns32k-sequent-dynix\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-#endif
-
-#if defined (_SEQUENT_)
- struct utsname un;
-
- uname(&un);
-
- if (strncmp(un.version, "V2", 2) == 0) {
- printf ("i386-sequent-ptx2\n"); exit (0);
- }
- if (strncmp(un.version, "V1", 2) == 0) { /* XXX is V1 correct? */
- printf ("i386-sequent-ptx1\n"); exit (0);
- }
- printf ("i386-sequent-ptx\n"); exit (0);
-
-#endif
-
-#if defined (vax)
-# if !defined (ultrix)
-# include <sys/param.h>
-# if defined (BSD)
-# if BSD == 43
- printf ("vax-dec-bsd4.3\n"); exit (0);
-# else
-# if BSD == 199006
- printf ("vax-dec-bsd4.3reno\n"); exit (0);
-# else
- printf ("vax-dec-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-# endif
-# endif
-# else
- printf ("vax-dec-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-# endif
-# else
- printf ("vax-dec-ultrix\n"); exit (0);
-# endif
-#endif
-
-#if defined (alliant) && defined (i860)
- printf ("i860-alliant-bsd\n"); exit (0);
-#endif
-
- exit (1);
-}
-EOF
-
-$CC_FOR_BUILD -o $dummy $dummy.c 2>/dev/null && SYSTEM_NAME=`$dummy` &&
- { echo "$SYSTEM_NAME"; exit; }
-
-# Apollos put the system type in the environment.
-
-test -d /usr/apollo && { echo ${ISP}-apollo-${SYSTYPE}; exit; }
-
-# Convex versions that predate uname can use getsysinfo(1)
-
-if [ -x /usr/convex/getsysinfo ]
-then
- case `getsysinfo -f cpu_type` in
- c1*)
- echo c1-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- c2*)
- if getsysinfo -f scalar_acc
- then echo c32-convex-bsd
- else echo c2-convex-bsd
- fi
- exit ;;
- c34*)
- echo c34-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- c38*)
- echo c38-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- c4*)
- echo c4-convex-bsd
- exit ;;
- esac
-fi
-
cat >&2 <<EOF
$0: unable to guess system type
diff --git a/scripts/config.sub b/scripts/config.sub
index 61cb4bc22..bba4efb80 100755
--- a/scripts/config.sub
+++ b/scripts/config.sub
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
#! /bin/sh
# Configuration validation subroutine script.
-# Copyright 1992-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+# Copyright 1992-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-timestamp='2013-10-01'
+timestamp='2014-09-11'
# This file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
# under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
@@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ Report bugs and patches to <[email protected]>."
version="\
GNU config.sub ($timestamp)
-Copyright 1992-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+Copyright 1992-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE."
@@ -283,8 +283,10 @@ case $basic_machine in
| mips64vr5900 | mips64vr5900el \
| mipsisa32 | mipsisa32el \
| mipsisa32r2 | mipsisa32r2el \
+ | mipsisa32r6 | mipsisa32r6el \
| mipsisa64 | mipsisa64el \
| mipsisa64r2 | mipsisa64r2el \
+ | mipsisa64r6 | mipsisa64r6el \
| mipsisa64sb1 | mipsisa64sb1el \
| mipsisa64sr71k | mipsisa64sr71kel \
| mipsr5900 | mipsr5900el \
@@ -296,11 +298,11 @@ case $basic_machine in
| nds32 | nds32le | nds32be \
| nios | nios2 | nios2eb | nios2el \
| ns16k | ns32k \
- | open8 \
- | or1k | or32 \
+ | open8 | or1k | or1knd | or32 \
| pdp10 | pdp11 | pj | pjl \
| powerpc | powerpc64 | powerpc64le | powerpcle \
| pyramid \
+ | riscv32 | riscv64 \
| rl78 | rx \
| score \
| sh | sh[1234] | sh[24]a | sh[24]aeb | sh[23]e | sh[34]eb | sheb | shbe | shle | sh[1234]le | sh3ele \
@@ -402,8 +404,10 @@ case $basic_machine in
| mips64vr5900-* | mips64vr5900el-* \
| mipsisa32-* | mipsisa32el-* \
| mipsisa32r2-* | mipsisa32r2el-* \
+ | mipsisa32r6-* | mipsisa32r6el-* \
| mipsisa64-* | mipsisa64el-* \
| mipsisa64r2-* | mipsisa64r2el-* \
+ | mipsisa64r6-* | mipsisa64r6el-* \
| mipsisa64sb1-* | mipsisa64sb1el-* \
| mipsisa64sr71k-* | mipsisa64sr71kel-* \
| mipsr5900-* | mipsr5900el-* \
@@ -415,6 +419,7 @@ case $basic_machine in
| nios-* | nios2-* | nios2eb-* | nios2el-* \
| none-* | np1-* | ns16k-* | ns32k-* \
| open8-* \
+ | or1k*-* \
| orion-* \
| pdp10-* | pdp11-* | pj-* | pjl-* | pn-* | power-* \
| powerpc-* | powerpc64-* | powerpc64le-* | powerpcle-* \
@@ -824,6 +829,10 @@ case $basic_machine in
basic_machine=powerpc-unknown
os=-morphos
;;
+ moxiebox)
+ basic_machine=moxie-unknown
+ os=-moxiebox
+ ;;
msdos)
basic_machine=i386-pc
os=-msdos
@@ -1369,14 +1378,14 @@ case $os in
| -cygwin* | -msys* | -pe* | -psos* | -moss* | -proelf* | -rtems* \
| -mingw32* | -mingw64* | -linux-gnu* | -linux-android* \
| -linux-newlib* | -linux-musl* | -linux-uclibc* \
- | -uxpv* | -beos* | -mpeix* | -udk* \
+ | -uxpv* | -beos* | -mpeix* | -udk* | -moxiebox* \
| -interix* | -uwin* | -mks* | -rhapsody* | -darwin* | -opened* \
| -openstep* | -oskit* | -conix* | -pw32* | -nonstopux* \
| -storm-chaos* | -tops10* | -tenex* | -tops20* | -its* \
| -os2* | -vos* | -palmos* | -uclinux* | -nucleus* \
| -morphos* | -superux* | -rtmk* | -rtmk-nova* | -windiss* \
| -powermax* | -dnix* | -nx6 | -nx7 | -sei* | -dragonfly* \
- | -skyos* | -haiku* | -rdos* | -toppers* | -drops* | -es*)
+ | -skyos* | -haiku* | -rdos* | -toppers* | -drops* | -es* | -tirtos*)
# Remember, each alternative MUST END IN *, to match a version number.
;;
-qnx*)
@@ -1594,9 +1603,6 @@ case $basic_machine in
mips*-*)
os=-elf
;;
- or1k-*)
- os=-elf
- ;;
or32-*)
os=-coff
;;
diff --git a/scripts/depcomp b/scripts/depcomp
index ff4e08f4a..4ebd5b3a2 100755
--- a/scripts/depcomp
+++ b/scripts/depcomp
@@ -1,10 +1,9 @@
#! /bin/sh
# depcomp - compile a program generating dependencies as side-effects
-scriptversion=2011-12-04.11; # UTC
+scriptversion=2013-05-30.07; # UTC
-# Copyright (C) 1999, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010,
-# 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+# Copyright (C) 1999-2013 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
@@ -28,9 +27,9 @@ scriptversion=2011-12-04.11; # UTC
case $1 in
'')
- echo "$0: No command. Try '$0 --help' for more information." 1>&2
- exit 1;
- ;;
+ echo "$0: No command. Try '$0 --help' for more information." 1>&2
+ exit 1;
+ ;;
-h | --h*)
cat <<\EOF
Usage: depcomp [--help] [--version] PROGRAM [ARGS]
@@ -57,6 +56,66 @@ EOF
;;
esac
+# Get the directory component of the given path, and save it in the
+# global variables '$dir'. Note that this directory component will
+# be either empty or ending with a '/' character. This is deliberate.
+set_dir_from ()
+{
+ case $1 in
+ */*) dir=`echo "$1" | sed -e 's|/[^/]*$|/|'`;;
+ *) dir=;;
+ esac
+}
+
+# Get the suffix-stripped basename of the given path, and save it the
+# global variable '$base'.
+set_base_from ()
+{
+ base=`echo "$1" | sed -e 's|^.*/||' -e 's/\.[^.]*$//'`
+}
+
+# If no dependency file was actually created by the compiler invocation,
+# we still have to create a dummy depfile, to avoid errors with the
+# Makefile "include basename.Plo" scheme.
+make_dummy_depfile ()
+{
+ echo "#dummy" > "$depfile"
+}
+
+# Factor out some common post-processing of the generated depfile.
+# Requires the auxiliary global variable '$tmpdepfile' to be set.
+aix_post_process_depfile ()
+{
+ # If the compiler actually managed to produce a dependency file,
+ # post-process it.
+ if test -f "$tmpdepfile"; then
+ # Each line is of the form 'foo.o: dependency.h'.
+ # Do two passes, one to just change these to
+ # $object: dependency.h
+ # and one to simply output
+ # dependency.h:
+ # which is needed to avoid the deleted-header problem.
+ { sed -e "s,^.*\.[$lower]*:,$object:," < "$tmpdepfile"
+ sed -e "s,^.*\.[$lower]*:[$tab ]*,," -e 's,$,:,' < "$tmpdepfile"
+ } > "$depfile"
+ rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
+ else
+ make_dummy_depfile
+ fi
+}
+
+# A tabulation character.
+tab=' '
+# A newline character.
+nl='
+'
+# Character ranges might be problematic outside the C locale.
+# These definitions help.
+upper=ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
+lower=abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
+digits=0123456789
+alpha=${upper}${lower}
+
if test -z "$depmode" || test -z "$source" || test -z "$object"; then
echo "depcomp: Variables source, object and depmode must be set" 1>&2
exit 1
@@ -69,6 +128,9 @@ tmpdepfile=${tmpdepfile-`echo "$depfile" | sed 's/\.\([^.]*\)$/.T\1/'`}
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
+# Avoid interferences from the environment.
+gccflag= dashmflag=
+
# Some modes work just like other modes, but use different flags. We
# parameterize here, but still list the modes in the big case below,
# to make depend.m4 easier to write. Note that we *cannot* use a case
@@ -80,26 +142,32 @@ if test "$depmode" = hp; then
fi
if test "$depmode" = dashXmstdout; then
- # This is just like dashmstdout with a different argument.
- dashmflag=-xM
- depmode=dashmstdout
+ # This is just like dashmstdout with a different argument.
+ dashmflag=-xM
+ depmode=dashmstdout
fi
cygpath_u="cygpath -u -f -"
if test "$depmode" = msvcmsys; then
- # This is just like msvisualcpp but w/o cygpath translation.
- # Just convert the backslash-escaped backslashes to single forward
- # slashes to satisfy depend.m4
- cygpath_u='sed s,\\\\,/,g'
- depmode=msvisualcpp
+ # This is just like msvisualcpp but w/o cygpath translation.
+ # Just convert the backslash-escaped backslashes to single forward
+ # slashes to satisfy depend.m4
+ cygpath_u='sed s,\\\\,/,g'
+ depmode=msvisualcpp
fi
if test "$depmode" = msvc7msys; then
- # This is just like msvc7 but w/o cygpath translation.
- # Just convert the backslash-escaped backslashes to single forward
- # slashes to satisfy depend.m4
- cygpath_u='sed s,\\\\,/,g'
- depmode=msvc7
+ # This is just like msvc7 but w/o cygpath translation.
+ # Just convert the backslash-escaped backslashes to single forward
+ # slashes to satisfy depend.m4
+ cygpath_u='sed s,\\\\,/,g'
+ depmode=msvc7
+fi
+
+if test "$depmode" = xlc; then
+ # IBM C/C++ Compilers xlc/xlC can output gcc-like dependency information.
+ gccflag=-qmakedep=gcc,-MF
+ depmode=gcc
fi
case "$depmode" in
@@ -122,8 +190,7 @@ gcc3)
done
"$@"
stat=$?
- if test $stat -eq 0; then :
- else
+ if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
@@ -131,13 +198,17 @@ gcc3)
;;
gcc)
+## Note that this doesn't just cater to obsosete pre-3.x GCC compilers.
+## but also to in-use compilers like IMB xlc/xlC and the HP C compiler.
+## (see the conditional assignment to $gccflag above).
## There are various ways to get dependency output from gcc. Here's
## why we pick this rather obscure method:
## - Don't want to use -MD because we'd like the dependencies to end
## up in a subdir. Having to rename by hand is ugly.
## (We might end up doing this anyway to support other compilers.)
## - The DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT environment variable makes gcc act like
-## -MM, not -M (despite what the docs say).
+## -MM, not -M (despite what the docs say). Also, it might not be
+## supported by the other compilers which use the 'gcc' depmode.
## - Using -M directly means running the compiler twice (even worse
## than renaming).
if test -z "$gccflag"; then
@@ -145,15 +216,14 @@ gcc)
fi
"$@" -Wp,"$gccflag$tmpdepfile"
stat=$?
- if test $stat -eq 0; then :
- else
+ if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
rm -f "$depfile"
echo "$object : \\" > "$depfile"
- alpha=ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
-## The second -e expression handles DOS-style file names with drive letters.
+ # The second -e expression handles DOS-style file names with drive
+ # letters.
sed -e 's/^[^:]*: / /' \
-e 's/^['$alpha']:\/[^:]*: / /' < "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
## This next piece of magic avoids the "deleted header file" problem.
@@ -162,16 +232,15 @@ gcc)
## typically no way to rebuild the header). We avoid this by adding
## dummy dependencies for each header file. Too bad gcc doesn't do
## this for us directly.
- tr ' ' '
-' < "$tmpdepfile" |
## Some versions of gcc put a space before the ':'. On the theory
## that the space means something, we add a space to the output as
## well. hp depmode also adds that space, but also prefixes the VPATH
## to the object. Take care to not repeat it in the output.
## Some versions of the HPUX 10.20 sed can't process this invocation
## correctly. Breaking it into two sed invocations is a workaround.
- sed -e 's/^\\$//' -e '/^$/d' -e "s|.*$object$||" -e '/:$/d' \
- | sed -e 's/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
+ tr ' ' "$nl" < "$tmpdepfile" \
+ | sed -e 's/^\\$//' -e '/^$/d' -e "s|.*$object$||" -e '/:$/d' \
+ | sed -e 's/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
@@ -189,8 +258,7 @@ sgi)
"$@" -MDupdate "$tmpdepfile"
fi
stat=$?
- if test $stat -eq 0; then :
- else
+ if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
@@ -198,43 +266,41 @@ sgi)
if test -f "$tmpdepfile"; then # yes, the sourcefile depend on other files
echo "$object : \\" > "$depfile"
-
# Clip off the initial element (the dependent). Don't try to be
# clever and replace this with sed code, as IRIX sed won't handle
# lines with more than a fixed number of characters (4096 in
# IRIX 6.2 sed, 8192 in IRIX 6.5). We also remove comment lines;
# the IRIX cc adds comments like '#:fec' to the end of the
# dependency line.
- tr ' ' '
-' < "$tmpdepfile" \
- | sed -e 's/^.*\.o://' -e 's/#.*$//' -e '/^$/ d' | \
- tr '
-' ' ' >> "$depfile"
+ tr ' ' "$nl" < "$tmpdepfile" \
+ | sed -e 's/^.*\.o://' -e 's/#.*$//' -e '/^$/ d' \
+ | tr "$nl" ' ' >> "$depfile"
echo >> "$depfile"
-
# The second pass generates a dummy entry for each header file.
- tr ' ' '
-' < "$tmpdepfile" \
- | sed -e 's/^.*\.o://' -e 's/#.*$//' -e '/^$/ d' -e 's/$/:/' \
- >> "$depfile"
+ tr ' ' "$nl" < "$tmpdepfile" \
+ | sed -e 's/^.*\.o://' -e 's/#.*$//' -e '/^$/ d' -e 's/$/:/' \
+ >> "$depfile"
else
- # The sourcefile does not contain any dependencies, so just
- # store a dummy comment line, to avoid errors with the Makefile
- # "include basename.Plo" scheme.
- echo "#dummy" > "$depfile"
+ make_dummy_depfile
fi
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
+xlc)
+ # This case exists only to let depend.m4 do its work. It works by
+ # looking at the text of this script. This case will never be run,
+ # since it is checked for above.
+ exit 1
+ ;;
+
aix)
# The C for AIX Compiler uses -M and outputs the dependencies
# in a .u file. In older versions, this file always lives in the
# current directory. Also, the AIX compiler puts '$object:' at the
# start of each line; $object doesn't have directory information.
# Version 6 uses the directory in both cases.
- dir=`echo "$object" | sed -e 's|/[^/]*$|/|'`
- test "x$dir" = "x$object" && dir=
- base=`echo "$object" | sed -e 's|^.*/||' -e 's/\.o$//' -e 's/\.lo$//'`
+ set_dir_from "$object"
+ set_base_from "$object"
if test "$libtool" = yes; then
tmpdepfile1=$dir$base.u
tmpdepfile2=$base.u
@@ -247,9 +313,7 @@ aix)
"$@" -M
fi
stat=$?
-
- if test $stat -eq 0; then :
- else
+ if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile1" "$tmpdepfile2" "$tmpdepfile3"
exit $stat
fi
@@ -258,57 +322,113 @@ aix)
do
test -f "$tmpdepfile" && break
done
- if test -f "$tmpdepfile"; then
- # Each line is of the form 'foo.o: dependent.h'.
- # Do two passes, one to just change these to
- # '$object: dependent.h' and one to simply 'dependent.h:'.
- sed -e "s,^.*\.[a-z]*:,$object:," < "$tmpdepfile" > "$depfile"
- # That's a tab and a space in the [].
- sed -e 's,^.*\.[a-z]*:[ ]*,,' -e 's,$,:,' < "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
- else
- # The sourcefile does not contain any dependencies, so just
- # store a dummy comment line, to avoid errors with the Makefile
- # "include basename.Plo" scheme.
- echo "#dummy" > "$depfile"
+ aix_post_process_depfile
+ ;;
+
+tcc)
+ # tcc (Tiny C Compiler) understand '-MD -MF file' since version 0.9.26
+ # FIXME: That version still under development at the moment of writing.
+ # Make that this statement remains true also for stable, released
+ # versions.
+ # It will wrap lines (doesn't matter whether long or short) with a
+ # trailing '\', as in:
+ #
+ # foo.o : \
+ # foo.c \
+ # foo.h \
+ #
+ # It will put a trailing '\' even on the last line, and will use leading
+ # spaces rather than leading tabs (at least since its commit 0394caf7
+ # "Emit spaces for -MD").
+ "$@" -MD -MF "$tmpdepfile"
+ stat=$?
+ if test $stat -ne 0; then
+ rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
+ exit $stat
fi
+ rm -f "$depfile"
+ # Each non-empty line is of the form 'foo.o : \' or ' dep.h \'.
+ # We have to change lines of the first kind to '$object: \'.
+ sed -e "s|.*:|$object :|" < "$tmpdepfile" > "$depfile"
+ # And for each line of the second kind, we have to emit a 'dep.h:'
+ # dummy dependency, to avoid the deleted-header problem.
+ sed -n -e 's|^ *\(.*\) *\\$|\1:|p' < "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
-icc)
- # Intel's C compiler understands '-MD -MF file'. However on
- # icc -MD -MF foo.d -c -o sub/foo.o sub/foo.c
- # ICC 7.0 will fill foo.d with something like
- # foo.o: sub/foo.c
- # foo.o: sub/foo.h
- # which is wrong. We want:
- # sub/foo.o: sub/foo.c
- # sub/foo.o: sub/foo.h
- # sub/foo.c:
- # sub/foo.h:
- # ICC 7.1 will output
+## The order of this option in the case statement is important, since the
+## shell code in configure will try each of these formats in the order
+## listed in this file. A plain '-MD' option would be understood by many
+## compilers, so we must ensure this comes after the gcc and icc options.
+pgcc)
+ # Portland's C compiler understands '-MD'.
+ # Will always output deps to 'file.d' where file is the root name of the
+ # source file under compilation, even if file resides in a subdirectory.
+ # The object file name does not affect the name of the '.d' file.
+ # pgcc 10.2 will output
# foo.o: sub/foo.c sub/foo.h
- # and will wrap long lines using \ :
+ # and will wrap long lines using '\' :
# foo.o: sub/foo.c ... \
# sub/foo.h ... \
# ...
+ set_dir_from "$object"
+ # Use the source, not the object, to determine the base name, since
+ # that's sadly what pgcc will do too.
+ set_base_from "$source"
+ tmpdepfile=$base.d
+
+ # For projects that build the same source file twice into different object
+ # files, the pgcc approach of using the *source* file root name can cause
+ # problems in parallel builds. Use a locking strategy to avoid stomping on
+ # the same $tmpdepfile.
+ lockdir=$base.d-lock
+ trap "
+ echo '$0: caught signal, cleaning up...' >&2
+ rmdir '$lockdir'
+ exit 1
+ " 1 2 13 15
+ numtries=100
+ i=$numtries
+ while test $i -gt 0; do
+ # mkdir is a portable test-and-set.
+ if mkdir "$lockdir" 2>/dev/null; then
+ # This process acquired the lock.
+ "$@" -MD
+ stat=$?
+ # Release the lock.
+ rmdir "$lockdir"
+ break
+ else
+ # If the lock is being held by a different process, wait
+ # until the winning process is done or we timeout.
+ while test -d "$lockdir" && test $i -gt 0; do
+ sleep 1
+ i=`expr $i - 1`
+ done
+ fi
+ i=`expr $i - 1`
+ done
+ trap - 1 2 13 15
+ if test $i -le 0; then
+ echo "$0: failed to acquire lock after $numtries attempts" >&2
+ echo "$0: check lockdir '$lockdir'" >&2
+ exit 1
+ fi
- "$@" -MD -MF "$tmpdepfile"
- stat=$?
- if test $stat -eq 0; then :
- else
+ if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
rm -f "$depfile"
- # Each line is of the form 'foo.o: dependent.h',
- # or 'foo.o: dep1.h dep2.h \', or ' dep3.h dep4.h \'.
+ # Each line is of the form `foo.o: dependent.h',
+ # or `foo.o: dep1.h dep2.h \', or ` dep3.h dep4.h \'.
# Do two passes, one to just change these to
- # '$object: dependent.h' and one to simply 'dependent.h:'.
+ # `$object: dependent.h' and one to simply `dependent.h:'.
sed "s,^[^:]*:,$object :," < "$tmpdepfile" > "$depfile"
# Some versions of the HPUX 10.20 sed can't process this invocation
# correctly. Breaking it into two sed invocations is a workaround.
- sed 's,^[^:]*: \(.*\)$,\1,;s/^\\$//;/^$/d;/:$/d' < "$tmpdepfile" |
- sed -e 's/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
+ sed 's,^[^:]*: \(.*\)$,\1,;s/^\\$//;/^$/d;/:$/d' < "$tmpdepfile" \
+ | sed -e 's/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
@@ -319,9 +439,8 @@ hp2)
# 'foo.d', which lands next to the object file, wherever that
# happens to be.
# Much of this is similar to the tru64 case; see comments there.
- dir=`echo "$object" | sed -e 's|/[^/]*$|/|'`
- test "x$dir" = "x$object" && dir=
- base=`echo "$object" | sed -e 's|^.*/||' -e 's/\.o$//' -e 's/\.lo$//'`
+ set_dir_from "$object"
+ set_base_from "$object"
if test "$libtool" = yes; then
tmpdepfile1=$dir$base.d
tmpdepfile2=$dir.libs/$base.d
@@ -332,8 +451,7 @@ hp2)
"$@" +Maked
fi
stat=$?
- if test $stat -eq 0; then :
- else
+ if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile1" "$tmpdepfile2"
exit $stat
fi
@@ -343,77 +461,61 @@ hp2)
test -f "$tmpdepfile" && break
done
if test -f "$tmpdepfile"; then
- sed -e "s,^.*\.[a-z]*:,$object:," "$tmpdepfile" > "$depfile"
+ sed -e "s,^.*\.[$lower]*:,$object:," "$tmpdepfile" > "$depfile"
# Add 'dependent.h:' lines.
sed -ne '2,${
- s/^ *//
- s/ \\*$//
- s/$/:/
- p
- }' "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
+ s/^ *//
+ s/ \\*$//
+ s/$/:/
+ p
+ }' "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
else
- echo "#dummy" > "$depfile"
+ make_dummy_depfile
fi
rm -f "$tmpdepfile" "$tmpdepfile2"
;;
tru64)
- # The Tru64 compiler uses -MD to generate dependencies as a side
- # effect. 'cc -MD -o foo.o ...' puts the dependencies into 'foo.o.d'.
- # At least on Alpha/Redhat 6.1, Compaq CCC V6.2-504 seems to put
- # dependencies in 'foo.d' instead, so we check for that too.
- # Subdirectories are respected.
- dir=`echo "$object" | sed -e 's|/[^/]*$|/|'`
- test "x$dir" = "x$object" && dir=
- base=`echo "$object" | sed -e 's|^.*/||' -e 's/\.o$//' -e 's/\.lo$//'`
-
- if test "$libtool" = yes; then
- # With Tru64 cc, shared objects can also be used to make a
- # static library. This mechanism is used in libtool 1.4 series to
- # handle both shared and static libraries in a single compilation.
- # With libtool 1.4, dependencies were output in $dir.libs/$base.lo.d.
- #
- # With libtool 1.5 this exception was removed, and libtool now
- # generates 2 separate objects for the 2 libraries. These two
- # compilations output dependencies in $dir.libs/$base.o.d and
- # in $dir$base.o.d. We have to check for both files, because
- # one of the two compilations can be disabled. We should prefer
- # $dir$base.o.d over $dir.libs/$base.o.d because the latter is
- # automatically cleaned when .libs/ is deleted, while ignoring
- # the former would cause a distcleancheck panic.
- tmpdepfile1=$dir.libs/$base.lo.d # libtool 1.4
- tmpdepfile2=$dir$base.o.d # libtool 1.5
- tmpdepfile3=$dir.libs/$base.o.d # libtool 1.5
- tmpdepfile4=$dir.libs/$base.d # Compaq CCC V6.2-504
- "$@" -Wc,-MD
- else
- tmpdepfile1=$dir$base.o.d
- tmpdepfile2=$dir$base.d
- tmpdepfile3=$dir$base.d
- tmpdepfile4=$dir$base.d
- "$@" -MD
- fi
-
- stat=$?
- if test $stat -eq 0; then :
- else
- rm -f "$tmpdepfile1" "$tmpdepfile2" "$tmpdepfile3" "$tmpdepfile4"
- exit $stat
- fi
-
- for tmpdepfile in "$tmpdepfile1" "$tmpdepfile2" "$tmpdepfile3" "$tmpdepfile4"
- do
- test -f "$tmpdepfile" && break
- done
- if test -f "$tmpdepfile"; then
- sed -e "s,^.*\.[a-z]*:,$object:," < "$tmpdepfile" > "$depfile"
- # That's a tab and a space in the [].
- sed -e 's,^.*\.[a-z]*:[ ]*,,' -e 's,$,:,' < "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
- else
- echo "#dummy" > "$depfile"
- fi
- rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
- ;;
+ # The Tru64 compiler uses -MD to generate dependencies as a side
+ # effect. 'cc -MD -o foo.o ...' puts the dependencies into 'foo.o.d'.
+ # At least on Alpha/Redhat 6.1, Compaq CCC V6.2-504 seems to put
+ # dependencies in 'foo.d' instead, so we check for that too.
+ # Subdirectories are respected.
+ set_dir_from "$object"
+ set_base_from "$object"
+
+ if test "$libtool" = yes; then
+ # Libtool generates 2 separate objects for the 2 libraries. These
+ # two compilations output dependencies in $dir.libs/$base.o.d and
+ # in $dir$base.o.d. We have to check for both files, because
+ # one of the two compilations can be disabled. We should prefer
+ # $dir$base.o.d over $dir.libs/$base.o.d because the latter is
+ # automatically cleaned when .libs/ is deleted, while ignoring
+ # the former would cause a distcleancheck panic.
+ tmpdepfile1=$dir$base.o.d # libtool 1.5
+ tmpdepfile2=$dir.libs/$base.o.d # Likewise.
+ tmpdepfile3=$dir.libs/$base.d # Compaq CCC V6.2-504
+ "$@" -Wc,-MD
+ else
+ tmpdepfile1=$dir$base.d
+ tmpdepfile2=$dir$base.d
+ tmpdepfile3=$dir$base.d
+ "$@" -MD
+ fi
+
+ stat=$?
+ if test $stat -ne 0; then
+ rm -f "$tmpdepfile1" "$tmpdepfile2" "$tmpdepfile3"
+ exit $stat
+ fi
+
+ for tmpdepfile in "$tmpdepfile1" "$tmpdepfile2" "$tmpdepfile3"
+ do
+ test -f "$tmpdepfile" && break
+ done
+ # Same post-processing that is required for AIX mode.
+ aix_post_process_depfile
+ ;;
msvc7)
if test "$libtool" = yes; then
@@ -424,8 +526,7 @@ msvc7)
"$@" $showIncludes > "$tmpdepfile"
stat=$?
grep -v '^Note: including file: ' "$tmpdepfile"
- if test "$stat" = 0; then :
- else
+ if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
@@ -443,14 +544,15 @@ msvc7)
p
}' | $cygpath_u | sort -u | sed -n '
s/ /\\ /g
-s/\(.*\)/ \1 \\/p
+s/\(.*\)/'"$tab"'\1 \\/p
s/.\(.*\) \\/\1:/
H
$ {
- s/.*/ /
+ s/.*/'"$tab"'/
G
p
}' >> "$depfile"
+ echo >> "$depfile" # make sure the fragment doesn't end with a backslash
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
@@ -502,14 +604,14 @@ dashmstdout)
# in the target name. This is to cope with DOS-style filenames:
# a dependency such as 'c:/foo/bar' could be seen as target 'c' otherwise.
"$@" $dashmflag |
- sed 's:^[ ]*[^: ][^:][^:]*\:[ ]*:'"$object"'\: :' > "$tmpdepfile"
+ sed "s|^[$tab ]*[^:$tab ][^:][^:]*:[$tab ]*|$object: |" > "$tmpdepfile"
rm -f "$depfile"
cat < "$tmpdepfile" > "$depfile"
- tr ' ' '
-' < "$tmpdepfile" | \
-## Some versions of the HPUX 10.20 sed can't process this invocation
-## correctly. Breaking it into two sed invocations is a workaround.
- sed -e 's/^\\$//' -e '/^$/d' -e '/:$/d' | sed -e 's/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
+ # Some versions of the HPUX 10.20 sed can't process this sed invocation
+ # correctly. Breaking it into two sed invocations is a workaround.
+ tr ' ' "$nl" < "$tmpdepfile" \
+ | sed -e 's/^\\$//' -e '/^$/d' -e '/:$/d' \
+ | sed -e 's/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
@@ -562,11 +664,12 @@ makedepend)
# makedepend may prepend the VPATH from the source file name to the object.
# No need to regex-escape $object, excess matching of '.' is harmless.
sed "s|^.*\($object *:\)|\1|" "$tmpdepfile" > "$depfile"
- sed '1,2d' "$tmpdepfile" | tr ' ' '
-' | \
-## Some versions of the HPUX 10.20 sed can't process this invocation
-## correctly. Breaking it into two sed invocations is a workaround.
- sed -e 's/^\\$//' -e '/^$/d' -e '/:$/d' | sed -e 's/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
+ # Some versions of the HPUX 10.20 sed can't process the last invocation
+ # correctly. Breaking it into two sed invocations is a workaround.
+ sed '1,2d' "$tmpdepfile" \
+ | tr ' ' "$nl" \
+ | sed -e 's/^\\$//' -e '/^$/d' -e '/:$/d' \
+ | sed -e 's/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile" "$tmpdepfile".bak
;;
@@ -602,10 +705,10 @@ cpp)
esac
done
- "$@" -E |
- sed -n -e '/^# [0-9][0-9]* "\([^"]*\)".*/ s:: \1 \\:p' \
- -e '/^#line [0-9][0-9]* "\([^"]*\)".*/ s:: \1 \\:p' |
- sed '$ s: \\$::' > "$tmpdepfile"
+ "$@" -E \
+ | sed -n -e '/^# [0-9][0-9]* "\([^"]*\)".*/ s:: \1 \\:p' \
+ -e '/^#line [0-9][0-9]* "\([^"]*\)".*/ s:: \1 \\:p' \
+ | sed '$ s: \\$::' > "$tmpdepfile"
rm -f "$depfile"
echo "$object : \\" > "$depfile"
cat < "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
@@ -637,23 +740,23 @@ msvisualcpp)
shift
;;
"-Gm"|"/Gm"|"-Gi"|"/Gi"|"-ZI"|"/ZI")
- set fnord "$@"
- shift
- shift
- ;;
+ set fnord "$@"
+ shift
+ shift
+ ;;
*)
- set fnord "$@" "$arg"
- shift
- shift
- ;;
+ set fnord "$@" "$arg"
+ shift
+ shift
+ ;;
esac
done
"$@" -E 2>/dev/null |
sed -n '/^#line [0-9][0-9]* "\([^"]*\)"/ s::\1:p' | $cygpath_u | sort -u > "$tmpdepfile"
rm -f "$depfile"
echo "$object : \\" > "$depfile"
- sed < "$tmpdepfile" -n -e 's% %\\ %g' -e '/^\(.*\)$/ s:: \1 \\:p' >> "$depfile"
- echo " " >> "$depfile"
+ sed < "$tmpdepfile" -n -e 's% %\\ %g' -e '/^\(.*\)$/ s::'"$tab"'\1 \\:p' >> "$depfile"
+ echo "$tab" >> "$depfile"
sed < "$tmpdepfile" -n -e 's% %\\ %g' -e '/^\(.*\)$/ s::\1\::p' >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
diff --git a/scripts/install-sh b/scripts/install-sh
index 0b65ee871..377bb8687 100755
--- a/scripts/install-sh
+++ b/scripts/install-sh
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
#!/bin/sh
# install - install a program, script, or datafile
-scriptversion=2004-10-22.00
+scriptversion=2011-11-20.07; # UTC
# This originates from X11R5 (mit/util/scripts/install.sh), which was
# later released in X11R6 (xc/config/util/install.sh) with the
@@ -35,42 +35,72 @@ scriptversion=2004-10-22.00
# FSF changes to this file are in the public domain.
#
# Calling this script install-sh is preferred over install.sh, to prevent
-# `make' implicit rules from creating a file called install from it
+# 'make' implicit rules from creating a file called install from it
# when there is no Makefile.
#
# This script is compatible with the BSD install script, but was written
-# from scratch. It can only install one file at a time, a restriction
-# shared with many OS's install programs.
+# from scratch.
+
+nl='
+'
+IFS=" "" $nl"
# set DOITPROG to echo to test this script
# Don't use :- since 4.3BSD and earlier shells don't like it.
-doit="${DOITPROG-}"
+doit=${DOITPROG-}
+if test -z "$doit"; then
+ doit_exec=exec
+else
+ doit_exec=$doit
+fi
+
+# Put in absolute file names if you don't have them in your path;
+# or use environment vars.
+
+chgrpprog=${CHGRPPROG-chgrp}
+chmodprog=${CHMODPROG-chmod}
+chownprog=${CHOWNPROG-chown}
+cmpprog=${CMPPROG-cmp}
+cpprog=${CPPROG-cp}
+mkdirprog=${MKDIRPROG-mkdir}
+mvprog=${MVPROG-mv}
+rmprog=${RMPROG-rm}
+stripprog=${STRIPPROG-strip}
+
+posix_glob='?'
+initialize_posix_glob='
+ test "$posix_glob" != "?" || {
+ if (set -f) 2>/dev/null; then
+ posix_glob=
+ else
+ posix_glob=:
+ fi
+ }
+'
-# put in absolute paths if you don't have them in your path; or use env. vars.
+posix_mkdir=
-mvprog="${MVPROG-mv}"
-cpprog="${CPPROG-cp}"
-chmodprog="${CHMODPROG-chmod}"
-chownprog="${CHOWNPROG-chown}"
-chgrpprog="${CHGRPPROG-chgrp}"
-stripprog="${STRIPPROG-strip}"
-rmprog="${RMPROG-rm}"
-mkdirprog="${MKDIRPROG-mkdir}"
+# Desired mode of installed file.
+mode=0755
-chmodcmd="$chmodprog 0755"
-chowncmd=
chgrpcmd=
-stripcmd=
+chmodcmd=$chmodprog
+chowncmd=
+mvcmd=$mvprog
rmcmd="$rmprog -f"
-mvcmd="$mvprog"
+stripcmd=
+
src=
dst=
dir_arg=
-dstarg=
+dst_arg=
+
+copy_on_change=false
no_target_directory=
-usage="Usage: $0 [OPTION]... [-T] SRCFILE DSTFILE
+usage="\
+Usage: $0 [OPTION]... [-T] SRCFILE DSTFILE
or: $0 [OPTION]... SRCFILES... DIRECTORY
or: $0 [OPTION]... -t DIRECTORY SRCFILES...
or: $0 [OPTION]... -d DIRECTORIES...
@@ -80,108 +110,148 @@ In the 2nd and 3rd, copy all SRCFILES to DIRECTORY.
In the 4th, create DIRECTORIES.
Options:
--c (ignored)
--d create directories instead of installing files.
--g GROUP $chgrpprog installed files to GROUP.
--m MODE $chmodprog installed files to MODE.
--o USER $chownprog installed files to USER.
--s $stripprog installed files.
--t DIRECTORY install into DIRECTORY.
--T report an error if DSTFILE is a directory.
---help display this help and exit.
---version display version info and exit.
+ --help display this help and exit.
+ --version display version info and exit.
+
+ -c (ignored)
+ -C install only if different (preserve the last data modification time)
+ -d create directories instead of installing files.
+ -g GROUP $chgrpprog installed files to GROUP.
+ -m MODE $chmodprog installed files to MODE.
+ -o USER $chownprog installed files to USER.
+ -s $stripprog installed files.
+ -t DIRECTORY install into DIRECTORY.
+ -T report an error if DSTFILE is a directory.
Environment variables override the default commands:
- CHGRPPROG CHMODPROG CHOWNPROG CPPROG MKDIRPROG MVPROG RMPROG STRIPPROG
+ CHGRPPROG CHMODPROG CHOWNPROG CMPPROG CPPROG MKDIRPROG MVPROG
+ RMPROG STRIPPROG
"
-while test -n "$1"; do
+while test $# -ne 0; do
case $1 in
- -c) shift
- continue;;
+ -c) ;;
+
+ -C) copy_on_change=true;;
- -d) dir_arg=true
- shift
- continue;;
+ -d) dir_arg=true;;
-g) chgrpcmd="$chgrpprog $2"
- shift
- shift
- continue;;
+ shift;;
- --help) echo "$usage"; exit 0;;
+ --help) echo "$usage"; exit $?;;
- -m) chmodcmd="$chmodprog $2"
- shift
- shift
- continue;;
+ -m) mode=$2
+ case $mode in
+ *' '* | *' '* | *'
+'* | *'*'* | *'?'* | *'['*)
+ echo "$0: invalid mode: $mode" >&2
+ exit 1;;
+ esac
+ shift;;
-o) chowncmd="$chownprog $2"
- shift
- shift
- continue;;
-
- -s) stripcmd=$stripprog
- shift
- continue;;
-
- -t) dstarg=$2
- shift
- shift
- continue;;
-
- -T) no_target_directory=true
- shift
- continue;;
-
- --version) echo "$0 $scriptversion"; exit 0;;
-
- *) # When -d is used, all remaining arguments are directories to create.
- # When -t is used, the destination is already specified.
- test -n "$dir_arg$dstarg" && break
- # Otherwise, the last argument is the destination. Remove it from $@.
- for arg
- do
- if test -n "$dstarg"; then
- # $@ is not empty: it contains at least $arg.
- set fnord "$@" "$dstarg"
- shift # fnord
- fi
- shift # arg
- dstarg=$arg
- done
+ shift;;
+
+ -s) stripcmd=$stripprog;;
+
+ -t) dst_arg=$2
+ # Protect names problematic for 'test' and other utilities.
+ case $dst_arg in
+ -* | [=\(\)!]) dst_arg=./$dst_arg;;
+ esac
+ shift;;
+
+ -T) no_target_directory=true;;
+
+ --version) echo "$0 $scriptversion"; exit $?;;
+
+ --) shift
break;;
+
+ -*) echo "$0: invalid option: $1" >&2
+ exit 1;;
+
+ *) break;;
esac
+ shift
done
-if test -z "$1"; then
+if test $# -ne 0 && test -z "$dir_arg$dst_arg"; then
+ # When -d is used, all remaining arguments are directories to create.
+ # When -t is used, the destination is already specified.
+ # Otherwise, the last argument is the destination. Remove it from $@.
+ for arg
+ do
+ if test -n "$dst_arg"; then
+ # $@ is not empty: it contains at least $arg.
+ set fnord "$@" "$dst_arg"
+ shift # fnord
+ fi
+ shift # arg
+ dst_arg=$arg
+ # Protect names problematic for 'test' and other utilities.
+ case $dst_arg in
+ -* | [=\(\)!]) dst_arg=./$dst_arg;;
+ esac
+ done
+fi
+
+if test $# -eq 0; then
if test -z "$dir_arg"; then
echo "$0: no input file specified." >&2
exit 1
fi
- # It's OK to call `install-sh -d' without argument.
+ # It's OK to call 'install-sh -d' without argument.
# This can happen when creating conditional directories.
exit 0
fi
+if test -z "$dir_arg"; then
+ do_exit='(exit $ret); exit $ret'
+ trap "ret=129; $do_exit" 1
+ trap "ret=130; $do_exit" 2
+ trap "ret=141; $do_exit" 13
+ trap "ret=143; $do_exit" 15
+
+ # Set umask so as not to create temps with too-generous modes.
+ # However, 'strip' requires both read and write access to temps.
+ case $mode in
+ # Optimize common cases.
+ *644) cp_umask=133;;
+ *755) cp_umask=22;;
+
+ *[0-7])
+ if test -z "$stripcmd"; then
+ u_plus_rw=
+ else
+ u_plus_rw='% 200'
+ fi
+ cp_umask=`expr '(' 777 - $mode % 1000 ')' $u_plus_rw`;;
+ *)
+ if test -z "$stripcmd"; then
+ u_plus_rw=
+ else
+ u_plus_rw=,u+rw
+ fi
+ cp_umask=$mode$u_plus_rw;;
+ esac
+fi
+
for src
do
- # Protect names starting with `-'.
+ # Protect names problematic for 'test' and other utilities.
case $src in
- -*) src=./$src ;;
+ -* | [=\(\)!]) src=./$src;;
esac
if test -n "$dir_arg"; then
dst=$src
- src=
-
- if test -d "$dst"; then
- mkdircmd=:
- chmodcmd=
- else
- mkdircmd=$mkdirprog
- fi
+ dstdir=$dst
+ test -d "$dstdir"
+ dstdir_status=$?
else
+
# Waiting for this to be detected by the "$cpprog $src $dsttmp" command
# might cause directories to be created, which would be especially bad
# if $src (and thus $dsttmp) contains '*'.
@@ -190,71 +260,194 @@ do
exit 1
fi
- if test -z "$dstarg"; then
+ if test -z "$dst_arg"; then
echo "$0: no destination specified." >&2
exit 1
fi
-
- dst=$dstarg
- # Protect names starting with `-'.
- case $dst in
- -*) dst=./$dst ;;
- esac
+ dst=$dst_arg
# If destination is a directory, append the input filename; won't work
# if double slashes aren't ignored.
if test -d "$dst"; then
if test -n "$no_target_directory"; then
- echo "$0: $dstarg: Is a directory" >&2
+ echo "$0: $dst_arg: Is a directory" >&2
exit 1
fi
- dst=$dst/`basename "$src"`
+ dstdir=$dst
+ dst=$dstdir/`basename "$src"`
+ dstdir_status=0
+ else
+ # Prefer dirname, but fall back on a substitute if dirname fails.
+ dstdir=`
+ (dirname "$dst") 2>/dev/null ||
+ expr X"$dst" : 'X\(.*[^/]\)//*[^/][^/]*/*$' \| \
+ X"$dst" : 'X\(//\)[^/]' \| \
+ X"$dst" : 'X\(//\)$' \| \
+ X"$dst" : 'X\(/\)' \| . 2>/dev/null ||
+ echo X"$dst" |
+ sed '/^X\(.*[^/]\)\/\/*[^/][^/]*\/*$/{
+ s//\1/
+ q
+ }
+ /^X\(\/\/\)[^/].*/{
+ s//\1/
+ q
+ }
+ /^X\(\/\/\)$/{
+ s//\1/
+ q
+ }
+ /^X\(\/\).*/{
+ s//\1/
+ q
+ }
+ s/.*/./; q'
+ `
+
+ test -d "$dstdir"
+ dstdir_status=$?
fi
fi
- # This sed command emulates the dirname command.
- dstdir=`echo "$dst" | sed -e 's,/*$,,;s,[^/]*$,,;s,/*$,,;s,^$,.,'`
+ obsolete_mkdir_used=false
+
+ if test $dstdir_status != 0; then
+ case $posix_mkdir in
+ '')
+ # Create intermediate dirs using mode 755 as modified by the umask.
+ # This is like FreeBSD 'install' as of 1997-10-28.
+ umask=`umask`
+ case $stripcmd.$umask in
+ # Optimize common cases.
+ *[2367][2367]) mkdir_umask=$umask;;
+ .*0[02][02] | .[02][02] | .[02]) mkdir_umask=22;;
+
+ *[0-7])
+ mkdir_umask=`expr $umask + 22 \
+ - $umask % 100 % 40 + $umask % 20 \
+ - $umask % 10 % 4 + $umask % 2
+ `;;
+ *) mkdir_umask=$umask,go-w;;
+ esac
+
+ # With -d, create the new directory with the user-specified mode.
+ # Otherwise, rely on $mkdir_umask.
+ if test -n "$dir_arg"; then
+ mkdir_mode=-m$mode
+ else
+ mkdir_mode=
+ fi
+
+ posix_mkdir=false
+ case $umask in
+ *[123567][0-7][0-7])
+ # POSIX mkdir -p sets u+wx bits regardless of umask, which
+ # is incompatible with FreeBSD 'install' when (umask & 300) != 0.
+ ;;
+ *)
+ tmpdir=${TMPDIR-/tmp}/ins$RANDOM-$$
+ trap 'ret=$?; rmdir "$tmpdir/d" "$tmpdir" 2>/dev/null; exit $ret' 0
+
+ if (umask $mkdir_umask &&
+ exec $mkdirprog $mkdir_mode -p -- "$tmpdir/d") >/dev/null 2>&1
+ then
+ if test -z "$dir_arg" || {
+ # Check for POSIX incompatibilities with -m.
+ # HP-UX 11.23 and IRIX 6.5 mkdir -m -p sets group- or
+ # other-writable bit of parent directory when it shouldn't.
+ # FreeBSD 6.1 mkdir -m -p sets mode of existing directory.
+ ls_ld_tmpdir=`ls -ld "$tmpdir"`
+ case $ls_ld_tmpdir in
+ d????-?r-*) different_mode=700;;
+ d????-?--*) different_mode=755;;
+ *) false;;
+ esac &&
+ $mkdirprog -m$different_mode -p -- "$tmpdir" && {
+ ls_ld_tmpdir_1=`ls -ld "$tmpdir"`
+ test "$ls_ld_tmpdir" = "$ls_ld_tmpdir_1"
+ }
+ }
+ then posix_mkdir=:
+ fi
+ rmdir "$tmpdir/d" "$tmpdir"
+ else
+ # Remove any dirs left behind by ancient mkdir implementations.
+ rmdir ./$mkdir_mode ./-p ./-- 2>/dev/null
+ fi
+ trap '' 0;;
+ esac;;
+ esac
- # Make sure that the destination directory exists.
+ if
+ $posix_mkdir && (
+ umask $mkdir_umask &&
+ $doit_exec $mkdirprog $mkdir_mode -p -- "$dstdir"
+ )
+ then :
+ else
- # Skip lots of stat calls in the usual case.
- if test ! -d "$dstdir"; then
- defaultIFS='
- '
- IFS="${IFS-$defaultIFS}"
+ # The umask is ridiculous, or mkdir does not conform to POSIX,
+ # or it failed possibly due to a race condition. Create the
+ # directory the slow way, step by step, checking for races as we go.
- oIFS=$IFS
- # Some sh's can't handle IFS=/ for some reason.
- IFS='%'
- set x `echo "$dstdir" | sed -e 's@/@%@g' -e 's@^%@/@'`
- shift
- IFS=$oIFS
+ case $dstdir in
+ /*) prefix='/';;
+ [-=\(\)!]*) prefix='./';;
+ *) prefix='';;
+ esac
- pathcomp=
+ eval "$initialize_posix_glob"
- while test $# -ne 0 ; do
- pathcomp=$pathcomp$1
+ oIFS=$IFS
+ IFS=/
+ $posix_glob set -f
+ set fnord $dstdir
shift
- if test ! -d "$pathcomp"; then
- $mkdirprog "$pathcomp"
- # mkdir can fail with a `File exist' error in case several
- # install-sh are creating the directory concurrently. This
- # is OK.
- test -d "$pathcomp" || exit
+ $posix_glob set +f
+ IFS=$oIFS
+
+ prefixes=
+
+ for d
+ do
+ test X"$d" = X && continue
+
+ prefix=$prefix$d
+ if test -d "$prefix"; then
+ prefixes=
+ else
+ if $posix_mkdir; then
+ (umask=$mkdir_umask &&
+ $doit_exec $mkdirprog $mkdir_mode -p -- "$dstdir") && break
+ # Don't fail if two instances are running concurrently.
+ test -d "$prefix" || exit 1
+ else
+ case $prefix in
+ *\'*) qprefix=`echo "$prefix" | sed "s/'/'\\\\\\\\''/g"`;;
+ *) qprefix=$prefix;;
+ esac
+ prefixes="$prefixes '$qprefix'"
+ fi
+ fi
+ prefix=$prefix/
+ done
+
+ if test -n "$prefixes"; then
+ # Don't fail if two instances are running concurrently.
+ (umask $mkdir_umask &&
+ eval "\$doit_exec \$mkdirprog $prefixes") ||
+ test -d "$dstdir" || exit 1
+ obsolete_mkdir_used=true
fi
- pathcomp=$pathcomp/
- done
+ fi
fi
if test -n "$dir_arg"; then
- $doit $mkdircmd "$dst" \
- && { test -z "$chowncmd" || $doit $chowncmd "$dst"; } \
- && { test -z "$chgrpcmd" || $doit $chgrpcmd "$dst"; } \
- && { test -z "$stripcmd" || $doit $stripcmd "$dst"; } \
- && { test -z "$chmodcmd" || $doit $chmodcmd "$dst"; }
-
+ { test -z "$chowncmd" || $doit $chowncmd "$dst"; } &&
+ { test -z "$chgrpcmd" || $doit $chgrpcmd "$dst"; } &&
+ { test "$obsolete_mkdir_used$chowncmd$chgrpcmd" = false ||
+ test -z "$chmodcmd" || $doit $chmodcmd $mode "$dst"; } || exit 1
else
- dstfile=`basename "$dst"`
# Make a couple of temp file names in the proper directory.
dsttmp=$dstdir/_inst.$$_
@@ -262,10 +455,9 @@ do
# Trap to clean up those temp files at exit.
trap 'ret=$?; rm -f "$dsttmp" "$rmtmp" && exit $ret' 0
- trap '(exit $?); exit' 1 2 13 15
# Copy the file name to the temp name.
- $doit $cpprog "$src" "$dsttmp" &&
+ (umask $cp_umask && $doit_exec $cpprog "$src" "$dsttmp") &&
# and set any options; do chmod last to preserve setuid bits.
#
@@ -273,51 +465,63 @@ do
# ignore errors from any of these, just make sure not to ignore
# errors from the above "$doit $cpprog $src $dsttmp" command.
#
- { test -z "$chowncmd" || $doit $chowncmd "$dsttmp"; } \
- && { test -z "$chgrpcmd" || $doit $chgrpcmd "$dsttmp"; } \
- && { test -z "$stripcmd" || $doit $stripcmd "$dsttmp"; } \
- && { test -z "$chmodcmd" || $doit $chmodcmd "$dsttmp"; } &&
-
- # Now rename the file to the real destination.
- { $doit $mvcmd -f "$dsttmp" "$dstdir/$dstfile" 2>/dev/null \
- || {
- # The rename failed, perhaps because mv can't rename something else
- # to itself, or perhaps because mv is so ancient that it does not
- # support -f.
-
- # Now remove or move aside any old file at destination location.
- # We try this two ways since rm can't unlink itself on some
- # systems and the destination file might be busy for other
- # reasons. In this case, the final cleanup might fail but the new
- # file should still install successfully.
- {
- if test -f "$dstdir/$dstfile"; then
- $doit $rmcmd -f "$dstdir/$dstfile" 2>/dev/null \
- || $doit $mvcmd -f "$dstdir/$dstfile" "$rmtmp" 2>/dev/null \
- || {
- echo "$0: cannot unlink or rename $dstdir/$dstfile" >&2
- (exit 1); exit
- }
- else
- :
- fi
- } &&
-
- # Now rename the file to the real destination.
- $doit $mvcmd "$dsttmp" "$dstdir/$dstfile"
- }
- }
- fi || { (exit 1); exit; }
+ { test -z "$chowncmd" || $doit $chowncmd "$dsttmp"; } &&
+ { test -z "$chgrpcmd" || $doit $chgrpcmd "$dsttmp"; } &&
+ { test -z "$stripcmd" || $doit $stripcmd "$dsttmp"; } &&
+ { test -z "$chmodcmd" || $doit $chmodcmd $mode "$dsttmp"; } &&
+
+ # If -C, don't bother to copy if it wouldn't change the file.
+ if $copy_on_change &&
+ old=`LC_ALL=C ls -dlL "$dst" 2>/dev/null` &&
+ new=`LC_ALL=C ls -dlL "$dsttmp" 2>/dev/null` &&
+
+ eval "$initialize_posix_glob" &&
+ $posix_glob set -f &&
+ set X $old && old=:$2:$4:$5:$6 &&
+ set X $new && new=:$2:$4:$5:$6 &&
+ $posix_glob set +f &&
+
+ test "$old" = "$new" &&
+ $cmpprog "$dst" "$dsttmp" >/dev/null 2>&1
+ then
+ rm -f "$dsttmp"
+ else
+ # Rename the file to the real destination.
+ $doit $mvcmd -f "$dsttmp" "$dst" 2>/dev/null ||
+
+ # The rename failed, perhaps because mv can't rename something else
+ # to itself, or perhaps because mv is so ancient that it does not
+ # support -f.
+ {
+ # Now remove or move aside any old file at destination location.
+ # We try this two ways since rm can't unlink itself on some
+ # systems and the destination file might be busy for other
+ # reasons. In this case, the final cleanup might fail but the new
+ # file should still install successfully.
+ {
+ test ! -f "$dst" ||
+ $doit $rmcmd -f "$dst" 2>/dev/null ||
+ { $doit $mvcmd -f "$dst" "$rmtmp" 2>/dev/null &&
+ { $doit $rmcmd -f "$rmtmp" 2>/dev/null; :; }
+ } ||
+ { echo "$0: cannot unlink or rename $dst" >&2
+ (exit 1); exit 1
+ }
+ } &&
+
+ # Now rename the file to the real destination.
+ $doit $mvcmd "$dsttmp" "$dst"
+ }
+ fi || exit 1
+
+ trap '' 0
+ fi
done
-# The final little trick to "correctly" pass the exit status to the exit trap.
-{
- (exit 0); exit
-}
-
# Local variables:
# eval: (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp)
# time-stamp-start: "scriptversion="
# time-stamp-format: "%:y-%02m-%02d.%02H"
-# time-stamp-end: "$"
+# time-stamp-time-zone: "UTC"
+# time-stamp-end: "; # UTC"
# End:
diff --git a/scripts/mdate-sh b/scripts/mdate-sh
index b610b47a6..b3719cf76 100755
--- a/scripts/mdate-sh
+++ b/scripts/mdate-sh
@@ -1,6 +1,9 @@
#!/bin/sh
# Get modification time of a file or directory and pretty-print it.
-# Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 1997, 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+
+scriptversion=2010-08-21.06; # UTC
+
+# Copyright (C) 1995-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# written by Ulrich Drepper <[email protected]>, June 1995
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
@@ -14,14 +17,55 @@
# 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, write to the Free Software Foundation,
-# Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
+# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# As a special exception to the GNU General Public License, if you
# distribute this file as part of a program that contains a
# configuration script generated by Autoconf, you may include it under
# the same distribution terms that you use for the rest of that program.
+# This file is maintained in Automake, please report
+# bugs to <[email protected]> or send patches to
+
+if test -n "${ZSH_VERSION+set}" && (emulate sh) >/dev/null 2>&1; then
+ emulate sh
+ NULLCMD=:
+ # Pre-4.2 versions of Zsh do word splitting on ${1+"$@"}, which
+ # is contrary to our usage. Disable this feature.
+ alias -g '${1+"$@"}'='"$@"'
+ setopt NO_GLOB_SUBST
+fi
+
+case $1 in
+ '')
+ echo "$0: No file. Try '$0 --help' for more information." 1>&2
+ exit 1;
+ ;;
+ -h | --h*)
+ cat <<\EOF
+Usage: mdate-sh [--help] [--version] FILE
+
+Pretty-print the modification day of FILE, in the format:
+1 January 1970
+
+Report bugs to <[email protected]>.
+EOF
+ exit $?
+ ;;
+ -v | --v*)
+ echo "mdate-sh $scriptversion"
+ exit $?
+ ;;
+esac
+
+error ()
+{
+ echo "$0: $1" >&2
+ exit 1
+}
+
+
# Prevent date giving response in another language.
LANG=C
export LANG
@@ -30,7 +74,15 @@ export LC_ALL
LC_TIME=C
export LC_TIME
-save_arg1="$1"
+# GNU ls changes its time format in response to the TIME_STYLE
+# variable. Since we cannot assume 'unset' works, revert this
+# variable to its documented default.
+if test "${TIME_STYLE+set}" = set; then
+ TIME_STYLE=posix-long-iso
+ export TIME_STYLE
+fi
+
+save_arg1=$1
# Find out how to get the extended ls output of a file or directory.
if ls -L /dev/null 1>/dev/null 2>&1; then
@@ -38,27 +90,32 @@ if ls -L /dev/null 1>/dev/null 2>&1; then
else
ls_command='ls -l -d'
fi
+# Avoid user/group names that might have spaces, when possible.
+if ls -n /dev/null 1>/dev/null 2>&1; then
+ ls_command="$ls_command -n"
+fi
-# A `ls -l' line looks as follows on OS/2.
+# A 'ls -l' line looks as follows on OS/2.
# drwxrwx--- 0 Aug 11 2001 foo
# This differs from Unix, which adds ownership information.
# drwxrwx--- 2 root root 4096 Aug 11 2001 foo
#
# To find the date, we split the line on spaces and iterate on words
# until we find a month. This cannot work with files whose owner is a
-# user named `Jan', or `Feb', etc. However, it's unlikely that `/'
+# user named "Jan", or "Feb", etc. However, it's unlikely that '/'
# will be owned by a user whose name is a month. So we first look at
# the extended ls output of the root directory to decide how many
# words should be skipped to get the date.
# On HPUX /bin/sh, "set" interprets "-rw-r--r--" as options, so the "x" below.
-set - x`$ls_command /`
+set x`$ls_command /`
# Find which argument is the month.
month=
command=
until test $month
do
+ test $# -gt 0 || error "failed parsing '$ls_command /' output"
shift
# Add another shift to the command.
command="$command shift;"
@@ -78,14 +135,35 @@ do
esac
done
+test -n "$month" || error "failed parsing '$ls_command /' output"
+
# Get the extended ls output of the file or directory.
-set - x`eval "$ls_command \"\$save_arg1\""`
+set dummy x`eval "$ls_command \"\\\$save_arg1\""`
# Remove all preceding arguments
eval $command
-# Get the month. Next argument is day, followed by the year or time.
-case $1 in
+# Because of the dummy argument above, month is in $2.
+#
+# On a POSIX system, we should have
+#
+# $# = 5
+# $1 = file size
+# $2 = month
+# $3 = day
+# $4 = year or time
+# $5 = filename
+#
+# On Darwin 7.7.0 and 7.6.0, we have
+#
+# $# = 4
+# $1 = day
+# $2 = month
+# $3 = year or time
+# $4 = filename
+
+# Get the month.
+case $2 in
Jan) month=January; nummonth=1;;
Feb) month=February; nummonth=2;;
Mar) month=March; nummonth=3;;
@@ -100,7 +178,10 @@ case $1 in
Dec) month=December; nummonth=12;;
esac
-day=$2
+case $3 in
+ ???*) day=$1;;
+ *) day=$3; shift;;
+esac
# Here we have to deal with the problem that the ls output gives either
# the time of day or the year.
@@ -131,3 +212,13 @@ esac
# The result.
echo $day $month $year
+
+# Local Variables:
+# mode: shell-script
+# sh-indentation: 2
+# eval: (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp)
+# time-stamp-start: "scriptversion="
+# time-stamp-format: "%:y-%02m-%02d.%02H"
+# time-stamp-time-zone: "UTC"
+# time-stamp-end: "; # UTC"
+# End:
diff --git a/scripts/missing b/scripts/missing
index 3392b9e70..db98974ff 100755
--- a/scripts/missing
+++ b/scripts/missing
@@ -1,11 +1,10 @@
#! /bin/sh
-# Common stub for a few missing GNU programs while installing.
+# Common wrapper for a few potentially missing GNU programs.
-scriptversion=2004-09-07.08
+scriptversion=2013-10-28.13; # UTC
-# Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004
-# Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-# Originally by Fran,cois Pinard <[email protected]>, 1996.
+# Copyright (C) 1996-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+# Originally written by Fran,cois Pinard <[email protected]>, 1996.
# 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
@@ -18,9 +17,7 @@ scriptversion=2004-09-07.08
# 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, write to the Free Software
-# Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
-# 02110-1301, USA.
+# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# As a special exception to the GNU General Public License, if you
# distribute this file as part of a program that contains a
@@ -28,326 +25,191 @@ scriptversion=2004-09-07.08
# the same distribution terms that you use for the rest of that program.
if test $# -eq 0; then
- echo 1>&2 "Try \`$0 --help' for more information"
+ echo 1>&2 "Try '$0 --help' for more information"
exit 1
fi
-run=:
+case $1 in
-# In the cases where this matters, `missing' is being run in the
-# srcdir already.
-if test -f configure.ac; then
- configure_ac=configure.ac
-else
- configure_ac=configure.in
-fi
-
-msg="missing on your system"
+ --is-lightweight)
+ # Used by our autoconf macros to check whether the available missing
+ # script is modern enough.
+ exit 0
+ ;;
-case "$1" in
---run)
- # Try to run requested program, and just exit if it succeeds.
- run=
- shift
- "$@" && exit 0
- # Exit code 63 means version mismatch. This often happens
- # when the user try to use an ancient version of a tool on
- # a file that requires a minimum version. In this case we
- # we should proceed has if the program had been absent, or
- # if --run hadn't been passed.
- if test $? = 63; then
- run=:
- msg="probably too old"
- fi
- ;;
+ --run)
+ # Back-compat with the calling convention used by older automake.
+ shift
+ ;;
-h|--h|--he|--hel|--help)
echo "\
$0 [OPTION]... PROGRAM [ARGUMENT]...
-Handle \`PROGRAM [ARGUMENT]...' for when PROGRAM is missing, or return an
-error status if there is no known handling for PROGRAM.
+Run 'PROGRAM [ARGUMENT]...', returning a proper advice when this fails due
+to PROGRAM being missing or too old.
Options:
-h, --help display this help and exit
-v, --version output version information and exit
- --run try to run the given command, and emulate it if it fails
Supported PROGRAM values:
- aclocal touch file \`aclocal.m4'
- autoconf touch file \`configure'
- autoheader touch file \`config.h.in'
- automake touch all \`Makefile.in' files
- bison create \`y.tab.[ch]', if possible, from existing .[ch]
- flex create \`lex.yy.c', if possible, from existing .c
- help2man touch the output file
- lex create \`lex.yy.c', if possible, from existing .c
- makeinfo touch the output file
- tar try tar, gnutar, gtar, then tar without non-portable flags
- yacc create \`y.tab.[ch]', if possible, from existing .[ch]
+ aclocal autoconf autoheader autom4te automake makeinfo
+ bison yacc flex lex help2man
+
+Version suffixes to PROGRAM as well as the prefixes 'gnu-', 'gnu', and
+'g' are ignored when checking the name.
Send bug reports to <[email protected]>."
- exit 0
+ exit $?
;;
-v|--v|--ve|--ver|--vers|--versi|--versio|--version)
echo "missing $scriptversion (GNU Automake)"
- exit 0
+ exit $?
;;
-*)
- echo 1>&2 "$0: Unknown \`$1' option"
- echo 1>&2 "Try \`$0 --help' for more information"
+ echo 1>&2 "$0: unknown '$1' option"
+ echo 1>&2 "Try '$0 --help' for more information"
exit 1
;;
esac
-# Now exit if we have it, but it failed. Also exit now if we
-# don't have it and --version was passed (most likely to detect
-# the program).
-case "$1" in
- lex|yacc)
- # Not GNU programs, they don't have --version.
- ;;
-
- tar)
- if test -n "$run"; then
- echo 1>&2 "ERROR: \`tar' requires --run"
- exit 1
- elif test "x$2" = "x--version" || test "x$2" = "x--help"; then
- exit 1
- fi
- ;;
-
- *)
- if test -z "$run" && ($1 --version) > /dev/null 2>&1; then
- # We have it, but it failed.
- exit 1
- elif test "x$2" = "x--version" || test "x$2" = "x--help"; then
- # Could not run --version or --help. This is probably someone
- # running `$TOOL --version' or `$TOOL --help' to check whether
- # $TOOL exists and not knowing $TOOL uses missing.
- exit 1
- fi
- ;;
-esac
-
-# If it does not exist, or fails to run (possibly an outdated version),
-# try to emulate it.
-case "$1" in
- aclocal*)
- echo 1>&2 "\
-WARNING: \`$1' is $msg. You should only need it if
- you modified \`acinclude.m4' or \`${configure_ac}'. You might want
- to install the \`Automake' and \`Perl' packages. Grab them from
- any GNU archive site."
- touch aclocal.m4
- ;;
-
- autoconf)
- echo 1>&2 "\
-WARNING: \`$1' is $msg. You should only need it if
- you modified \`${configure_ac}'. You might want to install the
- \`Autoconf' and \`GNU m4' packages. Grab them from any GNU
- archive site."
- touch configure
- ;;
-
- autoheader)
- echo 1>&2 "\
-WARNING: \`$1' is $msg. You should only need it if
- you modified \`acconfig.h' or \`${configure_ac}'. You might want
- to install the \`Autoconf' and \`GNU m4' packages. Grab them
- from any GNU archive site."
- files=`sed -n 's/^[ ]*A[CM]_CONFIG_HEADER(\([^)]*\)).*/\1/p' ${configure_ac}`
- test -z "$files" && files="config.h"
- touch_files=
- for f in $files; do
- case "$f" in
- *:*) touch_files="$touch_files "`echo "$f" |
- sed -e 's/^[^:]*://' -e 's/:.*//'`;;
- *) touch_files="$touch_files $f.in";;
- esac
- done
- touch $touch_files
- ;;
-
- automake*)
- echo 1>&2 "\
-WARNING: \`$1' is $msg. You should only need it if
- you modified \`Makefile.am', \`acinclude.m4' or \`${configure_ac}'.
- You might want to install the \`Automake' and \`Perl' packages.
- Grab them from any GNU archive site."
- find . -type f -name Makefile.am -print |
- sed 's/\.am$/.in/' |
- while read f; do touch "$f"; done
- ;;
-
- autom4te)
- echo 1>&2 "\
-WARNING: \`$1' is needed, but is $msg.
- You might have modified some files without having the
- proper tools for further handling them.
- You can get \`$1' as part of \`Autoconf' from any GNU
- archive site."
-
- file=`echo "$*" | sed -n 's/.*--output[ =]*\([^ ]*\).*/\1/p'`
- test -z "$file" && file=`echo "$*" | sed -n 's/.*-o[ ]*\([^ ]*\).*/\1/p'`
- if test -f "$file"; then
- touch $file
- else
- test -z "$file" || exec >$file
- echo "#! /bin/sh"
- echo "# Created by GNU Automake missing as a replacement of"
- echo "# $ $@"
- echo "exit 0"
- chmod +x $file
- exit 1
- fi
- ;;
-
- bison|yacc)
- echo 1>&2 "\
-WARNING: \`$1' $msg. You should only need it if
- you modified a \`.y' file. You may need the \`Bison' package
- in order for those modifications to take effect. You can get
- \`Bison' from any GNU archive site."
- rm -f y.tab.c y.tab.h
- if [ $# -ne 1 ]; then
- eval LASTARG="\${$#}"
- case "$LASTARG" in
- *.y)
- SRCFILE=`echo "$LASTARG" | sed 's/y$/c/'`
- if [ -f "$SRCFILE" ]; then
- cp "$SRCFILE" y.tab.c
- fi
- SRCFILE=`echo "$LASTARG" | sed 's/y$/h/'`
- if [ -f "$SRCFILE" ]; then
- cp "$SRCFILE" y.tab.h
- fi
- ;;
- esac
- fi
- if [ ! -f y.tab.h ]; then
- echo >y.tab.h
- fi
- if [ ! -f y.tab.c ]; then
- echo 'main() { return 0; }' >y.tab.c
- fi
- ;;
-
- lex|flex)
- echo 1>&2 "\
-WARNING: \`$1' is $msg. You should only need it if
- you modified a \`.l' file. You may need the \`Flex' package
- in order for those modifications to take effect. You can get
- \`Flex' from any GNU archive site."
- rm -f lex.yy.c
- if [ $# -ne 1 ]; then
- eval LASTARG="\${$#}"
- case "$LASTARG" in
- *.l)
- SRCFILE=`echo "$LASTARG" | sed 's/l$/c/'`
- if [ -f "$SRCFILE" ]; then
- cp "$SRCFILE" lex.yy.c
- fi
- ;;
- esac
- fi
- if [ ! -f lex.yy.c ]; then
- echo 'main() { return 0; }' >lex.yy.c
- fi
- ;;
-
- help2man)
- echo 1>&2 "\
-WARNING: \`$1' is $msg. You should only need it if
- you modified a dependency of a manual page. You may need the
- \`Help2man' package in order for those modifications to take
- effect. You can get \`Help2man' from any GNU archive site."
-
- file=`echo "$*" | sed -n 's/.*-o \([^ ]*\).*/\1/p'`
- if test -z "$file"; then
- file=`echo "$*" | sed -n 's/.*--output=\([^ ]*\).*/\1/p'`
- fi
- if [ -f "$file" ]; then
- touch $file
- else
- test -z "$file" || exec >$file
- echo ".ab help2man is required to generate this page"
- exit 1
- fi
- ;;
-
- makeinfo)
- echo 1>&2 "\
-WARNING: \`$1' is $msg. You should only need it if
- you modified a \`.texi' or \`.texinfo' file, or any other file
- indirectly affecting the aspect of the manual. The spurious
- call might also be the consequence of using a buggy \`make' (AIX,
- DU, IRIX). You might want to install the \`Texinfo' package or
- the \`GNU make' package. Grab either from any GNU archive site."
- file=`echo "$*" | sed -n 's/.*-o \([^ ]*\).*/\1/p'`
- if test -z "$file"; then
- file=`echo "$*" | sed 's/.* \([^ ]*\) *$/\1/'`
- file=`sed -n '/^@setfilename/ { s/.* \([^ ]*\) *$/\1/; p; q; }' $file`
- fi
- touch $file
- ;;
-
- tar)
- shift
-
- # We have already tried tar in the generic part.
- # Look for gnutar/gtar before invocation to avoid ugly error
- # messages.
- if (gnutar --version > /dev/null 2>&1); then
- gnutar "$@" && exit 0
- fi
- if (gtar --version > /dev/null 2>&1); then
- gtar "$@" && exit 0
- fi
- firstarg="$1"
- if shift; then
- case "$firstarg" in
- *o*)
- firstarg=`echo "$firstarg" | sed s/o//`
- tar "$firstarg" "$@" && exit 0
- ;;
- esac
- case "$firstarg" in
- *h*)
- firstarg=`echo "$firstarg" | sed s/h//`
- tar "$firstarg" "$@" && exit 0
- ;;
- esac
- fi
-
- echo 1>&2 "\
-WARNING: I can't seem to be able to run \`tar' with the given arguments.
- You may want to install GNU tar or Free paxutils, or check the
- command line arguments."
- exit 1
- ;;
-
- *)
- echo 1>&2 "\
-WARNING: \`$1' is needed, and is $msg.
- You might have modified some files without having the
- proper tools for further handling them. Check the \`README' file,
- it often tells you about the needed prerequisites for installing
- this package. You may also peek at any GNU archive site, in case
- some other package would contain this missing \`$1' program."
- exit 1
- ;;
-esac
+# Run the given program, remember its exit status.
+"$@"; st=$?
+
+# If it succeeded, we are done.
+test $st -eq 0 && exit 0
+
+# Also exit now if we it failed (or wasn't found), and '--version' was
+# passed; such an option is passed most likely to detect whether the
+# program is present and works.
+case $2 in --version|--help) exit $st;; esac
+
+# Exit code 63 means version mismatch. This often happens when the user
+# tries to use an ancient version of a tool on a file that requires a
+# minimum version.
+if test $st -eq 63; then
+ msg="probably too old"
+elif test $st -eq 127; then
+ # Program was missing.
+ msg="missing on your system"
+else
+ # Program was found and executed, but failed. Give up.
+ exit $st
+fi
-exit 0
+perl_URL=http://www.perl.org/
+flex_URL=http://flex.sourceforge.net/
+gnu_software_URL=http://www.gnu.org/software
+
+program_details ()
+{
+ case $1 in
+ aclocal|automake)
+ echo "The '$1' program is part of the GNU Automake package:"
+ echo "<$gnu_software_URL/automake>"
+ echo "It also requires GNU Autoconf, GNU m4 and Perl in order to run:"
+ echo "<$gnu_software_URL/autoconf>"
+ echo "<$gnu_software_URL/m4/>"
+ echo "<$perl_URL>"
+ ;;
+ autoconf|autom4te|autoheader)
+ echo "The '$1' program is part of the GNU Autoconf package:"
+ echo "<$gnu_software_URL/autoconf/>"
+ echo "It also requires GNU m4 and Perl in order to run:"
+ echo "<$gnu_software_URL/m4/>"
+ echo "<$perl_URL>"
+ ;;
+ esac
+}
+
+give_advice ()
+{
+ # Normalize program name to check for.
+ normalized_program=`echo "$1" | sed '
+ s/^gnu-//; t
+ s/^gnu//; t
+ s/^g//; t'`
+
+ printf '%s\n' "'$1' is $msg."
+
+ configure_deps="'configure.ac' or m4 files included by 'configure.ac'"
+ case $normalized_program in
+ autoconf*)
+ echo "You should only need it if you modified 'configure.ac',"
+ echo "or m4 files included by it."
+ program_details 'autoconf'
+ ;;
+ autoheader*)
+ echo "You should only need it if you modified 'acconfig.h' or"
+ echo "$configure_deps."
+ program_details 'autoheader'
+ ;;
+ automake*)
+ echo "You should only need it if you modified 'Makefile.am' or"
+ echo "$configure_deps."
+ program_details 'automake'
+ ;;
+ aclocal*)
+ echo "You should only need it if you modified 'acinclude.m4' or"
+ echo "$configure_deps."
+ program_details 'aclocal'
+ ;;
+ autom4te*)
+ echo "You might have modified some maintainer files that require"
+ echo "the 'autom4te' program to be rebuilt."
+ program_details 'autom4te'
+ ;;
+ bison*|yacc*)
+ echo "You should only need it if you modified a '.y' file."
+ echo "You may want to install the GNU Bison package:"
+ echo "<$gnu_software_URL/bison/>"
+ ;;
+ lex*|flex*)
+ echo "You should only need it if you modified a '.l' file."
+ echo "You may want to install the Fast Lexical Analyzer package:"
+ echo "<$flex_URL>"
+ ;;
+ help2man*)
+ echo "You should only need it if you modified a dependency" \
+ "of a man page."
+ echo "You may want to install the GNU Help2man package:"
+ echo "<$gnu_software_URL/help2man/>"
+ ;;
+ makeinfo*)
+ echo "You should only need it if you modified a '.texi' file, or"
+ echo "any other file indirectly affecting the aspect of the manual."
+ echo "You might want to install the Texinfo package:"
+ echo "<$gnu_software_URL/texinfo/>"
+ echo "The spurious makeinfo call might also be the consequence of"
+ echo "using a buggy 'make' (AIX, DU, IRIX), in which case you might"
+ echo "want to install GNU make:"
+ echo "<$gnu_software_URL/make/>"
+ ;;
+ *)
+ echo "You might have modified some files without having the proper"
+ echo "tools for further handling them. Check the 'README' file, it"
+ echo "often tells you about the needed prerequisites for installing"
+ echo "this package. You may also peek at any GNU archive site, in"
+ echo "case some other package contains this missing '$1' program."
+ ;;
+ esac
+}
+
+give_advice "$1" | sed -e '1s/^/WARNING: /' \
+ -e '2,$s/^/ /' >&2
+
+# Propagate the correct exit status (expected to be 127 for a program
+# not found, 63 for a program that failed due to version mismatch).
+exit $st
# Local variables:
# eval: (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp)
# time-stamp-start: "scriptversion="
# time-stamp-format: "%:y-%02m-%02d.%02H"
-# time-stamp-end: "$"
+# time-stamp-time-zone: "UTC"
+# time-stamp-end: "; # UTC"
# End:
diff --git a/scripts/mkinstalldirs b/scripts/mkinstalldirs
index 6fbe5e117..55d537f87 100755
--- a/scripts/mkinstalldirs
+++ b/scripts/mkinstalldirs
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
#! /bin/sh
# mkinstalldirs --- make directory hierarchy
-scriptversion=2004-02-15.20
+scriptversion=2009-04-28.21; # UTC
# Original author: Noah Friedman <[email protected]>
# Created: 1993-05-16
@@ -11,8 +11,11 @@ scriptversion=2004-02-15.20
# bugs to <[email protected]> or send patches to
+nl='
+'
+IFS=" "" $nl"
errstatus=0
-dirmode=""
+dirmode=
usage="\
Usage: mkinstalldirs [-h] [--help] [--version] [-m MODE] DIR ...
@@ -27,7 +30,7 @@ while test $# -gt 0 ; do
case $1 in
-h | --help | --h*) # -h for help
echo "$usage"
- exit 0
+ exit $?
;;
-m) # -m PERM arg
shift
@@ -37,7 +40,7 @@ while test $# -gt 0 ; do
;;
--version)
echo "$0 $scriptversion"
- exit 0
+ exit $?
;;
--) # stop option processing
shift
@@ -78,9 +81,9 @@ case $dirmode in
echo "mkdir -p -- $*"
exec mkdir -p -- "$@"
else
- # On NextStep and OpenStep, the `mkdir' command does not
+ # On NextStep and OpenStep, the 'mkdir' command does not
# recognize any option. It will interpret all options as
- # directories to create, and then abort because `.' already
+ # directories to create, and then abort because '.' already
# exists.
test -d ./-p && rmdir ./-p
test -d ./--version && rmdir ./--version
@@ -103,13 +106,21 @@ esac
for file
do
- set fnord `echo ":$file" | sed -ne 's/^:\//#/;s/^://;s/\// /g;s/^#/\//;p'`
+ case $file in
+ /*) pathcomp=/ ;;
+ *) pathcomp= ;;
+ esac
+ oIFS=$IFS
+ IFS=/
+ set fnord $file
shift
+ IFS=$oIFS
- pathcomp=
for d
do
- pathcomp="$pathcomp$d"
+ test "x$d" = x && continue
+
+ pathcomp=$pathcomp$d
case $pathcomp in
-*) pathcomp=./$pathcomp ;;
esac
@@ -124,7 +135,7 @@ do
else
if test ! -z "$dirmode"; then
echo "chmod $dirmode $pathcomp"
- lasterr=""
+ lasterr=
chmod "$dirmode" "$pathcomp" || lasterr=$?
if test ! -z "$lasterr"; then
@@ -134,7 +145,7 @@ do
fi
fi
- pathcomp="$pathcomp/"
+ pathcomp=$pathcomp/
done
done
@@ -146,5 +157,6 @@ exit $errstatus
# eval: (add-hook 'write-file-hooks 'time-stamp)
# time-stamp-start: "scriptversion="
# time-stamp-format: "%:y-%02m-%02d.%02H"
-# time-stamp-end: "$"
+# time-stamp-time-zone: "UTC"
+# time-stamp-end: "; # UTC"
# End:
diff --git a/scripts/texinfo.tex b/scripts/texinfo.tex
index bc7002da9..47008b0b3 100644
--- a/scripts/texinfo.tex
+++ b/scripts/texinfo.tex
@@ -3,11 +3,11 @@
% Load plain if necessary, i.e., if running under initex.
\expandafter\ifx\csname fmtname\endcsname\relax\input plain\fi
%
-\def\texinfoversion{2012-01-19.16}
+\def\texinfoversion{2013-02-01.11}
%
% Copyright 1985, 1986, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995,
% 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006,
-% 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+% 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
%
% This texinfo.tex file is free software: you can redistribute it and/or
% modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
@@ -24,13 +24,14 @@
%
% As a special exception, when this file is read by TeX when processing
% a Texinfo source document, you may use the result without
-% restriction. (This has been our intent since Texinfo was invented.)
+% restriction. This Exception is an additional permission under section 7
+% of the GNU General Public License, version 3 ("GPLv3").
%
% Please try the latest version of texinfo.tex before submitting bug
% reports; you can get the latest version from:
-% http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/ (the Texinfo home page), or
-% ftp://tug.org/tex/texinfo.tex
-% (and all CTAN mirrors, see http://www.ctan.org).
+% http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/texinfo/ (the Texinfo release area), or
+% http://ftpmirror.gnu.org/texinfo/ (same, via a mirror), or
+% http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/ (the Texinfo home page)
% The texinfo.tex in any given distribution could well be out
% of date, so if that's what you're using, please check.
%
@@ -594,7 +595,7 @@
\def\:{\spacefactor=1000 }
% @* forces a line break.
-\def\*{\hfil\break\hbox{}\ignorespaces}
+\def\*{\unskip\hfil\break\hbox{}\ignorespaces}
% @/ allows a line break.
\let\/=\allowbreak
@@ -887,7 +888,7 @@ where each line of input produces a line of output.}
\def\popthisfilestack{\errthisfilestackempty}
\def\errthisfilestackempty{\errmessage{Internal error:
the stack of filenames is empty.}}
-
+%
\def\thisfile{}
% @center line
@@ -895,36 +896,46 @@ where each line of input produces a line of output.}
%
\parseargdef\center{%
\ifhmode
- \let\next\centerH
+ \let\centersub\centerH
\else
- \let\next\centerV
+ \let\centersub\centerV
\fi
- \next{\hfil \ignorespaces#1\unskip \hfil}%
+ \centersub{\hfil \ignorespaces#1\unskip \hfil}%
+ \let\centersub\relax % don't let the definition persist, just in case
}
-\def\centerH#1{%
- {%
- \hfil\break
- \advance\hsize by -\leftskip
- \advance\hsize by -\rightskip
- \line{#1}%
- \break
- }%
+\def\centerH#1{{%
+ \hfil\break
+ \advance\hsize by -\leftskip
+ \advance\hsize by -\rightskip
+ \line{#1}%
+ \break
+}}
+%
+\newcount\centerpenalty
+\def\centerV#1{%
+ % The idea here is the same as in \startdefun, \cartouche, etc.: if
+ % @center is the first thing after a section heading, we need to wipe
+ % out the negative parskip inserted by \sectionheading, but still
+ % prevent a page break here.
+ \centerpenalty = \lastpenalty
+ \ifnum\centerpenalty>10000 \vskip\parskip \fi
+ \ifnum\centerpenalty>9999 \penalty\centerpenalty \fi
+ \line{\kern\leftskip #1\kern\rightskip}%
}
-\def\centerV#1{\line{\kern\leftskip #1\kern\rightskip}}
% @sp n outputs n lines of vertical space
-
+%
\parseargdef\sp{\vskip #1\baselineskip}
% @comment ...line which is ignored...
% @c is the same as @comment
% @ignore ... @end ignore is another way to write a comment
-
+%
\def\comment{\begingroup \catcode`\^^M=\other%
\catcode`\@=\other \catcode`\{=\other \catcode`\}=\other%
\commentxxx}
{\catcode`\^^M=\other \gdef\commentxxx#1^^M{\endgroup}}
-
+%
\let\c=\comment
% @paragraphindent NCHARS
@@ -1107,7 +1118,7 @@ where each line of input produces a line of output.}
% #1 is a control sequence in which to do the replacements,
% which we \xdef.
\def\txiescapepdf#1{%
- \ifx\pdfescapestring\relax
+ \ifx\pdfescapestring\thisisundefined
% No primitive available; should we give a warning or log?
% Many times it won't matter.
\else
@@ -1173,8 +1184,8 @@ output) for that.)}
%
% #1 is image name, #2 width (might be empty/whitespace), #3 height (ditto).
\def\dopdfimage#1#2#3{%
- \def\imagewidth{#2}\setbox0 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #2}%
- \def\imageheight{#3}\setbox2 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #3}%
+ \def\pdfimagewidth{#2}\setbox0 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #2}%
+ \def\pdfimageheight{#3}\setbox2 = \hbox{\ignorespaces #3}%
%
% pdftex (and the PDF format) support .pdf, .png, .jpg (among
% others). Let's try in that order, PDF first since if
@@ -1212,8 +1223,8 @@ output) for that.)}
\else
\immediate\pdfximage
\fi
- \ifdim \wd0 >0pt width \imagewidth \fi
- \ifdim \wd2 >0pt height \imageheight \fi
+ \ifdim \wd0 >0pt width \pdfimagewidth \fi
+ \ifdim \wd2 >0pt height \pdfimageheight \fi
\ifnum\pdftexversion<13
#1.\pdfimgext
\else
@@ -1357,12 +1368,17 @@ output) for that.)}
\def\skipspaces#1{\def\PP{#1}\def\D{|}%
\ifx\PP\D\let\nextsp\relax
\else\let\nextsp\skipspaces
- \ifx\p\space\else\addtokens{\filename}{\PP}%
- \advance\filenamelength by 1
- \fi
+ \addtokens{\filename}{\PP}%
+ \advance\filenamelength by 1
\fi
\nextsp}
- \def\getfilename#1{\filenamelength=0\expandafter\skipspaces#1|\relax}
+ \def\getfilename#1{%
+ \filenamelength=0
+ % If we don't expand the argument now, \skipspaces will get
+ % snagged on things like "@value{foo}".
+ \edef\temp{#1}%
+ \expandafter\skipspaces\temp|\relax
+ }
\ifnum\pdftexversion < 14
\let \startlink \pdfannotlink
\else
@@ -1459,9 +1475,6 @@ output) for that.)}
\def\ttsl{\setfontstyle{ttsl}}
-% Default leading.
-\newdimen\textleading \textleading = 13.2pt
-
% Set the baselineskip to #1, and the lineskip and strut size
% correspondingly. There is no deep meaning behind these magic numbers
% used as factors; they just match (closely enough) what Knuth defined.
@@ -1473,6 +1486,7 @@ output) for that.)}
% can get a sort of poor man's double spacing by redefining this.
\def\baselinefactor{1}
%
+\newdimen\textleading
\def\setleading#1{%
\dimen0 = #1\relax
\normalbaselineskip = \baselinefactor\dimen0
@@ -1745,18 +1759,24 @@ end
\fi\fi
-% Set the font macro #1 to the font named #2, adding on the
-% specified font prefix (normally `cm').
+% Set the font macro #1 to the font named \fontprefix#2.
% #3 is the font's design size, #4 is a scale factor, #5 is the CMap
-% encoding (currently only OT1, OT1IT and OT1TT are allowed, pass
-% empty to omit).
+% encoding (only OT1, OT1IT and OT1TT are allowed, or empty to omit).
+% Example:
+% #1 = \textrm
+% #2 = \rmshape
+% #3 = 10
+% #4 = \mainmagstep
+% #5 = OT1
+%
\def\setfont#1#2#3#4#5{%
\font#1=\fontprefix#2#3 scaled #4
\csname cmap#5\endcsname#1%
}
% This is what gets called when #5 of \setfont is empty.
\let\cmap\gobble
-% emacs-page end of cmaps
+%
+% (end of cmaps)
% Use cm as the default font prefix.
% To specify the font prefix, you must define \fontprefix
@@ -1766,7 +1786,7 @@ end
\fi
% Support font families that don't use the same naming scheme as CM.
\def\rmshape{r}
-\def\rmbshape{bx} %where the normal face is bold
+\def\rmbshape{bx} % where the normal face is bold
\def\bfshape{b}
\def\bxshape{bx}
\def\ttshape{tt}
@@ -1781,8 +1801,7 @@ end
\def\scshape{csc}
\def\scbshape{csc}
-% Definitions for a main text size of 11pt. This is the default in
-% Texinfo.
+% Definitions for a main text size of 11pt. (The default in Texinfo.)
%
\def\definetextfontsizexi{%
% Text fonts (11.2pt, magstep1).
@@ -1907,7 +1926,7 @@ end
\textleading = 13.2pt % line spacing for 11pt CM
\textfonts % reset the current fonts
\rm
-} % end of 11pt text font size definitions
+} % end of 11pt text font size definitions, \definetextfontsizexi
% Definitions to make the main text be 10pt Computer Modern, with
@@ -2039,7 +2058,7 @@ end
\textleading = 12pt % line spacing for 10pt CM
\textfonts % reset the current fonts
\rm
-} % end of 10pt text font size definitions
+} % end of 10pt text font size definitions, \definetextfontsizex
% We provide the user-level command
@@ -2254,8 +2273,6 @@ end
\gdef\markupsetcodequoteleft{\let`\codequoteleft}
\gdef\markupsetcodequoteright{\let'\codequoteright}
-
-\gdef\markupsetnoligaturesquoteleft{\let`\noligaturesquoteleft}
}
\let\markupsetuplqcode \markupsetcodequoteleft
@@ -2264,6 +2281,9 @@ end
\let\markupsetuplqexample \markupsetcodequoteleft
\let\markupsetuprqexample \markupsetcodequoteright
%
+\let\markupsetuplqkbd \markupsetcodequoteleft
+\let\markupsetuprqkbd \markupsetcodequoteright
+%
\let\markupsetuplqsamp \markupsetcodequoteleft
\let\markupsetuprqsamp \markupsetcodequoteright
%
@@ -2273,8 +2293,6 @@ end
\let\markupsetuplqverbatim \markupsetcodequoteleft
\let\markupsetuprqverbatim \markupsetcodequoteright
-\let\markupsetuplqkbd \markupsetnoligaturesquoteleft
-
% Allow an option to not use regular directed right quote/apostrophe
% (char 0x27), but instead the undirected quote from cmtt (char 0x0d).
% The undirected quote is ugly, so don't make it the default, but it
@@ -2364,8 +2382,7 @@ end
\aftersmartic
}
-% like \smartslanted except unconditionally uses \ttsl, and no ic.
-% @var is set to this for defun arguments.
+% Unconditional use \ttsl, and no ic. @var is set to this for defuns.
\def\ttslanted#1{{\ttsl #1}}
% @cite is like \smartslanted except unconditionally use \sl. We never want
@@ -2430,34 +2447,12 @@ end
% @samp.
\def\samp#1{{\setupmarkupstyle{samp}\lq\tclose{#1}\rq\null}}
-% definition of @key that produces a lozenge. Doesn't adjust to text size.
-%\setfont\keyrm\rmshape{8}{1000}{OT1}
-%\font\keysy=cmsy9
-%\def\key#1{{\keyrm\textfont2=\keysy \leavevmode\hbox{%
-% \raise0.4pt\hbox{\angleleft}\kern-.08em\vtop{%
-% \vbox{\hrule\kern-0.4pt
-% \hbox{\raise0.4pt\hbox{\vphantom{\angleleft}}#1}}%
-% \kern-0.4pt\hrule}%
-% \kern-.06em\raise0.4pt\hbox{\angleright}}}}
-
-% definition of @key with no lozenge. If the current font is already
-% monospace, don't change it; that way, we respect @kbdinputstyle. But
-% if it isn't monospace, then use \tt.
-%
-\def\key#1{{\setupmarkupstyle{key}%
- \nohyphenation
- \ifmonospace\else\tt\fi
- #1}\null}
-
-% ctrl is no longer a Texinfo command.
-\def\ctrl #1{{\tt \rawbackslash \hat}#1}
-
-% @file, @option are the same as @samp.
-\let\file=\samp
-\let\option=\samp
+% @indicateurl is \samp, that is, with quotes.
+\let\indicateurl=\samp
-% @code is a modification of @t,
-% which makes spaces the same size as normal in the surrounding text.
+% @code (and similar) prints in typewriter, but with spaces the same
+% size as normal in the surrounding text, without hyphenation, etc.
+% This is a subroutine for that.
\def\tclose#1{%
{%
% Change normal interword space to be same as for the current font.
@@ -2482,7 +2477,7 @@ end
% We *must* turn on hyphenation at `-' and `_' in @code.
% Otherwise, it is too hard to avoid overfull hboxes
% in the Emacs manual, the Library manual, etc.
-
+%
% Unfortunately, TeX uses one parameter (\hyphenchar) to control
% both hyphenation at - and hyphenation within words.
% We must therefore turn them both off (\tclose does that)
@@ -2501,7 +2496,7 @@ end
\let-\codedash
\let_\codeunder
\else
- \let-\realdash
+ \let-\normaldash
\let_\realunder
\fi
\codex
@@ -2510,7 +2505,7 @@ end
\def\codex #1{\tclose{#1}\endgroup}
-\def\realdash{-}
+\def\normaldash{-}
\def\codedash{-\discretionary{}{}{}}
\def\codeunder{%
% this is all so @math{@code{var_name}+1} can work. In math mode, _
@@ -2525,9 +2520,9 @@ end
}
% An additional complication: the above will allow breaks after, e.g.,
-% each of the four underscores in __typeof__. This is undesirable in
-% some manuals, especially if they don't have long identifiers in
-% general. @allowcodebreaks provides a way to control this.
+% each of the four underscores in __typeof__. This is bad.
+% @allowcodebreaks provides a document-level way to turn breaking at -
+% and _ on and off.
%
\newif\ifallowcodebreaks \allowcodebreakstrue
@@ -2546,6 +2541,13 @@ end
\fi\fi
}
+% For @command, @env, @file, @option quotes seem unnecessary,
+% so use \code rather than \samp.
+\let\command=\code
+\let\env=\code
+\let\file=\code
+\let\option=\code
+
% @uref (abbreviation for `urlref') takes an optional (comma-separated)
% second argument specifying the text to display and an optional third
% arg as text to display instead of (rather than in addition to) the url
@@ -2692,10 +2694,6 @@ end
\let\email=\uref
\fi
-% @kbd is like @code, except that if the argument is just one @key command,
-% then @kbd has no effect.
-\def\kbd#1{{\setupmarkupstyle{kbd}\def\look{#1}\expandafter\kbdfoo\look??\par}}
-
% @kbdinputstyle -- arg is `distinct' (@kbd uses slanted tty font always),
% `example' (@kbd uses ttsl only inside of @example and friends),
% or `code' (@kbd uses normal tty font always).
@@ -2719,16 +2717,36 @@ end
% Default is `distinct'.
\kbdinputstyle distinct
+% @kbd is like @code, except that if the argument is just one @key command,
+% then @kbd has no effect.
+\def\kbd#1{{\def\look{#1}\expandafter\kbdsub\look??\par}}
+
\def\xkey{\key}
-\def\kbdfoo#1#2#3\par{\def\one{#1}\def\three{#3}\def\threex{??}%
-\ifx\one\xkey\ifx\threex\three \key{#2}%
-\else{\tclose{\kbdfont\setupmarkupstyle{kbd}\look}}\fi
-\else{\tclose{\kbdfont\setupmarkupstyle{kbd}\look}}\fi}
+\def\kbdsub#1#2#3\par{%
+ \def\one{#1}\def\three{#3}\def\threex{??}%
+ \ifx\one\xkey\ifx\threex\three \key{#2}%
+ \else{\tclose{\kbdfont\setupmarkupstyle{kbd}\look}}\fi
+ \else{\tclose{\kbdfont\setupmarkupstyle{kbd}\look}}\fi
+}
-% For @indicateurl, @env, @command quotes seem unnecessary, so use \code.
-\let\indicateurl=\code
-\let\env=\code
-\let\command=\code
+% definition of @key that produces a lozenge. Doesn't adjust to text size.
+%\setfont\keyrm\rmshape{8}{1000}{OT1}
+%\font\keysy=cmsy9
+%\def\key#1{{\keyrm\textfont2=\keysy \leavevmode\hbox{%
+% \raise0.4pt\hbox{\angleleft}\kern-.08em\vtop{%
+% \vbox{\hrule\kern-0.4pt
+% \hbox{\raise0.4pt\hbox{\vphantom{\angleleft}}#1}}%
+% \kern-0.4pt\hrule}%
+% \kern-.06em\raise0.4pt\hbox{\angleright}}}}
+
+% definition of @key with no lozenge. If the current font is already
+% monospace, don't change it; that way, we respect @kbdinputstyle. But
+% if it isn't monospace, then use \tt.
+%
+\def\key#1{{\setupmarkupstyle{key}%
+ \nohyphenation
+ \ifmonospace\else\tt\fi
+ #1}\null}
% @clicksequence{File @click{} Open ...}
\def\clicksequence#1{\begingroup #1\endgroup}
@@ -2836,6 +2854,9 @@ end
}
}
+% ctrl is no longer a Texinfo command, but leave this definition for fun.
+\def\ctrl #1{{\tt \rawbackslash \hat}#1}
+
% @inlinefmt{FMTNAME,PROCESSED-TEXT} and @inlineraw{FMTNAME,RAW-TEXT}.
% Ignore unless FMTNAME == tex; then it is like @iftex and @tex,
% except specified as a normal braced arg, so no newlines to worry about.
@@ -3126,12 +3147,17 @@ end
% hopefully nobody will notice/care.
\edef\ecsize{\csname\curfontsize ecsize\endcsname}%
\edef\nominalsize{\csname\curfontsize nominalsize\endcsname}%
- \ifx\curfontstyle\bfstylename
- % bold:
- \font\thisecfont = ecb\ifusingit{i}{x}\ecsize \space at \nominalsize
+ \ifmonospace
+ % typewriter:
+ \font\thisecfont = ectt\ecsize \space at \nominalsize
\else
- % regular:
- \font\thisecfont = ec\ifusingit{ti}{rm}\ecsize \space at \nominalsize
+ \ifx\curfontstyle\bfstylename
+ % bold:
+ \font\thisecfont = ecb\ifusingit{i}{x}\ecsize \space at \nominalsize
+ \else
+ % regular:
+ \font\thisecfont = ec\ifusingit{ti}{rm}\ecsize \space at \nominalsize
+ \fi
\fi
\thisecfont
}
@@ -3244,6 +3270,20 @@ end
\finishedtitlepagetrue
}
+% Settings used for typesetting titles: no hyphenation, no indentation,
+% don't worry much about spacing, ragged right. This should be used
+% inside a \vbox, and fonts need to be set appropriately first. Because
+% it is always used for titles, nothing else, we call \rmisbold. \par
+% should be specified before the end of the \vbox, since a vbox is a group.
+%
+\def\raggedtitlesettings{%
+ \rmisbold
+ \hyphenpenalty=10000
+ \parindent=0pt
+ \tolerance=5000
+ \ptexraggedright
+}
+
% Macros to be used within @titlepage:
\let\subtitlerm=\tenrm
@@ -3251,7 +3291,7 @@ end
\parseargdef\title{%
\checkenv\titlepage
- \leftline{\titlefonts\rmisbold #1}
+ \vbox{\titlefonts \raggedtitlesettings #1\par}%
% print a rule at the page bottom also.
\finishedtitlepagefalse
\vskip4pt \hrule height 4pt width \hsize \vskip4pt
@@ -4148,7 +4188,7 @@ end
% ..., but we might end up with active ones in the argument if
% we're called from @code, as @code{@value{foo-bar_}}, though.
% So \let them to their normal equivalents.
- \let-\realdash \let_\normalunderscore
+ \let-\normaldash \let_\normalunderscore
}
}
@@ -4188,7 +4228,7 @@ end
}
\def\ifsetfail{\doignore{ifset}}
-% @ifclear VAR ... @end ifclear reads the `...' iff VAR has never been
+% @ifclear VAR ... @end executes the `...' iff VAR has never been
% defined with @set, or has been undefined with @clear.
%
% The `\else' inside the `\doifset' parameter is a trick to reuse the
@@ -4199,6 +4239,35 @@ end
\def\ifclear{\parsearg{\doifset{\else \let\next=\ifclearfail}}}
\def\ifclearfail{\doignore{ifclear}}
+% @ifcommandisdefined CMD ... @end executes the `...' if CMD (written
+% without the @) is in fact defined. We can only feasibly check at the
+% TeX level, so something like `mathcode' is going to considered
+% defined even though it is not a Texinfo command.
+%
+\makecond{ifcommanddefined}
+\def\ifcommanddefined{\parsearg{\doifcmddefined{\let\next=\ifcmddefinedfail}}}
+%
+\def\doifcmddefined#1#2{{%
+ \makevalueexpandable
+ \let\next=\empty
+ \expandafter\ifx\csname #2\endcsname\relax
+ #1% If not defined, \let\next as above.
+ \fi
+ \expandafter
+ }\next
+}
+\def\ifcmddefinedfail{\doignore{ifcommanddefined}}
+
+% @ifcommandnotdefined CMD ... handled similar to @ifclear above.
+\makecond{ifcommandnotdefined}
+\def\ifcommandnotdefined{%
+ \parsearg{\doifcmddefined{\else \let\next=\ifcmdnotdefinedfail}}}
+\def\ifcmdnotdefinedfail{\doignore{ifcommandnotdefined}}
+
+% Set the `txicommandconditionals' variable, so documents have a way to
+% test if the @ifcommand...defined conditionals are available.
+\set txicommandconditionals
+
% @dircategory CATEGORY -- specify a category of the dir file
% which this file should belong to. Ignore this in TeX.
\let\dircategory=\comment
@@ -4435,6 +4504,7 @@ end
\definedummyword\guillemetright
\definedummyword\guilsinglleft
\definedummyword\guilsinglright
+ \definedummyword\lbracechar
\definedummyword\leq
\definedummyword\minus
\definedummyword\ogonek
@@ -4447,6 +4517,7 @@ end
\definedummyword\quoteleft
\definedummyword\quoteright
\definedummyword\quotesinglbase
+ \definedummyword\rbracechar
\definedummyword\result
\definedummyword\textdegree
%
@@ -4498,6 +4569,7 @@ end
\definedummyword\t
%
% Commands that take arguments.
+ \definedummyword\abbr
\definedummyword\acronym
\definedummyword\anchor
\definedummyword\cite
@@ -4509,7 +4581,9 @@ end
\definedummyword\emph
\definedummyword\env
\definedummyword\file
+ \definedummyword\image
\definedummyword\indicateurl
+ \definedummyword\inforef
\definedummyword\kbd
\definedummyword\key
\definedummyword\math
@@ -4556,7 +4630,10 @@ end
% content at all. So for index sorting, we map @{ and @} to strings
% starting with |, since that ASCII character is between ASCII { and }.
\def\{{|a}%
+ \def\lbracechar{|a}%
+ %
\def\}{|b}%
+ \def\rbracechar{|b}%
%
% Non-English letters.
\def\AA{AA}%
@@ -4732,10 +4809,9 @@ end
%
% ..., ready, GO:
%
-\def\safewhatsit#1{%
-\ifhmode
+\def\safewhatsit#1{\ifhmode
#1%
-\else
+ \else
% \lastskip and \lastpenalty cannot both be nonzero simultaneously.
\whatsitskip = \lastskip
\edef\lastskipmacro{\the\lastskip}%
@@ -4759,7 +4835,6 @@ end
% to re-insert the same penalty (values >10000 are used for various
% signals); since we just inserted a non-discardable item, any
% following glue (such as a \parskip) would be a breakpoint. For example:
- %
% @deffn deffn-whatever
% @vindex index-whatever
% Description.
@@ -4772,8 +4847,7 @@ end
% (the whatsit from the \write), so we must insert a \nobreak.
\nobreak\vskip\whatsitskip
\fi
-\fi
-}
+\fi}
% The index entry written in the file actually looks like
% \entry {sortstring}{page}{topic}
@@ -5520,14 +5594,6 @@ end
% Define @majorheading, @heading and @subheading
-% NOTE on use of \vbox for chapter headings, section headings, and such:
-% 1) We use \vbox rather than the earlier \line to permit
-% overlong headings to fold.
-% 2) \hyphenpenalty is set to 10000 because hyphenation in a
-% heading is obnoxious; this forbids it.
-% 3) Likewise, headings look best if no \parindent is used, and
-% if justification is not attempted. Hence \raggedright.
-
\def\majorheading{%
{\advance\chapheadingskip by 10pt \chapbreak }%
\parsearg\chapheadingzzz
@@ -5535,10 +5601,8 @@ end
\def\chapheading{\chapbreak \parsearg\chapheadingzzz}
\def\chapheadingzzz#1{%
- {\chapfonts \vbox{\hyphenpenalty=10000\tolerance=5000
- \parindent=0pt\ptexraggedright
- \rmisbold #1\hfill}}%
- \bigskip \par\penalty 200\relax
+ \vbox{\chapfonts \raggedtitlesettings #1\par}%
+ \nobreak\bigskip \nobreak
\suppressfirstparagraphindent
}
@@ -5697,8 +5761,7 @@ end
%
% Typeset the actual heading.
\nobreak % Avoid page breaks at the interline glue.
- \vbox{\hyphenpenalty=10000 \tolerance=5000 \parindent=0pt \ptexraggedright
- \hangindent=\wd0 \centerparametersmaybe
+ \vbox{\raggedtitlesettings \hangindent=\wd0 \centerparametersmaybe
\unhbox0 #1\par}%
}%
\nobreak\bigskip % no page break after a chapter title
@@ -5720,18 +5783,18 @@ end
\def\setchapterstyle #1 {\csname CHAPF#1\endcsname}
%
\def\unnchfopen #1{%
-\chapoddpage {\chapfonts \vbox{\hyphenpenalty=10000\tolerance=5000
- \parindent=0pt\ptexraggedright
- \rmisbold #1\hfill}}\bigskip \par\nobreak
+ \chapoddpage
+ \vbox{\chapfonts \raggedtitlesettings #1\par}%
+ \nobreak\bigskip\nobreak
}
\def\chfopen #1#2{\chapoddpage {\chapfonts
\vbox to 3in{\vfil \hbox to\hsize{\hfil #2} \hbox to\hsize{\hfil #1} \vfil}}%
\par\penalty 5000 %
}
\def\centerchfopen #1{%
-\chapoddpage {\chapfonts \vbox{\hyphenpenalty=10000\tolerance=5000
- \parindent=0pt
- \hfill {\rmisbold #1}\hfill}}\bigskip \par\nobreak
+ \chapoddpage
+ \vbox{\chapfonts \raggedtitlesettings \hfill #1\hfill}%
+ \nobreak\bigskip \nobreak
}
\def\CHAPFopen{%
\global\let\chapmacro=\chfopen
@@ -5876,14 +5939,15 @@ end
%
% We'll almost certainly start a paragraph next, so don't let that
% glue accumulate. (Not a breakpoint because it's preceded by a
- % discardable item.)
+ % discardable item.) However, when a paragraph is not started next
+ % (\startdefun, \cartouche, \center, etc.), this needs to be wiped out
+ % or the negative glue will cause weirdly wrong output, typically
+ % obscuring the section heading with something else.
\vskip-\parskip
%
- % This is purely so the last item on the list is a known \penalty >
- % 10000. This is so \startdefun can avoid allowing breakpoints after
- % section headings. Otherwise, it would insert a valid breakpoint between:
- % @section sec-whatever
- % @deffn def-whatever
+ % This is so the last item on the main vertical list is a known
+ % \penalty > 10000, so \startdefun, etc., can recognize the situation
+ % and do the needful.
\penalty 10001
}
@@ -6303,7 +6367,7 @@ end
% If this cartouche directly follows a sectioning command, we need the
% \parskip glue (backspaced over by default) or the cartouche can
% collide with the section heading.
- \ifnum\lastpenalty>10000 \vskip\parskip \fi
+ \ifnum\lastpenalty>10000 \vskip\parskip \penalty\lastpenalty \fi
%
\vbox\bgroup
\baselineskip=0pt\parskip=0pt\lineskip=0pt
@@ -6496,16 +6560,9 @@ end
\makedispenvdef{quotation}{\quotationstart}
%
\def\quotationstart{%
- {\parskip=0pt \aboveenvbreak}% because \aboveenvbreak inserts \parskip
- \parindent=0pt
- %
- % @cartouche defines \nonarrowing to inhibit narrowing at next level down.
+ \indentedblockstart % same as \indentedblock, but increase right margin too.
\ifx\nonarrowing\relax
- \advance\leftskip by \lispnarrowing
\advance\rightskip by \lispnarrowing
- \exdentamount = \lispnarrowing
- \else
- \let\nonarrowing = \relax
\fi
\parsearg\quotationlabel
}
@@ -6531,6 +6588,32 @@ end
\fi
}
+% @indentedblock is like @quotation, but indents only on the left and
+% has no optional argument.
+%
+\makedispenvdef{indentedblock}{\indentedblockstart}
+%
+\def\indentedblockstart{%
+ {\parskip=0pt \aboveenvbreak}% because \aboveenvbreak inserts \parskip
+ \parindent=0pt
+ %
+ % @cartouche defines \nonarrowing to inhibit narrowing at next level down.
+ \ifx\nonarrowing\relax
+ \advance\leftskip by \lispnarrowing
+ \exdentamount = \lispnarrowing
+ \else
+ \let\nonarrowing = \relax
+ \fi
+}
+
+% Keep a nonzero parskip for the environment, since we're doing normal filling.
+%
+\def\Eindentedblock{%
+ \par
+ {\parskip=0pt \afterenvbreak}%
+}
+\def\Esmallindentedblock{\Eindentedblock}
+
% LaTeX-like @verbatim...@end verbatim and @verb{<char>...<char>}
% If we want to allow any <char> as delimiter,
@@ -7009,7 +7092,10 @@ end
\df \sl \hyphenchar\font=0
%
% On the other hand, if an argument has two dashes (for instance), we
- % want a way to get ttsl. Let's try @var for that.
+ % want a way to get ttsl. We used to recommend @var for that, so
+ % leave the code in, but it's strange for @var to lead to typewriter.
+ % Nowadays we recommend @code, since the difference between a ttsl hyphen
+ % and a tt hyphen is pretty tiny. @code also disables ?` !`.
\def\var##1{{\setupmarkupstyle{var}\ttslanted{##1}}}%
#1%
\sl\hyphenchar\font=45
@@ -7793,7 +7879,7 @@ end
\fi\fi
}
-
+%
% @xref, @pxref, and @ref generate cross-references. For \xrefX, #1 is
% the node name, #2 the name of the Info cross-reference, #3 the printed
% node name, #4 the name of the Info file, #5 the name of the printed
@@ -7803,16 +7889,21 @@ end
\def\xref#1{\putwordSee{} \xrefX[#1,,,,,,,]}
\def\ref#1{\xrefX[#1,,,,,,,]}
%
-\newbox\topbox
+\newbox\toprefbox
\newbox\printedrefnamebox
+\newbox\infofilenamebox
\newbox\printedmanualbox
%
\def\xrefX[#1,#2,#3,#4,#5,#6]{\begingroup
\unsepspaces
%
+ % Get args without leading/trailing spaces.
\def\printedrefname{\ignorespaces #3}%
\setbox\printedrefnamebox = \hbox{\printedrefname\unskip}%
%
+ \def\infofilename{\ignorespaces #4}%
+ \setbox\infofilenamebox = \hbox{\infofilename\unskip}%
+ %
\def\printedmanual{\ignorespaces #5}%
\setbox\printedmanualbox = \hbox{\printedmanual\unskip}%
%
@@ -7845,12 +7936,20 @@ end
\ifpdf
{\indexnofonts
\turnoffactive
+ \makevalueexpandable
% This expands tokens, so do it after making catcode changes, so _
- % etc. don't get their TeX definitions.
+ % etc. don't get their TeX definitions. This ignores all spaces in
+ % #4, including (wrongly) those in the middle of the filename.
\getfilename{#4}%
%
+ % This (wrongly) does not take account of leading or trailing
+ % spaces in #1, which should be ignored.
\edef\pdfxrefdest{#1}%
- \txiescapepdf\pdfxrefdest
+ \ifx\pdfxrefdest\empty
+ \def\pdfxrefdest{Top}% no empty targets
+ \else
+ \txiescapepdf\pdfxrefdest % escape PDF special chars
+ \fi
%
\leavevmode
\startlink attr{/Border [0 0 0]}%
@@ -7883,7 +7982,7 @@ end
\printedrefname
\fi
%
- % if the user also gave the printed manual name (fifth arg), append
+ % If the user also gave the printed manual name (fifth arg), append
% "in MANUALNAME".
\ifdim \wd\printedmanualbox > 0pt
\space \putwordin{} \cite{\printedmanual}%
@@ -7898,32 +7997,20 @@ end
% this is a loss. Therefore, we give the text of the node name
% again, so it is as if TeX is seeing it for the first time.
%
- % Cross-manual reference. Only include the "Section ``foo'' in" if
- % the foo is neither missing or Top. Thus, @xref{,,,foo,The Foo Manual}
- % outputs simply "see The Foo Manual".
\ifdim \wd\printedmanualbox > 0pt
- % What is the 7sp about? The idea is that we also want to omit
- % the Section part if we would be printing "Top", since they are
- % clearly trying to refer to the whole manual. But, this being
- % TeX, we can't easily compare strings while ignoring the possible
- % spaces before and after in the input. By adding the arbitrary
- % 7sp, we make it much less likely that a real node name would
- % happen to have the same width as "Top" (e.g., in a monospaced font).
- % I hope it will never happen in practice.
+ % Cross-manual reference with a printed manual name.
%
- % For the same basic reason, we retypeset the "Top" at every
- % reference, since the current font is indeterminate.
+ \crossmanualxref{\cite{\printedmanual\unskip}}%
+ %
+ \else\ifdim \wd\infofilenamebox > 0pt
+ % Cross-manual reference with only an info filename (arg 4), no
+ % printed manual name (arg 5). This is essentially the same as
+ % the case above; we output the filename, since we have nothing else.
%
- \setbox\topbox = \hbox{Top\kern7sp}%
- \setbox2 = \hbox{\ignorespaces \printedrefname \unskip \kern7sp}%
- \ifdim \wd2 > 7sp
- \ifdim \wd2 = \wd\topbox \else
- \putwordSection{} ``\printedrefname'' \putwordin{}\space
- \fi
- \fi
- \cite{\printedmanual}%
+ \crossmanualxref{\code{\infofilename\unskip}}%
+ %
\else
- % Reference in this manual.
+ % Reference within this manual.
%
% _ (for example) has to be the character _ for the purposes of the
% control sequence corresponding to the node, but it has to expand
@@ -7944,11 +8031,37 @@ end
%
% output the `page 3'.
\turnoffactive \putwordpage\tie\refx{#1-pg}{}%
- \fi
+ \fi\fi
\fi
\endlink
\endgroup}
+% Output a cross-manual xref to #1. Used just above (twice).
+%
+% Only include the text "Section ``foo'' in" if the foo is neither
+% missing or Top. Thus, @xref{,,,foo,The Foo Manual} outputs simply
+% "see The Foo Manual", the idea being to refer to the whole manual.
+%
+% But, this being TeX, we can't easily compare our node name against the
+% string "Top" while ignoring the possible spaces before and after in
+% the input. By adding the arbitrary 7sp below, we make it much less
+% likely that a real node name would have the same width as "Top" (e.g.,
+% in a monospaced font). Hopefully it will never happen in practice.
+%
+% For the same basic reason, we retypeset the "Top" at every
+% reference, since the current font is indeterminate.
+%
+\def\crossmanualxref#1{%
+ \setbox\toprefbox = \hbox{Top\kern7sp}%
+ \setbox2 = \hbox{\ignorespaces \printedrefname \unskip \kern7sp}%
+ \ifdim \wd2 > 7sp % nonempty?
+ \ifdim \wd2 = \wd\toprefbox \else % same as Top?
+ \putwordSection{} ``\printedrefname'' \putwordin{}\space
+ \fi
+ \fi
+ #1%
+}
+
% This macro is called from \xrefX for the `[nodename]' part of xref
% output. It's a separate macro only so it can be changed more easily,
% since square brackets don't work well in some documents. Particularly
@@ -8316,7 +8429,7 @@ end
it from ftp://tug.org/tex/epsf.tex.}
%
\def\image#1{%
- \ifx\epsfbox\thisiundefined
+ \ifx\epsfbox\thisisundefined
\ifwarnednoepsf \else
\errhelp = \noepsfhelp
\errmessage{epsf.tex not found, images will be ignored}%
@@ -8340,6 +8453,13 @@ end
% If the image is by itself, center it.
\ifvmode
\imagevmodetrue
+ \else \ifx\centersub\centerV
+ % for @center @image, we need a vbox so we can have our vertical space
+ \imagevmodetrue
+ \vbox\bgroup % vbox has better behavior than vtop herev
+ \fi\fi
+ %
+ \ifimagevmode
\nobreak\medskip
% Usually we'll have text after the image which will insert
% \parskip glue, so insert it here too to equalize the space
@@ -8349,9 +8469,13 @@ end
\fi
%
% Leave vertical mode so that indentation from an enclosing
- % environment such as @quotation is respected. On the other hand, if
- % it's at the top level, we don't want the normal paragraph indentation.
- \noindent
+ % environment such as @quotation is respected.
+ % However, if we're at the top level, we don't want the
+ % normal paragraph indentation.
+ % On the other hand, if we are in the case of @center @image, we don't
+ % want to start a paragraph, which will create a hsize-width box and
+ % eradicate the centering.
+ \ifx\centersub\centerV\else \noindent \fi
%
% Output the image.
\ifpdf
@@ -8363,7 +8487,10 @@ end
\epsfbox{#1.eps}%
\fi
%
- \ifimagevmode \medskip \fi % space after the standalone image
+ \ifimagevmode
+ \medskip % space after a standalone image
+ \fi
+ \ifx\centersub\centerV \egroup \fi
\endgroup}
@@ -9866,22 +9993,26 @@ directory should work if nowhere else does.}
@gdef@otherbackslash{@let\=@realbackslash}
% Same as @turnoffactive except outputs \ as {\tt\char`\\} instead of
-% the literal character `\'.
-%
-@def@normalturnoffactive{%
- @let"=@normaldoublequote
- @let$=@normaldollar %$ font-lock fix
- @let+=@normalplus
- @let<=@normalless
- @let>=@normalgreater
- @let\=@normalbackslash
- @let^=@normalcaret
- @let_=@normalunderscore
- @let|=@normalverticalbar
- @let~=@normaltilde
- @markupsetuplqdefault
- @markupsetuprqdefault
- @unsepspaces
+% the literal character `\'. Also revert - to its normal character, in
+% case the active - from code has slipped in.
+%
+{@catcode`- = @active
+ @gdef@normalturnoffactive{%
+ @let-=@normaldash
+ @let"=@normaldoublequote
+ @let$=@normaldollar %$ font-lock fix
+ @let+=@normalplus
+ @let<=@normalless
+ @let>=@normalgreater
+ @let\=@normalbackslash
+ @let^=@normalcaret
+ @let_=@normalunderscore
+ @let|=@normalverticalbar
+ @let~=@normaltilde
+ @markupsetuplqdefault
+ @markupsetuprqdefault
+ @unsepspaces
+ }
}
% Make _ and + \other characters, temporarily.