into Makefile.pre.in; the configure script will only determine the basename
of the file.
This fixes installation of a Python built using C++, reported by Greg
Wilson.
-shared does the following things:
- invoke the linker with -G -dy -z text (the latter only if
-mimpure-text was not given)
- drop crt1.o from the list of objects being linked
- drop -lc from the list of libraries being linked
OTOH, -G is just passed through to the linker.
The things that -shared does are necessary: crt1.o defines _start, and
requires main, so it should not be present in a shared library.
Likewise, -z text should be used to detect position-dependent code at
compile time.
Compile shared object files using -fPIC option when using GCC on Solaris (SF
patch #103865). Closes bug #132783. Move config.c generated by makesetup to
the Modules directory.
- Add CFLAGSFORSHARED variable. configure sets this to CCSHARED if LDLIBRARY
is a shared library.
- Remove -fPIC from OPT, it has no business there.
- Change CCSHARED option for Linux to -fPIC. It should probably be
-fPIC on a few other platforms as well.
- Don't create silly boot Makefile, create Setup files and run makesetup
instead.
- change EXE to EXTEXT, there is an autoconf macro for it
- use PROG_INSTALL macro rather than always using install-sh
- add option to disable signal module (simplifies the makefile)
- create subdirs for object files (when building out of src dir)
- don't generate subdir makefiles
- generate "boot" makefile
by weird and (hopefully) unnecessary SET_CXX and SET_DLLLIBRARY macros
that occurr at the start of Makefile.in files.
- Also removed the already-commented-out SET_CCC macro cruft.
builds during which he forgot to uncomment crucial library lines in
Setup, walks into Guido's East End nightclub with a tactical nuclear
weapon on his shoulder. Said nuclear weapon is promptly deployed
exactly where it will do the most good, right in the middle of
configure.in.
With this patch, the set of libraries autoconfigured in is extended to
include ndbm, gdbm, and crypt. This essentially eliminates any need to
tweak Setup for a normal Linux build.
"'E was a fair man. Cruel, but fair."
when configure detects the presence of termios.h; later we'll use this
for correct configuration of edline/readline.
Also, fix a bug in acconfig.h -- somebody forgot to add an undef to
cover the LIBNDBM configure symbol, which was preventing autoheader
from working properly.
of dbmmodule dynamically by default (otherwise it can pull in
dependencies with libdb that croak pybsddb3). This change moves the
Setup line for dbmmodule to Setup.config.in.
- when compiling with GCC on Solaris, use "$(CC) -shared" instead
of "$(CC) -G" to generate .so files
- when compiling with GCC on any platform, add "-fPIC" to OPT
(without this, "$(CC) -shared" dies horribly)
regardless of whether the system getopt() does what we want. This avoids the
hassle with prototypes and externs, and the check to see if the system
getopt() does what we want. Prefix optind, optarg and opterr with _PyOS_ to
avoid name clashes. Add new include file to define the right symbols. Fix
Demo/pyserv/pyserv.c to include getopt.h itself, instead of relying on
Python to provide it.
-Wstrict-prototypes options. This will make it a lot easier to keep
warnings under control in the first place in the future.
There is one known warning at this time, caught by the -Wstrict-prototypes
option. In Modules/main.c, the declaration of getopt() without parameters
gets a complaint (rightly) that it is not a proper prototype. The lack of
a complete prototype information should be corrected when the right
portability conditions have been identified.
Approved by the Guido.
Tony Lownds: [ Patch #101816 ] Fixes shared modules on Mac OS X
1. Mac OS X is recognized by the Next-ish host recognition code as
"Darwin/1.2"
2. When specifying just --with-dyld, modules can compile as shared
3. --with-dyld and --with-next-framework, modules can compile as
shared
4. --with-suffix=.exe, and Lib/plat-darwin1.2 is being made, the regen
script invokes python as python.exe
[I had to reformat this patch a bit to make it work. Please test!]
Dan Wolfe: [ Patch #101823 ] Fix Darwin POSIX Thread redefinition
The patch below fixes the redefinition problem in Darwin with
_POSIX_THREADS. I'm not sure if this is the correct long term fix but
for now it fixes the problem and the fix is specific to Darwin.
Dan Wolfe: [ Patch #101824 ] On Darwin, remove unrecognized option
`-OPT:Olimit=0'
After many, many, many compiles, I finally got itchy of this warning
cluttering up the output... so I scratched (Darwin configs only) and
it's gone! :-)
test -d "$directory"
to
test ! -z "directory" -a -d "directory"
Apparently, on SunOS 4.1.4_JL (and other?) OSes, -d on an empty string
always returns true. This closes SF bug #115392.