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autoheader
to Create `config.h.in'
The autoheader
program can create a template file of C
`#define' statements for configure
to use. If
`configure.ac' invokes AC_CONFIG_HEADERS(file)
,
autoheader
creates `file.in'; if multiple file
arguments are given, the first one is used. Otherwise,
autoheader
creates `config.h.in'.
In order to do its job, autoheader
needs you to document all
of the symbols that you might use; i.e., there must be at least one
AC_DEFINE
or one AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED
call with a third
argument for each symbol (see section 7.1 Defining C Preprocessor Symbols). An additional
constraint is that the first argument of AC_DEFINE
must be a
literal. Note that all symbols defined by Autoconf's builtin tests are
already documented properly; you only need to document those that you
define yourself.
You might wonder why autoheader
is needed: after all, why
would configure
need to "patch" a `config.h.in' to
produce a `config.h' instead of just creating `config.h' from
scratch? Well, when everything rocks, the answer is just that we are
wasting our time maintaining autoheader
: generating
`config.h' directly is all that is needed. When things go wrong,
however, you'll be thankful for the existence of autoheader
.
The fact that the symbols are documented is important in order to
check that `config.h' makes sense. The fact that there is a
well-defined list of symbols that should be #define
'd (or not) is
also important for people who are porting packages to environments where
configure
cannot be run: they just have to fill in the
blanks.
But let's come back to the point: autoheader
's invocation...
If you give autoheader
an argument, it uses that file instead
of `configure.ac' and writes the header file to the standard output
instead of to `config.h.in'. If you give autoheader
an
argument of `-', it reads the standard input instead of
`configure.ac' and writes the header file to the standard output.
autoheader
accepts the following options:
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