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Zachary Ware
60cae1c5a1 Import xz 5.2.2 (as of svn r86089) 2017-05-22 16:21:28 -05:00
456 changed files with 147392 additions and 225039 deletions

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Authors of XZ Utils
===================
XZ Utils is developed and maintained by Lasse Collin
<lasse.collin@tukaani.org>.
Major parts of liblzma are based on code written by Igor Pavlov,
specifically the LZMA SDK <http://7-zip.org/sdk.html>. Without
this code, XZ Utils wouldn't exist.
The SHA-256 implementation in liblzma is based on the code found from
7-Zip <http://7-zip.org/>, which has a modified version of the SHA-256
code found from Crypto++ <http://www.cryptopp.com/>. The SHA-256 code
in Crypto++ was written by Kevin Springle and Wei Dai.
Some scripts have been adapted from gzip. The original versions
were written by Jean-loup Gailly, Charles Levert, and Paul Eggert.
Andrew Dudman helped adapting the scripts and their man pages for
XZ Utils.
The GNU Autotools-based build system contains files from many authors,
which I'm not trying to list here.
Several people have contributed fixes or reported bugs. Most of them
are mentioned in the file THANKS.

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XZ Utils Licensing
==================
Different licenses apply to different files in this package. Here
is a rough summary of which licenses apply to which parts of this
package (but check the individual files to be sure!):
- liblzma is in the public domain.
- xz, xzdec, and lzmadec command line tools are in the public
domain unless GNU getopt_long had to be compiled and linked
in from the lib directory. The getopt_long code is under
GNU LGPLv2.1+.
- The scripts to grep, diff, and view compressed files have been
adapted from gzip. These scripts and their documentation are
under GNU GPLv2+.
- All the documentation in the doc directory and most of the
XZ Utils specific documentation files in other directories
are in the public domain.
- Translated messages are in the public domain.
- The build system contains public domain files, and files that
are under GNU GPLv2+ or GNU GPLv3+. None of these files end up
in the binaries being built.
- Test files and test code in the tests directory, and debugging
utilities in the debug directory are in the public domain.
- The extra directory may contain public domain files, and files
that are under various free software licenses.
You can do whatever you want with the files that have been put into
the public domain. If you find public domain legally problematic,
take the previous sentence as a license grant. If you still find
the lack of copyright legally problematic, you have too many
lawyers.
As usual, this software is provided "as is", without any warranty.
If you copy significant amounts of public domain code from XZ Utils
into your project, acknowledging this somewhere in your software is
polite (especially if it is proprietary, non-free software), but
naturally it is not legally required. Here is an example of a good
notice to put into "about box" or into documentation:
This software includes code from XZ Utils <http://tukaani.org/xz/>.
The following license texts are included in the following files:
- COPYING.LGPLv2.1: GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1
- COPYING.GPLv2: GNU General Public License version 2
- COPYING.GPLv3: GNU General Public License version 3
Note that the toolchain (compiler, linker etc.) may add some code
pieces that are copyrighted. Thus, it is possible that e.g. liblzma
binary wouldn't actually be in the public domain in its entirety
even though it contains no copyrighted code from the XZ Utils source
package.
If you have questions, don't hesitate to ask the author(s) for more
information.

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GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 2, June 1991
Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
Preamble
The licenses for most software are designed to take away your
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License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free
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When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not
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NO WARRANTY
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How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
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<one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
Copyright (C) <year> <name of author>
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Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
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Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) year name of author
Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
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The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
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You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
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Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
`Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
<signature of Ty Coon>, 1 April 1989
Ty Coon, President of Vice
This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General
Public License instead of this License.

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GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
Version 3, 29 June 2007
Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/>
Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
Preamble
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The licenses for most software and other practical works are designed
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That's all there is to it!

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XZ Utils Installation
=====================
0. Preface
1. Supported platforms
1.1. Compilers
1.2. Platform-specific notes
1.2.1. AIX
1.2.2. IRIX
1.2.3. MINIX 3
1.2.4. OpenVMS
1.2.5. Solaris, OpenSolaris, and derivatives
1.2.6. Tru64
1.2.7. Windows
1.2.8. DOS
1.3. Adding support for new platforms
2. configure options
2.1. Static vs. dynamic linking of liblzma
2.2. Optimizing xzdec and lzmadec
3. xzgrep and other scripts
3.1. Dependencies
3.2. PATH
4. Troubleshooting
4.1. "No C99 compiler was found."
4.2. "No POSIX conforming shell (sh) was found."
4.3. configure works but build fails at crc32_x86.S
4.4. Lots of warnings about symbol visibility
4.5. "make check" fails
4.6. liblzma.so (or similar) not found when running xz
0. Preface
----------
If you aren't familiar with building packages that use GNU Autotools,
see the file INSTALL.generic for generic instructions before reading
further.
If you are going to build a package for distribution, see also the
file PACKAGERS. It contains information that should help making the
binary packages as good as possible, but the information isn't very
interesting to those making local builds for private use or for use
in special situations like embedded systems.
1. Supported platforms
----------------------
XZ Utils are developed on GNU/Linux, but they should work on many
POSIX-like operating systems like *BSDs and Solaris, and even on
a few non-POSIX operating systems.
1.1. Compilers
A C99 compiler is required to compile XZ Utils. If you use GCC, you
need at least version 3.x.x. GCC version 2.xx.x doesn't support some
C99 features used in XZ Utils source code, thus GCC 2 won't compile
XZ Utils.
XZ Utils takes advantage of some GNU C extensions when building
with GCC. Because these extensions are used only when building
with GCC, it should be possible to use any C99 compiler.
1.2. Platform-specific notes
1.2.1. AIX
If you use IBM XL C compiler, pass CC=xlc_r to configure. If
you use CC=xlc instead, you must disable threading support
with --disable-threads (usually not recommended).
1.2.2. IRIX
MIPSpro 7.4.4m has been reported to produce broken code if using
the -O2 optimization flag ("make check" fails). Using -O1 should
work.
A problem has been reported when using shared liblzma. Passing
--disable-shared to configure works around this. Alternatively,
putting "-64" to CFLAGS to build a 64-bit version might help too.
1.2.3. MINIX 3
The default install of MINIX 3 includes Amsterdam Compiler Kit (ACK),
which doesn't support C99. Install GCC to compile XZ Utils.
MINIX 3.1.8 and older have bugs in /usr/include/stdint.h, which has
to be patched before XZ Utils can be compiled correctly. See
<http://gforge.cs.vu.nl/gf/project/minix/tracker/?action=TrackerItemEdit&tracker_item_id=537>.
MINIX 3.2.0 and later use a different libc and aren't affected by
the above bug.
XZ Utils doesn't have code to detect the amount of physical RAM and
number of CPU cores on MINIX 3.
See section 4.4 in this file about symbol visibility warnings (you
may want to pass gl_cv_cc_visibility=no to configure).
1.2.4. OpenVMS
XZ Utils can be built for OpenVMS, but the build system files
are not included in the XZ Utils source package. The required
OpenVMS-specific files are maintained by Jouk Jansen and can be
downloaded here:
http://nchrem.tnw.tudelft.nl/openvms/software2.html#xzutils
1.2.5. Solaris, OpenSolaris, and derivatives
The following linker error has been reported on some x86 systems:
ld: fatal: relocation error: R_386_GOTOFF: ...
This can be worked around by passing gl_cv_cc_visibility=no
as an argument to the configure script.
test_scripts.sh in "make check" may fail if good enough tools are
missing from PATH (/usr/xpg4/bin or /usr/xpg6/bin). See sections
4.5 and 3.2 for more information.
1.2.6. Tru64
If you try to use the native C compiler on Tru64 (passing CC=cc to
configure), you may need the workaround mention in section 4.1 in
this file (pass also ac_cv_prog_cc_c99= to configure).
1.2.7. Windows
Building XZ Utils on Windows is supported under the following
environments:
- MinGW-w64 + MSYS (32-bit and 64-bit x86): This is used
for building the official binary packages for Windows.
There is windows/build.bash to ease packaging XZ Utils with
MinGW(-w64) + MSYS into a redistributable .zip or .7z file.
See windows/INSTALL-MinGW.txt for more information.
- MinGW + MSYS (32-bit x86): I haven't recently tested this.
- Cygwin 1.7.35 and later: NOTE that using XZ Utils >= 5.2.0
under Cygwin older than 1.7.35 can lead to DATA LOSS! If
you must use an old Cygwin version, stick to XZ Utils 5.0.x
which is safe under older Cygwin versions. You can check
the Cygwin version with the command "cygcheck -V".
- Microsoft Visual Studio 2013 update 2 or later (MSVC for short):
See windows/INSTALL-MSVC.txt for more information.
It may be possible to build liblzma with other toolchains too, but
that will probably require writing a separate makefile. Building
the command line tools with non-GNU toolchains will be harder than
building only liblzma.
Even if liblzma is built with MinGW(-w64), the resulting DLL can
be used by other compilers and linkers, including MSVC. See
windows/README-Windows.txt for details.
1.2.8. DOS
There is an experimental Makefile in the "dos" directory to build
XZ Utils on DOS using DJGPP. Support for long file names (LFN) is
needed. See dos/README for more information.
GNU Autotools based build hasn't been tried on DOS. If you try, I
would like to hear if it worked.
1.3. Adding support for new platforms
If you have written patches to make XZ Utils to work on previously
unsupported platform, please send the patches to me! I will consider
including them to the official version. It's nice to minimize the
need of third-party patching.
One exception: Don't request or send patches to change the whole
source package to C89. I find C99 substantially nicer to write and
maintain. However, the public library headers must be in C89 to
avoid frustrating those who maintain programs, which are strictly
in C89 or C++.
2. configure options
--------------------
In most cases, the defaults are what you want. Many of the options
below are useful only when building a size-optimized version of
liblzma or command line tools.
--enable-encoders=LIST
--disable-encoders
Specify a comma-separated LIST of filter encoders to
build. See "./configure --help" for exact list of
available filter encoders. The default is to build all
supported encoders.
If LIST is empty or --disable-encoders is used, no filter
encoders will be built and also the code shared between
encoders will be omitted.
Disabling encoders will remove some symbols from the
liblzma ABI, so this option should be used only when it
is known to not cause problems.
--enable-decoders=LIST
--disable-decoders
This is like --enable-encoders but for decoders. The
default is to build all supported decoders.
--enable-match-finders=LIST
liblzma includes two categories of match finders:
hash chains and binary trees. Hash chains (hc3 and hc4)
are quite fast but they don't provide the best compression
ratio. Binary trees (bt2, bt3 and bt4) give excellent
compression ratio, but they are slower and need more
memory than hash chains.
You need to enable at least one match finder to build the
LZMA1 or LZMA2 filter encoders. Usually hash chains are
used only in the fast mode, while binary trees are used to
when the best compression ratio is wanted.
The default is to build all the match finders if LZMA1
or LZMA2 filter encoders are being built.
--enable-checks=LIST
liblzma support multiple integrity checks. CRC32 is
mandatory, and cannot be omitted. See "./configure --help"
for exact list of available integrity check types.
liblzma and the command line tools can decompress files
which use unsupported integrity check type, but naturally
the file integrity cannot be verified in that case.
Disabling integrity checks may remove some symbols from
the liblzma ABI, so this option should be used only when
it is known to not cause problems.
--disable-xz
--disable-xzdec
--disable-lzmadec
--disable-lzmainfo
Don't build and install the command line tool mentioned
in the option name.
NOTE: Disabling xz will skip some tests in "make check".
NOTE: If xzdec is disabled and lzmadec is left enabled,
a dangling man page symlink lzmadec.1 -> xzdec.1 is
created.
--disable-lzma-links
Don't create symlinks for LZMA Utils compatibility.
This includes lzma, unlzma, and lzcat. If scripts are
installed, also lzdiff, lzcmp, lzgrep, lzegrep, lzfgrep,
lzmore, and lzless will be omitted if this option is used.
--disable-scripts
Don't install the scripts xzdiff, xzgrep, xzmore, xzless,
and their symlinks.
--disable-doc
Don't install the documentation files to $docdir
(often /usr/doc/xz or /usr/local/doc/xz). Man pages
will still be installed. The $docdir can be changed
with --docdir=DIR.
--disable-assembler
liblzma includes some assembler optimizations. Currently
there is only assembler code for CRC32 and CRC64 for
32-bit x86.
All the assembler code in liblzma is position-independent
code, which is suitable for use in shared libraries and
position-independent executables. So far only i386
instructions are used, but the code is optimized for i686
class CPUs. If you are compiling liblzma exclusively for
pre-i686 systems, you may want to disable the assembler
code.
--enable-unaligned-access
Allow liblzma to use unaligned memory access for 16-bit
and 32-bit loads and stores. This should be enabled only
when the hardware supports this, i.e. when unaligned
access is fast. Some operating system kernels emulate
unaligned access, which is extremely slow. This option
shouldn't be used on systems that rely on such emulation.
Unaligned access is enabled by default on x86, x86-64,
and big endian PowerPC.
--enable-small
Reduce the size of liblzma by selecting smaller but
semantically equivalent version of some functions, and
omit precomputed lookup tables. This option tends to
make liblzma slightly slower.
Note that while omitting the precomputed tables makes
liblzma smaller on disk, the tables are still needed at
run time, and need to be computed at startup. This also
means that the RAM holding the tables won't be shared
between applications linked against shared liblzma.
This option doesn't modify CFLAGS to tell the compiler
to optimize for size. You need to add -Os or equivalent
flag(s) to CFLAGS manually.
--enable-assume-ram=SIZE
On the most common operating systems, XZ Utils is able to
detect the amount of physical memory on the system. This
information is used by the options --memlimit-compress,
--memlimit-decompress, and --memlimit when setting the
limit to a percentage of total RAM.
On some systems, there is no code to detect the amount of
RAM though. Using --enable-assume-ram one can set how much
memory to assume on these systems. SIZE is given as MiB.
The default is 128 MiB.
Feel free to send patches to add support for detecting
the amount of RAM on the operating system you use. See
src/common/tuklib_physmem.c for details.
--enable-threads=METHOD
Threading support is enabled by default so normally there
is no need to specify this option.
Supported values for METHOD:
yes Autodetect the threading method. If none
is found, configure will give an error.
posix Use POSIX pthreads. This is the default
except on Windows outside Cygwin.
win95 Use Windows 95 compatible threads. This
is compatible with Windows XP and later
too. This is the default for 32-bit x86
Windows builds. The `win95' threading is
incompatible with --enable-small.
vista Use Windows Vista compatible threads. The
resulting binaries won't run on Windows XP
or older. This is the default for Windows
excluding 32-bit x86 builds (that is, on
x86-64 the default is `vista').
no Disable threading support. This is the
same as using --disable-threads.
NOTE: If combined with --enable-small, the
resulting liblzma won't be thread safe,
that is, if a multi-threaded application
calls any liblzma functions from more than
one thread, something bad may happen.
--enable-symbol-versions
Use symbol versioning for liblzma. This is enabled by
default on GNU/Linux, other GNU-based systems, and
FreeBSD.
--enable-debug
This enables the assert() macro and possibly some other
run-time consistency checks. It makes the code slower, so
you normally don't want to have this enabled.
--enable-werror
If building with GCC, make all compiler warnings an error,
that abort the compilation. This may help catching bugs,
and should work on most systems. This has no effect on the
resulting binaries.
2.1. Static vs. dynamic linking of liblzma
On 32-bit x86, linking against static liblzma can give a minor
speed improvement. Static libraries on x86 are usually compiled as
position-dependent code (non-PIC) and shared libraries are built as
position-independent code (PIC). PIC wastes one register, which can
make the code slightly slower compared to a non-PIC version. (Note
that this doesn't apply to x86-64.)
If you want to link xz against static liblzma, the simplest way
is to pass --disable-shared to configure. If you want also shared
liblzma, run configure again and run "make install" only for
src/liblzma.
2.2. Optimizing xzdec and lzmadec
xzdec and lzmadec are intended to be relatively small instead of
optimizing for the best speed. Thus, it is a good idea to build
xzdec and lzmadec separately:
- To link the tools against static liblzma, pass --disable-shared
to configure.
- To select somewhat size-optimized variant of some things in
liblzma, pass --enable-small to configure.
- Tell the compiler to optimize for size instead of speed.
E.g. with GCC, put -Os into CFLAGS.
- xzdec and lzmadec will never use multithreading capabilities of
liblzma. You can avoid dependency on libpthread by passing
--disable-threads to configure.
- There are and will be no translated messages for xzdec and
lzmadec, so it is fine to pass also --disable-nls to configure.
- Only decoder code is needed, so you can speed up the build
slightly by passing --disable-encoders to configure. This
shouldn't affect the final size of the executables though,
because the linker is able to omit the encoder code anyway.
If you have no use for xzdec or lzmadec, you can disable them with
--disable-xzdec and --disable-lzmadec.
3. xzgrep and other scripts
---------------------------
3.1. Dependencies
POSIX shell (sh) and bunch of other standard POSIX tools are required
to run the scripts. The configure script tries to find a POSIX
compliant sh, but if it fails, you can force the shell by passing
gl_cv_posix_shell=/path/to/posix-sh as an argument to the configure
script.
xzdiff (xzcmp/lzdiff/lzcmp) may use mktemp if it is available. As
a fallback xzdiff will use mkdir to securely create a temporary
directory. Having mktemp available is still recommended since the
mkdir fallback method isn't as robust as mktemp is. The original
mktemp can be found from <http://www.mktemp.org/>. On GNU, most will
use the mktemp program from GNU coreutils instead of the original
implementation. Both mktemp versions are fine.
In addition to using xz to decompress .xz files, xzgrep and xzdiff
use gzip, bzip2, and lzop to support .gz, bz2, and .lzo files.
3.2. PATH
The scripts assume that the required tools (standard POSIX utilities,
mktemp, and xz) are in PATH; the scripts don't set the PATH themselves.
Some people like this while some think this is a bug. Those in the
latter group can easily patch the scripts before running the configure
script by taking advantage of a placeholder line in the scripts.
For example, to make the scripts prefix /usr/bin:/bin to PATH:
perl -pi -e 's|^#SET_PATH.*$|PATH=/usr/bin:/bin:\$PATH|' \
src/scripts/xz*.in
4. Troubleshooting
------------------
4.1. "No C99 compiler was found."
You need a C99 compiler to build XZ Utils. If the configure script
cannot find a C99 compiler and you think you have such a compiler
installed, set the compiler command by passing CC=/path/to/c99 as
an argument to the configure script.
If you get this error even when you think your compiler supports C99,
you can override the test by passing ac_cv_prog_cc_c99= as an argument
to the configure script. The test for C99 compiler is not perfect (and
it is not as easy to make it perfect as it sounds), so sometimes this
may be needed. You will get a compile error if your compiler doesn't
support enough C99.
4.2. "No POSIX conforming shell (sh) was found."
xzgrep and other scripts need a shell that (roughly) conforms
to POSIX. The configure script tries to find such a shell. If
it fails, you can force the shell to be used by passing
gl_cv_posix_shell=/path/to/posix-sh as an argument to the configure
script. Alternatively you can omit the installation of scripts and
this error by passing --disable-scripts to configure.
4.3. configure works but build fails at crc32_x86.S
The easy fix is to pass --disable-assembler to the configure script.
The configure script determines if assembler code can be used by
looking at the configure triplet; there is currently no check if
the assembler code can actually actually be built. The x86 assembler
code should work on x86 GNU/Linux, *BSDs, Solaris, Darwin, MinGW,
Cygwin, and DJGPP. On other x86 systems, there may be problems and
the assembler code may need to be disabled with the configure option.
If you get this error when building for x86-64, you have specified or
the configure script has misguessed your architecture. Pass the
correct configure triplet using the --build=CPU-COMPANY-SYSTEM option
(see INSTALL.generic).
4.4. Lots of warnings about symbol visibility
On some systems where symbol visibility isn't supported, GCC may
still accept the visibility options and attributes, which will make
configure think that visibility is supported. This will result in
many compiler warnings. You can avoid the warnings by forcing the
visibility support off by passing gl_cv_cc_visibility=no as an
argument to the configure script. This has no effect on the
resulting binaries, but fewer warnings looks nicer and may allow
using --enable-werror.
4.5. "make check" fails
If the other tests pass but test_scripts.sh fails, then the problem
is in the scripts in src/scripts. Comparing the contents of
tests/xzgrep_test_output to tests/xzgrep_expected_output might
give a good idea about problems in xzgrep. One possibility is that
some tools are missing from the current PATH or the tools lack
support for some POSIX features. This can happen at least on
Solaris where the tools in /bin may be ancient but good enough
tools are available in /usr/xpg4/bin or /usr/xpg6/bin. One fix
for this problem is described in section 3.2 of this file.
If tests other than test_scripts.sh fail, a likely reason is that
libtool links the test programs against an installed version of
liblzma instead of the version that was just built. This is
obviously a bug which seems to happen on some platforms.
A workaround is to uninstall the old liblzma versions first.
If the problem isn't any of those described above, then it's likely
a bug in XZ Utils or in the compiler. See the platform-specific
notes in this file for possible known problems. Please report
a bug if you cannot solve the problem. See README for contact
information.
4.6. liblzma.so (or similar) not found when running xz
If you installed the package with "make install" and get an error
about liblzma.so (or a similarly named file) being missing, try
running "ldconfig" to update the run-time linker cache (if your
operating system has such a command).

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Installation Instructions
*************************
Copyright (C) 1994, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005,
2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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
==================
Briefly, the shell commands `./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
those values to create a `Makefile' in each directory of the package.
It may also create one or more `.h' files containing system-dependent
definitions. Finally, it creates a shell script `config.status' that
you can run in the future to recreate the current configuration, and a
file `config.log' containing compiler output (useful mainly for
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
disabled by default to prevent problems with accidental use of stale
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
diffs or instructions to the address given in the `README' so they can
be considered for the next release. If you are using the cache, and at
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 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:
1. `cd' to the directory containing the package's source code and type
`./configure' to configure the package for your system.
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, generally using the just-built uninstalled binaries.
4. Type `make install' to install the programs and any data files and
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
also a `make maintainer-clean' target, but that is intended mainly
for the package's developers. If you use it, you may have to get
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.
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=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
same time, by placing the object files for each architecture in their
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 `..'. 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.
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' 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
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. 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'.
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
`README' should mention any `--enable-' and `--with-' options that the
package recognizes.
For packages that use the X Window System, `configure' can usually
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.
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
`--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:
CPU-COMPANY-SYSTEM
where SYSTEM can have one of these forms:
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 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
platform different from the build platform, you should specify the
"host" platform (i.e., that on which the generated programs will
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'.
`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.
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
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
them in the `configure' command line, using `VAR=value'. For example:
./configure CC=/usr/local2/bin/gcc
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 bug. Until the bug is fixed you can use this workaround:
CONFIG_SHELL=/bin/bash /bin/bash ./configure CONFIG_SHELL=/bin/bash
`configure' Invocation
======================
`configure' recognizes the following options to control how it
operates.
`--help'
`-h'
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'
Print the version of Autoconf used to generate the `configure'
script, and exit.
`--cache-file=FILE'
Enable the cache: use and save the results of the tests in FILE,
traditionally `config.cache'. FILE defaults to `/dev/null' to
disable caching.
`--config-cache'
`-C'
Alias for `--cache-file=config.cache'.
`--quiet'
`--silent'
`-q'
Do not print messages saying which checks are being made. To
suppress all normal output, redirect it to `/dev/null' (any error
messages will still be shown).
`--srcdir=DIR'
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.

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##
## Author: Lasse Collin
##
## This file has been put into the public domain.
## You can do whatever you want with this file.
##
# Use -n to prevent gzip from adding a timestamp to the .gz headers.
GZIP_ENV = -9n
DIST_SUBDIRS = lib src po tests debug
SUBDIRS =
if COND_GNULIB
SUBDIRS += lib
endif
SUBDIRS += src po tests
if COND_DOC
dist_doc_DATA = \
AUTHORS \
COPYING \
COPYING.GPLv2 \
NEWS \
README \
THANKS \
TODO \
doc/faq.txt \
doc/history.txt \
doc/xz-file-format.txt \
doc/lzma-file-format.txt
examplesdir = $(docdir)/examples
dist_examples_DATA = \
doc/examples/00_README.txt \
doc/examples/01_compress_easy.c \
doc/examples/02_decompress.c \
doc/examples/03_compress_custom.c \
doc/examples/04_compress_easy_mt.c \
doc/examples/Makefile
examplesolddir = $(docdir)/examples_old
dist_examplesold_DATA = \
doc/examples_old/xz_pipe_comp.c \
doc/examples_old/xz_pipe_decomp.c
endif
EXTRA_DIST = \
extra \
dos \
windows \
macosx \
autogen.sh \
Doxyfile.in \
COPYING.GPLv2 \
COPYING.GPLv3 \
COPYING.LGPLv2.1 \
INSTALL.generic \
PACKAGERS \
build-aux/manconv.sh \
build-aux/version.sh
ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS = -I m4
# List of man pages to conver to PDF and plain text in the dist-hook target.
manfiles = \
src/xz/xz.1 \
src/xzdec/xzdec.1 \
src/lzmainfo/lzmainfo.1 \
src/scripts/xzdiff.1 \
src/scripts/xzgrep.1 \
src/scripts/xzless.1 \
src/scripts/xzmore.1
# Create ChangeLog from output of "git log --date=iso --stat".
# Convert the man pages to PDF and plain text (ASCII only) formats.
dist-hook:
if test -d "$(srcdir)/.git" && type git > /dev/null 2>&1; then \
( cd "$(srcdir)" && git log --date=iso --stat ) \
> "$(distdir)/ChangeLog"; \
fi
if type groff > /dev/null 2>&1 && type ps2pdf > /dev/null 2>&1; then \
dest="$(distdir)/doc/man" && \
$(MKDIR_P) "$$dest/pdf-a4" "$$dest/pdf-letter" "$$dest/txt" && \
for FILE in $(manfiles); do \
BASE=`basename $$FILE .1` && \
sh "$(srcdir)/build-aux/manconv.sh" pdf a4 \
< "$(srcdir)/$$FILE" \
> "$$dest/pdf-a4/$$BASE-a4.pdf" && \
sh "$(srcdir)/build-aux/manconv.sh" pdf letter \
< "$(srcdir)/$$FILE" \
> "$$dest/pdf-letter/$$BASE-letter.pdf" && \
sh "$(srcdir)/build-aux/manconv.sh" ascii \
< "$(srcdir)/$$FILE" \
> "$$dest/txt/$$BASE.txt"; \
done; \
fi
# This works with GNU tar and gives cleaner package than normal 'make dist'.
mydist:
sh "$(srcdir)/src/liblzma/validate_map.sh"
VERSION=$(VERSION); \
if test -d "$(srcdir)/.git" && type git > /dev/null 2>&1; then \
SNAPSHOT=`cd "$(srcdir)" && git describe --abbrev=4 | cut -b2-`; \
test -n "$$SNAPSHOT" && VERSION=$$SNAPSHOT; \
fi; \
TAR_OPTIONS='--owner=0 --group=0 --numeric-owner --mode=u+rw,go+r-w' \
$(MAKE) VERSION="$$VERSION" dist-gzip

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XZ Utils Release Notes
======================
5.2.2 (2015-09-29)
* Fixed bugs in QNX-specific code.
* Omitted the use of pipe2() even if it is available to avoid
portability issues with some old Linux and glibc combinations.
* Updated German translation.
* Added project files to build static and shared liblzma (not the
whole XZ Utils) with Visual Studio 2013 update 2 or later.
* Documented that threaded decompression hasn't been implemented
yet. A 5.2.0 NEWS entry describing multi-threading support had
incorrectly said "decompression" when it should have said
"compression".
5.2.1 (2015-02-26)
* Fixed a compression-ratio regression in fast mode of LZMA1 and
LZMA2. The bug is present in 5.1.4beta and 5.2.0 releases.
* Fixed a portability problem in xz that affected at least OpenBSD.
* Fixed xzdiff to be compatible with FreeBSD's mktemp which differs
from most other mktemp implementations.
* Changed CPU core count detection to use cpuset_getaffinity() on
FreeBSD.
5.2.0 (2014-12-21)
Since 5.1.4beta:
* All fixes from 5.0.8
* liblzma: Fixed lzma_stream_encoder_mt_memusage() when a preset
was used.
* xzdiff: If mktemp isn't installed, mkdir will be used as
a fallback to create a temporary directory. Installing mktemp
is still recommended.
* Updated French, German, Italian, Polish, and Vietnamese
translations.
Summary of fixes and new features added in the 5.1.x development
releases:
* liblzma:
- Added support for multi-threaded compression. See the
lzma_mt structure, lzma_stream_encoder_mt(), and
lzma_stream_encoder_mt_memusage() in <lzma/container.h>,
lzma_get_progress() in <lzma/base.h>, and lzma_cputhreads()
in <lzma/hardware.h> for details.
- Made the uses of lzma_allocator const correct.
- Added lzma_block_uncomp_encode() to create uncompressed
.xz Blocks using LZMA2 uncompressed chunks.
- Added support for LZMA_IGNORE_CHECK.
- A few speed optimizations were made.
- Added support for symbol versioning. It is enabled by default
on GNU/Linux, other GNU-based systems, and FreeBSD.
- liblzma (not the whole XZ Utils) should now be buildable
with MSVC 2013 update 2 or later using windows/config.h.
* xz:
- Fixed a race condition in the signal handling. It was
possible that e.g. the first SIGINT didn't make xz exit
if reading or writing blocked and one had bad luck. The fix
is non-trivial, so as of writing it is unknown if it will be
backported to the v5.0 branch.
- Multi-threaded compression can be enabled with the
--threads (-T) option.
[Fixed: This originally said "decompression".]
- New command line options in xz: --single-stream,
--block-size=SIZE, --block-list=SIZES,
--flush-timeout=TIMEOUT, and --ignore-check.
- xz -lvv now shows the minimum xz version that is required to
decompress the file. Currently it is 5.0.0 for all supported
.xz files except files with empty LZMA2 streams require 5.0.2.
* xzdiff and xzgrep now support .lzo files if lzop is installed.
The .tzo suffix is also recognized as a shorthand for .tar.lzo.
5.1.4beta (2014-09-14)
* All fixes from 5.0.6
* liblzma: Fixed the use of presets in threaded encoder
initialization.
* xz --block-list and --block-size can now be used together
in single-threaded mode. Previously the combination only
worked in multi-threaded mode.
* Added support for LZMA_IGNORE_CHECK to liblzma and made it
available in xz as --ignore-check.
* liblzma speed optimizations:
- Initialization of a new LZMA1 or LZMA2 encoder has been
optimized. (The speed of reinitializing an already-allocated
encoder isn't affected.) This helps when compressing many
small buffers with lzma_stream_buffer_encode() and other
similar situations where an already-allocated encoder state
isn't reused. This speed-up is visible in xz too if one
compresses many small files one at a time instead running xz
once and giving all files as command-line arguments.
- Buffer comparisons are now much faster when unaligned access
is allowed (configured with --enable-unaligned-access). This
speeds up encoding significantly. There is arch-specific code
for 32-bit and 64-bit x86 (32-bit needs SSE2 for the best
results and there's no run-time CPU detection for now).
For other archs there is only generic code which probably
isn't as optimal as arch-specific solutions could be.
- A few speed optimizations were made to the SHA-256 code.
(Note that the builtin SHA-256 code isn't used on all
operating systems.)
* liblzma can now be built with MSVC 2013 update 2 or later
using windows/config.h.
* Vietnamese translation was added.
5.1.3alpha (2013-10-26)
* All fixes from 5.0.5
* liblzma:
- Fixed a deadlock in the threaded encoder.
- Made the uses of lzma_allocator const correct.
- Added lzma_block_uncomp_encode() to create uncompressed
.xz Blocks using LZMA2 uncompressed chunks.
- Added support for native threads on Windows and the ability
to detect the number of CPU cores.
* xz:
- Fixed a race condition in the signal handling. It was
possible that e.g. the first SIGINT didn't make xz exit
if reading or writing blocked and one had bad luck. The fix
is non-trivial, so as of writing it is unknown if it will be
backported to the v5.0 branch.
- Made the progress indicator work correctly in threaded mode.
- Threaded encoder now works together with --block-list=SIZES.
- Added preliminary support for --flush-timeout=TIMEOUT.
It can be useful for (somewhat) real-time streaming. For
now the decompression side has to be done with something
else than the xz tool due to how xz does buffering, but this
should be fixed.
5.1.2alpha (2012-07-04)
* All fixes from 5.0.3 and 5.0.4
* liblzma:
- Fixed a deadlock and an invalid free() in the threaded encoder.
- Added support for symbol versioning. It is enabled by default
on GNU/Linux, other GNU-based systems, and FreeBSD.
- Use SHA-256 implementation from the operating system if one is
available in libc, libmd, or libutil. liblzma won't use e.g.
OpenSSL or libgcrypt to avoid introducing new dependencies.
- Fixed liblzma.pc for static linking.
- Fixed a few portability bugs.
* xz --decompress --single-stream now fixes the input position after
successful decompression. Now the following works:
echo foo | xz > foo.xz
echo bar | xz >> foo.xz
( xz -dc --single-stream ; xz -dc --single-stream ) < foo.xz
Note that it doesn't work if the input is not seekable
or if there is Stream Padding between the concatenated
.xz Streams.
* xz -lvv now shows the minimum xz version that is required to
decompress the file. Currently it is 5.0.0 for all supported .xz
files except files with empty LZMA2 streams require 5.0.2.
* Added an *incomplete* implementation of --block-list=SIZES to xz.
It only works correctly in single-threaded mode and when
--block-size isn't used at the same time. --block-list allows
specifying the sizes of Blocks which can be useful e.g. when
creating files for random-access reading.
5.1.1alpha (2011-04-12)
* All fixes from 5.0.2
* liblzma fixes that will also be included in 5.0.3:
- A memory leak was fixed.
- lzma_stream_buffer_encode() no longer creates an empty .xz
Block if encoding an empty buffer. Such an empty Block with
LZMA2 data would trigger a bug in 5.0.1 and older (see the
first bullet point in 5.0.2 notes). When releasing 5.0.2,
I thought that no encoder creates this kind of files but
I was wrong.
- Validate function arguments better in a few functions. Most
importantly, specifying an unsupported integrity check to
lzma_stream_buffer_encode() no longer creates a corrupt .xz
file. Probably no application tries to do that, so this
shouldn't be a big problem in practice.
- Document that lzma_block_buffer_encode(),
lzma_easy_buffer_encode(), lzma_stream_encoder(), and
lzma_stream_buffer_encode() may return LZMA_UNSUPPORTED_CHECK.
- The return values of the _memusage() functions are now
documented better.
* Support for multithreaded compression was added using the simplest
method, which splits the input data into blocks and compresses
them independently. Other methods will be added in the future.
The current method has room for improvement, e.g. it is possible
to reduce the memory usage.
* Added the options --single-stream and --block-size=SIZE to xz.
* xzdiff and xzgrep now support .lzo files if lzop is installed.
The .tzo suffix is also recognized as a shorthand for .tar.lzo.
* Support for short 8.3 filenames under DOS was added to xz. It is
experimental and may change before it gets into a stable release.
5.0.8 (2014-12-21)
* Fixed an old bug in xzgrep that affected OpenBSD and probably
a few other operating systems too.
* Updated French and German translations.
* Added support for detecting the amount of RAM on AmigaOS/AROS.
* Minor build system updates.
5.0.7 (2014-09-20)
* Fix regressions introduced in 5.0.6:
- Fix building with non-GNU make.
- Fix invalid Libs.private value in liblzma.pc which broke
static linking against liblzma if the linker flags were
taken from pkg-config.
5.0.6 (2014-09-14)
* xzgrep now exits with status 0 if at least one file matched.
* A few minor portability and build system fixes
5.0.5 (2013-06-30)
* lzmadec and liblzma's lzma_alone_decoder(): Support decompressing
.lzma files that have less common settings in the headers
(dictionary size other than 2^n or 2^n + 2^(n-1), or uncompressed
size greater than 256 GiB). The limitations existed to avoid false
positives when detecting .lzma files. The lc + lp <= 4 limitation
still remains since liblzma's LZMA decoder has that limitation.
NOTE: xz's .lzma support or liblzma's lzma_auto_decoder() are NOT
affected by this change. They still consider uncommon .lzma headers
as not being in the .lzma format. Changing this would give way too
many false positives.
* xz:
- Interaction of preset and custom filter chain options was
made less illogical. This affects only certain less typical
uses cases so few people are expected to notice this change.
Now when a custom filter chain option (e.g. --lzma2) is
specified, all preset options (-0 ... -9, -e) earlier are on
the command line are completely forgotten. Similarly, when
a preset option is specified, all custom filter chain options
earlier on the command line are completely forgotten.
Example 1: "xz -9 --lzma2=preset=5 -e" is equivalent to "xz -e"
which is equivalent to "xz -6e". Earlier -e didn't put xz back
into preset mode and thus the example command was equivalent
to "xz --lzma2=preset=5".
Example 2: "xz -9e --lzma2=preset=5 -7" is equivalent to
"xz -7". Earlier a custom filter chain option didn't make
xz forget the -e option so the example was equivalent to
"xz -7e".
- Fixes and improvements to error handling.
- Various fixes to the man page.
* xzless: Fixed to work with "less" versions 448 and later.
* xzgrep: Made -h an alias for --no-filename.
* Include the previously missing debug/translation.bash which can
be useful for translators.
* Include a build script for Mac OS X. This has been in the Git
repository since 2010 but due to a mistake in Makefile.am the
script hasn't been included in a release tarball before.
5.0.4 (2012-06-22)
* liblzma:
- Fix lzma_index_init(). It could crash if memory allocation
failed.
- Fix the possibility of an incorrect LZMA_BUF_ERROR when a BCJ
filter is used and the application only provides exactly as
much output space as is the uncompressed size of the file.
- Fix a bug in doc/examples_old/xz_pipe_decompress.c. It didn't
check if the last call to lzma_code() really returned
LZMA_STREAM_END, which made the program think that truncated
files are valid.
- New example programs in doc/examples (old programs are now in
doc/examples_old). These have more comments and more detailed
error handling.
* Fix "xz -lvv foo.xz". It could crash on some corrupted files.
* Fix output of "xz --robot -lv" and "xz --robot -lvv" which
incorrectly printed the filename also in the "foo (x/x)" format.
* Fix exit status of "xzdiff foo.xz bar.xz".
* Fix exit status of "xzgrep foo binary_file".
* Fix portability to EBCDIC systems.
* Fix a configure issue on AIX with the XL C compiler. See INSTALL
for details.
* Update French, German, Italian, and Polish translations.
5.0.3 (2011-05-21)
* liblzma fixes:
- A memory leak was fixed.
- lzma_stream_buffer_encode() no longer creates an empty .xz
Block if encoding an empty buffer. Such an empty Block with
LZMA2 data would trigger a bug in 5.0.1 and older (see the
first bullet point in 5.0.2 notes). When releasing 5.0.2,
I thought that no encoder creates this kind of files but
I was wrong.
- Validate function arguments better in a few functions. Most
importantly, specifying an unsupported integrity check to
lzma_stream_buffer_encode() no longer creates a corrupt .xz
file. Probably no application tries to do that, so this
shouldn't be a big problem in practice.
- Document that lzma_block_buffer_encode(),
lzma_easy_buffer_encode(), lzma_stream_encoder(), and
lzma_stream_buffer_encode() may return LZMA_UNSUPPORTED_CHECK.
- The return values of the _memusage() functions are now
documented better.
* Fix command name detection in xzgrep. xzegrep and xzfgrep now
correctly use egrep and fgrep instead of grep.
* French translation was added.
5.0.2 (2011-04-01)
* LZMA2 decompressor now correctly accepts LZMA2 streams with no
uncompressed data. Previously it considered them corrupt. The
bug can affect applications that use raw LZMA2 streams. It is
very unlikely to affect .xz files because no compressor creates
.xz files with empty LZMA2 streams. (Empty .xz files are a
different thing than empty LZMA2 streams.)
* "xz --suffix=.foo filename.foo" now refuses to compress the
file due to it already having the suffix .foo. It was already
documented on the man page, but the code lacked the test.
* "xzgrep -l foo bar.xz" works now.
* Polish translation was added.
5.0.1 (2011-01-29)
* xz --force now (de)compresses files that have setuid, setgid,
or sticky bit set and files that have multiple hard links.
The man page had it documented this way already, but the code
had a bug.
* gzip and bzip2 support in xzdiff was fixed.
* Portability fixes
* Minor fix to Czech translation
5.0.0 (2010-10-23)
Only the most important changes compared to 4.999.9beta are listed
here. One change is especially important:
* The memory usage limit is now disabled by default. Some scripts
written before this change may have used --memory=max on xz command
line or in XZ_OPT. THESE USES OF --memory=max SHOULD BE REMOVED
NOW, because they interfere with user's ability to set the memory
usage limit himself. If user-specified limit causes problems to
your script, blame the user.
Other significant changes:
* Added support for XZ_DEFAULTS environment variable. This variable
allows users to set default options for xz, e.g. default memory
usage limit or default compression level. Scripts that use xz
must never set or unset XZ_DEFAULTS. Scripts should use XZ_OPT
instead if they need a way to pass options to xz via an
environment variable.
* The compression settings associated with the preset levels
-0 ... -9 have been changed. --extreme was changed a little too.
It is now less likely to make compression worse, but with some
files the new --extreme may compress slightly worse than the old
--extreme.
* If a preset level (-0 ... -9) is specified after a custom filter
chain options have been used (e.g. --lzma2), the custom filter
chain will be forgotten. Earlier the preset options were
completely ignored after custom filter chain options had been
seen.
* xz will create sparse files when decompressing if the uncompressed
data contains long sequences of binary zeros. This is done even
when writing to standard output that is connected to a regular
file and certain additional conditions are met to make it safe.
* Support for "xz --list" was added. Combine with --verbose or
--verbose --verbose (-vv) for detailed output.
* I had hoped that liblzma API would have been stable after
4.999.9beta, but there have been a couple of changes in the
advanced features, which don't affect most applications:
- Index handling code was revised. If you were using the old
API, you will get a compiler error (so it's easy to notice).
- A subtle but important change was made to the Block handling
API. lzma_block.version has to be initialized even for
lzma_block_header_decode(). Code that doesn't do it will work
for now, but might break in the future, which makes this API
change easy to miss.
* The major soname has been bumped to 5.0.0. liblzma API and ABI
are now stable, so the need to recompile programs linking against
liblzma shouldn't arise soon.

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Information to packagers of XZ Utils
====================================
0. Preface
1. Package naming
2. Package description
3. License
4. configure options
5. Additional documentation
6. Extra files
7. Installing XZ Utils and LZMA Utils in parallel
8. Example
0. Preface
----------
This document is meant for people who create and maintain XZ Utils
packages for operating system distributions. The focus is on GNU/Linux
systems, but most things apply to other systems too.
While the standard "configure && make DESTDIR=$PKG install" should
give a pretty good package, there are some details which packagers
may want to tweak.
Packagers should also read the INSTALL file.
1. Package naming
-----------------
The preferred name for the XZ Utils package is "xz", because that's
the name of the upstream tarball. Naturally you may have good reasons
to use some other name; I won't get angry about it. ;-) It's just nice
to be able to point people to the correct package name without asking
what distro they have.
If your distro policy is to split things into small pieces, here is
one suggestion:
xz xz, xzdec, scripts (xzdiff, xzgrep, etc.), docs
xz-lzma lzma, unlzma, lzcat, lzgrep etc. symlinks and
lzmadec binary for compatibility with LZMA Utils
liblzma liblzma.so.*
liblzma-devel liblzma.so, liblzma.a, API headers
2. Package description
----------------------
Here is a suggestion which you may use as the package description.
If you can use only one-line description, pick only the first line.
Naturally, feel free to use some other description if you find it
better, and maybe send it to me too.
Library and command line tools for XZ and LZMA compressed files
XZ Utils provide a general purpose data compression library
and command line tools. The native file format is the .xz
format, but also the legacy .lzma format is supported. The .xz
format supports multiple compression algorithms, of which LZMA2
is currently the primary algorithm. With typical files, XZ Utils
create about 30 % smaller files than gzip.
If you are splitting XZ Utils into multiple packages, here are some
suggestions for package descriptions:
xz:
Command line tools for XZ and LZMA compressed files
This package includes the xz compression tool and other command
line tools from XZ Utils. xz has command line syntax similar to
that of gzip. The native file format is the .xz format, but also
the legacy .lzma format is supported. The .xz format supports
multiple compression algorithms, of which LZMA2 is currently the
primary algorithm. With typical files, XZ Utils create about 30 %
smaller files than gzip.
Note that this package doesn't include the files needed for
LZMA Utils 4.32.x compatibility. Install also the xz-lzma
package to make XZ Utils emulate LZMA Utils 4.32.x.
xz-lzma:
LZMA Utils emulation with XZ Utils
This package includes executables and symlinks to make
XZ Utils emulate lzma, unlzma, lzcat, and other command
line tools found from the legacy LZMA Utils 4.32.x package.
liblzma:
Library for XZ and LZMA compressed files
liblzma is a general purpose data compression library with
an API similar to that of zlib. liblzma supports multiple
algorithms, of which LZMA2 is currently the primary algorithm.
The native file format is .xz, but also the legacy .lzma
format and raw streams (no headers at all) are supported.
This package includes the shared library.
liblzma-devel:
Library for XZ and LZMA compressed files
This package includes the API headers, static library, and
other development files related to liblzma.
3. License
----------
If the package manager supports a license field, you probably should
put GPLv2+ there (GNU GPL v2 or later). The interesting parts of
XZ Utils are in the public domain, but some less important files
ending up into the binary package are under GPLv2+. So it is simplest
to just say GPLv2+ if you cannot specify "public domain and GPLv2+".
If you split XZ Utils into multiple packages as described earlier
in this file, liblzma and liblzma-dev packages will contain only
public domain code (from XZ Utils at least; compiler or linker may
add some third-party code, which may be copyrighted).
4. configure options
--------------------
Unless you are building a package for a distribution that is meant
only for embedded systems, don't use the following configure options:
--enable-debug
--enable-encoders (*)
--enable-decoders
--enable-match-finders
--enable-checks
--enable-small (*)
--disable-threads (*)
(*) These are OK when building xzdec and lzmadec as described
in INSTALL.
xzdec and lzmadec don't provide any functionality that isn't already
available in the xz tool. Shipping xzdec and lzmadec without size
optimization and statically-linked liblzma isn't very useful. Doing
that would give users the xzdec man page, which may make it easier
for people to find out that such tools exists, but the executables
wouldn't have any advantage over the full-featured xz.
5. Additional documentation
---------------------------
"make install" copies some additional documentation to $docdir
(--docdir in configure). There is a copy of the GNU GPL v2, which
can be replaced with a symlink if your distro ships with shared
copies of the common license texts.
liblzma API is currently only documented using Doxygen tags in the
API headers. It hasn't been tested much how good results Doxygen
is able to make from the tags (e.g. Doxyfile might need tweaking,
the tagging may need to be improved etc.), so it might be simpler
to just let people read docs directly from the .h files for now,
and also save quite a bit in package size at the same time.
6. Extra files
--------------
The "extra" directory contains some small extra tools or other files.
The exact set of extra files can vary between XZ Utils releases. The
extra files have only limited use or they are too dangerous to be
put directly to $bindir (7z2lzma.sh is a good example, since it can
silently create corrupt output if certain conditions are not met).
If you feel like it, you may copy the extra directory under the doc
directory (e.g. /usr/share/doc/xz/extra). Maybe some people will find
them useful. However, most people needing these tools probably are
able to find them from the source package too.
The "debug" directory contains some tools that are useful only when
hacking on XZ Utils. Don't package these tools.
7. Installing XZ Utils and LZMA Utils in parallel
-------------------------------------------------
XZ Utils and LZMA Utils 4.32.x can be installed in parallel by
omitting the compatibility symlinks (lzma, unlzma, lzcat, lzgrep etc.)
from the XZ Utils package. It's probably a good idea to still package
the symlinks into a separate package so that users may choose if they
want to use XZ Utils or LZMA Utils for handling .lzma files.
8. Example
----------
Here is an example for i686 GNU/Linux that
- links xz and lzmainfo against shared liblzma;
- links size-optimized xzdec and lzmadec against static liblzma
while avoiding libpthread dependency;
- includes only shared liblzma in the final package; and
- copies also the "extra" directory to the package.
PKG=/tmp/xz-pkg
tar xf xz-x.y.z.tar.gz
cd xz-x.y.z
./configure \
--prefix=/usr \
--disable-static \
--disable-xzdec \
--disable-lzmadec \
CFLAGS='-march=i686 -mtune=generic -O2'
make
make DESTDIR=$PKG install-strip
make clean
./configure \
--prefix=/usr \
--disable-shared \
--disable-nls \
--disable-encoders \
--enable-small \
--disable-threads \
CFLAGS='-march=i686 -mtune=generic -Os'
make -C src/liblzma
make -C src/xzdec
make -C src/xzdec DESTDIR=$PKG install-strip
cp -a extra $PKG/usr/share/doc/xz

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XZ Utils
========
0. Overview
1. Documentation
1.1. Overall documentation
1.2. Documentation for command-line tools
1.3. Documentation for liblzma
2. Version numbering
3. Reporting bugs
4. Translating the xz tool
5. Other implementations of the .xz format
6. Contact information
0. Overview
-----------
XZ Utils provide a general-purpose data-compression library plus
command-line tools. The native file format is the .xz format, but
also the legacy .lzma format is supported. The .xz format supports
multiple compression algorithms, which are called "filters" in the
context of XZ Utils. The primary filter is currently LZMA2. With
typical files, XZ Utils create about 30 % smaller files than gzip.
To ease adapting support for the .xz format into existing applications
and scripts, the API of liblzma is somewhat similar to the API of the
popular zlib library. For the same reason, the command-line tool xz
has a command-line syntax similar to that of gzip.
When aiming for the highest compression ratio, the LZMA2 encoder uses
a lot of CPU time and may use, depending on the settings, even
hundreds of megabytes of RAM. However, in fast modes, the LZMA2 encoder
competes with bzip2 in compression speed, RAM usage, and compression
ratio.
LZMA2 is reasonably fast to decompress. It is a little slower than
gzip, but a lot faster than bzip2. Being fast to decompress means
that the .xz format is especially nice when the same file will be
decompressed very many times (usually on different computers), which
is the case e.g. when distributing software packages. In such
situations, it's not too bad if the compression takes some time,
since that needs to be done only once to benefit many people.
With some file types, combining (or "chaining") LZMA2 with an
additional filter can improve the compression ratio. A filter chain may
contain up to four filters, although usually only one or two are used.
For example, putting a BCJ (Branch/Call/Jump) filter before LZMA2
in the filter chain can improve compression ratio of executable files.
Since the .xz format allows adding new filter IDs, it is possible that
some day there will be a filter that is, for example, much faster to
compress than LZMA2 (but probably with worse compression ratio).
Similarly, it is possible that some day there is a filter that will
compress better than LZMA2.
XZ Utils doesn't support multithreaded compression or decompression
yet. It has been planned though and taken into account when designing
the .xz file format.
1. Documentation
----------------
1.1. Overall documentation
README This file
INSTALL.generic Generic install instructions for those not familiar
with packages using GNU Autotools
INSTALL Installation instructions specific to XZ Utils
PACKAGERS Information to packagers of XZ Utils
COPYING XZ Utils copyright and license information
COPYING.GPLv2 GNU General Public License version 2
COPYING.GPLv3 GNU General Public License version 3
COPYING.LGPLv2.1 GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1
AUTHORS The main authors of XZ Utils
THANKS Incomplete list of people who have helped making
this software
NEWS User-visible changes between XZ Utils releases
ChangeLog Detailed list of changes (commit log)
TODO Known bugs and some sort of to-do list
Note that only some of the above files are included in binary
packages.
1.2. Documentation for command-line tools
The command-line tools are documented as man pages. In source code
releases (and possibly also in some binary packages), the man pages
are also provided in plain text (ASCII only) and PDF formats in the
directory "doc/man" to make the man pages more accessible to those
whose operating system doesn't provide an easy way to view man pages.
1.3. Documentation for liblzma
The liblzma API headers include short docs about each function
and data type as Doxygen tags. These docs should be quite OK as
a quick reference.
I have planned to write a bunch of very well documented example
programs, which (due to comments) should work as a tutorial to
various features of liblzma. No such example programs have been
written yet.
For now, if you have never used liblzma, libbzip2, or zlib, I
recommend learning the *basics* of the zlib API. Once you know that,
it should be easier to learn liblzma.
http://zlib.net/manual.html
http://zlib.net/zlib_how.html
2. Version numbering
--------------------
The version number format of XZ Utils is X.Y.ZS:
- X is the major version. When this is incremented, the library
API and ABI break.
- Y is the minor version. It is incremented when new features
are added without breaking the existing API or ABI. An even Y
indicates a stable release and an odd Y indicates unstable
(alpha or beta version).
- Z is the revision. This has a different meaning for stable and
unstable releases:
* Stable: Z is incremented when bugs get fixed without adding
any new features. This is intended to be convenient for
downstream distributors that want bug fixes but don't want
any new features to minimize the risk of introducing new bugs.
* Unstable: Z is just a counter. API or ABI of features added
in earlier unstable releases having the same X.Y may break.
- S indicates stability of the release. It is missing from the
stable releases, where Y is an even number. When Y is odd, S
is either "alpha" or "beta" to make it very clear that such
versions are not stable releases. The same X.Y.Z combination is
not used for more than one stability level, i.e. after X.Y.Zalpha,
the next version can be X.Y.(Z+1)beta but not X.Y.Zbeta.
3. Reporting bugs
-----------------
Naturally it is easiest for me if you already know what causes the
unexpected behavior. Even better if you have a patch to propose.
However, quite often the reason for unexpected behavior is unknown,
so here are a few things to do before sending a bug report:
1. Try to create a small example how to reproduce the issue.
2. Compile XZ Utils with debugging code using configure switches
--enable-debug and, if possible, --disable-shared. If you are
using GCC, use CFLAGS='-O0 -ggdb3'. Don't strip the resulting
binaries.
3. Turn on core dumps. The exact command depends on your shell;
for example in GNU bash it is done with "ulimit -c unlimited",
and in tcsh with "limit coredumpsize unlimited".
4. Try to reproduce the suspected bug. If you get "assertion failed"
message, be sure to include the complete message in your bug
report. If the application leaves a coredump, get a backtrace
using gdb:
$ gdb /path/to/app-binary # Load the app to the debugger.
(gdb) core core # Open the coredump.
(gdb) bt # Print the backtrace. Copy & paste to bug report.
(gdb) quit # Quit gdb.
Report your bug via email or IRC (see Contact information below).
Don't send core dump files or any executables. If you have a small
example file(s) (total size less than 256 KiB), please include
it/them as an attachment. If you have bigger test files, put them
online somewhere and include a URL to the file(s) in the bug report.
Always include the exact version number of XZ Utils in the bug report.
If you are using a snapshot from the git repository, use "git describe"
to get the exact snapshot version. If you are using XZ Utils shipped
in an operating system distribution, mention the distribution name,
distribution version, and exact xz package version; if you cannot
repeat the bug with the code compiled from unpatched source code,
you probably need to report a bug to your distribution's bug tracking
system.
4. Translating the xz tool
--------------------------
The messages from the xz tool have been translated into a few
languages. Before starting to translate into a new language, ask
the author whether someone else hasn't already started working on it.
Test your translation. Testing includes comparing the translated
output to the original English version by running the same commands
in both your target locale and with LC_ALL=C. Ask someone to
proof-read and test the translation.
Testing can be done e.g. by installing xz into a temporary directory:
./configure --disable-shared --prefix=/tmp/xz-test
# <Edit the .po file in the po directory.>
make -C po update-po
make install
bash debug/translation.bash | less
bash debug/translation.bash | less -S # For --list outputs
Repeat the above as needed (no need to re-run configure though).
Note especially the following:
- The output of --help and --long-help must look nice on
an 80-column terminal. It's OK to add extra lines if needed.
- In contrast, don't add extra lines to error messages and such.
They are often preceded with e.g. a filename on the same line,
so you have no way to predict where to put a \n. Let the terminal
do the wrapping even if it looks ugly. Adding new lines will be
even uglier in the generic case even if it looks nice in a few
limited examples.
- Be careful with column alignment in tables and table-like output
(--list, --list --verbose --verbose, --info-memory, --help, and
--long-help):
* All descriptions of options in --help should start in the
same column (but it doesn't need to be the same column as
in the English messages; just be consistent if you change it).
Check that both --help and --long-help look OK, since they
share several strings.
* --list --verbose and --info-memory print lines that have
the format "Description: %s". If you need a longer
description, you can put extra space between the colon
and %s. Then you may need to add extra space to other
strings too so that the result as a whole looks good (all
values start at the same column).
* The columns of the actual tables in --list --verbose --verbose
should be aligned properly. Abbreviate if necessary. It might
be good to keep at least 2 or 3 spaces between column headings
and avoid spaces in the headings so that the columns stand out
better, but this is a matter of opinion. Do what you think
looks best.
- Be careful to put a period at the end of a sentence when the
original version has it, and don't put it when the original
doesn't have it. Similarly, be careful with \n characters
at the beginning and end of the strings.
- Read the TRANSLATORS comments that have been extracted from the
source code and included in xz.pot. If they suggest testing the
translation with some type of command, do it. If testing needs
input files, use e.g. tests/files/good-*.xz.
- When updating the translation, read the fuzzy (modified) strings
carefully, and don't mark them as updated before you actually
have updated them. Reading through the unchanged messages can be
good too; sometimes you may find a better wording for them.
- If you find language problems in the original English strings,
feel free to suggest improvements. Ask if something is unclear.
- The translated messages should be understandable (sometimes this
may be a problem with the original English messages too). Don't
make a direct word-by-word translation from English especially if
the result doesn't sound good in your language.
In short, take your time and pay attention to the details. Making
a good translation is not a quick and trivial thing to do. The
translated xz should look as polished as the English version.
5. Other implementations of the .xz format
------------------------------------------
7-Zip and the p7zip port of 7-Zip support the .xz format starting
from the version 9.00alpha.
http://7-zip.org/
http://p7zip.sourceforge.net/
XZ Embedded is a limited implementation written for use in the Linux
kernel, but it is also suitable for other embedded use.
http://tukaani.org/xz/embedded.html
6. Contact information
----------------------
If you have questions, bug reports, patches etc. related to XZ Utils,
contact Lasse Collin <lasse.collin@tukaani.org> (in Finnish or English).
I'm sometimes slow at replying. If you haven't got a reply within two
weeks, assume that your email has got lost and resend it or use IRC.
You can find me also from #tukaani on Freenode; my nick is Larhzu.
The channel tends to be pretty quiet, so just ask your question and
someone may wake up.

116
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Thanks
======
Some people have helped more, some less, but nevertheless everyone's help
has been important. :-) In alphabetical order:
- Mark Adler
- H. Peter Anvin
- Jeff Bastian
- Nelson H. F. Beebe
- Karl Berry
- Anders F. Björklund
- Emmanuel Blot
- Martin Blumenstingl
- Jakub Bogusz
- Maarten Bosmans
- Trent W. Buck
- James Buren
- David Burklund
- Daniel Mealha Cabrita
- Milo Casagrande
- Marek Černocký
- Tomer Chachamu
- Gabi Davar
- Chris Donawa
- Andrew Dudman
- Markus Duft
- İsmail Dönmez
- Robert Elz
- Gilles Espinasse
- Denis Excoffier
- Michael Felt
- Michael Fox
- Mike Frysinger
- Daniel Richard G.
- Bill Glessner
- Jason Gorski
- Juan Manuel Guerrero
- Diederik de Haas
- Joachim Henke
- Christian Hesse
- Vincenzo Innocente
- Peter Ivanov
- Jouk Jansen
- Jun I Jin
- Per Øyvind Karlsen
- Thomas Klausner
- Richard Koch
- Ville Koskinen
- Jan Kratochvil
- Christian Kujau
- Stephan Kulow
- Peter Lawler
- James M Leddy
- Hin-Tak Leung
- Andraž 'ruskie' Levstik
- Cary Lewis
- Wim Lewis
- Lorenzo De Liso
- Bela Lubkin
- Gregory Margo
- Jim Meyering
- Arkadiusz Miskiewicz
- Conley Moorhous
- Rafał Mużyło
- Adrien Nader
- Hongbo Ni
- Jonathan Nieder
- Andre Noll
- Peter O'Gorman
- Peter Pallinger
- Rui Paulo
- Igor Pavlov
- Diego Elio Pettenò
- Elbert Pol
- Mikko Pouru
- Trần Ngọc Quân
- Pavel Raiskup
- Ole André Vadla Ravnås
- Robert Readman
- Bernhard Reutner-Fischer
- Eric S. Raymond
- Cristian Rodríguez
- Christian von Roques
- Torsten Rupp
- Jukka Salmi
- Alexandre Sauvé
- Benno Schulenberg
- Andreas Schwab
- Dan Shechter
- Stuart Shelton
- Brad Smith
- Jonathan Stott
- Dan Stromberg
- Vincent Torri
- Paul Townsend
- Mohammed Adnène Trojette
- Alexey Tourbin
- Patrick J. Volkerding
- Martin Väth
- Adam Walling
- Christian Weisgerber
- Bert Wesarg
- Fredrik Wikstrom
- Ralf Wildenhues
- Charles Wilson
- Lars Wirzenius
- Pilorz Wojciech
- Ryan Young
- Andreas Zieringer
Also thanks to all the people who have participated in the Tukaani project.
I have probably forgot to add some names to the above list. Sorry about
that and thanks for your help.

111
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XZ Utils To-Do List
===================
Known bugs
----------
The test suite is too incomplete.
If the memory usage limit is less than about 13 MiB, xz is unable to
automatically scale down the compression settings enough even though
it would be possible by switching from BT2/BT3/BT4 match finder to
HC3/HC4.
XZ Utils compress some files significantly worse than LZMA Utils.
This is due to faster compression presets used by XZ Utils, and
can often be worked around by using "xz --extreme". With some files
--extreme isn't enough though: it's most likely with files that
compress extremely well, so going from compression ratio of 0.003
to 0.004 means big relative increase in the compressed file size.
xz doesn't quote unprintable characters when it displays file names
given on the command line.
tuklib_exit() doesn't block signals => EINTR is possible.
SIGTSTP is not handled. If xz is stopped, the estimated remaining
time and calculated (de)compression speed won't make sense in the
progress indicator (xz --verbose).
If liblzma has created threads and fork() gets called, liblzma
code will break in the child process unless it calls exec() and
doesn't touch liblzma.
Missing features
----------------
Add support for storing metadata in .xz files. A preliminary
idea is to create a new Stream type for metadata. When both
metadata and data are wanted in the same .xz file, two or more
Streams would be concatenated.
The state stored in lzma_stream should be cloneable, which would
be mostly useful when using a preset dictionary in LZMA2, but
it may have other uses too. Compare to deflateCopy() in zlib.
Support LZMA_FINISH in raw decoder to indicate end of LZMA1 and
other streams that don't have an end of payload marker.
Adjust dictionary size when the input file size is known.
Maybe do this only if an option is given.
xz doesn't support copying extended attributes, access control
lists etc. from source to target file.
Multithreaded compression:
- Reduce memory usage of the current method.
- Implement threaded match finders.
- Implement pigz-style threading in LZMA2.
Multithreaded decompression
Buffer-to-buffer coding could use less RAM (especially when
decompressing LZMA1 or LZMA2).
I/O library is not implemented (similar to gzopen() in zlib).
It will be a separate library that supports uncompressed, .gz,
.bz2, .lzma, and .xz files.
Support changing lzma_options_lzma.mode with lzma_filters_update().
Support LZMA_FULL_FLUSH for lzma_stream_decoder() to stop at
Block and Stream boundaries.
lzma_strerror() to convert lzma_ret to human readable form?
This is tricky, because the same error codes are used with
slightly different meanings, and this cannot be fixed anymore.
Make it possible to adjust LZMA2 options in the middle of a Block
so that the encoding speed vs. compression ratio can be optimized
when the compressed data is streamed over network.
Improved BCJ filters. The current filters are small but they aren't
so great when compressing binary packages that contain various file
types. Specifically, they make things worse if there are static
libraries or Linux kernel modules. The filtering could also be
more effective (without getting overly complex), for example,
streamable variant BCJ2 from 7-Zip could be implemented.
Filter that autodetects specific data types in the input stream
and applies appropriate filters for the corrects parts of the input.
Perhaps combine this with the BCJ filter improvement point above.
Long-range LZ77 method as a separate filter or as a new LZMA2
match finder.
Documentation
-------------
More tutorial programs are needed for liblzma.
Document the LZMA1 and LZMA2 algorithms.
Miscellaneous
------------
Try to get the media type for .xz registered at IANA.

1228
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22
autogen.sh Normal file
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#!/bin/sh
###############################################################################
#
# Author: Lasse Collin
#
# This file has been put into the public domain.
# You can do whatever you want with this file.
#
###############################################################################
# The result of using "autoreconf -fi" should be identical to using this
# script. I'm leaving this script here just in case someone finds it useful.
set -e -x
${AUTOPOINT:-autopoint} -f
${LIBTOOLIZE:-libtoolize} -c -f || glibtoolize -c -f
${ACLOCAL:-aclocal} -I m4
${AUTOCONF:-autoconf}
${AUTOHEADER:-autoheader}
${AUTOMAKE:-automake} -acf --foreign

347
build-aux/compile Normal file
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#! /bin/sh
# Wrapper for compilers which do not understand '-c -o'.
scriptversion=2012-10-14.11; # UTC
# Copyright (C) 1999-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# Written by Tom Tromey <tromey@cygnus.com>.
#
# 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
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
# any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# 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, 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 <bug-automake@gnu.org> or send patches to
# <automake-patches@gnu.org>.
nl='
'
# We need space, tab and new line, in precisely that order. Quoting is
# there to prevent tools from complaining about whitespace usage.
IFS=" "" $nl"
file_conv=
# func_file_conv build_file lazy
# Convert a $build file to $host form and store it in $file
# Currently only supports Windows hosts. If the determined conversion
# type is listed in (the comma separated) LAZY, no conversion will
# take place.
func_file_conv ()
{
file=$1
case $file in
/ | /[!/]*) # absolute file, and not a UNC file
if test -z "$file_conv"; then
# lazily determine how to convert abs files
case `uname -s` in
MINGW*)
file_conv=mingw
;;
CYGWIN*)
file_conv=cygwin
;;
*)
file_conv=wine
;;
esac
fi
case $file_conv/,$2, in
*,$file_conv,*)
;;
mingw/*)
file=`cmd //C echo "$file " | sed -e 's/"\(.*\) " *$/\1/'`
;;
cygwin/*)
file=`cygpath -m "$file" || echo "$file"`
;;
wine/*)
file=`winepath -w "$file" || echo "$file"`
;;
esac
;;
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 ()
{
# Assume a capable shell
lib_path=
shared=:
linker_opts=
for arg
do
if test -n "$eat"; then
eat=
else
case $1 in
-o)
# configure might choose to run compile as 'compile cc -o foo foo.c'.
eat=1
case $2 in
*.o | *.[oO][bB][jJ])
func_file_conv "$2"
set x "$@" -Fo"$file"
shift
;;
*)
func_file_conv "$2"
set x "$@" -Fe"$file"
shift
;;
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 "$2"
set x "$@" "$lib"
shift
;;
-l*)
func_cl_dashl "${1#-l}"
set x "$@" "$lib"
shift
;;
-L)
eat=1
func_cl_dashL "$2"
;;
-L*)
func_cl_dashL "${1#-L}"
;;
-static)
shared=false
;;
-Wl,*)
arg=${1#-Wl,}
save_ifs="$IFS"; IFS=','
for flag in $arg; do
IFS="$save_ifs"
linker_opts="$linker_opts $flag"
done
IFS="$save_ifs"
;;
-Xlinker)
eat=1
linker_opts="$linker_opts $2"
;;
-*)
set x "$@" "$1"
shift
;;
*.cc | *.CC | *.cxx | *.CXX | *.[cC]++)
func_file_conv "$1"
set x "$@" -Tp"$file"
shift
;;
*.c | *.cpp | *.CPP | *.lib | *.LIB | *.Lib | *.OBJ | *.obj | *.[oO])
func_file_conv "$1" mingw
set x "$@" "$file"
shift
;;
*)
set x "$@" "$1"
shift
;;
esac
fi
shift
done
if test -n "$linker_opts"; then
linker_opts="-link$linker_opts"
fi
exec "$@" $linker_opts
exit 1
}
eat=
case $1 in
'')
echo "$0: No command. Try '$0 --help' for more information." 1>&2
exit 1;
;;
-h | --h*)
cat <<\EOF
Usage: compile [--help] [--version] PROGRAM [ARGS]
Wrapper for compilers which do not understand '-c -o'.
Remove '-o dest.o' from ARGS, run PROGRAM with the remaining
arguments, and rename the output as expected.
If you are trying to build a whole package this is not the
right script to run: please start by reading the file 'INSTALL'.
Report bugs to <bug-automake@gnu.org>.
EOF
exit $?
;;
-v | --v*)
echo "compile $scriptversion"
exit $?
;;
cl | *[/\\]cl | cl.exe | *[/\\]cl.exe )
func_cl_wrapper "$@" # Doesn't return...
;;
esac
ofile=
cfile=
for arg
do
if test -n "$eat"; then
eat=
else
case $1 in
-o)
# configure might choose to run compile as 'compile cc -o foo foo.c'.
# So we strip '-o arg' only if arg is an object.
eat=1
case $2 in
*.o | *.obj)
ofile=$2
;;
*)
set x "$@" -o "$2"
shift
;;
esac
;;
*.c)
cfile=$1
set x "$@" "$1"
shift
;;
*)
set x "$@" "$1"
shift
;;
esac
fi
shift
done
if test -z "$ofile" || test -z "$cfile"; then
# If no '-o' option was seen then we might have been invoked from a
# pattern rule where we don't need one. That is ok -- this is a
# normal compilation that the losing compiler can handle. If no
# '.c' file was seen then we are probably linking. That is also
# ok.
exec "$@"
fi
# Name of file we expect compiler to create.
cofile=`echo "$cfile" | sed 's|^.*[\\/]||; s|^[a-zA-Z]:||; s/\.c$/.o/'`
# Create the lock directory.
# Note: use '[/\\:.-]' here to ensure that we don't use the same name
# that we are using for the .o file. Also, base the name on the expected
# object file name, since that is what matters with a parallel build.
lockdir=`echo "$cofile" | sed -e 's|[/\\:.-]|_|g'`.d
while true; do
if mkdir "$lockdir" >/dev/null 2>&1; then
break
fi
sleep 1
done
# FIXME: race condition here if user kills between mkdir and trap.
trap "rmdir '$lockdir'; exit 1" 1 2 15
# Run the compile.
"$@"
ret=$?
if test -f "$cofile"; then
test "$cofile" = "$ofile" || mv "$cofile" "$ofile"
elif test -f "${cofile}bj"; then
test "${cofile}bj" = "$ofile" || mv "${cofile}bj" "$ofile"
fi
rmdir "$lockdir"
exit $ret
# 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:

1421
build-aux/config.guess vendored Normal file

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

672
build-aux/config.rpath Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,672 @@
#! /bin/sh
# Output a system dependent set of variables, describing how to set the
# run time search path of shared libraries in an executable.
#
# Copyright 1996-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# Taken from GNU libtool, 2001
# Originally by Gordon Matzigkeit <gord@gnu.ai.mit.edu>, 1996
#
# This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation gives
# unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, with or without
# modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
#
# The first argument passed to this file is the canonical host specification,
# CPU_TYPE-MANUFACTURER-OPERATING_SYSTEM
# or
# CPU_TYPE-MANUFACTURER-KERNEL-OPERATING_SYSTEM
# The environment variables CC, GCC, LDFLAGS, LD, with_gnu_ld
# should be set by the caller.
#
# The set of defined variables is at the end of this script.
# Known limitations:
# - On IRIX 6.5 with CC="cc", the run time search patch must not be longer
# than 256 bytes, otherwise the compiler driver will dump core. The only
# known workaround is to choose shorter directory names for the build
# directory and/or the installation directory.
# All known linkers require a `.a' archive for static linking (except MSVC,
# which needs '.lib').
libext=a
shrext=.so
host="$1"
host_cpu=`echo "$host" | sed 's/^\([^-]*\)-\([^-]*\)-\(.*\)$/\1/'`
host_vendor=`echo "$host" | sed 's/^\([^-]*\)-\([^-]*\)-\(.*\)$/\2/'`
host_os=`echo "$host" | sed 's/^\([^-]*\)-\([^-]*\)-\(.*\)$/\3/'`
# Code taken from libtool.m4's _LT_CC_BASENAME.
for cc_temp in $CC""; do
case $cc_temp in
compile | *[\\/]compile | ccache | *[\\/]ccache ) ;;
distcc | *[\\/]distcc | purify | *[\\/]purify ) ;;
\-*) ;;
*) break;;
esac
done
cc_basename=`echo "$cc_temp" | sed -e 's%^.*/%%'`
# Code taken from libtool.m4's _LT_COMPILER_PIC.
wl=
if test "$GCC" = yes; then
wl='-Wl,'
else
case "$host_os" in
aix*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
darwin*)
case $cc_basename in
xlc*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
esac
;;
mingw* | cygwin* | pw32* | os2* | cegcc*)
;;
hpux9* | hpux10* | hpux11*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
irix5* | irix6* | nonstopux*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
newsos6)
;;
linux* | k*bsd*-gnu)
case $cc_basename in
ecc*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
icc* | ifort*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
lf95*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
pgcc | pgf77 | pgf90)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
ccc*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
como)
wl='-lopt='
;;
*)
case `$CC -V 2>&1 | sed 5q` in
*Sun\ C*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
esac
;;
esac
;;
osf3* | osf4* | osf5*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
rdos*)
;;
solaris*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
sunos4*)
wl='-Qoption ld '
;;
sysv4 | sysv4.2uw2* | sysv4.3*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
sysv4*MP*)
;;
sysv5* | unixware* | sco3.2v5* | sco5v6* | OpenUNIX*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
unicos*)
wl='-Wl,'
;;
uts4*)
;;
esac
fi
# Code taken from libtool.m4's _LT_LINKER_SHLIBS.
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec=
hardcode_libdir_separator=
hardcode_direct=no
hardcode_minus_L=no
case "$host_os" in
cygwin* | mingw* | pw32* | cegcc*)
# FIXME: the MSVC++ port hasn't been tested in a loooong time
# When not using gcc, we currently assume that we are using
# Microsoft Visual C++.
if test "$GCC" != yes; then
with_gnu_ld=no
fi
;;
interix*)
# we just hope/assume this is gcc and not c89 (= MSVC++)
with_gnu_ld=yes
;;
openbsd*)
with_gnu_ld=no
;;
esac
ld_shlibs=yes
if test "$with_gnu_ld" = yes; then
# Set some defaults for GNU ld with shared library support. These
# are reset later if shared libraries are not supported. Putting them
# here allows them to be overridden if necessary.
# Unlike libtool, we use -rpath here, not --rpath, since the documented
# option of GNU ld is called -rpath, not --rpath.
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}-rpath ${wl}$libdir'
case "$host_os" in
aix[3-9]*)
# On AIX/PPC, the GNU linker is very broken
if test "$host_cpu" != ia64; then
ld_shlibs=no
fi
;;
amigaos*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-L$libdir'
hardcode_minus_L=yes
# Samuel A. Falvo II <kc5tja@dolphin.openprojects.net> reports
# that the semantics of dynamic libraries on AmigaOS, at least up
# to version 4, is to share data among multiple programs linked
# with the same dynamic library. Since this doesn't match the
# behavior of shared libraries on other platforms, we cannot use
# them.
ld_shlibs=no
;;
beos*)
if $LD --help 2>&1 | grep ': supported targets:.* elf' > /dev/null; then
:
else
ld_shlibs=no
fi
;;
cygwin* | mingw* | pw32* | cegcc*)
# hardcode_libdir_flag_spec is actually meaningless, as there is
# no search path for DLLs.
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-L$libdir'
if $LD --help 2>&1 | grep 'auto-import' > /dev/null; then
:
else
ld_shlibs=no
fi
;;
interix[3-9]*)
hardcode_direct=no
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}-rpath,$libdir'
;;
gnu* | linux* | k*bsd*-gnu)
if $LD --help 2>&1 | grep ': supported targets:.* elf' > /dev/null; then
:
else
ld_shlibs=no
fi
;;
netbsd*)
;;
solaris*)
if $LD -v 2>&1 | grep 'BFD 2\.8' > /dev/null; then
ld_shlibs=no
elif $LD --help 2>&1 | grep ': supported targets:.* elf' > /dev/null; then
:
else
ld_shlibs=no
fi
;;
sysv5* | sco3.2v5* | sco5v6* | unixware* | OpenUNIX*)
case `$LD -v 2>&1` in
*\ [01].* | *\ 2.[0-9].* | *\ 2.1[0-5].*)
ld_shlibs=no
;;
*)
if $LD --help 2>&1 | grep ': supported targets:.* elf' > /dev/null; then
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='`test -z "$SCOABSPATH" && echo ${wl}-rpath,$libdir`'
else
ld_shlibs=no
fi
;;
esac
;;
sunos4*)
hardcode_direct=yes
;;
*)
if $LD --help 2>&1 | grep ': supported targets:.* elf' > /dev/null; then
:
else
ld_shlibs=no
fi
;;
esac
if test "$ld_shlibs" = no; then
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec=
fi
else
case "$host_os" in
aix3*)
# Note: this linker hardcodes the directories in LIBPATH if there
# are no directories specified by -L.
hardcode_minus_L=yes
if test "$GCC" = yes; then
# Neither direct hardcoding nor static linking is supported with a
# broken collect2.
hardcode_direct=unsupported
fi
;;
aix[4-9]*)
if test "$host_cpu" = ia64; then
# On IA64, the linker does run time linking by default, so we don't
# have to do anything special.
aix_use_runtimelinking=no
else
aix_use_runtimelinking=no
# Test if we are trying to use run time linking or normal
# AIX style linking. If -brtl is somewhere in LDFLAGS, we
# need to do runtime linking.
case $host_os in aix4.[23]|aix4.[23].*|aix[5-9]*)
for ld_flag in $LDFLAGS; do
if (test $ld_flag = "-brtl" || test $ld_flag = "-Wl,-brtl"); then
aix_use_runtimelinking=yes
break
fi
done
;;
esac
fi
hardcode_direct=yes
hardcode_libdir_separator=':'
if test "$GCC" = yes; then
case $host_os in aix4.[012]|aix4.[012].*)
collect2name=`${CC} -print-prog-name=collect2`
if test -f "$collect2name" && \
strings "$collect2name" | grep resolve_lib_name >/dev/null
then
# We have reworked collect2
:
else
# We have old collect2
hardcode_direct=unsupported
hardcode_minus_L=yes
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-L$libdir'
hardcode_libdir_separator=
fi
;;
esac
fi
# Begin _LT_AC_SYS_LIBPATH_AIX.
echo 'int main () { return 0; }' > conftest.c
${CC} ${LDFLAGS} conftest.c -o conftest
aix_libpath=`dump -H conftest 2>/dev/null | sed -n -e '/Import File Strings/,/^$/ { /^0/ { s/^0 *\(.*\)$/\1/; p; }
}'`
if test -z "$aix_libpath"; then
aix_libpath=`dump -HX64 conftest 2>/dev/null | sed -n -e '/Import File Strings/,/^$/ { /^0/ { s/^0 *\(.*\)$/\1/; p; }
}'`
fi
if test -z "$aix_libpath"; then
aix_libpath="/usr/lib:/lib"
fi
rm -f conftest.c conftest
# End _LT_AC_SYS_LIBPATH_AIX.
if test "$aix_use_runtimelinking" = yes; then
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}-blibpath:$libdir:'"$aix_libpath"
else
if test "$host_cpu" = ia64; then
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}-R $libdir:/usr/lib:/lib'
else
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}-blibpath:$libdir:'"$aix_libpath"
fi
fi
;;
amigaos*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-L$libdir'
hardcode_minus_L=yes
# see comment about different semantics on the GNU ld section
ld_shlibs=no
;;
bsdi[45]*)
;;
cygwin* | mingw* | pw32* | cegcc*)
# When not using gcc, we currently assume that we are using
# Microsoft Visual C++.
# hardcode_libdir_flag_spec is actually meaningless, as there is
# no search path for DLLs.
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec=' '
libext=lib
;;
darwin* | rhapsody*)
hardcode_direct=no
if test "$GCC" = yes ; then
:
else
case $cc_basename in
xlc*)
;;
*)
ld_shlibs=no
;;
esac
fi
;;
dgux*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-L$libdir'
;;
freebsd1*)
ld_shlibs=no
;;
freebsd2.2*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-R$libdir'
hardcode_direct=yes
;;
freebsd2*)
hardcode_direct=yes
hardcode_minus_L=yes
;;
freebsd* | dragonfly*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-R$libdir'
hardcode_direct=yes
;;
hpux9*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}+b ${wl}$libdir'
hardcode_libdir_separator=:
hardcode_direct=yes
# hardcode_minus_L: Not really in the search PATH,
# but as the default location of the library.
hardcode_minus_L=yes
;;
hpux10*)
if test "$with_gnu_ld" = no; then
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}+b ${wl}$libdir'
hardcode_libdir_separator=:
hardcode_direct=yes
# hardcode_minus_L: Not really in the search PATH,
# but as the default location of the library.
hardcode_minus_L=yes
fi
;;
hpux11*)
if test "$with_gnu_ld" = no; then
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}+b ${wl}$libdir'
hardcode_libdir_separator=:
case $host_cpu in
hppa*64*|ia64*)
hardcode_direct=no
;;
*)
hardcode_direct=yes
# hardcode_minus_L: Not really in the search PATH,
# but as the default location of the library.
hardcode_minus_L=yes
;;
esac
fi
;;
irix5* | irix6* | nonstopux*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}-rpath ${wl}$libdir'
hardcode_libdir_separator=:
;;
netbsd*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-R$libdir'
hardcode_direct=yes
;;
newsos6)
hardcode_direct=yes
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}-rpath ${wl}$libdir'
hardcode_libdir_separator=:
;;
openbsd*)
if test -f /usr/libexec/ld.so; then
hardcode_direct=yes
if test -z "`echo __ELF__ | $CC -E - | grep __ELF__`" || test "$host_os-$host_cpu" = "openbsd2.8-powerpc"; then
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}-rpath,$libdir'
else
case "$host_os" in
openbsd[01].* | openbsd2.[0-7] | openbsd2.[0-7].*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-R$libdir'
;;
*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}-rpath,$libdir'
;;
esac
fi
else
ld_shlibs=no
fi
;;
os2*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-L$libdir'
hardcode_minus_L=yes
;;
osf3*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}-rpath ${wl}$libdir'
hardcode_libdir_separator=:
;;
osf4* | osf5*)
if test "$GCC" = yes; then
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='${wl}-rpath ${wl}$libdir'
else
# Both cc and cxx compiler support -rpath directly
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-rpath $libdir'
fi
hardcode_libdir_separator=:
;;
solaris*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-R$libdir'
;;
sunos4*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-L$libdir'
hardcode_direct=yes
hardcode_minus_L=yes
;;
sysv4)
case $host_vendor in
sni)
hardcode_direct=yes # is this really true???
;;
siemens)
hardcode_direct=no
;;
motorola)
hardcode_direct=no #Motorola manual says yes, but my tests say they lie
;;
esac
;;
sysv4.3*)
;;
sysv4*MP*)
if test -d /usr/nec; then
ld_shlibs=yes
fi
;;
sysv4*uw2* | sysv5OpenUNIX* | sysv5UnixWare7.[01].[10]* | unixware7* | sco3.2v5.0.[024]*)
;;
sysv5* | sco3.2v5* | sco5v6*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='`test -z "$SCOABSPATH" && echo ${wl}-R,$libdir`'
hardcode_libdir_separator=':'
;;
uts4*)
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec='-L$libdir'
;;
*)
ld_shlibs=no
;;
esac
fi
# Check dynamic linker characteristics
# Code taken from libtool.m4's _LT_SYS_DYNAMIC_LINKER.
# Unlike libtool.m4, here we don't care about _all_ names of the library, but
# only about the one the linker finds when passed -lNAME. This is the last
# element of library_names_spec in libtool.m4, or possibly two of them if the
# linker has special search rules.
library_names_spec= # the last element of library_names_spec in libtool.m4
libname_spec='lib$name'
case "$host_os" in
aix3*)
library_names_spec='$libname.a'
;;
aix[4-9]*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
amigaos*)
library_names_spec='$libname.a'
;;
beos*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
bsdi[45]*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
cygwin* | mingw* | pw32* | cegcc*)
shrext=.dll
library_names_spec='$libname.dll.a $libname.lib'
;;
darwin* | rhapsody*)
shrext=.dylib
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
dgux*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
freebsd1*)
;;
freebsd* | dragonfly*)
case "$host_os" in
freebsd[123]*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext$versuffix' ;;
*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext' ;;
esac
;;
gnu*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
hpux9* | hpux10* | hpux11*)
case $host_cpu in
ia64*)
shrext=.so
;;
hppa*64*)
shrext=.sl
;;
*)
shrext=.sl
;;
esac
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
interix[3-9]*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
irix5* | irix6* | nonstopux*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
case "$host_os" in
irix5* | nonstopux*)
libsuff= shlibsuff=
;;
*)
case $LD in
*-32|*"-32 "|*-melf32bsmip|*"-melf32bsmip ") libsuff= shlibsuff= ;;
*-n32|*"-n32 "|*-melf32bmipn32|*"-melf32bmipn32 ") libsuff=32 shlibsuff=N32 ;;
*-64|*"-64 "|*-melf64bmip|*"-melf64bmip ") libsuff=64 shlibsuff=64 ;;
*) libsuff= shlibsuff= ;;
esac
;;
esac
;;
linux*oldld* | linux*aout* | linux*coff*)
;;
linux* | k*bsd*-gnu)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
knetbsd*-gnu)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
netbsd*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
newsos6)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
nto-qnx*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
openbsd*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext$versuffix'
;;
os2*)
libname_spec='$name'
shrext=.dll
library_names_spec='$libname.a'
;;
osf3* | osf4* | osf5*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
rdos*)
;;
solaris*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
sunos4*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext$versuffix'
;;
sysv4 | sysv4.3*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
sysv4*MP*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
sysv5* | sco3.2v5* | sco5v6* | unixware* | OpenUNIX* | sysv4*uw2*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
uts4*)
library_names_spec='$libname$shrext'
;;
esac
sed_quote_subst='s/\(["`$\\]\)/\\\1/g'
escaped_wl=`echo "X$wl" | sed -e 's/^X//' -e "$sed_quote_subst"`
shlibext=`echo "$shrext" | sed -e 's,^\.,,'`
escaped_libname_spec=`echo "X$libname_spec" | sed -e 's/^X//' -e "$sed_quote_subst"`
escaped_library_names_spec=`echo "X$library_names_spec" | sed -e 's/^X//' -e "$sed_quote_subst"`
escaped_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec=`echo "X$hardcode_libdir_flag_spec" | sed -e 's/^X//' -e "$sed_quote_subst"`
LC_ALL=C sed -e 's/^\([a-zA-Z0-9_]*\)=/acl_cv_\1=/' <<EOF
# How to pass a linker flag through the compiler.
wl="$escaped_wl"
# Static library suffix (normally "a").
libext="$libext"
# Shared library suffix (normally "so").
shlibext="$shlibext"
# Format of library name prefix.
libname_spec="$escaped_libname_spec"
# Library names that the linker finds when passed -lNAME.
library_names_spec="$escaped_library_names_spec"
# Flag to hardcode \$libdir into a binary during linking.
# This must work even if \$libdir does not exist.
hardcode_libdir_flag_spec="$escaped_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec"
# Whether we need a single -rpath flag with a separated argument.
hardcode_libdir_separator="$hardcode_libdir_separator"
# Set to yes if using DIR/libNAME.so during linking hardcodes DIR into the
# resulting binary.
hardcode_direct="$hardcode_direct"
# Set to yes if using the -LDIR flag during linking hardcodes DIR into the
# resulting binary.
hardcode_minus_L="$hardcode_minus_L"
EOF

1807
build-aux/config.sub vendored Normal file

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791
build-aux/depcomp Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,791 @@
#! /bin/sh
# depcomp - compile a program generating dependencies as side-effects
scriptversion=2013-05-30.07; # UTC
# Copyright (C) 1999-2014 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
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
# any later version.
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# 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, 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.
# Originally written by Alexandre Oliva <oliva@dcc.unicamp.br>.
case $1 in
'')
echo "$0: No command. Try '$0 --help' for more information." 1>&2
exit 1;
;;
-h | --h*)
cat <<\EOF
Usage: depcomp [--help] [--version] PROGRAM [ARGS]
Run PROGRAMS ARGS to compile a file, generating dependencies
as side-effects.
Environment variables:
depmode Dependency tracking mode.
source Source file read by 'PROGRAMS ARGS'.
object Object file output by 'PROGRAMS ARGS'.
DEPDIR directory where to store dependencies.
depfile Dependency file to output.
tmpdepfile Temporary file to use when outputting dependencies.
libtool Whether libtool is used (yes/no).
Report bugs to <bug-automake@gnu.org>.
EOF
exit $?
;;
-v | --v*)
echo "depcomp $scriptversion"
exit $?
;;
esac
# Get the directory component of the given path, and save it in the
# global variables '$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 "$object"; then
echo "depcomp: Variables source, object and depmode must be set" 1>&2
exit 1
fi
# Dependencies for sub/bar.o or sub/bar.obj go into sub/.deps/bar.Po.
depfile=${depfile-`echo "$object" |
sed 's|[^\\/]*$|'${DEPDIR-.deps}'/&|;s|\.\([^.]*\)$|.P\1|;s|Pobj$|Po|'`}
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
# here, because this file can only contain one case statement.
if test "$depmode" = hp; then
# HP compiler uses -M and no extra arg.
gccflag=-M
depmode=gcc
fi
if test "$depmode" = dashXmstdout; then
# This is just like dashmstdout with a different argument.
dashmflag=-xM
depmode=dashmstdout
fi
cygpath_u="cygpath -u -f -"
if test "$depmode" = msvcmsys; then
# This is just like msvisualcpp but w/o cygpath translation.
# Just convert the backslash-escaped backslashes to single forward
# slashes to satisfy depend.m4
cygpath_u='sed s,\\\\,/,g'
depmode=msvisualcpp
fi
if test "$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
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
gcc3)
## gcc 3 implements dependency tracking that does exactly what
## we want. Yay! Note: for some reason libtool 1.4 doesn't like
## it if -MD -MP comes after the -MF stuff. Hmm.
## Unfortunately, FreeBSD c89 acceptance of flags depends upon
## the command line argument order; so add the flags where they
## appear in depend2.am. Note that the slowdown incurred here
## affects only configure: in makefiles, %FASTDEP% shortcuts this.
for arg
do
case $arg in
-c) set fnord "$@" -MT "$object" -MD -MP -MF "$tmpdepfile" "$arg" ;;
*) set fnord "$@" "$arg" ;;
esac
shift # fnord
shift # $arg
done
"$@"
stat=$?
if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
mv "$tmpdepfile" "$depfile"
;;
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 $gccflag above).
## There are various ways to get dependency output from gcc. Here's
## why we pick this rather obscure method:
## - Don't want to use -MD because we'd like the dependencies to end
## up in a subdir. Having to rename by hand is ugly.
## (We might end up doing this anyway to support other compilers.)
## - The DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT environment variable makes gcc act like
## -MM, not -M (despite what the docs say). Also, it might not be
## supported by the other compilers which use the 'gcc' depmode.
## - Using -M directly means running the compiler twice (even worse
## than renaming).
if test -z "$gccflag"; then
gccflag=-MD,
fi
"$@" -Wp,"$gccflag$tmpdepfile"
stat=$?
if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
rm -f "$depfile"
echo "$object : \\" > "$depfile"
# The second -e expression handles DOS-style file names with drive
# letters.
sed -e 's/^[^:]*: / /' \
-e 's/^['$alpha']:\/[^:]*: / /' < "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
## This next piece of magic avoids the "deleted header file" problem.
## The problem is that when a header file which appears in a .P file
## is deleted, the dependency causes make to die (because there is
## typically no way to rebuild the header). We avoid this by adding
## dummy dependencies for each header file. Too bad gcc doesn't do
## this for us directly.
## Some versions of gcc put a space before the ':'. On the theory
## that the space means something, we add a space to the output as
## well. hp depmode also adds that space, but also prefixes the VPATH
## to the object. Take care to not repeat it in the output.
## Some versions of the HPUX 10.20 sed can't process this invocation
## correctly. Breaking it into two sed invocations is a workaround.
tr ' ' "$nl" < "$tmpdepfile" \
| sed -e 's/^\\$//' -e '/^$/d' -e "s|.*$object$||" -e '/:$/d' \
| sed -e 's/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
hp)
# This case exists only to let depend.m4 do its work. It works by
# looking at the text of this script. This case will never be run,
# since it is checked for above.
exit 1
;;
sgi)
if test "$libtool" = yes; then
"$@" "-Wp,-MDupdate,$tmpdepfile"
else
"$@" -MDupdate "$tmpdepfile"
fi
stat=$?
if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
rm -f "$depfile"
if test -f "$tmpdepfile"; then # yes, the sourcefile depend on other files
echo "$object : \\" > "$depfile"
# Clip off the initial element (the dependent). Don't try to be
# clever and replace this with sed code, as IRIX sed won't handle
# lines with more than a fixed number of characters (4096 in
# IRIX 6.2 sed, 8192 in IRIX 6.5). We also remove comment lines;
# the IRIX cc adds comments like '#:fec' to the end of the
# dependency line.
tr ' ' "$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 ' ' "$nl" < "$tmpdepfile" \
| sed -e 's/^.*\.o://' -e 's/#.*$//' -e '/^$/ d' -e 's/$/:/' \
>> "$depfile"
else
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; $object doesn't have directory information.
# Version 6 uses the directory in both cases.
set_dir_from "$object"
set_base_from "$object"
if test "$libtool" = yes; then
tmpdepfile1=$dir$base.u
tmpdepfile2=$base.u
tmpdepfile3=$dir.libs/$base.u
"$@" -Wc,-M
else
tmpdepfile1=$dir$base.u
tmpdepfile2=$dir$base.u
tmpdepfile3=$dir$base.u
"$@" -M
fi
stat=$?
if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile1" "$tmpdepfile2" "$tmpdepfile3"
exit $stat
fi
for tmpdepfile in "$tmpdepfile1" "$tmpdepfile2" "$tmpdepfile3"
do
test -f "$tmpdepfile" && break
done
aix_post_process_depfile
;;
tcc)
# tcc (Tiny C Compiler) understand '-MD -MF file' since version 0.9.26
# FIXME: That version still under development at the moment of writing.
# Make that this statement remains true also for stable, released
# versions.
# It will wrap lines (doesn't matter whether long or short) with a
# trailing '\', as in:
#
# foo.o : \
# foo.c \
# foo.h \
#
# It will put a trailing '\' even on the last line, and will use leading
# spaces rather than leading tabs (at least since its commit 0394caf7
# "Emit spaces for -MD").
"$@" -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 "$tmpdepfile"
;;
## The order of this option in the case statement is important, since the
## shell code in configure will try each of these formats in the order
## listed in this file. A plain '-MD' option would be understood by many
## compilers, so we must ensure this comes after the gcc and icc options.
pgcc)
# Portland's C compiler understands '-MD'.
# Will always output deps to 'file.d' where file is the root name of the
# source file under compilation, even if file resides in a subdirectory.
# The object file name does not affect the name of the '.d' file.
# pgcc 10.2 will output
# foo.o: sub/foo.c sub/foo.h
# and will wrap long lines using '\' :
# foo.o: sub/foo.c ... \
# sub/foo.h ... \
# ...
set_dir_from "$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
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 \'.
# Do two passes, one to just change these to
# `$object: dependent.h' and one to simply `dependent.h:'.
sed "s,^[^:]*:,$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' < "$tmpdepfile" \
| sed -e 's/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
hp2)
# The "hp" stanza above does not work with aCC (C++) and HP's ia64
# compilers, which have integrated preprocessors. The correct option
# to use with these is +Maked; it writes dependencies to a file named
# '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.
set_dir_from "$object"
set_base_from "$object"
if test "$libtool" = yes; then
tmpdepfile1=$dir$base.d
tmpdepfile2=$dir.libs/$base.d
"$@" -Wc,+Maked
else
tmpdepfile1=$dir$base.d
tmpdepfile2=$dir$base.d
"$@" +Maked
fi
stat=$?
if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile1" "$tmpdepfile2"
exit $stat
fi
for tmpdepfile in "$tmpdepfile1" "$tmpdepfile2"
do
test -f "$tmpdepfile" && break
done
if test -f "$tmpdepfile"; then
sed -e "s,^.*\.[$lower]*:,$object:," "$tmpdepfile" > "$depfile"
# Add 'dependent.h:' lines.
sed -ne '2,${
s/^ *//
s/ \\*$//
s/$/:/
p
}' "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
else
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.
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
showIncludes=-Wc,-showIncludes
else
showIncludes=-showIncludes
fi
"$@" $showIncludes > "$tmpdepfile"
stat=$?
grep -v '^Note: including file: ' "$tmpdepfile"
if test $stat -ne 0; then
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
exit $stat
fi
rm -f "$depfile"
echo "$object : \\" > "$depfile"
# The first sed program below extracts the file names and escapes
# backslashes for cygpath. The second sed program outputs the file
# name when reading, but also accumulates all include files in the
# hold buffer in order to output them again at the end. This only
# works with sed implementations that can handle large buffers.
sed < "$tmpdepfile" -n '
/^Note: including file: *\(.*\)/ {
s//\1/
s/\\/\\\\/g
p
}' | $cygpath_u | sort -u | sed -n '
s/ /\\ /g
s/\(.*\)/'"$tab"'\1 \\/p
s/.\(.*\) \\/\1:/
H
$ {
s/.*/'"$tab"'/
G
p
}' >> "$depfile"
echo >> "$depfile" # make sure the fragment doesn't end with a backslash
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
msvc7msys)
# 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
;;
#nosideeffect)
# This comment above is used by automake to tell side-effect
# dependency tracking mechanisms from slower ones.
dashmstdout)
# Important note: in order to support this mode, a compiler *must*
# always write the preprocessed file to stdout, regardless of -o.
"$@" || exit $?
# Remove the call to Libtool.
if test "$libtool" = yes; then
while test "X$1" != 'X--mode=compile'; do
shift
done
shift
fi
# Remove '-o $object'.
IFS=" "
for arg
do
case $arg in
-o)
shift
;;
$object)
shift
;;
*)
set fnord "$@" "$arg"
shift # fnord
shift # $arg
;;
esac
done
test -z "$dashmflag" && dashmflag=-M
# Require at least two characters before searching for ':'
# 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.
"$@" $dashmflag |
sed "s|^[$tab ]*[^:$tab ][^:][^:]*:[$tab ]*|$object: |" > "$tmpdepfile"
rm -f "$depfile"
cat < "$tmpdepfile" > "$depfile"
# Some versions of the HPUX 10.20 sed can't process this sed invocation
# correctly. Breaking it into two sed invocations is a workaround.
tr ' ' "$nl" < "$tmpdepfile" \
| sed -e 's/^\\$//' -e '/^$/d' -e '/:$/d' \
| sed -e 's/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
dashXmstdout)
# This case only exists to satisfy depend.m4. It is never actually
# run, as this mode is specially recognized in the preamble.
exit 1
;;
makedepend)
"$@" || exit $?
# Remove any Libtool call
if test "$libtool" = yes; then
while test "X$1" != 'X--mode=compile'; do
shift
done
shift
fi
# X makedepend
shift
cleared=no eat=no
for arg
do
case $cleared in
no)
set ""; shift
cleared=yes ;;
esac
if test $eat = yes; then
eat=no
continue
fi
case "$arg" in
-D*|-I*)
set fnord "$@" "$arg"; shift ;;
# Strip any option that makedepend may not understand. Remove
# the object too, otherwise makedepend will parse it as a source file.
-arch)
eat=yes ;;
-*|$object)
;;
*)
set fnord "$@" "$arg"; shift ;;
esac
done
obj_suffix=`echo "$object" | sed 's/^.*\././'`
touch "$tmpdepfile"
${MAKEDEPEND-makedepend} -o"$obj_suffix" -f"$tmpdepfile" "$@"
rm -f "$depfile"
# 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"
# 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
;;
cpp)
# Important note: in order to support this mode, a compiler *must*
# always write the preprocessed file to stdout.
"$@" || exit $?
# Remove the call to Libtool.
if test "$libtool" = yes; then
while test "X$1" != 'X--mode=compile'; do
shift
done
shift
fi
# Remove '-o $object'.
IFS=" "
for arg
do
case $arg in
-o)
shift
;;
$object)
shift
;;
*)
set fnord "$@" "$arg"
shift # fnord
shift # $arg
;;
esac
done
"$@" -E \
| sed -n -e '/^# [0-9][0-9]* "\([^"]*\)".*/ s:: \1 \\:p' \
-e '/^#line [0-9][0-9]* "\([^"]*\)".*/ s:: \1 \\:p' \
| sed '$ s: \\$::' > "$tmpdepfile"
rm -f "$depfile"
echo "$object : \\" > "$depfile"
cat < "$tmpdepfile" >> "$depfile"
sed < "$tmpdepfile" '/^$/d;s/^ //;s/ \\$//;s/$/ :/' >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
msvisualcpp)
# Important note: in order to support this mode, a compiler *must*
# always write the preprocessed file to stdout.
"$@" || exit $?
# Remove the call to Libtool.
if test "$libtool" = yes; then
while test "X$1" != 'X--mode=compile'; do
shift
done
shift
fi
IFS=" "
for arg
do
case "$arg" in
-o)
shift
;;
$object)
shift
;;
"-Gm"|"/Gm"|"-Gi"|"/Gi"|"-ZI"|"/ZI")
set fnord "$@"
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 '/^\(.*\)$/ s::'"$tab"'\1 \\:p' >> "$depfile"
echo "$tab" >> "$depfile"
sed < "$tmpdepfile" -n -e 's% %\\ %g' -e '/^\(.*\)$/ s::\1\::p' >> "$depfile"
rm -f "$tmpdepfile"
;;
msvcmsys)
# This case exists only to let depend.m4 do its work. It works by
# looking at the text of this script. This case will never be run,
# since it is checked for above.
exit 1
;;
none)
exec "$@"
;;
*)
echo "Unknown depmode $depmode" 1>&2
exit 1
;;
esac
exit 0
# 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:

501
build-aux/install-sh Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,501 @@
#!/bin/sh
# install - install a program, script, or datafile
scriptversion=2013-12-25.23; # UTC
# This originates from X11R5 (mit/util/scripts/install.sh), which was
# later released in X11R6 (xc/config/util/install.sh) with the
# following copyright and license.
#
# Copyright (C) 1994 X Consortium
#
# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
# of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to
# deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the
# rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
# sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
# furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
#
# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
# all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
#
# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
# IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
# X CONSORTIUM BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
# AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNEC-
# TION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
#
# Except as contained in this notice, the name of the X Consortium shall not
# be used in advertising or otherwise to promote the sale, use or other deal-
# ings in this Software without prior written authorization from the X Consor-
# tium.
#
#
# 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
# when there is no Makefile.
#
# This script is compatible with the BSD install script, but was written
# from scratch.
tab=' '
nl='
'
IFS=" $tab$nl"
# Set DOITPROG to "echo" to test this script.
doit=${DOITPROG-}
doit_exec=${doit:-exec}
# 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=${STRIPPROG-strip}
posix_mkdir=
# Desired mode of installed file.
mode=0755
chgrpcmd=
chmodcmd=$chmodprog
chowncmd=
mvcmd=$mvprog
rmcmd="$rmprog -f"
stripcmd=
src=
dst=
dir_arg=
dst_arg=
copy_on_change=false
is_target_a_directory=possibly
usage="\
Usage: $0 [OPTION]... [-T] SRCFILE DSTFILE
or: $0 [OPTION]... SRCFILES... DIRECTORY
or: $0 [OPTION]... -t DIRECTORY SRCFILES...
or: $0 [OPTION]... -d DIRECTORIES...
In the 1st form, copy SRCFILE to DSTFILE.
In the 2nd and 3rd, copy all SRCFILES to DIRECTORY.
In the 4th, create DIRECTORIES.
Options:
--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 CMPPROG CPPROG MKDIRPROG MVPROG
RMPROG STRIPPROG
"
while test $# -ne 0; do
case $1 in
-c) ;;
-C) copy_on_change=true;;
-d) dir_arg=true;;
-g) chgrpcmd="$chgrpprog $2"
shift;;
--help) echo "$usage"; exit $?;;
-m) mode=$2
case $mode in
*' '* | *"$tab"* | *"$nl"* | *'*'* | *'?'* | *'['*)
echo "$0: invalid mode: $mode" >&2
exit 1;;
esac
shift;;
-o) chowncmd="$chownprog $2"
shift;;
-s) stripcmd=$stripprog;;
-t)
is_target_a_directory=always
dst_arg=$2
# Protect names problematic for 'test' and other utilities.
case $dst_arg in
-* | [=\(\)!]) dst_arg=./$dst_arg;;
esac
shift;;
-T) is_target_a_directory=never;;
--version) echo "$0 $scriptversion"; exit $?;;
--) shift
break;;
-*) echo "$0: invalid option: $1" >&2
exit 1;;
*) break;;
esac
shift
done
# We allow the use of options -d and -T together, by making -d
# take the precedence; this is for compatibility with GNU install.
if test -n "$dir_arg"; then
if test -n "$dst_arg"; then
echo "$0: target directory not allowed when installing a directory." >&2
exit 1
fi
fi
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 "$0: no input file specified." >&2
exit 1
fi
# It's OK to call 'install-sh -d' without argument.
# This can happen when creating conditional directories.
exit 0
fi
if test -z "$dir_arg"; then
if test $# -gt 1 || test "$is_target_a_directory" = always; then
if test ! -d "$dst_arg"; then
echo "$0: $dst_arg: Is not a directory." >&2
exit 1
fi
fi
fi
if test -z "$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 problematic for 'test' and other utilities.
case $src in
-* | [=\(\)!]) src=./$src;;
esac
if test -n "$dir_arg"; then
dst=$src
dstdir=$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 $dsttmp) contains '*'.
if test ! -f "$src" && test ! -d "$src"; then
echo "$0: $src does not exist." >&2
exit 1
fi
if test -z "$dst_arg"; then
echo "$0: no destination specified." >&2
exit 1
fi
dst=$dst_arg
# If destination is a directory, append the input filename; won't work
# if double slashes aren't ignored.
if test -d "$dst"; then
if test "$is_target_a_directory" = never; then
echo "$0: $dst_arg: Is a directory" >&2
exit 1
fi
dstdir=$dst
dst=$dstdir/`basename "$src"`
dstdir_status=0
else
dstdir=`dirname "$dst"`
test -d "$dstdir"
dstdir_status=$?
fi
fi
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
if
$posix_mkdir && (
umask $mkdir_umask &&
$doit_exec $mkdirprog $mkdir_mode -p -- "$dstdir"
)
then :
else
# 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.
case $dstdir in
/*) prefix='/';;
[-=\(\)!]*) prefix='./';;
*) prefix='';;
esac
oIFS=$IFS
IFS=/
set -f
set fnord $dstdir
shift
set +f
IFS=$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
fi
fi
if test -n "$dir_arg"; then
{ test -z "$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
# Make a couple of temp file names in the proper directory.
dsttmp=$dstdir/_inst.$$_
rmtmp=$dstdir/_rm.$$_
# Trap to clean up those temp files at exit.
trap 'ret=$?; rm -f "$dsttmp" "$rmtmp" && exit $ret' 0
# Copy the file name to the temp name.
(umask $cp_umask && $doit_exec $cpprog "$src" "$dsttmp") &&
# and set any options; do chmod last to preserve setuid bits.
#
# If any of these fail, we abort the whole thing. If we want to
# ignore errors from any of these, just make sure not to ignore
# errors from the above "$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 $mode "$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` &&
set -f &&
set X $old && old=:$2:$4:$5:$6 &&
set X $new && new=:$2:$4:$5:$6 &&
set +f &&
test "$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
# Local variables:
# 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:

11147
build-aux/ltmain.sh Normal file

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

58
build-aux/manconv.sh Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,58 @@
#!/bin/sh
#
###############################################################################
#
# Wrapper for GNU groff to convert man pages to a few formats
#
# Usage: manconv.sh FORMAT [PAPER_SIZE] < in.1 > out.suffix
#
# FORMAT can be ascii, utf8, ps, or pdf. PAPER_SIZE can be anything that
# groff accepts, e.g. a4 or letter. See groff_font(5). PAPER_SIZE defaults
# to a4 and is used only when FORMAT is ps (PostScript) or pdf.
#
# Multiple man pages can be given at once e.g. to create a single PDF file
# with continuous page numbering.
#
###############################################################################
#
# Author: Lasse Collin
#
# This file has been put into the public domain.
# You can do whatever you want with this file.
#
###############################################################################
FORMAT=$1
PAPER=${2-a4}
# Make PostScript and PDF output more readable:
# - Use 11 pt font instead of the default 10 pt.
# - Use larger paragraph spacing than the default 0.4v (man(7) only).
FONT=11
PD=0.8
SED_PD="
/^\\.TH /s/\$/\\
.PD $PD/
s/^\\.PD\$/.PD $PD/"
case $FORMAT in
ascii)
groff -t -mandoc -Tascii | col -bx
;;
utf8)
groff -t -mandoc -Tutf8 | col -bx
;;
ps)
sed "$SED_PD" | groff -dpaper=$PAPER -t -mandoc \
-rC1 -rS$FONT -Tps -P-p$PAPER
;;
pdf)
sed "$SED_PD" | groff -dpaper=$PAPER -t -mandoc \
-rC1 -rS$FONT -Tps -P-p$PAPER | ps2pdf - -
;;
*)
echo 'Invalid arguments' >&2
exit 1
;;
esac

215
build-aux/missing Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,215 @@
#! /bin/sh
# Common wrapper for a few potentially missing GNU programs.
scriptversion=2013-10-28.13; # UTC
# Copyright (C) 1996-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# Originally written by Fran,cois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>, 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
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
# any later version.
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# 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, 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.
if test $# -eq 0; then
echo 1>&2 "Try '$0 --help' for more information"
exit 1
fi
case $1 in
--is-lightweight)
# Used by our autoconf macros to check whether the available missing
# script is modern enough.
exit 0
;;
--run)
# Back-compat with the calling convention used by older automake.
shift
;;
-h|--h|--he|--hel|--help)
echo "\
$0 [OPTION]... PROGRAM [ARGUMENT]...
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
Supported PROGRAM values:
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 <bug-automake@gnu.org>."
exit $?
;;
-v|--v|--ve|--ver|--vers|--versi|--versio|--version)
echo "missing $scriptversion (GNU Automake)"
exit $?
;;
-*)
echo 1>&2 "$0: unknown '$1' option"
echo 1>&2 "Try '$0 --help' for more information"
exit 1
;;
esac
# Run the given program, remember its exit status.
"$@"; 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
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-time-zone: "UTC"
# time-stamp-end: "; # UTC"
# End:

24
build-aux/version.sh Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,24 @@
#!/bin/sh
#
#############################################################################
#
# Get the version string from version.h and print it out without
# trailing newline. This makes it suitable for use in configure.ac.
#
#############################################################################
#
# Author: Lasse Collin
#
# This file has been put into the public domain.
# You can do whatever you want with this file.
#
#############################################################################
sed -n 's/LZMA_VERSION_STABILITY_ALPHA/alpha/
s/LZMA_VERSION_STABILITY_BETA/beta/
s/LZMA_VERSION_STABILITY_STABLE//
s/^#define LZMA_VERSION_[MPS][AIT][AJNT][A-Z]* //p' \
src/liblzma/api/lzma/version.h \
| tr '\n' '|' \
| sed 's/|/./; s/|/./; s/|//g' \
| tr -d '\r\n'

485
config.h.in Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,485 @@
/* config.h.in. Generated from configure.ac by autoheader. */
/* Define if building universal (internal helper macro) */
#undef AC_APPLE_UNIVERSAL_BUILD
/* How many MiB of RAM to assume if the real amount cannot be determined. */
#undef ASSUME_RAM
/* Define to 1 if translation of program messages to the user's native
language is requested. */
#undef ENABLE_NLS
/* Define to 1 if bswap_16 is available. */
#undef HAVE_BSWAP_16
/* Define to 1 if bswap_32 is available. */
#undef HAVE_BSWAP_32
/* Define to 1 if bswap_64 is available. */
#undef HAVE_BSWAP_64
/* Define to 1 if you have the <byteswap.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_BYTESWAP_H
/* Define to 1 if the system has the type `CC_SHA256_CTX'. */
#undef HAVE_CC_SHA256_CTX
/* Define to 1 if you have the `CC_SHA256_Init' function. */
#undef HAVE_CC_SHA256_INIT
/* Define to 1 if you have the MacOS X function CFLocaleCopyCurrent in the
CoreFoundation framework. */
#undef HAVE_CFLOCALECOPYCURRENT
/* Define to 1 if you have the MacOS X function CFPreferencesCopyAppValue in
the CoreFoundation framework. */
#undef HAVE_CFPREFERENCESCOPYAPPVALUE
/* Define to 1 if crc32 integrity check is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_CHECK_CRC32
/* Define to 1 if crc64 integrity check is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_CHECK_CRC64
/* Define to 1 if sha256 integrity check is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_CHECK_SHA256
/* Define to 1 if you have the `clock_gettime' function. */
#undef HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME
/* Define to 1 if you have the <CommonCrypto/CommonDigest.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_COMMONCRYPTO_COMMONDIGEST_H
/* Define if the GNU dcgettext() function is already present or preinstalled.
*/
#undef HAVE_DCGETTEXT
/* Define to 1 if you have the declaration of `CLOCK_MONOTONIC', and to 0 if
you don't. */
#undef HAVE_DECL_CLOCK_MONOTONIC
/* Define to 1 if you have the declaration of `program_invocation_name', and
to 0 if you don't. */
#undef HAVE_DECL_PROGRAM_INVOCATION_NAME
/* Define to 1 if arm decoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_DECODER_ARM
/* Define to 1 if armthumb decoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_DECODER_ARMTHUMB
/* Define to 1 if delta decoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_DECODER_DELTA
/* Define to 1 if ia64 decoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_DECODER_IA64
/* Define to 1 if lzma1 decoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_DECODER_LZMA1
/* Define to 1 if lzma2 decoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_DECODER_LZMA2
/* Define to 1 if powerpc decoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_DECODER_POWERPC
/* Define to 1 if sparc decoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_DECODER_SPARC
/* Define to 1 if x86 decoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_DECODER_X86
/* Define to 1 if you have the <dlfcn.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_DLFCN_H
/* Define to 1 if arm encoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_ENCODER_ARM
/* Define to 1 if armthumb encoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_ENCODER_ARMTHUMB
/* Define to 1 if delta encoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_ENCODER_DELTA
/* Define to 1 if ia64 encoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_ENCODER_IA64
/* Define to 1 if lzma1 encoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_ENCODER_LZMA1
/* Define to 1 if lzma2 encoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_ENCODER_LZMA2
/* Define to 1 if powerpc encoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_ENCODER_POWERPC
/* Define to 1 if sparc encoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_ENCODER_SPARC
/* Define to 1 if x86 encoder is enabled. */
#undef HAVE_ENCODER_X86
/* Define to 1 if you have the <fcntl.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_FCNTL_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the `futimens' function. */
#undef HAVE_FUTIMENS
/* Define to 1 if you have the `futimes' function. */
#undef HAVE_FUTIMES
/* Define to 1 if you have the `futimesat' function. */
#undef HAVE_FUTIMESAT
/* Define to 1 if you have the <getopt.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_GETOPT_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the `getopt_long' function. */
#undef HAVE_GETOPT_LONG
/* Define if the GNU gettext() function is already present or preinstalled. */
#undef HAVE_GETTEXT
/* Define if you have the iconv() function and it works. */
#undef HAVE_ICONV
/* Define to 1 if you have the <immintrin.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_IMMINTRIN_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the <inttypes.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_INTTYPES_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the <limits.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_LIMITS_H
/* Define to 1 if mbrtowc and mbstate_t are properly declared. */
#undef HAVE_MBRTOWC
/* Define to 1 if you have the <memory.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_MEMORY_H
/* Define to 1 to enable bt2 match finder. */
#undef HAVE_MF_BT2
/* Define to 1 to enable bt3 match finder. */
#undef HAVE_MF_BT3
/* Define to 1 to enable bt4 match finder. */
#undef HAVE_MF_BT4
/* Define to 1 to enable hc3 match finder. */
#undef HAVE_MF_HC3
/* Define to 1 to enable hc4 match finder. */
#undef HAVE_MF_HC4
/* Define to 1 if you have the <minix/sha2.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_MINIX_SHA2_H
/* Define to 1 if getopt.h declares extern int optreset. */
#undef HAVE_OPTRESET
/* Define to 1 if you have the `posix_fadvise' function. */
#undef HAVE_POSIX_FADVISE
/* Define to 1 if you have the `pthread_condattr_setclock' function. */
#undef HAVE_PTHREAD_CONDATTR_SETCLOCK
/* Have PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT. */
#undef HAVE_PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT
/* Define to 1 if you have the `SHA256Init' function. */
#undef HAVE_SHA256INIT
/* Define to 1 if the system has the type `SHA256_CTX'. */
#undef HAVE_SHA256_CTX
/* Define to 1 if you have the <sha256.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_SHA256_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the `SHA256_Init' function. */
#undef HAVE_SHA256_INIT
/* Define to 1 if the system has the type `SHA2_CTX'. */
#undef HAVE_SHA2_CTX
/* Define to 1 if you have the <sha2.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_SHA2_H
/* Define to 1 if optimizing for size. */
#undef HAVE_SMALL
/* Define to 1 if stdbool.h conforms to C99. */
#undef HAVE_STDBOOL_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the <stdint.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_STDINT_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the <stdlib.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_STDLIB_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the <strings.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_STRINGS_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the <string.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_STRING_H
/* Define to 1 if `st_atimensec' is a member of `struct stat'. */
#undef HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_ATIMENSEC
/* Define to 1 if `st_atimespec.tv_nsec' is a member of `struct stat'. */
#undef HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_ATIMESPEC_TV_NSEC
/* Define to 1 if `st_atim.st__tim.tv_nsec' is a member of `struct stat'. */
#undef HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_ATIM_ST__TIM_TV_NSEC
/* Define to 1 if `st_atim.tv_nsec' is a member of `struct stat'. */
#undef HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_ATIM_TV_NSEC
/* Define to 1 if `st_uatime' is a member of `struct stat'. */
#undef HAVE_STRUCT_STAT_ST_UATIME
/* Define to 1 if you have the <sys/byteorder.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_SYS_BYTEORDER_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the <sys/endian.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_SYS_ENDIAN_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the <sys/param.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the <sys/stat.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_SYS_STAT_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the <sys/time.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_SYS_TIME_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the <sys/types.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H
/* Define to 1 if the system has the type `uintptr_t'. */
#undef HAVE_UINTPTR_T
/* Define to 1 if you have the <unistd.h> header file. */
#undef HAVE_UNISTD_H
/* Define to 1 if you have the `utime' function. */
#undef HAVE_UTIME
/* Define to 1 if you have the `utimes' function. */
#undef HAVE_UTIMES
/* Define to 1 or 0, depending whether the compiler supports simple visibility
declarations. */
#undef HAVE_VISIBILITY
/* Define to 1 if you have the `wcwidth' function. */
#undef HAVE_WCWIDTH
/* Define to 1 if the system has the type `_Bool'. */
#undef HAVE__BOOL
/* Define to 1 if _mm_movemask_epi8 is available. */
#undef HAVE__MM_MOVEMASK_EPI8
/* Define to the sub-directory where libtool stores uninstalled libraries. */
#undef LT_OBJDIR
/* Define to 1 when using POSIX threads (pthreads). */
#undef MYTHREAD_POSIX
/* Define to 1 when using Windows Vista compatible threads. This uses features
that are not available on Windows XP. */
#undef MYTHREAD_VISTA
/* Define to 1 when using Windows 95 (and thus XP) compatible threads. This
avoids use of features that were added in Windows Vista. */
#undef MYTHREAD_WIN95
/* Define to 1 to disable debugging code. */
#undef NDEBUG
/* Name of package */
#undef PACKAGE
/* Define to the address where bug reports for this package should be sent. */
#undef PACKAGE_BUGREPORT
/* Define to the full name of this package. */
#undef PACKAGE_NAME
/* Define to the full name and version of this package. */
#undef PACKAGE_STRING
/* Define to the one symbol short name of this package. */
#undef PACKAGE_TARNAME
/* Define to the home page for this package. */
#undef PACKAGE_URL
/* Define to the version of this package. */
#undef PACKAGE_VERSION
/* Define to necessary symbol if this constant uses a non-standard name on
your system. */
#undef PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE
/* The size of `size_t', as computed by sizeof. */
#undef SIZEOF_SIZE_T
/* Define to 1 if you have the ANSI C header files. */
#undef STDC_HEADERS
/* Define to 1 if the number of available CPU cores can be detected with
cpuset(2). */
#undef TUKLIB_CPUCORES_CPUSET
/* Define to 1 if the number of available CPU cores can be detected with
pstat_getdynamic(). */
#undef TUKLIB_CPUCORES_PSTAT_GETDYNAMIC
/* Define to 1 if the number of available CPU cores can be detected with
sysconf(_SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN) or sysconf(_SC_NPROC_ONLN). */
#undef TUKLIB_CPUCORES_SYSCONF
/* Define to 1 if the number of available CPU cores can be detected with
sysctl(). */
#undef TUKLIB_CPUCORES_SYSCTL
/* Define to 1 if the system supports fast unaligned access to 16-bit and
32-bit integers. */
#undef TUKLIB_FAST_UNALIGNED_ACCESS
/* Define to 1 if the amount of physical memory can be detected with
_system_configuration.physmem. */
#undef TUKLIB_PHYSMEM_AIX
/* Define to 1 if the amount of physical memory can be detected with
getinvent_r(). */
#undef TUKLIB_PHYSMEM_GETINVENT_R
/* Define to 1 if the amount of physical memory can be detected with
getsysinfo(). */
#undef TUKLIB_PHYSMEM_GETSYSINFO
/* Define to 1 if the amount of physical memory can be detected with
pstat_getstatic(). */
#undef TUKLIB_PHYSMEM_PSTAT_GETSTATIC
/* Define to 1 if the amount of physical memory can be detected with
sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE) and sysconf(_SC_PHYS_PAGES). */
#undef TUKLIB_PHYSMEM_SYSCONF
/* Define to 1 if the amount of physical memory can be detected with sysctl().
*/
#undef TUKLIB_PHYSMEM_SYSCTL
/* Define to 1 if the amount of physical memory can be detected with Linux
sysinfo(). */
#undef TUKLIB_PHYSMEM_SYSINFO
/* Enable extensions on AIX 3, Interix. */
#ifndef _ALL_SOURCE
# undef _ALL_SOURCE
#endif
/* Enable GNU extensions on systems that have them. */
#ifndef _GNU_SOURCE
# undef _GNU_SOURCE
#endif
/* Enable threading extensions on Solaris. */
#ifndef _POSIX_PTHREAD_SEMANTICS
# undef _POSIX_PTHREAD_SEMANTICS
#endif
/* Enable extensions on HP NonStop. */
#ifndef _TANDEM_SOURCE
# undef _TANDEM_SOURCE
#endif
/* Enable general extensions on Solaris. */
#ifndef __EXTENSIONS__
# undef __EXTENSIONS__
#endif
/* Version number of package */
#undef VERSION
/* Define WORDS_BIGENDIAN to 1 if your processor stores words with the most
significant byte first (like Motorola and SPARC, unlike Intel). */
#if defined AC_APPLE_UNIVERSAL_BUILD
# if defined __BIG_ENDIAN__
# define WORDS_BIGENDIAN 1
# endif
#else
# ifndef WORDS_BIGENDIAN
# undef WORDS_BIGENDIAN
# endif
#endif
/* Enable large inode numbers on Mac OS X 10.5. */
#ifndef _DARWIN_USE_64_BIT_INODE
# define _DARWIN_USE_64_BIT_INODE 1
#endif
/* Number of bits in a file offset, on hosts where this is settable. */
#undef _FILE_OFFSET_BITS
/* Define for large files, on AIX-style hosts. */
#undef _LARGE_FILES
/* Define to 1 if on MINIX. */
#undef _MINIX
/* Define to 2 if the system does not provide POSIX.1 features except with
this defined. */
#undef _POSIX_1_SOURCE
/* Define to 1 if you need to in order for `stat' and other things to work. */
#undef _POSIX_SOURCE
/* Define for Solaris 2.5.1 so the uint32_t typedef from <sys/synch.h>,
<pthread.h>, or <semaphore.h> is not used. If the typedef were allowed, the
#define below would cause a syntax error. */
#undef _UINT32_T
/* Define for Solaris 2.5.1 so the uint64_t typedef from <sys/synch.h>,
<pthread.h>, or <semaphore.h> is not used. If the typedef were allowed, the
#define below would cause a syntax error. */
#undef _UINT64_T
/* Define for Solaris 2.5.1 so the uint8_t typedef from <sys/synch.h>,
<pthread.h>, or <semaphore.h> is not used. If the typedef were allowed, the
#define below would cause a syntax error. */
#undef _UINT8_T
/* Define to rpl_ if the getopt replacement functions and variables should be
used. */
#undef __GETOPT_PREFIX
/* Define to the type of a signed integer type of width exactly 32 bits if
such a type exists and the standard includes do not define it. */
#undef int32_t
/* Define to the type of a signed integer type of width exactly 64 bits if
such a type exists and the standard includes do not define it. */
#undef int64_t
/* Define to the type of an unsigned integer type of width exactly 16 bits if
such a type exists and the standard includes do not define it. */
#undef uint16_t
/* Define to the type of an unsigned integer type of width exactly 32 bits if
such a type exists and the standard includes do not define it. */
#undef uint32_t
/* Define to the type of an unsigned integer type of width exactly 64 bits if
such a type exists and the standard includes do not define it. */
#undef uint64_t
/* Define to the type of an unsigned integer type of width exactly 8 bits if
such a type exists and the standard includes do not define it. */
#undef uint8_t
/* Define to the type of an unsigned integer type wide enough to hold a
pointer, if such a type exists, and if the system does not define it. */
#undef uintptr_t

22144
configure vendored Normal file

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

842
configure.ac Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,842 @@
# -*- Autoconf -*-
# Process this file with autoconf to produce a configure script.
###############################################################################
#
# Author: Lasse Collin
#
# This file has been put into the public domain.
# You can do whatever you want with this file.
#
###############################################################################
# NOTE: Don't add useless checks. autoscan detects this and that, but don't
# let it confuse you. For example, we don't care about checking for behavior
# of malloc(), stat(), or lstat(), since we don't use those functions in
# a way that would cause the problems the autoconf macros check.
AC_PREREQ([2.64])
AC_INIT([XZ Utils], m4_esyscmd([/bin/sh build-aux/version.sh]),
[lasse.collin@tukaani.org], [xz], [http://tukaani.org/xz/])
AC_CONFIG_SRCDIR([src/liblzma/common/common.h])
AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR([build-aux])
AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR([m4])
AC_CONFIG_HEADER([config.h])
echo
echo "$PACKAGE_STRING"
echo
echo "System type:"
# This is needed to know if assembler optimizations can be used.
AC_CANONICAL_HOST
# We do some special things on Windows (32-bit or 64-bit) builds.
case $host_os in
mingw* | cygwin | msys) is_w32=yes ;;
*) is_w32=no ;;
esac
AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_W32], [test "$is_w32" = yes])
# We need to use $EXEEXT with $(LN_S) when creating symlinks to
# executables. Cygwin is an exception to this, since it is recommended
# that symlinks don't have the .exe suffix. To make this work, we
# define LN_EXEEXT.
#
# MSYS2 is treated the same way as Cygwin. It uses plain "msys" like
# the original MSYS when building MSYS/MSYS2-binaries. Hopefully this
# doesn't break things for the original MSYS developers. Note that this
# doesn't affect normal MSYS/MSYS2 users building non-MSYS/MSYS2 binaries
# since in that case the $host_os is usually mingw32.
case $host_os in
cygwin | msys) LN_EXEEXT= ;;
*) LN_EXEEXT='$(EXEEXT)' ;;
esac
AC_SUBST([LN_EXEEXT])
echo
echo "Configure options:"
AM_CFLAGS=
#############
# Debugging #
#############
AC_MSG_CHECKING([if debugging code should be compiled])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([debug], AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-debug], [Enable debugging code.]),
[], enable_debug=no)
if test "x$enable_debug" = xyes; then
AC_MSG_RESULT([yes])
else
AC_DEFINE([NDEBUG], [1], [Define to 1 to disable debugging code.])
AC_MSG_RESULT([no])
fi
###########
# Filters #
###########
m4_define([SUPPORTED_FILTERS], [lzma1,lzma2,delta,x86,powerpc,ia64,arm,armthumb,sparc])dnl
m4_define([SIMPLE_FILTERS], [x86,powerpc,ia64,arm,armthumb,sparc])
m4_define([LZ_FILTERS], [lzma1,lzma2])
m4_foreach([NAME], [SUPPORTED_FILTERS],
[enable_filter_[]NAME=no
enable_encoder_[]NAME=no
enable_decoder_[]NAME=no
])dnl
AC_MSG_CHECKING([which encoders to build])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([encoders], AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-encoders=LIST],
[Comma-separated list of encoders to build. Default=all.
Available encoders:]
m4_translit(m4_defn([SUPPORTED_FILTERS]), [,], [ ])),
[], [enable_encoders=SUPPORTED_FILTERS])
enable_encoders=`echo "$enable_encoders" | sed 's/,/ /g'`
if test "x$enable_encoders" = xno || test "x$enable_encoders" = x; then
AC_MSG_RESULT([(none)])
else
for arg in $enable_encoders
do
case $arg in m4_foreach([NAME], [SUPPORTED_FILTERS], [
NAME)
enable_filter_[]NAME=yes
enable_encoder_[]NAME=yes
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_ENCODER_[]m4_toupper(NAME), [1],
[Define to 1 if] NAME [encoder is enabled.])
;;])
*)
AC_MSG_RESULT([])
AC_MSG_ERROR([unknown filter: $arg])
;;
esac
done
AC_MSG_RESULT([$enable_encoders])
fi
AC_MSG_CHECKING([which decoders to build])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([decoders], AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-decoders=LIST],
[Comma-separated list of decoders to build. Default=all.
Available decoders are the same as available encoders.]),
[], [enable_decoders=SUPPORTED_FILTERS])
enable_decoders=`echo "$enable_decoders" | sed 's/,/ /g'`
if test "x$enable_decoders" = xno || test "x$enable_decoders" = x; then
AC_MSG_RESULT([(none)])
else
for arg in $enable_decoders
do
case $arg in m4_foreach([NAME], [SUPPORTED_FILTERS], [
NAME)
enable_filter_[]NAME=yes
enable_decoder_[]NAME=yes
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_DECODER_[]m4_toupper(NAME), [1],
[Define to 1 if] NAME [decoder is enabled.])
;;])
*)
AC_MSG_RESULT([])
AC_MSG_ERROR([unknown filter: $arg])
;;
esac
done
# LZMA2 requires that LZMA1 is enabled.
test "x$enable_encoder_lzma2" = xyes && enable_encoder_lzma1=yes
test "x$enable_decoder_lzma2" = xyes && enable_decoder_lzma1=yes
AC_MSG_RESULT([$enable_decoders])
fi
if test "x$enable_encoder_lzma2$enable_encoder_lzma1" = xyesno \
|| test "x$enable_decoder_lzma2$enable_decoder_lzma1" = xyesno; then
AC_MSG_ERROR([LZMA2 requires that LZMA1 is also enabled.])
fi
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_MAIN_ENCODER, test "x$enable_encoders" != xno && test "x$enable_encoders" != x)
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_MAIN_DECODER, test "x$enable_decoders" != xno && test "x$enable_decoders" != x)
m4_foreach([NAME], [SUPPORTED_FILTERS],
[AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_FILTER_[]m4_toupper(NAME), test "x$enable_filter_[]NAME" = xyes)
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_ENCODER_[]m4_toupper(NAME), test "x$enable_encoder_[]NAME" = xyes)
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_DECODER_[]m4_toupper(NAME), test "x$enable_decoder_[]NAME" = xyes)
])dnl
# The so called "simple filters" share common code.
enable_filter_simple=no
enable_encoder_simple=no
enable_decoder_simple=no
m4_foreach([NAME], [SIMPLE_FILTERS],
[test "x$enable_filter_[]NAME" = xyes && enable_filter_simple=yes
test "x$enable_encoder_[]NAME" = xyes && enable_encoder_simple=yes
test "x$enable_decoder_[]NAME" = xyes && enable_decoder_simple=yes
])dnl
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_FILTER_SIMPLE, test "x$enable_filter_simple" = xyes)
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_ENCODER_SIMPLE, test "x$enable_encoder_simple" = xyes)
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_DECODER_SIMPLE, test "x$enable_decoder_simple" = xyes)
# LZ-based filters share common code.
enable_filter_lz=no
enable_encoder_lz=no
enable_decoder_lz=no
m4_foreach([NAME], [LZ_FILTERS],
[test "x$enable_filter_[]NAME" = xyes && enable_filter_lz=yes
test "x$enable_encoder_[]NAME" = xyes && enable_encoder_lz=yes
test "x$enable_decoder_[]NAME" = xyes && enable_decoder_lz=yes
])dnl
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_FILTER_LZ, test "x$enable_filter_lz" = xyes)
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_ENCODER_LZ, test "x$enable_encoder_lz" = xyes)
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_DECODER_LZ, test "x$enable_decoder_lz" = xyes)
#################
# Match finders #
#################
m4_define([SUPPORTED_MATCH_FINDERS], [hc3,hc4,bt2,bt3,bt4])
m4_foreach([NAME], [SUPPORTED_MATCH_FINDERS],
[enable_match_finder_[]NAME=no
])
AC_MSG_CHECKING([which match finders to build])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([match-finders], AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-match-finders=LIST],
[Comma-separated list of match finders to build. Default=all.
At least one match finder is required for encoding with
the LZMA1 and LZMA2 filters. Available match finders:]
m4_translit(m4_defn([SUPPORTED_MATCH_FINDERS]), [,], [ ])), [],
[enable_match_finders=SUPPORTED_MATCH_FINDERS])
enable_match_finders=`echo "$enable_match_finders" | sed 's/,/ /g'`
if test "x$enable_encoder_lz" = xyes ; then
for arg in $enable_match_finders
do
case $arg in m4_foreach([NAME], [SUPPORTED_MATCH_FINDERS], [
NAME)
enable_match_finder_[]NAME=yes
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_MF_[]m4_toupper(NAME), [1],
[Define to 1 to enable] NAME [match finder.])
;;])
*)
AC_MSG_RESULT([])
AC_MSG_ERROR([unknown match finder: $arg])
;;
esac
done
AC_MSG_RESULT([$enable_match_finders])
else
AC_MSG_RESULT([(none because not building any LZ-based encoder)])
fi
####################
# Integrity checks #
####################
m4_define([SUPPORTED_CHECKS], [crc32,crc64,sha256])
m4_foreach([NAME], [SUPPORTED_CHECKS],
[enable_check_[]NAME=no
])dnl
AC_MSG_CHECKING([which integrity checks to build])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([checks], AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-checks=LIST],
[Comma-separated list of integrity checks to build.
Default=all. Available integrity checks:]
m4_translit(m4_defn([SUPPORTED_CHECKS]), [,], [ ])),
[], [enable_checks=SUPPORTED_CHECKS])
enable_checks=`echo "$enable_checks" | sed 's/,/ /g'`
if test "x$enable_checks" = xno || test "x$enable_checks" = x; then
AC_MSG_RESULT([(none)])
else
for arg in $enable_checks
do
case $arg in m4_foreach([NAME], [SUPPORTED_CHECKS], [
NAME)
enable_check_[]NAME=yes
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_CHECK_[]m4_toupper(NAME), [1],
[Define to 1 if] NAME
[integrity check is enabled.])
;;])
*)
AC_MSG_RESULT([])
AC_MSG_ERROR([unknown integrity check: $arg])
;;
esac
done
AC_MSG_RESULT([$enable_checks])
fi
if test "x$enable_check_crc32" = xno ; then
AC_MSG_ERROR([For now, the CRC32 check must always be enabled.])
fi
m4_foreach([NAME], [SUPPORTED_CHECKS],
[AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_CHECK_[]m4_toupper(NAME), test "x$enable_check_[]NAME" = xyes)
])dnl
###########################
# Assembler optimizations #
###########################
AC_MSG_CHECKING([if assembler optimizations should be used])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([assembler], AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-assembler],
[Do not use assembler optimizations even if such exist
for the architecture.]),
[], [enable_assembler=yes])
if test "x$enable_assembler" = xyes; then
enable_assembler=no
case $host_os in
# Darwin should work too but only if not creating universal
# binaries. Solaris x86 could work too but I cannot test.
linux* | *bsd* | mingw* | cygwin | msys | *djgpp*)
case $host_cpu in
i?86) enable_assembler=x86 ;;
x86_64) enable_assembler=x86_64 ;;
esac
;;
esac
fi
case $enable_assembler in
x86 | x86_64 | no)
AC_MSG_RESULT([$enable_assembler])
;;
*)
AC_MSG_RESULT([])
AC_MSG_ERROR([--enable-assembler accepts only `yes', `no', `x86', or `x86_64'.])
;;
esac
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_ASM_X86, test "x$enable_assembler" = xx86)
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_ASM_X86_64, test "x$enable_assembler" = xx86_64)
#####################
# Size optimization #
#####################
AC_MSG_CHECKING([if small size is preferred over speed])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([small], AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-small],
[Make liblzma smaller and a little slower.
This is disabled by default to optimize for speed.]),
[], [enable_small=no])
if test "x$enable_small" = xyes; then
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_SMALL], [1], [Define to 1 if optimizing for size.])
elif test "x$enable_small" != xno; then
AC_MSG_RESULT([])
AC_MSG_ERROR([--enable-small accepts only `yes' or `no'])
fi
AC_MSG_RESULT([$enable_small])
AM_CONDITIONAL(COND_SMALL, test "x$enable_small" = xyes)
#############
# Threading #
#############
AC_MSG_CHECKING([if threading support is wanted])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([threads], AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-threads=METHOD],
[Supported METHODS are `yes', `no', `posix', `win95', and
`vista'. The default is `yes'. Using `no' together with
--enable-small makes liblzma thread unsafe.]),
[], [enable_threads=yes])
if test "x$enable_threads" = xyes; then
case $host_os in
mingw*)
case $host_cpu in
i?86) enable_threads=win95 ;;
*) enable_threads=vista ;;
esac
;;
*)
enable_threads=posix
;;
esac
fi
case $enable_threads in
posix | win95 | vista)
AC_MSG_RESULT([yes, $enable_threads])
;;
no)
AC_MSG_RESULT([no])
;;
*)
AC_MSG_RESULT([])
AC_MSG_ERROR([--enable-threads only accepts `yes', `no', `posix', `win95', or `vista'])
;;
esac
# The Win95 threading lacks thread-safe one-time initialization function.
# It's better to disallow it instead of allowing threaded but thread-unsafe
# build.
if test "x$enable_small$enable_threads" = xyeswin95; then
AC_MSG_ERROR([--enable-threads=win95 and --enable-small cannot be
used at the same time])
fi
# We use the actual result a little later.
#########################
# Assumed amount of RAM #
#########################
# We use 128 MiB as default, because it will allow decompressing files
# created with "xz -9". It would be slightly safer to guess a lower value,
# but most systems, on which we don't have any way to determine the amount
# of RAM, will probably have at least 128 MiB of RAM.
AC_MSG_CHECKING([how much RAM to assume if the real amount is unknown])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([assume-ram], AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-assume-ram=SIZE],
[If and only if the real amount of RAM cannot be determined,
assume SIZE MiB. The default is 128 MiB. This affects the
default memory usage limit.]),
[], [enable_assume_ram=128])
assume_ram_check=`echo "$enable_assume_ram" | tr -d 0123456789`
if test -z "$enable_assume_ram" || test -n "$assume_ram_check"; then
AC_MSG_RESULT([])
AC_MSG_ERROR([--enable-assume-ram accepts only an integer argument])
fi
AC_MSG_RESULT([$enable_assume_ram MiB])
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED([ASSUME_RAM], [$enable_assume_ram],
[How many MiB of RAM to assume if the real amount cannot
be determined.])
#########################
# Components to install #
#########################
AC_ARG_ENABLE([xz], [AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-xz],
[do not build the xz tool])],
[], [enable_xz=yes])
AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_XZ], [test x$enable_xz != xno])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([xzdec], [AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-xzdec],
[do not build xzdec])],
[], [enable_xzdec=yes])
AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_XZDEC], [test x$enable_xzdec != xno])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([lzmadec], [AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-lzmadec],
[do not build lzmadec
(it exists primarily for LZMA Utils compatibility)])],
[], [enable_lzmadec=yes])
AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_LZMADEC], [test x$enable_lzmadec != xno])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([lzmainfo], [AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-lzmainfo],
[do not build lzmainfo
(it exists primarily for LZMA Utils compatibility)])],
[], [enable_lzmainfo=yes])
AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_LZMAINFO], [test x$enable_lzmainfo != xno])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([lzma-links], [AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-lzma-links],
[do not create symlinks for LZMA Utils compatibility])],
[], [enable_lzma_links=yes])
AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_LZMALINKS], [test x$enable_lzma_links != xno])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([scripts], [AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-scripts],
[do not install the scripts xzdiff, xzgrep, xzless, xzmore,
and their symlinks])],
[], [enable_scripts=yes])
AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_SCRIPTS], [test x$enable_scripts != xno])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([doc], [AS_HELP_STRING([--disable-doc],
[do not install documentation files to docdir
(man pages will still be installed)])],
[], [enable_doc=yes])
AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_DOC], [test x$enable_doc != xno])
#####################
# Symbol versioning #
#####################
AC_MSG_CHECKING([if library symbol versioning should be used])
AC_ARG_ENABLE([symbol-versions], [AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-symbol-versions],
[Use symbol versioning for liblzma. Enabled by default on
GNU/Linux, other GNU-based systems, and FreeBSD.])],
[], [enable_symbol_versions=auto])
if test "x$enable_symbol_versions" = xauto; then
case $host_os in
# NOTE: Even if one omits -gnu on GNU/Linux (e.g.
# i486-slackware-linux), configure will (via config.sub)
# append -gnu (e.g. i486-slackware-linux-gnu), and this
# test will work correctly.
gnu* | *-gnu* | freebsd*)
enable_symbol_versions=yes
;;
*)
enable_symbol_versions=no
;;
esac
fi
AC_MSG_RESULT([$enable_symbol_versions])
AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_SYMVERS], [test "x$enable_symbol_versions" = xyes])
###############################################################################
# Checks for programs.
###############################################################################
echo
gl_POSIX_SHELL
if test -z "$POSIX_SHELL" && test "x$enable_scripts" = xyes ; then
AC_MSG_ERROR([No POSIX conforming shell (sh) was found.])
fi
echo
echo "Initializing Automake:"
# We don't use "subdir-objects" yet because it breaks "make distclean" when
# dependencies are enabled (as of Automake 1.14.1) due to this bug:
# http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=17354
# The -Wno-unsupported is used to silence warnings about missing
# "subdir-objects".
AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE([1.12 foreign tar-v7 filename-length-max=99 serial-tests -Wno-unsupported])
AC_PROG_LN_S
AC_PROG_CC_C99
if test x$ac_cv_prog_cc_c99 = xno ; then
AC_MSG_ERROR([No C99 compiler was found.])
fi
AM_PROG_CC_C_O
AM_PROG_AS
AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS
case $enable_threads in
posix)
echo
echo "POSIX threading support:"
AX_PTHREAD([:]) dnl We don't need the HAVE_PTHREAD macro.
LIBS="$LIBS $PTHREAD_LIBS"
AM_CFLAGS="$AM_CFLAGS $PTHREAD_CFLAGS"
dnl NOTE: PTHREAD_CC is ignored. It would be useful on AIX,
dnl but it's tricky to get it right together with
dnl AC_PROG_CC_C99. Thus, this is handled by telling the
dnl user in INSTALL to set the correct CC manually.
AC_DEFINE([MYTHREAD_POSIX], [1],
[Define to 1 when using POSIX threads (pthreads).])
# These are nice to have but not mandatory.
#
# FIXME: xz uses clock_gettime if it is available and can do
# it even when threading is disabled. Moving this outside
# of pthread detection may be undesirable because then
# liblzma may get linked against librt even when librt isn't
# needed by liblzma.
OLD_CFLAGS=$CFLAGS
CFLAGS="$CFLAGS $PTHREAD_CFLAGS"
AC_SEARCH_LIBS([clock_gettime], [rt])
AC_CHECK_FUNCS([clock_gettime pthread_condattr_setclock])
AC_CHECK_DECLS([CLOCK_MONOTONIC], [], [], [[#include <time.h>]])
CFLAGS=$OLD_CFLAGS
;;
win95)
AC_DEFINE([MYTHREAD_WIN95], [1], [Define to 1 when using
Windows 95 (and thus XP) compatible threads.
This avoids use of features that were added in
Windows Vista.])
;;
vista)
AC_DEFINE([MYTHREAD_VISTA], [1], [Define to 1 when using
Windows Vista compatible threads. This uses
features that are not available on Windows XP.])
;;
esac
AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_THREADS], [test "x$enable_threads" != xno])
echo
echo "Initializing Libtool:"
LT_PREREQ([2.2])
LT_INIT([win32-dll])
LT_LANG([Windows Resource])
# This is a bit wrong since it is possible to request that only some libs
# are built as shared. Using that feature isn't so common though, and this
# breaks only on Windows (at least for now) if the user enables only some
# libs as shared.
AM_CONDITIONAL([COND_SHARED], [test "x$enable_shared" != xno])
###############################################################################
# Checks for libraries.
###############################################################################
echo
echo "Initializing gettext:"
AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION([0.18])
AM_GNU_GETTEXT([external])
###############################################################################
# Checks for header files.
###############################################################################
echo
echo "System headers and functions:"
# There is currently no workarounds in this package if some of
# these headers are missing.
AC_CHECK_HEADERS([fcntl.h limits.h sys/time.h],
[],
[AC_MSG_ERROR([Required header file(s) are missing.])])
# This allows the use of the intrinsic functions if they are available.
AC_CHECK_HEADERS([immintrin.h])
###############################################################################
# Checks for typedefs, structures, and compiler characteristics.
###############################################################################
dnl We don't need these as long as we need a C99 compiler anyway.
dnl AC_C_INLINE
dnl AC_C_RESTRICT
AC_HEADER_STDBOOL
AC_TYPE_UINT8_T
AC_TYPE_UINT16_T
AC_TYPE_INT32_T
AC_TYPE_UINT32_T
AC_TYPE_INT64_T
AC_TYPE_UINT64_T
AC_TYPE_UINTPTR_T
AC_CHECK_SIZEOF([size_t])
# The command line tool can copy high resolution timestamps if such
# information is available in struct stat. Otherwise one second accuracy
# is used.
AC_CHECK_MEMBERS([
struct stat.st_atim.tv_nsec,
struct stat.st_atimespec.tv_nsec,
struct stat.st_atimensec,
struct stat.st_uatime,
struct stat.st_atim.st__tim.tv_nsec])
AC_SYS_LARGEFILE
AC_C_BIGENDIAN
###############################################################################
# Checks for library functions.
###############################################################################
# Gnulib replacements as needed
gl_GETOPT
# Find the best function to set timestamps.
AC_CHECK_FUNCS([futimens futimes futimesat utimes utime], [break])
# This is nice to have but not mandatory.
AC_CHECK_FUNCS([posix_fadvise])
TUKLIB_PROGNAME
TUKLIB_INTEGER
TUKLIB_PHYSMEM
TUKLIB_CPUCORES
TUKLIB_MBSTR
# Check for system-provided SHA-256. At least the following is supported:
#
# OS Headers Library Type Function
# FreeBSD sys/types.h + sha256.h libmd SHA256_CTX SHA256_Init
# NetBSD sys/types.h + sha2.h SHA256_CTX SHA256_Init
# OpenBSD sys/types.h + sha2.h SHA2_CTX SHA256Init
# Solaris sys/types.h + sha2.h libmd SHA256_CTX SHA256Init
# MINIX 3 sys/types.h + minix/sha2.h libutil SHA256_CTX SHA256_Init
# Darwin CommonCrypto/CommonDigest.h CC_SHA256_CTX CC_SHA256_Init
#
# Note that Darwin's CC_SHA256_Update takes buffer size as uint32_t instead
# of size_t.
#
# We don't check for e.g. OpenSSL or libgcrypt because we don't want
# to introduce dependencies to other packages by default. Maybe such
# libraries could be supported via additional configure options though.
#
if test "x$enable_check_sha256" = "xyes"; then
# Test for Common Crypto before others, because Darwin has sha256.h
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17
debug/README Normal file
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Debug tools
-----------
This directory contains a few tiny programs that may be helpful when
debugging XZ Utils.
These tools are not meant to be installed. Often one needs to edit
the source code a little to make the programs do the wanted things.
If you don't know how these programs could help you, it is likely
that they really are useless to you.
These aren't intended to be used as example programs. They take some
shortcuts here and there, which correct programs should not do. Many
possible errors (especially I/O errors) are ignored. Don't report
bugs or send patches to fix this kind of bugs.

39
debug/crc32.c Normal file
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///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
/// \file crc32.c
/// \brief Primitive CRC32 calculation tool
//
// Author: Lasse Collin
//
// This file has been put into the public domain.
// You can do whatever you want with this file.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include "sysdefs.h"
#include "lzma.h"
#include <stdio.h>
int
main(void)
{
uint32_t crc = 0;
do {
uint8_t buf[BUFSIZ];
const size_t size = fread(buf, 1, sizeof(buf), stdin);
crc = lzma_crc32(buf, size, crc);
} while (!ferror(stdin) && !feof(stdin));
//printf("%08" PRIX32 "\n", crc);
// I want it little endian so it's easy to work with hex editor.
printf("%02" PRIX32 " ", crc & 0xFF);
printf("%02" PRIX32 " ", (crc >> 8) & 0xFF);
printf("%02" PRIX32 " ", (crc >> 16) & 0xFF);
printf("%02" PRIX32 " ", crc >> 24);
printf("\n");
return 0;
}

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///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
/// \file full_flush.c
/// \brief Encode files using LZMA_FULL_FLUSH
//
// Author: Lasse Collin
//
// This file has been put into the public domain.
// You can do whatever you want with this file.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include "sysdefs.h"
#include "lzma.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#define CHUNK 64
static lzma_stream strm = LZMA_STREAM_INIT;
static FILE *file_in;
static void
encode(size_t size, lzma_action action)
{
uint8_t in[CHUNK];
uint8_t out[CHUNK];
lzma_ret ret;
do {
if (strm.avail_in == 0 && size > 0) {
const size_t amount = my_min(size, CHUNK);
strm.avail_in = fread(in, 1, amount, file_in);
strm.next_in = in;
size -= amount; // Intentionally not using avail_in.
}
strm.next_out = out;
strm.avail_out = CHUNK;
ret = lzma_code(&strm, size == 0 ? action : LZMA_RUN);
if (ret != LZMA_OK && ret != LZMA_STREAM_END) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s:%u: %s: ret == %d\n",
__FILE__, __LINE__, __func__, ret);
exit(1);
}
fwrite(out, 1, CHUNK - strm.avail_out, stdout);
} while (size > 0 || strm.avail_out == 0);
if ((action == LZMA_RUN && ret != LZMA_OK)
|| (action != LZMA_RUN && ret != LZMA_STREAM_END)) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s:%u: %s: ret == %d\n",
__FILE__, __LINE__, __func__, ret);
exit(1);
}
}
int
main(int argc, char **argv)
{
file_in = argc > 1 ? fopen(argv[1], "rb") : stdin;
// Config
lzma_options_lzma opt_lzma;
if (lzma_lzma_preset(&opt_lzma, 1)) {
fprintf(stderr, "preset failed\n");
exit(1);
}
lzma_filter filters[LZMA_FILTERS_MAX + 1];
filters[0].id = LZMA_FILTER_LZMA2;
filters[0].options = &opt_lzma;
filters[1].id = LZMA_VLI_UNKNOWN;
// Init
if (lzma_stream_encoder(&strm, filters, LZMA_CHECK_CRC32) != LZMA_OK) {
fprintf(stderr, "init failed\n");
exit(1);
}
// if (lzma_easy_encoder(&strm, 1)) {
// fprintf(stderr, "init failed\n");
// exit(1);
// }
// Encoding
encode(0, LZMA_FULL_FLUSH);
encode(6, LZMA_FULL_FLUSH);
encode(0, LZMA_FULL_FLUSH);
encode(7, LZMA_FULL_FLUSH);
encode(0, LZMA_FULL_FLUSH);
encode(0, LZMA_FINISH);
// Clean up
lzma_end(&strm);
return 0;
}

53
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///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
/// \file hex2bin.c
/// \brief Converts hexadecimal input strings to binary
//
// Author: Lasse Collin
//
// This file has been put into the public domain.
// You can do whatever you want with this file.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include "sysdefs.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#include <ctype.h>
static int
getbin(int x)
{
if (x >= '0' && x <= '9')
return x - '0';
if (x >= 'A' && x <= 'F')
return x - 'A' + 10;
return x - 'a' + 10;
}
int
main(void)
{
while (true) {
int byte = getchar();
if (byte == EOF)
return 0;
if (!isxdigit(byte))
continue;
const int digit = getchar();
if (digit == EOF || !isxdigit(digit)) {
fprintf(stderr, "Invalid input\n");
return 1;
}
byte = (getbin(byte) << 4) | getbin(digit);
if (putchar(byte) == EOF) {
perror(NULL);
return 1;
}
}
}

129
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///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
/// \file known_sizes.c
/// \brief Encodes .lzma Stream with sizes known in Block Header
///
/// The input file is encoded in RAM, and the known Compressed Size
/// and/or Uncompressed Size values are stored in the Block Header.
/// As of writing there's no such Stream encoder in liblzma.
//
// Author: Lasse Collin
//
// This file has been put into the public domain.
// You can do whatever you want with this file.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include "sysdefs.h"
#include "lzma.h"
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
// Support file sizes up to 1 MiB. We use this for output space too, so files
// close to 1 MiB had better compress at least a little or we have a buffer
// overflow.
#define BUFFER_SIZE (1U << 20)
int
main(void)
{
// Allocate the buffers.
uint8_t *in = malloc(BUFFER_SIZE);
uint8_t *out = malloc(BUFFER_SIZE);
if (in == NULL || out == NULL)
return 1;
// Fill the input buffer.
const size_t in_size = fread(in, 1, BUFFER_SIZE, stdin);
// Filter setup
lzma_options_lzma opt_lzma;
if (lzma_lzma_preset(&opt_lzma, 1))
return 1;
lzma_filter filters[] = {
{
.id = LZMA_FILTER_LZMA2,
.options = &opt_lzma
},
{
.id = LZMA_VLI_UNKNOWN
}
};
lzma_block block = {
.check = LZMA_CHECK_CRC32,
.compressed_size = BUFFER_SIZE, // Worst case reserve
.uncompressed_size = in_size,
.filters = filters,
};
lzma_stream strm = LZMA_STREAM_INIT;
if (lzma_block_encoder(&strm, &block) != LZMA_OK)
return 1;
// Reserve space for Stream Header and Block Header. We need to
// calculate the size of the Block Header first.
if (lzma_block_header_size(&block) != LZMA_OK)
return 1;
size_t out_size = LZMA_STREAM_HEADER_SIZE + block.header_size;
strm.next_in = in;
strm.avail_in = in_size;
strm.next_out = out + out_size;
strm.avail_out = BUFFER_SIZE - out_size;
if (lzma_code(&strm, LZMA_FINISH) != LZMA_STREAM_END)
return 1;
out_size += strm.total_out;
if (lzma_block_header_encode(&block, out + LZMA_STREAM_HEADER_SIZE)
!= LZMA_OK)
return 1;
lzma_index *idx = lzma_index_init(NULL);
if (idx == NULL)
return 1;
if (lzma_index_append(idx, NULL, block.header_size + strm.total_out,
strm.total_in) != LZMA_OK)
return 1;
if (lzma_index_encoder(&strm, idx) != LZMA_OK)
return 1;
if (lzma_code(&strm, LZMA_RUN) != LZMA_STREAM_END)
return 1;
out_size += strm.total_out;
lzma_end(&strm);
lzma_index_end(idx, NULL);
// Encode the Stream Header and Stream Footer. backwards_size is
// needed only for the Stream Footer.
lzma_stream_flags sf = {
.backward_size = strm.total_out,
.check = block.check,
};
if (lzma_stream_header_encode(&sf, out) != LZMA_OK)
return 1;
if (lzma_stream_footer_encode(&sf, out + out_size) != LZMA_OK)
return 1;
out_size += LZMA_STREAM_HEADER_SIZE;
// Write out the file.
fwrite(out, 1, out_size, stdout);
return 0;
}

51
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///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
/// \file memusage.c
/// \brief Calculates memory usage using lzma_memory_usage()
//
// Author: Lasse Collin
//
// This file has been put into the public domain.
// You can do whatever you want with this file.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include "sysdefs.h"
#include "lzma.h"
#include <stdio.h>
int
main(void)
{
lzma_options_lzma lzma = {
.dict_size = (1U << 30) + (1U << 29),
.lc = 3,
.lp = 0,
.pb = 2,
.preset_dict = NULL,
.preset_dict_size = 0,
.mode = LZMA_MODE_NORMAL,
.nice_len = 48,
.mf = LZMA_MF_BT4,
.depth = 0,
};
/*
lzma_options_filter filters[] = {
{ LZMA_FILTER_LZMA1,
(lzma_options_lzma *)&lzma_preset_lzma[6 - 1] },
{ UINT64_MAX, NULL }
};
*/
lzma_filter filters[] = {
{ LZMA_FILTER_LZMA1, &lzma },
{ UINT64_MAX, NULL }
};
printf("Encoder: %10" PRIu64 " B\n",
lzma_raw_encoder_memusage(filters));
printf("Decoder: %10" PRIu64 " B\n",
lzma_raw_decoder_memusage(filters));
return 0;
}

36
debug/repeat.c Normal file
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///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
/// \file repeat.c
/// \brief Repeats given string given times
///
/// This program can be useful when debugging run-length encoder in
/// the Subblock filter, especially the condition when repeat count
/// doesn't fit into 28-bit integer.
//
// Author: Lasse Collin
//
// This file has been put into the public domain.
// You can do whatever you want with this file.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include "sysdefs.h"
#include <stdio.h>
int
main(int argc, char **argv)
{
if (argc != 3) {
fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s COUNT STRING\n", argv[0]);
exit(1);
}
unsigned long long count = strtoull(argv[1], NULL, 10);
const size_t size = strlen(argv[2]);
while (count-- != 0)
fwrite(argv[2], 1, size, stdout);
return !!(ferror(stdout) || fclose(stdout));
}

125
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///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
/// \file sync_flush.c
/// \brief Encode files using LZMA_SYNC_FLUSH
//
// Author: Lasse Collin
//
// This file has been put into the public domain.
// You can do whatever you want with this file.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include "sysdefs.h"
#include "lzma.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#define CHUNK 64
static lzma_stream strm = LZMA_STREAM_INIT;
static FILE *file_in;
static void
encode(size_t size, lzma_action action)
{
uint8_t in[CHUNK];
uint8_t out[CHUNK];
lzma_ret ret;
do {
if (strm.avail_in == 0 && size > 0) {
const size_t amount = my_min(size, CHUNK);
strm.avail_in = fread(in, 1, amount, file_in);
strm.next_in = in;
size -= amount; // Intentionally not using avail_in.
}
strm.next_out = out;
strm.avail_out = CHUNK;
ret = lzma_code(&strm, size == 0 ? action : LZMA_RUN);
if (ret != LZMA_OK && ret != LZMA_STREAM_END) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s:%u: %s: ret == %d\n",
__FILE__, __LINE__, __func__, ret);
exit(1);
}
fwrite(out, 1, CHUNK - strm.avail_out, stdout);
} while (size > 0 || strm.avail_out == 0);
if ((action == LZMA_RUN && ret != LZMA_OK)
|| (action != LZMA_RUN && ret != LZMA_STREAM_END)) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s:%u: %s: ret == %d\n",
__FILE__, __LINE__, __func__, ret);
exit(1);
}
}
int
main(int argc, char **argv)
{
file_in = argc > 1 ? fopen(argv[1], "rb") : stdin;
// Config
lzma_options_lzma opt_lzma = {
.dict_size = 1U << 16,
.lc = LZMA_LC_DEFAULT,
.lp = LZMA_LP_DEFAULT,
.pb = LZMA_PB_DEFAULT,
.preset_dict = NULL,
.mode = LZMA_MODE_NORMAL,
.nice_len = 32,
.mf = LZMA_MF_HC3,
.depth = 0,
};
lzma_options_delta opt_delta = {
.dist = 16
};
lzma_filter filters[LZMA_FILTERS_MAX + 1];
filters[0].id = LZMA_FILTER_LZMA2;
filters[0].options = &opt_lzma;
filters[1].id = LZMA_VLI_UNKNOWN;
// Init
if (lzma_stream_encoder(&strm, filters, LZMA_CHECK_CRC32) != LZMA_OK) {
fprintf(stderr, "init failed\n");
exit(1);
}
// Encoding
encode(0, LZMA_SYNC_FLUSH);
encode(6, LZMA_SYNC_FLUSH);
encode(0, LZMA_SYNC_FLUSH);
encode(7, LZMA_SYNC_FLUSH);
encode(0, LZMA_SYNC_FLUSH);
encode(0, LZMA_FINISH);
/*
encode(53, LZMA_SYNC_FLUSH);
opt_lzma.lc = 2;
opt_lzma.lp = 1;
opt_lzma.pb = 0;
if (lzma_filters_update(&strm, filters) != LZMA_OK) {
fprintf(stderr, "update failed\n");
exit(1);
}
encode(404, LZMA_FINISH);
*/
// Clean up
lzma_end(&strm);
return 0;
// Prevent useless warnings so we don't need to have special CFLAGS
// to disable -Werror.
(void)opt_lzma;
(void)opt_delta;
}

100
debug/translation.bash Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,100 @@
#!/bin/bash
###############################################################################
#
# Script to check output of some translated messages
#
# This should be useful for translators to check that the translated strings
# look good. This doesn't make xz print all possible strings, but it should
# cover most of the cases where mistakes can easily happen.
#
# Give the path and filename of the xz executable as an argument. If no
# arguments are given, this script uses ../src/xz/xz (relative to the
# location of this script).
#
# You may want to pipe the output of this script to less -S to view the
# tables printed by xz --list on a 80-column terminal. On the other hand,
# viewing the other messages may be better without -S.
#
###############################################################################
#
# Author: Lasse Collin
#
# This file has been put into the public domain.
# You can do whatever you want with this file.
#
###############################################################################
set -e
# If an argument was given, use it to set the location of the xz executable.
unset XZ
if [ -n "$1" ]; then
XZ=$1
[ "x${XZ:0:1}" != "x/" ] && XZ="$PWD/$XZ"
fi
# Locate top_srcdir and go there.
top_srcdir="$(cd -- "$(dirname -- "$0")" && cd .. && pwd)"
cd -- "$top_srcdir"
# If XZ wasn't already set, use the default location.
XZ=${XZ-"$PWD/src/xz/xz"}
if [ "$(type -t "$XZ" || true)" != "file" ]; then
echo "Give the location of the xz executable as an argument" \
"to this script."
exit 1
fi
XZ=$(type -p -- "$XZ")
# Print the xz version and locale information.
echo "$XZ --version"
"$XZ" --version
echo
if [ -d .git ] && type git > /dev/null 2>&1; then
echo "Source code version in $PWD:"
git describe --abbrev=4
fi
echo
locale
echo
# Make the test files directory the current directory.
cd tests/files
# Put xz in PATH so that argv[0] stays short.
PATH=${XZ%/*}:$PATH
# Some of the test commands are error messages and thus don't
# return successfully.
set +e
for CMD in \
"xz --foobarbaz" \
"xz --memlimit=123abcd" \
"xz --memlimit=40MiB -6 /dev/null" \
"xz --memlimit=0 --info-memory" \
"xz --memlimit-compress=1234MiB --memlimit-decompress=50MiB --info-memory" \
"xz --verbose --verbose /dev/null | cat" \
"xz --lzma2=foobarbaz" \
"xz --lzma2=foobarbaz=abcd" \
"xz --lzma2=mf=abcd" \
"xz --lzma2=preset=foobarbaz" \
"xz --lzma2=mf=bt4,nice=2" \
"xz --lzma2=nice=50000" \
"xz --help" \
"xz --long-help" \
"xz --list good-*lzma2*" \
"xz --list good-1-check*" \
"xz --list --verbose good-*lzma2*" \
"xz --list --verbose good-1-check*" \
"xz --list --verbose --verbose good-*lzma2*" \
"xz --list --verbose --verbose good-1-check*" \
"xz --list --verbose --verbose unsupported-check.xz"
do
echo "-----------------------------------------------------------"
echo
echo "\$ $CMD"
eval "$CMD"
echo
done 2>&1

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@@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
liblzma example programs
========================
Introduction
The examples are written so that the same comments aren't
repeated (much) in later files.
On POSIX systems, the examples should build by just typing "make".
The examples that use stdin or stdout don't set stdin and stdout
to binary mode. On systems where it matters (e.g. Windows) it is
possible that the examples won't work without modification.
List of examples
01_compress_easy.c Multi-call compression using
a compression preset
02_decompress.c Multi-call decompression
03_compress_custom.c Like 01_compress_easy.c but using
a custom filter chain
(x86 BCJ + LZMA2)
04_compress_easy_mt.c Multi-threaded multi-call
compression using a compression
preset

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@@ -0,0 +1,297 @@
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
/// \file 01_compress_easy.c
/// \brief Compress from stdin to stdout in multi-call mode
///
/// Usage: ./01_compress_easy PRESET < INFILE > OUTFILE
///
/// Example: ./01_compress_easy 6 < foo > foo.xz
//
// Author: Lasse Collin
//
// This file has been put into the public domain.
// You can do whatever you want with this file.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <lzma.h>
static void
show_usage_and_exit(const char *argv0)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s PRESET < INFILE > OUTFILE\n"
"PRESET is a number 0-9 and can optionally be "
"followed by `e' to indicate extreme preset\n",
argv0);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
static uint32_t
get_preset(int argc, char **argv)
{
// One argument whose first char must be 0-9.
if (argc != 2 || argv[1][0] < '0' || argv[1][0] > '9')
show_usage_and_exit(argv[0]);
// Calculate the preste level 0-9.
uint32_t preset = argv[1][0] - '0';
// If there is a second char, it must be 'e'. It will set
// the LZMA_PRESET_EXTREME flag.
if (argv[1][1] != '\0') {
if (argv[1][1] != 'e' || argv[1][2] != '\0')
show_usage_and_exit(argv[0]);
preset |= LZMA_PRESET_EXTREME;
}
return preset;
}
static bool
init_encoder(lzma_stream *strm, uint32_t preset)
{
// Initialize the encoder using a preset. Set the integrity to check
// to CRC64, which is the default in the xz command line tool. If
// the .xz file needs to be decompressed with XZ Embedded, use
// LZMA_CHECK_CRC32 instead.
lzma_ret ret = lzma_easy_encoder(strm, preset, LZMA_CHECK_CRC64);
// Return successfully if the initialization went fine.
if (ret == LZMA_OK)
return true;
// Something went wrong. The possible errors are documented in
// lzma/container.h (src/liblzma/api/lzma/container.h in the source
// package or e.g. /usr/include/lzma/container.h depending on the
// install prefix).
const char *msg;
switch (ret) {
case LZMA_MEM_ERROR:
msg = "Memory allocation failed";
break;
case LZMA_OPTIONS_ERROR:
msg = "Specified preset is not supported";
break;
case LZMA_UNSUPPORTED_CHECK:
msg = "Specified integrity check is not supported";
break;
default:
// This is most likely LZMA_PROG_ERROR indicating a bug in
// this program or in liblzma. It is inconvenient to have a
// separate error message for errors that should be impossible
// to occur, but knowing the error code is important for
// debugging. That's why it is good to print the error code
// at least when there is no good error message to show.
msg = "Unknown error, possibly a bug";
break;
}
fprintf(stderr, "Error initializing the encoder: %s (error code %u)\n",
msg, ret);
return false;
}
static bool
compress(lzma_stream *strm, FILE *infile, FILE *outfile)
{
// This will be LZMA_RUN until the end of the input file is reached.
// This tells lzma_code() when there will be no more input.
lzma_action action = LZMA_RUN;
// Buffers to temporarily hold uncompressed input
// and compressed output.
uint8_t inbuf[BUFSIZ];
uint8_t outbuf[BUFSIZ];
// Initialize the input and output pointers. Initializing next_in
// and avail_in isn't really necessary when we are going to encode
// just one file since LZMA_STREAM_INIT takes care of initializing
// those already. But it doesn't hurt much and it will be needed
// if encoding more than one file like we will in 02_decompress.c.
//
// While we don't care about strm->total_in or strm->total_out in this
// example, it is worth noting that initializing the encoder will
// always reset total_in and total_out to zero. But the encoder
// initialization doesn't touch next_in, avail_in, next_out, or
// avail_out.
strm->next_in = NULL;
strm->avail_in = 0;
strm->next_out = outbuf;
strm->avail_out = sizeof(outbuf);
// Loop until the file has been successfully compressed or until
// an error occurs.
while (true) {
// Fill the input buffer if it is empty.
if (strm->avail_in == 0 && !feof(infile)) {
strm->next_in = inbuf;
strm->avail_in = fread(inbuf, 1, sizeof(inbuf),
infile);
if (ferror(infile)) {
fprintf(stderr, "Read error: %s\n",
strerror(errno));
return false;
}
// Once the end of the input file has been reached,
// we need to tell lzma_code() that no more input
// will be coming and that it should finish the
// encoding.
if (feof(infile))
action = LZMA_FINISH;
}
// Tell liblzma do the actual encoding.
//
// This reads up to strm->avail_in bytes of input starting
// from strm->next_in. avail_in will be decremented and
// next_in incremented by an equal amount to match the
// number of input bytes consumed.
//
// Up to strm->avail_out bytes of compressed output will be
// written starting from strm->next_out. avail_out and next_out
// will be incremented by an equal amount to match the number
// of output bytes written.
//
// The encoder has to do internal buffering, which means that
// it may take quite a bit of input before the same data is
// available in compressed form in the output buffer.
lzma_ret ret = lzma_code(strm, action);
// If the output buffer is full or if the compression finished
// successfully, write the data from the output bufffer to
// the output file.
if (strm->avail_out == 0 || ret == LZMA_STREAM_END) {
// When lzma_code() has returned LZMA_STREAM_END,
// the output buffer is likely to be only partially
// full. Calculate how much new data there is to
// be written to the output file.
size_t write_size = sizeof(outbuf) - strm->avail_out;
if (fwrite(outbuf, 1, write_size, outfile)
!= write_size) {
fprintf(stderr, "Write error: %s\n",
strerror(errno));
return false;
}
// Reset next_out and avail_out.
strm->next_out = outbuf;
strm->avail_out = sizeof(outbuf);
}
// Normally the return value of lzma_code() will be LZMA_OK
// until everything has been encoded.
if (ret != LZMA_OK) {
// Once everything has been encoded successfully, the
// return value of lzma_code() will be LZMA_STREAM_END.
//
// It is important to check for LZMA_STREAM_END. Do not
// assume that getting ret != LZMA_OK would mean that
// everything has gone well.
if (ret == LZMA_STREAM_END)
return true;
// It's not LZMA_OK nor LZMA_STREAM_END,
// so it must be an error code. See lzma/base.h
// (src/liblzma/api/lzma/base.h in the source package
// or e.g. /usr/include/lzma/base.h depending on the
// install prefix) for the list and documentation of
// possible values. Most values listen in lzma_ret
// enumeration aren't possible in this example.
const char *msg;
switch (ret) {
case LZMA_MEM_ERROR:
msg = "Memory allocation failed";
break;
case LZMA_DATA_ERROR:
// This error is returned if the compressed
// or uncompressed size get near 8 EiB
// (2^63 bytes) because that's where the .xz
// file format size limits currently are.
// That is, the possibility of this error
// is mostly theoretical unless you are doing
// something very unusual.
//
// Note that strm->total_in and strm->total_out
// have nothing to do with this error. Changing
// those variables won't increase or decrease
// the chance of getting this error.
msg = "File size limits exceeded";
break;
default:
// This is most likely LZMA_PROG_ERROR, but
// if this program is buggy (or liblzma has
// a bug), it may be e.g. LZMA_BUF_ERROR or
// LZMA_OPTIONS_ERROR too.
//
// It is inconvenient to have a separate
// error message for errors that should be
// impossible to occur, but knowing the error
// code is important for debugging. That's why
// it is good to print the error code at least
// when there is no good error message to show.
msg = "Unknown error, possibly a bug";
break;
}
fprintf(stderr, "Encoder error: %s (error code %u)\n",
msg, ret);
return false;
}
}
}
extern int
main(int argc, char **argv)
{
// Get the preset number from the command line.
uint32_t preset = get_preset(argc, argv);
// Initialize a lzma_stream structure. When it is allocated on stack,
// it is simplest to use LZMA_STREAM_INIT macro like below. When it
// is allocated on heap, using memset(strmptr, 0, sizeof(*strmptr))
// works (as long as NULL pointers are represented with zero bits
// as they are on practically all computers today).
lzma_stream strm = LZMA_STREAM_INIT;
// Initialize the encoder. If it succeeds, compress from
// stdin to stdout.
bool success = init_encoder(&strm, preset);
if (success)
success = compress(&strm, stdin, stdout);
// Free the memory allocated for the encoder. If we were encoding
// multiple files, this would only need to be done after the last
// file. See 02_decompress.c for handling of multiple files.
//
// It is OK to call lzma_end() multiple times or when it hasn't been
// actually used except initialized with LZMA_STREAM_INIT.
lzma_end(&strm);
// Close stdout to catch possible write errors that can occur
// when pending data is flushed from the stdio buffers.
if (fclose(stdout)) {
fprintf(stderr, "Write error: %s\n", strerror(errno));
success = false;
}
return success ? EXIT_SUCCESS : EXIT_FAILURE;
}

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,287 @@
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
/// \file 02_decompress.c
/// \brief Decompress .xz files to stdout
///
/// Usage: ./02_decompress INPUT_FILES... > OUTFILE
///
/// Example: ./02_decompress foo.xz bar.xz > foobar
//
// Author: Lasse Collin
//
// This file has been put into the public domain.
// You can do whatever you want with this file.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <lzma.h>
static bool
init_decoder(lzma_stream *strm)
{
// Initialize a .xz decoder. The decoder supports a memory usage limit
// and a set of flags.
//
// The memory usage of the decompressor depends on the settings used
// to compress a .xz file. It can vary from less than a megabyte to
// a few gigabytes, but in practice (at least for now) it rarely
// exceeds 65 MiB because that's how much memory is required to
// decompress files created with "xz -9". Settings requiring more
// memory take extra effort to use and don't (at least for now)
// provide significantly better compression in most cases.
//
// Memory usage limit is useful if it is important that the
// decompressor won't consume gigabytes of memory. The need
// for limiting depends on the application. In this example,
// no memory usage limiting is used. This is done by setting
// the limit to UINT64_MAX.
//
// The .xz format allows concatenating compressed files as is:
//
// echo foo | xz > foobar.xz
// echo bar | xz >> foobar.xz
//
// When decompressing normal standalone .xz files, LZMA_CONCATENATED
// should always be used to support decompression of concatenated
// .xz files. If LZMA_CONCATENATED isn't used, the decoder will stop
// after the first .xz stream. This can be useful when .xz data has
// been embedded inside another file format.
//
// Flags other than LZMA_CONCATENATED are supported too, and can
// be combined with bitwise-or. See lzma/container.h
// (src/liblzma/api/lzma/container.h in the source package or e.g.
// /usr/include/lzma/container.h depending on the install prefix)
// for details.
lzma_ret ret = lzma_stream_decoder(
strm, UINT64_MAX, LZMA_CONCATENATED);
// Return successfully if the initialization went fine.
if (ret == LZMA_OK)
return true;
// Something went wrong. The possible errors are documented in
// lzma/container.h (src/liblzma/api/lzma/container.h in the source
// package or e.g. /usr/include/lzma/container.h depending on the
// install prefix).
//
// Note that LZMA_MEMLIMIT_ERROR is never possible here. If you
// specify a very tiny limit, the error will be delayed until
// the first headers have been parsed by a call to lzma_code().
const char *msg;
switch (ret) {
case LZMA_MEM_ERROR:
msg = "Memory allocation failed";
break;
case LZMA_OPTIONS_ERROR:
msg = "Unsupported decompressor flags";
break;
default:
// This is most likely LZMA_PROG_ERROR indicating a bug in
// this program or in liblzma. It is inconvenient to have a
// separate error message for errors that should be impossible
// to occur, but knowing the error code is important for
// debugging. That's why it is good to print the error code
// at least when there is no good error message to show.
msg = "Unknown error, possibly a bug";
break;
}
fprintf(stderr, "Error initializing the decoder: %s (error code %u)\n",
msg, ret);
return false;
}
static bool
decompress(lzma_stream *strm, const char *inname, FILE *infile, FILE *outfile)
{
// When LZMA_CONCATENATED flag was used when initializing the decoder,
// we need to tell lzma_code() when there will be no more input.
// This is done by setting action to LZMA_FINISH instead of LZMA_RUN
// in the same way as it is done when encoding.
//
// When LZMA_CONCATENATED isn't used, there is no need to use
// LZMA_FINISH to tell when all the input has been read, but it
// is still OK to use it if you want. When LZMA_CONCATENATED isn't
// used, the decoder will stop after the first .xz stream. In that
// case some unused data may be left in strm->next_in.
lzma_action action = LZMA_RUN;
uint8_t inbuf[BUFSIZ];
uint8_t outbuf[BUFSIZ];
strm->next_in = NULL;
strm->avail_in = 0;
strm->next_out = outbuf;
strm->avail_out = sizeof(outbuf);
while (true) {
if (strm->avail_in == 0 && !feof(infile)) {
strm->next_in = inbuf;
strm->avail_in = fread(inbuf, 1, sizeof(inbuf),
infile);
if (ferror(infile)) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: Read error: %s\n",
inname, strerror(errno));
return false;
}
// Once the end of the input file has been reached,
// we need to tell lzma_code() that no more input
// will be coming. As said before, this isn't required
// if the LZMA_CONATENATED flag isn't used when
// initializing the decoder.
if (feof(infile))
action = LZMA_FINISH;
}
lzma_ret ret = lzma_code(strm, action);
if (strm->avail_out == 0 || ret == LZMA_STREAM_END) {
size_t write_size = sizeof(outbuf) - strm->avail_out;
if (fwrite(outbuf, 1, write_size, outfile)
!= write_size) {
fprintf(stderr, "Write error: %s\n",
strerror(errno));
return false;
}
strm->next_out = outbuf;
strm->avail_out = sizeof(outbuf);
}
if (ret != LZMA_OK) {
// Once everything has been decoded successfully, the
// return value of lzma_code() will be LZMA_STREAM_END.
//
// It is important to check for LZMA_STREAM_END. Do not
// assume that getting ret != LZMA_OK would mean that
// everything has gone well or that when you aren't
// getting more output it must have successfully
// decoded everything.
if (ret == LZMA_STREAM_END)
return true;
// It's not LZMA_OK nor LZMA_STREAM_END,
// so it must be an error code. See lzma/base.h
// (src/liblzma/api/lzma/base.h in the source package
// or e.g. /usr/include/lzma/base.h depending on the
// install prefix) for the list and documentation of
// possible values. Many values listen in lzma_ret
// enumeration aren't possible in this example, but
// can be made possible by enabling memory usage limit
// or adding flags to the decoder initialization.
const char *msg;
switch (ret) {
case LZMA_MEM_ERROR:
msg = "Memory allocation failed";
break;
case LZMA_FORMAT_ERROR:
// .xz magic bytes weren't found.
msg = "The input is not in the .xz format";
break;
case LZMA_OPTIONS_ERROR:
// For example, the headers specify a filter
// that isn't supported by this liblzma
// version (or it hasn't been enabled when
// building liblzma, but no-one sane does
// that unless building liblzma for an
// embedded system). Upgrading to a newer
// liblzma might help.
//
// Note that it is unlikely that the file has
// accidentally became corrupt if you get this
// error. The integrity of the .xz headers is
// always verified with a CRC32, so
// unintentionally corrupt files can be
// distinguished from unsupported files.
msg = "Unsupported compression options";
break;
case LZMA_DATA_ERROR:
msg = "Compressed file is corrupt";
break;
case LZMA_BUF_ERROR:
// Typically this error means that a valid
// file has got truncated, but it might also
// be a damaged part in the file that makes
// the decoder think the file is truncated.
// If you prefer, you can use the same error
// message for this as for LZMA_DATA_ERROR.
msg = "Compressed file is truncated or "
"otherwise corrupt";
break;
default:
// This is most likely LZMA_PROG_ERROR.
msg = "Unknown error, possibly a bug";
break;
}
fprintf(stderr, "%s: Decoder error: "
"%s (error code %u)\n",
inname, msg, ret);
return false;
}
}
}
extern int
main(int argc, char **argv)
{
if (argc <= 1) {
fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s FILES...\n", argv[0]);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
lzma_stream strm = LZMA_STREAM_INIT;
bool success = true;
// Try to decompress all files.
for (int i = 1; i < argc; ++i) {
if (!init_decoder(&strm)) {
// Decoder initialization failed. There's no point
// to retry it so we need to exit.
success = false;
break;
}
FILE *infile = fopen(argv[i], "rb");
if (infile == NULL) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: Error opening the "
"input file: %s\n",
argv[i], strerror(errno));
success = false;
} else {
success &= decompress(&strm, argv[i], infile, stdout);
fclose(infile);
}
}
// Free the memory allocated for the decoder. This only needs to be
// done after the last file.
lzma_end(&strm);
if (fclose(stdout)) {
fprintf(stderr, "Write error: %s\n", strerror(errno));
success = false;
}
return success ? EXIT_SUCCESS : EXIT_FAILURE;
}

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///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
/// \file 03_compress_custom.c
/// \brief Compress in multi-call mode using x86 BCJ and LZMA2
///
/// Usage: ./03_compress_custom < INFILE > OUTFILE
///
/// Example: ./03_compress_custom < foo > foo.xz
//
// Author: Lasse Collin
//
// This file has been put into the public domain.
// You can do whatever you want with this file.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <lzma.h>
static bool
init_encoder(lzma_stream *strm)
{
// Use the default preset (6) for LZMA2.
//
// The lzma_options_lzma structure and the lzma_lzma_preset() function
// are declared in lzma/lzma12.h (src/liblzma/api/lzma/lzma12.h in the
// source package or e.g. /usr/include/lzma/lzma12.h depending on
// the install prefix).
lzma_options_lzma opt_lzma2;
if (lzma_lzma_preset(&opt_lzma2, LZMA_PRESET_DEFAULT)) {
// It should never fail because the default preset
// (and presets 0-9 optionally with LZMA_PRESET_EXTREME)
// are supported by all stable liblzma versions.
//
// (The encoder initialization later in this function may
// still fail due to unsupported preset *if* the features
// required by the preset have been disabled at build time,
// but no-one does such things except on embedded systems.)
fprintf(stderr, "Unsupported preset, possibly a bug\n");
return false;
}
// Now we could customize the LZMA2 options if we wanted. For example,
// we could set the the dictionary size (opt_lzma2.dict_size) to
// something else than the default (8 MiB) of the default preset.
// See lzma/lzma12.h for details of all LZMA2 options.
//
// The x86 BCJ filter will try to modify the x86 instruction stream so
// that LZMA2 can compress it better. The x86 BCJ filter doesn't need
// any options so it will be set to NULL below.
//
// Construct the filter chain. The uncompressed data goes first to
// the first filter in the array, in this case the x86 BCJ filter.
// The array is always terminated by setting .id = LZMA_VLI_UNKNOWN.
//
// See lzma/filter.h for more information about the lzma_filter
// structure.
lzma_filter filters[] = {
{ .id = LZMA_FILTER_X86, .options = NULL },
{ .id = LZMA_FILTER_LZMA2, .options = &opt_lzma2 },
{ .id = LZMA_VLI_UNKNOWN, .options = NULL },
};
// Initialize the encoder using the custom filter chain.
lzma_ret ret = lzma_stream_encoder(strm, filters, LZMA_CHECK_CRC64);
if (ret == LZMA_OK)
return true;
const char *msg;
switch (ret) {
case LZMA_MEM_ERROR:
msg = "Memory allocation failed";
break;
case LZMA_OPTIONS_ERROR:
// We are no longer using a plain preset so this error
// message has been edited accordingly compared to
// 01_compress_easy.c.
msg = "Specified filter chain is not supported";
break;
case LZMA_UNSUPPORTED_CHECK:
msg = "Specified integrity check is not supported";
break;
default:
msg = "Unknown error, possibly a bug";
break;
}
fprintf(stderr, "Error initializing the encoder: %s (error code %u)\n",
msg, ret);
return false;
}
// This function is identical to the one in 01_compress_easy.c.
static bool
compress(lzma_stream *strm, FILE *infile, FILE *outfile)
{
lzma_action action = LZMA_RUN;
uint8_t inbuf[BUFSIZ];
uint8_t outbuf[BUFSIZ];
strm->next_in = NULL;
strm->avail_in = 0;
strm->next_out = outbuf;
strm->avail_out = sizeof(outbuf);
while (true) {
if (strm->avail_in == 0 && !feof(infile)) {
strm->next_in = inbuf;
strm->avail_in = fread(inbuf, 1, sizeof(inbuf),
infile);
if (ferror(infile)) {
fprintf(stderr, "Read error: %s\n",
strerror(errno));
return false;
}
if (feof(infile))
action = LZMA_FINISH;
}
lzma_ret ret = lzma_code(strm, action);
if (strm->avail_out == 0 || ret == LZMA_STREAM_END) {
size_t write_size = sizeof(outbuf) - strm->avail_out;
if (fwrite(outbuf, 1, write_size, outfile)
!= write_size) {
fprintf(stderr, "Write error: %s\n",
strerror(errno));
return false;
}
strm->next_out = outbuf;
strm->avail_out = sizeof(outbuf);
}
if (ret != LZMA_OK) {
if (ret == LZMA_STREAM_END)
return true;
const char *msg;
switch (ret) {
case LZMA_MEM_ERROR:
msg = "Memory allocation failed";
break;
case LZMA_DATA_ERROR:
msg = "File size limits exceeded";
break;
default:
msg = "Unknown error, possibly a bug";
break;
}
fprintf(stderr, "Encoder error: %s (error code %u)\n",
msg, ret);
return false;
}
}
}
extern int
main(void)
{
lzma_stream strm = LZMA_STREAM_INIT;
bool success = init_encoder(&strm);
if (success)
success = compress(&strm, stdin, stdout);
lzma_end(&strm);
if (fclose(stdout)) {
fprintf(stderr, "Write error: %s\n", strerror(errno));
success = false;
}
return success ? EXIT_SUCCESS : EXIT_FAILURE;
}

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///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//
/// \file 04_compress_easy_mt.c
/// \brief Compress in multi-call mode using LZMA2 in multi-threaded mode
///
/// Usage: ./04_compress_easy_mt < INFILE > OUTFILE
///
/// Example: ./04_compress_easy_mt < foo > foo.xz
//
// Author: Lasse Collin
//
// This file has been put into the public domain.
// You can do whatever you want with this file.
//
///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <lzma.h>
static bool
init_encoder(lzma_stream *strm)
{
// The threaded encoder takes the options as pointer to
// a lzma_mt structure.
lzma_mt mt = {
// No flags are needed.
.flags = 0,
// Let liblzma determine a sane block size.
.block_size = 0,
// Use no timeout for lzma_code() calls by setting timeout
// to zero. That is, sometimes lzma_code() might block for
// a long time (from several seconds to even minutes).
// If this is not OK, for example due to progress indicator
// needing updates, specify a timeout in milliseconds here.
// See the documentation of lzma_mt in lzma/container.h for
// information how to choose a reasonable timeout.
.timeout = 0,
// Use the default preset (6) for LZMA2.
// To use a preset, filters must be set to NULL.
.preset = LZMA_PRESET_DEFAULT,
.filters = NULL,
// Use CRC64 for integrity checking. See also
// 01_compress_easy.c about choosing the integrity check.
.check = LZMA_CHECK_CRC64,
};
// Detect how many threads the CPU supports.
mt.threads = lzma_cputhreads();
// If the number of CPU cores/threads cannot be detected,
// use one thread. Note that this isn't the same as the normal
// single-threaded mode as this will still split the data into
// blocks and use more RAM than the normal single-threaded mode.
// You may want to consider using lzma_easy_encoder() or
// lzma_stream_encoder() instead of lzma_stream_encoder_mt() if
// lzma_cputhreads() returns 0 or 1.
if (mt.threads == 0)
mt.threads = 1;
// If the number of CPU cores/threads exceeds threads_max,
// limit the number of threads to keep memory usage lower.
// The number 8 is arbitrarily chosen and may be too low or
// high depending on the compression preset and the computer
// being used.
//
// FIXME: A better way could be to check the amount of RAM
// (or available RAM) and use lzma_stream_encoder_mt_memusage()
// to determine if the number of threads should be reduced.
const uint32_t threads_max = 8;
if (mt.threads > threads_max)
mt.threads = threads_max;
// Initialize the threaded encoder.
lzma_ret ret = lzma_stream_encoder_mt(strm, &mt);
if (ret == LZMA_OK)
return true;
const char *msg;
switch (ret) {
case LZMA_MEM_ERROR:
msg = "Memory allocation failed";
break;
case LZMA_OPTIONS_ERROR:
// We are no longer using a plain preset so this error
// message has been edited accordingly compared to
// 01_compress_easy.c.
msg = "Specified filter chain is not supported";
break;
case LZMA_UNSUPPORTED_CHECK:
msg = "Specified integrity check is not supported";
break;
default:
msg = "Unknown error, possibly a bug";
break;
}
fprintf(stderr, "Error initializing the encoder: %s (error code %u)\n",
msg, ret);
return false;
}
// This function is identical to the one in 01_compress_easy.c.
static bool
compress(lzma_stream *strm, FILE *infile, FILE *outfile)
{
lzma_action action = LZMA_RUN;
uint8_t inbuf[BUFSIZ];
uint8_t outbuf[BUFSIZ];
strm->next_in = NULL;
strm->avail_in = 0;
strm->next_out = outbuf;
strm->avail_out = sizeof(outbuf);
while (true) {
if (strm->avail_in == 0 && !feof(infile)) {
strm->next_in = inbuf;
strm->avail_in = fread(inbuf, 1, sizeof(inbuf),
infile);
if (ferror(infile)) {
fprintf(stderr, "Read error: %s\n",
strerror(errno));
return false;
}
if (feof(infile))
action = LZMA_FINISH;
}
lzma_ret ret = lzma_code(strm, action);
if (strm->avail_out == 0 || ret == LZMA_STREAM_END) {
size_t write_size = sizeof(outbuf) - strm->avail_out;
if (fwrite(outbuf, 1, write_size, outfile)
!= write_size) {
fprintf(stderr, "Write error: %s\n",
strerror(errno));
return false;
}
strm->next_out = outbuf;
strm->avail_out = sizeof(outbuf);
}
if (ret != LZMA_OK) {
if (ret == LZMA_STREAM_END)
return true;
const char *msg;
switch (ret) {
case LZMA_MEM_ERROR:
msg = "Memory allocation failed";
break;
case LZMA_DATA_ERROR:
msg = "File size limits exceeded";
break;
default:
msg = "Unknown error, possibly a bug";
break;
}
fprintf(stderr, "Encoder error: %s (error code %u)\n",
msg, ret);
return false;
}
}
}
extern int
main(void)
{
lzma_stream strm = LZMA_STREAM_INIT;
bool success = init_encoder(&strm);
if (success)
success = compress(&strm, stdin, stdout);
lzma_end(&strm);
if (fclose(stdout)) {
fprintf(stderr, "Write error: %s\n", strerror(errno));
success = false;
}
return success ? EXIT_SUCCESS : EXIT_FAILURE;
}

24
doc/examples/Makefile Normal file
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#
# Author: Lasse Collin
#
# This file has been put into the public domain.
# You can do whatever you want with this file.
#
CC = c99
CFLAGS = -g
LDFLAGS = -llzma
PROGS = \
01_compress_easy \
02_decompress \
03_compress_custom \
04_compress_easy_mt
all: $(PROGS)
.c:
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ $< $(LDFLAGS)
clean:
-rm -f $(PROGS)

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/*
* xz_pipe_comp.c
* A simple example of pipe-only xz compressor implementation.
* version: 2010-07-12 - by Daniel Mealha Cabrita
* Not copyrighted -- provided to the public domain.
*
* Compiling:
* Link with liblzma. GCC example:
* $ gcc -llzma xz_pipe_comp.c -o xz_pipe_comp
*
* Usage example:
* $ cat some_file | ./xz_pipe_comp > some_file.xz
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <lzma.h>
/* COMPRESSION SETTINGS */
/* analogous to xz CLI options: -0 to -9 */
#define COMPRESSION_LEVEL 6
/* boolean setting, analogous to xz CLI option: -e */
#define COMPRESSION_EXTREME true
/* see: /usr/include/lzma/check.h LZMA_CHECK_* */
#define INTEGRITY_CHECK LZMA_CHECK_CRC64
/* read/write buffer sizes */
#define IN_BUF_MAX 4096
#define OUT_BUF_MAX 4096
/* error codes */
#define RET_OK 0
#define RET_ERROR_INIT 1
#define RET_ERROR_INPUT 2
#define RET_ERROR_OUTPUT 3
#define RET_ERROR_COMPRESSION 4
/* note: in_file and out_file must be open already */
int xz_compress (FILE *in_file, FILE *out_file)
{
uint32_t preset = COMPRESSION_LEVEL | (COMPRESSION_EXTREME ? LZMA_PRESET_EXTREME : 0);
lzma_check check = INTEGRITY_CHECK;
lzma_stream strm = LZMA_STREAM_INIT; /* alloc and init lzma_stream struct */
uint8_t in_buf [IN_BUF_MAX];
uint8_t out_buf [OUT_BUF_MAX];
size_t in_len; /* length of useful data in in_buf */
size_t out_len; /* length of useful data in out_buf */
bool in_finished = false;
bool out_finished = false;
lzma_action action;
lzma_ret ret_xz;
int ret;
ret = RET_OK;
/* initialize xz encoder */
ret_xz = lzma_easy_encoder (&strm, preset, check);
if (ret_xz != LZMA_OK) {
fprintf (stderr, "lzma_easy_encoder error: %d\n", (int) ret_xz);
return RET_ERROR_INIT;
}
while ((! in_finished) && (! out_finished)) {
/* read incoming data */
in_len = fread (in_buf, 1, IN_BUF_MAX, in_file);
if (feof (in_file)) {
in_finished = true;
}
if (ferror (in_file)) {
in_finished = true;
ret = RET_ERROR_INPUT;
}
strm.next_in = in_buf;
strm.avail_in = in_len;
/* if no more data from in_buf, flushes the
internal xz buffers and closes the xz data
with LZMA_FINISH */
action = in_finished ? LZMA_FINISH : LZMA_RUN;
/* loop until there's no pending compressed output */
do {
/* out_buf is clean at this point */
strm.next_out = out_buf;
strm.avail_out = OUT_BUF_MAX;
/* compress data */
ret_xz = lzma_code (&strm, action);
if ((ret_xz != LZMA_OK) && (ret_xz != LZMA_STREAM_END)) {
fprintf (stderr, "lzma_code error: %d\n", (int) ret_xz);
out_finished = true;
ret = RET_ERROR_COMPRESSION;
} else {
/* write compressed data */
out_len = OUT_BUF_MAX - strm.avail_out;
fwrite (out_buf, 1, out_len, out_file);
if (ferror (out_file)) {
out_finished = true;
ret = RET_ERROR_OUTPUT;
}
}
} while (strm.avail_out == 0);
}
lzma_end (&strm);
return ret;
}
int main ()
{
int ret;
ret = xz_compress (stdin, stdout);
return ret;
}

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/*
* xz_pipe_decomp.c
* A simple example of pipe-only xz decompressor implementation.
* version: 2012-06-14 - by Daniel Mealha Cabrita
* Not copyrighted -- provided to the public domain.
*
* Compiling:
* Link with liblzma. GCC example:
* $ gcc -llzma xz_pipe_decomp.c -o xz_pipe_decomp
*
* Usage example:
* $ cat some_file.xz | ./xz_pipe_decomp > some_file
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <lzma.h>
/* read/write buffer sizes */
#define IN_BUF_MAX 4096
#define OUT_BUF_MAX 4096
/* error codes */
#define RET_OK 0
#define RET_ERROR_INIT 1
#define RET_ERROR_INPUT 2
#define RET_ERROR_OUTPUT 3
#define RET_ERROR_DECOMPRESSION 4
/* note: in_file and out_file must be open already */
int xz_decompress (FILE *in_file, FILE *out_file)
{
lzma_stream strm = LZMA_STREAM_INIT; /* alloc and init lzma_stream struct */
const uint32_t flags = LZMA_TELL_UNSUPPORTED_CHECK | LZMA_CONCATENATED;
const uint64_t memory_limit = UINT64_MAX; /* no memory limit */
uint8_t in_buf [IN_BUF_MAX];
uint8_t out_buf [OUT_BUF_MAX];
size_t in_len; /* length of useful data in in_buf */
size_t out_len; /* length of useful data in out_buf */
bool in_finished = false;
bool out_finished = false;
lzma_action action;
lzma_ret ret_xz;
int ret;
ret = RET_OK;
/* initialize xz decoder */
ret_xz = lzma_stream_decoder (&strm, memory_limit, flags);
if (ret_xz != LZMA_OK) {
fprintf (stderr, "lzma_stream_decoder error: %d\n", (int) ret_xz);
return RET_ERROR_INIT;
}
while ((! in_finished) && (! out_finished)) {
/* read incoming data */
in_len = fread (in_buf, 1, IN_BUF_MAX, in_file);
if (feof (in_file)) {
in_finished = true;
}
if (ferror (in_file)) {
in_finished = true;
ret = RET_ERROR_INPUT;
}
strm.next_in = in_buf;
strm.avail_in = in_len;
/* if no more data from in_buf, flushes the
internal xz buffers and closes the decompressed data
with LZMA_FINISH */
action = in_finished ? LZMA_FINISH : LZMA_RUN;
/* loop until there's no pending decompressed output */
do {
/* out_buf is clean at this point */
strm.next_out = out_buf;
strm.avail_out = OUT_BUF_MAX;
/* decompress data */
ret_xz = lzma_code (&strm, action);
if ((ret_xz != LZMA_OK) && (ret_xz != LZMA_STREAM_END)) {
fprintf (stderr, "lzma_code error: %d\n", (int) ret_xz);
out_finished = true;
ret = RET_ERROR_DECOMPRESSION;
} else {
/* write decompressed data */
out_len = OUT_BUF_MAX - strm.avail_out;
fwrite (out_buf, 1, out_len, out_file);
if (ferror (out_file)) {
out_finished = true;
ret = RET_ERROR_OUTPUT;
}
}
} while (strm.avail_out == 0);
}
/* Bug fix (2012-06-14): If no errors were detected, check
that the last lzma_code() call returned LZMA_STREAM_END.
If not, the file is probably truncated. */
if ((ret == RET_OK) && (ret_xz != LZMA_STREAM_END)) {
fprintf (stderr, "Input truncated or corrupt\n");
ret = RET_ERROR_DECOMPRESSION;
}
lzma_end (&strm);
return ret;
}
int main ()
{
int ret;
ret = xz_decompress (stdin, stdout);
return ret;
}

224
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XZ Utils FAQ
============
Q: What do the letters XZ mean?
A: Nothing. They are just two letters, which come from the file format
suffix .xz. The .xz suffix was selected, because it seemed to be
pretty much unused. It has no deeper meaning.
Q: What are LZMA and LZMA2?
A: LZMA stands for Lempel-Ziv-Markov chain-Algorithm. It is the name
of the compression algorithm designed by Igor Pavlov for 7-Zip.
LZMA is based on LZ77 and range encoding.
LZMA2 is an updated version of the original LZMA to fix a couple of
practical issues. In context of XZ Utils, LZMA is called LZMA1 to
emphasize that LZMA is not the same thing as LZMA2. LZMA2 is the
primary compression algorithm in the .xz file format.
Q: There are many LZMA related projects. How does XZ Utils relate to them?
A: 7-Zip and LZMA SDK are the original projects. LZMA SDK is roughly
a subset of the 7-Zip source tree.
p7zip is 7-Zip's command-line tools ported to POSIX-like systems.
LZMA Utils provide a gzip-like lzma tool for POSIX-like systems.
LZMA Utils are based on LZMA SDK. XZ Utils are the successor to
LZMA Utils.
There are several other projects using LZMA. Most are more or less
based on LZMA SDK. See <http://7-zip.org/links.html>.
Q: Why is liblzma named liblzma if its primary file format is .xz?
Shouldn't it be e.g. libxz?
A: When the designing of the .xz format began, the idea was to replace
the .lzma format and use the same .lzma suffix. It would have been
quite OK to reuse the suffix when there were very few .lzma files
around. However, the old .lzma format became popular before the
new format was finished. The new format was renamed to .xz but the
name of liblzma wasn't changed.
Q: Do XZ Utils support the .7z format?
A: No. Use 7-Zip (Windows) or p7zip (POSIX-like systems) to handle .7z
files.
Q: I have many .tar.7z files. Can I convert them to .tar.xz without
spending hours recompressing the data?
A: In the "extra" directory, there is a script named 7z2lzma.bash which
is able to convert some .7z files to the .lzma format (not .xz). It
needs the 7za (or 7z) command from p7zip. The script may silently
produce corrupt output if certain assumptions are not met, so
decompress the resulting .lzma file and compare it against the
original before deleting the original file!
Q: I have many .lzma files. Can I quickly convert them to the .xz format?
A: For now, no. Since XZ Utils supports the .lzma format, it's usually
not too bad to keep the old files in the old format. If you want to
do the conversion anyway, you need to decompress the .lzma files and
then recompress to the .xz format.
Technically, there is a way to make the conversion relatively fast
(roughly twice the time that normal decompression takes). Writing
such a tool would take quite a bit of time though, and would probably
be useful to only a few people. If you really want such a conversion
tool, contact Lasse Collin and offer some money.
Q: I have installed xz, but my tar doesn't recognize .tar.xz files.
How can I extract .tar.xz files?
A: xz -dc foo.tar.xz | tar xf -
Q: Can I recover parts of a broken .xz file (e.g. a corrupted CD-R)?
A: It may be possible if the file consists of multiple blocks, which
typically is not the case if the file was created in single-threaded
mode. There is no recovery program yet.
Q: Is (some part of) XZ Utils patented?
A: Lasse Collin is not aware of any patents that could affect XZ Utils.
However, due to the nature of software patents, it's not possible to
guarantee that XZ Utils isn't affected by any third party patent(s).
Q: Where can I find documentation about the file format and algorithms?
A: The .xz format is documented in xz-file-format.txt. It is a container
format only, and doesn't include descriptions of any non-trivial
filters.
Documenting LZMA and LZMA2 is planned, but for now, there is no other
documentation than the source code. Before you begin, you should know
the basics of LZ77 and range-coding algorithms. LZMA is based on LZ77,
but LZMA is a lot more complex. Range coding is used to compress
the final bitstream like Huffman coding is used in Deflate.
Q: I cannot find BCJ and BCJ2 filters. Don't they exist in liblzma?
A: BCJ filter is called "x86" in liblzma. BCJ2 is not included,
because it requires using more than one encoded output stream.
A streamable version of BCJ2-style filtering is planned.
Q: I need to use a script that runs "xz -9". On a system with 256 MiB
of RAM, xz says that it cannot allocate memory. Can I make the
script work without modifying it?
A: Set a default memory usage limit for compression. You can do it e.g.
in a shell initialization script such as ~/.bashrc or /etc/profile:
XZ_DEFAULTS=--memlimit-compress=150MiB
export XZ_DEFAULTS
xz will then scale the compression settings down so that the given
memory usage limit is not reached. This way xz shouldn't run out
of memory.
Check also that memory-related resource limits are high enough.
On most systems, "ulimit -a" will show the current resource limits.
Q: How do I create files that can be decompressed with XZ Embedded?
A: See the documentation in XZ Embedded. In short, something like
this is a good start:
xz --check=crc32 --lzma2=preset=6e,dict=64KiB
Or if a BCJ filter is needed too, e.g. if compressing
a kernel image for PowerPC:
xz --check=crc32 --powerpc --lzma2=preset=6e,dict=64KiB
Adjust the dictionary size to get a good compromise between
compression ratio and decompressor memory usage. Note that
in single-call decompression mode of XZ Embedded, a big
dictionary doesn't increase memory usage.
Q: Will xz support threaded compression?
A: It is planned and has been taken into account when designing
the .xz file format. Eventually there will probably be three types
of threading, each method having its own advantages and disadvantages.
The simplest method is splitting the uncompressed data into blocks
and compressing them in parallel independent from each other.
Since the blocks are compressed independently, they can also be
decompressed independently. Together with the index feature in .xz,
this allows using threads to create .xz files for random-access
reading. This also makes threaded decompression possible, although
it is not clear if threaded decompression will ever be implemented.
The independent blocks method has a couple of disadvantages too. It
will compress worse than a single-block method. Often the difference
is not too big (maybe 1-2 %) but sometimes it can be too big. Also,
the memory usage of the compressor increases linearly when adding
threads.
Match finder parallelization is another threading method. It has
been in 7-Zip for ages. It doesn't affect compression ratio or
memory usage significantly. Among the three threading methods, only
this is useful when compressing small files (files that are not
significantly bigger than the dictionary). Unfortunately this method
scales only to about two CPU cores.
The third method is pigz-style threading (I use that name, because
pigz <http://www.zlib.net/pigz/> uses that method). It doesn't
affect compression ratio significantly and scales to many cores.
The memory usage scales linearly when threads are added. This isn't
significant with pigz, because Deflate uses only a 32 KiB dictionary,
but with LZMA2 the memory usage will increase dramatically just like
with the independent-blocks method. There is also a constant
computational overhead, which may make pigz-method a bit dull on
dual-core compared to the parallel match finder method, but with more
cores the overhead is not a big deal anymore.
Combining the threading methods will be possible and also useful.
E.g. combining match finder parallelization with pigz-style threading
can cut the memory usage by 50 %.
It is possible that the single-threaded method will be modified to
create files identical to the pigz-style method. We'll see once
pigz-style threading has been implemented in liblzma.
Q: How do I build a program that needs liblzmadec (lzmadec.h)?
A: liblzmadec is part of LZMA Utils. XZ Utils has liblzma, but no
liblzmadec. The code using liblzmadec should be ported to use
liblzma instead. If you cannot or don't want to do that, download
LZMA Utils from <http://tukaani.org/lzma/>.
Q: The default build of liblzma is too big. How can I make it smaller?
A: Give --enable-small to the configure script. Use also appropriate
--enable or --disable options to include only those filter encoders
and decoders and integrity checks that you actually need. Use
CFLAGS=-Os (with GCC) or equivalent to tell your compiler to optimize
for size. See INSTALL for information about configure options.
If the result is still too big, take a look at XZ Embedded. It is
a separate project, which provides a limited but significantly
smaller XZ decoder implementation than XZ Utils. You can find it
at <http://tukaani.org/xz/embedded.html>.

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History of LZMA Utils and XZ Utils
==================================
Tukaani distribution
In 2005, there was a small group working on the Tukaani distribution,
which was a Slackware fork. One of the project's goals was to fit the
distro on a single 700 MiB ISO-9660 image. Using LZMA instead of gzip
helped a lot. Roughly speaking, one could fit data that took 1000 MiB
in gzipped form into 700 MiB with LZMA. Naturally, the compression
ratio varied across packages, but this was what we got on average.
Slackware packages have traditionally had .tgz as the filename suffix,
which is an abbreviation of .tar.gz. A logical naming for LZMA
compressed packages was .tlz, being an abbreviation of .tar.lzma.
At the end of the year 2007, there was no distribution under the
Tukaani project anymore, but development of LZMA Utils was kept going.
Still, there were .tlz packages around, because at least Vector Linux
(a Slackware based distribution) used LZMA for its packages.
First versions of the modified pkgtools used the LZMA_Alone tool from
Igor Pavlov's LZMA SDK as is. It was fine, because users wouldn't need
to interact with LZMA_Alone directly. But people soon wanted to use
LZMA for other files too, and the interface of LZMA_Alone wasn't
comfortable for those used to gzip and bzip2.
First steps of LZMA Utils
The first version of LZMA Utils (4.22.0) included a shell script called
lzmash. It was a wrapper that had a gzip-like command-line interface. It
used the LZMA_Alone tool from LZMA SDK to do all the real work. zgrep,
zdiff, and related scripts from gzip were adapted to work with LZMA and
were part of the first LZMA Utils release too.
LZMA Utils 4.22.0 included also lzmadec, which was a small (less than
10 KiB) decoder-only command-line tool. It was written on top of the
decoder-only C code found from the LZMA SDK. lzmadec was convenient in
situations where LZMA_Alone (a few hundred KiB) would be too big.
lzmash and lzmadec were written by Lasse Collin.
Second generation
The lzmash script was an ugly and not very secure hack. The last
version of LZMA Utils to use lzmash was 4.27.1.
LZMA Utils 4.32.0beta1 introduced a new lzma command-line tool written
by Ville Koskinen. It was written in C++, and used the encoder and
decoder from C++ LZMA SDK with some little modifications. This tool
replaced both the lzmash script and the LZMA_Alone command-line tool
in LZMA Utils.
Introducing this new tool caused some temporary incompatibilities,
because the LZMA_Alone executable was simply named lzma like the new
command-line tool, but they had a completely different command-line
interface. The file format was still the same.
Lasse wrote liblzmadec, which was a small decoder-only library based
on the C code found from LZMA SDK. liblzmadec had an API similar to
zlib, although there were some significant differences, which made it
non-trivial to use it in some applications designed for zlib and
libbzip2.
The lzmadec command-line tool was converted to use liblzmadec.
Alexandre Sauvé helped converting the build system to use GNU
Autotools. This made it easier to test for certain less portable
features needed by the new command-line tool.
Since the new command-line tool never got completely finished (for
example, it didn't support the LZMA_OPT environment variable), the
intent was to not call 4.32.x stable. Similarly, liblzmadec wasn't
polished, but appeared to work well enough, so some people started
using it too.
Because the development of the third generation of LZMA Utils was
delayed considerably (3-4 years), the 4.32.x branch had to be kept
maintained. It got some bug fixes now and then, and finally it was
decided to call it stable, although most of the missing features were
never added.
File format problems
The file format used by LZMA_Alone was primitive. It was designed with
embedded systems in mind, and thus provided only a minimal set of
features. The two biggest problems for non-embedded use were the lack
of magic bytes and an integrity check.
Igor and Lasse started developing a new file format with some help
from Ville Koskinen. Also Mark Adler, Mikko Pouru, H. Peter Anvin,
and Lars Wirzenius helped with some minor things at some point of the
development. Designing the new format took quite a long time (actually,
too long a time would be a more appropriate expression). It was mostly
because Lasse was quite slow at getting things done due to personal
reasons.
Originally the new format was supposed to use the same .lzma suffix
that was already used by the old file format. Switching to the new
format wouldn't have caused much trouble when the old format wasn't
used by many people. But since the development of the new format took
such a long time, the old format got quite popular, and it was decided
that the new file format must use a different suffix.
It was decided to use .xz as the suffix of the new file format. The
first stable .xz file format specification was finally released in
December 2008. In addition to fixing the most obvious problems of
the old .lzma format, the .xz format added some new features like
support for multiple filters (compression algorithms), filter chaining
(like piping on the command line), and limited random-access reading.
Currently the primary compression algorithm used in .xz is LZMA2.
It is an extension on top of the original LZMA to fix some practical
problems: LZMA2 adds support for flushing the encoder, uncompressed
chunks, eases stateful decoder implementations, and improves support
for multithreading. Since LZMA2 is better than the original LZMA, the
original LZMA is not supported in .xz.
Transition to XZ Utils
The early versions of XZ Utils were called LZMA Utils. The first
releases were 4.42.0alphas. They dropped the rest of the C++ LZMA SDK.
The code was still directly based on LZMA SDK but ported to C and
converted from a callback API to a stateful API. Later, Igor Pavlov
made a C version of the LZMA encoder too; these ports from C++ to C
were independent in LZMA SDK and LZMA Utils.
The core of the new LZMA Utils was liblzma, a compression library with
a zlib-like API. liblzma supported both the old and new file format.
The gzip-like lzma command-line tool was rewritten to use liblzma.
The new LZMA Utils code base was renamed to XZ Utils when the name
of the new file format had been decided. The liblzma compression
library retained its name though, because changing it would have
caused unnecessary breakage in applications already using the early
liblzma snapshots.
The xz command-line tool can emulate the gzip-like lzma tool by
creating appropriate symlinks (e.g. lzma -> xz). Thus, practically
all scripts using the lzma tool from LZMA Utils will work as is with
XZ Utils (and will keep using the old .lzma format). Still, the .lzma
format is more or less deprecated. XZ Utils will keep supporting it,
but new applications should use the .xz format, and migrating old
applications to .xz is often a good idea too.

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The .lzma File Format
=====================
0. Preface
0.1. Notices and Acknowledgements
0.2. Changes
1. File Format
1.1. Header
1.1.1. Properties
1.1.2. Dictionary Size
1.1.3. Uncompressed Size
1.2. LZMA Compressed Data
2. References
0. Preface
This document describes the .lzma file format, which is
sometimes also called LZMA_Alone format. It is a legacy file
format, which is being or has been replaced by the .xz format.
The MIME type of the .lzma format is `application/x-lzma'.
The most commonly used software to handle .lzma files are
LZMA SDK, LZMA Utils, 7-Zip, and XZ Utils. This document
describes some of the differences between these implementations
and gives hints what subset of the .lzma format is the most
portable.
0.1. Notices and Acknowledgements
This file format was designed by Igor Pavlov for use in
LZMA SDK. This document was written by Lasse Collin
<lasse.collin@tukaani.org> using the documentation found
from the LZMA SDK.
This document has been put into the public domain.
0.2. Changes
Last modified: 2011-04-12 11:55+0300
1. File Format
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+==========================+
| Header | LZMA Compressed Data |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+==========================+
The .lzma format file consist of 13-byte Header followed by
the LZMA Compressed Data.
Unlike the .gz, .bz2, and .xz formats, it is not possible to
concatenate multiple .lzma files as is and expect the
decompression tool to decode the resulting file as if it were
a single .lzma file.
For example, the command line tools from LZMA Utils and
LZMA SDK silently ignore all the data after the first .lzma
stream. In contrast, the command line tool from XZ Utils
considers the .lzma file to be corrupt if there is data after
the first .lzma stream.
1.1. Header
+------------+----+----+----+----+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+
| Properties | Dictionary Size | Uncompressed Size |
+------------+----+----+----+----+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+
1.1.1. Properties
The Properties field contains three properties. An abbreviation
is given in parentheses, followed by the value range of the
property. The field consists of
1) the number of literal context bits (lc, [0, 8]);
2) the number of literal position bits (lp, [0, 4]); and
3) the number of position bits (pb, [0, 4]).
The properties are encoded using the following formula:
Properties = (pb * 5 + lp) * 9 + lc
The following C code illustrates a straightforward way to
decode the Properties field:
uint8_t lc, lp, pb;
uint8_t prop = get_lzma_properties();
if (prop > (4 * 5 + 4) * 9 + 8)
return LZMA_PROPERTIES_ERROR;
pb = prop / (9 * 5);
prop -= pb * 9 * 5;
lp = prop / 9;
lc = prop - lp * 9;
XZ Utils has an additional requirement: lc + lp <= 4. Files
which don't follow this requirement cannot be decompressed
with XZ Utils. Usually this isn't a problem since the most
common lc/lp/pb values are 3/0/2. It is the only lc/lp/pb
combination that the files created by LZMA Utils can have,
but LZMA Utils can decompress files with any lc/lp/pb.
1.1.2. Dictionary Size
Dictionary Size is stored as an unsigned 32-bit little endian
integer. Any 32-bit value is possible, but for maximum
portability, only sizes of 2^n and 2^n + 2^(n-1) should be
used.
LZMA Utils creates only files with dictionary size 2^n,
16 <= n <= 25. LZMA Utils can decompress files with any
dictionary size.
XZ Utils creates and decompresses .lzma files only with
dictionary sizes 2^n and 2^n + 2^(n-1). If some other
dictionary size is specified when compressing, the value
stored in the Dictionary Size field is a rounded up, but the
specified value is still used in the actual compression code.
1.1.3. Uncompressed Size
Uncompressed Size is stored as unsigned 64-bit little endian
integer. A special value of 0xFFFF_FFFF_FFFF_FFFF indicates
that Uncompressed Size is unknown. End of Payload Marker (*)
is used if and only if Uncompressed Size is unknown.
XZ Utils rejects files whose Uncompressed Size field specifies
a known size that is 256 GiB or more. This is to reject false
positives when trying to guess if the input file is in the
.lzma format. When Uncompressed Size is unknown, there is no
limit for the uncompressed size of the file.
(*) Some tools use the term End of Stream (EOS) marker
instead of End of Payload Marker.
1.2. LZMA Compressed Data
Detailed description of the format of this field is out of
scope of this document.
2. References
LZMA SDK - The original LZMA implementation
http://7-zip.org/sdk.html
7-Zip
http://7-zip.org/
LZMA Utils - LZMA adapted to POSIX-like systems
http://tukaani.org/lzma/
XZ Utils - The next generation of LZMA Utils
http://tukaani.org/xz/
The .xz file format - The successor of the .lzma format
http://tukaani.org/xz/xz-file-format.txt

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LZMAINFO(1) XZ Utils LZMAINFO(1)
NAME
lzmainfo - show information stored in the .lzma file header
SYNOPSIS
lzmainfo [--help] [--version] [file...]
DESCRIPTION
lzmainfo shows information stored in the .lzma file header. It reads
the first 13 bytes from the specified file, decodes the header, and
prints it to standard output in human readable format. If no files are
given or file is -, standard input is read.
Usually the most interesting information is the uncompressed size and
the dictionary size. Uncompressed size can be shown only if the file
is in the non-streamed .lzma format variant. The amount of memory
required to decompress the file is a few dozen kilobytes plus the dic-
tionary size.
lzmainfo is included in XZ Utils primarily for backward compatibility
with LZMA Utils.
EXIT STATUS
0 All is good.
1 An error occurred.
BUGS
lzmainfo uses MB while the correct suffix would be MiB (2^20 bytes).
This is to keep the output compatible with LZMA Utils.
SEE ALSO
xz(1)
Tukaani 2013-06-30 LZMAINFO(1)

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XZDEC(1) XZ Utils XZDEC(1)
NAME
xzdec, lzmadec - Small .xz and .lzma decompressors
SYNOPSIS
xzdec [option...] [file...]
lzmadec [option...] [file...]
DESCRIPTION
xzdec is a liblzma-based decompression-only tool for .xz (and only .xz)
files. xzdec is intended to work as a drop-in replacement for xz(1) in
the most common situations where a script has been written to use xz
--decompress --stdout (and possibly a few other commonly used options)
to decompress .xz files. lzmadec is identical to xzdec except that
lzmadec supports .lzma files instead of .xz files.
To reduce the size of the executable, xzdec doesn't support multi-
threading or localization, and doesn't read options from XZ_DEFAULTS
and XZ_OPT environment variables. xzdec doesn't support displaying
intermediate progress information: sending SIGINFO to xzdec does noth-
ing, but sending SIGUSR1 terminates the process instead of displaying
progress information.
OPTIONS
-d, --decompress, --uncompress
Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec supports only decompres-
sion.
-k, --keep
Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec never creates or removes
any files.
-c, --stdout, --to-stdout
Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec always writes the decom-
pressed data to standard output.
-q, --quiet
Specifying this once does nothing since xzdec never displays any
warnings or notices. Specify this twice to suppress errors.
-Q, --no-warn
Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec never uses the exit sta-
tus 2.
-h, --help
Display a help message and exit successfully.
-V, --version
Display the version number of xzdec and liblzma.
EXIT STATUS
0 All was good.
1 An error occurred.
xzdec doesn't have any warning messages like xz(1) has, thus the exit
status 2 is not used by xzdec.
NOTES
Use xz(1) instead of xzdec or lzmadec for normal everyday use. xzdec
or lzmadec are meant only for situations where it is important to have
a smaller decompressor than the full-featured xz(1).
xzdec and lzmadec are not really that small. The size can be reduced
further by dropping features from liblzma at compile time, but that
shouldn't usually be done for executables distributed in typical non-
embedded operating system distributions. If you need a truly small .xz
decompressor, consider using XZ Embedded.
SEE ALSO
xz(1)
XZ Embedded: <http://tukaani.org/xz/embedded.html>
Tukaani 2013-06-30 XZDEC(1)

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XZDIFF(1) XZ Utils XZDIFF(1)
NAME
xzcmp, xzdiff, lzcmp, lzdiff - compare compressed files
SYNOPSIS
xzcmp [cmp_options] file1 [file2]
xzdiff [diff_options] file1 [file2]
lzcmp [cmp_options] file1 [file2]
lzdiff [diff_options] file1 [file2]
DESCRIPTION
xzcmp and xzdiff invoke cmp(1) or diff(1) on files compressed with
xz(1), lzma(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1), or lzop(1). All options specified
are passed directly to cmp(1) or diff(1). If only one file is speci-
fied, then the files compared are file1 (which must have a suffix of a
supported compression format) and file1 from which the compression for-
mat suffix has been stripped. If two files are specified, then they
are uncompressed if necessary and fed to cmp(1) or diff(1). The exit
status from cmp(1) or diff(1) is preserved.
The names lzcmp and lzdiff are provided for backward compatibility with
LZMA Utils.
SEE ALSO
cmp(1), diff(1), xz(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1), lzop(1), zdiff(1)
BUGS
Messages from the cmp(1) or diff(1) programs refer to temporary file-
names instead of those specified.
Tukaani 2011-03-19 XZDIFF(1)

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XZGREP(1) XZ Utils XZGREP(1)
NAME
xzgrep - search compressed files for a regular expression
SYNOPSIS
xzgrep [grep_options] [-e] pattern file...
xzegrep ...
xzfgrep ...
lzgrep ...
lzegrep ...
lzfgrep ...
DESCRIPTION
xzgrep invokes grep(1) on files which may be either uncompressed or
compressed with xz(1), lzma(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1), or lzop(1). All
options specified are passed directly to grep(1).
If no file is specified, then standard input is decompressed if neces-
sary and fed to grep(1). When reading from standard input, gzip(1),
bzip2(1), and lzop(1) compressed files are not supported.
If xzgrep is invoked as xzegrep or xzfgrep then egrep(1) or fgrep(1) is
used instead of grep(1). The same applies to names lzgrep, lzegrep,
and lzfgrep, which are provided for backward compatibility with LZMA
Utils.
ENVIRONMENT
GREP If the GREP environment variable is set, xzgrep uses it instead
of grep(1), egrep(1), or fgrep(1).
SEE ALSO
grep(1), xz(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1), lzop(1), zgrep(1)
Tukaani 2011-03-19 XZGREP(1)

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XZLESS(1) XZ Utils XZLESS(1)
NAME
xzless, lzless - view xz or lzma compressed (text) files
SYNOPSIS
xzless [file...]
lzless [file...]
DESCRIPTION
xzless is a filter that displays text from compressed files to a termi-
nal. It works on files compressed with xz(1) or lzma(1). If no files
are given, xzless reads from standard input.
xzless uses less(1) to present its output. Unlike xzmore, its choice
of pager cannot be altered by setting an environment variable. Com-
mands are based on both more(1) and vi(1) and allow back and forth
movement and searching. See the less(1) manual for more information.
The command named lzless is provided for backward compatibility with
LZMA Utils.
ENVIRONMENT
LESSMETACHARS
A list of characters special to the shell. Set by xzless unless
it is already set in the environment.
LESSOPEN
Set to a command line to invoke the xz(1) decompressor for pre-
processing the input files to less(1).
SEE ALSO
less(1), xz(1), xzmore(1), zless(1)
Tukaani 2010-09-27 XZLESS(1)

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XZMORE(1) XZ Utils XZMORE(1)
NAME
xzmore, lzmore - view xz or lzma compressed (text) files
SYNOPSIS
xzmore [file...]
lzmore [file...]
DESCRIPTION
xzmore is a filter which allows examination of xz(1) or lzma(1) com-
pressed text files one screenful at a time on a soft-copy terminal.
To use a pager other than the default more, set environment variable
PAGER to the name of the desired program. The name lzmore is provided
for backward compatibility with LZMA Utils.
e or q When the prompt --More--(Next file: file) is printed, this com-
mand causes xzmore to exit.
s When the prompt --More--(Next file: file) is printed, this com-
mand causes xzmore to skip the next file and continue.
For list of keyboard commands supported while actually viewing the con-
tent of a file, refer to manual of the pager you use, usually more(1).
SEE ALSO
more(1), xz(1), xzless(1), zmore(1)
Tukaani 2013-06-30 XZMORE(1)

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Building XZ Utils for DOS
=========================
Introduction
This document explains how to build XZ Utils for DOS using DJGPP.
The resulting binaries should run at least on various DOS versions
and under Windows 95/98/98SE/ME, although the Windows version of
XZ Utils is recommended under Windows 95 and later.
This is currently experimental and has got very little testing.
Note: Makefile and config.h are updated only now and then. This
means that especially if you checked out a development version,
building for DOS probably won't work without updating Makefile
and config.h first.
Getting and Installing DJGPP
You may use <http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/zip-picker.html> to help
deciding what to download, but as of writing (2010-10-09) that may
not be the most convenient way taking into account what components
are actually required to build XZ Utils. However, using the
zip-picker can still be worth doing to get nice short summary of
installation instructions (they can be found from readme.1st too).
For a more manual method, first select a mirror from
<http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/getting.html>. You need
the following files:
unzip32.exe (if you don't already have a LFN-capable unzipper)
beta/v2/djdev204.zip
v2gnu/bnu219b.zip
v2gnu/gcc444b.zip
v2gnu/mak3791b.zip
v2misc/csdpmi7b.zip
If newer versions are available, probably you should try them first.
Note that djdev203.zip is too old to build XZ Utils; you need at
least djdev204.zip. Also note that you want csdpmi7b.zip even if you
run under Windows or DOSEMU, because the XZ Utils Makefile will embed
cwsdstub.exe to the resulting binaries.
See the instructions in readme.1st found from djdev204.zip. Here's
a short summary, but you should still read readme.1st.
C:\> mkdir DJGPP
C:\> cd DJGPP
C:\DJGPP> c:\download\unzip32 c:\download\djdev204.zip
C:\DJGPP> c:\download\unzip32 c:\download\bnu219b.zip
C:\DJGPP> c:\download\unzip32 c:\download\gcc444b.zip
C:\DJGPP> c:\download\unzip32 c:\download\mak3791b.zip
C:\DJGPP> c:\download\unzip32 c:\download\csdpmi7b.zip
C:\DJGPP> set PATH=C:\DJGPP\BIN;%PATH%
C:\DJGPP> set DJGPP=C:\DJGPP\DJGPP.ENV
You may want to add the last two lines into AUTOEXEC.BAT or have,
for example, DJGPP.BAT which you can run before using DJGPP.
Make sure you use completely upper case path in the DJGPP environment
variable. This is not required by DJGPP, but the XZ Utils Makefile is
a bit stupid and expects that everything in DJGPP environment variable
is uppercase.
Building
You need to have an environment that supports long filenames (LFN).
Once you have built XZ Utils, the resulting binaries can be run
without long filename support.
Run "make" in this directory (the directory containing this README).
You should get xz.exe (and a bunch of temporary files). Other tools
are not built. Having e.g. xzdec.exe doesn't save much space compared
to xz.exe, because the DJGPP runtime makes the .exe quite big anyway.

147
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###############################################################################
#
# Makefile to build XZ Utils using DJGPP
#
# Author: Lasse Collin
#
# This file has been put into the public domain.
# You can do whatever you want with this file.
#
###############################################################################
# For debugging, set comment "#define NDEBUG 1" from config.h to enable
# the assert() macro, set STRIP=rem to disable stripping, and finally
# e.g. CFLAGS="-g -O0".
CC = gcc
STRIP = strip
CPPFLAGS =
CFLAGS = -g -Wall -Wextra -Wfatal-errors -march=i386 -mtune=i686 -O2
LDFLAGS = -lemu
# NOTE: -fgnu89-inline is needed on DJGPP 2.04 beta and GCC >= 4.3.0
# because time.h uses GNU-style "extern inline".
ALL_CFLAGS = -std=gnu99 -fgnu89-inline
ALL_CPPFLAGS = \
-I. \
-I../lib \
-I../src/common \
-I../src/liblzma/api \
-I../src/liblzma/common \
-I../src/liblzma/check \
-I../src/liblzma/rangecoder \
-I../src/liblzma/lz \
-I../src/liblzma/lzma \
-I../src/liblzma/delta \
-I../src/liblzma/simple \
-DHAVE_CONFIG_H
ALL_CPPFLAGS += $(CPPFLAGS)
ALL_CFLAGS += $(CFLAGS)
.PHONY: all
all: xz.exe
SRCS_C = \
../lib/getopt.c \
../lib/getopt1.c \
../src/common/tuklib_cpucores.c \
../src/common/tuklib_exit.c \
../src/common/tuklib_mbstr_fw.c \
../src/common/tuklib_mbstr_width.c \
../src/common/tuklib_open_stdxxx.c \
../src/common/tuklib_physmem.c \
../src/common/tuklib_progname.c \
../src/liblzma/check/check.c \
../src/liblzma/check/crc32_table.c \
../src/liblzma/check/crc64_table.c \
../src/liblzma/check/sha256.c \
../src/liblzma/common/alone_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/alone_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/block_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/block_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/block_header_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/block_header_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/block_util.c \
../src/liblzma/common/common.c \
../src/liblzma/common/filter_common.c \
../src/liblzma/common/filter_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/filter_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/filter_flags_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/filter_flags_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/hardware_physmem.c \
../src/liblzma/common/index.c \
../src/liblzma/common/index_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/index_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/index_hash.c \
../src/liblzma/common/stream_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/stream_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/stream_flags_common.c \
../src/liblzma/common/stream_flags_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/stream_flags_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/vli_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/vli_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/common/vli_size.c \
../src/liblzma/delta/delta_common.c \
../src/liblzma/delta/delta_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/delta/delta_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/lz/lz_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/lz/lz_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/lz/lz_encoder_mf.c \
../src/liblzma/lzma/fastpos_table.c \
../src/liblzma/lzma/lzma2_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/lzma/lzma2_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/lzma/lzma_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/lzma/lzma_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/lzma/lzma_encoder_optimum_fast.c \
../src/liblzma/lzma/lzma_encoder_optimum_normal.c \
../src/liblzma/lzma/lzma_encoder_presets.c \
../src/liblzma/rangecoder/price_table.c \
../src/liblzma/simple/arm.c \
../src/liblzma/simple/armthumb.c \
../src/liblzma/simple/ia64.c \
../src/liblzma/simple/powerpc.c \
../src/liblzma/simple/simple_coder.c \
../src/liblzma/simple/simple_decoder.c \
../src/liblzma/simple/simple_encoder.c \
../src/liblzma/simple/sparc.c \
../src/liblzma/simple/x86.c \
../src/xz/args.c \
../src/xz/coder.c \
../src/xz/file_io.c \
../src/xz/hardware.c \
../src/xz/list.c \
../src/xz/main.c \
../src/xz/message.c \
../src/xz/mytime.c \
../src/xz/options.c \
../src/xz/signals.c \
../src/xz/suffix.c \
../src/xz/util.c
SRCS_ASM = \
../src/liblzma/check/crc32_x86.S \
../src/liblzma/check/crc64_x86.S
OBJS_C = $(SRCS_C:.c=.o)
OBJS_ASM = $(SRCS_ASM:.S=.o)
OBJS = $(OBJS_C) $(OBJS_ASM)
getopt.h:
update ../lib/getopt.in.h getopt.h
$(OBJS): getopt.h
$(OBJS_C): %.o: %.c
$(CC) $(ALL_CPPFLAGS) $(ALL_CFLAGS) -c -o $@ $<
$(OBJS_ASM): %.o: %.S
$(CC) $(ALL_CPPFLAGS) $(ALL_CFLAGS) -c -o $@ $<
# Make xz.exe not depend on an external DPMI server.
xz.exe: $(OBJS)
$(CC) $(ALL_CFLAGS) $(OBJS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@
$(STRIP) --strip-all $@
exe2coff $@
del $@
copy /b $(DJGPP:DJGPP.ENV=BIN\CWSDSTUB.EXE) + $(@:.exe=) $@
del $(@:.exe=)

123
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XZ Utils on DOS
===============
DOS-specific filename handling
xz detects at runtime if long filename (LFN) support is
available and will use it by default. It can be disabled by
setting an environment variable:
set lfn=n
When xz is in LFN mode, it behaves pretty much the same as it
does on other operating systems. Examples:
xz foo.tar -> foo.tar.xz
xz -d foo.tar.xz -> foo.tar
xz -F lzma foo.tar -> foo.tar.lzma
xz -d foo.tar.lzma -> foo.tar
When LFN support isn't available or it is disabled with LFN=n
environment setting, xz works in short filename (SFN) mode. This
affects filename suffix handling when compressing.
When compressing to the .xz format in SFN mode:
- Files without an extension get .xz just like on LFN systems.
- *.tar files become *.txz (shorthand for *.tar.xz). *.txz
is recognized by xz on all supported operating systems.
(Try to avoid confusing this with gzipped .txt files.)
- Files with 1-3 character extension have their extension modified
so that the last character is a dash ("-"). If the extension
is already three characters, the last character is lost. The
resulting *.?- or *.??- filename is recognized in LFN mode, but
it isn't recognized by xz on other operating systems.
Examples:
xz foo -> foo.xz | xz -d foo.xz -> foo
xz foo.tar -> foo.txz | xz -d foo.txz -> foo.tar
xz foo.c -> foo.c- | xz -d foo.c- -> foo.c
xz read.me -> read.me- | xz -d read.me- -> read.me
xz foo.txt -> foo.tx- | xz -d foo.tx- -> foo.tx !
Note that in the last example above, the third character of the
filename extension is lost.
When compressing to the legacy .lzma format in SFN mode:
- *.tar files become *.tlz (shorthand for *.tar.lzma). *.tlz
is recognized by xz on all supported operating systems.
- Other files become *.lzm. The original filename extension
is lost. *.lzm is recognized also in LFN mode, but it is not
recognized by xz on other operating systems.
Examples:
xz -F lzma foo -> foo.lzm | xz -d foo.lzm -> foo
xz -F lzma foo.tar -> foo.tlz | xz -d foo.tlz -> foo.tar
xz -F lzma foo.c -> foo.lzm | xz -d foo.lzm -> foo !
xz -F lzma read.me -> read.lzm | xz -d read.lzm -> read !
xz -F lzma foo.txt -> foo.lzm | xz -d foo.lzm -> foo !
When compressing with a custom suffix (-S .SUF, --suffix=.SUF) to
any file format:
- If the suffix begins with a dot, the filename extension is
replaced with the new suffix. The original extension is lost.
- If the suffix doesn't begin with a dot and the filename has no
extension and the filename given on the command line doesn't
have a dot at the end, the custom suffix is appended just like
on LFN systems.
- If the suffix doesn't begin with a dot and the filename has
an extension (or an extension-less filename is given with a dot
at the end), the last 1-3 characters of the filename extension
may get overwritten to fit the given custom suffix.
Examples:
xz -S x foo -> foox | xz -dS x foox -> foo
xz -S x foo. -> foo.x | xz -dS x foo.x -> foo
xz -S .x foo -> foo.x | xz -dS .x foo.x -> foo
xz -S .x foo. -> foo.x | xz -dS .x foo.x -> foo
xz -S x.y foo -> foox.y | xz -dS x.y foox.y -> foo
xz -S .a foo.c -> foo.a | xz -dS .a foo.a -> foo !
xz -S a foo.c -> foo.ca | xz -dS a foo.ca -> foo.c
xz -S ab foo.c -> foo.cab | xz -dS ab foo.cab -> foo.c
xz -S ab read.me -> read.mab | xz -dS ab read.mab -> read.m !
xz -S ab foo.txt -> foo.tab | xz -dS ab foo.tab -> foo.t !
xz -S abc foo.txt -> foo.abc | xz -dS abc foo.abc -> foo !
When decompressing, the suffix handling in SFN mode is the same as
in LFN mode. The DOS-specific filenames *.lzm, *.?-, and *.??- are
recognized also in LFN mode.
xz handles certain uncommon situations safely:
- If the generated output filename refers to the same file as
the input file, xz detects this and refuses to compress or
decompress the input file even if --force is used. This can
happen when giving an overlong filename in SFN mode. E.g.
"xz -S x foo.texinfo" would try to write to foo.tex which on
SFN system is the same file as foo.texinfo.
- If the generated output filename is a special file like "con"
or "prn", xz detects this and refuses to compress or decompress
the input file even if --force is used.
Bugs
xz doesn't necessarily work in Dosbox. It should work in DOSEMU.
Pressing Ctrl-c or Ctrl-Break won't remove the incomplete target file
when running under Windows XP Command Prompt (something goes wrong
with SIGINT handling). It works correctly under Windows 95/98/98SE/ME.

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/* How many MiB of RAM to assume if the real amount cannot be determined. */
#define ASSUME_RAM 32
/* Define to 1 if crc32 integrity check is enabled. */
#define HAVE_CHECK_CRC32 1
/* Define to 1 if crc64 integrity check is enabled. */
#define HAVE_CHECK_CRC64 1
/* Define to 1 if sha256 integrity check is enabled. */
#define HAVE_CHECK_SHA256 1
/* Define to 1 if arm decoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_DECODER_ARM 1
/* Define to 1 if armthumb decoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_DECODER_ARMTHUMB 1
/* Define to 1 if delta decoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_DECODER_DELTA 1
/* Define to 1 if ia64 decoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_DECODER_IA64 1
/* Define to 1 if lzma1 decoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_DECODER_LZMA1 1
/* Define to 1 if lzma2 decoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_DECODER_LZMA2 1
/* Define to 1 if powerpc decoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_DECODER_POWERPC 1
/* Define to 1 if sparc decoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_DECODER_SPARC 1
/* Define to 1 if x86 decoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_DECODER_X86 1
/* Define to 1 if arm encoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_ENCODER_ARM 1
/* Define to 1 if armthumb encoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_ENCODER_ARMTHUMB 1
/* Define to 1 if delta encoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_ENCODER_DELTA 1
/* Define to 1 if ia64 encoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_ENCODER_IA64 1
/* Define to 1 if lzma1 encoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_ENCODER_LZMA1 1
/* Define to 1 if lzma2 encoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_ENCODER_LZMA2 1
/* Define to 1 if powerpc encoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_ENCODER_POWERPC 1
/* Define to 1 if sparc encoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_ENCODER_SPARC 1
/* Define to 1 if x86 encoder is enabled. */
#define HAVE_ENCODER_X86 1
/* Define to 1 if you have the <inttypes.h> header file. */
#define HAVE_INTTYPES_H 1
/* Define to 1 if you have the <limits.h> header file. */
#define HAVE_LIMITS_H 1
/* Define to 1 to enable bt2 match finder. */
#define HAVE_MF_BT2 1
/* Define to 1 to enable bt3 match finder. */
#define HAVE_MF_BT3 1
/* Define to 1 to enable bt4 match finder. */
#define HAVE_MF_BT4 1
/* Define to 1 to enable hc3 match finder. */
#define HAVE_MF_HC3 1
/* Define to 1 to enable hc4 match finder. */
#define HAVE_MF_HC4 1
/* Define to 1 if stdbool.h conforms to C99. */
#define HAVE_STDBOOL_H 1
/* Define to 1 if you have the <stdint.h> header file. */
#define HAVE_STDINT_H 1
/* Define to 1 if you have the <stdlib.h> header file. */
#define HAVE_STDLIB_H 1
/* Define to 1 if you have the <string.h> header file. */
#define HAVE_STRING_H 1
/* Define to 1 if you have the <sys/time.h> header file. */
#define HAVE_SYS_TIME_H 1
/* Define to 1 if you have the `utimes' function. */
#define HAVE_UTIMES 1
/* Define to 1 or 0, depending whether the compiler supports simple visibility
declarations. */
#define HAVE_VISIBILITY 0
/* Define to 1 if the system has the type `_Bool'. */
#define HAVE__BOOL 1
/* Define to 1 to disable debugging code. */
#define NDEBUG 1
/* Define to the address where bug reports for this package should be sent. */
#define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "lasse.collin@tukaani.org"
/* Define to the full name of this package. */
#define PACKAGE_NAME "XZ Utils"
/* Define to the home page for this package. */
#define PACKAGE_URL "http://tukaani.org/xz/"
/* The size of `size_t', as computed by sizeof. */
#define SIZEOF_SIZE_T 4
/* Define to 1 if the system supports fast unaligned access to 16-bit and
32-bit integers. */
#define TUKLIB_FAST_UNALIGNED_ACCESS 1

115
extra/7z2lzma/7z2lzma.bash Normal file
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#!/bin/bash
#
#############################################################################
#
# 7z2lzma.bash is very primitive .7z to .lzma converter. The input file must
# have exactly one LZMA compressed stream, which has been created with the
# default lc, lp, and pb values. The CRC32 in the .7z archive is not checked,
# and the script may seem to succeed while it actually created a corrupt .lzma
# file. You should always try uncompressing both the original .7z and the
# created .lzma and compare that the output is identical.
#
# This script requires basic GNU tools and 7z or 7za tool from p7zip.
#
# Last modified: 2009-01-15 14:25+0200
#
#############################################################################
#
# Author: Lasse Collin <lasse.collin@tukaani.org>
#
# This file has been put into the public domain.
# You can do whatever you want with this file.
#
#############################################################################
# You can use 7z or 7za, both will work.
SEVENZIP=7za
if [ $# != 2 -o -z "$1" -o -z "$2" ]; then
echo "Usage: $0 input.7z output.lzma"
exit 1
fi
# Converts an integer variable to little endian binary integer.
int2bin()
{
local LEN=$1
local NUM=$2
local HEX=(0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F)
local I
for ((I=0; I < "$LEN"; ++I)); do
printf "\\x${HEX[(NUM >> 4) & 0x0F]}${HEX[NUM & 0x0F]}"
NUM=$((NUM >> 8))
done
}
# Make sure we get possible errors from pipes.
set -o pipefail
# Get information about the input file. At least older 7z and 7za versions
# may return with zero exit status even when an error occurred, so check
# if the output has any lines beginning with "Error".
INFO=$("$SEVENZIP" l -slt "$1")
if [ $? != 0 ] || printf '%s\n' "$INFO" | grep -q ^Error; then
printf '%s\n' "$INFO"
exit 1
fi
# Check if the input file has more than one compressed block.
if printf '%s\n' "$INFO" | grep -q '^Block = 1'; then
echo "Cannot convert, because the input file has more than"
echo "one compressed block."
exit 1
fi
# Get compressed, uncompressed, and dictionary size.
CSIZE=$(printf '%s\n' "$INFO" | sed -rn 's|^Packed Size = ([0-9]+$)|\1|p')
USIZE=$(printf '%s\n' "$INFO" | sed -rn 's|^Size = ([0-9]+$)|\1|p')
DICT=$(printf '%s\n' "$INFO" | sed -rn 's|^Method = LZMA:([0-9]+[bkm]?)$|\1|p')
if [ -z "$CSIZE" -o -z "$USIZE" -o -z "$DICT" ]; then
echo "Parsing output of $SEVENZIP failed. Maybe the file uses some"
echo "other compression method than plain LZMA."
exit 1
fi
# The following assumes that the default lc, lp, and pb settings were used.
# Otherwise the output will be corrupt.
printf '\x5D' > "$2"
# Dictionary size can be either was power of two, bytes, kibibytes, or
# mebibytes. We need to convert it to bytes.
case $DICT in
*b)
DICT=${DICT%b}
;;
*k)
DICT=${DICT%k}
DICT=$((DICT << 10))
;;
*m)
DICT=${DICT%m}
DICT=$((DICT << 20))
;;
*)
DICT=$((1 << DICT))
;;
esac
int2bin 4 "$DICT" >> "$2"
# Uncompressed size
int2bin 8 "$USIZE" >> "$2"
# Copy the actual compressed data. Using multiple dd commands to avoid
# copying large amount of data with one-byte block size, which would be
# annoyingly slow.
BS=8192
BIGSIZE=$((CSIZE / BS))
CSIZE=$((CSIZE % BS))
{
dd of=/dev/null bs=32 count=1 \
&& dd bs="$BS" count="$BIGSIZE" \
&& dd bs=1 count="$CSIZE"
} < "$1" >> "$2"
exit $?

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/*
scanlzma, scan for lzma compressed data in stdin and echo it to stdout.
Copyright (C) 2006 Timo Lindfors
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
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
*/
/* Usage example:
$ wget http://www.wifi-shop.cz/Files/produkty/wa2204/wa2204av1.4.1.zip
$ unzip wa2204av1.4.1.zip
$ gcc scanlzma.c -o scanlzma -Wall
$ ./scanlzma 0 < WA2204-FW1.4.1/linux-1.4.bin | lzma -c -d | strings | grep -i "copyright"
UpdateDD version 2.5, Copyright (C) 2005 Philipp Benner.
Copyright (C) 2005 Philipp Benner.
Copyright (C) 2005 Philipp Benner.
mawk 1.3%s%s %s, Copyright (C) Michael D. Brennan
# Copyright (C) 1998, 1999, 2001 Henry Spencer.
...
*/
/* LZMA compressed file format */
/* --------------------------- */
/* Offset Size Description */
/* 0 1 Special LZMA properties for compressed data */
/* 1 4 Dictionary size (little endian) */
/* 5 8 Uncompressed size (little endian). -1 means unknown size */
/* 13 Compressed data */
#define BUFSIZE 4096
int find_lzma_header(unsigned char *buf) {
return (buf[0] < 0xE1
&& buf[0] == 0x5d
&& buf[4] < 0x20
&& (memcmp (buf + 10 , "\x00\x00\x00", 3) == 0
|| (memcmp (buf + 5, "\xFF\xFF\xFF\xFF\xFF\xFF\xFF\xFF", 8) == 0)));
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
char buf[BUFSIZE];
int ret, i, numlzma, blocks=0;
if (argc != 2) {
printf("usage: %s numlzma < infile | lzma -c -d > outfile\n"
"where numlzma is index of lzma file to extract, starting from zero.\n",
argv[0]);
exit(1);
}
numlzma = atoi(argv[1]);
for (;;) {
/* Read data. */
ret = fread(buf, BUFSIZE, 1, stdin);
if (ret != 1)
break;
/* Scan for signature. */
for (i = 0; i<BUFSIZE-23; i++) {
if (find_lzma_header(buf+i) && numlzma-- <= 0) {
fwrite(buf+i, (BUFSIZE-i), 1, stdout);
for (;;) {
int ch;
ch = getchar();
if (ch == EOF)
exit(0);
putchar(ch);
}
}
}
blocks++;
}
return 1;
}

32
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##
## Copyright (C) 2004-2007 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
## the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
## (at your option) any later version.
##
## This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
## but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
## MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
## GNU General Public License for more details.
##
## Not using gnulib-tool, at least for now. It is likely that we won't
## need anything else from Gnulib than getopt_long().
noinst_LIBRARIES = libgnu.a
libgnu_a_SOURCES =
libgnu_a_DEPENDENCIES = $(LIBOBJS)
libgnu_a_LIBADD = $(LIBOBJS)
EXTRA_DIST = getopt.in.h getopt.c getopt1.c getopt_int.h
BUILT_SOURCES = $(GETOPT_H)
MOSTLYCLEANFILES = getopt.h getopt.h-t
getopt.h: getopt.in.h
{ echo '/* DO NOT EDIT! GENERATED AUTOMATICALLY! */'; \
cat $(srcdir)/getopt.in.h; \
} > $@-t
mv -f $@-t $@

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# Makefile.in generated by automake 1.15 from Makefile.am.
# @configure_input@
# Copyright (C) 1994-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# This Makefile.in is free software; the Free Software Foundation
# gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
# with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law; without
# even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
# PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
@SET_MAKE@
VPATH = @srcdir@
am__is_gnu_make = { \
if test -z '$(MAKELEVEL)'; then \
false; \
elif test -n '$(MAKE_HOST)'; then \
true; \
elif test -n '$(MAKE_VERSION)' && test -n '$(CURDIR)'; then \
true; \
else \
false; \
fi; \
}
am__make_running_with_option = \
case $${target_option-} in \
?) ;; \
*) echo "am__make_running_with_option: internal error: invalid" \
"target option '$${target_option-}' specified" >&2; \
exit 1;; \
esac; \
has_opt=no; \
sane_makeflags=$$MAKEFLAGS; \
if $(am__is_gnu_make); then \
sane_makeflags=$$MFLAGS; \
else \
case $$MAKEFLAGS in \
*\\[\ \ ]*) \
bs=\\; \
sane_makeflags=`printf '%s\n' "$$MAKEFLAGS" \
| sed "s/$$bs$$bs[$$bs $$bs ]*//g"`;; \
esac; \
fi; \
skip_next=no; \
strip_trailopt () \
{ \
flg=`printf '%s\n' "$$flg" | sed "s/$$1.*$$//"`; \
}; \
for flg in $$sane_makeflags; do \
test $$skip_next = yes && { skip_next=no; continue; }; \
case $$flg in \
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/* Declarations for getopt.
Copyright (C) 1989-1994,1996-1999,2001,2003,2004,2005,2006,2007
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1, or (at your option)
any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser 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. */
#ifndef _GETOPT_H
#ifndef __need_getopt
# define _GETOPT_H 1
#endif
/* Standalone applications should #define __GETOPT_PREFIX to an
identifier that prefixes the external functions and variables
defined in this header. When this happens, include the
headers that might declare getopt so that they will not cause
confusion if included after this file. Then systematically rename
identifiers so that they do not collide with the system functions
and variables. Renaming avoids problems with some compilers and
linkers. */
#if defined __GETOPT_PREFIX && !defined __need_getopt
# include <stdlib.h>
# include <stdio.h>
# include <unistd.h>
# undef __need_getopt
# undef getopt
# undef getopt_long
# undef getopt_long_only
# undef optarg
# undef opterr
# undef optind
# undef optopt
# define __GETOPT_CONCAT(x, y) x ## y
# define __GETOPT_XCONCAT(x, y) __GETOPT_CONCAT (x, y)
# define __GETOPT_ID(y) __GETOPT_XCONCAT (__GETOPT_PREFIX, y)
# define getopt __GETOPT_ID (getopt)
# define getopt_long __GETOPT_ID (getopt_long)
# define getopt_long_only __GETOPT_ID (getopt_long_only)
# define optarg __GETOPT_ID (optarg)
# define opterr __GETOPT_ID (opterr)
# define optind __GETOPT_ID (optind)
# define optopt __GETOPT_ID (optopt)
#endif
/* Standalone applications get correct prototypes for getopt_long and
getopt_long_only; they declare "char **argv". libc uses prototypes
with "char *const *argv" that are incorrect because getopt_long and
getopt_long_only can permute argv; this is required for backward
compatibility (e.g., for LSB 2.0.1).
This used to be `#if defined __GETOPT_PREFIX && !defined __need_getopt',
but it caused redefinition warnings if both unistd.h and getopt.h were
included, since unistd.h includes getopt.h having previously defined
__need_getopt.
The only place where __getopt_argv_const is used is in definitions
of getopt_long and getopt_long_only below, but these are visible
only if __need_getopt is not defined, so it is quite safe to rewrite
the conditional as follows:
*/
#if !defined __need_getopt
# if defined __GETOPT_PREFIX
# define __getopt_argv_const /* empty */
# else
# define __getopt_argv_const const
# endif
#endif
/* If __GNU_LIBRARY__ is not already defined, either we are being used
standalone, or this is the first header included in the source file.
If we are being used with glibc, we need to include <features.h>, but
that does not exist if we are standalone. So: if __GNU_LIBRARY__ is
not defined, include <ctype.h>, which will pull in <features.h> for us
if it's from glibc. (Why ctype.h? It's guaranteed to exist and it
doesn't flood the namespace with stuff the way some other headers do.) */
#if !defined __GNU_LIBRARY__
# include <ctype.h>
#endif
#ifndef __THROW
# ifndef __GNUC_PREREQ
# define __GNUC_PREREQ(maj, min) (0)
# endif
# if defined __cplusplus && __GNUC_PREREQ (2,8)
# define __THROW throw ()
# else
# define __THROW
# endif
#endif
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
/* For communication from `getopt' to the caller.
When `getopt' finds an option that takes an argument,
the argument value is returned here.
Also, when `ordering' is RETURN_IN_ORDER,
each non-option ARGV-element is returned here. */
extern char *optarg;
/* Index in ARGV of the next element to be scanned.
This is used for communication to and from the caller
and for communication between successive calls to `getopt'.
On entry to `getopt', zero means this is the first call; initialize.
When `getopt' returns -1, this is the index of the first of the
non-option elements that the caller should itself scan.
Otherwise, `optind' communicates from one call to the next
how much of ARGV has been scanned so far. */
extern int optind;
/* Callers store zero here to inhibit the error message `getopt' prints
for unrecognized options. */
extern int opterr;
/* Set to an option character which was unrecognized. */
extern int optopt;
#ifndef __need_getopt
/* Describe the long-named options requested by the application.
The LONG_OPTIONS argument to getopt_long or getopt_long_only is a vector
of `struct option' terminated by an element containing a name which is
zero.
The field `has_arg' is:
no_argument (or 0) if the option does not take an argument,
required_argument (or 1) if the option requires an argument,
optional_argument (or 2) if the option takes an optional argument.
If the field `flag' is not NULL, it points to a variable that is set
to the value given in the field `val' when the option is found, but
left unchanged if the option is not found.
To have a long-named option do something other than set an `int' to
a compiled-in constant, such as set a value from `optarg', set the
option's `flag' field to zero and its `val' field to a nonzero
value (the equivalent single-letter option character, if there is
one). For long options that have a zero `flag' field, `getopt'
returns the contents of the `val' field. */
struct option
{
const char *name;
/* has_arg can't be an enum because some compilers complain about
type mismatches in all the code that assumes it is an int. */
int has_arg;
int *flag;
int val;
};
/* Names for the values of the `has_arg' field of `struct option'. */
# define no_argument 0
# define required_argument 1
# define optional_argument 2
#endif /* need getopt */
/* Get definitions and prototypes for functions to process the
arguments in ARGV (ARGC of them, minus the program name) for
options given in OPTS.
Return the option character from OPTS just read. Return -1 when
there are no more options. For unrecognized options, or options
missing arguments, `optopt' is set to the option letter, and '?' is
returned.
The OPTS string is a list of characters which are recognized option
letters, optionally followed by colons, specifying that that letter
takes an argument, to be placed in `optarg'.
If a letter in OPTS is followed by two colons, its argument is
optional. This behavior is specific to the GNU `getopt'.
The argument `--' causes premature termination of argument
scanning, explicitly telling `getopt' that there are no more
options.
If OPTS begins with `-', then non-option arguments are treated as
arguments to the option '\1'. This behavior is specific to the GNU
`getopt'. If OPTS begins with `+', or POSIXLY_CORRECT is set in
the environment, then do not permute arguments. */
extern int getopt (int ___argc, char *const *___argv, const char *__shortopts)
__THROW;
#ifndef __need_getopt
extern int getopt_long (int ___argc, char *__getopt_argv_const *___argv,
const char *__shortopts,
const struct option *__longopts, int *__longind)
__THROW;
extern int getopt_long_only (int ___argc, char *__getopt_argv_const *___argv,
const char *__shortopts,
const struct option *__longopts, int *__longind)
__THROW;
#endif
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
/* Make sure we later can get all the definitions and declarations. */
#undef __need_getopt
#endif /* getopt.h */

171
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/* getopt_long and getopt_long_only entry points for GNU getopt.
Copyright (C) 1987,88,89,90,91,92,93,94,96,97,98,2004,2006
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1, or (at your option)
any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser 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. */
#ifdef _LIBC
# include <getopt.h>
#else
# include <config.h>
# include "getopt.h"
#endif
#include "getopt_int.h"
#include <stdio.h>
/* This needs to come after some library #include
to get __GNU_LIBRARY__ defined. */
#ifdef __GNU_LIBRARY__
#include <stdlib.h>
#endif
#ifndef NULL
#define NULL 0
#endif
int
getopt_long (int argc, char *__getopt_argv_const *argv, const char *options,
const struct option *long_options, int *opt_index)
{
return _getopt_internal (argc, (char **) argv, options, long_options,
opt_index, 0, 0);
}
int
_getopt_long_r (int argc, char **argv, const char *options,
const struct option *long_options, int *opt_index,
struct _getopt_data *d)
{
return _getopt_internal_r (argc, argv, options, long_options, opt_index,
0, 0, d);
}
/* Like getopt_long, but '-' as well as '--' can indicate a long option.
If an option that starts with '-' (not '--') doesn't match a long option,
but does match a short option, it is parsed as a short option
instead. */
int
getopt_long_only (int argc, char *__getopt_argv_const *argv,
const char *options,
const struct option *long_options, int *opt_index)
{
return _getopt_internal (argc, (char **) argv, options, long_options,
opt_index, 1, 0);
}
int
_getopt_long_only_r (int argc, char **argv, const char *options,
const struct option *long_options, int *opt_index,
struct _getopt_data *d)
{
return _getopt_internal_r (argc, argv, options, long_options, opt_index,
1, 0, d);
}
#ifdef TEST
#include <stdio.h>
int
main (int argc, char **argv)
{
int c;
int digit_optind = 0;
while (1)
{
int this_option_optind = optind ? optind : 1;
int option_index = 0;
static struct option long_options[] =
{
{"add", 1, 0, 0},
{"append", 0, 0, 0},
{"delete", 1, 0, 0},
{"verbose", 0, 0, 0},
{"create", 0, 0, 0},
{"file", 1, 0, 0},
{0, 0, 0, 0}
};
c = getopt_long (argc, argv, "abc:d:0123456789",
long_options, &option_index);
if (c == -1)
break;
switch (c)
{
case 0:
printf ("option %s", long_options[option_index].name);
if (optarg)
printf (" with arg %s", optarg);
printf ("\n");
break;
case '0':
case '1':
case '2':
case '3':
case '4':
case '5':
case '6':
case '7':
case '8':
case '9':
if (digit_optind != 0 && digit_optind != this_option_optind)
printf ("digits occur in two different argv-elements.\n");
digit_optind = this_option_optind;
printf ("option %c\n", c);
break;
case 'a':
printf ("option a\n");
break;
case 'b':
printf ("option b\n");
break;
case 'c':
printf ("option c with value `%s'\n", optarg);
break;
case 'd':
printf ("option d with value `%s'\n", optarg);
break;
case '?':
break;
default:
printf ("?? getopt returned character code 0%o ??\n", c);
}
}
if (optind < argc)
{
printf ("non-option ARGV-elements: ");
while (optind < argc)
printf ("%s ", argv[optind++]);
printf ("\n");
}
exit (0);
}
#endif /* TEST */

131
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/* Internal declarations for getopt.
Copyright (C) 1989-1994,1996-1999,2001,2003,2004
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
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
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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. */
#ifndef _GETOPT_INT_H
#define _GETOPT_INT_H 1
extern int _getopt_internal (int ___argc, char **___argv,
const char *__shortopts,
const struct option *__longopts, int *__longind,
int __long_only, int __posixly_correct);
/* Reentrant versions which can handle parsing multiple argument
vectors at the same time. */
/* Data type for reentrant functions. */
struct _getopt_data
{
/* These have exactly the same meaning as the corresponding global
variables, except that they are used for the reentrant
versions of getopt. */
int optind;
int opterr;
int optopt;
char *optarg;
/* Internal members. */
/* True if the internal members have been initialized. */
int __initialized;
/* The next char to be scanned in the option-element
in which the last option character we returned was found.
This allows us to pick up the scan where we left off.
If this is zero, or a null string, it means resume the scan
by advancing to the next ARGV-element. */
char *__nextchar;
/* Describe how to deal with options that follow non-option ARGV-elements.
If the caller did not specify anything,
the default is REQUIRE_ORDER if the environment variable
POSIXLY_CORRECT is defined, PERMUTE otherwise.
REQUIRE_ORDER means don't recognize them as options;
stop option processing when the first non-option is seen.
This is what Unix does.
This mode of operation is selected by either setting the environment
variable POSIXLY_CORRECT, or using `+' as the first character
of the list of option characters, or by calling getopt.
PERMUTE is the default. We permute the contents of ARGV as we
scan, so that eventually all the non-options are at the end.
This allows options to be given in any order, even with programs
that were not written to expect this.
RETURN_IN_ORDER is an option available to programs that were
written to expect options and other ARGV-elements in any order
and that care about the ordering of the two. We describe each
non-option ARGV-element as if it were the argument of an option
with character code 1. Using `-' as the first character of the
list of option characters selects this mode of operation.
The special argument `--' forces an end of option-scanning regardless
of the value of `ordering'. In the case of RETURN_IN_ORDER, only
`--' can cause `getopt' to return -1 with `optind' != ARGC. */
enum
{
REQUIRE_ORDER, PERMUTE, RETURN_IN_ORDER
} __ordering;
/* If the POSIXLY_CORRECT environment variable is set
or getopt was called. */
int __posixly_correct;
/* Handle permutation of arguments. */
/* Describe the part of ARGV that contains non-options that have
been skipped. `first_nonopt' is the index in ARGV of the first
of them; `last_nonopt' is the index after the last of them. */
int __first_nonopt;
int __last_nonopt;
#if defined _LIBC && defined USE_NONOPTION_FLAGS
int __nonoption_flags_max_len;
int __nonoption_flags_len;
# endif
};
/* The initializer is necessary to set OPTIND and OPTERR to their
default values and to clear the initialization flag. */
#define _GETOPT_DATA_INITIALIZER { 1, 1 }
extern int _getopt_internal_r (int ___argc, char **___argv,
const char *__shortopts,
const struct option *__longopts, int *__longind,
int __long_only, int __posixly_correct,
struct _getopt_data *__data);
extern int _getopt_long_r (int ___argc, char **___argv,
const char *__shortopts,
const struct option *__longopts, int *__longind,
struct _getopt_data *__data);
extern int _getopt_long_only_r (int ___argc, char **___argv,
const char *__shortopts,
const struct option *__longopts,
int *__longind,
struct _getopt_data *__data);
#endif /* getopt_int.h */

332
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# ===========================================================================
# http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf-archive/ax_pthread.html
# ===========================================================================
#
# SYNOPSIS
#
# AX_PTHREAD([ACTION-IF-FOUND[, ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND]])
#
# DESCRIPTION
#
# This macro figures out how to build C programs using POSIX threads. It
# sets the PTHREAD_LIBS output variable to the threads library and linker
# flags, and the PTHREAD_CFLAGS output variable to any special C compiler
# flags that are needed. (The user can also force certain compiler
# flags/libs to be tested by setting these environment variables.)
#
# Also sets PTHREAD_CC to any special C compiler that is needed for
# multi-threaded programs (defaults to the value of CC otherwise). (This
# is necessary on AIX to use the special cc_r compiler alias.)
#
# NOTE: You are assumed to not only compile your program with these flags,
# but also link it with them as well. e.g. you should link with
# $PTHREAD_CC $CFLAGS $PTHREAD_CFLAGS $LDFLAGS ... $PTHREAD_LIBS $LIBS
#
# If you are only building threads programs, you may wish to use these
# variables in your default LIBS, CFLAGS, and CC:
#
# LIBS="$PTHREAD_LIBS $LIBS"
# CFLAGS="$CFLAGS $PTHREAD_CFLAGS"
# CC="$PTHREAD_CC"
#
# In addition, if the PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE thread-attribute constant
# has a nonstandard name, defines PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE to that name
# (e.g. PTHREAD_CREATE_UNDETACHED on AIX).
#
# Also HAVE_PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT is defined if pthread is found and the
# PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT symbol is defined when compiling with
# PTHREAD_CFLAGS.
#
# ACTION-IF-FOUND is a list of shell commands to run if a threads library
# is found, and ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND is a list of commands to run it if it
# is not found. If ACTION-IF-FOUND is not specified, the default action
# will define HAVE_PTHREAD.
#
# Please let the authors know if this macro fails on any platform, or if
# you have any other suggestions or comments. This macro was based on work
# by SGJ on autoconf scripts for FFTW (http://www.fftw.org/) (with help
# from M. Frigo), as well as ac_pthread and hb_pthread macros posted by
# Alejandro Forero Cuervo to the autoconf macro repository. We are also
# grateful for the helpful feedback of numerous users.
#
# Updated for Autoconf 2.68 by Daniel Richard G.
#
# LICENSE
#
# Copyright (c) 2008 Steven G. Johnson <stevenj@alum.mit.edu>
# Copyright (c) 2011 Daniel Richard G. <skunk@iSKUNK.ORG>
#
# 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 the
# Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your
# option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
# WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 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, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
#
# As a special exception, the respective Autoconf Macro's copyright owner
# gives unlimited permission to copy, distribute and modify the configure
# scripts that are the output of Autoconf when processing the Macro. You
# need not follow the terms of the GNU General Public License when using
# or distributing such scripts, even though portions of the text of the
# Macro appear in them. The GNU General Public License (GPL) does govern
# all other use of the material that constitutes the Autoconf Macro.
#
# This special exception to the GPL applies to versions of the Autoconf
# Macro released by the Autoconf Archive. When you make and distribute a
# modified version of the Autoconf Macro, you may extend this special
# exception to the GPL to apply to your modified version as well.
#serial 21
AU_ALIAS([ACX_PTHREAD], [AX_PTHREAD])
AC_DEFUN([AX_PTHREAD], [
AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST])
AC_LANG_PUSH([C])
ax_pthread_ok=no
# We used to check for pthread.h first, but this fails if pthread.h
# requires special compiler flags (e.g. on True64 or Sequent).
# It gets checked for in the link test anyway.
# First of all, check if the user has set any of the PTHREAD_LIBS,
# etcetera environment variables, and if threads linking works using
# them:
if test x"$PTHREAD_LIBS$PTHREAD_CFLAGS" != x; then
save_CFLAGS="$CFLAGS"
CFLAGS="$CFLAGS $PTHREAD_CFLAGS"
save_LIBS="$LIBS"
LIBS="$PTHREAD_LIBS $LIBS"
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for pthread_join in LIBS=$PTHREAD_LIBS with CFLAGS=$PTHREAD_CFLAGS])
AC_TRY_LINK_FUNC([pthread_join], [ax_pthread_ok=yes])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$ax_pthread_ok])
if test x"$ax_pthread_ok" = xno; then
PTHREAD_LIBS=""
PTHREAD_CFLAGS=""
fi
LIBS="$save_LIBS"
CFLAGS="$save_CFLAGS"
fi
# We must check for the threads library under a number of different
# names; the ordering is very important because some systems
# (e.g. DEC) have both -lpthread and -lpthreads, where one of the
# libraries is broken (non-POSIX).
# Create a list of thread flags to try. Items starting with a "-" are
# C compiler flags, and other items are library names, except for "none"
# which indicates that we try without any flags at all, and "pthread-config"
# which is a program returning the flags for the Pth emulation library.
ax_pthread_flags="pthreads none -Kthread -kthread lthread -pthread -pthreads -mthreads pthread --thread-safe -mt pthread-config"
# The ordering *is* (sometimes) important. Some notes on the
# individual items follow:
# pthreads: AIX (must check this before -lpthread)
# none: in case threads are in libc; should be tried before -Kthread and
# other compiler flags to prevent continual compiler warnings
# -Kthread: Sequent (threads in libc, but -Kthread needed for pthread.h)
# -kthread: FreeBSD kernel threads (preferred to -pthread since SMP-able)
# lthread: LinuxThreads port on FreeBSD (also preferred to -pthread)
# -pthread: Linux/gcc (kernel threads), BSD/gcc (userland threads)
# -pthreads: Solaris/gcc
# -mthreads: Mingw32/gcc, Lynx/gcc
# -mt: Sun Workshop C (may only link SunOS threads [-lthread], but it
# doesn't hurt to check since this sometimes defines pthreads too;
# also defines -D_REENTRANT)
# ... -mt is also the pthreads flag for HP/aCC
# pthread: Linux, etcetera
# --thread-safe: KAI C++
# pthread-config: use pthread-config program (for GNU Pth library)
case ${host_os} in
solaris*)
# On Solaris (at least, for some versions), libc contains stubbed
# (non-functional) versions of the pthreads routines, so link-based
# tests will erroneously succeed. (We need to link with -pthreads/-mt/
# -lpthread.) (The stubs are missing pthread_cleanup_push, or rather
# a function called by this macro, so we could check for that, but
# who knows whether they'll stub that too in a future libc.) So,
# we'll just look for -pthreads and -lpthread first:
ax_pthread_flags="-pthreads pthread -mt -pthread $ax_pthread_flags"
;;
darwin*)
ax_pthread_flags="-pthread $ax_pthread_flags"
;;
esac
# Clang doesn't consider unrecognized options an error unless we specify
# -Werror. We throw in some extra Clang-specific options to ensure that
# this doesn't happen for GCC, which also accepts -Werror.
AC_MSG_CHECKING([if compiler needs -Werror to reject unknown flags])
save_CFLAGS="$CFLAGS"
ax_pthread_extra_flags="-Werror"
CFLAGS="$CFLAGS $ax_pthread_extra_flags -Wunknown-warning-option -Wsizeof-array-argument"
AC_COMPILE_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([int foo(void);],[foo()])],
[AC_MSG_RESULT([yes])],
[ax_pthread_extra_flags=
AC_MSG_RESULT([no])])
CFLAGS="$save_CFLAGS"
if test x"$ax_pthread_ok" = xno; then
for flag in $ax_pthread_flags; do
case $flag in
none)
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether pthreads work without any flags])
;;
-*)
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether pthreads work with $flag])
PTHREAD_CFLAGS="$flag"
;;
pthread-config)
AC_CHECK_PROG([ax_pthread_config], [pthread-config], [yes], [no])
if test x"$ax_pthread_config" = xno; then continue; fi
PTHREAD_CFLAGS="`pthread-config --cflags`"
PTHREAD_LIBS="`pthread-config --ldflags` `pthread-config --libs`"
;;
*)
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for the pthreads library -l$flag])
PTHREAD_LIBS="-l$flag"
;;
esac
save_LIBS="$LIBS"
save_CFLAGS="$CFLAGS"
LIBS="$PTHREAD_LIBS $LIBS"
CFLAGS="$CFLAGS $PTHREAD_CFLAGS $ax_pthread_extra_flags"
# Check for various functions. We must include pthread.h,
# since some functions may be macros. (On the Sequent, we
# need a special flag -Kthread to make this header compile.)
# We check for pthread_join because it is in -lpthread on IRIX
# while pthread_create is in libc. We check for pthread_attr_init
# due to DEC craziness with -lpthreads. We check for
# pthread_cleanup_push because it is one of the few pthread
# functions on Solaris that doesn't have a non-functional libc stub.
# We try pthread_create on general principles.
AC_LINK_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([#include <pthread.h>
static void routine(void *a) { a = 0; }
static void *start_routine(void *a) { return a; }],
[pthread_t th; pthread_attr_t attr;
pthread_create(&th, 0, start_routine, 0);
pthread_join(th, 0);
pthread_attr_init(&attr);
pthread_cleanup_push(routine, 0);
pthread_cleanup_pop(0) /* ; */])],
[ax_pthread_ok=yes],
[])
LIBS="$save_LIBS"
CFLAGS="$save_CFLAGS"
AC_MSG_RESULT([$ax_pthread_ok])
if test "x$ax_pthread_ok" = xyes; then
break;
fi
PTHREAD_LIBS=""
PTHREAD_CFLAGS=""
done
fi
# Various other checks:
if test "x$ax_pthread_ok" = xyes; then
save_LIBS="$LIBS"
LIBS="$PTHREAD_LIBS $LIBS"
save_CFLAGS="$CFLAGS"
CFLAGS="$CFLAGS $PTHREAD_CFLAGS"
# Detect AIX lossage: JOINABLE attribute is called UNDETACHED.
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for joinable pthread attribute])
attr_name=unknown
for attr in PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE PTHREAD_CREATE_UNDETACHED; do
AC_LINK_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([#include <pthread.h>],
[int attr = $attr; return attr /* ; */])],
[attr_name=$attr; break],
[])
done
AC_MSG_RESULT([$attr_name])
if test "$attr_name" != PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE; then
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED([PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE], [$attr_name],
[Define to necessary symbol if this constant
uses a non-standard name on your system.])
fi
AC_MSG_CHECKING([if more special flags are required for pthreads])
flag=no
case ${host_os} in
aix* | freebsd* | darwin*) flag="-D_THREAD_SAFE";;
osf* | hpux*) flag="-D_REENTRANT";;
solaris*)
if test "$GCC" = "yes"; then
flag="-D_REENTRANT"
else
# TODO: What about Clang on Solaris?
flag="-mt -D_REENTRANT"
fi
;;
esac
AC_MSG_RESULT([$flag])
if test "x$flag" != xno; then
PTHREAD_CFLAGS="$flag $PTHREAD_CFLAGS"
fi
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT],
[ax_cv_PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT], [
AC_LINK_IFELSE([AC_LANG_PROGRAM([[#include <pthread.h>]],
[[int i = PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT;]])],
[ax_cv_PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT=yes],
[ax_cv_PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT=no])
])
AS_IF([test "x$ax_cv_PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT" = "xyes"],
[AC_DEFINE([HAVE_PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT], [1], [Have PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT.])])
LIBS="$save_LIBS"
CFLAGS="$save_CFLAGS"
# More AIX lossage: compile with *_r variant
if test "x$GCC" != xyes; then
case $host_os in
aix*)
AS_CASE(["x/$CC"],
[x*/c89|x*/c89_128|x*/c99|x*/c99_128|x*/cc|x*/cc128|x*/xlc|x*/xlc_v6|x*/xlc128|x*/xlc128_v6],
[#handle absolute path differently from PATH based program lookup
AS_CASE(["x$CC"],
[x/*],
[AS_IF([AS_EXECUTABLE_P([${CC}_r])],[PTHREAD_CC="${CC}_r"])],
[AC_CHECK_PROGS([PTHREAD_CC],[${CC}_r],[$CC])])])
;;
esac
fi
fi
test -n "$PTHREAD_CC" || PTHREAD_CC="$CC"
AC_SUBST([PTHREAD_LIBS])
AC_SUBST([PTHREAD_CFLAGS])
AC_SUBST([PTHREAD_CC])
# Finally, execute ACTION-IF-FOUND/ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND:
if test x"$ax_pthread_ok" = xyes; then
ifelse([$1],,[AC_DEFINE([HAVE_PTHREAD],[1],[Define if you have POSIX threads libraries and header files.])],[$1])
:
else
ax_pthread_ok=no
$2
fi
AC_LANG_POP
])dnl AX_PTHREAD

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# getopt.m4 serial 14 (modified version)
dnl Copyright (C) 2002-2006, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
dnl This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
dnl gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
dnl with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
# The getopt module assume you want GNU getopt, with getopt_long etc,
# rather than vanilla POSIX getopt. This means your code should
# always include <getopt.h> for the getopt prototypes.
AC_DEFUN([gl_GETOPT_SUBSTITUTE],
[
AC_LIBOBJ([getopt])
AC_LIBOBJ([getopt1])
gl_GETOPT_SUBSTITUTE_HEADER
])
AC_DEFUN([gl_GETOPT_SUBSTITUTE_HEADER],
[
GETOPT_H=getopt.h
AC_DEFINE([__GETOPT_PREFIX], [[rpl_]],
[Define to rpl_ if the getopt replacement functions and variables
should be used.])
AC_SUBST([GETOPT_H])
])
AC_DEFUN([gl_GETOPT_CHECK_HEADERS],
[
if test -z "$GETOPT_H"; then
AC_CHECK_HEADERS([getopt.h], [], [GETOPT_H=getopt.h])
fi
if test -z "$GETOPT_H"; then
AC_CHECK_FUNCS([getopt_long], [], [GETOPT_H=getopt.h])
fi
dnl BSD getopt_long uses a way to reset option processing, that is different
dnl from GNU and Solaris (which copied the GNU behavior). We support both
dnl GNU and BSD style resetting of getopt_long(), so there's no need to use
dnl GNU getopt_long() on BSD due to different resetting style.
dnl
dnl With getopt_long(), some BSD versions have a bug in handling optional
dnl arguments. This bug appears only if the environment variable
dnl POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, so it shouldn't be too bad in most
dnl cases; probably most don't have that variable set. But if we actually
dnl hit this bug, it is a real problem due to our heavy use of optional
dnl arguments.
dnl
dnl According to CVS logs, the bug was introduced in OpenBSD in 2003-09-22
dnl and copied to FreeBSD in 2004-02-24. It was fixed in both in 2006-09-22,
dnl so the affected versions shouldn't be popular anymore anyway. NetBSD
dnl never had this bug. TODO: What about Darwin and others?
if test -z "$GETOPT_H"; then
AC_CHECK_DECL([optreset],
[AC_DEFINE([HAVE_OPTRESET], 1,
[Define to 1 if getopt.h declares extern int optreset.])],
[], [#include <getopt.h>])
fi
dnl Solaris 10 getopt doesn't handle `+' as a leading character in an
dnl option string (as of 2005-05-05). We don't use that feature, so this
dnl is not a problem for us. Thus, the respective test was removed here.
])
AC_DEFUN([gl_GETOPT_IFELSE],
[
AC_REQUIRE([gl_GETOPT_CHECK_HEADERS])
AS_IF([test -n "$GETOPT_H"], [$1], [$2])
])
AC_DEFUN([gl_GETOPT], [gl_GETOPT_IFELSE([gl_GETOPT_SUBSTITUTE])])

383
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# gettext.m4 serial 63 (gettext-0.18)
dnl Copyright (C) 1995-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
dnl This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
dnl gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
dnl with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
dnl
dnl This file can can be used in projects which are not available under
dnl the GNU General Public License or the GNU Library General Public
dnl License but which still want to provide support for the GNU gettext
dnl functionality.
dnl Please note that the actual code of the GNU gettext library is covered
dnl by the GNU Library General Public License, and the rest of the GNU
dnl gettext package package is covered by the GNU General Public License.
dnl They are *not* in the public domain.
dnl Authors:
dnl Ulrich Drepper <drepper@cygnus.com>, 1995-2000.
dnl Bruno Haible <haible@clisp.cons.org>, 2000-2006, 2008-2010.
dnl Macro to add for using GNU gettext.
dnl Usage: AM_GNU_GETTEXT([INTLSYMBOL], [NEEDSYMBOL], [INTLDIR]).
dnl INTLSYMBOL can be one of 'external', 'no-libtool', 'use-libtool'. The
dnl default (if it is not specified or empty) is 'no-libtool'.
dnl INTLSYMBOL should be 'external' for packages with no intl directory,
dnl and 'no-libtool' or 'use-libtool' for packages with an intl directory.
dnl If INTLSYMBOL is 'use-libtool', then a libtool library
dnl $(top_builddir)/intl/libintl.la will be created (shared and/or static,
dnl depending on --{enable,disable}-{shared,static} and on the presence of
dnl AM-DISABLE-SHARED). If INTLSYMBOL is 'no-libtool', a static library
dnl $(top_builddir)/intl/libintl.a will be created.
dnl If NEEDSYMBOL is specified and is 'need-ngettext', then GNU gettext
dnl implementations (in libc or libintl) without the ngettext() function
dnl will be ignored. If NEEDSYMBOL is specified and is
dnl 'need-formatstring-macros', then GNU gettext implementations that don't
dnl support the ISO C 99 <inttypes.h> formatstring macros will be ignored.
dnl INTLDIR is used to find the intl libraries. If empty,
dnl the value `$(top_builddir)/intl/' is used.
dnl
dnl The result of the configuration is one of three cases:
dnl 1) GNU gettext, as included in the intl subdirectory, will be compiled
dnl and used.
dnl Catalog format: GNU --> install in $(datadir)
dnl Catalog extension: .mo after installation, .gmo in source tree
dnl 2) GNU gettext has been found in the system's C library.
dnl Catalog format: GNU --> install in $(datadir)
dnl Catalog extension: .mo after installation, .gmo in source tree
dnl 3) No internationalization, always use English msgid.
dnl Catalog format: none
dnl Catalog extension: none
dnl If INTLSYMBOL is 'external', only cases 2 and 3 can occur.
dnl The use of .gmo is historical (it was needed to avoid overwriting the
dnl GNU format catalogs when building on a platform with an X/Open gettext),
dnl but we keep it in order not to force irrelevant filename changes on the
dnl maintainers.
dnl
AC_DEFUN([AM_GNU_GETTEXT],
[
dnl Argument checking.
ifelse([$1], [], , [ifelse([$1], [external], , [ifelse([$1], [no-libtool], , [ifelse([$1], [use-libtool], ,
[errprint([ERROR: invalid first argument to AM_GNU_GETTEXT
])])])])])
ifelse(ifelse([$1], [], [old])[]ifelse([$1], [no-libtool], [old]), [old],
[AC_DIAGNOSE([obsolete], [Use of AM_GNU_GETTEXT without [external] argument is deprecated.])])
ifelse([$2], [], , [ifelse([$2], [need-ngettext], , [ifelse([$2], [need-formatstring-macros], ,
[errprint([ERROR: invalid second argument to AM_GNU_GETTEXT
])])])])
define([gt_included_intl],
ifelse([$1], [external],
ifdef([AM_GNU_GETTEXT_][INTL_SUBDIR], [yes], [no]),
[yes]))
define([gt_libtool_suffix_prefix], ifelse([$1], [use-libtool], [l], []))
gt_NEEDS_INIT
AM_GNU_GETTEXT_NEED([$2])
AC_REQUIRE([AM_PO_SUBDIRS])dnl
ifelse(gt_included_intl, yes, [
AC_REQUIRE([AM_INTL_SUBDIR])dnl
])
dnl Prerequisites of AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY.
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_PREPARE_PREFIX])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_RPATH])
dnl Sometimes libintl requires libiconv, so first search for libiconv.
dnl Ideally we would do this search only after the
dnl if test "$USE_NLS" = "yes"; then
dnl if { eval "gt_val=\$$gt_func_gnugettext_libc"; test "$gt_val" != "yes"; }; then
dnl tests. But if configure.in invokes AM_ICONV after AM_GNU_GETTEXT
dnl the configure script would need to contain the same shell code
dnl again, outside any 'if'. There are two solutions:
dnl - Invoke AM_ICONV_LINKFLAGS_BODY here, outside any 'if'.
dnl - Control the expansions in more detail using AC_PROVIDE_IFELSE.
dnl Since AC_PROVIDE_IFELSE is only in autoconf >= 2.52 and not
dnl documented, we avoid it.
ifelse(gt_included_intl, yes, , [
AC_REQUIRE([AM_ICONV_LINKFLAGS_BODY])
])
dnl Sometimes, on MacOS X, libintl requires linking with CoreFoundation.
gt_INTL_MACOSX
dnl Set USE_NLS.
AC_REQUIRE([AM_NLS])
ifelse(gt_included_intl, yes, [
BUILD_INCLUDED_LIBINTL=no
USE_INCLUDED_LIBINTL=no
])
LIBINTL=
LTLIBINTL=
POSUB=
dnl Add a version number to the cache macros.
case " $gt_needs " in
*" need-formatstring-macros "*) gt_api_version=3 ;;
*" need-ngettext "*) gt_api_version=2 ;;
*) gt_api_version=1 ;;
esac
gt_func_gnugettext_libc="gt_cv_func_gnugettext${gt_api_version}_libc"
gt_func_gnugettext_libintl="gt_cv_func_gnugettext${gt_api_version}_libintl"
dnl If we use NLS figure out what method
if test "$USE_NLS" = "yes"; then
gt_use_preinstalled_gnugettext=no
ifelse(gt_included_intl, yes, [
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether included gettext is requested])
AC_ARG_WITH([included-gettext],
[ --with-included-gettext use the GNU gettext library included here],
nls_cv_force_use_gnu_gettext=$withval,
nls_cv_force_use_gnu_gettext=no)
AC_MSG_RESULT([$nls_cv_force_use_gnu_gettext])
nls_cv_use_gnu_gettext="$nls_cv_force_use_gnu_gettext"
if test "$nls_cv_force_use_gnu_gettext" != "yes"; then
])
dnl User does not insist on using GNU NLS library. Figure out what
dnl to use. If GNU gettext is available we use this. Else we have
dnl to fall back to GNU NLS library.
if test $gt_api_version -ge 3; then
gt_revision_test_code='
#ifndef __GNU_GETTEXT_SUPPORTED_REVISION
#define __GNU_GETTEXT_SUPPORTED_REVISION(major) ((major) == 0 ? 0 : -1)
#endif
changequote(,)dnl
typedef int array [2 * (__GNU_GETTEXT_SUPPORTED_REVISION(0) >= 1) - 1];
changequote([,])dnl
'
else
gt_revision_test_code=
fi
if test $gt_api_version -ge 2; then
gt_expression_test_code=' + * ngettext ("", "", 0)'
else
gt_expression_test_code=
fi
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for GNU gettext in libc], [$gt_func_gnugettext_libc],
[AC_TRY_LINK([#include <libintl.h>
$gt_revision_test_code
extern int _nl_msg_cat_cntr;
extern int *_nl_domain_bindings;],
[bindtextdomain ("", "");
return * gettext ("")$gt_expression_test_code + _nl_msg_cat_cntr + *_nl_domain_bindings],
[eval "$gt_func_gnugettext_libc=yes"],
[eval "$gt_func_gnugettext_libc=no"])])
if { eval "gt_val=\$$gt_func_gnugettext_libc"; test "$gt_val" != "yes"; }; then
dnl Sometimes libintl requires libiconv, so first search for libiconv.
ifelse(gt_included_intl, yes, , [
AM_ICONV_LINK
])
dnl Search for libintl and define LIBINTL, LTLIBINTL and INCINTL
dnl accordingly. Don't use AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY([intl],[iconv])
dnl because that would add "-liconv" to LIBINTL and LTLIBINTL
dnl even if libiconv doesn't exist.
AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY([intl])
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for GNU gettext in libintl],
[$gt_func_gnugettext_libintl],
[gt_save_CPPFLAGS="$CPPFLAGS"
CPPFLAGS="$CPPFLAGS $INCINTL"
gt_save_LIBS="$LIBS"
LIBS="$LIBS $LIBINTL"
dnl Now see whether libintl exists and does not depend on libiconv.
AC_TRY_LINK([#include <libintl.h>
$gt_revision_test_code
extern int _nl_msg_cat_cntr;
extern
#ifdef __cplusplus
"C"
#endif
const char *_nl_expand_alias (const char *);],
[bindtextdomain ("", "");
return * gettext ("")$gt_expression_test_code + _nl_msg_cat_cntr + *_nl_expand_alias ("")],
[eval "$gt_func_gnugettext_libintl=yes"],
[eval "$gt_func_gnugettext_libintl=no"])
dnl Now see whether libintl exists and depends on libiconv.
if { eval "gt_val=\$$gt_func_gnugettext_libintl"; test "$gt_val" != yes; } && test -n "$LIBICONV"; then
LIBS="$LIBS $LIBICONV"
AC_TRY_LINK([#include <libintl.h>
$gt_revision_test_code
extern int _nl_msg_cat_cntr;
extern
#ifdef __cplusplus
"C"
#endif
const char *_nl_expand_alias (const char *);],
[bindtextdomain ("", "");
return * gettext ("")$gt_expression_test_code + _nl_msg_cat_cntr + *_nl_expand_alias ("")],
[LIBINTL="$LIBINTL $LIBICONV"
LTLIBINTL="$LTLIBINTL $LTLIBICONV"
eval "$gt_func_gnugettext_libintl=yes"
])
fi
CPPFLAGS="$gt_save_CPPFLAGS"
LIBS="$gt_save_LIBS"])
fi
dnl If an already present or preinstalled GNU gettext() is found,
dnl use it. But if this macro is used in GNU gettext, and GNU
dnl gettext is already preinstalled in libintl, we update this
dnl libintl. (Cf. the install rule in intl/Makefile.in.)
if { eval "gt_val=\$$gt_func_gnugettext_libc"; test "$gt_val" = "yes"; } \
|| { { eval "gt_val=\$$gt_func_gnugettext_libintl"; test "$gt_val" = "yes"; } \
&& test "$PACKAGE" != gettext-runtime \
&& test "$PACKAGE" != gettext-tools; }; then
gt_use_preinstalled_gnugettext=yes
else
dnl Reset the values set by searching for libintl.
LIBINTL=
LTLIBINTL=
INCINTL=
fi
ifelse(gt_included_intl, yes, [
if test "$gt_use_preinstalled_gnugettext" != "yes"; then
dnl GNU gettext is not found in the C library.
dnl Fall back on included GNU gettext library.
nls_cv_use_gnu_gettext=yes
fi
fi
if test "$nls_cv_use_gnu_gettext" = "yes"; then
dnl Mark actions used to generate GNU NLS library.
BUILD_INCLUDED_LIBINTL=yes
USE_INCLUDED_LIBINTL=yes
LIBINTL="ifelse([$3],[],\${top_builddir}/intl,[$3])/libintl.[]gt_libtool_suffix_prefix[]a $LIBICONV $LIBTHREAD"
LTLIBINTL="ifelse([$3],[],\${top_builddir}/intl,[$3])/libintl.[]gt_libtool_suffix_prefix[]a $LTLIBICONV $LTLIBTHREAD"
LIBS=`echo " $LIBS " | sed -e 's/ -lintl / /' -e 's/^ //' -e 's/ $//'`
fi
CATOBJEXT=
if test "$gt_use_preinstalled_gnugettext" = "yes" \
|| test "$nls_cv_use_gnu_gettext" = "yes"; then
dnl Mark actions to use GNU gettext tools.
CATOBJEXT=.gmo
fi
])
if test -n "$INTL_MACOSX_LIBS"; then
if test "$gt_use_preinstalled_gnugettext" = "yes" \
|| test "$nls_cv_use_gnu_gettext" = "yes"; then
dnl Some extra flags are needed during linking.
LIBINTL="$LIBINTL $INTL_MACOSX_LIBS"
LTLIBINTL="$LTLIBINTL $INTL_MACOSX_LIBS"
fi
fi
if test "$gt_use_preinstalled_gnugettext" = "yes" \
|| test "$nls_cv_use_gnu_gettext" = "yes"; then
AC_DEFINE([ENABLE_NLS], [1],
[Define to 1 if translation of program messages to the user's native language
is requested.])
else
USE_NLS=no
fi
fi
AC_MSG_CHECKING([whether to use NLS])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$USE_NLS])
if test "$USE_NLS" = "yes"; then
AC_MSG_CHECKING([where the gettext function comes from])
if test "$gt_use_preinstalled_gnugettext" = "yes"; then
if { eval "gt_val=\$$gt_func_gnugettext_libintl"; test "$gt_val" = "yes"; }; then
gt_source="external libintl"
else
gt_source="libc"
fi
else
gt_source="included intl directory"
fi
AC_MSG_RESULT([$gt_source])
fi
if test "$USE_NLS" = "yes"; then
if test "$gt_use_preinstalled_gnugettext" = "yes"; then
if { eval "gt_val=\$$gt_func_gnugettext_libintl"; test "$gt_val" = "yes"; }; then
AC_MSG_CHECKING([how to link with libintl])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$LIBINTL])
AC_LIB_APPENDTOVAR([CPPFLAGS], [$INCINTL])
fi
dnl For backward compatibility. Some packages may be using this.
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_GETTEXT], [1],
[Define if the GNU gettext() function is already present or preinstalled.])
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_DCGETTEXT], [1],
[Define if the GNU dcgettext() function is already present or preinstalled.])
fi
dnl We need to process the po/ directory.
POSUB=po
fi
ifelse(gt_included_intl, yes, [
dnl If this is used in GNU gettext we have to set BUILD_INCLUDED_LIBINTL
dnl to 'yes' because some of the testsuite requires it.
if test "$PACKAGE" = gettext-runtime || test "$PACKAGE" = gettext-tools; then
BUILD_INCLUDED_LIBINTL=yes
fi
dnl Make all variables we use known to autoconf.
AC_SUBST([BUILD_INCLUDED_LIBINTL])
AC_SUBST([USE_INCLUDED_LIBINTL])
AC_SUBST([CATOBJEXT])
dnl For backward compatibility. Some configure.ins may be using this.
nls_cv_header_intl=
nls_cv_header_libgt=
dnl For backward compatibility. Some Makefiles may be using this.
DATADIRNAME=share
AC_SUBST([DATADIRNAME])
dnl For backward compatibility. Some Makefiles may be using this.
INSTOBJEXT=.mo
AC_SUBST([INSTOBJEXT])
dnl For backward compatibility. Some Makefiles may be using this.
GENCAT=gencat
AC_SUBST([GENCAT])
dnl For backward compatibility. Some Makefiles may be using this.
INTLOBJS=
if test "$USE_INCLUDED_LIBINTL" = yes; then
INTLOBJS="\$(GETTOBJS)"
fi
AC_SUBST([INTLOBJS])
dnl Enable libtool support if the surrounding package wishes it.
INTL_LIBTOOL_SUFFIX_PREFIX=gt_libtool_suffix_prefix
AC_SUBST([INTL_LIBTOOL_SUFFIX_PREFIX])
])
dnl For backward compatibility. Some Makefiles may be using this.
INTLLIBS="$LIBINTL"
AC_SUBST([INTLLIBS])
dnl Make all documented variables known to autoconf.
AC_SUBST([LIBINTL])
AC_SUBST([LTLIBINTL])
AC_SUBST([POSUB])
])
dnl gt_NEEDS_INIT ensures that the gt_needs variable is initialized.
m4_define([gt_NEEDS_INIT],
[
m4_divert_text([DEFAULTS], [gt_needs=])
m4_define([gt_NEEDS_INIT], [])
])
dnl Usage: AM_GNU_GETTEXT_NEED([NEEDSYMBOL])
AC_DEFUN([AM_GNU_GETTEXT_NEED],
[
m4_divert_text([INIT_PREPARE], [gt_needs="$gt_needs $1"])
])
dnl Usage: AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION([gettext-version])
AC_DEFUN([AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION], [])

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# iconv.m4 serial 9 (gettext-0.18)
dnl Copyright (C) 2000-2002, 2007-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
dnl This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
dnl gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
dnl with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
dnl From Bruno Haible.
AC_DEFUN([AM_ICONV_LINKFLAGS_BODY],
[
dnl Prerequisites of AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY.
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_PREPARE_PREFIX])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_RPATH])
dnl Search for libiconv and define LIBICONV, LTLIBICONV and INCICONV
dnl accordingly.
AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY([iconv])
])
AC_DEFUN([AM_ICONV_LINK],
[
dnl Some systems have iconv in libc, some have it in libiconv (OSF/1 and
dnl those with the standalone portable GNU libiconv installed).
AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST]) dnl for cross-compiles
dnl Search for libiconv and define LIBICONV, LTLIBICONV and INCICONV
dnl accordingly.
AC_REQUIRE([AM_ICONV_LINKFLAGS_BODY])
dnl Add $INCICONV to CPPFLAGS before performing the following checks,
dnl because if the user has installed libiconv and not disabled its use
dnl via --without-libiconv-prefix, he wants to use it. The first
dnl AC_TRY_LINK will then fail, the second AC_TRY_LINK will succeed.
am_save_CPPFLAGS="$CPPFLAGS"
AC_LIB_APPENDTOVAR([CPPFLAGS], [$INCICONV])
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for iconv], [am_cv_func_iconv], [
am_cv_func_iconv="no, consider installing GNU libiconv"
am_cv_lib_iconv=no
AC_TRY_LINK([#include <stdlib.h>
#include <iconv.h>],
[iconv_t cd = iconv_open("","");
iconv(cd,NULL,NULL,NULL,NULL);
iconv_close(cd);],
[am_cv_func_iconv=yes])
if test "$am_cv_func_iconv" != yes; then
am_save_LIBS="$LIBS"
LIBS="$LIBS $LIBICONV"
AC_TRY_LINK([#include <stdlib.h>
#include <iconv.h>],
[iconv_t cd = iconv_open("","");
iconv(cd,NULL,NULL,NULL,NULL);
iconv_close(cd);],
[am_cv_lib_iconv=yes]
[am_cv_func_iconv=yes])
LIBS="$am_save_LIBS"
fi
])
if test "$am_cv_func_iconv" = yes; then
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for working iconv], [am_cv_func_iconv_works], [
dnl This tests against bugs in AIX 5.1, HP-UX 11.11, Solaris 10.
am_save_LIBS="$LIBS"
if test $am_cv_lib_iconv = yes; then
LIBS="$LIBS $LIBICONV"
fi
AC_TRY_RUN([
#include <iconv.h>
#include <string.h>
int main ()
{
/* Test against AIX 5.1 bug: Failures are not distinguishable from successful
returns. */
{
iconv_t cd_utf8_to_88591 = iconv_open ("ISO8859-1", "UTF-8");
if (cd_utf8_to_88591 != (iconv_t)(-1))
{
static const char input[] = "\342\202\254"; /* EURO SIGN */
char buf[10];
const char *inptr = input;
size_t inbytesleft = strlen (input);
char *outptr = buf;
size_t outbytesleft = sizeof (buf);
size_t res = iconv (cd_utf8_to_88591,
(char **) &inptr, &inbytesleft,
&outptr, &outbytesleft);
if (res == 0)
return 1;
}
}
/* Test against Solaris 10 bug: Failures are not distinguishable from
successful returns. */
{
iconv_t cd_ascii_to_88591 = iconv_open ("ISO8859-1", "646");
if (cd_ascii_to_88591 != (iconv_t)(-1))
{
static const char input[] = "\263";
char buf[10];
const char *inptr = input;
size_t inbytesleft = strlen (input);
char *outptr = buf;
size_t outbytesleft = sizeof (buf);
size_t res = iconv (cd_ascii_to_88591,
(char **) &inptr, &inbytesleft,
&outptr, &outbytesleft);
if (res == 0)
return 1;
}
}
#if 0 /* This bug could be worked around by the caller. */
/* Test against HP-UX 11.11 bug: Positive return value instead of 0. */
{
iconv_t cd_88591_to_utf8 = iconv_open ("utf8", "iso88591");
if (cd_88591_to_utf8 != (iconv_t)(-1))
{
static const char input[] = "\304rger mit b\366sen B\374bchen ohne Augenma\337";
char buf[50];
const char *inptr = input;
size_t inbytesleft = strlen (input);
char *outptr = buf;
size_t outbytesleft = sizeof (buf);
size_t res = iconv (cd_88591_to_utf8,
(char **) &inptr, &inbytesleft,
&outptr, &outbytesleft);
if ((int)res > 0)
return 1;
}
}
#endif
/* Test against HP-UX 11.11 bug: No converter from EUC-JP to UTF-8 is
provided. */
if (/* Try standardized names. */
iconv_open ("UTF-8", "EUC-JP") == (iconv_t)(-1)
/* Try IRIX, OSF/1 names. */
&& iconv_open ("UTF-8", "eucJP") == (iconv_t)(-1)
/* Try AIX names. */
&& iconv_open ("UTF-8", "IBM-eucJP") == (iconv_t)(-1)
/* Try HP-UX names. */
&& iconv_open ("utf8", "eucJP") == (iconv_t)(-1))
return 1;
return 0;
}], [am_cv_func_iconv_works=yes], [am_cv_func_iconv_works=no],
[case "$host_os" in
aix* | hpux*) am_cv_func_iconv_works="guessing no" ;;
*) am_cv_func_iconv_works="guessing yes" ;;
esac])
LIBS="$am_save_LIBS"
])
case "$am_cv_func_iconv_works" in
*no) am_func_iconv=no am_cv_lib_iconv=no ;;
*) am_func_iconv=yes ;;
esac
else
am_func_iconv=no am_cv_lib_iconv=no
fi
if test "$am_func_iconv" = yes; then
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_ICONV], [1],
[Define if you have the iconv() function and it works.])
fi
if test "$am_cv_lib_iconv" = yes; then
AC_MSG_CHECKING([how to link with libiconv])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$LIBICONV])
else
dnl If $LIBICONV didn't lead to a usable library, we don't need $INCICONV
dnl either.
CPPFLAGS="$am_save_CPPFLAGS"
LIBICONV=
LTLIBICONV=
fi
AC_SUBST([LIBICONV])
AC_SUBST([LTLIBICONV])
])
AC_DEFUN([AM_ICONV],
[
AM_ICONV_LINK
if test "$am_cv_func_iconv" = yes; then
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for iconv declaration])
AC_CACHE_VAL([am_cv_proto_iconv], [
AC_TRY_COMPILE([
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <iconv.h>
extern
#ifdef __cplusplus
"C"
#endif
#if defined(__STDC__) || defined(__cplusplus)
size_t iconv (iconv_t cd, char * *inbuf, size_t *inbytesleft, char * *outbuf, size_t *outbytesleft);
#else
size_t iconv();
#endif
], [], [am_cv_proto_iconv_arg1=""], [am_cv_proto_iconv_arg1="const"])
am_cv_proto_iconv="extern size_t iconv (iconv_t cd, $am_cv_proto_iconv_arg1 char * *inbuf, size_t *inbytesleft, char * *outbuf, size_t *outbytesleft);"])
am_cv_proto_iconv=`echo "[$]am_cv_proto_iconv" | tr -s ' ' | sed -e 's/( /(/'`
AC_MSG_RESULT([
$am_cv_proto_iconv])
AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED([ICONV_CONST], [$am_cv_proto_iconv_arg1],
[Define as const if the declaration of iconv() needs const.])
fi
])

51
m4/intlmacosx.m4 Normal file
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# intlmacosx.m4 serial 3 (gettext-0.18)
dnl Copyright (C) 2004-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
dnl This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
dnl gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
dnl with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
dnl
dnl This file can can be used in projects which are not available under
dnl the GNU General Public License or the GNU Library General Public
dnl License but which still want to provide support for the GNU gettext
dnl functionality.
dnl Please note that the actual code of the GNU gettext library is covered
dnl by the GNU Library General Public License, and the rest of the GNU
dnl gettext package package is covered by the GNU General Public License.
dnl They are *not* in the public domain.
dnl Checks for special options needed on MacOS X.
dnl Defines INTL_MACOSX_LIBS.
AC_DEFUN([gt_INTL_MACOSX],
[
dnl Check for API introduced in MacOS X 10.2.
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for CFPreferencesCopyAppValue],
[gt_cv_func_CFPreferencesCopyAppValue],
[gt_save_LIBS="$LIBS"
LIBS="$LIBS -Wl,-framework -Wl,CoreFoundation"
AC_TRY_LINK([#include <CoreFoundation/CFPreferences.h>],
[CFPreferencesCopyAppValue(NULL, NULL)],
[gt_cv_func_CFPreferencesCopyAppValue=yes],
[gt_cv_func_CFPreferencesCopyAppValue=no])
LIBS="$gt_save_LIBS"])
if test $gt_cv_func_CFPreferencesCopyAppValue = yes; then
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_CFPREFERENCESCOPYAPPVALUE], [1],
[Define to 1 if you have the MacOS X function CFPreferencesCopyAppValue in the CoreFoundation framework.])
fi
dnl Check for API introduced in MacOS X 10.3.
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for CFLocaleCopyCurrent], [gt_cv_func_CFLocaleCopyCurrent],
[gt_save_LIBS="$LIBS"
LIBS="$LIBS -Wl,-framework -Wl,CoreFoundation"
AC_TRY_LINK([#include <CoreFoundation/CFLocale.h>], [CFLocaleCopyCurrent();],
[gt_cv_func_CFLocaleCopyCurrent=yes],
[gt_cv_func_CFLocaleCopyCurrent=no])
LIBS="$gt_save_LIBS"])
if test $gt_cv_func_CFLocaleCopyCurrent = yes; then
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_CFLOCALECOPYCURRENT], [1],
[Define to 1 if you have the MacOS X function CFLocaleCopyCurrent in the CoreFoundation framework.])
fi
INTL_MACOSX_LIBS=
if test $gt_cv_func_CFPreferencesCopyAppValue = yes || test $gt_cv_func_CFLocaleCopyCurrent = yes; then
INTL_MACOSX_LIBS="-Wl,-framework -Wl,CoreFoundation"
fi
AC_SUBST([INTL_MACOSX_LIBS])
])

110
m4/lib-ld.m4 Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,110 @@
# lib-ld.m4 serial 4 (gettext-0.18)
dnl Copyright (C) 1996-2003, 2009-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
dnl This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
dnl gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
dnl with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
dnl Subroutines of libtool.m4,
dnl with replacements s/AC_/AC_LIB/ and s/lt_cv/acl_cv/ to avoid collision
dnl with libtool.m4.
dnl From libtool-1.4. Sets the variable with_gnu_ld to yes or no.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_PROG_LD_GNU],
[AC_CACHE_CHECK([if the linker ($LD) is GNU ld], [acl_cv_prog_gnu_ld],
[# I'd rather use --version here, but apparently some GNU ld's only accept -v.
case `$LD -v 2>&1 </dev/null` in
*GNU* | *'with BFD'*)
acl_cv_prog_gnu_ld=yes ;;
*)
acl_cv_prog_gnu_ld=no ;;
esac])
with_gnu_ld=$acl_cv_prog_gnu_ld
])
dnl From libtool-1.4. Sets the variable LD.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_PROG_LD],
[AC_ARG_WITH([gnu-ld],
[ --with-gnu-ld assume the C compiler uses GNU ld [default=no]],
test "$withval" = no || with_gnu_ld=yes, with_gnu_ld=no)
AC_REQUIRE([AC_PROG_CC])dnl
AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST])dnl
# Prepare PATH_SEPARATOR.
# The user is always right.
if test "${PATH_SEPARATOR+set}" != set; then
echo "#! /bin/sh" >conf$$.sh
echo "exit 0" >>conf$$.sh
chmod +x conf$$.sh
if (PATH="/nonexistent;."; conf$$.sh) >/dev/null 2>&1; then
PATH_SEPARATOR=';'
else
PATH_SEPARATOR=:
fi
rm -f conf$$.sh
fi
ac_prog=ld
if test "$GCC" = yes; then
# Check if gcc -print-prog-name=ld gives a path.
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for ld used by GCC])
case $host in
*-*-mingw*)
# gcc leaves a trailing carriage return which upsets mingw
ac_prog=`($CC -print-prog-name=ld) 2>&5 | tr -d '\015'` ;;
*)
ac_prog=`($CC -print-prog-name=ld) 2>&5` ;;
esac
case $ac_prog in
# Accept absolute paths.
[[\\/]* | [A-Za-z]:[\\/]*)]
[re_direlt='/[^/][^/]*/\.\./']
# Canonicalize the path of ld
ac_prog=`echo $ac_prog| sed 's%\\\\%/%g'`
while echo $ac_prog | grep "$re_direlt" > /dev/null 2>&1; do
ac_prog=`echo $ac_prog| sed "s%$re_direlt%/%"`
done
test -z "$LD" && LD="$ac_prog"
;;
"")
# If it fails, then pretend we aren't using GCC.
ac_prog=ld
;;
*)
# If it is relative, then search for the first ld in PATH.
with_gnu_ld=unknown
;;
esac
elif test "$with_gnu_ld" = yes; then
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for GNU ld])
else
AC_MSG_CHECKING([for non-GNU ld])
fi
AC_CACHE_VAL([acl_cv_path_LD],
[if test -z "$LD"; then
IFS="${IFS= }"; ac_save_ifs="$IFS"; IFS="${IFS}${PATH_SEPARATOR-:}"
for ac_dir in $PATH; do
test -z "$ac_dir" && ac_dir=.
if test -f "$ac_dir/$ac_prog" || test -f "$ac_dir/$ac_prog$ac_exeext"; then
acl_cv_path_LD="$ac_dir/$ac_prog"
# Check to see if the program is GNU ld. I'd rather use --version,
# but apparently some GNU ld's only accept -v.
# Break only if it was the GNU/non-GNU ld that we prefer.
case `"$acl_cv_path_LD" -v 2>&1 < /dev/null` in
*GNU* | *'with BFD'*)
test "$with_gnu_ld" != no && break ;;
*)
test "$with_gnu_ld" != yes && break ;;
esac
fi
done
IFS="$ac_save_ifs"
else
acl_cv_path_LD="$LD" # Let the user override the test with a path.
fi])
LD="$acl_cv_path_LD"
if test -n "$LD"; then
AC_MSG_RESULT([$LD])
else
AC_MSG_RESULT([no])
fi
test -z "$LD" && AC_MSG_ERROR([no acceptable ld found in \$PATH])
AC_LIB_PROG_LD_GNU
])

774
m4/lib-link.m4 Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,774 @@
# lib-link.m4 serial 21 (gettext-0.18)
dnl Copyright (C) 2001-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
dnl This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
dnl gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
dnl with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
dnl From Bruno Haible.
AC_PREREQ([2.54])
dnl AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS(name [, dependencies]) searches for libname and
dnl the libraries corresponding to explicit and implicit dependencies.
dnl Sets and AC_SUBSTs the LIB${NAME} and LTLIB${NAME} variables and
dnl augments the CPPFLAGS variable.
dnl Sets and AC_SUBSTs the LIB${NAME}_PREFIX variable to nonempty if libname
dnl was found in ${LIB${NAME}_PREFIX}/$acl_libdirstem.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS],
[
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_PREPARE_PREFIX])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_RPATH])
pushdef([Name],[translit([$1],[./-], [___])])
pushdef([NAME],[translit([$1],[abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz./-],
[ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ___])])
AC_CACHE_CHECK([how to link with lib[]$1], [ac_cv_lib[]Name[]_libs], [
AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY([$1], [$2])
ac_cv_lib[]Name[]_libs="$LIB[]NAME"
ac_cv_lib[]Name[]_ltlibs="$LTLIB[]NAME"
ac_cv_lib[]Name[]_cppflags="$INC[]NAME"
ac_cv_lib[]Name[]_prefix="$LIB[]NAME[]_PREFIX"
])
LIB[]NAME="$ac_cv_lib[]Name[]_libs"
LTLIB[]NAME="$ac_cv_lib[]Name[]_ltlibs"
INC[]NAME="$ac_cv_lib[]Name[]_cppflags"
LIB[]NAME[]_PREFIX="$ac_cv_lib[]Name[]_prefix"
AC_LIB_APPENDTOVAR([CPPFLAGS], [$INC]NAME)
AC_SUBST([LIB]NAME)
AC_SUBST([LTLIB]NAME)
AC_SUBST([LIB]NAME[_PREFIX])
dnl Also set HAVE_LIB[]NAME so that AC_LIB_HAVE_LINKFLAGS can reuse the
dnl results of this search when this library appears as a dependency.
HAVE_LIB[]NAME=yes
popdef([NAME])
popdef([Name])
])
dnl AC_LIB_HAVE_LINKFLAGS(name, dependencies, includes, testcode, [missing-message])
dnl searches for libname and the libraries corresponding to explicit and
dnl implicit dependencies, together with the specified include files and
dnl the ability to compile and link the specified testcode. The missing-message
dnl defaults to 'no' and may contain additional hints for the user.
dnl If found, it sets and AC_SUBSTs HAVE_LIB${NAME}=yes and the LIB${NAME}
dnl and LTLIB${NAME} variables and augments the CPPFLAGS variable, and
dnl #defines HAVE_LIB${NAME} to 1. Otherwise, it sets and AC_SUBSTs
dnl HAVE_LIB${NAME}=no and LIB${NAME} and LTLIB${NAME} to empty.
dnl Sets and AC_SUBSTs the LIB${NAME}_PREFIX variable to nonempty if libname
dnl was found in ${LIB${NAME}_PREFIX}/$acl_libdirstem.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_HAVE_LINKFLAGS],
[
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_PREPARE_PREFIX])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_RPATH])
pushdef([Name],[translit([$1],[./-], [___])])
pushdef([NAME],[translit([$1],[abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz./-],
[ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ___])])
dnl Search for lib[]Name and define LIB[]NAME, LTLIB[]NAME and INC[]NAME
dnl accordingly.
AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY([$1], [$2])
dnl Add $INC[]NAME to CPPFLAGS before performing the following checks,
dnl because if the user has installed lib[]Name and not disabled its use
dnl via --without-lib[]Name-prefix, he wants to use it.
ac_save_CPPFLAGS="$CPPFLAGS"
AC_LIB_APPENDTOVAR([CPPFLAGS], [$INC]NAME)
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for lib[]$1], [ac_cv_lib[]Name], [
ac_save_LIBS="$LIBS"
dnl If $LIB[]NAME contains some -l options, add it to the end of LIBS,
dnl because these -l options might require -L options that are present in
dnl LIBS. -l options benefit only from the -L options listed before it.
dnl Otherwise, add it to the front of LIBS, because it may be a static
dnl library that depends on another static library that is present in LIBS.
dnl Static libraries benefit only from the static libraries listed after
dnl it.
case " $LIB[]NAME" in
*" -l"*) LIBS="$LIBS $LIB[]NAME" ;;
*) LIBS="$LIB[]NAME $LIBS" ;;
esac
AC_TRY_LINK([$3], [$4],
[ac_cv_lib[]Name=yes],
[ac_cv_lib[]Name='m4_if([$5], [], [no], [[$5]])'])
LIBS="$ac_save_LIBS"
])
if test "$ac_cv_lib[]Name" = yes; then
HAVE_LIB[]NAME=yes
AC_DEFINE([HAVE_LIB]NAME, 1, [Define if you have the lib][$1 library.])
AC_MSG_CHECKING([how to link with lib[]$1])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$LIB[]NAME])
else
HAVE_LIB[]NAME=no
dnl If $LIB[]NAME didn't lead to a usable library, we don't need
dnl $INC[]NAME either.
CPPFLAGS="$ac_save_CPPFLAGS"
LIB[]NAME=
LTLIB[]NAME=
LIB[]NAME[]_PREFIX=
fi
AC_SUBST([HAVE_LIB]NAME)
AC_SUBST([LIB]NAME)
AC_SUBST([LTLIB]NAME)
AC_SUBST([LIB]NAME[_PREFIX])
popdef([NAME])
popdef([Name])
])
dnl Determine the platform dependent parameters needed to use rpath:
dnl acl_libext,
dnl acl_shlibext,
dnl acl_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec,
dnl acl_hardcode_libdir_separator,
dnl acl_hardcode_direct,
dnl acl_hardcode_minus_L.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_RPATH],
[
dnl Tell automake >= 1.10 to complain if config.rpath is missing.
m4_ifdef([AC_REQUIRE_AUX_FILE], [AC_REQUIRE_AUX_FILE([config.rpath])])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_PROG_CC]) dnl we use $CC, $GCC, $LDFLAGS
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_PROG_LD]) dnl we use $LD, $with_gnu_ld
AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST]) dnl we use $host
AC_REQUIRE([AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR_DEFAULT]) dnl we use $ac_aux_dir
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for shared library run path origin], [acl_cv_rpath], [
CC="$CC" GCC="$GCC" LDFLAGS="$LDFLAGS" LD="$LD" with_gnu_ld="$with_gnu_ld" \
${CONFIG_SHELL-/bin/sh} "$ac_aux_dir/config.rpath" "$host" > conftest.sh
. ./conftest.sh
rm -f ./conftest.sh
acl_cv_rpath=done
])
wl="$acl_cv_wl"
acl_libext="$acl_cv_libext"
acl_shlibext="$acl_cv_shlibext"
acl_libname_spec="$acl_cv_libname_spec"
acl_library_names_spec="$acl_cv_library_names_spec"
acl_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec="$acl_cv_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec"
acl_hardcode_libdir_separator="$acl_cv_hardcode_libdir_separator"
acl_hardcode_direct="$acl_cv_hardcode_direct"
acl_hardcode_minus_L="$acl_cv_hardcode_minus_L"
dnl Determine whether the user wants rpath handling at all.
AC_ARG_ENABLE([rpath],
[ --disable-rpath do not hardcode runtime library paths],
:, enable_rpath=yes)
])
dnl AC_LIB_FROMPACKAGE(name, package)
dnl declares that libname comes from the given package. The configure file
dnl will then not have a --with-libname-prefix option but a
dnl --with-package-prefix option. Several libraries can come from the same
dnl package. This declaration must occur before an AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS or similar
dnl macro call that searches for libname.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_FROMPACKAGE],
[
pushdef([NAME],[translit([$1],[abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz./-],
[ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ___])])
define([acl_frompackage_]NAME, [$2])
popdef([NAME])
pushdef([PACK],[$2])
pushdef([PACKUP],[translit(PACK,[abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz./-],
[ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ___])])
define([acl_libsinpackage_]PACKUP,
m4_ifdef([acl_libsinpackage_]PACKUP, [acl_libsinpackage_]PACKUP[[, ]],)[lib$1])
popdef([PACKUP])
popdef([PACK])
])
dnl AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY(name [, dependencies]) searches for libname and
dnl the libraries corresponding to explicit and implicit dependencies.
dnl Sets the LIB${NAME}, LTLIB${NAME} and INC${NAME} variables.
dnl Also, sets the LIB${NAME}_PREFIX variable to nonempty if libname was found
dnl in ${LIB${NAME}_PREFIX}/$acl_libdirstem.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_BODY],
[
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_PREPARE_MULTILIB])
pushdef([NAME],[translit([$1],[abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz./-],
[ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ___])])
pushdef([PACK],[m4_ifdef([acl_frompackage_]NAME, [acl_frompackage_]NAME, lib[$1])])
pushdef([PACKUP],[translit(PACK,[abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz./-],
[ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ___])])
pushdef([PACKLIBS],[m4_ifdef([acl_frompackage_]NAME, [acl_libsinpackage_]PACKUP, lib[$1])])
dnl Autoconf >= 2.61 supports dots in --with options.
pushdef([P_A_C_K],[m4_if(m4_version_compare(m4_defn([m4_PACKAGE_VERSION]),[2.61]),[-1],[translit(PACK,[.],[_])],PACK)])
dnl By default, look in $includedir and $libdir.
use_additional=yes
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([
eval additional_includedir=\"$includedir\"
eval additional_libdir=\"$libdir\"
])
AC_ARG_WITH(P_A_C_K[-prefix],
[[ --with-]]P_A_C_K[[-prefix[=DIR] search for ]PACKLIBS[ in DIR/include and DIR/lib
--without-]]P_A_C_K[[-prefix don't search for ]PACKLIBS[ in includedir and libdir]],
[
if test "X$withval" = "Xno"; then
use_additional=no
else
if test "X$withval" = "X"; then
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([
eval additional_includedir=\"$includedir\"
eval additional_libdir=\"$libdir\"
])
else
additional_includedir="$withval/include"
additional_libdir="$withval/$acl_libdirstem"
if test "$acl_libdirstem2" != "$acl_libdirstem" \
&& ! test -d "$withval/$acl_libdirstem"; then
additional_libdir="$withval/$acl_libdirstem2"
fi
fi
fi
])
dnl Search the library and its dependencies in $additional_libdir and
dnl $LDFLAGS. Using breadth-first-seach.
LIB[]NAME=
LTLIB[]NAME=
INC[]NAME=
LIB[]NAME[]_PREFIX=
dnl HAVE_LIB${NAME} is an indicator that LIB${NAME}, LTLIB${NAME} have been
dnl computed. So it has to be reset here.
HAVE_LIB[]NAME=
rpathdirs=
ltrpathdirs=
names_already_handled=
names_next_round='$1 $2'
while test -n "$names_next_round"; do
names_this_round="$names_next_round"
names_next_round=
for name in $names_this_round; do
already_handled=
for n in $names_already_handled; do
if test "$n" = "$name"; then
already_handled=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$already_handled"; then
names_already_handled="$names_already_handled $name"
dnl See if it was already located by an earlier AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS
dnl or AC_LIB_HAVE_LINKFLAGS call.
uppername=`echo "$name" | sed -e 'y|abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz./-|ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ___|'`
eval value=\"\$HAVE_LIB$uppername\"
if test -n "$value"; then
if test "$value" = yes; then
eval value=\"\$LIB$uppername\"
test -z "$value" || LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }$value"
eval value=\"\$LTLIB$uppername\"
test -z "$value" || LTLIB[]NAME="${LTLIB[]NAME}${LTLIB[]NAME:+ }$value"
else
dnl An earlier call to AC_LIB_HAVE_LINKFLAGS has determined
dnl that this library doesn't exist. So just drop it.
:
fi
else
dnl Search the library lib$name in $additional_libdir and $LDFLAGS
dnl and the already constructed $LIBNAME/$LTLIBNAME.
found_dir=
found_la=
found_so=
found_a=
eval libname=\"$acl_libname_spec\" # typically: libname=lib$name
if test -n "$acl_shlibext"; then
shrext=".$acl_shlibext" # typically: shrext=.so
else
shrext=
fi
if test $use_additional = yes; then
dir="$additional_libdir"
dnl The same code as in the loop below:
dnl First look for a shared library.
if test -n "$acl_shlibext"; then
if test -f "$dir/$libname$shrext"; then
found_dir="$dir"
found_so="$dir/$libname$shrext"
else
if test "$acl_library_names_spec" = '$libname$shrext$versuffix'; then
ver=`(cd "$dir" && \
for f in "$libname$shrext".*; do echo "$f"; done \
| sed -e "s,^$libname$shrext\\\\.,," \
| sort -t '.' -n -r -k1,1 -k2,2 -k3,3 -k4,4 -k5,5 \
| sed 1q ) 2>/dev/null`
if test -n "$ver" && test -f "$dir/$libname$shrext.$ver"; then
found_dir="$dir"
found_so="$dir/$libname$shrext.$ver"
fi
else
eval library_names=\"$acl_library_names_spec\"
for f in $library_names; do
if test -f "$dir/$f"; then
found_dir="$dir"
found_so="$dir/$f"
break
fi
done
fi
fi
fi
dnl Then look for a static library.
if test "X$found_dir" = "X"; then
if test -f "$dir/$libname.$acl_libext"; then
found_dir="$dir"
found_a="$dir/$libname.$acl_libext"
fi
fi
if test "X$found_dir" != "X"; then
if test -f "$dir/$libname.la"; then
found_la="$dir/$libname.la"
fi
fi
fi
if test "X$found_dir" = "X"; then
for x in $LDFLAGS $LTLIB[]NAME; do
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([eval x=\"$x\"])
case "$x" in
-L*)
dir=`echo "X$x" | sed -e 's/^X-L//'`
dnl First look for a shared library.
if test -n "$acl_shlibext"; then
if test -f "$dir/$libname$shrext"; then
found_dir="$dir"
found_so="$dir/$libname$shrext"
else
if test "$acl_library_names_spec" = '$libname$shrext$versuffix'; then
ver=`(cd "$dir" && \
for f in "$libname$shrext".*; do echo "$f"; done \
| sed -e "s,^$libname$shrext\\\\.,," \
| sort -t '.' -n -r -k1,1 -k2,2 -k3,3 -k4,4 -k5,5 \
| sed 1q ) 2>/dev/null`
if test -n "$ver" && test -f "$dir/$libname$shrext.$ver"; then
found_dir="$dir"
found_so="$dir/$libname$shrext.$ver"
fi
else
eval library_names=\"$acl_library_names_spec\"
for f in $library_names; do
if test -f "$dir/$f"; then
found_dir="$dir"
found_so="$dir/$f"
break
fi
done
fi
fi
fi
dnl Then look for a static library.
if test "X$found_dir" = "X"; then
if test -f "$dir/$libname.$acl_libext"; then
found_dir="$dir"
found_a="$dir/$libname.$acl_libext"
fi
fi
if test "X$found_dir" != "X"; then
if test -f "$dir/$libname.la"; then
found_la="$dir/$libname.la"
fi
fi
;;
esac
if test "X$found_dir" != "X"; then
break
fi
done
fi
if test "X$found_dir" != "X"; then
dnl Found the library.
LTLIB[]NAME="${LTLIB[]NAME}${LTLIB[]NAME:+ }-L$found_dir -l$name"
if test "X$found_so" != "X"; then
dnl Linking with a shared library. We attempt to hardcode its
dnl directory into the executable's runpath, unless it's the
dnl standard /usr/lib.
if test "$enable_rpath" = no \
|| test "X$found_dir" = "X/usr/$acl_libdirstem" \
|| test "X$found_dir" = "X/usr/$acl_libdirstem2"; then
dnl No hardcoding is needed.
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }$found_so"
else
dnl Use an explicit option to hardcode DIR into the resulting
dnl binary.
dnl Potentially add DIR to ltrpathdirs.
dnl The ltrpathdirs will be appended to $LTLIBNAME at the end.
haveit=
for x in $ltrpathdirs; do
if test "X$x" = "X$found_dir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
ltrpathdirs="$ltrpathdirs $found_dir"
fi
dnl The hardcoding into $LIBNAME is system dependent.
if test "$acl_hardcode_direct" = yes; then
dnl Using DIR/libNAME.so during linking hardcodes DIR into the
dnl resulting binary.
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }$found_so"
else
if test -n "$acl_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec" && test "$acl_hardcode_minus_L" = no; then
dnl Use an explicit option to hardcode DIR into the resulting
dnl binary.
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }$found_so"
dnl Potentially add DIR to rpathdirs.
dnl The rpathdirs will be appended to $LIBNAME at the end.
haveit=
for x in $rpathdirs; do
if test "X$x" = "X$found_dir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
rpathdirs="$rpathdirs $found_dir"
fi
else
dnl Rely on "-L$found_dir".
dnl But don't add it if it's already contained in the LDFLAGS
dnl or the already constructed $LIBNAME
haveit=
for x in $LDFLAGS $LIB[]NAME; do
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([eval x=\"$x\"])
if test "X$x" = "X-L$found_dir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }-L$found_dir"
fi
if test "$acl_hardcode_minus_L" != no; then
dnl FIXME: Not sure whether we should use
dnl "-L$found_dir -l$name" or "-L$found_dir $found_so"
dnl here.
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }$found_so"
else
dnl We cannot use $acl_hardcode_runpath_var and LD_RUN_PATH
dnl here, because this doesn't fit in flags passed to the
dnl compiler. So give up. No hardcoding. This affects only
dnl very old systems.
dnl FIXME: Not sure whether we should use
dnl "-L$found_dir -l$name" or "-L$found_dir $found_so"
dnl here.
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }-l$name"
fi
fi
fi
fi
else
if test "X$found_a" != "X"; then
dnl Linking with a static library.
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }$found_a"
else
dnl We shouldn't come here, but anyway it's good to have a
dnl fallback.
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }-L$found_dir -l$name"
fi
fi
dnl Assume the include files are nearby.
additional_includedir=
case "$found_dir" in
*/$acl_libdirstem | */$acl_libdirstem/)
basedir=`echo "X$found_dir" | sed -e 's,^X,,' -e "s,/$acl_libdirstem/"'*$,,'`
if test "$name" = '$1'; then
LIB[]NAME[]_PREFIX="$basedir"
fi
additional_includedir="$basedir/include"
;;
*/$acl_libdirstem2 | */$acl_libdirstem2/)
basedir=`echo "X$found_dir" | sed -e 's,^X,,' -e "s,/$acl_libdirstem2/"'*$,,'`
if test "$name" = '$1'; then
LIB[]NAME[]_PREFIX="$basedir"
fi
additional_includedir="$basedir/include"
;;
esac
if test "X$additional_includedir" != "X"; then
dnl Potentially add $additional_includedir to $INCNAME.
dnl But don't add it
dnl 1. if it's the standard /usr/include,
dnl 2. if it's /usr/local/include and we are using GCC on Linux,
dnl 3. if it's already present in $CPPFLAGS or the already
dnl constructed $INCNAME,
dnl 4. if it doesn't exist as a directory.
if test "X$additional_includedir" != "X/usr/include"; then
haveit=
if test "X$additional_includedir" = "X/usr/local/include"; then
if test -n "$GCC"; then
case $host_os in
linux* | gnu* | k*bsd*-gnu) haveit=yes;;
esac
fi
fi
if test -z "$haveit"; then
for x in $CPPFLAGS $INC[]NAME; do
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([eval x=\"$x\"])
if test "X$x" = "X-I$additional_includedir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
if test -d "$additional_includedir"; then
dnl Really add $additional_includedir to $INCNAME.
INC[]NAME="${INC[]NAME}${INC[]NAME:+ }-I$additional_includedir"
fi
fi
fi
fi
fi
dnl Look for dependencies.
if test -n "$found_la"; then
dnl Read the .la file. It defines the variables
dnl dlname, library_names, old_library, dependency_libs, current,
dnl age, revision, installed, dlopen, dlpreopen, libdir.
save_libdir="$libdir"
case "$found_la" in
*/* | *\\*) . "$found_la" ;;
*) . "./$found_la" ;;
esac
libdir="$save_libdir"
dnl We use only dependency_libs.
for dep in $dependency_libs; do
case "$dep" in
-L*)
additional_libdir=`echo "X$dep" | sed -e 's/^X-L//'`
dnl Potentially add $additional_libdir to $LIBNAME and $LTLIBNAME.
dnl But don't add it
dnl 1. if it's the standard /usr/lib,
dnl 2. if it's /usr/local/lib and we are using GCC on Linux,
dnl 3. if it's already present in $LDFLAGS or the already
dnl constructed $LIBNAME,
dnl 4. if it doesn't exist as a directory.
if test "X$additional_libdir" != "X/usr/$acl_libdirstem" \
&& test "X$additional_libdir" != "X/usr/$acl_libdirstem2"; then
haveit=
if test "X$additional_libdir" = "X/usr/local/$acl_libdirstem" \
|| test "X$additional_libdir" = "X/usr/local/$acl_libdirstem2"; then
if test -n "$GCC"; then
case $host_os in
linux* | gnu* | k*bsd*-gnu) haveit=yes;;
esac
fi
fi
if test -z "$haveit"; then
haveit=
for x in $LDFLAGS $LIB[]NAME; do
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([eval x=\"$x\"])
if test "X$x" = "X-L$additional_libdir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
if test -d "$additional_libdir"; then
dnl Really add $additional_libdir to $LIBNAME.
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }-L$additional_libdir"
fi
fi
haveit=
for x in $LDFLAGS $LTLIB[]NAME; do
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([eval x=\"$x\"])
if test "X$x" = "X-L$additional_libdir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
if test -d "$additional_libdir"; then
dnl Really add $additional_libdir to $LTLIBNAME.
LTLIB[]NAME="${LTLIB[]NAME}${LTLIB[]NAME:+ }-L$additional_libdir"
fi
fi
fi
fi
;;
-R*)
dir=`echo "X$dep" | sed -e 's/^X-R//'`
if test "$enable_rpath" != no; then
dnl Potentially add DIR to rpathdirs.
dnl The rpathdirs will be appended to $LIBNAME at the end.
haveit=
for x in $rpathdirs; do
if test "X$x" = "X$dir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
rpathdirs="$rpathdirs $dir"
fi
dnl Potentially add DIR to ltrpathdirs.
dnl The ltrpathdirs will be appended to $LTLIBNAME at the end.
haveit=
for x in $ltrpathdirs; do
if test "X$x" = "X$dir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
ltrpathdirs="$ltrpathdirs $dir"
fi
fi
;;
-l*)
dnl Handle this in the next round.
names_next_round="$names_next_round "`echo "X$dep" | sed -e 's/^X-l//'`
;;
*.la)
dnl Handle this in the next round. Throw away the .la's
dnl directory; it is already contained in a preceding -L
dnl option.
names_next_round="$names_next_round "`echo "X$dep" | sed -e 's,^X.*/,,' -e 's,^lib,,' -e 's,\.la$,,'`
;;
*)
dnl Most likely an immediate library name.
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }$dep"
LTLIB[]NAME="${LTLIB[]NAME}${LTLIB[]NAME:+ }$dep"
;;
esac
done
fi
else
dnl Didn't find the library; assume it is in the system directories
dnl known to the linker and runtime loader. (All the system
dnl directories known to the linker should also be known to the
dnl runtime loader, otherwise the system is severely misconfigured.)
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }-l$name"
LTLIB[]NAME="${LTLIB[]NAME}${LTLIB[]NAME:+ }-l$name"
fi
fi
fi
done
done
if test "X$rpathdirs" != "X"; then
if test -n "$acl_hardcode_libdir_separator"; then
dnl Weird platform: only the last -rpath option counts, the user must
dnl pass all path elements in one option. We can arrange that for a
dnl single library, but not when more than one $LIBNAMEs are used.
alldirs=
for found_dir in $rpathdirs; do
alldirs="${alldirs}${alldirs:+$acl_hardcode_libdir_separator}$found_dir"
done
dnl Note: acl_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec uses $libdir and $wl.
acl_save_libdir="$libdir"
libdir="$alldirs"
eval flag=\"$acl_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec\"
libdir="$acl_save_libdir"
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }$flag"
else
dnl The -rpath options are cumulative.
for found_dir in $rpathdirs; do
acl_save_libdir="$libdir"
libdir="$found_dir"
eval flag=\"$acl_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec\"
libdir="$acl_save_libdir"
LIB[]NAME="${LIB[]NAME}${LIB[]NAME:+ }$flag"
done
fi
fi
if test "X$ltrpathdirs" != "X"; then
dnl When using libtool, the option that works for both libraries and
dnl executables is -R. The -R options are cumulative.
for found_dir in $ltrpathdirs; do
LTLIB[]NAME="${LTLIB[]NAME}${LTLIB[]NAME:+ }-R$found_dir"
done
fi
popdef([P_A_C_K])
popdef([PACKLIBS])
popdef([PACKUP])
popdef([PACK])
popdef([NAME])
])
dnl AC_LIB_APPENDTOVAR(VAR, CONTENTS) appends the elements of CONTENTS to VAR,
dnl unless already present in VAR.
dnl Works only for CPPFLAGS, not for LIB* variables because that sometimes
dnl contains two or three consecutive elements that belong together.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_APPENDTOVAR],
[
for element in [$2]; do
haveit=
for x in $[$1]; do
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([eval x=\"$x\"])
if test "X$x" = "X$element"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
[$1]="${[$1]}${[$1]:+ }$element"
fi
done
])
dnl For those cases where a variable contains several -L and -l options
dnl referring to unknown libraries and directories, this macro determines the
dnl necessary additional linker options for the runtime path.
dnl AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_FROM_LIBS([LDADDVAR], [LIBSVALUE], [USE-LIBTOOL])
dnl sets LDADDVAR to linker options needed together with LIBSVALUE.
dnl If USE-LIBTOOL evaluates to non-empty, linking with libtool is assumed,
dnl otherwise linking without libtool is assumed.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS_FROM_LIBS],
[
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_RPATH])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_PREPARE_MULTILIB])
$1=
if test "$enable_rpath" != no; then
if test -n "$acl_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec" && test "$acl_hardcode_minus_L" = no; then
dnl Use an explicit option to hardcode directories into the resulting
dnl binary.
rpathdirs=
next=
for opt in $2; do
if test -n "$next"; then
dir="$next"
dnl No need to hardcode the standard /usr/lib.
if test "X$dir" != "X/usr/$acl_libdirstem" \
&& test "X$dir" != "X/usr/$acl_libdirstem2"; then
rpathdirs="$rpathdirs $dir"
fi
next=
else
case $opt in
-L) next=yes ;;
-L*) dir=`echo "X$opt" | sed -e 's,^X-L,,'`
dnl No need to hardcode the standard /usr/lib.
if test "X$dir" != "X/usr/$acl_libdirstem" \
&& test "X$dir" != "X/usr/$acl_libdirstem2"; then
rpathdirs="$rpathdirs $dir"
fi
next= ;;
*) next= ;;
esac
fi
done
if test "X$rpathdirs" != "X"; then
if test -n ""$3""; then
dnl libtool is used for linking. Use -R options.
for dir in $rpathdirs; do
$1="${$1}${$1:+ }-R$dir"
done
else
dnl The linker is used for linking directly.
if test -n "$acl_hardcode_libdir_separator"; then
dnl Weird platform: only the last -rpath option counts, the user
dnl must pass all path elements in one option.
alldirs=
for dir in $rpathdirs; do
alldirs="${alldirs}${alldirs:+$acl_hardcode_libdir_separator}$dir"
done
acl_save_libdir="$libdir"
libdir="$alldirs"
eval flag=\"$acl_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec\"
libdir="$acl_save_libdir"
$1="$flag"
else
dnl The -rpath options are cumulative.
for dir in $rpathdirs; do
acl_save_libdir="$libdir"
libdir="$dir"
eval flag=\"$acl_hardcode_libdir_flag_spec\"
libdir="$acl_save_libdir"
$1="${$1}${$1:+ }$flag"
done
fi
fi
fi
fi
fi
AC_SUBST([$1])
])

224
m4/lib-prefix.m4 Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,224 @@
# lib-prefix.m4 serial 7 (gettext-0.18)
dnl Copyright (C) 2001-2005, 2008-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
dnl This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
dnl gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
dnl with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
dnl From Bruno Haible.
dnl AC_LIB_ARG_WITH is synonymous to AC_ARG_WITH in autoconf-2.13, and
dnl similar to AC_ARG_WITH in autoconf 2.52...2.57 except that is doesn't
dnl require excessive bracketing.
ifdef([AC_HELP_STRING],
[AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_ARG_WITH], [AC_ARG_WITH([$1],[[$2]],[$3],[$4])])],
[AC_DEFUN([AC_][LIB_ARG_WITH], [AC_ARG_WITH([$1],[$2],[$3],[$4])])])
dnl AC_LIB_PREFIX adds to the CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS the flags that are needed
dnl to access previously installed libraries. The basic assumption is that
dnl a user will want packages to use other packages he previously installed
dnl with the same --prefix option.
dnl This macro is not needed if only AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS is used to locate
dnl libraries, but is otherwise very convenient.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_PREFIX],
[
AC_BEFORE([$0], [AC_LIB_LINKFLAGS])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_PROG_CC])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_PREPARE_MULTILIB])
AC_REQUIRE([AC_LIB_PREPARE_PREFIX])
dnl By default, look in $includedir and $libdir.
use_additional=yes
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([
eval additional_includedir=\"$includedir\"
eval additional_libdir=\"$libdir\"
])
AC_LIB_ARG_WITH([lib-prefix],
[ --with-lib-prefix[=DIR] search for libraries in DIR/include and DIR/lib
--without-lib-prefix don't search for libraries in includedir and libdir],
[
if test "X$withval" = "Xno"; then
use_additional=no
else
if test "X$withval" = "X"; then
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([
eval additional_includedir=\"$includedir\"
eval additional_libdir=\"$libdir\"
])
else
additional_includedir="$withval/include"
additional_libdir="$withval/$acl_libdirstem"
fi
fi
])
if test $use_additional = yes; then
dnl Potentially add $additional_includedir to $CPPFLAGS.
dnl But don't add it
dnl 1. if it's the standard /usr/include,
dnl 2. if it's already present in $CPPFLAGS,
dnl 3. if it's /usr/local/include and we are using GCC on Linux,
dnl 4. if it doesn't exist as a directory.
if test "X$additional_includedir" != "X/usr/include"; then
haveit=
for x in $CPPFLAGS; do
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([eval x=\"$x\"])
if test "X$x" = "X-I$additional_includedir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
if test "X$additional_includedir" = "X/usr/local/include"; then
if test -n "$GCC"; then
case $host_os in
linux* | gnu* | k*bsd*-gnu) haveit=yes;;
esac
fi
fi
if test -z "$haveit"; then
if test -d "$additional_includedir"; then
dnl Really add $additional_includedir to $CPPFLAGS.
CPPFLAGS="${CPPFLAGS}${CPPFLAGS:+ }-I$additional_includedir"
fi
fi
fi
fi
dnl Potentially add $additional_libdir to $LDFLAGS.
dnl But don't add it
dnl 1. if it's the standard /usr/lib,
dnl 2. if it's already present in $LDFLAGS,
dnl 3. if it's /usr/local/lib and we are using GCC on Linux,
dnl 4. if it doesn't exist as a directory.
if test "X$additional_libdir" != "X/usr/$acl_libdirstem"; then
haveit=
for x in $LDFLAGS; do
AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([eval x=\"$x\"])
if test "X$x" = "X-L$additional_libdir"; then
haveit=yes
break
fi
done
if test -z "$haveit"; then
if test "X$additional_libdir" = "X/usr/local/$acl_libdirstem"; then
if test -n "$GCC"; then
case $host_os in
linux*) haveit=yes;;
esac
fi
fi
if test -z "$haveit"; then
if test -d "$additional_libdir"; then
dnl Really add $additional_libdir to $LDFLAGS.
LDFLAGS="${LDFLAGS}${LDFLAGS:+ }-L$additional_libdir"
fi
fi
fi
fi
fi
])
dnl AC_LIB_PREPARE_PREFIX creates variables acl_final_prefix,
dnl acl_final_exec_prefix, containing the values to which $prefix and
dnl $exec_prefix will expand at the end of the configure script.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_PREPARE_PREFIX],
[
dnl Unfortunately, prefix and exec_prefix get only finally determined
dnl at the end of configure.
if test "X$prefix" = "XNONE"; then
acl_final_prefix="$ac_default_prefix"
else
acl_final_prefix="$prefix"
fi
if test "X$exec_prefix" = "XNONE"; then
acl_final_exec_prefix='${prefix}'
else
acl_final_exec_prefix="$exec_prefix"
fi
acl_save_prefix="$prefix"
prefix="$acl_final_prefix"
eval acl_final_exec_prefix=\"$acl_final_exec_prefix\"
prefix="$acl_save_prefix"
])
dnl AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX([statement]) evaluates statement, with the
dnl variables prefix and exec_prefix bound to the values they will have
dnl at the end of the configure script.
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_WITH_FINAL_PREFIX],
[
acl_save_prefix="$prefix"
prefix="$acl_final_prefix"
acl_save_exec_prefix="$exec_prefix"
exec_prefix="$acl_final_exec_prefix"
$1
exec_prefix="$acl_save_exec_prefix"
prefix="$acl_save_prefix"
])
dnl AC_LIB_PREPARE_MULTILIB creates
dnl - a variable acl_libdirstem, containing the basename of the libdir, either
dnl "lib" or "lib64" or "lib/64",
dnl - a variable acl_libdirstem2, as a secondary possible value for
dnl acl_libdirstem, either the same as acl_libdirstem or "lib/sparcv9" or
dnl "lib/amd64".
AC_DEFUN([AC_LIB_PREPARE_MULTILIB],
[
dnl There is no formal standard regarding lib and lib64.
dnl On glibc systems, the current practice is that on a system supporting
dnl 32-bit and 64-bit instruction sets or ABIs, 64-bit libraries go under
dnl $prefix/lib64 and 32-bit libraries go under $prefix/lib. We determine
dnl the compiler's default mode by looking at the compiler's library search
dnl path. If at least one of its elements ends in /lib64 or points to a
dnl directory whose absolute pathname ends in /lib64, we assume a 64-bit ABI.
dnl Otherwise we use the default, namely "lib".
dnl On Solaris systems, the current practice is that on a system supporting
dnl 32-bit and 64-bit instruction sets or ABIs, 64-bit libraries go under
dnl $prefix/lib/64 (which is a symlink to either $prefix/lib/sparcv9 or
dnl $prefix/lib/amd64) and 32-bit libraries go under $prefix/lib.
AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST])
acl_libdirstem=lib
acl_libdirstem2=
case "$host_os" in
solaris*)
dnl See Solaris 10 Software Developer Collection > Solaris 64-bit Developer's Guide > The Development Environment
dnl <http://docs.sun.com/app/docs/doc/816-5138/dev-env?l=en&a=view>.
dnl "Portable Makefiles should refer to any library directories using the 64 symbolic link."
dnl But we want to recognize the sparcv9 or amd64 subdirectory also if the
dnl symlink is missing, so we set acl_libdirstem2 too.
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for 64-bit host], [gl_cv_solaris_64bit],
[AC_EGREP_CPP([sixtyfour bits], [
#ifdef _LP64
sixtyfour bits
#endif
], [gl_cv_solaris_64bit=yes], [gl_cv_solaris_64bit=no])
])
if test $gl_cv_solaris_64bit = yes; then
acl_libdirstem=lib/64
case "$host_cpu" in
sparc*) acl_libdirstem2=lib/sparcv9 ;;
i*86 | x86_64) acl_libdirstem2=lib/amd64 ;;
esac
fi
;;
*)
searchpath=`(LC_ALL=C $CC -print-search-dirs) 2>/dev/null | sed -n -e 's,^libraries: ,,p' | sed -e 's,^=,,'`
if test -n "$searchpath"; then
acl_save_IFS="${IFS= }"; IFS=":"
for searchdir in $searchpath; do
if test -d "$searchdir"; then
case "$searchdir" in
*/lib64/ | */lib64 ) acl_libdirstem=lib64 ;;
*/../ | */.. )
# Better ignore directories of this form. They are misleading.
;;
*) searchdir=`cd "$searchdir" && pwd`
case "$searchdir" in
*/lib64 ) acl_libdirstem=lib64 ;;
esac ;;
esac
fi
done
IFS="$acl_save_IFS"
fi
;;
esac
test -n "$acl_libdirstem2" || acl_libdirstem2="$acl_libdirstem"
])

8369
m4/libtool.m4 vendored Normal file

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437
m4/ltoptions.m4 vendored Normal file
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# Helper functions for option handling. -*- Autoconf -*-
#
# Copyright (C) 2004-2005, 2007-2009, 2011-2015 Free Software
# Foundation, Inc.
# Written by Gary V. Vaughan, 2004
#
# This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation gives
# unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, with or without
# modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
# serial 8 ltoptions.m4
# This is to help aclocal find these macros, as it can't see m4_define.
AC_DEFUN([LTOPTIONS_VERSION], [m4_if([1])])
# _LT_MANGLE_OPTION(MACRO-NAME, OPTION-NAME)
# ------------------------------------------
m4_define([_LT_MANGLE_OPTION],
[[_LT_OPTION_]m4_bpatsubst($1__$2, [[^a-zA-Z0-9_]], [_])])
# _LT_SET_OPTION(MACRO-NAME, OPTION-NAME)
# ---------------------------------------
# Set option OPTION-NAME for macro MACRO-NAME, and if there is a
# matching handler defined, dispatch to it. Other OPTION-NAMEs are
# saved as a flag.
m4_define([_LT_SET_OPTION],
[m4_define(_LT_MANGLE_OPTION([$1], [$2]))dnl
m4_ifdef(_LT_MANGLE_DEFUN([$1], [$2]),
_LT_MANGLE_DEFUN([$1], [$2]),
[m4_warning([Unknown $1 option '$2'])])[]dnl
])
# _LT_IF_OPTION(MACRO-NAME, OPTION-NAME, IF-SET, [IF-NOT-SET])
# ------------------------------------------------------------
# Execute IF-SET if OPTION is set, IF-NOT-SET otherwise.
m4_define([_LT_IF_OPTION],
[m4_ifdef(_LT_MANGLE_OPTION([$1], [$2]), [$3], [$4])])
# _LT_UNLESS_OPTIONS(MACRO-NAME, OPTION-LIST, IF-NOT-SET)
# -------------------------------------------------------
# Execute IF-NOT-SET unless all options in OPTION-LIST for MACRO-NAME
# are set.
m4_define([_LT_UNLESS_OPTIONS],
[m4_foreach([_LT_Option], m4_split(m4_normalize([$2])),
[m4_ifdef(_LT_MANGLE_OPTION([$1], _LT_Option),
[m4_define([$0_found])])])[]dnl
m4_ifdef([$0_found], [m4_undefine([$0_found])], [$3
])[]dnl
])
# _LT_SET_OPTIONS(MACRO-NAME, OPTION-LIST)
# ----------------------------------------
# OPTION-LIST is a space-separated list of Libtool options associated
# with MACRO-NAME. If any OPTION has a matching handler declared with
# LT_OPTION_DEFINE, dispatch to that macro; otherwise complain about
# the unknown option and exit.
m4_defun([_LT_SET_OPTIONS],
[# Set options
m4_foreach([_LT_Option], m4_split(m4_normalize([$2])),
[_LT_SET_OPTION([$1], _LT_Option)])
m4_if([$1],[LT_INIT],[
dnl
dnl Simply set some default values (i.e off) if boolean options were not
dnl specified:
_LT_UNLESS_OPTIONS([LT_INIT], [dlopen], [enable_dlopen=no
])
_LT_UNLESS_OPTIONS([LT_INIT], [win32-dll], [enable_win32_dll=no
])
dnl
dnl If no reference was made to various pairs of opposing options, then
dnl we run the default mode handler for the pair. For example, if neither
dnl 'shared' nor 'disable-shared' was passed, we enable building of shared
dnl archives by default:
_LT_UNLESS_OPTIONS([LT_INIT], [shared disable-shared], [_LT_ENABLE_SHARED])
_LT_UNLESS_OPTIONS([LT_INIT], [static disable-static], [_LT_ENABLE_STATIC])
_LT_UNLESS_OPTIONS([LT_INIT], [pic-only no-pic], [_LT_WITH_PIC])
_LT_UNLESS_OPTIONS([LT_INIT], [fast-install disable-fast-install],
[_LT_ENABLE_FAST_INSTALL])
_LT_UNLESS_OPTIONS([LT_INIT], [aix-soname=aix aix-soname=both aix-soname=svr4],
[_LT_WITH_AIX_SONAME([aix])])
])
])# _LT_SET_OPTIONS
## --------------------------------- ##
## Macros to handle LT_INIT options. ##
## --------------------------------- ##
# _LT_MANGLE_DEFUN(MACRO-NAME, OPTION-NAME)
# -----------------------------------------
m4_define([_LT_MANGLE_DEFUN],
[[_LT_OPTION_DEFUN_]m4_bpatsubst(m4_toupper([$1__$2]), [[^A-Z0-9_]], [_])])
# LT_OPTION_DEFINE(MACRO-NAME, OPTION-NAME, CODE)
# -----------------------------------------------
m4_define([LT_OPTION_DEFINE],
[m4_define(_LT_MANGLE_DEFUN([$1], [$2]), [$3])[]dnl
])# LT_OPTION_DEFINE
# dlopen
# ------
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [dlopen], [enable_dlopen=yes
])
AU_DEFUN([AC_LIBTOOL_DLOPEN],
[_LT_SET_OPTION([LT_INIT], [dlopen])
AC_DIAGNOSE([obsolete],
[$0: Remove this warning and the call to _LT_SET_OPTION when you
put the 'dlopen' option into LT_INIT's first parameter.])
])
dnl aclocal-1.4 backwards compatibility:
dnl AC_DEFUN([AC_LIBTOOL_DLOPEN], [])
# win32-dll
# ---------
# Declare package support for building win32 dll's.
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [win32-dll],
[enable_win32_dll=yes
case $host in
*-*-cygwin* | *-*-mingw* | *-*-pw32* | *-*-cegcc*)
AC_CHECK_TOOL(AS, as, false)
AC_CHECK_TOOL(DLLTOOL, dlltool, false)
AC_CHECK_TOOL(OBJDUMP, objdump, false)
;;
esac
test -z "$AS" && AS=as
_LT_DECL([], [AS], [1], [Assembler program])dnl
test -z "$DLLTOOL" && DLLTOOL=dlltool
_LT_DECL([], [DLLTOOL], [1], [DLL creation program])dnl
test -z "$OBJDUMP" && OBJDUMP=objdump
_LT_DECL([], [OBJDUMP], [1], [Object dumper program])dnl
])# win32-dll
AU_DEFUN([AC_LIBTOOL_WIN32_DLL],
[AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST])dnl
_LT_SET_OPTION([LT_INIT], [win32-dll])
AC_DIAGNOSE([obsolete],
[$0: Remove this warning and the call to _LT_SET_OPTION when you
put the 'win32-dll' option into LT_INIT's first parameter.])
])
dnl aclocal-1.4 backwards compatibility:
dnl AC_DEFUN([AC_LIBTOOL_WIN32_DLL], [])
# _LT_ENABLE_SHARED([DEFAULT])
# ----------------------------
# implement the --enable-shared flag, and supports the 'shared' and
# 'disable-shared' LT_INIT options.
# DEFAULT is either 'yes' or 'no'. If omitted, it defaults to 'yes'.
m4_define([_LT_ENABLE_SHARED],
[m4_define([_LT_ENABLE_SHARED_DEFAULT], [m4_if($1, no, no, yes)])dnl
AC_ARG_ENABLE([shared],
[AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-shared@<:@=PKGS@:>@],
[build shared libraries @<:@default=]_LT_ENABLE_SHARED_DEFAULT[@:>@])],
[p=${PACKAGE-default}
case $enableval in
yes) enable_shared=yes ;;
no) enable_shared=no ;;
*)
enable_shared=no
# Look at the argument we got. We use all the common list separators.
lt_save_ifs=$IFS; IFS=$IFS$PATH_SEPARATOR,
for pkg in $enableval; do
IFS=$lt_save_ifs
if test "X$pkg" = "X$p"; then
enable_shared=yes
fi
done
IFS=$lt_save_ifs
;;
esac],
[enable_shared=]_LT_ENABLE_SHARED_DEFAULT)
_LT_DECL([build_libtool_libs], [enable_shared], [0],
[Whether or not to build shared libraries])
])# _LT_ENABLE_SHARED
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [shared], [_LT_ENABLE_SHARED([yes])])
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [disable-shared], [_LT_ENABLE_SHARED([no])])
# Old names:
AC_DEFUN([AC_ENABLE_SHARED],
[_LT_SET_OPTION([LT_INIT], m4_if([$1], [no], [disable-])[shared])
])
AC_DEFUN([AC_DISABLE_SHARED],
[_LT_SET_OPTION([LT_INIT], [disable-shared])
])
AU_DEFUN([AM_ENABLE_SHARED], [AC_ENABLE_SHARED($@)])
AU_DEFUN([AM_DISABLE_SHARED], [AC_DISABLE_SHARED($@)])
dnl aclocal-1.4 backwards compatibility:
dnl AC_DEFUN([AM_ENABLE_SHARED], [])
dnl AC_DEFUN([AM_DISABLE_SHARED], [])
# _LT_ENABLE_STATIC([DEFAULT])
# ----------------------------
# implement the --enable-static flag, and support the 'static' and
# 'disable-static' LT_INIT options.
# DEFAULT is either 'yes' or 'no'. If omitted, it defaults to 'yes'.
m4_define([_LT_ENABLE_STATIC],
[m4_define([_LT_ENABLE_STATIC_DEFAULT], [m4_if($1, no, no, yes)])dnl
AC_ARG_ENABLE([static],
[AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-static@<:@=PKGS@:>@],
[build static libraries @<:@default=]_LT_ENABLE_STATIC_DEFAULT[@:>@])],
[p=${PACKAGE-default}
case $enableval in
yes) enable_static=yes ;;
no) enable_static=no ;;
*)
enable_static=no
# Look at the argument we got. We use all the common list separators.
lt_save_ifs=$IFS; IFS=$IFS$PATH_SEPARATOR,
for pkg in $enableval; do
IFS=$lt_save_ifs
if test "X$pkg" = "X$p"; then
enable_static=yes
fi
done
IFS=$lt_save_ifs
;;
esac],
[enable_static=]_LT_ENABLE_STATIC_DEFAULT)
_LT_DECL([build_old_libs], [enable_static], [0],
[Whether or not to build static libraries])
])# _LT_ENABLE_STATIC
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [static], [_LT_ENABLE_STATIC([yes])])
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [disable-static], [_LT_ENABLE_STATIC([no])])
# Old names:
AC_DEFUN([AC_ENABLE_STATIC],
[_LT_SET_OPTION([LT_INIT], m4_if([$1], [no], [disable-])[static])
])
AC_DEFUN([AC_DISABLE_STATIC],
[_LT_SET_OPTION([LT_INIT], [disable-static])
])
AU_DEFUN([AM_ENABLE_STATIC], [AC_ENABLE_STATIC($@)])
AU_DEFUN([AM_DISABLE_STATIC], [AC_DISABLE_STATIC($@)])
dnl aclocal-1.4 backwards compatibility:
dnl AC_DEFUN([AM_ENABLE_STATIC], [])
dnl AC_DEFUN([AM_DISABLE_STATIC], [])
# _LT_ENABLE_FAST_INSTALL([DEFAULT])
# ----------------------------------
# implement the --enable-fast-install flag, and support the 'fast-install'
# and 'disable-fast-install' LT_INIT options.
# DEFAULT is either 'yes' or 'no'. If omitted, it defaults to 'yes'.
m4_define([_LT_ENABLE_FAST_INSTALL],
[m4_define([_LT_ENABLE_FAST_INSTALL_DEFAULT], [m4_if($1, no, no, yes)])dnl
AC_ARG_ENABLE([fast-install],
[AS_HELP_STRING([--enable-fast-install@<:@=PKGS@:>@],
[optimize for fast installation @<:@default=]_LT_ENABLE_FAST_INSTALL_DEFAULT[@:>@])],
[p=${PACKAGE-default}
case $enableval in
yes) enable_fast_install=yes ;;
no) enable_fast_install=no ;;
*)
enable_fast_install=no
# Look at the argument we got. We use all the common list separators.
lt_save_ifs=$IFS; IFS=$IFS$PATH_SEPARATOR,
for pkg in $enableval; do
IFS=$lt_save_ifs
if test "X$pkg" = "X$p"; then
enable_fast_install=yes
fi
done
IFS=$lt_save_ifs
;;
esac],
[enable_fast_install=]_LT_ENABLE_FAST_INSTALL_DEFAULT)
_LT_DECL([fast_install], [enable_fast_install], [0],
[Whether or not to optimize for fast installation])dnl
])# _LT_ENABLE_FAST_INSTALL
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [fast-install], [_LT_ENABLE_FAST_INSTALL([yes])])
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [disable-fast-install], [_LT_ENABLE_FAST_INSTALL([no])])
# Old names:
AU_DEFUN([AC_ENABLE_FAST_INSTALL],
[_LT_SET_OPTION([LT_INIT], m4_if([$1], [no], [disable-])[fast-install])
AC_DIAGNOSE([obsolete],
[$0: Remove this warning and the call to _LT_SET_OPTION when you put
the 'fast-install' option into LT_INIT's first parameter.])
])
AU_DEFUN([AC_DISABLE_FAST_INSTALL],
[_LT_SET_OPTION([LT_INIT], [disable-fast-install])
AC_DIAGNOSE([obsolete],
[$0: Remove this warning and the call to _LT_SET_OPTION when you put
the 'disable-fast-install' option into LT_INIT's first parameter.])
])
dnl aclocal-1.4 backwards compatibility:
dnl AC_DEFUN([AC_ENABLE_FAST_INSTALL], [])
dnl AC_DEFUN([AM_DISABLE_FAST_INSTALL], [])
# _LT_WITH_AIX_SONAME([DEFAULT])
# ----------------------------------
# implement the --with-aix-soname flag, and support the `aix-soname=aix'
# and `aix-soname=both' and `aix-soname=svr4' LT_INIT options. DEFAULT
# is either `aix', `both' or `svr4'. If omitted, it defaults to `aix'.
m4_define([_LT_WITH_AIX_SONAME],
[m4_define([_LT_WITH_AIX_SONAME_DEFAULT], [m4_if($1, svr4, svr4, m4_if($1, both, both, aix))])dnl
shared_archive_member_spec=
case $host,$enable_shared in
power*-*-aix[[5-9]]*,yes)
AC_MSG_CHECKING([which variant of shared library versioning to provide])
AC_ARG_WITH([aix-soname],
[AS_HELP_STRING([--with-aix-soname=aix|svr4|both],
[shared library versioning (aka "SONAME") variant to provide on AIX, @<:@default=]_LT_WITH_AIX_SONAME_DEFAULT[@:>@.])],
[case $withval in
aix|svr4|both)
;;
*)
AC_MSG_ERROR([Unknown argument to --with-aix-soname])
;;
esac
lt_cv_with_aix_soname=$with_aix_soname],
[AC_CACHE_VAL([lt_cv_with_aix_soname],
[lt_cv_with_aix_soname=]_LT_WITH_AIX_SONAME_DEFAULT)
with_aix_soname=$lt_cv_with_aix_soname])
AC_MSG_RESULT([$with_aix_soname])
if test aix != "$with_aix_soname"; then
# For the AIX way of multilib, we name the shared archive member
# based on the bitwidth used, traditionally 'shr.o' or 'shr_64.o',
# and 'shr.imp' or 'shr_64.imp', respectively, for the Import File.
# Even when GNU compilers ignore OBJECT_MODE but need '-maix64' flag,
# the AIX toolchain works better with OBJECT_MODE set (default 32).
if test 64 = "${OBJECT_MODE-32}"; then
shared_archive_member_spec=shr_64
else
shared_archive_member_spec=shr
fi
fi
;;
*)
with_aix_soname=aix
;;
esac
_LT_DECL([], [shared_archive_member_spec], [0],
[Shared archive member basename, for filename based shared library versioning on AIX])dnl
])# _LT_WITH_AIX_SONAME
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [aix-soname=aix], [_LT_WITH_AIX_SONAME([aix])])
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [aix-soname=both], [_LT_WITH_AIX_SONAME([both])])
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [aix-soname=svr4], [_LT_WITH_AIX_SONAME([svr4])])
# _LT_WITH_PIC([MODE])
# --------------------
# implement the --with-pic flag, and support the 'pic-only' and 'no-pic'
# LT_INIT options.
# MODE is either 'yes' or 'no'. If omitted, it defaults to 'both'.
m4_define([_LT_WITH_PIC],
[AC_ARG_WITH([pic],
[AS_HELP_STRING([--with-pic@<:@=PKGS@:>@],
[try to use only PIC/non-PIC objects @<:@default=use both@:>@])],
[lt_p=${PACKAGE-default}
case $withval in
yes|no) pic_mode=$withval ;;
*)
pic_mode=default
# Look at the argument we got. We use all the common list separators.
lt_save_ifs=$IFS; IFS=$IFS$PATH_SEPARATOR,
for lt_pkg in $withval; do
IFS=$lt_save_ifs
if test "X$lt_pkg" = "X$lt_p"; then
pic_mode=yes
fi
done
IFS=$lt_save_ifs
;;
esac],
[pic_mode=m4_default([$1], [default])])
_LT_DECL([], [pic_mode], [0], [What type of objects to build])dnl
])# _LT_WITH_PIC
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [pic-only], [_LT_WITH_PIC([yes])])
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LT_INIT], [no-pic], [_LT_WITH_PIC([no])])
# Old name:
AU_DEFUN([AC_LIBTOOL_PICMODE],
[_LT_SET_OPTION([LT_INIT], [pic-only])
AC_DIAGNOSE([obsolete],
[$0: Remove this warning and the call to _LT_SET_OPTION when you
put the 'pic-only' option into LT_INIT's first parameter.])
])
dnl aclocal-1.4 backwards compatibility:
dnl AC_DEFUN([AC_LIBTOOL_PICMODE], [])
## ----------------- ##
## LTDL_INIT Options ##
## ----------------- ##
m4_define([_LTDL_MODE], [])
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LTDL_INIT], [nonrecursive],
[m4_define([_LTDL_MODE], [nonrecursive])])
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LTDL_INIT], [recursive],
[m4_define([_LTDL_MODE], [recursive])])
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LTDL_INIT], [subproject],
[m4_define([_LTDL_MODE], [subproject])])
m4_define([_LTDL_TYPE], [])
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LTDL_INIT], [installable],
[m4_define([_LTDL_TYPE], [installable])])
LT_OPTION_DEFINE([LTDL_INIT], [convenience],
[m4_define([_LTDL_TYPE], [convenience])])

124
m4/ltsugar.m4 vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,124 @@
# ltsugar.m4 -- libtool m4 base layer. -*-Autoconf-*-
#
# Copyright (C) 2004-2005, 2007-2008, 2011-2015 Free Software
# Foundation, Inc.
# Written by Gary V. Vaughan, 2004
#
# This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation gives
# unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, with or without
# modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
# serial 6 ltsugar.m4
# This is to help aclocal find these macros, as it can't see m4_define.
AC_DEFUN([LTSUGAR_VERSION], [m4_if([0.1])])
# lt_join(SEP, ARG1, [ARG2...])
# -----------------------------
# Produce ARG1SEPARG2...SEPARGn, omitting [] arguments and their
# associated separator.
# Needed until we can rely on m4_join from Autoconf 2.62, since all earlier
# versions in m4sugar had bugs.
m4_define([lt_join],
[m4_if([$#], [1], [],
[$#], [2], [[$2]],
[m4_if([$2], [], [], [[$2]_])$0([$1], m4_shift(m4_shift($@)))])])
m4_define([_lt_join],
[m4_if([$#$2], [2], [],
[m4_if([$2], [], [], [[$1$2]])$0([$1], m4_shift(m4_shift($@)))])])
# lt_car(LIST)
# lt_cdr(LIST)
# ------------
# Manipulate m4 lists.
# These macros are necessary as long as will still need to support
# Autoconf-2.59, which quotes differently.
m4_define([lt_car], [[$1]])
m4_define([lt_cdr],
[m4_if([$#], 0, [m4_fatal([$0: cannot be called without arguments])],
[$#], 1, [],
[m4_dquote(m4_shift($@))])])
m4_define([lt_unquote], $1)
# lt_append(MACRO-NAME, STRING, [SEPARATOR])
# ------------------------------------------
# Redefine MACRO-NAME to hold its former content plus 'SEPARATOR''STRING'.
# Note that neither SEPARATOR nor STRING are expanded; they are appended
# to MACRO-NAME as is (leaving the expansion for when MACRO-NAME is invoked).
# No SEPARATOR is output if MACRO-NAME was previously undefined (different
# than defined and empty).
#
# This macro is needed until we can rely on Autoconf 2.62, since earlier
# versions of m4sugar mistakenly expanded SEPARATOR but not STRING.
m4_define([lt_append],
[m4_define([$1],
m4_ifdef([$1], [m4_defn([$1])[$3]])[$2])])
# lt_combine(SEP, PREFIX-LIST, INFIX, SUFFIX1, [SUFFIX2...])
# ----------------------------------------------------------
# Produce a SEP delimited list of all paired combinations of elements of
# PREFIX-LIST with SUFFIX1 through SUFFIXn. Each element of the list
# has the form PREFIXmINFIXSUFFIXn.
# Needed until we can rely on m4_combine added in Autoconf 2.62.
m4_define([lt_combine],
[m4_if(m4_eval([$# > 3]), [1],
[m4_pushdef([_Lt_sep], [m4_define([_Lt_sep], m4_defn([lt_car]))])]]dnl
[[m4_foreach([_Lt_prefix], [$2],
[m4_foreach([_Lt_suffix],
]m4_dquote(m4_dquote(m4_shift(m4_shift(m4_shift($@)))))[,
[_Lt_sep([$1])[]m4_defn([_Lt_prefix])[$3]m4_defn([_Lt_suffix])])])])])
# lt_if_append_uniq(MACRO-NAME, VARNAME, [SEPARATOR], [UNIQ], [NOT-UNIQ])
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Iff MACRO-NAME does not yet contain VARNAME, then append it (delimited
# by SEPARATOR if supplied) and expand UNIQ, else NOT-UNIQ.
m4_define([lt_if_append_uniq],
[m4_ifdef([$1],
[m4_if(m4_index([$3]m4_defn([$1])[$3], [$3$2$3]), [-1],
[lt_append([$1], [$2], [$3])$4],
[$5])],
[lt_append([$1], [$2], [$3])$4])])
# lt_dict_add(DICT, KEY, VALUE)
# -----------------------------
m4_define([lt_dict_add],
[m4_define([$1($2)], [$3])])
# lt_dict_add_subkey(DICT, KEY, SUBKEY, VALUE)
# --------------------------------------------
m4_define([lt_dict_add_subkey],
[m4_define([$1($2:$3)], [$4])])
# lt_dict_fetch(DICT, KEY, [SUBKEY])
# ----------------------------------
m4_define([lt_dict_fetch],
[m4_ifval([$3],
m4_ifdef([$1($2:$3)], [m4_defn([$1($2:$3)])]),
m4_ifdef([$1($2)], [m4_defn([$1($2)])]))])
# lt_if_dict_fetch(DICT, KEY, [SUBKEY], VALUE, IF-TRUE, [IF-FALSE])
# -----------------------------------------------------------------
m4_define([lt_if_dict_fetch],
[m4_if(lt_dict_fetch([$1], [$2], [$3]), [$4],
[$5],
[$6])])
# lt_dict_filter(DICT, [SUBKEY], VALUE, [SEPARATOR], KEY, [...])
# --------------------------------------------------------------
m4_define([lt_dict_filter],
[m4_if([$5], [], [],
[lt_join(m4_quote(m4_default([$4], [[, ]])),
lt_unquote(m4_split(m4_normalize(m4_foreach(_Lt_key, lt_car([m4_shiftn(4, $@)]),
[lt_if_dict_fetch([$1], _Lt_key, [$2], [$3], [_Lt_key ])])))))])[]dnl
])

23
m4/ltversion.m4 vendored Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
# ltversion.m4 -- version numbers -*- Autoconf -*-
#
# Copyright (C) 2004, 2011-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# Written by Scott James Remnant, 2004
#
# This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation gives
# unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, with or without
# modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
# @configure_input@
# serial 4179 ltversion.m4
# This file is part of GNU Libtool
m4_define([LT_PACKAGE_VERSION], [2.4.6])
m4_define([LT_PACKAGE_REVISION], [2.4.6])
AC_DEFUN([LTVERSION_VERSION],
[macro_version='2.4.6'
macro_revision='2.4.6'
_LT_DECL(, macro_version, 0, [Which release of libtool.m4 was used?])
_LT_DECL(, macro_revision, 0)
])

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