Gary V. Vaughan e46561b83e My thanks to Alexandre Duret-Lutz <adl@gnu.org> for the insight
required to write this changeset -- especially that ltmain.sh is
the same on any machine for a given release, which I hadn't
noticed for some bizarre reason: It turns out that generating
distributed files from configure causes no end of hassle, as
evidenced by the many patches I've generated over the last few
days to try and get the dist and distcheck make rules to work.
Instead of all that hair, we now simply generate our distributed
files (now including ltmain.sh) with make rules -- and since
automake creates make variables for all AC_SUBSTs, that is really
easy.  The code looks a lot more like automake and autoconf
Makefile.ams now, and doesn't have all the rough edges the earlier
hacky solution suffered from.  We still generate libtool from
config.status, but that is not a distributed file, and doesn't
break the golden rule.  Besides, there is way more going on there
than a bunch of substitutions:

* Makefile.am (edit): New common sed substitutions for files now
generated by make instead of config.status.
(CLEANFILES): Clean new tmp files.
(EXTRA_DIST): Add ltmain.sh.
(vcl-tmp): Reinstated.
(m4/ltversion.m4, config/ltmain.sh): New rules.  Generate from
here instead of config.status.
(libtoolize): Ditto.
(libtool): Call config.status to regenerate if necessary.
(dist-hook): Removed.
* config/ltmain.in: Moved here from top_srcdir.
* README-alpha: Update instructions to check AS_SHELL_SANITIZE is
up to date.
* bootstrap: Rewritten.  Generate m4/ltversion.m4 and
config/ltmain.sh because configure depends on them.
* configure.ac (AC_CONFIG_SRCDIR): Use libtoolize.in now that
ltmain.in has moved.
(AC_CONFIG_FILES): Don't generate distributed files,
config/ltmain.sh and libtoolize from config.status.  We have make
rules to do that now.
2004-07-30 23:02:39 +00:00
2004-01-04 20:45:24 +00:00

This is GNU Libtool, a generic library support script.  Libtool hides
the complexity of using shared libraries behind a consistent, portable
interface.

To use libtool, add the new generic library building commands to your
Makefile, Makefile.in, or Makefile.am.  See the documentation for
details.

Libtool supports building static libraries on all platforms.

Shared library support has been implemented for these platforms:
  AIX 3.x, 4.x (*-*-aix3*, *-*-aix4*)
  BeOS (*-*-beos*)
  BSD/OS 2.1, 3.x, 4.x (*-*-bsdi2.1, *-*-bsdi3*, *-*-bsdi4*)
  Darwin 5.x, 6.x a.k.a Mac OS X (*-*-darwin*) [see note]
  Digital/UNIX 3.x, 4.x, a.k.a. OSF/1 (*-*-osf3*, *-*-osf4*)
  DG/UX R4.11, R4.12, R4.20 (*-*-dguxR411*, *-*-dguxR412*, *-*-dguxR420*)
  FreeBSD 2.x, 3.x, 4.x (*-*-freebsd2*, *-*-freebsd3*, *-*-freebsd4*)
  GNU Hurd (*-*-gnu*)
  GNU/Linux ELF (*-*-linux-gnu*, except aout, coff, and oldld)
  HP-UX 9.x, 10.x, 11.x (*-*-hpux9*, *-*-hpux10*, *-*-hpux11*) [see note]
  IRIX 5.x, 6.x (*-*-irix5*, *-*-irix6*)
  NCR MP-RAS 3.x (*-ncr-sysv4.3*) [see note]
  NEWS-OS Release 6 (*-*-newsos6)
  Motorola System V 4 (mk88-motorola-sysv4) [see note]
  NetBSD 1.x (*-*-netbsd*)
  OpenBSD 2.x (*-*-openbsd*)
  OS/2 using EMX (*-*-os2*)
  Reliant Unix (*-sni-sysv4) [see note]
  SCO OpenServer 5.x (*-*-sco3.2v5*)
  SCO UnixWare 7.x (*-*-sysv5*)
  Solaris 2.x (*-*-solaris2*)
  SunOS 4.x, a.k.a. Solaris 1.x  (*-*-sunos4*)
  UnixWare 2.x (*-*-sysv4.2uw2*)
  UTS 4.x (*-*-uts4*)
  All ELF targets that use both the GNU C compiler (gcc) and GNU ld

NOTE: Some HP-UX sed programs are horribly broken, and cannot handle
libtool's requirements, so users may report unusual problems.  There
is no workaround except to install a working sed (such as GNU sed) on
these systems.

NOTE: The vendor-distributed NCR MP-RAS cc programs emits copyright
on standard error that confuse tests on size of conftest.err.  The
workaround is to specify CC when run configure with CC='cc -Hnocopyr'.

NOTE: Due to a bug in autoconf cc isn't supported on Motorola System V 4.
You can only use gcc. This bug will hopefully be fixed in autoconf 2.14.

NOTE: Any earlier DG/UX system with ELF executables, such as R3.10 or
R4.10, is also likely to work, but hasn't been explicitly tested.

NOTE: Libtool has only been tested with the Siemens C-compiler and
an old version of gcc provided by Marco Walther you can find on
ftp://ftp.mch.sni.de/sni/mr/pd/gnu/gcc/gcc.2.7.2.3 on Reliant Unix.  

NOTE: libtool.m4, ltdl.m4 and the configure.ac files are marked to use
autoconf-mode, which is distributed with GNU Emacs 21, and all recent
releases of XEmacs.

NOTE: In some cases support is more limited on Darwin 5.x because of
the use of zsh as the default system shell.

Libtool's home page is:

  http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/libtool.html

See the file NEWS for a description of recent changes to libtool.

See the file INSTALL for instructions on how to build and install
libtool.

See the info node (libtool)Tested Platforms. (or the file
doc/PLATFORMS) for a list of platforms that libtool shared library
support was tested on.

If you have any suggestions or bug reports, or you wish to port
libtool to a new platform, please send electronic mail to the libtool
mailing list <libtool@gnu.org> or bug reports to <bug-libtool@gnu.org>.
Don't forget to mention the version of libtool that you are currently
using (by typing `libtool --version').

People have complained that they find the version numbering scheme
under which libtool is released confusing... it works like this:

	<major-number>.<minor-number>

Releases with a <major-number> less than 1 were not yet feature
complete.  If libtool ever undergoes a major rewrite or substantial
restructuring, the <major-number> will be incremented again.  In the
mean time, whenever we make a stable release it will have its 
<minor-number> incremented with respect to the previous stable
release.

So that alpha releases can be distinguished from stable releases,
we append a letter to them, starting with `a' and continuing
alphabetically:

	<major-number>.<minor-number><alpha> 

Since alpha releases are start with the code of a previous stable
release, the <major-number> and <minor-number> are the same as the
stable release they started with.  So release `1.3a' is the first
alpha release after stable release `1.3', and so on.

To complicate matters slightly we always increment the letter in the
repository before *and* after making a release tarball.  This means
that "odd" letters (a,c,e,g...) only exist in the repository, and
"even" letters are used instantaneously for an alpha release.  For
example, you can tell that libtool-1.3c is an alpha release that is a
snapshot of the repository taken between official alpha releases
1.3b and 1.3d.  Since the odd lettered alpha release number potentially
cover many states of the tree, we somtimes qualify such releases by
adding the cvs version of the ChangeLog:

	$ libtool --version
	ltmain.sh (GNU libtool) 1.3c (1.666 2000/01/14 13:50:21)

Finally, if we need to make a patch release to fix bugs in a stable
release, and the development on the trunk has made the tree unstable,
we use a third number, so:

	<major-number>.<minor-number>.<patch number>

	$ libtool --version
	ltconfig (GNU libtool) 1.3.4 (1.385.2.196 1999/12/07 21:47:57)

There might be several patch releases to the last stable release,
and all happening concurrently with alpha releases.  For example,
libtool-1.3.4 and libtool-1.3b might be available at the same time:
`1.3.4' is the fourth patch release after stable release `1.3';
`1.3b' is the first alpha release after stable release `1.3'.

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