Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view configure.usage @ 611:38db05db9cb5
[xemacs-hg @ 2001-06-08 12:21:09 by ben]
------ gc-in-window-procedure fixes ------
alloc.c: Create "post-gc actions", to avoid those dreaded "GC during window
procedure" problems.
event-msw.c: Abort, clean and simple, when GC in window procedure. We want
to flush these puppies out.
glyphs-msw.c: Use a post-gc action when destroying subwindows.
lisp.h: Declare register_post_gc_action().
scrollbar-msw.c: Use a post-gc action when unshowing scrollbar windows, if in gc.
redisplay.c: Add comment about the utter evilness of what's going down here.
------ cygwin setitimer fixes ------
Makefile.in.in: Compile profile.c only when HAVE_SETITIMER.
nt.c: Style fixes.
nt.c: Move setitimer() emulation to win32.c, because Cygwin needs it too.
profile.c: Make sure we don't compile if no setitimer(). Use qxe_setitimer()
instead of just plain setitimer().
signal.c: Define qxe_setitimer() as an encapsulation around setitimer() --
call setitimer() directly unless Cygwin or MS Win, in which case
we use our simulated version in win32.c.
systime.h: Prototype mswindows_setitimer() and qxe_setitimer(). Long
comment about "qxe" and the policy regarding encapsulation.
win32.c: Move setitimer() emulation here, so Cygwin can use it.
Rename a couple of functions and variables to be longer and more
descriptive. In setitimer_helper_proc(), send the signal
using either mswindows_raise() or (on Cygwin) kill(). If for
some reason we are still getting lockups, we'll change the kill()
to directly invoke the signal handlers.
------ windows shell fixes ------
callproc.c, ntproc.c: Comments about how these two files must die.
callproc.c: On MS Windows, init shell-file-name from SHELL, then COMSPEC,
not just COMSPEC. (more correct and closer to FSF.) Don't
force a value for SHELL into the environment. (Comments added
to explain why not.)
nt.c: Don't shove a fabricated SHELL into the environment. See above.
------ misc fixes ------
glyphs-shared.c: Style correction.
xemacs-faq.texi: Merge in the rest of Hrvoje's Windows FAQ. Redo section 7
to update current reality and add condensed versions of
new changes for 21.1 and 21.4. (Not quite done for 21.4.)
Lots more Windows updates.
process.el: Need to quote a null
argument, too. From Dan Holmsand.
startup.el:
startup.el: Call MS Windows init function.
win32-native.el: Correct comments at top. Correctly handle passing arguments
to Cygwin programs and to bash. Fix quoting of zero-length
arguments (from Dan Holmsand). Set shell-command-switch based
on shell-file-name, which in turn comes from env var SHELL.
author | ben |
---|---|
date | Fri, 08 Jun 2001 12:21:27 +0000 |
parents | 45ba69404a1f |
children | 277f059a321b |
line wrap: on
line source
Usage: configure [--OPTION[=VALUE] ...] [CONFIGURATION] Set compilation and installation parameters for XEmacs, and report. Note that for most of the following options, you can explicitly enable them using `--OPTION=yes' and explicitly disable them using `--OPTION=no'. This is especially useful for auto-detected options. The option `--without-FEATURE' is a synonym for `--with-FEATURE=no'. Options marked with a (*) are auto-detected. Many features require external packages to be installed first. Get them from ftp://ftp.xemacs.org/pub/xemacs/aux. Use colons (or quoted spaces) to separate directory names in option values which are PATHs (i.e. lists of directories). The results of configure tests are saved in config.log, which is useful for diagnosing problems. General options: --help Issue this usage message. --verbose Accepted but ignored. --extra-verbose Display more information, useful for debugging. Compilation options: --compiler=PROG C compiler to use --xemacs-compiler=PROG compiler to use to compile just the xemacs executable --with-gcc (*) Use GCC to compile XEmacs. --cflags=FLAGS Compiler flags (such as -O) --cpp=PROG C preprocessor to use (e.g. /usr/ccs/lib/cpp or cc -E) --cppflags=FLAGS C preprocessor flags (e.g. -I/foo or -Dfoo=bar) --libs=LIBS Additional libraries (e.g. -lfoo) --ldflags=FLAGS Additional linker flags (e.g. -L/foo) --site-includes=PATH List of directories to search first for header files --site-libraries=PATH List of directories to search first for libraries --site-prefixes=PATH List of directories to search for include/ and lib/ subdirectories, just after 'site-includes' and 'site-libraries' --site-runtime-libraries=PATH List of ALL directories to search for dynamically linked libraries at run time --dynamic=yes Link dynamically if supported by system. --dynamic=no Force static linking on systems where dynamic linking is the default. --srcdir=DIR Look for the XEmacs source files in DIR. Works best when using GNU Make. Installation options: --prefix=DIR Install files below DIR. Defaults to `/usr/local'. --with-prefix=no Don't compile the value of --prefix into the executable. Window-system options: --with-gtk Support GTK on the X Window System. (EXPERIMENTAL) --with-gnome Support GNOME on the X Window System. (EXPERIMENTAL) --with-x11 (*) Support the X Window System. --x-includes=DIR Search for X header files in DIR. --x-libraries=DIR Search for X libraries in DIR. --with-msw (*) Support MS Windows as a window system (only under Cygwin and MinGW). --with-toolbars=no Don't compile with any toolbar support. --with-wmcommand=no Compile without realized leader window which will keep the WM_COMMAND property. --with-athena=TYPE Use TYPE Athena widgets (xaw, 3d, next, 95, or xpm) --with-menubars=TYPE Use TYPE menubars (lucid, motif, or no). The Lucid widgets emulate Motif (mostly) but are faster. *WARNING* The Motif menubar is currently broken. --with-scrollbars=TYPE Use TYPE scrollbars (lucid, motif, athena, or no). --with-dialogs=TYPE Use TYPE dialog boxes (motif, athena, or no). Lucid menubars and scrollbars are the default. Motif dialog boxes will be used if Motif can be found. --with-widgets=TYPE Use TYPE widgets (motif, athena, or no). Motif widgets will be used if Motif can be found. Other widget types are currently unsupported. --with-dragndrop Compile in the generic drag and drop API. This is automatically added if one of the drag and drop protocols is found (currently CDE, OffiX, MSWindows). *WARNING* The Drag'n'drop support is under development and is considered experimental. --with-cde Compile in support for CDE drag and drop. --with-offix Compile in support for OffiX drag and drop. *WARNING* If you compile in OffiX, you may not be able to use multiple X displays success- fully. If the two servers are from different vendors, the results may be unpredictable. --with-xmu=no (*) For those unfortunates whose vendors don't ship Xmu. --external-widget Compile with external widget support. TTY (character terminal) options: --with-tty=no Don't support ttys. --with-ncurses (*) Use the ncurses library for tty support. --with-gpm (*) Compile in GPM mouse support for ttys. Image options: --with-xpm (*) Compile with support for XPM images. PRACTICALLY REQUIRED. Although this library is nonstandard and a real hassle to build, many basic things (e.g. toolbars) depend on it, and you will run into many problems without it. --with-png (*) Compile with support for PNG images. Recommended because the images on the About page are not viewable without it. --with-jpeg (*) Compile with support for JPEG images. Useful if you are using a mail, news reader, or web browser in XEmacs, so that JPEG images can be displayed. --with-tiff (*) Compile with support for TIFF images. Possibly useful, for the same reason as JPEG images. --with-xface (*) Compile with support for X-Face mail headers. Requires the compface package. Of doubtful usefulness. --with-gif=no Compile without the (builtin) support for GIF images. Sound options: --with-sound=TYPE,[TYPE],... Compile with native sound support. Valid types are `native', `nas' and `esd'. Prefix a type with 'no' to disable. The first option can be `none' or `all'. `none' is a synonym for `nonative,nonas,noesd'. `all' is a synonym for native,nas,esd or `all'. The default is to autodetect all sound support. --native-sound-lib=LIB Native sound support library. Needed on Suns with --with-sound=both because both sound libraries are called libaudio. Database options: --with-database=TYPE (*) Compile with database support. Valid types are `no' or a comma-separated list of one or more of `berkdb' and either `dbm' or `gnudbm'. --with-ldap (*) Compile with support for the LDAP protocol. --with-postgresql (*) Compile with support for the PostgreSQL RDBMS. Mail options: --mail-locking=TYPE (*) Specify the locking to be used by movemail to prevent concurrent updates of mail spool files. Valid types are `lockf', `flock', and `dot'. --with-pop Support POP for mail retrieval. --with-kerberos Support Kerberos-authenticated POP. --with-hesiod Support Hesiod to get the POP server host. Additional features: --with-tooltalk (*) Support the ToolTalk IPC protocol. --with-workshop Support the Sun WorkShop (formerly Sparcworks) development environment. --with-socks Compile with support for SOCKS (an Internet proxy). --with-dnet (*) Compile with support for DECnet. --with-modules Compile in experimental support for dynamically loaded libraries (Dynamic Shared Objects). --with-netinstall Compile in support for installation over the internet. --with-site-lisp=yes Allow for a site-lisp directory in the XEmacs hierarchy searched before the installation packages. --with-site-modules=no Disable site-modules directory in the XEmacs hierarchy, which is searched before the installation modules. --package-path=PATH Directories to search for packages to dump with xemacs. PATH splits into three parts separated by double colons (::), an early, a late, and a last part, corresponding to their position in the various system paths: The early part is always first, the late part somewhere in the middle, and the last part at the very back. Only the late part gets seen at dump time. If PATH has only one component, that component is late. If PATH has two components, the first is early, the second is late. --infodir=DIR Directory to install XEmacs Info manuals and dir in. --infopath=PATH Directories to search for Info documents, info dir and localdir files in case run-time searching for them fails. --moduledir=DIR Directory to install dynamic modules in. --pdump New, experimental, non-working, don't-sue-me-if- your-house-collapses-and-your-wife-leaves-you, portable dumper. --with-file-coding Allows transparent use of "foreign" line break conventions in text files (such as LF-delimited text imported from a Unix system to a Windows environment), optionally including autodetection. Defaults to ON on Windows, OFF on Unix. Internationalization options: --with-mule Compile with Mule (MUlti-Lingual Emacs) support, needed to support non-Latin-1 (including Asian) languages. --with-xim=xlib Compile with support for X input methods, --with-xim=motif (*) Used in conjunction with Mule support. Use either raw Xlib to provide XIM support, or the Motif XmIm* routines (when available). NOTE: On some systems bugs in X11's XIM support will cause XEmacs to crash, so by default, no XIM support is compiled in, unless running on Solaris and the XmIm* routines are detected. --with-canna (*) Compile with support for Canna (a Japanese input method used in conjunction with Mule support). --with-wnn (*) Compile with support for WNN (a multi-language input method used in conjunction with Mule support). --with-wnn6 (*) Compile with support for the commercial package WNN6. --with-i18n3 Compile with I18N level 3 (support for message translation). This doesn't currently work. --with-xfs Compile with XFontSet support for bilingual menubar. Can't use this option with --with-xim=motif or xlib. And should have --with-menubars=lucid. Debugging options: --debug Compile with support for debugging XEmacs. (Causes code-size increase and little loss of speed.) --error-checking=TYPE[,TYPE]... Compile with internal error-checking added. Causes noticeable loss of speed. Valid types are extents, bufpos, malloc, gc, typecheck. --error-checking=none Disable all internal error-checking (the default). --error-checking=all Enable all internal error-checking. --memory-usage-stats Compile with additional code to allow you to determine what XEmacs's memory is being used for. Causes a small code increase but no loss of speed. Normally enabled when --debug is given. --no-doc-file Don't rebuild the DOC file unless it's explicitly deleted. Only use during development. (It speeds up the compile-run-test cycle.) --use-union-type Enable or disable use of a union, instead of an int, for the fundamental Lisp_Object type; this provides stricter type-checking. Only works with some systems and compilers. --with-quantify Add support for performance debugging using Quantify. --with-purify Add support for memory debugging using Purify. Other options: --rel-alloc Use the relocating allocator (default for this option is system-dependent). --with-dlmalloc Control usage of Doug Lea malloc on systems that have it in the standard C library (default is to use it if it is available). --with-system-malloc Force use of the system malloc, rather than GNU malloc. --with-debug-malloc Use the debugging malloc package. --with-clash-detection Use lock files to detect multiple edits of the same file. The default is to do clash detection. You may also specify any of the `path' variables found in Makefile.in, including --bindir, --libdir, --docdir, --lispdir, --sitelispdir, --datadir, --infodir, --mandir and so on. Note that we recommend against explicitly setting any of these variables. See the INSTALL file for a complete list plus the reasons we advise not changing them. If successful, configure leaves its status in config.status. If unsuccessful after disturbing the status quo, it removes config.status. The configure script also recognizes some environment variables, each of which is equivalent to a corresponding configure flag. Configure flags take precedence over environment variables, if both are specified. environment corresponding variable configure flag ----------- -------------- CC --compiler XEMACS_CC --xemacs-compiler CPP --cpp CFLAGS --cflags CPPFLAGS --cppflags LDFLAGS --ldflags LIBS --libs LD_RUN_PATH --site-runtime-libraries For more details on the install process, consult the INSTALL file.