wxWidgets/wx-config.in

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#!/bin/sh
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
#
# Name: wx-config{.in,}
# Purpose: wx configuration search and query tool {template,}
# Author: Ron <ron@debian.org>
# Modified by:
# Created: 8/9/2004
# RCS-ID: $Id$
# Copyright: (c) 2004 Ron <ron@debian.org>
# Essentially a fresh start this time around, but for maximum
# compatibility basic code was taken from, and heavy reference
# made to, the previously unattributed wx-config from cvs.
# All the usual suspects contributed to the dicussion that led
# to this new work and likewise to the ideas and content in the
# original (which was probably influenced by gtk), among them:
# Robert Roebling, Vadim Zeitlin, Vaclav Slavik, Robin Dunn
# Licence: wxWindows licence
############################################################################
# Extra^2 debug mode, for if things ever get really weird.
[ -z "$WXDEBUG_X" ] || set -x
# We expect a posix shell, so if this is a Bourne shell,
# and apparently a few still exist, try for bash or ksh.
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
if [ ~ = '~' ]
then
if (bash -c echo) >/dev/null 2>&1
then
exec bash "$0" "$@"
fi
if (ksh -c echo) >/dev/null 2>&1
then
exec ksh "$0" "$@"
fi
echo "$0: this script requires bash or ksh"
exit 1
fi
# On with some basic stuff, like the ability to die gracefully,
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# and to tell people what we are about.
# ------------------------------------------------------------------
# decho _message
# Output a message to stderr.
decho() { echo "$*" 1>&2; }
# usage _exitcode
# Outputs a usage message to stderr and exits with _exitcode.
# Try to keep this to a single page (ie. < 25 lines). We can add
# alternate or interactive help targets if people want more detail.
#
# Exit codes are now subject to a more strict interpretation.
# wx-config should return 0 upon successful operation, 1 if the
# reqested operation could not be completed successfully, and 2
# if the requested operation is not supported by this version of
# wx-config.
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
usage()
{
cat 1>&2 <<EOF
wx-config [--prefix[=DIR]] [--exec-prefix[=DIR]] [--release] [--version-full]
[--list] [--host=HOST] [--toolkit=TOOLKIT] [--universal[=yes|no]]
[--unicode[=yes|no]] [--debug[=yes|no]] [--static[=yes|no]]
[--version[=VERSION]] [--basename] [--cc] [--cppflags] [--cflags]
[--cxxflags] [--rescomp] [--libs] [--cxx] [--ld] [--linkdeps]
[--utility=UTIL] [LIB ...]
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
wx-config returns information about the wxWidgets libraries available
on your system. It may be used to retrieve the information you require
to build applications using these libraries.
If alternative builds of wxWidgets exist on the system, you can use the
options: --prefix, --host, --toolkit, --unicode, --debug, --static,
--version and --universal, to select from them. Use the --list option to
show alternatives available which match specified criteria. The unicode,
debug, and universal options take an optional yes or no argument, while
host and version accept posix extended regex. The --utility option will
return the correct version of UTIL to use with the selected library build.
--linkdeps returns only static libraries for your makefile link rule deps.
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
Optional LIB arguments (comma or space separated) may be used to specify
the wxWidgets libraries that you wish to use. The magic "std" label may
be used to import all libraries that would be used by default if none were
specified explicitly. eg. wx-config --libs core,base.
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
EOF
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
exit $1
}
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Unfussy people are the easiest to deal with, get them out of the way now.
[ $# -gt 0 ] || usage 1
# Contentious tools determined by configure.
EGREP="@EGREP@"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# For the people who know what they want, or think they do:
# Divide the valid arguments into functional groups for later examination,
# then parse all command line arguments completely, deferring action on
# output options until all significant input has been processed and any
# decision about delegation has been taken.
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Note early, that '-' is a complete no-no for use in option names below.
# It totally falls apart as soon as it becomes part of a variable name.
# Use '_' instead, and by the magic of it all just being bits, you'll
# be able to use --my-option or --my_option from the command line at
# your discretion. They are synonymous as user input, but _ALWAYS_ use
# underscores for compound names in the code here, never a dash.
# The list of all options we recognise. If it is not in here, then
# it is not something we want to handle.
# ------------------------------------------------------------------
# Options that specify a distinct library build.
#
# Note also that order in this list is significant later on, as this sets
# the precedence with which we will try to gauge the similarity of other
# configs to this one. Options earlier in the list should be more crucial
# to match well than those that follow. Options specified by the user will
# always take precedence and are not subject to any partial ordering here.
wxconfig_schema="host toolkit widgetset chartype debugtype flavour version linkage"
# Options that are expected to generate some output.
wxconfig_output_options="prefix exec_prefix
list
release version version_full
basename
cppflags cflags cxxflags
rescomp
rezflags
libs
linkdeps
cc cxx ld
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
gl_libs"
# Options that permit the user to supply hints that may affect the output.
# These options all accept arbitrary values, to interpret as they please.
wxconfig_input_options="prefix exec_prefix utility $wxconfig_schema"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Input options that accept only a yes or no argument.
wxconfig_yesno_options="universal unicode debug static"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Boolean options that do something or not.
wxconfig_flag_options="$wxconfig_yesno_options selected_config no_rpath inplace"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Some simple sugar coating to keep things more readable below.
# --------------------------------------------------------------
# option_name _string
# Returns NAME if _string is of the form: --NAME[=...]
option_name()
{
_option_name_temp=${1%%=*}
echo ${_option_name_temp#--} | tr '-' '_'
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
}
# option_value _string
# Returns FOO if _string is of the form: --option=FOO
option_value()
{
echo "${1#*=}"
}
# match_field _value _list
# Returns true if _value is a field in _list
match_field()
{
_match_field_match="$1"
shift
for _match_field_i; do
[ "x$_match_field_i" != "x$_match_field_match" ] || return 0
done
false
}
# remove_field _value _list
# Returns _list minus any field(s) that match _value.
remove_field()
{
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
_remf_value="$1"
_remf_list=''
shift
if [ -n "$_remf_value" ]; then
for _remf_item; do
[ "x$_remf_item" = "x$_remf_value" ] ||
_remf_list="${_remf_list:+$_remf_list }$_remf_item"
done
echo "$_remf_list"
else
echo $*
fi
}
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# validate_arg _domain _set _name _value
# Boilerplate to validate an argument and initialise a psuedo-hash.
# This one is almost reduction into absurdity, and perhaps makes the
# precise action of the argument parser below just a little more
# obscure, but oh so neat and compact to use for multiple option
# groups. It expands to replace repetitive clauses of the form:
#
# i="$(option_name $arg)"
# if match_field "$i" $wxconfig_input_options; then
# input_options="${input_options:+$input_options }$i"
# eval "input_option_$i=$(option_value $arg)"
# continue
# fi
#
# with the one liners you see on the page below.
validate_arg()
{
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
if match_field "$3" $(eval echo \"\$$1_$2_options\"); then
eval "$2_options=\"\${$2_options:+\$$2_options }$3\""
eval "$2_option_$3=\"$4\""
return
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
false
}
# check_yesno_option _ynoption _option _yesval _noval
# This one might be made more generic and/or incorporated into
# validate_arg above at some later stage, but right now we just
# condition any specialist options into a generic one for later
# handling. Once they are sanity checked there is no difference
# in any case.
check_yesno_option()
{
eval "case \${yesno_option_$1-\${flag_option_$1-unset}} in
unset) ;;
y*|Y*) input_option_$2=\"$3\" ;;
n*|N*) input_option_$2=\"$4\" ;;
*)
decho
decho \" *** Error: Invalid request '--$1=\$yesno_option_$1'\"
decho \" Valid arguments for --$1 are: [ yes, no ]\"
decho
exit 1
;;
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
esac"
}
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Now we are ready to find out what the user wants from us.
# --------------------------------------------------------------
# With just a little more complexity here we could have shortest
# unique string matching for options, but that is probably overkill
# today, so lets just get the job done.
#
# The important thing now then is that we simply read all input from
# the user and don't try to act prematurely on partial information.
# --help or an illegal argument are the only shortcuts out of here
# at this point, otherwise, it's time to just shut up and listen for
# a moment.
for arg; do
case "$arg" in
--help|-h)
usage
;;
--*=*)
_name=$(option_name $arg)
_value=$(option_value $arg)
if validate_arg wxconfig input "$_name" "$_value" ||
validate_arg wxconfig yesno "$_name" "$_value"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
then
continue
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
;;
--*)
_name=$(option_name $arg)
if validate_arg wxconfig flag "$_name" yes ||
validate_arg wxconfig output "$_name" yes
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
then
continue
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
;;
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
*)
# FIXME Surely we can validate the parameters too ...
input_parameters="${input_parameters:+$input_parameters }$arg"
continue
;;
esac
decho " *** Error: Unrecognised option: '$arg'"
decho "Use wx-config --help for information on command line options."
exit 2
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
done
# validate_arg only checks and decomposes form. Sanity check the yes/no
# options now too and push their respective mask values into place.
check_yesno_option universal widgetset univ
check_yesno_option unicode chartype unicode ansi
check_yesno_option debug debugtype debug release
check_yesno_option static linkage '-static'
# Dump everything we just read in debug mode.
if [ -n "$WXDEBUG" ]; then
decho
decho " input parameters = $input_parameters"
decho " input options = $input_options"
for i in $input_options; do
decho " $i = $(eval echo \"\$input_option_$i\")"
done
decho " yes/no options = $yesno_options"
for y in $yesno_options; do
decho " $y = $(eval echo \"\$yesno_option_$y\")"
done
decho " flag options = $flag_options"
for f in $flag_options; do
decho " $f = $(eval echo \"\$flag_option_$f\")"
done
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
decho " output options = $output_options"
for o in $output_options; do
decho " $o = $(eval echo \"\$output_option_$o\")"
done
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Everything came in as a legal argument then, lets put some of
# the pieces together with a little self knowledge to see what
# we should do next.
# --------------------------------------------------------------
# get_mask [ _hash ]
# Construct a config filename mask from a psuedo-hash of component variables.
# The optional argument is the prefix of the hash to use. If not specified
# this will return a mask derived from the command line options that were used.
get_mask()
{
[ $# -gt 0 ] || set m
eval echo "\${$1_host}\${$1_toolkit}\${$1_widgetset}-\${$1_chartype}-\${$1_debugtype}\${$1_linkage}-\${$1_version}\${$1_flavour}"
}
# Returns true if this script is for a cross compiled config.
is_cross() { [ "x@cross_compiling@" = "xyes" ]; }
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Determine the base directories we require.
prefix=${input_option_prefix-${this_prefix:-@prefix@}}
exec_prefix=${input_option_exec_prefix-${input_option_prefix-${this_exec_prefix:-@exec_prefix@}}}
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
wxconfdir="@libdir@/wx/config"
installed_configs=$( cd "$wxconfdir" 2> /dev/null && ls | grep -v "^inplace-" )
is_cross && target="@host_alias@"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Define a pseudo-hash to contain the specification of this wx-config
# instance and its associated library.
this_host="${target:+${target}-}"
this_toolkit="@TOOLKIT_DIR@@TOOLKIT_VERSION@"
this_widgetset="@WIDGET_SET@"
this_chartype="@WX_CHARTYPE@"
this_debugtype="@WX_DEBUGTYPE@"
this_flavour="@WX_FLAVOUR@"
this_version="@WX_RELEASE@"
this_linkage=$( [ "x@SHARED@" = "x1" ] || echo '-static' )
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
this_config=$(get_mask this)
# Extract the user specification from the options parsed.
m_host=${input_option_host:+${input_option_host}-?}
m_host=${m_host:-${input_option_host-$this_host}}
m_toolkit=${input_option_toolkit:-[^-]+}
m_widgetset=${input_option_widgetset-(univ)?}
m_chartype=${input_option_chartype:-(unicode|ansi)}
m_debugtype=${input_option_debugtype:-(debug|release)}
m_flavour=${input_option_flavour:+-$input_option_flavour}
m_flavour=${m_flavour:-${input_option_flavour-(-[^-]+)?}}
m_version=${input_option_version:-[0-9]+\.[0-9]+}
m_linkage=${input_option_linkage-(-static)?}
configmask="^$(get_mask)$"
# Dump the user specification in debug mode.
if [ -n "$WXDEBUG" ]; then
decho
decho " prefix = '$prefix'"
decho " exec_prefix = '$exec_prefix'"
decho " wxconfdir = '$wxconfdir'"
decho " m_host = '$m_host'"
decho " m_toolkit = '$m_toolkit'"
decho " m_widgetset = '$m_widgetset'"
decho " m_chartype = '$m_chartype'"
decho " m_debugtype = '$m_debugtype'"
decho " m_flavour = '$m_flavour'"
decho " m_version = '$m_version'"
decho " m_linkage = '$m_linkage'"
decho " configmask = '$configmask'"
decho " this config = '$this_config'"
decho
fi
# From here on, we'll need to be able to figure out a delegation target.
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# The rules for delegation are:
#
# 1. If the specification is so general that it matches the default config
# (ie. this one on a first pass), then the default config will be used
# even if other installed libs would also match the spec.
#
# 2. If the default config does not match, find a list of all installed
# libraries that do match.
# a. If that list is empty, the specification is incompatible
# with any installed lib. Warn and abort.
# b. If that list contains exactly one candidate. Delegate to
# that candidate.
# c. If the list contains multiple candidates, pass on to step 3.
#
# 3. Attempt to discriminate among rival candidates by their similarity
# to the default configuration (ie. this one). If we can find a unique
# candidate in this way, delegate to it. If not, present a list of
# options to the user and request that they disambiguate it with one or
# more additional fields.
#
# To refine the specified pattern, we specialise each unbound field
# using the default value from this config file. If that results in
# no matches, we unbind it again and try the next field. If it still
# results in multiple matches we try binding the next field as well
# until a unique or null result again occurs.
#
# A more general way to look at this, is the feature specifiers are all
# modifiers of the wx-config you are calling. If you supply none, the
# default for that build configuration will be used. If you supply one
# or more that the default build cannot satisfy, it will try to find the
# config most like itself with the desired feature(s) enabled.
# The features configured into the first wx-config called will be taken
# as implicitly specified if it is necessary to disambiguate likely
# candidates from the information that was explicitly provided.
# But first, more sugar to keep what follows clear and legible.
# --------------------------------------------------------------
# find_eligible_delegates _mask
# Outputs all the config files installed which match the
# (extended regex) _mask passed as an argument.
find_eligible_delegates() { echo "$installed_configs" | $EGREP "$1" 2> /dev/null; }
# user_mask_fits _config
# Returns true if the string _config satisfies the user specified mask.
user_mask_fits() { echo "$1" | $EGREP "$configmask" > /dev/null 2>&1; }
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# count_fields _word
# Returns the number of IFS split fields in _word
count_fields() { return $#; }
# count_delegates _mask
# Return the number of eligible config files that match _mask
count_delegates() { count_fields $(find_eligible_delegates $1); }
# is_set _variablename
# Returns true if $_variablename is initialised.
is_set() { [ "x$(eval echo \"\${$1-unset}\")" != "xunset" ]; }
# do_find_best_delegate _unbound-options
# The real worker part of find_best_delegate below. Recurses though all
# unbound options binding them one at a time to the default derived from
# this file until a unique match is made or no alternatives remain that
# may be sensibly guessed at. It will preferentially bind the unspecified
# options in the order they are listed in wxconfig_schema. Using this
# partial ordering it should find the first match with the most significant
# similarity to this file that unambiguously meets the user specification.
# If such a match exists it will be output to stdout.
#
# Be careful if you modify this function. If the pruning logic is rendered
# inoperative it will simply recurse over every permutation in the search
# space, which may still appear to work, but add a couple more options (or
# explicitly specify a few less) and you may not live long enough to learn
# the result. WXDEBUG=findprogress is your friend here, it will show you
# how many nodes get searched before a result. If you start seeing
# increases in that number for the same input, check your work.
# Raising the number of discriminating options from 6 to 8 raised the worst
# case time for this to run (without pruning) from 3 to nearly 15 seconds
# and its downhill fast from here if we have to ride that boat.
# Early pruning still gets that down to under half a second (up from about
# .25), so we have some breathing space yet before a different search method
# will be called for, but lets not squander it.
do_find_best_delegate()
{
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
(
if [ "x$WXDEBUG" = "xverbose" ]; then
_fbd_indent="${_fbd_indent}. "
decho " $_fbd_indent---> unbound options: $*"
fi
for i; do
if [ "x$WXDEBUG" = "xverbose" ]; then
decho " ${_fbd_indent}binding '$i' with '$(remove_field $i $*)' still free"
[ -z "$_pruned" ] || decho " ${_fbd_indent} --- pruned: $_pruned ---"
fi
if (
eval m_$i=\$this_$i
_mask="^$(get_mask)$"
if [ "x$WXDEBUG" = "xverbose" ]; then
decho " ${_fbd_indent} checking: $_mask"
count_delegates "$_mask"
decho " $_fbd_indent $? eligible delegates"
for d in $(find_eligible_delegates "$_mask"); do
decho " ${_fbd_indent} $d"
done
fi
count_delegates "$_mask"
_still_eligible=$?
if [ $_still_eligible -eq 1 ]; then
echo $(find_eligible_delegates "$_mask")
return
fi
[ "x$WXDEBUG" != "xfindprogress" ] || printf "." 1>&2
[ $_still_eligible -gt 1 ] && [ $# -gt 1 ] &&
do_find_best_delegate $(remove_field $i $*)
)
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
then
return
elif [ $# -gt 1 ]; then
if [ "x$WXDEBUG" = "xverbose" ]; then
decho " ${_fbd_indent}pruning: $i"
_pruned="${_pruned:+$_pruned }$i"
fi
set $(remove_field $i $*)
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
done
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
false
)
}
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# find_best_delegate
# A simple wrapper around do_find_best_delegate that first determines
# the unbound options (ie. the ones that the user did not explicitly
# declare a preference for on the command line)
find_best_delegate()
{
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
for _fbdi in $wxconfig_schema; do
is_set input_option_$_fbdi ||
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
_unbound_options="${_unbound_options:+$_unbound_options }$_fbdi"
done
do_find_best_delegate $_unbound_options
}
# Legacy wx-config helpers.
# -------------------------
# get_legacy_mask
# Returns a mask in the format used by wx2.4.
get_legacy_mask()
{
[ $# -gt 0 ] || set m
eval [ "x\${$1_chartype}" != "xunicode" ] || _unicode_flag=u
eval [ "x\${$1_debugtype}" != "xdebug" ] || _debug_flag=d
eval echo "wx\${$1_toolkit}${_unicode_flag}${_debug_flag}-\${$1_version}\${$1_host}-config"
}
# find_legacy_configs
# Returns a list of configs installed by wx2.4 releases.
find_legacy_configs()
{
(
cd "$prefix/bin" &&
{
ls wx*-2.4-config | grep -v ^wxbase
ls wx*-2.4-config | grep ^wxbase
}
) 2> /dev/null
}
# find_best_legacy_config
# Returns the best legacy config for a given specification.
# This assumes no matching new style config has been found.
find_best_legacy_config()
{
_legacy_configs=$(find_legacy_configs)
if [ -n "$_legacy_configs" ]; then
_legacy_mask=$(get_legacy_mask)
for d in $_legacy_configs; do
if echo $d | $EGREP $_legacy_mask > /dev/null 2>&1 ; then
echo "$d"
return
fi
done
fi
false
}
# The only action we can perform authoritatively prior to delegation
# is to list all the possible delegates.
# --------------------------------------------------------------
config_spec="$0 $*"
[ -z "$WXDEBUG" ] || config_spec=$configmask
# Next chance for another satisfied customer then
#
# If we want to get really polished here we can do plural checking,
# but we should probably leave that until the day we gettextise it.
if [ -n "$output_option_list" ]; then
_remains_in_prefix=$installed_configs
_delegates=$(find_eligible_delegates $configmask)
_best_delegate=$(find_best_delegate)
if [ "x$WXDEBUG" = "xverbose" ]; then
decho
decho " all = $_remains_in_prefix"
decho " matching = $_delegates"
decho " best = $_best_delegate"
decho " this = $this_config"
fi
for d in $_delegates; do
_remains_in_prefix=$(remove_field $d $_remains_in_prefix)
done
echo
echo " Default config is $this_config"
echo
if user_mask_fits "$this_config" ; then
echo " Default config ${this_exec_prefix+in $this_exec_prefix }will be used for output"
if match_field "$this_config" $_delegates ; then
_delegates=$(remove_field $this_config $_delegates)
else
echo " though it is not installed in: $prefix"
if [ -n "$_best_delegate" ] && [ "x$_best_delegate" != "x$this_config" ]; then
echo
echo " Best alternate in $prefix:"
echo " $_best_delegate"
fi
fi
elif [ -n "$_best_delegate" ]; then
echo " Specification best match: $_best_delegate"
elif [ -z "$_delegates" ]; then
_last_chance=$(find_best_legacy_config)
if [ -n "$_last_chance" ]; then
echo " Specification matches legacy config: $_last_chance"
else
cat <<-EOF
No config found to match: $config_spec
in $wxconfdir
Please install the desired library build, or specify a different
prefix where it may be found. If the library is not installed
you may call its wx-config directly by specifying its full path.
EOF
fi
else
echo " Specification was ambiguous. Use additional feature options"
echo " to choose between alternate matches."
fi
_delegates=$(remove_field "$_best_delegate" $_delegates)
if [ -n "$_delegates" ]; then
echo
echo " Alternate matches:"
for d in $_delegates; do
echo " $d"
done
fi
if [ -n "$_remains_in_prefix" ]; then
echo
echo " Also available in $prefix:"
for d in $_remains_in_prefix; do
echo " $d"
done
fi
_legacy_configs=$(find_legacy_configs)
if [ -n "$_legacy_configs" ]; then
echo
echo " Legacy configs available in $prefix:"
for d in $_legacy_configs; do
echo " ${d%-config}"
done
fi
echo
exit
fi
# ... so if that wasn't what they wanted, then we need to know for
# certain, can this config satisfy the user specification?
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# --------------------------------------------------------------
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
if ! user_mask_fits "$this_config" ; then
# No? Then lets see if it knows anybody who can.
# But first, just be sure someone hasn't typo'd us into a loop.
# In present day wx, correct delegation should never need more
# than one hop so this is trivial to detect.
if [ -n "$WXCONFIG_DELEGATED" ]; then
decho
decho " *** Error: Bad config delegation"
decho
decho " to: $0"
decho " ($this_config) cannot satisfy:"
decho " $config_spec"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
decho " Someone has been terribly careless."
decho
exit 1
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
count_delegates "$configmask"
_numdelegates=$?
if [ -n "$WXDEBUG" ]; then
decho " must delegate to an alternate config"
decho " potential delegates ($_numdelegates):"
for i in $(find_eligible_delegates "$configmask"); do
decho " $i"
done
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
if [ $_numdelegates -eq 0 ]; then
_last_chance=$(find_best_legacy_config)
if [ -n "$_last_chance" ]; then
for arg; do
case "$arg" in
--prefix*|--exec-prefix*| \
--version|--release|--basename| \
--static|--libs|--gl_libs| \
--cppflags|--cflags|--cxxflags| \
--cc|--cxx|--ld| \
--rezflags|--inplace)
_legacy_args="$_legacy_args $arg"
;;
--static|--static=y*|--static=Y*)
_legacy_args="$_legacy_args --static"
;;
esac
done
if [ -n "$WXDEBUG" ]; then
decho " found a suitable legacy delegate: $_last_chance"
decho "--> $prefix/bin/$_last_chance $_legacy_args"
fi
export WXCONFIG_DELEGATED=yes
$prefix/bin/$_last_chance $_legacy_args
exit
else
cat 1>&2 <<-EOF
Warning: No config found to match: $config_spec
in $wxconfdir
If you require this configuration, please install the desired
library build. If this is part of an automated configuration
test and no other errors occur, you may safely ignore it.
You may use wx-config --list to see all configs available in
the default prefix.
EOF
# PIPEDREAM: from here we are actually just a teensy step
# from simply building the missing config for the user
# on the fly if this is an in tree wx-config.
exit 1
fi
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
if [ $_numdelegates -gt 1 ]; then
[ -z "$WXDEBUG" ] || decho " must prune the list of eligible delegates"
best_delegate=$(find_best_delegate)
if [ -n "$best_delegate" ]; then
if [ -n "$WXDEBUG" ]; then
decho " found a suitable delegate: $best_delegate"
decho "--> $wxconfdir/$best_delegate $*"
fi
export WXCONFIG_DELEGATED=yes
$wxconfdir/$best_delegate $*
exit
fi
decho
decho " *** Error: Specification is ambiguous"
decho " as $config_spec"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
decho " Use additional feature options to choose between:"
for i in $(find_eligible_delegates "$configmask"); do
decho " $i"
done
decho
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
exit 1
fi
if [ -n "$WXDEBUG" ]; then
decho " using the only suitable delegate"
decho "--> $wxconfdir/$(find_eligible_delegates $configmask) $*"
fi
export WXCONFIG_DELEGATED=yes
$wxconfdir/$(find_eligible_delegates $configmask) $*
exit
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# If we are still here, then from now on we are responsible for
# all the user's needs. Time to rustle up some output for them.
# --------------------------------------------------------------
[ -z "$WXDEBUG" ] || decho " using this config"
# If the user supplied a prefix, and the in tree config did not
# delegate out to anything in that prefix, then reset the build
# tree prefix to provide the correct output for using this
# uninstalled wx build. Or put more simply:
prefix=${this_prefix-$prefix}
exec_prefix=${this_exec_prefix-$exec_prefix}
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
includedir="@includedir@"
libdir="@libdir@"
bindir="@bindir@"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Trivial queries we can answer now.
[ -z "$output_option_prefix" ] || echo $prefix
[ -z "$output_option_exec_prefix" ] || echo $exec_prefix
[ -z "$output_option_release" ] || echo "@WX_RELEASE@"
[ -z "$output_option_version" ] || echo "@WX_VERSION@"
[ -z "$output_option_version_full" ] || echo "@WX_SUBVERSION@"
[ -z "$output_option_basename" ] || echo "@WX_LIBRARY_BASENAME_GUI@"
[ -z "$output_option_cc" ] || echo "@CC@"
[ -z "$output_option_cxx" ] || echo "@CXX@"
[ -z "$output_option_ld" ] || echo "@EXE_LINKER@"
[ -z "$flag_option_selected_config" ] || echo "$this_config"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# --rezflags is deprecated and disabled (2005/11/29)
if [ -n "$output_option_rezflags" ]; then
echo "@true"
decho "Warning: --rezflags, along with Mac OS classic resource building" \
"is deprecated. You should remove this from your Makefile and" \
"build .app bundles instead."
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# The rest are going to need a little more work.
# --------------------------------------------------------------
is_monolithic() { [ "x@MONOLITHIC@" = "x1" ]; }
is_static() { [ -n "$this_linkage" ]; }
is_installed() { [ -z "$this_prefix" ]; }
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Is the user after a support utility?
# If this is a cross build, we need to find and return a suitable
# native utility for the job, so we search:
#
# 1. local build dir (for native uninstalled builds only).
# 2. (optional) user supplied prefix.
# 3. configured install prefix.
# 4. environment $PATH.
#
# and if such a thing still cannot be found, exit signalling an error.
if [ -n "$input_option_utility" ]; then
# This is dumb, in tree binaries should be in a standard location
# like the libs, but work with what we've got for now.
is_cross || _util="$exec_prefix/utils/$input_option_utility/$input_option_utility"
if ! is_installed && [ -x "$_util" ]; then
is_static || _preload="eval LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$exec_prefix/lib"
echo $_preload $_util
exit
fi
IFS=':'
_user_prefix=${input_option_exec_prefix:-$input_option_prefix}
for _util in "${input_option_utility}-@WX_RELEASE@@WX_FLAVOUR@" \
"${input_option_utility}-@WX_RELEASE@" \
"${input_option_utility}"
do
for p in ${_user_prefix:+$_user_prefix/bin} $bindir $PATH; do
[ -z "$WXDEBUG" ] || decho " checking for: '$p/$_util'"
if [ -x "$p/$_util" ]; then
echo "$p/$_util"
exit
fi
done
done
exit 1
fi
# Still here? Then get the options together for building an app.
# ----------------------------------------------------------------
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Additional configuration for individual library components.
ldflags_gl="@LDFLAGS_GL@"
ldlibs_base="@WXCONFIG_LIBS@"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
ldlibs_core="@EXTRALIBS_GUI@"
ldlibs_gl="@OPENGL_LIBS@"
ldlibs_html="@EXTRALIBS_HTML@"
ldlibs_xml="@EXTRALIBS_XML@"
ldlibs_odbc="@EXTRALIBS_ODBC@"
ldlibs_adv="@EXTRALIBS_SDL@"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# lib_flags_for _liblist
# This function returns a list of flags suitable to return with the
# output of --libs for all of the libraries in _liblist. You can
# add support for a new library by adding an entry for it in the
# psuedo-hashes above if it requires additional linker options.
lib_flags_for()
{
[ -z "$WXDEBUG" ] || decho " fetching lib flags for: '$*'"
_all_ldflags=''
_all_libs=''
_wxlibs=''
is_cross && _target="-${target}"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
for lib; do
# We evidently can't trust people not to duplicate things in
# configure, or to keep them in any sort of sane order overall,
# so only add unique new fields here even if it takes us a while.
# In the case of libs, we bubble any duplicates to the end,
# because if multiple libs require it, static linking at least
# will require it to come after all of them. So long as local
# order is ok in configure then we should always be able to
# massage a correct result here like this.
#
# FIXME: ldlibs_core is totally bogus. Fix the duplication
# there independently of this. This covers for it, but we
# want to do this anyway because some libs may share common
# deps without a common ancestor in wx. This is not a licence
# for sloppy work elsewhere though and @GUI_TK_LIBRARY should
# be fixed.
for f in $(eval echo \"\$ldflags_$lib\"); do
match_field "$f" $_all_ldflags || _all_ldflags="$_all_ldflags $f"
done
if match_field "$lib" @CORE_BASE_LIBS@ ; then
_libname="@WX_LIBRARY_BASENAME_NOGUI@"
else
_libname="@WX_LIBRARY_BASENAME_GUI@"
fi
[ $lib = base ] || _libname="${_libname}_$lib"
_libname="${_libname}-@WX_RELEASE@$_target"
if is_static; then
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
_wxlibs="$_wxlibs ${libdir}/lib${_libname}.a"
for f in $(eval echo \"\$ldlibs_$lib\"); do
# Only propagate duplicate -libraries to their latest
# possible position. Do not eliminate any other
# duplicates that might occur. They should be fixed
# in configure long before they get here.
# This started as a workaround for Mac -framework,
# but it seems like a better policy in general, which
# will let the more heinous bugs in configure shake out.
# We should maybe filter *.a here too, but not unless
# we have to.
case "$f" in
-l*) _all_libs="$(remove_field $f $_all_libs) $f" ;;
*) _all_libs="$_all_libs $f" ;;
esac
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
done
else
_wxlibs="$_wxlibs -l${_libname}"
fi
done
if [ -n "$WXDEBUG" ]; then
decho " retrieved: ldflags = $_all_ldflags"
decho " wxlibs = $_wxlibs"
decho " alllibs = $_all_libs"
fi
echo $_all_ldflags $_wxlibs $_all_libs
}
# this is the strict subset of the above function which returns only the
# (static) libraries themselves: this is used for linkdeps output which should
# output the list of libraries the main program should depend on
#
# of course, this duplication is bad but I'll leave to somebody else the care
# of refactoring this as I don't see any way to do it - VZ.
# This (and the other cruft to support it) should be removed with
# reference to the FIXME above when configure stops piping us a slurry
# of options that need to be decomposed again for most practical uses - RL.
link_deps_for()
{
_wxlibs=''
is_cross && _target="-${target}"
for lib; do
if match_field "$lib" @CORE_BASE_LIBS@ ; then
_libname="@WX_LIBRARY_BASENAME_NOGUI@"
else
_libname="@WX_LIBRARY_BASENAME_GUI@"
fi
[ $lib = base ] || _libname="${_libname}_$lib"
_libname="${_libname}-@WX_RELEASE@$_target"
_wxlibs="$_wxlibs ${libdir}/lib${_libname}.a"
done
echo $_wxlibs
}
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Sanity check the list of libs the user provided us, if any.
# --------------------------------------------------------------
wx_libs=$(echo "$input_parameters" | tr ',' ' ')
[ -z "$WXDEBUG" ] || decho " user supplied libs: '$wx_libs'"
if is_monolithic; then
# Core libs are already built into the blob.
for i in std @CORE_GUI_LIBS@ @CORE_BASE_LIBS@; do
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
wx_libs=$(remove_field $i $wx_libs)
done
wx_libs="@WXCONFIG_LDFLAGS_GUI@ $(lib_flags_for $wx_libs)"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# We still need the core lib deps for a static build though
if is_static; then
link_deps="${libdir}/libwx_@TOOLCHAIN_NAME@.a"
wx_libs="$wx_libs $link_deps $ldlibs_core @LIBS@"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
else
wx_libs="$wx_libs -lwx_@TOOLCHAIN_NAME@"
fi
using_gui=yes
else # MONOLITHIC = 0
# Import everything by default, expand std if specified, or add base if omitted.
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
if [ -z "$wx_libs" ]; then
wx_libs="@CORE_GUI_LIBS@ @CORE_BASE_LIBS@"
elif match_field std $wx_libs; then
# Bubble any libs that were already specified to the end
# of the list and ensure static linking order is retained.
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
wx_libs=$(remove_field std $wx_libs)
for i in @CORE_GUI_LIBS@ @CORE_BASE_LIBS@; do
wx_libs="$(remove_field $i $wx_libs) $i"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
done
elif ! match_field base $wx_libs ; then
wx_libs="$wx_libs base"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
fi
using_gui=no
for i in $wx_libs ; do
if match_field "$i" @CORE_GUI_LIBS@ ; then
_guildflags="@WXCONFIG_LDFLAGS_GUI@"
using_gui=yes
break
fi
match_field "$i" @CORE_BASE_LIBS@ || using_gui=yes
done
if is_static; then
link_deps=$(link_deps_for $wx_libs)
fi
wx_libs="$_guildflags $(lib_flags_for $wx_libs)"
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
if [ -n "$WXDEBUG" ]; then
decho
decho " using libs: '$wx_libs'"
decho " using_gui = $using_gui"
decho
fi
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# Endgame. Nothing left to discover now.
# --------------------------------------------------------------
[ "$using_gui" = "yes" ] || _gui_cppflags="-DwxUSE_GUI=0"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
if is_installed; then
_include_cppflags="-I${includedir}/wx-@WX_RELEASE@@WX_FLAVOUR@"
else
_include_cppflags="-I${includedir} -I${prefix}/contrib/include"
fi
_cppflags=$(echo "-I${libdir}/wx/include/@TOOLCHAIN_FULLNAME@" $_include_cppflags "@WXCONFIG_CPPFLAGS@" $_gui_cppflags)
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# now without further ado, we can answer these too.
[ -z "$output_option_cppflags" ] || echo $_cppflags
[ -z "$output_option_cflags" ] || echo $_cppflags "@WXCONFIG_CFLAGS@"
[ -z "$output_option_cxxflags" ] || echo $_cppflags "@WXCONFIG_CXXFLAGS@"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
[ -z "$output_option_gl_libs" ] || echo $(lib_flags_for gl)
[ -z "$output_option_linkdeps" ] || echo $link_deps
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
if [ -n "$output_option_libs" ]; then
is_cross &&
[ "x$libdir" = "x/usr/${target}/lib" ] ||
[ "x$libdir" = "x/usr/lib" ] ||
_ldflags="-L$libdir"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
is_installed || [ -n "$flag_option_no_rpath" ] || _rpath="@WXCONFIG_RPATH@"
echo $_ldflags "@LDFLAGS@" $_rpath $wx_libs "@DMALLOC_LIBS@"
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
fi
# xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
#
# Beyond here reside only machine or tool specific workarounds
# that require knowlege not obtainable prior to this comment.
#
# Please. Avoid addding things here, wx-config should avoid
# hard coding tool specific details. Do not use things here
# as an example of other things that should be here, These
# shouldn't be here either. This is a place of last resort
# for interim workarounds. I can but stress as strongly as
# the censor will allow, there are only bad examples of things
# that belong at this level of abstraction to follow. It is
# a limbo for glitches awaiting the Next Design Repair. Ok.
#
# With that firmly in mind, our debut dilemma is:
# Resource compilers. An elusive term that covers some pretty
# dissimilar concepts on various platforms. The good news is,
# each platform has only one definition of 'resource', compiled
# or not, and so we can abstract that neatly to return a platform
# specific invocation of the appropriate tool. The bad news is,
# windres (at least) requires knowledge of the wx header files
# location(s) that cannot be predicted reliably before the call to
# wx-config is made. Currently for all known resource compilers,
# we can simply return a command and some salient configuration
# options in response to a request for --rescomp. So here we
# top up the options for any tools that may require information
# that was only just determined in the last few machine cycles,
# then output the necessary incantation for the platform.
#
# Most things should already be constant by the time configure
# has run. Do not add anything here that is already known there.
if [ -n "$output_option_rescomp" ]; then
case "@RESCOMP@" in
*windres|wrc)
# Note that with late model windres, we could just insert
# _include_cppflags here, but use the old notation for now
# as it is more universally accepted.
if is_installed; then
echo "@RESCOMP@ --include-dir" \
"${includedir}/wx-@WX_RELEASE@@WX_FLAVOUR@" \
"@WXCONFIG_RESFLAGS@"
else
echo "@RESCOMP@ --include-dir ${includedir}" \
"--include-dir ${prefix}/contrib/include" \
"@WXCONFIG_RESFLAGS@"
fi
;;
# neither rez not emxbind have any specific needs from
# us, so just output what was determined by configure.
*)
echo @RESCOMP@ @WXCONFIG_RESFLAGS@
;;
esac
fi
#
# xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 17:16:29 +00:00
# And so that's it, we're done. Have a nice build.
exit 0