Next: ax_path_bdb, Previous: ax_openmp, Up: The Macros
AX_PATCH_LIBTOOL_CHANGING_CMDS_IFS
Do a ‘grep "^[a-z]*_cmds=" libtool‘ - these are "subroutines" encoded by libtool.m4 into the generated libtool script. Since libtool assumes that there is no subroutine-facility in the shell invoked, these are not actually subroutines, but actually a "list of commands". This looks correct, but the command separator is not ";" - it is "~", the tilde character.
Now, grep again, look for ‘grep ’IFS="~"’ libtool‘ and see that libtool scripting uses a for-loop on the command-list, i.e for cmd in $some_cmds. This works correctly when the IFS was modified, where IFS stands for "input field separator" which is whitespace characters by default.
The problem: I have some real-world filesystems where there are directories using "~" inside of them, to be more to the point, it is a change control management software that uses source repositories of the form "path/master/project~version/src" and libtool has the tendency to resolve any symlinks so that it will paste such path into the $_cmds script when it gets evaluated a number of times.
This script is a workaround: I do not know why the ";" was not chosen as the IFS, perhaps it has some weird interactions in some shells since it is also the default record separator being one time bigger in context than the argument separator. I have made good success however with using "?" as the IFS, since there is no path-name that uses a question mark, and there is no _cmds ever around that uses "?" for some thing.
Oh yes, there are some usages of "*" to match shell-wise at the output file of some tool, so that might have triggered the choice to not use "?" in the first place - but in real life it never occurred that a _cmds script was created that has gone to use "?". And so, this ac-macro exchanges the s/~/?/g in configured _cmds variables and replaces all occurrences of s/IFS="~"/IFS="?"/ - and it all works smooth now.
Download the latest version of ax_patch_libtool_changing_cmds_ifs.m4 or browse the macro’s revision history.
Copyright © 2008 Guido U. Draheim guidod@gmx.de
Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this notice are preserved. This file is offered as-is, without any warranty.
Next: ax_path_bdb, Previous: ax_openmp, Up: The Macros