With ./configure, you'll have an alternate method to
prepare the source distribution for building. This support is
experimental, and I'd like to receive feedback and patches for your
operating system. If a build with autoconf doesn't work, you can
always revert to the original Makefile which is saved by configure to
Makefile.dist. make mrproper will undo
everything that has been modified by ./configure.
% ./configure; make; make install
--help--enable-http--enable-default-catalog=pathlistSGML_CATALOG_FILES.--enable-default-search-path=pathlist
SGML_SEARCH_PATH.--disable-mif
--disable-html
If you have some extra additions to OpenJade, you can set CFLAGS/CXXFLAGS and/or LDFLAGS/LIBS at configure time:
CXXFLAGS=-Dmyhacks LDFLAGS=-L/opt/myhacks LIBS=-lmyhacks ./configure
Check the invocation of ld in Makefile.comm for the exact semantics of LDFLAGS and LIBS.
By default, ./configure attempts to build shared
libraries and link against them. This is done via the
libtool utility, a utility that knows how to build shared
libraries on a number of platforms.
By default, only shared libraries are built. If you have
difficulties building shared libraries, or you want to build static
versions, you can use the
--{enable,disable}{shared,static} options to configure
libtool to your likings.
According to the libtool 1.2 docs, shared libraries work on:
One more note from the libtool documentation: the HP/UX sed seems to be badly broken, install GNU sed before attempting to build - libtool depends on a working sed.