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In most situations, calling AC_OUTPUT
is sufficient to produce
`Makefile's in subdirectories. However, configure
scripts
that control more than one independent package can use
AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS
to run configure
scripts for other
packages in subdirectories.
AC_OUTPUT
run configure
in each subdirectory
dir in the given whitespace-separated list. Each dir should
be a literal, i.e., please do not use:
if test "$package_foo_enabled" = yes; then $my_subdirs="$my_subdirs foo" fi AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS($my_subdirs)
because this prevents `./configure --help=recursive' from
displaying the options of the package foo
. Rather, you should
write:
if test "$package_foo_enabled" = yes then; AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS(foo) fi
If a given dir is not found, no error is reported, so a
configure
script can configure whichever parts of a large source
tree are present. If a given dir contains configure.gnu
,
it is run instead of configure
. This is for packages that might
use a non-autoconf script Configure
, which can't be called
through a wrapper configure
since it would be the same file on
case-insensitive filesystems. Likewise, if a dir contains
`configure.ac' but no configure
, the Cygnus configure
script found by AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR
is used.
The subdirectory configure
scripts are given the same command
line options that were given to this configure
script, with minor
changes if needed (e.g., to adjust a relative path for the cache file or
source directory). This macro also sets the output variable
subdirs
to the list of directories `dir ...'.
`Makefile' rules can use this variable to determine which
subdirectories to recurse into. This macro may be called multiple
times.
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