| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051 | # AM_AUX_DIR_EXPAND                                         -*- Autoconf -*-# Copyright (C) 2001-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.## This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation# gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,# with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.# For projects using AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR([foo]), Autoconf sets# $ac_aux_dir to '$srcdir/foo'.  In other projects, it is set to# '$srcdir', '$srcdir/..', or '$srcdir/../..'.## Of course, Automake must honor this variable whenever it calls a# tool from the auxiliary directory.  The problem is that $srcdir (and# therefore $ac_aux_dir as well) can be either absolute or relative,# depending on how configure is run.  This is pretty annoying, since# it makes $ac_aux_dir quite unusable in subdirectories: in the top# source directory, any form will work fine, but in subdirectories a# relative path needs to be adjusted first.## $ac_aux_dir/missing#    fails when called from a subdirectory if $ac_aux_dir is relative# $top_srcdir/$ac_aux_dir/missing#    fails if $ac_aux_dir is absolute,#    fails when called from a subdirectory in a VPATH build with#          a relative $ac_aux_dir## The reason of the latter failure is that $top_srcdir and $ac_aux_dir# are both prefixed by $srcdir.  In an in-source build this is usually# harmless because $srcdir is '.', but things will broke when you# start a VPATH build or use an absolute $srcdir.## So we could use something similar to $top_srcdir/$ac_aux_dir/missing,# iff we strip the leading $srcdir from $ac_aux_dir.  That would be:#   am_aux_dir='\$(top_srcdir)/'`expr "$ac_aux_dir" : "$srcdir//*\(.*\)"`# and then we would define $MISSING as#   MISSING="\${SHELL} $am_aux_dir/missing"# This will work as long as MISSING is not called from configure, because# unfortunately $(top_srcdir) has no meaning in configure.# However there are other variables, like CC, which are often used in# configure, and could therefore not use this "fixed" $ac_aux_dir.## Another solution, used here, is to always expand $ac_aux_dir to an# absolute PATH.  The drawback is that using absolute paths prevent a# configured tree to be moved without reconfiguration.AC_DEFUN([AM_AUX_DIR_EXPAND],[AC_REQUIRE([AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR_DEFAULT])dnl# Expand $ac_aux_dir to an absolute path.am_aux_dir=`cd "$ac_aux_dir" && pwd`])
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