Wireshark-commits: [Wireshark-commits] rev 41593: /trunk/ /trunk/: acinclude.m4 configure.in
Date: Fri, 16 Mar 2012 03:27:45 GMT
http://anonsvn.wireshark.org/viewvc/viewvc.cgi?view=rev&revision=41593

User: guy
Date: 2012/03/15 08:27 PM

Log:
 Put -D and -I flags into CPPFLAGS rather than into CFLAGS; that should
 make them apply to C++ as well as C.  That seems to be what the autoconf
 documentation suggests:
 
 - Variable: CFLAGS
   Debugging and optimization options for the C compiler. If it is not set
   in the environment when configure runs, the default value is set when
   you call AC_PROG_CC (or empty if you don't). configure uses this
   variable when compiling or linking programs to test for C features.
 
   If a compiler option affects only the behavior of the preprocessor
   (e.g., -Dname), it should be put into CPPFLAGS instead. If it affects
   only the linker (e.g., -Ldirectory), it should be put into LDFLAGS
   instead. If it affects only the compiler proper, CFLAGS is the natural
   home for it. If an option affects multiple phases of the compiler,
   though, matters get tricky. One approach to put such options directly
   into CC, e.g., CC='gcc -m64'. Another is to put them into both CPPFLAGS
   and LDFLAGS, but not into CFLAGS.
 
 	...
 
 - Variable: CPPFLAGS
   Preprocessor options for the C, C++, Objective C, and Objective C++
   preprocessors and compilers. If it is not set in the environment when
   configure runs, the default value is empty. configure uses this variable
   when preprocessing or compiling programs to test for C, C++, Objective
   C, and Objective C++ features.
 
   This variable's contents should contain options like -I, -D, and -U that
   affect only the behavior of the preprocessor. Please see the explanation
   of CFLAGS for what you can do if an option affects other phases of the
   compiler as well.

Directory: /trunk/
  Changes    Path            Action
  +52 -79    acinclude.m4    Modified
  +11 -13    configure.in    Modified