Node:autoheader Invocation, Next:, Previous:Header Templates, Up:Configuration Headers



Using autoheader to Create config.h.in

The autoheader program can create a template file of C #define statements for configure to use. If configure.ac invokes AC_CONFIG_HEADERS(file), autoheader creates file.in; if multiple file arguments are given, the first one is used. Otherwise, autoheader creates config.h.in.

In order to do its job, autoheader needs you to document all of the symbols that you might use; i.e., there must be at least one AC_DEFINE or one AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED using its third argument for each symbol (see Defining Symbols). An additional constraint is that the first argument of AC_DEFINE must be a literal. Note that all symbols defined by Autoconf's built-in tests are already documented properly; you only need to document those that you define yourself.

You might wonder why autoheader is needed: after all, why would configure need to "patch" a config.h.in to produce a config.h instead of just creating config.h from scratch? Well, when everything rocks, the answer is just that we are wasting our time maintaining autoheader: generating config.h directly is all that is needed. When things go wrong, however, you'll be thankful for the existence of autoheader.

The fact that the symbols are documented is important in order to check that config.h makes sense. The fact that there is a well defined list of symbols that should be #define'd (or not) is also important for people who are porting packages to environments where configure cannot be run: they just have to fill in the blanks.

But let's come back to the point: autoheader's invocation...

If you give autoheader an argument, it uses that file instead of configure.ac and writes the header file to the standard output instead of to config.h.in. If you give autoheader an argument of -, it reads the standard input instead of configure.ac and writes the header file to the standard output.

autoheader accepts the following options:

--help
-h
Print a summary of the command line options and exit.
--version
-V
Print the version number of Autoconf and exit.
--verbose
-v
Report processing steps.
--debug
-d
Don't remove the temporary files.
--force
-f
Remake the template file even if newer than its input files.
--include=dir
-I dir
Also look for input files in dir. Multiple invocations accumulate. Directories are browsed from last to first.
--warnings=category
-W category
Report the warnings related to category (which can actually be a comma separated list). Current categories include:
obsolete
report the uses of obsolete constructs
all
report all the warnings
none
report none
error
treats warnings as errors
no-category
disable warnings falling into category