<prog>`}}} in `configure`. It is preferable to simply using {{{`which
<prog>`}}} because backticks (`) (aka backquotes) invoke a sub-shell
which may source a "noisy" `~/.whatever` file, and we do not want the
error messages to be part of the assignment in {{{foo=`which
<prog>`}}}.
This commit was SVN r16955.
cover the case where a subdirectory is also built that needs to be
removed.
Note that there are other macros that we don't control (AC, AM, and/or
LT) that also exhibit this problem that we cannot fix. :-\
Fixes trac:1180.
This commit was SVN r16669.
The following Trac tickets were found above:
Ticket 1180 --> https://svn.open-mpi.org/trac/ompi/ticket/1180
an issue on Solaris where /usr/bin/grep doesn't understand -q. The
grep that AC_PROG_GREP finds (/usr/xpg4/bin/grep), which is POSIX
compliant and understands -q. Also fix one instance where egrep was
used instead of $EGREP.
This commit was SVN r14829.
on almost all platforms (except OS X... sigh...). This is the merge
of r10846 - 10894 from the tmp/f90-shared branch to the trunk.
This commit was SVN r11103.
The following SVN revisions from the original message are invalid or
inconsistent and therefore were not cross-referenced:
r10846
We have repeatedly seen users inadvertantly try to use a C compiler
for $CXX (e.g., using icc instead of icpc in recent versions of the
Intel compiler). Unfortunately, this would "sorta work", meaning that
configure would complete successfully and the build would fail much
later in the process (when $CXX was used to try to link a C++
compiler). This was further compounded by the fact that many C
compilers will switch into "C++ mode" when they compile files that end
in .cc -- meaning that they'll *compile* C++ codes properly, but they
won't *link* properly. Hence, users would get all the way down to
compiling the C++ MPI bindings or ompi_info (i.e., very late in the
build process) before the problem became evident.
We already have a test in configure that tries to compile, link, and
run a sample C++ program. This helped ensure that $CXX was a valid
compiler, but it did not catch if the user accidentally supplied a C
compiler instead of a C++ compiler because the test program was simply
"return 0". This commit updates the test program to use some
C++-specific constructs (std::string) so that if the user supplies a C
compiler in $CXX, the program may *compile*, but it will definitely
fail to *link*.
Hence, the process will fail early in configure (with a descriptive
message about how the compiler failed to work properly) rather than
late in the build.
This commit was SVN r10829.
source tree that are named .f95, and b) it sets the future file
extension for Fortran AC tests to be .f95. This is not a problem for
gfortran, but other compilers (e.g., ifort) don't like that.
This commit was SVN r9040.
changes. The two Big Changes are elegance (much more re-use of code
rather than cut-n-pasting the same code over and over and over and...)
and enabling cross-compilation for F77 and F90 (because we actually
have to *run* some compiled F77 and F90 programs for some of the
tests, which obviously won't work in a cross-compilation environment
-- so enable the use of config.cache to load such values in
cross-compiling environments).
This commit was SVN r8991.
situations) before going on to tests that run executables with the
compiler. Print a friendly error message if it fails. Hopefully, this
will help people with borked compilers.
This commit was SVN r8898.
from themselves -- but doesn't look valid. For example, it's legal to
have $FC and $F77 to both be ifort (intel fortran compiler).
This commit was SVN r4148.