2001-03-06 Alexandre Duret-Lutz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
* install.am (install-strip): Set INSTALL_PROGRAM_ENV if STRIP is
not empty.
* m4/strip.m4 (AM_PROG_INSTALL_STRIP): Set INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM
to install-sh unconditionally. Don't set INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM_ENV.
diff -ru ../automake-1.4e-2001-02-27/install.am ./install.am
--- ../automake-1.4e-2001-02-27/install.am Tue Feb 27 10:59:58 2001
+++ ./install.am Tue Mar 6 20:12:15 2001
@@ -66,4 +66,5 @@
## Use double quotes here because we might need to interpolate some
## backquotes at runtime.
$(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) INSTALL_PROGRAM="$(INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM)" \
- INSTALL_PROGRAM_ENV='$(INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM_ENV)' install
+ `test -z '$(STRIP)' || \
+ echo "INSTALL_PROGRAM_ENV=STRIPPROG='$(STRIP)'"` install
diff -ru ../automake-1.4e-2001-02-27/m4/strip.m4 ./m4/strip.m4
--- ../automake-1.4e-2001-02-27/m4/strip.m4 Mon Feb 19 01:12:15 2001
+++ ./m4/strip.m4 Tue Mar 6 20:22:27 2001
@@ -1,51 +1,13 @@
# One issue with vendor `install' (even GNU) is that you can't
# specify the program used to strip binaries. This is especially
-# annoying in cross=compiling environments, where the build's strip
+# annoying in cross-compiling environments, where the build's strip
# is unlikely to handle the host's binaries.
-# Fortunately install-sh will honor a STRIPPROG variable, so if we ever
-# need to use a non standard strip, we just have to make sure we use
-# install-sh with the STRIPPROG variable set.
+# Fortunately install-sh will honor a STRIPPROG variable, so we
+# always use install-sh in `make install-strip', and initialize
+# STRIPPROG with the value of the STRIP variable (set by the user).
AC_DEFUN([AM_PROG_INSTALL_STRIP],
-[AC_REQUIRE([AM_MISSING_INSTALL_SH])
-dnl Don't test for $cross_compiling = yes, it might be `maybe'...
-# We'd like to do this but we can't because it will unconditionally
-# require config.guess. One way would be if autoconf had the capability
-# to let us compile in this code only when config.guess was already
-# a possibility.
-#if test "$cross_compiling" != no; then
-# # since we are cross-compiling, we need to check for a suitable `strip'
-# AM_PROG_STRIP
-# if test -z "$STRIP"; then
-# AC_MSG_WARN([strip missing, install-strip will not strip binaries])
-# fi
-#fi
-
-# If $STRIP is defined (either by the user, or by AM_PROG_STRIP),
-# instruct install-strip to use install-sh and the given $STRIP program.
-# Otherwise, just use ${INSTALL}: the idea is to use the vendor install
-# as much as possible, because it's faster.
-if test -z "$STRIP"; then
- # The top level make will set INSTALL_PROGRAM=$(INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM)
- # and the double dolard below is there to make sure that ${INSTALL}
- # is substitued in the sub-makes, not at the top-level; this is
- # needed if ${INSTALL} is a relative path (ajusted in each subdirectory
- # by config.status).
- INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM='$${INSTALL} -s'
- INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM_ENV=''
-else
+[AC_REQUIRE([AM_MISSING_INSTALL_SH])dnl
_am_dirpart="`echo $install_sh | sed -e 's,//*[[^/]]*$,,'`"
INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM="\${SHELL} \`CDPATH=: && cd $_am_dirpart && pwd\`/install-sh
-c -s"
- INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM_ENV="STRIPPROG='\$(STRIP)'"
-fi
AC_SUBST([STRIP])
-AC_SUBST([INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM])
-AC_SUBST([INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM_ENV])])
-
-#AC_DEFUN([AM_PROG_STRIP],
-#[# Check for `strip', unless the installer
-# has set the STRIP environment variable.
-# Note: don't explicitly check for -z "$STRIP" here because
-# that will cause problems if AC_CANONICAL_* is AC_REQUIREd after
-# this macro, and anyway it doesn't have an effect anyway.
-#AC_CHECK_TOOL([STRIP],[strip])
-#])
+AC_SUBST([INSTALL_STRIP_PROGRAM])])
--
Alexandre Duret-Lutz