Hi everybody! I'm currently developing an application that I want to distribute now. I want to package everything using the autotools, so that everybody only has to download the tarball, run configure, make and make install. I already got things working with some test source files located in the same directory. But the application that I developed has a bunch of subdirectories that all belong to the same target. My directory structure looks like this:
+ main.cpp + src |-- exception (directory with source files) |-- handler (directory with source files) |-- number (directory with source files) |-- parser (directory with source files) |-- (some .h and .cpp files) + tests |-- handler (directory with source files) |-- nodes (directory with source files) |-- number (directory with source files) |-- (some .h and .cpp files) All the files have to be compiled. Then, all the object files should be linked together to create an executable. That's it. A simple project, whose files are located in subdirectories. For me, it seems as if the autotools don't support subdirectories (only if every subdirectory represents another target). Is there a way to do the stuff described above in an elegant way? I would be glad if somebody could explain me how to do it, or send me a link with a similar project that has the same directory structure. I'm currently using: Debian Sarge, Kernel 2.6.17.11, autoconf 2.59, automake 1.4-p6, libtool 1.5.6, aclocal 1.4-p6 and bash 3.1.14(1). Thanks in advance, Andi _______________________________________________ help-gnu-utils mailing list help-gnu-utils@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gnu-utils