Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentr...@enterprisedb.com> writes: > I don't think preserving timestamps should be the default behavior, but > I would support organizing things so that additional options can be > passed to "install" to make it do whatever the user prefers. But that > won't work if some installations don't go through install.
Check, but ... > Btw., a quick test of make -C src/include/ install: > cp (current code): 0.5 s > GNU install: 0.6 s > install-sh: 12.5 s So this says that there's only a performance issue with install-sh; but that's used by just a tiny minority of systems anymore. Scraping the buildfarm's configure results, I find this many animals reporting each of these choices: 4 /bin/install -c 8 config/install-sh -c 2 /opt/packages/coreutils-8.6/inst/bin/install -c 1 /usr/bin/ginstall -c 100 /usr/bin/install -c 1 /usr/gnu/bin/install -c The 8 holdouts are gaur haddock hake hornet hoverfly mandrill sungazer tern ie, ancient HPUX, OpenIndiana (Solaris), and AIX, none of which are likely development platforms anymore --- and if somebody did care about this, there's nothing stopping them from installing GNU install on their machine. So I fear we're optimizing for a case that stopped being mainstream a decade or more back. I could get behind switching the code back to using $(INSTALL) for this, and then offering some way to inject user-selected switches into the $(INSTALL) invocations. That wouldn't need much more than another gmake macro. (Does there need to be a way to inject such switches only into header installations, or is it OK to do it across the board?) [ wanders away wondering how this'd affect the meson conversion project ] regards, tom lane