On Wed, 2011-04-27 at 19:13 -0700, Dan Nicholson wrote:
On Wed, Apr 27, 2011 at 5:32 PM, Alan Coopersmith
alan.coopersm...@oracle.com wrote:
On 04/27/11 03:54 AM, Dan Nicholson wrote:
IMO, you should at least AC_SUBST the variable if you want to use it
somewhere else.
I just wanted to
On Mon, Apr 25, 2011 at 8:35 PM, Alan Coopersmith
alan.coopersm...@oracle.com wrote:
Still only adds it to CWARNFLAGS if --enable-strict-compilation is
passed, but sets the variable with the right flags for the compiler
so it's available for other checks in configure scripts.
Signed-off-by:
Actually, I think you should do this for gcc since it doesn't automatically
error on unknown attributes (then I can pull that into the xorg-tls macro):
STRICT_CFLAGS=-pedantic -Werror -Werror=attributes
On Apr 27, 2011, at 3:54 AM, Dan Nicholson wrote:
On Mon, Apr 25, 2011 at 8:35 PM, Alan
On 04/27/11 03:54 AM, Dan Nicholson wrote:
IMO, you should at least AC_SUBST the variable if you want to use it
somewhere else.
I just wanted to make it available to the XORG_TLS macro Jeremy's working
on, not in a Makefile - is AC_SUBST needed for that?
On the other hand it doesn't hurt, so I
On Wed, Apr 27, 2011 at 5:32 PM, Alan Coopersmith
alan.coopersm...@oracle.com wrote:
On 04/27/11 03:54 AM, Dan Nicholson wrote:
IMO, you should at least AC_SUBST the variable if you want to use it
somewhere else.
I just wanted to make it available to the XORG_TLS macro Jeremy's working
on,
On Mon, 2011-04-25 at 20:35 -0700, Alan Coopersmith wrote:
Still only adds it to CWARNFLAGS if --enable-strict-compilation is
passed, but sets the variable with the right flags for the compiler
so it's available for other checks in configure scripts.
Signed-off-by: Alan Coopersmith