# $Id: configure.local.example,v 1.25 2017/02/08 16:16:08 schwarze Exp $ # # Copyright (c) 2014, 2015, 2016 Ingo Schwarze # # Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any # purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above # copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. # # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES # WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF # MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR # ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES # WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN # ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF # OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. # For all settings documented in this file, there are reasonable # defaults and/or the ./configure script attempts autodetection. # Consequently, you only need to create a file ./configure.local # and put any of these settings into it if ./configure autodetection # fails or if you want to make different choices for other reasons. # If autodetection fails, please tell . # We recommend that you write ./configure.local from scratch and # only put the lines there you need. This file contains examples. # It is not intended as a template to be copied as a whole. # --- user settings relevant for all builds ---------------------------- # For -Tutf8 and -Tlocale operation, mandoc(1) requires # providing setlocale(3) and providing wcwidth(3) and # putwchar(3) with a wchar_t storing UCS-4 values. Theoretically, # the latter should be tested with the __STDC_ISO_10646__ feature # macro. In practice, many headers do not provide that # macro even though they treat wchar_t as UCS-4. So the automatic # test only checks that wchar_t is wide enough, that is, at least # four bytes. # The following line forces multi-byte support. # If your C library does not treat wchar_t as UCS-4, the UTF-8 output # mode will print garbage. HAVE_WCHAR=1 # The following line disables multi-byte support. # The output modes -Tutf8 and -Tlocale will be the same as -Tascii. HAVE_WCHAR=0 # For -Tutf8 mode, mandoc needs to set an arbitrary locale having # a UTF-8 character set. If autodetection of a suitable locale # fails or selects an undesirable locale, you can manually choose # the locale for -Tutf8 mode: UTF8_LOCALE=en_US.UTF-8 # When man(1) or apropos(1) is called without -m and -M options, # MANPATH is not set in the environment, and man.conf(5) is not # available, manuals are searched for in the following directory # trees by default. MANPATH_DEFAULT="/usr/share/man:/usr/X11R6/man:/usr/local/man" # In manual pages written in the mdoc(7) language, the operating system # version is displayed in the page footer line. If an operating system # is specified as an argument to the .Os macro, that is always used. # If the .Os macro has no argument and an operation system is specified # with the mandoc(1) -Ios= command line option, that is used. # Otherwise, the uname(3) library function is called at runtime to find # the name of the operating system. # If you do not want uname(3) to be called but instead want a fixed # string to be used, use the following line: OSNAME="OpenBSD 6.0" # The following installation directories are used. # It is possible to set only one or a few of these variables, # there is no need to copy the whole block. # Even if you set PREFIX to something else, the other variables # pick it up without copying them all over. PREFIX="/usr/local" BINDIR="${PREFIX}/bin" SBINDIR="${PREFIX}/sbin" MANDIR="${PREFIX}/man" # Some distributions may want to avoid naming conflicts # with the configuration files of other man(1) implementations. # This changes the name of the installed section 5 manual page as well. MANM_MANCONF="mandoc.conf" # default is "man.conf" # Some distributions may want to avoid naming conflicts among manuals. # If you want to change the names of installed section 7 manual pages, # the following alternative names are suggested. # The suffix ".7" will automatically be appended. # It is possible to set only one or a few of these variables, # there is no need to copy the whole block. MANM_MAN="mandoc_man" # default is "man" MANM_MDOC="mandoc_mdoc" # default is "mdoc" MANM_ROFF="mandoc_roff" # default is "roff" MANM_EQN="mandoc_eqn" # default is "eqn" MANM_TBL="mandoc_tbl" # default is "tbl" # Some distributions may want to avoid naming conflicts with # other man(1), apropos(1), makewhatis(8), or soelim(1) utilities. # If you want to change the names of binary programs, # the following alternative names are suggested. # Using different names is possible as well. # This changes the names of the installed section 1 and section 8 # manual pages as well. # It is possible to set only one or two of these variables, # there is no need to copy the whole block. BINM_MAN=mman # default is "man" BINM_APROPOS=mapropos # default is "apropos" BINM_WHATIS=mwhatis # default is "whatis" BINM_MAKEWHATIS=mandocdb # default is "makewhatis" BINM_SOELIM=msoelim # default is "soelim" # Before falling back to the bundled version of the ohash(3) hashing # library, autoconfiguration tries the following linker flag to # link against your system version. If you do have ohash(3) on # your system but it needs different linker flags, set the following # variable to specify the required linker flags. LD_OHASH="-lutil" # When library autodetection decides to use -L/usr/local/lib, # -I/usr/local/include is automatically added to CFLAGS. # If you manually set LD_OHASH to something including -L/usr/local/lib, # chances are you will also need the following line: CFLAGS="${CFLAGS} -I/usr/local/include" # Some platforms may need an additional linker flag for nanosleep(2). # If none is needed or it is -lrt, it is autodetected. # Otherwise, set the following variable. LD_NANOSLEEP="-lrt" # Some platforms may need an additional linker flag for recvmsg(2). # If none is needed or it is -lsocket, it is autodetected. # Otherwise, set the following variable. LD_RECVMSG="-lsocket" # Some platforms might need additional linker flags to link against # libmandoc that are not autodetected, though no such cases are # currently known. LDADD="-lm" # Some systems may want to set additional linker flags for all the # binaries, not only for those using libmandoc, for example for # hardening options. LDFLAGS="-Wl,-z,relro" # It is possible to change the utility program used for installation # and the modes files are installed with. The defaults are: INSTALL="install" INSTALL_PROGRAM="${INSTALL} -m 0555" INSTALL_LIB="${INSTALL} -m 0444" INSTALL_MAN="${INSTALL} -m 0444" INSTALL_DATA="${INSTALL} -m 0444" # When using the "homebrew" package manager on Mac OS X, the actual # manuals are located in a so-called "cellar" and only symlinked # into the manual trees. To allow mandoc to follow such symlinks, # you have to specify the physical location of the cellar as returned # by realpath(3), for example: PREFIX="/usr/local" HOMEBREWDIR="${PREFIX}/Cellar" # --- user settings for the mandoc(3) library -------------------------- # By default, libmandoc.a is not installed. It is almost never needed # because there is almost no non-mandoc software out there using this # library. The one notable exception is NetBSD apropos(1). # So, when building for the NetBSD base system - but not for NetBSD # ports nor for pkgsrc! - you may want the following: INSTALL_LIBMANDOC=1 # The following settings are only used when INSTALL_LIBMANDOC is set. INCLUDEDIR="${PREFIX}/include/mandoc" LIBDIR="${PREFIX}/lib/mandoc" # --- user settings related to man.cgi --------------------------------- # By default, building man.cgi(8) is disabled. To enable it, copy # cgi.h.example to cgi.h, edit it, and use the following line. BUILD_CGI=1 # The remaining settings in this section are only relevant if BUILD_CGI # is enabled. Otherwise, they have no effect either way. # By default, man.cgi(8) is linked statically. # Some systems do not support static linking, for example Mac OS X. # In that case, use the following line: STATIC= # Some systems, for example Linux, require -pthread for static linking: STATIC="-static -pthread" # Some directories. # This works just like PREFIX, see above. WWWPREFIX="/var/www" HTDOCDIR="${WWWPREFIX}/htdocs" CGIBINDIR="${WWWPREFIX}/cgi-bin" # --- user settings related to catman ---------------------------------- # By default, building mandocd(8) and catman(8) is disabled. # To enable it, use the following line. # It does not work on SunOS 5.10 because there is no mkdirat(2) # nor on SunOS 5.9 which also lacks CMSG_LEN(3) and CMSG_SPACE(3). BUILD_CATMAN=1 # --- settings that rarely need to be touched -------------------------- # Do not set these variables unless you really need to. # You can manually override the compiler to be used. # But that's rarely useful because ./configure asks your make(1) # which compiler to use, and that answer will hardly be wrong. CC=cc # IBM AIX may need: CC=xlc # The default compiler flags are: CFLAGS="-g -W -Wall -Wstrict-prototypes -Wno-unused-parameter -Wwrite-strings" # IBM AIX xlc does not support -W; in that case, please use: CFLAGS="-g" # In rare cases, it may be required to skip individual automatic tests. # Each of the following variables can be set to 0 (test will not be run # and will be regarded as failed) or 1 (test will not be run and will # be regarded as successful). HAVE_DIRENT_NAMLEN=0 HAVE_ENDIAN=0 HAVE_EFTYPE=0 HAVE_ERR=0 HAVE_FTS=0 # Setting this implies HAVE_FTS_COMPARE_CONST=0. HAVE_FTS_COMPARE_CONST=0 # Setting this implies HAVE_FTS=1. HAVE_GETLINE=0 HAVE_GETSUBOPT=0 HAVE_ISBLANK=0 HAVE_MKDTEMP=0 HAVE_NTOHL=0 HAVE_OHASH=0 HAVE_PATH_MAX=0 HAVE_PLEDGE=0 HAVE_PROGNAME=0 HAVE_REALLOCARRAY=0 HAVE_REWB_BSD=0 HAVE_REWB_SYSV=0 HAVE_STRCASESTR=0 HAVE_STRINGLIST=0 HAVE_STRLCAT=0 HAVE_STRLCPY=0 HAVE_STRPTIME=0 HAVE_STRSEP=0 HAVE_STRTONUM=0 HAVE_SYS_ENDIAN=0 HAVE_VASPRINTF=0 HAVE_WCHAR=0