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NEWS
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* WARNING: New versioning scheme for Automake.
- Beginning with the release 1.13.2, Automake has started to use a
more rational versioning scheme, that should allow users to know
which kind of changes can be expected from a new version, based
on its version number.
+ Micro releases (e.g., 1.13.3, 2.0.1, 3.2.8) introduce only bug
and regression fixes and documentation updates; they should not
introduce new features, nor any backward-incompatibility (any
such incompatibility would be considered a bug, to be fixed with
a further micro release).
+ Minor releases (e.g., 1.14, 2.1) can introduce new backward
compatible features; the only backward-incompatibilities allowed
in such a release are new *non-fatal* deprecations and warnings,
and possibly fixes for old or non-trivial bugs (or even inefficient
behaviours) that could unfortunately have been seen and used by
some as "corner case features". Possible disruptions caused by
this kind of fixes should hopefully be quite rare, and their
effects limited in scope.
+ Major versions (now expected to be released every 18 or 24 months,
and not more often) can introduce new big features (possibly with
rough edges and not-fully-stabilized APIs), removal of deprecated
features, backward-incompatible changes of behaviour, and possibly
major refactorings (that, while ideally transparent to the user,
could introduce new bugs). Incompatibilities should however not
be introduced gratuitously and abruptly; a proper deprecation path
should be duly implemented in the preceding minor releases.
- According to this new scheme, the next major version of Automake
(the one that had previously been labelled as "1.14") will actually
become "Automake 2.0". Automake 1.14 has already been released as
the last minor release, and the present one is a bug-fixing release
following up on that one.
- See discussion about automake bug#13578 for more details and
background: <http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=13578>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* WARNING: Future backward-incompatibilities!
- Makefile recipes generated by Automake 2.0 will expect to use an
'rm' program that doesn't complain when called without any non-option
argument if the '-f' option is given (so that commands like "rm -f"
and "rm -rf" will act as a no-op, instead of raising usage errors).
This behavior of 'rm' is very widespread in the wild, and it will be
required in the next POSIX version:
<http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=542>
Accordingly, AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE now expands some shell code that checks
that the default 'rm' program in PATH satisfies this requirement,
aborting the configure process if this is not the case. For the
moment, it's still possible to force the configuration process to
succeed even with a broken 'rm', that that will no longer be the case
for Automake 2.0.
- Automake 2.0 will require Autoconf 2.70 or later (which is still
unreleased at the moment of writing, but is planned to be released
before Automake 2.0 is).
- Automake 2.0 will drop support for the long-deprecated 'configure.in'
name for the Autoconf input file. You are advised to start using the
recommended name 'configure.ac' instead, ASAP.
- The ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS special make variable will be fully deprecated in
Automake 2.0: it will raise warnings in the "obsolete" category (but
still no hard error of course, for compatibilities with the many, many
packages that still relies on that variable). You are advised to
start relying on the new Automake support for AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS
instead (which was introduced in Automake 1.13).
- Automake 2.0 will remove support for automatic dependency tracking
with the SGI C/C++ compilers on IRIX. The SGI depmode has been
reported broken "in the wild" already, and we don't think investing
time in debugging and fixing is worthwhile, especially considering
that SGI has last updated those compilers in 2006, and is expected
to retire support for them in December 2013:
<http://www.sgi.com/services/support/irix_mips_support.html>
- Automake 2.0 will remove support for MS-DOS and Windows 95/98/ME
(support for them was offered by relying on the DJGPP project).
Note however that both Cygwin and MSYS/MinGW on modern Windows
versions will continue to be fully supported.
- Automake-provided scripts and makefile recipes might (finally!)
start assuming a POSIX shell in Automake 2.0. There still is no
certainty about this though: we'd first like to wait and see
whether future Autoconf versions will be enhanced to guarantee
that such a shell is always found and provided by the checks in
./configure.
- Starting from Automake 2.0, third-party m4 files located in the
system-wide aclocal directory, as well as in any directory listed
in the ACLOCAL_PATH environment variable, will take precedence
over "built-in" Automake macros. For example (assuming Automake
is installed in the /usr/local hierarchy), a definition of the
AM_PROG_VALAC macro found in '/usr/local/share/aclocal/my-vala.m4'
should take precedence over the same-named automake-provided macro
(defined in '/usr/local/share/aclocal-2.0/vala.m4').
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.14.1:
* Bugs fixed:
- The user is no longer allowed to override the --srcdir nor the --prefix
configure options used by "make distcheck" (bug#14991).
- Fixed a gross inefficiency in the recipes for installing byte-compiled
python files, that was causing an O(N^2) performance on the number N of
files, instead of the expected O(N) performance. Note that this bug
was only relevant when the number of python files was high (which is
unusual in practice).
- Automake try to offer a more reproducible output for warning messages,
in the face of the newly-introduced randomization for hash keys order
in Perl 5.18.
- The 'test-driver' script now actually error out with a clear error
message on the most common invalid usages.
- Several spurious failures/hangs in the testsuite (bugs #14706, #14707,
#14760, #14911, #15181, #15237).
* Documentation fixes:
- Fixed typos in the 'fix-timestamp.sh' example script that made it
nonsensical.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.14:
* C compilation, and the AC_PROG_CC and AM_PROG_CC_C_O macros:
- The 'compile' script is now unconditionally required for all packages
that perform C compilation (if you are using the '--add-missing'
option, automake will fetch that script for you, so you shouldn't
need any explicit adjustment). This new behaviour is needed to avoid
obscure errors when the 'subdir-objects' option is used, and the
compiler is an inferior one that doesn't grasp the combined use of
both the "-c -o" options; see discussion about automake bug#13378 for
more details:
<http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=13378#35>
<http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=13378#44>
- The next major Automake version (2.0) will unconditionally activate
the 'subdir-objects' option. In order to smooth out the transition,
we now give a warning (in the category 'unsupported') whenever a
source file is present in a subdirectory but the 'subdir-object' is
not enabled. For example, the following usage will trigger such a
warning:
bin_PROGRAMS = sub/foo
sub_foo_SOURCES = sub/main.c sub/bar.c
- Automake will automatically enhance the autoconf-provided macro
AC_PROG_CC to force it to check, at configure time, that the
C compiler supports the combined use of both the '-c' and '-o'
options. The result of this check is saved in the cache variable
'am_cv_prog_cc_c_o', and said result can be overridden by
pre-defining that variable.
- The AM_PROG_CC_C_O macro can still be called, albeit that should no
longer be necessary. This macro is now just a thin wrapper around the
Automake-enhanced AC_PROG_CC. This means, among the other things,
that its behaviour is changed in three ways:
1. It no longer invokes the Autoconf-provided AC_PROG_CC_C_O
macro behind the scenes.
2. It caches the check result in the 'am_cv_prog_cc_c_o' variable,
and not in a 'ac_cv_prog_cc_*_c_o' variable whose exact name is
dynamically computed only at configure runtime (really!) from
the content of the '$CC' variable.
3. It no longer automatically AC_DEFINE the C preprocessor
symbol 'NO_MINUS_C_MINUS_O'.
* Texinfo support:
- Automake can now be instructed to place '.info' files generated from
Texinfo input in the builddir rather than in the srcdir; this is done
specifying the new automake option 'info-in-builddir'. This feature
was requested by the developers of GCC, GDB, GNU binutils and the GNU
bfd library. See the extensive discussion about automake bug#11034
for more details.
- For quite a long time, Automake has been implementing an undocumented
hack which ensured that '.info' files which appeared to be cleaned
(by being listed in the CLEANFILES or DISTCLEANFILES variables) were
built in the builddir rather than in the srcdir; this hack was
introduced to ensure better backward-compatibility with package
such as Texinfo, which do things like:
info_TEXINFOS = texinfo.txi info-stnd.texi info.texi
DISTCLEANFILES = texinfo texinfo-* info*.info*
# Do not create info files for distribution.
dist-info:
@:
in order not to distribute generated '.info' files.
Now that we have the 'info-in-builddir' option that explicitly causes
generated '.info' files to be placed in the builddir, this hack should
be longer necessary, so we deprecate it with runtime warnings. It will
likely be removed altogether in Automake 2.0.
* Relative directory in Makefile fragments:
- The special Automake-time substitutions '%reldir%' and '%canon_reldir%'
(and their short versions, '%D%' and '%C%' respectively) can now be used
in an included Makefile fragment. The former is substituted with the
relative directory of the included fragment (compared to the top-level
including Makefile), and the latter with the canonicalized version of
the same relative directory.
# in 'Makefile.am':
bin_PROGRAMS = # will be updated by included Makefile fragments
include src/Makefile.inc
# in 'src/Makefile.inc':
bin_PROGRAMS += %reldir%/foo
%canon_reldir%_foo_SOURCES = %reldir%/bar.c
This should be especially useful for packages using a non-recursive
build system.
* Deprecated distribution formats:
- The 'shar' and 'compress' distribution formats are deprecated, and
scheduled for removal in Automake 2.0. Accordingly, the use of the
'dist-shar' and 'dist-tarZ' will cause warnings at automake runtime
(in the 'obsolete' category), and the recipes of the Automake-generated
targets 'dist-shar' and 'dist-tarZ' will unconditionally display
(non-fatal) warnings at make runtime.
* New configure runtime warnings about "rm -f" support:
- To simplify transition to Automake 2.0, the shell code expanded by
AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE now checks (at configure runtime) that the default
'rm' program in PATH doesn't complain when called without any
non-option argument if the '-f' option is given (so that commands like
"rm -f" and "rm -rf" act as a no-op, instead of raising usage errors).
If this is not the case, the configure script is aborted, to call the
attention of the user on the issue, and invite him to fix his PATH.
The checked 'rm' behavior is very widespread in the wild, and will be
required by future POSIX versions:
<http://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=542>
The user can still force the configure process to complete even in the
presence of a broken 'rm' by defining the ACCEPT_INFERIOR_RM_PROGRAM
environment variable to "yes". And the generated Makefiles should
still work correctly even when such broken 'rm' is used. But note
that this will no longer be the case with Automake 2.0 though, so, if
you encounter the warning, please report it to us ASAP (and try to fix
your environment as well).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.13.4:
* Bugs fixed:
- Fix a minor regression introduced in Automake 1.13.3: when two or more
user-defined suffix rules were present in a single Makefile.am,
automake would needlessly include definition of some make variables
related to C compilation in the generated Makefile.in (bug#14560).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.13.3:
* Documentation fixes:
- The documentation no longer mistakenly reports that the obsolete
'AM_MKDIR_PROG_P' macro and '$(mkdir_p)' make variable are going
to be removed in Automake 2.0.
* Bugs fixed:
- Byte-compilation of Emacs lisp files could fail spuriously on
Solaris, when /bin/ksh or /usr/xpg4/bin/sh were used as shell.
- If the same user-defined suffixes were transformed into different
Automake-known suffixes in different Makefile.am files in the same
project, automake could get confused and generate inconsistent
Makefiles (automake bug#14441).
For example, if 'Makefile.am' contained a ".ext.cc:" suffix rule,
and 'sub/Makefile.am' contained a ".ext.c:" suffix rule, automake
would have mistakenly placed into 'Makefile.in' rules to compile
"*.c" files into object files, and into 'sub/Makefile.in' rules to
compile "*.cc" files into object files --- rather than the other
way around. This is now fixed.
* Testsuite work:
- The test cases no longer have the executable bit set. This should
make it clear that they are not meant to be run directly; as
explained in t/README, they can only be run through the custom
'runtest' script, or by a "make check" invocation.
- The testsuite has seen the introduction of a new helper function
'run_make', and several related changes. These serve a two-fold
purpose:
1. Remove brittleness due to the use of "make -e" in test cases.
2. Seamlessly allow the use of parallel make ("make -j...") in the
test cases, even where redirection of make output is involved
(see automake bug#11413 for a description of the subtle issues
in this area).
- Several spurious failures have been fixed (they hit especially
MinGW/MSYS builds). See automake bugs #14493, #14494, #14495,
#14498, #14499, #14500, #14501, #14517 and #14528.
- Some other minor miscellaneous changes and fixlets.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.13.2:
* Documentation fixes:
- The long-deprecated but still supported two-arguments invocation form
of AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE is documented once again. This seems the sanest
thing to do, given that support for such usage might need to remain
in place for an unspecified amount of time in order to cater to people
who want to define the version number for their package dynamically at
configure runtime (unfortunately, Autoconf does not yet support this
scenario, so we cannot delegate the work to it).
- The serial testsuite harness is no longer reported as "deprecated",
but as "discouraged". We have no plan to remove it, nor to make its
use cause runtime warnings.
- The parallel testsuite is no longer reported as "experimental"; it
is well tested, and should be stable now.
- The 'shar' and 'tarZ' distribution formats and the 'dist-shar' and
'dist-tarZ' options are obsolescent, and their use is deprecated
in the documentation.
- Other minor miscellaneous fixes and improvements; in particular,
some improvements in cross-references.
* Obsolescent features:
- Use of suffix-less info files (that can be specified through the
'@setfilename' macro in Texinfo input files) is discouraged, and
its use will raise warnings in the 'obsolete' category. Simply
use the '.info' extension for all your info files, transforming
usages like:
@setfilename myprogram
into:
@setfilename myprogram.info
- Use of Texinfo input files with '.txi' or '.texinfo' extensions
is discouraged, and its use will raise warnings in the 'obsolete'
category. You are advised to simply use the '.texi' extension
instead.
* Bugs fixed:
- When the 'ustar' option is used, the generated configure script no
longer risks hanging during the tests for the availability of the
'pax' utility, even if the user running configure has a UID or GID
that requires more than 21 bits to be represented.
See automake bug#8343 and bug#13588.
- The obsolete macros AM_CONFIG_HEADER or AM_PROG_CC_STDC work once
again, as they did in Automake 1.12.x (albeit printing runtime
warnings in the 'obsolete' category). Removing them has turned
out to be a very bad idea, because it complicated distro packing
enormously. Making them issue fatal warnings, as we did in
Automake 1.13, has turned out to be a similarly very bad idea,
for exactly the same reason.
- aclocal will no longer error out if the first local m4 directory
(as specified by the '-I' option or the 'AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS' or
'AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR' macros) doesn't exist; it will merely report
a warning in the 'unsupported' category. This is done to support
some pre-existing real-world usages. See automake bug#13514.
- aclocal will no longer consider directories for extra m4 files more
than once, even if they are specified multiple times. This ensures
packages that specify both
AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR([m4]) in configure.ac
ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS = -I m4 in Makefile.am
will work correctly, even when the 'm4' directory contains no
package-specific files, but is used only to install third-party
m4 files (as can happen with e.g., "libtoolize --install").
See automake bug#13514.
- Analysis of make flags in Automake-generated rules has been made more
robust, and more future-proof. For example, in presence of make that
(like '-I') take an argument, the characters in said argument will no
longer be spuriously considered as a set of additional make options.
In particular, automake-generated rules will no longer spuriously
believe to be running in dry mode ("make -n") if run with an invocation
like "make -I noob"; nor will they believe to be running in keep-going
mode ("make -k") if run with an invocation like "make -I kool"
(automake bug#12554).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.13.1:
* Bugs fixed:
- Use of the obsolete macros AM_CONFIG_HEADER or AM_PROG_CC_STDC now
causes a clear and helpful error message, instead of obscure ones
(issue introduced in Automake 1.13).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.13:
* Bugs fixed:
- ylwrap renames properly header guards in generated header files
(*.h), instead of leaving Y_TAB_H.
- ylwrap now also converts header guards in implementation files
(*.c). Because ylwrap failed to rename properly #include in the
implementation files, current versions of Bison (e.g., 2.7)
duplicate the generated header file in the implementation file.
The header guard then protects the implementation file from
duplicate definitions from the header file.
* Version requirements:
- Autoconf 2.65 or greater is now required.
- The rules to build PDF and DVI output from Texinfo input now
require Texinfo 4.9 or later.
* Obsolete features:
- Support for the "Cygnus-style" trees (once enabled by the 'cygnus'
option) has been removed. See discussion about automake bug#11034
for more background: <http://debbugs.gnu.org/11034>.
- The deprecated aclocal option '--acdir' has been removed. You
should use the options '--automake-acdir' and '--system-acdir'
instead (which have been introduced in Automake 1.11.2).
- The following long-obsolete m4 macros have been removed:
AM_PROG_CC_STDC: superseded by AC_PROG_CC since October 2002
fp_PROG_CC_STDC: broken alias for AM_PROG_CC_STDC
fp_WITH_DMALLOC: old alias for AM_WITH_DMALLOC
AM_CONFIG_HEADER: superseded by AC_CONFIG_HEADERS since July 2002
ud_PATH_LISPDIR: old alias for AM_PATH_LISPDIR
jm_MAINTAINER_MODE: old alias for AM_MAINTAINER_MODE
ud_GNU_GETTEXT: old alias for AM_GNU_GETTEXT
gm_PROG_LIBTOOL: old alias for AC_PROG_LIBTOOL
fp_C_PROTOTYPES: old alias for AM_C_PROTOTYPES (which was part
of the now-removed automatic de-ANSI-fication
support of Automake)
- All the "old alias" macros in 'm4/obsolete.m4' have been removed.
- Use of the long-deprecated two- and three-arguments invocation forms
of the AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE is no longer documented. It's still supported
though (albeit with a warning in the 'obsolete' category), to cater
for people who want to define the version number for their package
dynamically (e.g., from the current VCS revision). We'll have to
continue this support until Autoconf itself is fixed to allow better
support for such dynamic version numbers.
* Elisp byte-compilation:
- The byte compilation of '.el' files into '.elc' files is now done
with a suffix rule. This has simplified the compilation process, and
more importantly made it less brittle. The downside is that emacs is
now invoked once for each '.el' files, which cause some noticeable
slowdowns. These should however be mitigated on multicore machines
(which are becoming the norm today) if concurrent make ("make -j")
is used.
- Elisp files placed in a subdirectory are now byte-compiled to '.elc'
files in the same subdirectory; for example, byte-compiling of file
'sub/foo.el' file will result in 'sub/foo.elc' rather than in
'foo.elc'. This behaviour is backward-incompatible with older
Automake versions, but it is more natural and more sane. See also
automake bug#7441.
- The Emacs invocation performing byte-compilation of '.el' files honors
the $(AM_ELCFLAGS) and $(ELCFLAGS) variables; as typical, the former
one is developer-reserved and the latter one user-reserved.
- The 'elisp-comp' script, once provided by Automake, has been rendered
obsoleted by the just-described changes, and thus removed.
* Changes to Automake-generated testsuite harnesses:
- The parallel testsuite harness (previously only enabled by the
'parallel-tests' option) is the default one; the older serial
testsuite harness will still be available through the use of the
'serial-tests' option (introduced in Automake 1.12).
- The 'color-tests' option is now unconditionally activated by default.
In particular, this means that testsuite output is now colorized by
default if the attached terminal seems to support ANSI escapes, and
that the user can force output colorization by setting the variable
AM_COLOR_TESTS to "always". The 'color-tests' is still recognized
for backward-compatibility, although it's a handled as a no-op now.
* Silent rules support:
- Support for silent rules is now always active in Automake-generated
Makefiles. So, although the verbose output is still the default,
the user can now always use "./configure --enable-silent-rules" or
"make V=0" to enable quieter output in the package he's building.
- The 'silent-rules' option has now become a no-op, preserved for
backward-compatibility only. In particular, its use no longer
disables the warnings in the 'portability-recursive' category.
* Texinfo Support:
- The rules to build PDF and DVI files from Texinfo input now require
Texinfo 4.9 or later.
- The rules to build PDF and DVI files from Texinfo input now use the
'--build-dir' option, to keep the auxiliary files used by texi2dvi
and texi2pdf around without cluttering the build directory, and to
make it possible to run the "dvi" and "pdf" recipes in parallel.
* Automatic remake rules and 'missing' script:
- The 'missing' script no longer tries to update the timestamp of
out-of-date files that require a maintainer-specific tool to be
remade, in case the user lacks such a tool (or has a too-old version
of it). It just gives a useful warning, and in some cases also a
tip about how to obtain such a tool.
- The missing script has thus become useless as a (poor) way to work
around the sketched-timestamps issues that can happen for projects
that keep generated files committed in their VCS repository. Such
projects are now encouraged to write a custom "fix-timestamps.sh"
script to avoid such issues; a simple example is provided in the
"CVS and generated files" chapter of the automake manual.
* Recursive targets:
- The user can now define his own recursive targets that recurse
in the directories specified in $(SUBDIRS). This can be done by
specifying the name of such targets in invocations of the new
'AM_EXTRA_RECURSIVE_TARGETS' m4 macro.
* Tags:
- Any failure in the recipe of the "tags", "ctags", "cscope" or
"cscopelist" targets in a subdirectory is now propagated to the
top-level make invocation.
- Tags are correctly computed also for files in _SOURCES variables that
only list files with non-standard suffixes (see automake bug#12372).
* Improvements to aclocal and related rebuilds rules:
- Autoconf-provided macros AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR and AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS
are now traced by aclocal, and can be used to declare the local m4
include directories. Formerly, one had to specify it with an explicit
'-I' option to the 'aclocal' invocation.
- The special make variable ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS is deprecated; future
Automake versions will warn about its use, and later version will
remove support for it altogether.
* The depcomp script:
- Dropped support for libtool 1.4.
- Various internal refactorings. They should cause no visible change,
but the chance for regression is there anyway, so please report any
unexpected or suspicious behaviour.
- Support for pre-8.0 versions of the Intel C Compiler has been dropped.
This should cause no problem, since icc 8.0 has been released in
December 2003 -- almost nine years ago.
- Support for tcc (the Tiny C Compiler) has been improved, and is now
handled through a dedicated 'tcc' mode.
* The ylwrap script:
- ylwrap generates header guards with a single '_' for series of non
alphabetic characters, instead of several. This is what Bison >=
2.5.1 does.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Bugs fixed in 1.12.6:
* Python-related bugs:
- The default installation location for python modules has been improved
for Python 3 on Debian and Ubuntu systems, changing from:
${prefix}/lib/python3/dist-packages
to
${prefix}/lib/python3.x/site-packages
This change should ensure modules installed using the default ${prefix}
"/usr/local" are found by default by system python 3.x installations.
See automake bug#10227.
- Python byte-compilation supports the new layout mandated by PEP-3147,
with its __pycache__ directory (automake bug#8847).
* Build system issues:
- The maintainer rebuild rules for Makefiles and aclocal.m4 in
Automake's own build system works correctly again (bug introduced
in Automake 1.12.5).
* Testsuite issues:
- The Vala-related tests has been changed to adjust to the removal of
the 'posix' profile in the valac compiler. See automake bug#12934
a.k.a. bug#12522.
- Some spurious testsuite failures related to older tools and systems
have been fixed.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.12.5:
* Vala support:
- The AM_PROG_VALAC macro has been enhanced to takes two further
optional arguments; it's signature now being
AM_PROG_VALAC([MINIMUM-VERSION], [ACTION-IF-FOUND],
[ACTION-IF-NOT-FOUND])
- By default, AM_PROG_VALAC no longer aborts the configure invocation
if the Vala compiler found is too old, but simply prints a warning
messages (as it did when the Vala compiler was not found). This
should avoid unnecessary difficulties for end users that just want
to compile the unmodified, distributed Vala-generated C sources,
but happens to have an old Vala compiler in their PATH. This fixes
automake bug#12688.
- If no proper Vala compiler is found at configure runtime, AM_PROG_VALAC
will set the AC_SUBST'd variable 'VALAC' to 'valac' rather than to ':'.
This is a better default, because with it a triggered makefile rule
invoking a Vala compilation will clearly fail with an informative error
message like "valac: command not found", rather than silently, with
the error possibly going unnoticed or triggering harder-to-diagnose
fallout failures in later steps.
* Miscellaneous changes:
- automake and aclocal no longer honours the 'perllibdir' environment
variable. That had always been intended only as an hack required in
the testsuite, not meant for any use beyond that.
Bugs fixed in 1.12.5:
* Long-standing bugs:
- Automake no longer generates spurious remake rules invoking autoheader
to regenerate the template corresponding to header files specified after
the first one in AC_CONFIG_HEADERS (automake bug#12495).
- When wrapping Microsoft tools, the 'compile' script falls back to
finding classic 'libname.a' style libraries when 'name.lib' and
'name.dll.lib' aren't available.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.12.4:
* Warnings and deprecations:
- Warnings in the 'obsolete' category are enabled by default both in
automake and aclocal.
* Miscellaneous changes:
- Some testsuite weaknesses and spurious failures have been fixed.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.12.3:
* Miscellaneous changes:
- The '.m4' files provided by Automake no longer define serial numbers.
This should cause no difference in the behaviour of aclocal though.
- Some testsuite weaknesses and spurious failures have been fixed.
- There is initial support for automatic dependency tracking with the
Portland Group C/C++ compilers, thanks to the new new depmode 'pgcc'.
Bugs fixed in 1.12.3:
* Long-standing bugs:
- Instead of renaming only self-references of files (typically for
#lines), ylwrap now also renames references to the other generated
files. This fixes support for GLR and C++ parsers from Bison (PR
automake/491 and automake bug#7648): 'parser.c' now properly
#includes 'parser.h' instead of 'y.tab.h'.
- Generated files unknown to ylwrap are now preserved. This fixes
C++ support for Bison (automake bug#7648): location.hh and the
like are no longer discarded.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.12.2:
* Warnings and deprecations:
- Automake now issues a warning (in the 'portability' category) if
'configure.in' is used instead of 'configure.ac' as the Autoconf
input file. Such a warning will also be present in the next
Autoconf version (2.70).
* Cleaning rules:
- Recursive cleaning rules descends into the $(SUBDIRS) in the natural
order (as done by the other recursive rules), rather than in the
inverse order. They used to do that in order to work a round a
limitation in an older implementation of the automatic dependency
tracking support, but that limitation had been lifted years ago
already, when the automatic dependency tracking based on side-effects
of compilation had been introduced.
- Cleaning rules for compiled objects (both "plain" and libtool) work
better when subdir objects are involved, not triggering a distinct
'rm' invocation for each such object. They do so by removing *any*
compiled object file that is in the same directory of a subdir
object. See automake bug#10697.
* Silent rules support:
- A new predefined $(AM_V_P) make variable is provided; it expands
to a shell conditional that can be used in recipes to know whether
make is being run in silent or verbose mode.
Bugs fixed in 1.12.2:
* SECURITY VULNERABILITIES!
- The 'distcheck' recipe no longer grants temporary world-write
permissions on the extracted distdir. Even if such rights were
only granted for a vanishingly small time window, the implied
race condition proved to be enough to allow a local attacker
to run arbitrary code with the privileges of the user running
"make distcheck". This is CVE-2012-3386.
* Long-standing bugs:
- The "recheck" targets behaves better in the face of build failures
related to previously failed tests. For example, if a test is a
compiled program that must be rerun by "make recheck", and its
compilation fails, it will still be rerun by further "make recheck"
invocations. See automake bug#11791.
* Bugs introduced by 1.12.1:
- Automake provides once again the '$(mkdir_p)' make variable and the
'@mkdir_p@' substitution (both as simple aliases for '$(MKDIR_P)'),
for better backward-compatibility.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.12.1:
* New supported languages:
- Support for Objective C++ has been added; it should work similarly to
the support for Objective C.
* Deprecated obsolescent features:
- Use of the long-deprecated two- and three-arguments invocation forms
of the AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE macro now elicits a warning in the 'obsolete'
category. Starting from some future major Automake release (likely
post-1.13), such usages will no longer be allowed.
- Support for the "Cygnus-style" trees (enabled by the 'cygnus' option) is
now deprecated (its use triggers a warning in the 'obsolete' category).
It will be removed in the next major Automake release (1.13).
- The long-obsolete (since 1.10) automake-provided $(mkdir_p) make
variable, @mkdir_p@ configure-time substitution and AM_PROG_MKDIR
m4 macro are deprecated, eliciting a warning in the 'obsolete'
category.
* Miscellaneous changes:
- The Automake test cases now require a proper POSIX-conforming shell.
Older non-POSIX Bourne shells (like Solaris 10 /bin/sh) will no longer
be accepted. In most cases, the user shouldn't have to specify such
POSIX shell explicitly, since it will be looked up at configure time.
Still, when this lookup fails, or when the user wants to override its
conclusion, the variable 'AM_TEST_RUNNER_SHELL' can be used (pointing
to the shell that will be used to run the Automake test cases).
Bugs fixed in 1.12.1:
* Bugs introduced by 1.12:
- Several weaknesses in Automake's own build system and test suite
have been fixed.
* Bugs introduced by 1.11.3:
- When given non-option arguments, aclocal rejects them, instead of
silently ignoring them.
* Long-standing bugs:
- When the 'color-tests' option is in use, forcing of colored testsuite
output through "AM_COLOR_TESTS=always" works even if the terminal is
a non-ANSI one, i.e., if the TERM environment variable has a value of
"dumb".
- Several inefficiencies and poor performances in the implementation
of the parallel-tests 'check' and 'recheck' targets have been fixed.
- The post-processing of output "#line" directives done the ylwrap
script is more faithful w.r.t. files in a subdirectory; for example,
if the processed file is "src/grammar.y", ylwrap will correctly
produce directives like:
#line 7 "src/grammar.y"
rather than like
#line 7 "grammar.y"
as it did before.
* Bugs with new Perl versions:
- Aclocal works correctly with perl 5.16.0 (automake bug#11543).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New in 1.12:
* Obsolete features removed:
- The never documented nor truly used script 'acinstall' has been
removed.
- Support for automatic de-ANSI-fication has been removed.
- The support for the "obscure" multilib feature has been removed
from Automake core (but remains available in the 'contrib/'
directory of the Automake distribution).
- Support for ".log -> .html" conversion and the check-html and
recheck-html targets has been removed from Automake core (but
remains available in the 'contrib/' directory of the Automake
distribution).
- The deprecated 'lzma' compression format for distribution archives
has been removed, in favor of 'xz' and 'lzip'.
- The obsolete AM_WITH_REGEX macro has been removed.
- The long-deprecated options '--output-dir', '--Werror' and
'--Wno-error' have been removed.
- The chapter on the history of Automake has been moved out of the
reference manual, into a new dedicated Texinfo file.
* New targets:
- New 'cscope' target to build a cscope database for the source tree.
* Changes to Automake-generated testsuite harnesses:
- The new automake option 'serial-tests' has been introduced. It can
be used to explicitly instruct automake to use the older serial
testsuite harness. This is still the default at the moment, but it
might change in future versions.
- The 'recheck' target (provided by the parallel testsuite harness) now
depends on the 'all' target. This allows for a better user-experience
in test-driven development. See automake bug#11252.
- Test scripts that exit with status 99 to signal an "hard error" (e.g.,
and unexpected or internal error, or a failure to set up the test case
scenario) have their outcome reported as an 'ERROR' now. Previous
versions of automake reported such an outcome as a 'FAIL' (the only
difference with normal failures being that hard errors were counted
as failures even when the test originating them was listed in
XFAIL_TESTS).
- The testsuite summary displayed by the parallel-test harness has a
completely new format, that always list the numbers of passed, failed,
xfailed, xpassed, skipped and errored tests, even when these numbers
are zero (but using smart coloring when the color-tests option is in
effect).
- The default testsuite driver offered by the 'parallel-tests' option is
now implemented (partly at least) with the help of automake-provided
auxiliary scripts (e.g., 'test-driver'), instead of relying entirely
on code in the generated Makefile.in.
This has two noteworthy implications. The first one is that projects
using the 'parallel-tests' option should now either run automake with
the '--add-missing' option, or manually copy the 'test-driver' script
into their tree. The second, and more important, implication is that
now, when the 'parallel-tests' option is in use, TESTS_ENVIRONMENT can
no longer be used to define a test runner, and the command specified
in LOG_COMPILER (and <ext>_LOG_COMPILER) must be a *real* executable
program or script. For example, this is still a valid usage (albeit
a little contorted):
TESTS_ENVIRONMENT = \
if test -n '$(STRICT_TESTS)'; then \
maybe_errexit='-e'; \
else \
maybe_errexit=''; \
fi;
LOG_COMPILER = $(SHELL) $$maybe_errexit
OTOH, this is no longer a valid usage:
TESTS_ENVIRONMENT = \
$(SHELL) `test -n '$(STRICT_TESTS_CHECKING)' && echo ' -e'`
neither is this:
TESTS_ENVIRONMENT = \
run_with_perl_or_shell () \
{ \
if grep -q '^#!.*perl' $$1; then
$(PERL) $$1; \
else \
$(SHELL) $$1; \
fi; \
}
LOG_COMPILER = run_with_perl_or_shell
- The package authors can now use customary testsuite drivers within
the framework provided by the 'parallel-tests' testsuite harness.
Consistently with the existing syntax, this can be done by defining
special makefile variables 'LOG_DRIVER' and '<ext>_LOG_DRIVER'.
- A new developer-reserved variable 'AM_TESTS_FD_REDIRECT' can be used
to redirect/define file descriptors used by the test scripts.
- The parallel-tests harness generates now, in addition the '.log' files
holding the output produced by the test scripts, a new set of '.trs'
files, holding "metadata" derived by the execution of the test scripts;
among such metadata are the outcomes of the test cases run by a script.
- Initial and still experimental support for the TAP test protocol is
now provided.
* Changes to Yacc and Lex support:
- C source and header files derived from non-distributed Yacc and/or
Lex sources are now removed by a simple "make clean" (while they were
previously removed only by "make maintainer-clean").
- Slightly backward-incompatible change, relevant only for use of Yacc
with C++: the extensions of the header files produced by the Yacc
rules are now modelled after the extension of the corresponding
sources. For example, yacc files named "foo.y++" and "bar.yy" will
produce header files named "foo.h++" and "bar.hh" respectively, where
they would have previously produced header files named simply "foo.h"
and "bar.h". This change offers better compatibility with 'bison -o'.
* Miscellaneous changes:
- The AM_PROG_VALAC macro now causes configure to exit with status 77,
rather than 1, if the vala compiler found is too old.
- The build system of Automake itself now avoids the use of make
recursion as much as possible.
- Automake now prefers to quote 'like this' or "like this", rather
than `like this', in diagnostic message and generated Makefiles,
to accommodate the new GNU Coding Standards recommendations.
- Automake has a new option '--print-libdir' that prints the path of the