Previous: autoconf Invocation, Up: Making configure Scripts
Installing the various components of the GNU Build System can be tedious: running autopoint for Gettext, automake for Makefile.in etc. in each directory. It may be needed either because some tools such as automake have been updated on your system, or because some of the sources such as configure.ac have been updated, or finally, simply in order to install the GNU Build System in a fresh tree.
autoreconf runs autoconf, autoheader, aclocal, automake, libtoolize, and autopoint (when appropriate) repeatedly to update the GNU Build System in the specified directories and their subdirectories (see Subdirectories). By default, it only remakes those files that are older than their sources.
If you install a new version of some tool, you can make autoreconf remake all of the files by giving it the --force option.
See Automatic Remaking, for Make rules to automatically remake configure scripts when their source files change. That method handles the timestamps of configuration header templates properly, but does not pass --autoconf-dir=dir or --localdir=dir.
Gettext supplies the autopoint command to add translation
infrastructure to a source package. If you use autopoint,
your configure.ac should invoke both AM_GNU_GETTEXT
and
AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION(
gettext-version)
. See Invoking the autopoint
Program, for further details.
autoreconf accepts the following options:
If deemed appropriate, this option triggers calls to
`automake --add-missing',
`libtoolize', `autopoint', etc.
AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS
).
Warnings about `syntax' are enabled by default, and the environment variable WARNINGS, a comma separated list of categories, is honored as well. Passing -W category actually behaves as if you had passed --warnings=syntax,$WARNINGS,category. If you want to disable the defaults and WARNINGS, but (for example) enable the warnings about obsolete constructs, you would use -W none,obsolete.
If you want autoreconf to pass flags that are not listed here
on to aclocal, set ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS
in your Makefile.am.