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_ACEOF
# If some macros were called several times there might be several times
# the same #defines, which is useless. Nevertheless, we may not want to
# sort them, since we want the *last* AC-DEFINE to be honored.
uniq confdefs.h | sed -n -f confdef2sed.sed >conftest.defines
sed 's/ac_d/ac_u/g' conftest.defines >conftest.undefs
rm -f confdef2sed.sed
# This sed command replaces #undef with comments. This is necessary, for
# example, in the case of _POSIX_SOURCE, which is predefined and required
# on some systems where configure will not decide to define it.
cat >>conftest.undefs <<\_ACEOF
s,^[ ]*#[ ]*undef[ ][ ]*[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*,/* & */,
_ACEOF
# Break up conftest.defines because some shells have a limit on the size
# of here documents, and old seds have small limits too (100 cmds).
echo ' # Handle all the #define templates only if necessary.' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
echo ' if grep "^[ ]*#[ ]*define" $tmp/in >/dev/null; then' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
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echo ' # If there are no defines, we may have an empty if/fi' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
echo ' :' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
rm -f conftest.tail
while grep . conftest.defines >/dev/null
do
# Write a limited-size here document to $tmp/defines.sed.
echo ' cat >$tmp/defines.sed <<CEOF' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
# Speed up: don't consider the non `#define' lines.
echo '/^[ ]*#[ ]*define/!b' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
# Work around the forget-to-reset-the-flag bug.
echo 't clr' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
echo ': clr' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
sed ${ac_max_here_lines}q conftest.defines >>$CONFIG_STATUS
echo 'CEOF
sed -f $tmp/defines.sed $tmp/in >$tmp/out
rm -f $tmp/in
mv $tmp/out $tmp/in
' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
sed 1,${ac_max_here_lines}d conftest.defines >conftest.tail
rm -f conftest.defines
mv conftest.tail conftest.defines
done
rm -f conftest.defines
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echo >>$CONFIG_STATUS
# Break up conftest.undefs because some shells have a limit on the size
# of here documents, and old seds have small limits too (100 cmds).
echo ' # Handle all the #undef templates' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
rm -f conftest.tail
while grep . conftest.undefs >/dev/null
do
# Write a limited-size here document to $tmp/undefs.sed.
echo ' cat >$tmp/undefs.sed <<CEOF' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
# Speed up: don't consider the non `#undef'
echo '/^[ ]*#[ ]*undef/!b' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
# Work around the forget-to-reset-the-flag bug.
echo 't clr' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
echo ': clr' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
sed ${ac_max_here_lines}q conftest.undefs >>$CONFIG_STATUS
echo 'CEOF
sed -f $tmp/undefs.sed $tmp/in >$tmp/out
rm -f $tmp/in
mv $tmp/out $tmp/in
' >>$CONFIG_STATUS
sed 1,${ac_max_here_lines}d conftest.undefs >conftest.tail
rm -f conftest.undefs
mv conftest.tail conftest.undefs
done
rm -f conftest.undefs
cat >>$CONFIG_STATUS <<\_ACEOF
# Let's still pretend it is `configure' which instantiates (i.e., don't
# use $as_me), people would be surprised to read:
# /* config.h. Generated by config.status. */
if test x"$ac_file" = x-; then
echo "/* Generated by configure. */" >$tmp/config.h
else
echo "/* $ac_file. Generated by configure. */" >$tmp/config.h
fi
cat $tmp/in >>$tmp/config.h
rm -f $tmp/in
if test x"$ac_file" != x-; then
if diff $ac_file $tmp/config.h >/dev/null 2>&1; then
{ echo "$as_me:$LINENO: $ac_file is unchanged" >&5
echo "$as_me: $ac_file is unchanged" >&6;}
else
ac_dir=`(dirname "$ac_file") 2>/dev/null ||
$as_expr X"$ac_file" : 'X\(.*[^/]\)//*[^/][^/]*/*$' \| \
X"$ac_file" : 'X\(//\)[^/]' \| \
X"$ac_file" : 'X\(//\)$' \| \
X"$ac_file" : 'X\(/\)' \| \
. : '\(.\)' 2>/dev/null ||
echo X"$ac_file" |
sed '/^X\(.*[^/]\)\/\/*[^/][^/]*\/*$/{ s//\1/; q; }
/^X\(\/\/\)[^/].*/{ s//\1/; q; }
/^X\(\/\/\)$/{ s//\1/; q; }
/^X\(\/\).*/{ s//\1/; q; }
s/.*/./; q'`
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{ if $as_mkdir_p; then
mkdir -p "$ac_dir"
else
as_dir="$ac_dir"
as_dirs=
while test ! -d "$as_dir"; do
as_dirs="$as_dir $as_dirs"
as_dir=`(dirname "$as_dir") 2>/dev/null ||
$as_expr X"$as_dir" : 'X\(.*[^/]\)//*[^/][^/]*/*$' \| \
X"$as_dir" : 'X\(//\)[^/]' \| \
X"$as_dir" : 'X\(//\)$' \| \
X"$as_dir" : 'X\(/\)' \| \
. : '\(.\)' 2>/dev/null ||
echo X"$as_dir" |
sed '/^X\(.*[^/]\)\/\/*[^/][^/]*\/*$/{ s//\1/; q; }
/^X\(\/\/\)[^/].*/{ s//\1/; q; }
/^X\(\/\/\)$/{ s//\1/; q; }
/^X\(\/\).*/{ s//\1/; q; }
s/.*/./; q'`
done
test ! -n "$as_dirs" || mkdir $as_dirs
fi || { { echo "$as_me:$LINENO: error: cannot create directory \"$ac_dir\"" >&5
echo "$as_me: error: cannot create directory \"$ac_dir\"" >&2;}
{ (exit 1); exit 1; }; }; }
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rm -f $ac_file
mv $tmp/config.h $ac_file
fi
else
cat $tmp/config.h
rm -f $tmp/config.h
fi
done
_ACEOF
cat >>$CONFIG_STATUS <<\_ACEOF
{ (exit 0); exit 0; }
_ACEOF
chmod +x $CONFIG_STATUS
ac_clean_files=$ac_clean_files_save
# configure is writing to config.log, and then calls config.status.
# config.status does its own redirection, appending to config.log.
# Unfortunately, on DOS this fails, as config.log is still kept open
# by configure, so config.status won't be able to write to it; its
# output is simply discarded. So we exec the FD to /dev/null,
# effectively closing config.log, so it can be properly (re)opened and
# appended to by config.status. When coming back to configure, we
# need to make the FD available again.
if test "$no_create" != yes; then
ac_cs_success=:
ac_config_status_args=
test "$silent" = yes &&
ac_config_status_args="$ac_config_status_args --quiet"
exec 5>/dev/null
$SHELL $CONFIG_STATUS $ac_config_status_args || ac_cs_success=false
exec 5>>config.log
# Use ||, not &&, to avoid exiting from the if with $? = 1, which
# would make configure fail if this is the last instruction.
$ac_cs_success || { (exit 1); exit 1; }
fi