diff options
-rwxr-xr-x | configure | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | configure.local.example | 25 |
2 files changed, 11 insertions, 18 deletions
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ #!/bin/sh # -# $Id: configure,v 1.71 2019/07/01 22:56:24 schwarze Exp $ +# $Id: configure,v 1.72 2020/02/05 15:12:11 schwarze Exp $ # # Copyright (c) 2014-2019 Ingo Schwarze <schwarze@openbsd.org> # @@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ OSENUM= OSNAME= UTF8_LOCALE= -CC=`printf "all:\\n\\t@echo \\\$(CC)\\n" | env -i make -sf -` +CC=cc CFLAGS= LDADD= LDFLAGS= diff --git a/configure.local.example b/configure.local.example index 4a456aad..bfb2e3fd 100644 --- a/configure.local.example +++ b/configure.local.example @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# $Id: configure.local.example,v 1.36 2019/03/06 10:18:58 schwarze Exp $ +# $Id: configure.local.example,v 1.37 2020/02/05 15:12:11 schwarze Exp $ # # Copyright (c) 2014-2019 Ingo Schwarze <schwarze@openbsd.org> # @@ -28,6 +28,14 @@ # --- user settings relevant for all builds ---------------------------- +# By default, "cc" is used as the C compiler, but it can be overridden. +# For example, the system compiler in SunOS 5.9 may not provide <stdint.h>, +# which may require this line: +CC=gcc + +# IBM AIX may need: +CC=xlc + # For -Tutf8 and -Tlocale operation, mandoc(1) requires <locale.h> # providing setlocale(3) and <wchar.h> providing wcwidth(3) and # putwchar(3) with a wchar_t storing UCS-4 values. Theoretically, @@ -268,21 +276,6 @@ BINM_CATMAN=mcatman # default is "catman" # 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 - -# Because the system compiler may not provide <stdint.h>, -# SunOS 5.9 may need: - -CC=gcc - -# IBM AIX may need: - -CC=xlc - # Normally, leave CFLAGS unset. In that case, -g will automatically # be used, and various -W options will be added if the compiler # supports them. If you define CFLAGS manually, it will be used |