I am converting a C++ program which uses the autotools build system to use a shared library, introducing the use of libtool. Most of the program functionality is being placed in the shared library, which is loaded by the main program, so that the common code can be accessed by other programs in future.
Throughout the program and library sources the autoheader generated config.h
is used with the usual macro:
#if HAVE_CONFIG_H
# include <config.h>
#endif
In configure.ac I use the macro to generate it:
AC_CONFIG_HEADERS([config.h])
My question is, do I need to install config.h
for others to be able to use my library, and if so, what is the appropriate way to do it, and should it be renamed to avoid conflicts etc?
The most information I have found on this is here:
http://www.openismus.com/documents/linux/building_libraries/building_libraries#installingheaders
But this is hardly an official source.
Never ever install autoheader's
config.h
.The last thing the users of your library need is interference from the macros leaking out of your
config.h
. Your library may haveHAVE_FOOBAR
, but my software might be compiled in a way that foobar is disabled, so thatHAVE_FOOBAR
will break my compilation.The AX_PREFIX_CONFIG macro from the archive is a workaround, where everything gets prefixed.
A better approach is to create a template file (e.g.
blargconfig.h.in
) with lines like:And then
AC_SUBST()
those variables inconfigure.ac
:Then list it as an output file:
The
.h
file should be listed withnodist_include_HEADERS
; the.h.in
file will be automatically distributed because it's listed inAC_CONFIG_FILES
.Destination for such files is commonly
$libdir/packagename/include
. See GLib for example, although they generateglibconfig.h
without a template (by writing the whole creation code inline inconfigure.ac
, as the autobook suggests). I find this approach less maintainable than usingAC_SUBST
, but it's more flexible.Of course, to help the compiler find the platform-dependent header you'll probably also want to write a pkgconfig script, like GLib does.
You will need to install
config.h
if it affects the interface. In practical terms, if the#define
's are required by the header(s), not just the.cc
implementation / compilation units.If
config.h
is a problem, you can specify another name in the AC_CONFIG_HEADERS macro. e.g.,AC_CONFIG_HEADERS([foo_config.h])
.The easiest way to install the header, assuming automake, is with:
nodist_include_HEADERS = foo_config.h
in the top-level
Makefile.am
. thenodist
prefix tells automake thatfoo_config.h
is generated rather than distributed with the package.If not using automake, install
foo_config.h
in$includedir
.$exec_prefix/include
is arguably a more correct location for a generated header, but in practice the former location is fine.I avoid using
config.h
, by passing relevant definitions inCPPFLAGS
orfoo_CPPFLAGS
along withAC_SUBST
toMakefile.am
for source builds, orAC_SUBST
tofoo.h.in
to generate headers at configure-time. A lot ofconfig.h
is test-generated noise. It requires more infrastructure, but it's what I prefer. I wouldn't recommend this approach unless you're comfortable with the autotools.