GDB_AC_DEFINE_RELOCATABLE(ICONV_BIN, iconv, ${iconv_bin})
])
-# On alpha-osf, it appears that libtermcap and libcurses are not compatible.
-# There is a very specific comment in /usr/include/curses.h explaining that
-# termcap routines built into libcurses must not be used.
-#
-# The symptoms we observed so far is GDB unexpectedly changing
-# the terminal settings when tgetent is called - this is particularly
-# visible as the output is missing carriage returns, and so rapidly
-# becomes very hard to read.
-#
-# The readline configure script has already decided that libtermcap
-# was enough for its purposes, and so decided to build readline using
-# libtermcap. Since the TUI mode requires curses, building GDB with
-# TUI enabled results in both libraries to be used at the same time,
-# which is not allowed. This basically means that GDB with TUI is
-# broken on alpha-osf.
-
-case $host_os in
- osf* )
- if test x"$enable_tui" = xyes; then
- AC_MSG_ERROR([Building GDB with TUI mode is not supported on this host])
- fi
- if test x"$enable_tui" = xauto; then
- enable_tui=no
- fi
- ;;
-esac
-
# For the TUI, we need enhanced curses functionality.
if test x"$enable_tui" != xno; then
prefer_curses=yes
AC_MSG_RESULT(${PYTHON_CFLAGS})
fi
- # On IRIX, type siginfo is not defined. Instead, sys/siginfo.h provides:
- # #if _SGIAPI
- # #define siginfo __siginfo
- # #endif
- # The problem is that including Python causes some XOPEN macros to be
- # unilaterally defined, and that in turn causes _SGIAPI to evaluate
- # to false. So, we work around this issue by defining siginfo ourself
- # though the command-line.
- #
# On x64 Windows, Python's include headers, and pyconfig.h in
# particular, rely on MS_WIN64 macro to detect that it's a 64bit
# version of Windows. Unfortunately, MS_WIN64 is only defined if
# solved as of 2012-10-02 (http://bugs.python.org/issue4709).
case "$gdb_host" in
- irix*) if test "${GCC}" = yes; then
- CPPFLAGS="$CPPFLAGS -Dsiginfo=__siginfo"
- fi
- ;;
mingw64)
if test "${GCC}" = yes; then
CPPFLAGS="$CPPFLAGS -DMS_WIN64"