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Re: Multiple definitions of ___printf__


From: John Darrington
Subject: Re: Multiple definitions of ___printf__
Date: Mon, 29 Mar 2010 17:29:31 +0000
User-agent: Mutt/1.5.18 (2008-05-17)

It's a real shame we have to have that dummy po/Makefile.am
One would have thought that because  we have the AC_PROVIDE([AM_PO_SUBDIRS])
line it wouldn't be necessary.


On Sat, Mar 27, 2010 at 02:31:01PM -0700, Ben Pfaff wrote:
     I pushed out my proposed changes to a new branch named
     "proposed-gettext".  It passes the testsuite.
     
     Comments?
     
     John Darrington <address@hidden> writes:
     
     > Yes.  I recall that was my primary complaint - it does (at least)
     > two distinct  things.  At the time I didn't find a way to seperate
     > them.  If we can do that, then it might be worth considering using
     > it again.
     >
     > On Fri, Mar 26, 2010 at 05:05:16PM -0700, Ben Pfaff wrote:
     >      
     >      AM_GNU_GETTEXT has two purposes.  First, it figures out how to
     >      link against libintl.  Second, it invokes AM_PO_SUBDIRS to set up
     >      all the po directory variables, etc.
     >      
     >      I think that it is only the second part that causes trouble, and
     >      I think that we can disable the second part by writing
     >              AC_PROVIDE([AM_PO_SUBDIRS])
     >      just above the call to AM_GNU_GETTEXT.
     >      
     >      I'll try this tonight, if I have time.
     >      
     >      > I don't think it will be very difficult to write an autoconf
     >      > test to see if libc contains libintl or not.
     >      
     >      The gettext manual makes it sound difficult.  From the section
     >      titled "AM_GNU_GETTEXT in `gettext.m4'":
     >      
     >         The complexities that `AM_GNU_GETTEXT' deals with are the 
following:
     >      
     >         * Some operating systems have `gettext' in the C library, for 
example
     >           glibc.  Some have it in a separate library `libintl'.  GNU
     >           `libintl' might have been installed as part of the GNU 
`gettext'
     >           package.
     >      
     >         * GNU `libintl', if installed, is not necessarily already in the
     >           search path (`CPPFLAGS' for the include file search path,
     >           `LDFLAGS' for the library search path).
     >      
     >         * Except for glibc, the operating system's native `gettext' 
cannot
     >           exploit the GNU mo files, doesn't have the necessary locale
     >           dependency features, and cannot convert messages from the
     >           catalog's text encoding to the user's locale encoding.
     >      
     >         * GNU `libintl', if installed, is not necessarily already in the 
run
     >           time library search path.  To avoid the need for setting an
     >           environment variable like `LD_LIBRARY_PATH', the macro adds the
     >           appropriate run time search path options to the `LIBINTL' and
     >           `LTLIBINTL' variables.  This works on most systems, but not on
     >           some operating systems with limited shared library support, 
like
     >           SCO.
     >      
     >         * GNU `libintl' relies on POSIX/XSI `iconv'.  The macro checks 
for
     >           linker options needed to use iconv and appends them to the
     >           `LIBINTL' and `LTLIBINTL' variables.
     >      
     >      -- 
     >      Ben Pfaff 
     >      http://benpfaff.org
     
     -- 
     Regarding a Microsoft/Xerox agreement:
        "This is a match made in heaven.
         Both companies excel at copying other people's work."
     address@hidden <URL:http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=99/05/16/2211252>

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