How to set a define through "./configure" with Autoconf

Luiz Antonio picture Luiz Antonio · Aug 9, 2012 · Viewed 12.3k times · Source

I have one project that can generate two diferent applications based on one define.

libfoo_la_CXXFLAGS = -DMYDEFINE

I have to modify the Makefile.am to set this define, so it is not automatic.

Can I set this define somehow through the configure command? Is there any other way to set one define using autotools?

Answer

Some programmer dude picture Some programmer dude · Aug 9, 2012

You have to edit the file configure.ac, and before AC_OUTPUT (which is the last thing in the file) add a call to AC_DEFINE.

In a simple case like yours, it should be enough with:

AC_DEFINE(MYDEFINE)

If you want to set a value, you use:

AC_DEFINE(MYDEFINE, 123)

This last will add -DMYDEFINE=123 to the flags, or #define MYDEFINE 123 in the generated autoconf header if you use that.

I recommend you read the documentation from the beginning, and work through their examples and tutorials. Also check other projects configure files to see how they use different features.

Edit: If you want to pass flags on the command line to the make command, then you do something like this:

libfoo_la_CXXFLAGS = $(MYFLAGS)

Then you call make like this:

$ make MYFLAGS="-DMYDEFINE"

If you don't set MYFLAGS on the command line, it will be undefined and empty in the makefile.

You can also set target-specific CPPFLAGS in Makefile.am, in which case the source files will be recompiled, once for each set of flags:

lib_LTLIBRARIES = libfoo.la libbar.la
libfoo_la_SOURCES = foo.c
libfoo_la_CPPFLAGS = -DFOO
libbar_la_SOURCES = foo.c
libbar_la_CPPFLAGS = -DBAR