# -*- mode: makefile -*- ############################################################################ # Install options # ############################################################################ #INSTALL_DIR=c:\Program Files\XEmacs\XEmacs-$(XEMACS_VERSION_STRING) INSTALL_DIR=E:\XEmacs\XEmacs-$(XEMACS_VERSION_STRING) # PACKAGE_PREFIX is root of the installed package hierarchies. # This corresponds to the configure option --with-late-packages. # See 'Package Hierarchies' in the info for more documentation. # If you don't set this, XEmacs will attempt to find the packages at runtime. #PACKAGE_PREFIX=c:\Program Files\XEmacs ############################################################################ # Compiled-in features: basic # ############################################################################ # Multilingual support. MULE=1 # Native MS Windows support. HAVE_MS_WINDOWS=1 # GTK support. Do NOT set this to 1; this does not currently work. HAVE_GTK=0 GTK_DIR= ############################################################################ # Compiled-in features: graphics formats # ############################################################################ # Directory under which the optional libraries are placed. To make your # life easy, just grab http://www.xemacs.org/Download/win32/optional-libs.exe # (a self-installing .ZIP) and unzip them into an appropriate directory # (by default, c:\src). This gets you precompiled versions of all of # the libraries below. OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR=c:\src # Set this to enable XPM support (virtually mandatory), and specify # the directory containing xpm. Get the library from # http://ftp.xemacs.org/pub/xemacs/aux/xpm-3.4k.tar.gz, or the latest # version (note that the library hasn't been updated in years) from # http://www.inria.fr/koala/lehors/xpm.html. HAVE_XPM=1 XPM_DIR=$(OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR)\xpm-3.4k # Set this to enable GIF support, and specify the directory containing giflib. # Get the latest version from http://sourceforge.net/projects/giflib/. HAVE_GIF=0 GIF_DIR=$(OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR)\giflib-4.1.6 # Set this to enable PNG support (virtually mandatory), and specify the # directories containing png and zlib. Get the latest version of PNG from # http://www.libpng.org/pub/png/libpng.html. Get the latest version of ZLIB # from http://www.gzip.org/zlib/. NOTE: In order to compile libpng, you will # have to rename the zlib directory to just `zlib'. We don't do that here # so we can preserve the version number, like for the other libraries. HAVE_PNG=1 PNG_DIR=$(OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR)\libpng-1.2.8 ZLIB_DIR=$(OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR)\zlib-1.2.3 # Set this to enable JPEG support (useful, but not necessary), and specify # the directory containing jpeg. Get the latest version from # http://www.ijg.org/ or ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/jpeg/. HAVE_JPEG=1 JPEG_DIR=$(OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR)\jpeg-6b # Set this to enable TIFF support (not very important), and specify the # directory containing tiff. Get the latest version from # http://www.remotesensing.org/libtiff/. HAVE_TIFF=1 TIFF_DIR=$(OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR)\tiff-3.7.3 # Set this to enable XFace support (not very important), and specify the # directory containing compface. Get the library from # http://ftp.xemacs.org/aux/compface-1.5.1.tar.gz. HAVE_XFACE=1 COMPFACE_DIR=$(OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR)\compface-1.5.1 # Set this to enable bignum support (useful, but not necessary), and specify # the directory containing GNU MP. Get the latest version from # http://www.swox.com/gmp/. HAVE_BIGNUM=0 BIGNUM_DIR=$(OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR)\gmp-4.1.4 # Set this to enable Berkeley DB support (not very important), and specify # the directory containing Sleepcat DB. Get the latest version from # http://www.sleepycat.com/products/db.shtml. If you want to use the # shared-library (DLL) version instead of the static library, set # BUILD_DATABASE_SHARED to 1. HAVE_DATABASE=0 BUILD_DATABASE_SHARED=0 DATABASE_DIR=$(OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR)\db-4.3.28 # Set this to enable PostgreSQL support (not very important), and specify # the directory containing PostgreSQL. Get the latest version from # http://www.postgresql.org/. HAVE_POSTGRESQL=0 POSTGRESQL_DIR=$(OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR)\postgresql-8.0.3 # Set this to enable LDAP support (not very important), and specify # the directory containing LDAP. It is not easy to build OpenLDAP under # native MS Windows, as it is only experimentally supported. However, there # is a mailing list for this, which contains postings of recent binaries and # build patches; see # # http://lucas.bergmans.us/hacks/openldap/ # # Get the latest version of OpenLDAP from http://www.openldap.org/. HAVE_LDAP=0 LDAP_DIR=$(OPTIONAL_LIBRARY_DIR)\openldap-2.3.4 ############################################################################ # Build settings # ############################################################################ # If you want to the built files to be placed outside of the source tree # (e.g. this allows you to build multiple versions of XEmacs, with # different configuration settings, from the same source tree), run # `make-build-dir' to create a skeleton build tree, giving it the name of a # path. This creates the specified directory and the `nt' directory below # it, copies config.inc (if it exists), config.inc.samp and xemacs.mak into # the `nt' directory, and modifies the config files to contain the path of # the source tree in SOURCE_DIR. This will not overwrite files that # already exist, so it can safely be run more than once on the same tree. # # Running nmake in the skeleton build tree will then build XEmacs in that # directory tree, using the source files as specified. The paths of the # `lisp' and `etc' directories in the source tree will be compiled into the # executable as "last-resort" values -- i.e. they will be used if you # simply run the executable as-is, but will not override any local copy of # the `lisp' and/or `etc' directories that you may have made. # # Alternatively, you can just uncomment the line below for BUILD_DIR and # specify a (possibly non-existent) path. Running nmake will then put its # build files into a parallel directory structure underneath the specified # path, creating the directories as necessary. The problem with this is # that the first method above allows you to have a different copy of # `config.inc' for each build directory, but doing it this way means you # have only one version of config.inc, and have to manually change it for # each different build. # NOTE: These cannot be relative paths. If you want the source and build to # be relatives of each other, use $(MAKEROOT) to refer to the root of the # current tree -- that's one level up from where xemacs.mak is located. # SOURCE_DIR=c:\src\xemacs\working # BUILD_DIR=c:\src\xemacs\msbuilds\working # Set this to specify the location of makeinfo. (If not set, XEmacs will # attempt to use its built-in, much slower texinfo support when building # info files.) If you are building XEmacs yourself, you probably have # Cygwin sitting around already. If not, you should. Cygwin provides a # `makeinfo.exe' in /usr/bin/makeinfo (/usr/bin is virtual, it's /bin in # the actual file system). MAKEINFO=c:\cygwin\bin\makeinfo.exe # Set this to enable debug code in XEmacs that doesn't slow things down, # and to add debugging information to the executable. (The code that's # enabled in XEmacs is primarily extra commands that aid in debugging # problems. The kind of debugging code that slows things down -- # i.e. internal error-checking -- is controlled by the ERROR_CHECK_ALL # variable, below.) DEBUG_XEMACS=1 # Set this to turn on optimization when compiling. Normally this should # be the opposite of DEBUG_XEMACS. !if $(DEBUG_XEMACS) OPTIMIZED_BUILD=0 !else OPTIMIZED_BUILD=1 !endif # Set this to build with the fastcall calling convention, which uses registers # instead of the stack and should speed things up a bit # #### Change to 1 when I check in the ws with support for fastcall USE_FASTCALL=0 # Set this in order to avoid building against MSVCRTD.dll, since we can't # ship that DLL and since it requires VC installed on the target computer BUILD_FOR_SETUP_KIT=1 ############################################################################ # Development options # ############################################################################ # Set this to compile in support for profiling. If you want line-by-line # profiling under VC++, you also need debugging turned on. PROFILE_SUPPORT=0 # Set this to enable support for edit-and-continue under VC++. # WARNING: This turns on incremental linking, which is known to lead to # occasional weird crashes in pdump loading. If that happens, do a # nmake -f xemacs.mak clean so that temacs.exe and xemacs.exe get removed. SUPPORT_EDIT_AND_CONTINUE=0 # Uncomment this to turn off or on the error-checking code, which adds # abundant internal error checking (and slows things down a lot). Normally, # leave this alone -- it will be on for beta builds and off for release # builds. # ERROR_CHECK_ALL=0 # Uncomment this to turn on or off whether we compile source files as C++ # files. This turns on additional error checking of various sorts. Normally, # leave it alone -- it will be on when ERROR_CHECK_ALL is on. # CPLUSPLUS_COMPILE=0 # Set this to speed up building, for development purposes. # WARNING: This may not completely rebuild all targets. In particular, # DOC is not rebuilt, and changes to lisp.h and config.h do not trigger # mass rebuilding. Other things may also be enabled that are not safe # for release builds. QUICK_BUILD=0 # Set this to see exactly which compilation commands are being run (not # generally recommended). VERBOSECC=0 # Set this to get nmake to use dependency info (recommended for development). # Requires cygwin or ActiveState versions of Perl to be installed. DEPEND=1 # Set this to use the portable dumper for dumping the preloaded Lisp # routines, instead of the older "unexec" routines in unexnt.c. USE_PORTABLE_DUMPER=1 # Set this to use the new experimental garbage-collection routines instead # of the traditional XEmacs garbage-collection routines. USE_KKCC=1 # Set this to use the new experimental incremental garbage collector # and the new allocator routines NEW_GC=0 # Set this to turn on the use of the union type, which gets you improved # type checking of Lisp_Objects -- they're declared as unions instead of # ints, and so places where a Lisp_Object is mistakenly passed to a routine # expecting an int (or vice-versa), or a check is written `if (foo)' # instead of `if (!NILP (foo))', will be flagged as errors. (All of these # do NOT lead to the expected results! Qnil is not represented as 0 [so if # (foo) will *ALWAYS* be true for a Lisp_Object], and the representation of # an integer as a Lisp_Object is not just the integer's numeric value, but # usually 2x the integer +/- 1.) # There used to be a claim that it simplified debugging. There may have # been a grain of truth to this pre-19.8, when there was no lrecord type # and all objects had a separate type appearing in the tag. Nowadays, # however, there is no debugging gain, and in fact frequent debugging *LOSS*, # since many debuggers don't handle unions very well, and usually there is # no way to directly specify a union from a debugging prompt. # Furthermore, release builds should *NOT* be done this way because (a) you # may get less efficiency, with compilers that can't figure out how to # optimize the union into a machine word; (b) even worse, the union type # often triggers compiler bugs, especially when combined with Mule and # error-checking. This has been the case with various times using GCC, # *AND CURRENTLY HAPPENS WITH VC++*, at least when using pdump. Therefore, # be warned! USE_UNION_TYPE=0 # Set this to build XEmacs with the Intel C Compiler. USE_INTEL_COMPILER=0