aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/readline/configure.ac
AgeCommit message (Collapse)AuthorFilesLines
2019-11-15Minor updates to readline configuryTom Tromey1-1/+2
Christian's recent patches to gnulib made me realize that readline should be changed to use AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS (ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS is deprecated) and that it can put the automake options into configure.ac. I also added no-define to the automake options. This doesn't matter much (we don't generate a config.h here), but gnulib does it, and it does make configure slightly smaller. readline/ChangeLog 2019-11-15 Tom Tromey <tromey@adacore.com> * configure, Makefile.in: Rebuild. * configure.ac: Use AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS. Pass options to AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE. * Makefile.am (AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS, ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS): Remove. Change-Id: If421599cc9dd9c4c3c37b9b439ab2c22c01742ed
2019-10-23Move readline to the readline/readline subdirectoryTom Tromey1-314/+23
readline turns out to be a bit of a stumbling block for the project to move gdbsupport (and then gdbserver) to the top-level. The issue is that readline headers are intended to be included with names like "readline/readline.h". To support this, gdb effectively adds a -I option pointing to the top-level source directory -- but, importantly, this option is not used when the system readline is used. For gdbsupport, a -I option like this would always be needed, but that in turn would break the system readline case. This was PR build/17077, fixed in commit a8a5dbcab8df0b3a9e04745d4fe8d64740acb323. Previously, we had discussed this on the gdb-patches list in terms of removing readline from the tree https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2019-09/msg00317.html However, Eli expressed some concerns, and Joel did as well (off-list). Given those concerns, and the fact that a patch-free local readline is relatively new in gdb (it was locally patched for years), I changed my mind and decided to handle this situation by moving the readline sources down a level. That is, upstream readline is now in readline/readline, and the top-level readline directory just contains the minimal configury needed to build that. This fixes the problem because, when gdb unconditionally adds a -I$(top_srcdir), this will not find readline headers. A separate -I will be needed instead, which is exactly what's needed for --with-system-readline. gdb/ChangeLog 2019-10-23 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * Makefile.in (READLINE_DIR): Update. gdb/doc/ChangeLog 2019-10-23 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * Makefile.in (READLINE_DIR): Update. readline/ChangeLog 2019-10-23 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> Move old contents to readline/ subdirectory. * aclocal.m4, configure, configure.ac, .gitignore, Makefile.am, Makefile.in, README: New files. Change-Id: Ice156a2ee09ea68722b48f64d97146d7428ea9e4
2019-08-12Import readline 8.0Tom Tromey1-5/+21
This imports readline 8.0. readline/ChangeLog.gdb 2019-08-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * Imported readline 8.0.
2019-08-12Import readline 7.0 (patch 5)Tom Tromey1-0/+304
This imports readline 7.0 (up to patch 5) while preserving all gdb-local changes. This was done by checking out the readline git repository, making a branch based on the gdb baseline revision, applying the gdb changes to that branch, and then merging from readline 7. readline/ChangeLog.gdb 2019-08-12 Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com> * Imported readline 7.0 patch 5.
2015-07-25Revert "Sync readline/ to version 7.0 alpha"Patrick Palka1-308/+0
This reverts commit b558ff043d41ba8d17a82f5f9ae5f9dade66160e. This reverts commit 4a11f2065906976675808364ddbd1c0f77eea41f. The initial import commit failed to retain local changes made to readline's configure.in (and the commit message erroneously stated that there were no local changes that needed to be reapplied). Also the import caused a couple of build errors and a scattering of testsuite regressions throughout many arches. It's probably better to start over with this import, hopefully more carefully next time.
2015-07-25Don't build readline's shared libs by defaultPatrick Palka1-1/+1
Since the sync to version 7.0-alpho, readline now by default builds (unused) shared libraries alongside static libraries, whereas before it only built static libraries. A couple of GDB buildbots were not happy with this change: http://gdb-build.sergiodj.net/builders/AIX-POWER7-plain/builds/240 http://gdb-build.sergiodj.net/builders/Fedora-i686/builds/1518 To get these buildbots building again, this patch alters readline's configure.ac file to not build shared libraries by default, as was the case with readline 6.2. A more permanent fix may be to alter the top-level Makefile.def to pass --disable-shared to readline, or to investigate why these building these shared libraries are giving the buildbots trouble. (I think the proximate reason why the i686 buildbot fails is because it passes CFLAGS=-m32 instead of CC="gcc -m32" to the top-level configure script, and readline's linker commands don't inherit CFLAGS. Not sure about the AIX failure.) readline/ChangeLog.gdb: * configure.ac: Default opt_shared_libs to no. * configure: Regenerate.
2015-07-25Sync readline/ to version 7.0 alphaPatrick Palka1-0/+308
This patch syncs our upstream copy of readline from version 6.2 to the latest version, 7.0 alpha (released July 10 2015). I essentially copied what was done the last time readline was synced, when Jan updated to readline 6.2 in 2011: http://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2011-05/msg00003.html Procedure: 1. I extracted the readline-7.0-alpha tarball on top of readline/. 2. I deleted all the new files under doc/ that were deliberately omitted before. 3. I regenerated readline/configure and readline/examples/rlfe/configure using autoconf 2.64. No other configure files need regenerating. 4. I updated the function gdb_printable_part in completer.c with a trivial change made to the readline function it is based off of, printable_part in readline/complete.c. There is more work to be done in completer.c to sync it with readline/complete.c, but it is non-trivial and should probably be done separately anyway. Local patches that had to be reapplied: None. readline 7.0 alpha contains all of our local readline patches. New files in readline/: colors.{c,h} examples/{hist_erasedups,hist_purgecmd,rl-callbacktest,rlbasic}.c parse-colors.{c,h} readline.pc.in configure.ac Deleted files in readline/: configure.in Regressions: After the sync there is one testsuite regression, the test "signal SIGINT" in gdb.gdb/selftest.exp which now FAILs. Previously, the readline 6.2 SIGINT handler would temporarily reinstall the underlying application's SIGINT handler and immediately re-raise SIGINT so that the orginal handler gets invoked. But now (since readline 6.3) its SIGINT handler does not re-raise SIGINT or directly invoke the original handler; it now sets a flag marking that SIGINT was raised, and waits until readline explicitly has control to call the application's SIGINT handler. Anyway, because SIGINT is no longer re-raised from within readline's SIGINT handler, doing "signal SIGINT" with a stopped inferior gdb process will no longer resume and then immediately stop the process (since there is no 2nd SIGINT to immediately catch). Instead, the inferior gdb process will now just print "Quit" and continue to run. So with this commit, this particular test case is adjusted to reflect this change in behavior (we now have to send a 2nd SIGINT manually to stop it). Aside from this one testsuite regression, I personally noticed no regression in user-visible behavior. Though I only tested on x86_64 and on i686 Debian Stretch. Getting this kind of change in at the start of the GDB 7.11 development cycle will allow us to get a lot of passive testing from developers and from bleeding-edge users. readline/ChangeLog.gdb: Import readline 7.0 alpha * configure: Regenerate. * examples/rlfe/configure: Regenerate. gdb/ChangeLog: * completer.c (gdb_printable_part): Sync with readline function it is based off of. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.gdb/selftest.exp (test_with_self): Update test to now expect the GDB inferior to no longer immediately stop after being resumed with "signal SIGINT".