| GNU Libtool |
| *********** |
| |
| 1. Introduction |
| =============== |
| |
| This file attempts to describe the processes we use to maintain libtool, |
| and is not part of a release distribution. |
| |
| 2. Maintenance Notes |
| ==================== |
| |
| * If you incorporate a change from somebody on the net: |
| If it is a large change, you must make sure they have signed the |
| appropriate paperwork, and be sure to add their name and email |
| address to THANKS |
| |
| * If a change fixes a test, mention the test in the ChangeLog entry. |
| |
| * If somebody reports a new bug, mention his name in the ChangeLog entry |
| and in the test case you write. |
| |
| * The correct response to most actual bugs is to write a new test case |
| which demonstrates the bug. Then fix the bug, re-run the test suite, |
| and check everything in. |
| |
| * Some files in the libtool package are not owned by libtool. These |
| files should never be edited here. These files are: |
| COPYING |
| INSTALL |
| config/ |
| + config.guess |
| + config.sub |
| + depcomp |
| + install-sh |
| + mdate-sh |
| + missing |
| + texinfo.tex |
| doc/ |
| + fdl.texi |
| libltdl/ |
| + COPYING.LIB |
| The ones that are important for a release can be udated with, |
| `make -fMakefile.maint fetch' (or `make -f../Makefile.maint fetch' |
| if you are running from a VPATH build directory, where `../' is the |
| relative path to the directory with `configure' in it). |
| |
| * Changes other than bug fixes must be mentioned in NEWS |
| |
| |
| 3. Test Suite |
| ============= |
| |
| * Use "make check" liberally, on as many platforms as you can. Use as |
| many compilers and linkers you can. |
| |
| |
| 4. Naming |
| ========= |
| |
| * We've adopted the convention that exported Autoconf macros should be |
| named with a leading `LT_' and be documented in the libtool manual. |
| Internal macros begin with `_LT_' if they are visible to aclocal, or |
| potentially part of an AC_DEFUN/AC_REQUIRE path, or else `_lt_' if |
| they are very low level. This convention was only introduced just |
| before libtool-2.0, so there may still be exceptions in the existing |
| code. But all new code should use it. |
| |
| * All shell variables used internally by libtool's Autoconf macros |
| should be named with the a leading `lt_' (not that they cannot clash |
| with the `_lt_' macro namespace). |
| |
| |
| 5. Editing 'ChangeLog' |
| ====================== |
| |
| * When in doubt, check that emacs can syntax-color properly in |
| change-log-mode. And preferably use emacs 'C-x 4 a' |
| (add-change-log-entry-other-window) to open ChangeLog with an |
| appropriate new template. |
| |
| * If this change is by a different author, or on a different date to the |
| last entry start a new entry at the top of the file with the format |
| (note two spaces between each field): |
| |
| yyyy-mm-dd Name of Author <email@address> |
| |
| * If more than one person collaborated on the change, additional |
| authors can be listed on subsequent lines, thus: |
| |
| yyyy-mm-dd Name of Main Author <email@address>, |
| Name of Contributor <another@email.address> |
| |
| * Where a change author did not supply a copyright assignment, but the |
| changes they submitted were sufficiently trivial to commit in any case |
| (see the GCS for guidelines on this), then flag this against their |
| name in the header, thus: |
| |
| yyyy-mm-dd Name of Author <email@address> (tiny change) |
| |
| * In ChangeLog.2004 and earlier, 'Name of Author' was sometimes the name |
| of the author of the ChangeLog when the person who made the change |
| being documented didn't supply one. In that case separated from |
| the previous field by a blank line and indented by 1 tab (note, only |
| 1 space between fields here) you will see: |
| |
| From Author of Actual Change <email@address>: |
| |
| As of now, don't do that anymore, since the GNU Coding Standards say |
| that the author of the change must be credited in the main entry |
| header for legal purposes. |
| |
| * Preferably the next part should be a description of the overall |
| purpose of the change, separated from the header by a blank line, |
| indented by 1 tab, and filled at column 72. The last character of the |
| description should be a colon, :. |
| |
| * Changes to each file come next. Each new file starts on a new line, |
| indented by 1 tab and starting with an asterisk and a space. Multiple |
| files can be listed here relative to $top_srcdir, and comma separated. |
| Names of functions (or sections as appropriate) to which the change |
| applies should be named inside parentheses and comma separated. If |
| this goes beyond column 72, then parens should be closed and re-opened |
| on the next line: |
| |
| * file, another/file, test/testcases/foo.test (func_foo) |
| (func_bar, func_baz): Description of changes. |
| |
| * If the change does not apply to particular functions (or sections), |
| the section list can be omitted: |
| |
| * file, another/file, test/testcases/foo.test: General changes. |
| |
| * If the changes are particular to certain architectures, they should be |
| listed after the functions in square brackets: |
| |
| * file, another/file (func_foo) [linux, solaris]: Description of |
| changes. |
| |
| * Subsequent changes in other files that are related to the same overall |
| enhancement or bugfix should be listed concurrently, without blank |
| lines. Always start a fresh line for a new file: |
| |
| * file, another/file (func_foo) [linux, solaris]: Description of |
| changes. |
| * doc/foo.texi (Invoking Foo): Document. |
| * NEWS: Updated. |
| |
| * If the change is in response to a problem reported by someone other |
| than the author, then credit them at the end of the description with: |
| |
| Reported by Reporter Name <email@address>. |
| |
| * See the GNU Coding Standards document for more details on ChangeLog |
| formatting. |
| |
| |
| 2005-01-08 Ralf Wildenhues <Ralf.Wildenhues@gmx.de> (tiny change), |
| Peter O'Gorman <peter@pogma.com> |
| |
| This is the overall description of the purpose of this change |
| and any useful background for a model ChangeLog entry: |
| |
| * HACKING: Updated copyright. This isn't attached to a |
| particular section of the file, so it comes first. |
| (Editing 'ChangeLog'): New section. This applies to the same |
| file, but since it applies to a particular section it starts on |
| a new line. |
| (Introduction, Maintenance Notes, Test Suite, Naming) |
| (Editing '.am' Files): If I had changed all these sections in |
| the same way, I can list them like this, being careful to close |
| and reopen the parentheses when starting a new line. The colon |
| only comes after the last section before this description. |
| * NEWS: Updated. |
| Reported by Bob Friesenhahn <bfriesen@simple.dallas.tx.us>. |
| |
| |
| 6. Editing `.am' Files |
| ====================== |
| |
| * Always use $(...) and not ${...} |
| |
| * Use `:', not `true'. Use `exit 1', not `false'. |
| |
| * Use `##' comments liberally. Comment anything even remotely unusual. |
| |
| * Never use basename or dirname. Instead use sed. |
| |
| * Do not use `cd' within back-quotes, use `$(lt__cd)' instead. |
| Otherwise the directory name may be printed, depending on CDPATH. |
| |
| * In general, if a loop is required, it should be silent. Then the body |
| of the loop itself should print each "important" command it runs. |
| |
| |
| 7. Editing `.m4sh' Files |
| ======================== |
| |
| * Use shell functions, but be careful not to assume local scope for |
| variable names. Don't use `return', instead echo the result of a |
| function and call it from within backquotes. |
| |
| * Function names should be prefixed `func_', the function header should |
| look like this: |
| |
| # func_foo [ OPTIONS ] |
| # Description of what func_foo does and returns. |
| func_foo () |
| { |
| $opt_debug |
| # contents of func_foo ... |
| } |
| |
| The `$opt_debug' is used to enable shell tracing (Korn shells reset |
| this on function entry). |
| |
| * For functions that are called frequently, if you need to return a |
| value, don't cause unneccessary forking of the shell using echo as |
| described above; instead set the return value in a variable named |
| after the called function with a suffix of `_result'. For example |
| the function `func_quote_for_eval' stores its return value in the |
| variable `$func_quote_for_eval_result'. |
| |
| * Although sh-indentation is set to 2 (by the `Local Variables:' block |
| at the end of .m4sh files), the left margin of the body of shell |
| functions should begin indented by 4 spaces. |
| |
| |
| 8. Editing `.m4' Files |
| ====================== |
| |
| * Be careful with both `echo' and `$ECHO'. As the latter may be one of |
| echo |
| print -r |
| printf %s\n |
| $CONFIG_SHELL $0 --fallback-echo |
| it may not have more than one argument, its value may not be eval'ed |
| and the argument may not start with a `-'. As a rule of thumb, use |
| echo .. for literal (constant) strings without leading |
| hyphen and no backslashes within, |
| $ECHO ".." for strings without leading hyphen, |
| $ECHO "X.." | $Xsed otherwise. |
| |
| |
| 9. Abstraction layers in libltdl |
| ================================ |
| |
| * The libltdl API uses a layered approach to differentiate internal and |
| external interfaces, among other things. To keep the abstraction |
| consistent, files in a given layer may only use APIs from files in the |
| lower layers. The exception to this is lt__glibc.h which serves a |
| dual purpose, as explained later. |
| |
| * At the bottom of the stack we have the system abstraction layer, |
| which tries to smooth over the cracks where there are differences |
| between host systems and compilers. config.h is generated at |
| configure time and is not installed; lt_system.h is an installed |
| file and cannot use macros from config.h: |
| |
| lt_system.h ../config.h |
| |
| * Next up is the libc abstraction layer, which provides a uniform api |
| to various system libc interfaces that differ between hosts supported |
| by libtool. Typically, the files that implement this layer begin: |
| |
| #if defined(HAVE_CONFIG_H) |
| # include HAVE_CONFIG_H |
| #endif |
| #include "lt_system.h" |
| |
| Or if they are installed headers that must work outside the libtool |
| source tree, simply: |
| |
| #include <libltdl/lt_system.h> |
| |
| This layer's interface is defined by files that are usually named with |
| a leading `lt__': |
| |
| ,------------. ,-----------. ,------. ,-------. |
| |lt__dirent.h| |lt__alloc.h| |argz.h| |slist.h| |
| +------------+ +-----------+ +------+ +-------+ |
| |lt__dirent.c| |lt__alloc.c| |argz.c| |slist.c| |
| `------------' `-----------' `------' `-------' |
| |
| The exceptions here are argz.h and slist.h which are used |
| independently of libltdl in other projects. |
| |
| * There is also a sub-layer that can be used either by the headers that |
| implement it, in which case its function is to avoid namespace clashes |
| when linked with the GNU C library; Or it can be included by code that |
| wants to program against a glibc like interface, where it also serves |
| the function of pulling in all the glibc-like functionality used by |
| libltdl from a single: |
| |
| #include <libltdl/lt__glibc.h> |
| |
| It consists of the single file: |
| |
| lt__glibc.h |
| |
| * The next layer are the subsystems of the exported libltdl API, which |
| are defined by files that are named with a leading `lt_' (no double |
| underscore!): |
| |
| ,----------. ,-------------. |
| |lt_error.h| |lt_dlloader.h| |
| +----------+ +-------------+ |
| |lt_error.c| |lt_dlloader.c| |
| `----------' `-------------' |
| |
| |
| * The top layer of the stack is the libltdl API proper, which includes |
| the subsystems automatically: |
| |
| ,------. |
| |ltdl.h| |
| +------+ |
| |ltdl.c| |
| `------' |
| |
| * And finally, there is an additional internal only layer (as evidenced |
| by the `lt__' prefix to the filename!) that defines additional |
| internal interfaces that are not exported to libltdl clients, but are |
| shared between internal files: |
| |
| lt__private.h |
| |
| |
| 10. Release Procedure |
| ==================== |
| |
| * If you are a libtool maintainer, but have not yet registered your |
| gpg public key and (preferred) email address with the FSF, send an |
| email, preferably GPG-signed, to <ftp-upload@gnu.org> that includes |
| the following: |
| |
| (a) name of package(s) that you are the maintainer for, and your |
| preferred email address. |
| |
| (b) an ASCII armored copy of your GnuPG key, as an attachment. |
| ("gpg --export -a YOUR_KEY_ID > mykey.asc" should give you |
| this.) |
| |
| When you have received acknowledgement of your message, the proper GPG |
| keys will be registered on ftp-upload.gnu.org and only then will you be |
| authorized to upload files to the FSF ftp machines. |
| |
| * If you do not have access to the mailing list administrative interface, |
| approach the list owners for the password. Be sure to check the lists |
| (esp. bug-libtool) for outstanding bug reports also in the list of |
| pending moderation requests. |
| |
| * Make sure you have wget installed. |
| |
| * Make sure you have a copy of xdelta installed, and a copy of the previous |
| release tarball in the build directory. |
| |
| * Make sure your locale is sane, e.g. by exporting LC_ALL=C. |
| |
| * Double check that serial number updates in public m4 files weren't forgotten |
| since last release (they should be updated in CVS along with commits that |
| require it so that users can work with CVS snapshots). |
| |
| * Double check that libltdl version number updates weren't forgotten since last |
| release (they should be updated in CVS along with commits that require it so |
| that users can work with CVS snapshots). |
| |
| * Update the version number in configure.ac. |
| See http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/contribute.html for details of |
| the numbering scheme. |
| |
| * Update NEWS, ChangeLog. |
| |
| * Run ./bootstrap. |
| |
| * Have some tea. If you are running on less than 3.6GHz CPU, order |
| a pizza too ;-) |
| |
| * Run ./configure (or create a build directory first and run configure |
| from there, if you want to keep the build tree separate). |
| |
| * Run `make -fMakefile.maint fetch' (or `make -f../Makefile.maint fetch' |
| if you are running from a VPATH build directory, where `../' is the |
| relative path to the directory with `configure' in it), which will |
| fetch new versions of the files that are maintained outside of |
| libtool. |
| |
| * Run `make distcheck' and `make distcheck |
| DISTCHECK_CONFIGURE_FLAGS=--disable-ltdl-install'. If there are any |
| problems, fix them and start again. |
| |
| * Run ./commit from the source tree. |
| |
| * Run `make -fMakefile.maint cvs-dist' (or `make -f../Makefile.maint |
| cvs-dist' if you are running from a VPATH build directory, where `../' |
| is the relative path to the directory with `configure' in it), which |
| will build a release tarball (with `make distcheck'), tag the tree |
| with release-$(VERSION) and generate the gpg signature files. |
| |
| * Run 'make -f[../]Makefile.maint deltas' (pass |
| LASTRELEASE=maj.min[.mic[alpha]] if needed) to create both diff and |
| xdelta files between the previous release tarball and the new with |
| detached gpg signature files and clear signed directive files. |
| |
| * Upload release tarball, diff file and xdelta file, plus their associated |
| detached gpg signature files and clear signed directive files to |
| ftp-upload.gnu.org. If the upload is destined for ftp.gnu.org, then the |
| files should be placed in the /incoming/ftp directory. If the upload is |
| an alpha release destined for alpha.gnu.org, then the files should be |
| placed in the /incoming/alpha directory. |
| |
| * Send announcement to libtool@gnu.org and autotools-announce@gnu.org, |
| if not an alpha send to info-gnu@gnu.org as well. |
| |
| * Update version number in configure.ac to next alpha number. |
| See http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/contribute.html for details of |
| the numbering scheme. |
| |
| * Update NEWS, ChangeLog. |
| |
| * Run ./commit. |
| |
| * Update the webpages, libtool.html will need to indicate the latest |
| release number and the news page should get a HTMLified copy of your |
| release announcement. |
| |
| * If not an alpha, replace manual.html with the new one |
| (generate with `make -f[../]Makefile.maint web-manual'). |
| |
| |
| |
| 11. Alpha release note template |
| =============================== |
| |
| To: libtool@gnu.org, autotools-announce@gnu.org |
| Subject: GNU Libtool @VERSION@ released (alpha release). |
| |
| The Libtool Team is pleased to announce alpha release @VERSION@ of GNU |
| Libtool. |
| |
| GNU Libtool hides the complexity of using shared libraries behind a |
| consistent, portable interface. GNU Libtool ships with GNU libltdl, |
| which hides the complexity of loading dynamic runtime libraries |
| (modules) behind a consistent, portable interface. |
| |
| Here are the compressed sources: |
| |
| ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@VERSION@.tar.gz |
| ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@VERSION@.tar.bz2 |
| |
| Here are the xdeltas and diffs against libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@: |
| |
| ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.diff.gz |
| ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.xdelta |
| |
| Here are the gpg detached signatures: |
| |
| ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@VERSION@.tar.gz.sig |
| ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@VERSION@.tar.bz2.sig |
| ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.diff.gz.sig |
| ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.xdelta.sig |
| |
| You should download the signature named after any tarball you download, |
| and then verify its integrity with, for example: |
| |
| gpg --verify libtool-@VERSION.tar.gz.sig |
| |
| Here are the MD5 and SHA1 checksums: |
| |
| @MD5SUM@ libtool-@VERSION@.tar.gz |
| @MD5SUM@ libtool-@VERSION@.tar.bz2 |
| @MD5SUM@ libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.diff.gz |
| @MD5SUM@ libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.xdelta |
| @SHA1SUM@ libtool-@VERSION@.tar.gz |
| @SHA1SUM@ libtool-@VERSION@.tar.bz2 |
| @SHA1SUM@ libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.diff.gz |
| @SHA1SUM@ libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.xdelta |
| |
| This release has @SUMMARY_OF_IMPROVEMENTS_SINCE_LAST_RELEASE_ON_THIS_BRANCH@. |
| |
| This release was bootstrapped with @BOOTSTRAP_TOOLS_WITH_VERSIONS@, |
| but is useable with @COMPATIBLE_AUTOTOOL_VERSIONS@ in your own |
| projects. |
| |
| Alternatively, you can fetch the unbootstrapped sourcecode from |
| anonymous cvs by using the following commands: |
| |
| $ export CVS_RSH=ssh |
| $ cvs -z3 -d :ext:anoncvs@savannah.gnu.org:/cvsroot/libtool \ |
| co -r @CVS_RELEASE_TAG@ libtool |
| |
| You will then need to have recent (possibly as yet unreleased) versions |
| of Automake and Autoconf installed to bootstrap the checked out |
| sources yourself. |
| |
| New in @VERSION@: @RELEASE_DATE@ |
| |
| @EXCERPT_FROM_NEWS_FILE@ |
| |
| Please report bugs to <bug-libtool@gnu.org>, along with the verbose |
| output of any failed test groups, and the output from `./libtool --help.' |
| |
| |
| |
| 12. Full release note template |
| ============================== |
| |
| To: info-gnu@gnu.org |
| Cc: libtool@gnu.org, autotools-announce@gnu.org |
| Subject: GNU Libtool @VERSION@ released. |
| |
| The Libtool Team is pleased to announce the release of GNU Libtool |
| @VERSION@. |
| |
| GNU Libtool hides the complexity of using shared libraries behind a |
| consistent, portable interface. GNU Libtool ships with GNU libltdl, |
| which hides the complexity of loading dynamic runtime libraries |
| (modules) behind a consistent, portable interface. |
| |
| This release has @SUMMARY_OF_IMPROVEMENTS_SINCE_LAST_RELEASE_ON_THIS_BRANCH@. |
| |
| New in @VERSION@: @RELEASE_DATE@ |
| |
| @EXCERPT_FROM_NEWS_FILE@ |
| |
| libtool-@VERSION@ is available now from ftp.gnu.org, along with |
| diffs and xdeltas against libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@ |
| that are also available from ftp.gnu.org. Please |
| use a mirror to reduce stress on the main gnu machine: |
| |
| http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html |
| |
| Here are the compressed sources: |
| |
| ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@VERSION@.tar.gz |
| ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@VERSION@.tar.bz2 |
| |
| Here are the xdeltas and diffs against libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@: |
| |
| ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.diff.gz |
| ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.xdelta |
| |
| Here are the gpg detached signatures: |
| |
| ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@VERSION@.tar.gz.sig |
| ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@VERSION@.tar.bz2.sig |
| ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.diff.gz.sig |
| ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/libtool/libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.xdelta.sig |
| |
| You should download the signature named after any tarball you download, |
| and then verify its integrity with, for example: |
| |
| gpg --verify libtool-@VERSION.tar.gz.sig |
| |
| Here are the MD5 and SHA1 checksums: |
| |
| @MD5SUM@ libtool-@VERSION@.tar.gz |
| @MD5SUM@ libtool-@VERSION@.tar.bz2 |
| @MD5SUM@ libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.diff.gz |
| @MD5SUM@ libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.xdelta |
| @SHA1SUM@ libtool-@VERSION@.tar.gz |
| @SHA1SUM@ libtool-@VERSION@.tar.bz2 |
| @SHA1SUM@ libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.diff.gz |
| @SHA1SUM@ libtool-@PREV_RELEASE_VERSION_ON_THIS_BRANCH@-@VERSION@.xdelta |
| |
| This release was bootstrapped with @BOOTSTRAP_TOOLS_WITH_VERSIONS@, |
| but is useable with @COMPATIBLE_AUTOTOOL_VERSIONS@ in your own |
| projects. |
| |
| Alternatively, you can fetch the unbootstrapped sourcecode from |
| anonymous cvs by using the following commands (just hit return when |
| you are prompted for the password): |
| |
| $ export CVS_RSH=ssh |
| $ cvs -z3 -d :ext:anoncvs@savannah.gnu.org:/cvsroot/libtool \ |
| co -r @CVS_RELEASE_TAG@ libtool |
| |
| You will then need to have the latest release versions of Automake |
| (@AUTOMAKE_VERSION@) and Autoconf (@AUTOCONF_VERSION@) installed to |
| bootstrap the checked out sources yourself. |
| |
| Please report bugs to <bug-libtool@gnu.org>, along with the verbose |
| output of any failed test groups, and the output from `./libtool --help.' |
| |
| |
| -- |
| Copyright (C) 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
| The canonical source of this file is maintained with the |
| GNU Libtool package. Report bugs to bug-libtool@gnu.org. |
| |
| GNU Libtool is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
| modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as |
| published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 |
| of the License, or (at your option) any later version. |
| |
| As a special exception to the GNU General Public License, |
| if you distribute this file as part of a program or library that |
| is built using GNU libtool, you may include it under the same |
| distribution terms that you use for the rest of that program. |
| |
| GNU Libtool is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU |
| General Public License for more details. |
| |
| You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| along with GNU Libtool; if not, write to the Free Software |
| Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA |
| 02110-1301 USA |
| |
| |
| Local Variables: |
| mode: text |
| fill-column: 72 |
| End: |