Config.pp 31 KB

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  1. //
  2. // dtool/Config.pp
  3. //
  4. // This file defines certain configuration variables that are written
  5. // into the various make scripts. It is processed by ppremake (along
  6. // with the Sources.pp files in each of the various directories) to
  7. // generate build scripts appropriate to each environment.
  8. //
  9. // ppremake is capable of generating makefiles for Unix compilers such
  10. // as gcc or SGI's MipsPRO compiler, as well as for Windows
  11. // environments like Microsoft's Visual C++. It can also,
  12. // potentially, generate Microsoft Developer's Studio project files
  13. // directly, although we haven't written the scripts to do this yet.
  14. // In principle, it can be extended to generate suitable build script
  15. // files for any number of different build environments.
  16. //
  17. // All of these build scripts can be tuned for a particular
  18. // environment via this file. This is the place for the user to
  19. // specify which external packages are installed and where, or to
  20. // enable or disable certain optional features. However, it is
  21. // suggested that rather than modify this file directly, you create a
  22. // custom file in your home directory and there redefine whatever
  23. // variables are appropriate, and set the environment variable
  24. // PPREMAKE_CONFIG to refer to it. In this way, you can easily get an
  25. // updated source tree (including a new Config.pp) without risking
  26. // accidentally losing your customizations. This also avoids having
  27. // to redefine the same variables in different packages (for instance,
  28. // in dtool and in panda).
  29. //
  30. // The syntax in this file resembles some hybrid between C++
  31. // preprocessor declarations and GNU make variables. This is the same
  32. // syntax used in the various ppremake system configure files; it's
  33. // designed to be easy to use as a macro language to generate
  34. // makefiles and their ilk.
  35. //
  36. // Some of the variables below are defined using the #define command,
  37. // and others are defined using #defer. The two are very similar in
  38. // their purpose; the difference is that, if the variable definition
  39. // includes references to other variables (e.g. $[varname]), then
  40. // #define will evaluate all of the other variable references
  41. // immediately and store the resulting expansion, while #defer will
  42. // store only the variable references themselves, and expand them when
  43. // the variable is later referenced. It is very similar to the
  44. // relationship between := and = in GNU Make.
  45. // dtool/Config.pp
  46. // In general, #defer is used in this file, to allow the user to
  47. // redefine critical variables in his or her own Config.pp file.
  48. // What kind of build scripts are we generating? This selects a
  49. // suitable template file from the ppremake system files. The
  50. // allowable choices, at present, are:
  51. //
  52. // unix - Generate makefiles suitable for most Unix platforms.
  53. // msvc - Generate Visual C++ project files (still a work in progress)
  54. // gmsvc - Generate makefiles similar to the above, using Microsoft
  55. // Visual C++, but uses the Cygwin-supplied GNU make
  56. // instead of Microsoft nmake. This is potentially
  57. // faster if you have multiple CPU's, since it supports
  58. // distributed make. It's a tiny bit slower if you're
  59. // not taking advantage of distributed make, because of
  60. // the overhead associated with Cygwin fork() calls.
  61. #if $[eq $[PLATFORM], Win32]
  62. // #define BUILD_TYPE msvc // not ready yet.
  63. #define BUILD_TYPE gmsvc
  64. #elif $[eq $[PLATFORM], Cygwin]
  65. #define BUILD_TYPE gmsvc
  66. #elif $[eq $[PLATFORM], osx]
  67. #define BUILD_TYPE osx
  68. #else
  69. #define BUILD_TYPE unix
  70. #endif
  71. // What is the default install directory for all trees in the Panda
  72. // suite? The default value for this variable is provided by
  73. // ppremake; on Unix machines it is the value of --prefix passed in to
  74. // the configure script, and on Windows machines the default is
  75. // hardcoded in config_msvc.h to C:\Panda3d.
  76. // You may also override this for a particular tree by defining a
  77. // variable name like DTOOL_INSTALL or PANDA_INSTALL. This variable
  78. // will have no effect when you are using the cttools to control your
  79. // attachment to the trees; in this case, the install directory for
  80. // each tree will by default be the root of the tree itself (although
  81. // this may be overridden).
  82. // #define INSTALL_DIR /usr/local/panda
  83. // If you intend to use Panda only as a Python module, you may find
  84. // the following define useful (but you should put in the correct path
  85. // to site-packages within your own installed Python). This will
  86. // install the Panda libraries into the standard Python search space
  87. // so that they can be accessed as Python modules. (Also see the
  88. // PYTHON_IPATH variable, below.)
  89. // If you don't do this, you can still use Panda as a Python module,
  90. // but you must put /usr/local/panda/lib (or $INSTALL_DIR/lib) on
  91. // your PYTHONPATH.
  92. // #define INSTALL_LIB_DIR /usr/lib/python2.2/site-packages
  93. // The PRC files are used by Panda for runtime configuration. Panda
  94. // will load up all files named *.prc in the directory specified by
  95. // the PRC_DIR environment variable, or in the directory named here if
  96. // that environment variable is undefined. Config files are loaded up
  97. // in alphabetical order (sorted by ASCII value), and the
  98. // alphabetically last files have precedence.
  99. // By default, we specify the install/etc dir, which is where the
  100. // system-provided PRC files get copied to.
  101. #defer DEFAULT_PRC_DIR $[INSTALL_DIR]/etc
  102. // What level of compiler optimization/debug symbols should we build?
  103. // The various optimize levels are defined as follows:
  104. //
  105. // 1 - No compiler optimizations, full debug symbols
  106. // 2 - Full compiler optimizations, full debug symbols
  107. // (if the compiler supports this)
  108. // 3 - Full compiler optimizations, no debug symbols
  109. // 4 - Full optimizations, no debug symbols, and asserts removed
  110. //
  111. #define OPTIMIZE 3
  112. // NOTE: In the following, to indicate "yes" to a yes/no question,
  113. // define the variable to be a nonempty string. To indicate "no",
  114. // define the variable to be an empty string.
  115. // Many of the HAVE_* variables are defined in terms of expressions
  116. // based on the paths and library names, etc., defined above. These
  117. // are defined using the "defer" command, so that they are not
  118. // evaluated right away, giving the user an opportunity to redefine
  119. // the variables they depend on, or to redefine the HAVE_* variables
  120. // themselves (you can explicitly define a HAVE_* variable to some
  121. // nonempty string to force the package to be marked as installed).
  122. // Do you want to generate a Python-callable interrogate interface?
  123. // This is only necessary if you plan to make calls into Panda from a
  124. // program written in Python. This is done only if HAVE_PYTHON,
  125. // below, is also true.
  126. #define INTERROGATE_PYTHON_INTERFACE 1
  127. // Do you want to generate a C-callable interrogate interface? This
  128. // generates an interface similar to the Python interface above, with
  129. // a C calling convention. It should be useful for most other kinds
  130. // of scripting language; the VR Studio used to use this to make calls
  131. // into Panda from Squeak. This is not presently used by any VR
  132. // Studio code.
  133. #define INTERROGATE_C_INTERFACE
  134. // Do you even want to build interrogate at all? This is the program
  135. // that reads our C++ source files and generates one of the above
  136. // interfaces. If you won't be building the interfaces, you don't
  137. // need the program.
  138. #defer HAVE_INTERROGATE $[or $[INTERROGATE_PYTHON_INTERFACE],$[INTERROGATE_C_INTERFACE]]
  139. // What additional options should be passed to interrogate when
  140. // generating either of the above two interfaces? Generally, you
  141. // probably don't want to mess with this.
  142. #define INTERROGATE_OPTIONS -fnames -string -refcount -assert
  143. // What's the name of the interrogate binary to run? The default
  144. // specified is the one that is built as part of DTOOL. If you have a
  145. // prebuilt binary standing by (for instance, one built opt4), specify
  146. // its name instead.
  147. #define INTERROGATE interrogate
  148. #define INTERROGATE_MODULE interrogate_module
  149. // Is Python installed, and should Python interfaces be generated? If
  150. // Python is installed, which directory is it in?
  151. #define PYTHON_IPATH /usr/include/python2.2
  152. #define PYTHON_LPATH
  153. #define PYTHON_FPATH
  154. #define PYTHON_FRAMEWORK
  155. #defer HAVE_PYTHON $[isdir $[PYTHON_IPATH]]
  156. // Define the default set of libraries to be instrumented by
  157. // genPyCode. You may wish to add to this list to add your own
  158. // libraries, or if you want to use some of the more obscure
  159. // interfaces like libpandaegg and libpandafx.
  160. #define GENPYCODE_LIBS libpandaexpress libpanda libpandaphysics libdirect
  161. // Normally, Python source files are copied into the INSTALL_LIB_DIR
  162. // defined above, along with the compiled C++ library objects, when
  163. // you make install. If you prefer not to copy these Python source
  164. // files, but would rather run them directly out of the source
  165. // directory (presumably so you can develop them and make changes
  166. // without having to reinstall), comment out this definition and put
  167. // your source directory on your PYTHONPATH.
  168. #define INSTALL_PYTHON_SOURCE 1
  169. // Do you want to enable the "in_interpreter" global variable? This
  170. // will enable some callbacks, particularly the MemoryUsage object, to
  171. // know whether they were called from Python code (or other high-level
  172. // show code) and react accordingly, generally for debugging
  173. // purporses. It adds a bit of runtime overhead, and isn't usually
  174. // useful unless we're building a debug tree anyway. The default is
  175. // to enable it only for optimize levels 1 and 2.
  176. #defer TRACK_IN_INTERPRETER $[<= $[OPTIMIZE], 2]
  177. // Do you want to compile in support for tracking memory usage? This
  178. // enables you to define the variable "track-memory-usage" at runtime
  179. // to help track memory leaks, and also report total memory usage on
  180. // PStats. There is some small overhead for having this ability
  181. // available, even if it is unused.
  182. #defer DO_MEMORY_USAGE $[<= $[OPTIMIZE], 3]
  183. // Do you want to compile in support for pipelining? This enables
  184. // setting and accessing multiple different copies of frame-specific
  185. // data stored in nodes, etc. At the moment, Panda cannot actually
  186. // take advantage of this support to do anything useful, but
  187. // eventually this will enable multi-stage pipelining of the render
  188. // process, as well as potentially remote rendering using a
  189. // distributed scene graph. For now, we enable this when building
  190. // optimize 1 only, since turning this on does perform some additional
  191. // sanity checks, but doesn't do anything else useful other than
  192. // increase run-time overhead.
  193. #defer DO_PIPELINING $[<= $[OPTIMIZE], 1]
  194. // Is NSPR installed, and where? This is the Netscape Portable
  195. // Runtime library, downloadable as part of the Mozilla package from
  196. // mozilla.org. It provides portable threading and networking
  197. // services to Panda. Panda should compile without it, although
  198. // without any threading or networking capabilities; eventually,
  199. // native support for these capabilities may be added for certain
  200. // platforms. See also HAVE_IPC and HAVE_NET.
  201. #define NSPR_IPATH /usr/include/nspr
  202. #define NSPR_LPATH
  203. #define NSPR_LIBS nspr4
  204. #defer HAVE_NSPR $[libtest $[NSPR_LPATH],$[NSPR_LIBS]]
  205. // Is a third-party STL library installed, and where? This is only
  206. // necessary if the default include and link lines that come with the
  207. // compiler don't provide adequate STL support. At least some form of
  208. // STL is absolutely required in order to build Panda.
  209. #define STL_IPATH
  210. #define STL_LPATH
  211. #define STL_CFLAGS
  212. #define STL_LIBS
  213. // Is OpenSSL installed, and where?
  214. #define SSL_IPATH /usr/local/ssl/include
  215. #define SSL_LPATH /usr/local/ssl/lib
  216. #define SSL_LIBS ssl crypto
  217. #defer HAVE_SSL $[libtest $[SSL_LPATH],$[SSL_LIBS]]
  218. // Define this nonempty if your version of OpenSSL is 0.9.7 or better.
  219. #define SSL_097
  220. // Define this true to include the OpenSSL code to report verbose
  221. // error messages when they occur.
  222. #defer REPORT_OPENSSL_ERRORS $[< $[OPTIMIZE], 4]
  223. // Is libjpeg installed, and where?
  224. #define JPEG_IPATH
  225. #define JPEG_LPATH
  226. #define JPEG_LIBS jpeg
  227. #defer HAVE_JPEG $[libtest $[JPEG_LPATH],$[JPEG_LIBS]]
  228. // Is libpng installed, and where?
  229. #define PNG_IPATH
  230. #define PNG_LPATH
  231. #define PNG_LIBS png
  232. #defer HAVE_PNG $[libtest $[PNG_LPATH],$[PNG_LIBS]]
  233. // Is libtiff installed, and where?
  234. #define TIFF_IPATH
  235. #define TIFF_LPATH
  236. #define TIFF_LIBS tiff z
  237. #defer HAVE_TIFF $[libtest $[TIFF_LPATH],$[TIFF_LIBS]]
  238. // Is libfftw installed, and where?
  239. #define FFTW_IPATH /usr/local/include
  240. #define FFTW_LPATH /usr/local/lib
  241. #define FFTW_LIBS rfftw fftw
  242. #defer HAVE_FFTW $[libtest $[FFTW_LPATH],$[FFTW_LIBS]]
  243. // Is NURBS++ installed, and where?
  244. #define NURBSPP_IPATH /usr/local/include/nurbs++
  245. #define NURBSPP_LPATH /usr/local/lib
  246. #define NURBSPP_LIBS nurbsf matrixN matrixI matrix
  247. #defer HAVE_NURBSPP $[libtest $[NURBSPP_LPATH],$[NURBSPP_LIBS]]
  248. // Is VRPN installed, and where?
  249. #define VRPN_IPATH
  250. #define VRPN_LPATH
  251. #define VRPN_LIBS
  252. #defer HAVE_VRPN $[libtest $[VRPN_LPATH],$[VRPN_LIBS]]
  253. // Is ZLIB installed, and where?
  254. #define ZLIB_IPATH
  255. #define ZLIB_LPATH
  256. #define ZLIB_LIBS z
  257. #defer HAVE_ZLIB $[libtest $[ZLIB_LPATH],$[ZLIB_LIBS]]
  258. // Is OpenGL installed, and where? This should include libGL as well
  259. // as libGLU, if they are in different places.
  260. #if $[WINDOWS_PLATFORM]
  261. #defer GL_IPATH
  262. #defer GL_LPATH
  263. #define GL_LIBS opengl32.lib glu32.lib
  264. #else
  265. #defer GL_IPATH
  266. #defer GL_LPATH /usr/X11R6/lib
  267. #defer GL_LIBS GL GLU
  268. #endif
  269. #defer HAVE_GL $[libtest $[GL_LPATH],$[GL_LIBS]]
  270. // Is Mesa installed separately from OpenGL? Mesa is an open-source
  271. // software-only OpenGL renderer. Panda can link with it
  272. // independently from OpenGL (and if Mesa is built statically, and/or
  273. // with -DUSE_MGL_NAMESPACE declared to rename gl* to mgl*, it can
  274. // switch between the system OpenGL implementation and the Mesa
  275. // implementation at runtime).
  276. // Also, Mesa includes some core libraries (in libOSMesa.so) that
  277. // allow totally headless rendering, handy if you want to run a
  278. // renderer as a batch service, and you don't want to insist that a
  279. // user be logged on to the desktop or otherwise deal with X11 or
  280. // Windows.
  281. // If you define HAVE_MESA here, and the appropriate paths to headers
  282. // and libraries, then Panda will build libmesadisplay, which can be
  283. // used in lieu of libpandagl or libpandadx to do rendering. However,
  284. // for most applications, you don't need to do this, since (a) if you
  285. // have hardware rendering capability, you probably don't want to use
  286. // Mesa, since it's software-only, and (b) if you don't have hardware
  287. // rendering, you can install Mesa as the system's OpenGL
  288. // implementation, so you can just use the normal libpandagl. You
  289. // only need to define HAVE_MESA if you want to run totally headless,
  290. // or if you want to be able to easily switch between Mesa and the
  291. // system OpenGL implementation at runtime. If you compiled Mesa with
  292. // USE_MGL_NAMESPACE defined, define MESA_MGL here.
  293. #define MESA_IPATH
  294. #define MESA_LPATH
  295. #define MESA_LIBS
  296. #define MESA_MGL
  297. #defer HAVE_MESA $[libtest $[MESA_LPATH],$[MESA_LIBS]]
  298. // Is the Chromium remote-rendering library installed, and where?
  299. // This should include libcr_opengl32.
  300. #defer CHROMIUM_IPATH
  301. #defer CHROMIUM_LPATH
  302. #defer CHROMIUM_LIBS
  303. #defer HAVE_CHROMIUM $[libtest $[CHROMIUM_LPATH],$[CHROMIUM_LIBS]]
  304. // How about GLX?
  305. #define GLX_IPATH
  306. #define GLX_LPATH
  307. #defer HAVE_GLX $[and $[HAVE_GL],$[UNIX_PLATFORM]]
  308. // Should we try to build the WGL interface?
  309. #defer HAVE_WGL $[and $[HAVE_GL],$[WINDOWS_PLATFORM]]
  310. // Should we try to build the SGI-specific glxdisplay?
  311. #define HAVE_SGIGL $[eq $[PLATFORM],Irix]
  312. // Is DirectX available, and should we try to build with it?
  313. #define DX_IPATH
  314. #define DX_LPATH
  315. #define DX_LIBS d3d8.lib d3dx8.lib dxerr8.lib
  316. #defer HAVE_DX $[libtest $[DX_LPATH],$[DX_LIBS]]
  317. // Do you want to build the DirectD tools for starting Panda clients
  318. // remotely? This only affects the direct tree. Enabling this may
  319. // cause libdirect.dll to fail to load on Win98 clients.
  320. #define HAVE_DIRECTD
  321. // Do you want to build in support for threading (multiprocessing)?
  322. // Building in support for threading will enable Panda to take
  323. // advantage of multiple CPU's if you have them (and if the OS
  324. // supports kernel threads running on different CPU's), but it will
  325. // slightly slow down Panda for the single CPU case, so this is not
  326. // enabled by default.
  327. // Currently, threading support requires NSPR, so you should not
  328. // define this true unless you have NSPR installed.
  329. #define HAVE_THREADS
  330. // Do you want to build the network interface? What additional libraries
  331. // are required? Currently, this requires NSPR.
  332. #define NET_IPATH
  333. #define NET_LPATH
  334. #if $[WINDOWS_PLATFORM]
  335. #define NET_LIBS wsock32.lib
  336. #else
  337. #define NET_LIBS
  338. #endif
  339. #defer HAVE_NET $[HAVE_NSPR]
  340. // Do you want to build the PStats interface, for graphical run-time
  341. // performance statistics? This requires NET to be available. By
  342. // default, we don't build PStats when OPTIMIZE = 4, although this is
  343. // possible.
  344. #defer DO_PSTATS $[or $[and $[HAVE_NET],$[< $[OPTIMIZE], 4]], $[DO_PSTATS]]
  345. // Do you want to build the debugging tools for recording and
  346. // visualizing intersection tests by the collision system? Enabling
  347. // this increases runtime collision overhead just a tiny bit.
  348. #defer DO_COLLISION_RECORDING $[< $[OPTIMIZE], 4]
  349. // Do you want to include the "debug" and "spam" Notify messages?
  350. // Normally, these are stripped out when we build with OPTIMIZE = 4, but
  351. // sometimes it's useful to keep them around. Redefine this in your
  352. // own Config.pp to achieve that.
  353. #defer NOTIFY_DEBUG $[< $[OPTIMIZE], 4]
  354. // Do you want to build the audio interface?
  355. #define HAVE_AUDIO 1
  356. // Info for the RAD game tools, Miles Sound System
  357. // note this may be overwritten in wintools Config.pp
  358. #define RAD_MSS_IPATH /usr/include/Miles6/include
  359. #define RAD_MSS_LPATH /usr/lib/Miles6/lib/win
  360. #define RAD_MSS_LIBS Mss32
  361. #defer HAVE_RAD_MSS $[libtest $[RAD_MSS_LPATH],$[RAD_MSS_LIBS]]
  362. // Info for the Fmod audio engine
  363. // note this may be overwritten in wintools Config.pp
  364. #define FMOD_IPATH
  365. #define FMOD_LPATH
  366. #define FMOD_LIBS fmod
  367. #defer HAVE_FMOD $[libtest $[FMOD_LPATH],$[FMOD_LIBS]]
  368. // Info for http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/chromium
  369. // note this may be overwritten in wintools Config.pp
  370. #define CHROMIUM_IPATH /usr/include/chromium/include
  371. #define CHROMIUM_LPATH /usr/lib/chromium/bin/WINT_NT
  372. #define CHROMIUM_LIBS spuload
  373. #defer HAVE_CHROMIUM $[libtest $[CHROMIUM_LPATH],$[CHROMIUM_LIBS]]
  374. // Is Gtk-- installed? How should we run the gtkmm-config program?
  375. // This matters only to programs in PANDATOOL.
  376. #define GTKMM_CONFIG gtkmm-config
  377. #defer HAVE_GTKMM $[bintest $[GTKMM_CONFIG]]
  378. // Do we have Freetype 2.0 (or better)? If available, this package is
  379. // used to generate dynamic in-the-world text from font files.
  380. // On Unix, freetype comes with the freetype-config executable, which
  381. // tells us where to look for the various files. On Windows, we need to
  382. // supply this information explicitly.
  383. #define FREETYPE_CONFIG freetype-config
  384. #defer HAVE_FREETYPE $[or $[libtest $[FREETYPE_LPATH],$[FREETYPE_LIBS]],$[bintest $[FREETYPE_CONFIG]]]
  385. #define FREETYPE_CFLAGS
  386. #define FREETYPE_IPATH
  387. #define FREETYPE_LPATH
  388. #define FREETYPE_LIBS
  389. // Define this true to compile in a default font, so every TextNode
  390. // will always have a font available without requiring the user to
  391. // specify one. Define it empty not to do this, saving a few
  392. // kilobytes on the generated library. Sorry, you can't pick a
  393. // particular font to be the default; it's hardcoded in the source
  394. // (although you can use the text-default-font prc variable to specify
  395. // a particular font file to load as the default, overriding the
  396. // compiled-in font).
  397. #define COMPILE_IN_DEFAULT_FONT 1
  398. // Is Maya installed? This matters only to programs in PANDATOOL.
  399. // Also, as of Maya 5.0 it seems the Maya library will not compile
  400. // properly with optimize level 4 set (we get link errors with ostream).
  401. #define MAYA_LOCATION /usr/aw/maya
  402. #defer MAYA_LIBS $[if $[WINDOWS_PLATFORM],Foundation.lib OpenMaya.lib OpenMayaAnim.lib,Foundation OpenMaya OpenMayaAnim]
  403. // Optionally define this to the value of LM_LICENSE_FILE that should
  404. // be set before invoking Maya.
  405. #define MAYA_LICENSE_FILE
  406. #defer HAVE_MAYA $[and $[<= $[OPTIMIZE], 3],$[isdir $[MAYA_LOCATION]/include/maya]]
  407. // Define this if your version of Maya is earlier than 5.0 (e.g. Maya 4.5).
  408. #define MAYA_PRE_5_0
  409. // In the same fashion as mayaegg converter above, set softimage to egg converter as well
  410. #define SOFTIMAGE_LOCATION /c/Softimage/sdk_18sp2/SDK_1.8SP2/SAAPHIRE
  411. #defer SOFTIMAGE_LIBS SAA.lib
  412. #defer HAVE_SOFTIMAGE $[isdir $[SOFTIMAGE_LOCATION]/h]
  413. // Define this to generate static libraries and executables, rather than
  414. // dynamic libraries.
  415. //#define LINK_ALL_STATIC yes
  416. // Define this to export the templates from the DLL. This is only
  417. // meaningful if LINK_ALL_STATIC is not defined, and we are building
  418. // on Windows. Some Windows compilers may not support this syntax.
  419. #defer EXPORT_TEMPLATES yes
  420. // Define this to explicitly link in the various external drivers, which
  421. // are normally separate, as part of the Panda library.
  422. //#define LINK_IN_GL yes
  423. //#define LINK_IN_DX yes
  424. //#define LINK_IN_EGG yes
  425. //#define LINK_IN_PHYSICS yes
  426. // Define USE_COMPILER to switch the particular compiler that should
  427. // be used. A handful of tokens are recognized, depending on BUILD_TYPE.
  428. // This may also be further customized within Global.$[BUILD_TYPE].pp.
  429. // If BUILD_TYPE is "unix", this may be one of:
  430. // GCC (gcc/g++)
  431. // MIPS (Irix MIPSPro compiler)
  432. //
  433. // If BUILD_TYPE is "msvc" or "gmsvc", this may be one of:
  434. // MSVC (Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0)
  435. // MSVC7 (Microsoft Visual C++ 7.0)
  436. // BOUNDS (BoundsChecker)
  437. // INTEL (Intel C/C++ compiler)
  438. #if $[WINDOWS_PLATFORM]
  439. #if $[eq $[USE_COMPILER],]
  440. #define USE_COMPILER MSVC7
  441. #endif
  442. #elif $[eq $[PLATFORM], Irix]
  443. #define USE_COMPILER MIPS
  444. #elif $[eq $[PLATFORM], Linux]
  445. #define USE_COMPILER GCC
  446. #elif $[eq $[PLATFORM], osx]
  447. #define USE_COMPILER GCC
  448. #endif
  449. // Permission masks to install data and executable files,
  450. // respectively. This is only meaningful for Unix systems.
  451. #define INSTALL_UMASK_DATA 644
  452. #define INSTALL_UMASK_PROG 755
  453. // How to invoke bison and flex. Panda takes advantage of some
  454. // bison/flex features, and therefore specifically requires bison and
  455. // flex, not some other versions of yacc and lex. However, you only
  456. // need to have these programs if you need to make changes to the
  457. // bison or flex sources (see the next point, below).
  458. #defer BISON bison
  459. #defer FLEX flex
  460. // You may not even have bison and flex installed. If you don't, no
  461. // sweat; Panda ships with the pre-generated output of these programs,
  462. // so you don't need them unless you want to make changes to the
  463. // grammars themselves (files named *.yxx or *.lxx).
  464. #defer HAVE_BISON $[bintest $[BISON]]
  465. // How to invoke sed. A handful of make rules use this. Since some
  466. // platforms (specifically, non-Unix platforms like Windows) don't
  467. // have any kind of sed, ppremake performs some limited sed-like
  468. // functions. The default is to use ppremake in this capacity. In
  469. // this variable, $[source] is the name of the file to read, $[target]
  470. // is the name of the file to generate, and $[script] is the one-line
  471. // sed script to run.
  472. #defer SED ppremake -s "$[script]" <$[source] >$[target]
  473. // What directory name (within each source directory) should the .o
  474. // (or .obj) files be written to? This can be any name, and it can be
  475. // used to differentiate different builds within the same tree.
  476. // However, don't define this to be '.', or you will be very sad the
  477. // next time you run 'make clean'.
  478. //#defer ODIR Opt$[OPTIMIZE]-$[PLATFORM]$[USE_COMPILER]
  479. // ODIR_SUFFIX is optional, usually empty
  480. #defer ODIR Opt$[OPTIMIZE]-$[PLATFORM]$[ODIR_SUFFIX]
  481. // What is the normal extension of a compiled object file?
  482. #if $[WINDOWS_PLATFORM]
  483. #define OBJ .obj
  484. #else
  485. #define OBJ .o
  486. #endif
  487. ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  488. // The following variables are only meaningful when BUILD_TYPE is
  489. // "unix". These define the commands to invoke the compiler, linker,
  490. // etc.
  491. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  492. // How to invoke the C and C++ compilers.
  493. #if $[eq $[USE_COMPILER], GCC]
  494. #define CC gcc
  495. #define CXX g++
  496. // gcc might run into template limits on some parts of Panda.
  497. // I upped this from 25 to build on OS X (GCC 3.3) -- skyler.
  498. #define C++FLAGS_GEN -ftemplate-depth-30
  499. #else
  500. #define CC cc
  501. #define CXX CC
  502. #endif
  503. // How to compile a C or C++ file into a .o file. $[target] is the
  504. // name of the .o file, $[source] is the name of the source file,
  505. // $[ipath] is a space-separated list of directories to search for
  506. // include files, and $[flags] is a list of additional flags to pass
  507. // to the compiler.
  508. #defer COMPILE_C $[CC] $[CFLAGS_GEN] -c -o $[target] $[ipath:%=-I%] $[flags] $[source]
  509. #defer COMPILE_C++ $[CXX] $[C++FLAGS_GEN] -c -o $[target] $[ipath:%=-I%] $[flags] $[source]
  510. // What flags should be passed to both C and C++ compilers to enable
  511. // compiler optimizations? This will be supplied when OPTIMIZE
  512. // (above) is set to 2, 3, or 4.
  513. #defer OPTFLAGS -O2
  514. // What define variables should be passed to the compilers for each
  515. // value of OPTIMIZE? We separate this so we can pass these same
  516. // options to interrogate, guaranteeing that the correct interfaces
  517. // are generated. Do not include -D here; that will be supplied
  518. // automatically.
  519. #defer CDEFINES_OPT1 _DEBUG $[EXTRA_CDEFS]
  520. #defer CDEFINES_OPT2 _DEBUG $[EXTRA_CDEFS]
  521. #defer CDEFINES_OPT3 $[EXTRA_CDEFS]
  522. #defer CDEFINES_OPT4 NDEBUG $[EXTRA_CDEFS]
  523. // What additional flags should be passed for each value of OPTIMIZE
  524. // (above)? We separate out the compiler-optimization flags, above,
  525. // so we can compile certain files that give optimizers trouble (like
  526. // the output of lex and yacc) without them, but with all the other
  527. // relevant flags.
  528. #defer CFLAGS_OPT1 $[CDEFINES_OPT1:%=-D%] -Wall -g
  529. #defer CFLAGS_OPT2 $[CDEFINES_OPT2:%=-D%] -Wall -g $[OPTFLAGS]
  530. #defer CFLAGS_OPT3 $[CDEFINES_OPT3:%=-D%] $[OPTFLAGS]
  531. #defer CFLAGS_OPT4 $[CDEFINES_OPT4:%=-D%] $[OPTFLAGS]
  532. // What additional flags should be passed to both compilers when
  533. // building shared (relocatable) sources? Some architectures require
  534. // special support for this.
  535. #defer CFLAGS_SHARED -fPIC
  536. // How to generate a C or C++ executable from a collection of .o
  537. // files. $[target] is the name of the binary to generate, and
  538. // $[sources] is the list of .o files. $[libs] is a space-separated
  539. // list of dependent libraries, and $[lpath] is a space-separated list
  540. // of directories in which those libraries can be found.
  541. #defer LINK_BIN_C $[cc_ld] -o $[target] $[sources] $[flags] $[lpath:%=-L%] $[libs:%=-l%]\
  542. $[fpath:%=-Wl,-F%] $[patsubst %,-framework %, $[frameworks]]
  543. #defer LINK_BIN_C++ $[cxx_ld]\
  544. -o $[target] $[sources]\
  545. $[flags]\
  546. $[lpath:%=-L%] $[libs:%=-l%]\
  547. $[fpath:%=-Wl,-F%] $[patsubst %,-framework %, $[frameworks]]
  548. // How to generate a static C or C++ library. $[target] is the
  549. // name of the library to generate, and $[sources] is the list of .o
  550. // files that will go into the library.
  551. #if $[eq $[PLATFORM], osx]
  552. #defer STATIC_LIB_C libtool -static -o $[target] $[sources]
  553. #defer STATIC_LIB_C++ libtool -static -o $[target] $[sources]
  554. #else
  555. #defer STATIC_LIB_C ar cru $[target] $[sources]
  556. #defer STATIC_LIB_C++ ar cru $[target] $[sources]
  557. #endif
  558. // How to run ranlib, if necessary, after generating a static library.
  559. // $[target] is the name of the library. Set this to the empty string
  560. // if ranlib is not necessary on your platform.
  561. #defer RANLIB ranlib $[target]
  562. // How to generate a shared C or C++ library. $[source] and $[target]
  563. // as above, and $[libs] is a space-separated list of dependent
  564. // libraries, and $[lpath] is a space-separated list of directories in
  565. // which those libraries can be found.
  566. #if $[eq $[PLATFORM], osx]
  567. #defer SHARED_LIB_C $[cc_ld] -o $[target] -install_name $[notdir $[target]] $[sources] $[lpath:%=-L%] $[libs:%=-l%] $[patsubst %,-framework %, $[frameworks]]
  568. #defer SHARED_LIB_C++ $[cxx_ld] -dynamic -dynamiclib -o $[target] -install_name $[notdir $[target]] $[sources] $[lpath:%=-L%] $[libs:%=-l%] $[patsubst %,-framework %, $[frameworks]]
  569. #else
  570. #defer SHARED_LIB_C $[cc_ld] -shared -o $[target] $[sources] $[lpath:%=-L%] $[libs:%=-l%]
  571. #defer SHARED_LIB_C++ $[cxx_ld] -shared -o $[target] $[sources] $[lpath:%=-L%] $[libs:%=-l%]
  572. #endif
  573. // How to install a data file or executable file. $[local] is the
  574. // local name of the file to install, and $[dest] is the name of the
  575. // directory to put it in.
  576. // On Unix systems, we strongly prefer using the install program to
  577. // install files. This has nice features like automatically setting
  578. // the permissions bits, and also is usually clever enough to install
  579. // a running program without crashing the running instance. However,
  580. // it doesn't understanding installing a program from a subdirectory,
  581. // so we have to cd into the source directory first.
  582. #defer INSTALL $[if $[ne $[dir $[local]], ./],cd ./$[dir $[local]] &&] install -m $[INSTALL_UMASK_DATA] $[notdir $[local]] $[dest]/
  583. #defer INSTALL_PROG $[if $[ne $[dir $[local]], ./],cd ./$[dir $[local]] &&] install -m $[INSTALL_UMASK_PROG] $[notdir $[local]] $[dest]/
  584. // Variable definitions for building with the Irix MIPSPro compiler.
  585. #if $[eq $[USE_COMPILER], MIPS]
  586. #define CC cc -n32 -mips3
  587. #define CXX CC -n32 -mips3
  588. // Turn off a few annoying warning messages.
  589. // 1174 - function 'blah' was declared but never used
  590. // 1201 - trailing comma is nonstandard.
  591. // 1209 - controlling expression is constant, e.g. if (0) { ... }
  592. // 1234 - access control not specified, 'public' by default
  593. // 1355 - extra ";" ignored
  594. // 1375 - destructor for base class is not virtual.
  595. // this one actually is bad. But we got alot of them from the classes
  596. // that we've derived from STL collections. Beware of this.
  597. // 3322 - omission of explicit type is nonstandard ("int" assumed)
  598. #define WOFF_LIST -woff 1174,1201,1209,1234,1355,1375,3322
  599. // Linker warnings
  600. // 85 - definition of SOMESYMBOL in SOMELIB preempts that of definition in
  601. // SOMEOTHERLIB.
  602. #define WOFF_LIST $[WOFF_LIST] -Wl,-LD_MSG:off=85
  603. #defer OPTFLAGS -O2 -OPT:Olimit=2500
  604. #defer CFLAGS_OPT1 $[CDEFINES_OPT1:%=-D%] $[WOFF_LIST] -g
  605. #defer CFLAGS_OPT2 $[CDEFINES_OPT2:%=-D%] $[WOFF_LIST]
  606. #defer CFLAGS_OPT3 $[CDEFINES_OPT3:%=-D%] $[WOFF_LIST]
  607. #defer CFLAGS_OPT4 $[CDEFINES_OPT4:%=-D%] $[WOFF_LIST]
  608. #defer CFLAGS_SHARED
  609. #defer STATIC_LIB_C $[CC] -ar -o $[target] $[sources]
  610. #defer STATIC_LIB_C++ $[CXX] -ar -o $[target] $[sources]
  611. #defer RANLIB
  612. #define SHARED_FLAGS -Wl,-none -Wl,-update_registry,$[TOPDIR]/so_locations
  613. #defer SHARED_LIB_C $[cc_ld] -shared $[SHARED_FLAGS] -o $[target] $[sources] $[lpath:%=-L%] $[libs:%=-l%]
  614. #defer SHARED_LIB_C++ $[cxx_ld] -shared $[SHARED_FLAGS] -o $[target] $[sources] $[lpath:%=-L%] $[libs:%=-l%]
  615. #endif
  616. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
  617. // There are also some additional variables that control specific
  618. // compiler/platform features or characteristics, defined in the
  619. // platform specific file Config.platform.pp. Be sure to inspect
  620. // these variables for correctness too.
  621. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////