Priorities for release: !! documentation (eg new macros) !! finish up TAGS work * `acinstall' * echo in installs? * `missing' program * copyrights on m4 files, aclocal output * for new autoconf: * completely handle multi-":" mode for AC_CONFIG_HEADER * Scan multiple input files when Makefile is generated? This would provide flexibility for large projects; subsumes the "Makefile.tmpl" idea [ can't do this. must explain why in manual. basically, solving all the problems is too hard like: how to remove redundancies between generated .in files instead should implement `include' directive for Makefile.am ] * figure out what to pass as CONFIG_HEADER to config.status * look @ jim's $(t:=foo) problem * should install-foo target for a new dir (eg fooexecdir) be run via install-data or install-exec? Consider examining name of variable. * no mention of $(LIBTOOL) in "clean" Makefile (?) * compatibility with older versions of autoconf if not --gnu ================================================================ * only remove libtool at top level? * clean up source directory by moving stuff into subdirs * consider adding pkglibexecdir, maybe others? requests for pkg-dirs with version included Fix ansi2knr so that knr-style function decls aren't incorrectly rewritten. Or, fix automake so that not all sources in a directory must be ansi. Should also fix things so that a separate ._o file is not needed; instead use a wrapper script. Gord on pretty-printing instead of raw loops: Gord> I think the best thing to do is to have make output be a valid shell Gord> script, and to have it be clear exactly what is happening at a given Gord> time. Further: - man page fixes - consider adding "echo"s to installs again. users can use make SHELL='sh -x' to get the full dirt Avoid loops when installing; instead unroll them in automake Some long-term projects: * if $(FOO) is used somewhere, ensure FOO is defined, either by user or by automake if possible * Don't rearrange order of `include' lines relative to += assignments. * Handle += assignments at all. consider putting all check-* targets onto @check? To support --help/--version checking? take diff-n-query code from libit Per Bothner says: Per> 1) Being able to build a set of non-source programs Per> from source programs, without necessarily linking them together. Per> I.e. one should be able to say something like: Per> dummy_SOURCES=foo.c bar.c Per> and automake should realize that it needs to build foo.o and bar.o. Per> 2) Being intelligent about new kinds of suffixes. Per> If it sees: Per> SUFFIXES = .class .java Per> and a suffix rule of the form: Per> .java.class: Per> then it should be able to realize it can build .class files from Per> .java files, and thus be able to generate a list of Per> .class files from a list of .java source files. From Jason Molenda: * allow a way to use "gzip --best" [ Try GZIP=--best make dist ] * don't assume GNU tar is "tar" (eg in distcheck) * actually use acinstall program !! Must fix require_file stuff. It is really gross, and I don't understand it any more. * error messages should print ``[info blah blah]'' command when a certain part of the standards apply. saw idea in message from Craig Burley. wouldn't it be really cool if compile-mode in Emacs understood this convention, and you could click on such text to go to the appropriate info page? !! should write autoconf-style doc entries for each m4 macro Jim's idea: should look for @setfilename and warn if filenames too long * guess split size * allow ".info" to be missing * must update GNU Hello ** many requests for a way to omit a file from the distribution. Should be done like `!foo' or `~foo' in _SOURCES, etc. Such files should be removed explicitly after the copy step! Doing this requires rewriting macros before generating Makefile.in. from joerg-martin schwarz: -- If Makefile.am contains $(CC), $(COMPILE), $(YLWRAP), .... in an explicitly written rule, you should emit the corresponding Makefile variables automatically. Configuring in the large: * allow hierarchy of dirs to share one aclocal.m4 How? consider printing full file name of Makefile.am or configure.in when giving error. This would help for very large trees with many configure.in scripts From the GNU Standards. These things could be checked, and probably should be if --gnu. * Make sure that the directory into which the distribution unpacks (as well as any subdirectories) are all world-writable (octal mode 777). * Make sure that no file name in the distribution is more than 14 characters long. * Don't include any symbolic links in the distribution itself. (ditto hard links) * Make sure that all the files in the distribution are world-readable. ** also, check --help output and --version output. Idea from François * standards no longer prohibit ANSI C. What does this imply for the de-ansi-fication feature? consider supporting "var+= stuff" syntax. rewrite to just var=... on output. This is sometimes convenient when you want to write a Makefile.am in more-or-less modular parts should be able to determine what is built by looking at rules (and configure.in). Then built man pages (eg) could automatically be omitted from the distribution. Idea from Joerg-Martin Schwarz: allow passing different -D flags to different compiles. This can be done, but with the restriction that a .c cannot appear in 2 different "objects" (programs/libraries) compiled with different -D options (because -c and -o do not always work together and parallel makes must work). This could be implemented by noticing whenever a ".o" target with no rules is being emitted, and adding the appropriate compilation rule as appropriate. This should work with targets from Makefile.am as well as from .P files, which means rewriting so that the Makefile.am contents aren't copied into the output immediately. This feature is probably required to fully support libtool ("grody compilation issue") [ this could be probably done more directly by examining the sources as we scan Makefile.am ] Henrik Frystyk Nielsen says: Henrik> 4) Flags like --include-deps are lost when you make changes to Henrik> Makefile.am files and automake is run automatically. It would Henrik> be nice to keep these flags as I now have to redo everything Henrik> manually. ... what about other options here too? Think about: maybe "make check" should just bomb if error occurs? Then user must use "make -k check". This is probably more natural. Consider: "cvs" option adds some cvs-specific rules? Right now, targets generated internally (eg "install") are not overridable by user code. This should probably be possible, even though it isn't very important. This could be done by generating all internal rules via a function call instead of just appending to $output_rules. [ this will be harder to implement when scanning a rule like all-recursive from subdirs.am ] * Should be a way to have "nobuild_PROGRAMS" which aren't even built, but which could be by running the magic make command. Other priorities: * Must rewrite am_install_var. Should break into multiple functions. This will allow the callers to be a little smarter. * Rewrite clean targets. * Must rewrite error handling code. Right now it is a real mess Should fix up require_file junk at the same time Things to finish libtool support: * Handle grody compilation issue Namely: some objects require a different compilation rule * Handle install changes * Handle clean changes * New definition for LINK djm wants ``LINKS'' variable; list of things to link together after install. In BSD environment, use: LINKS = from1 to1 from2 to2 ... Need way to say there are no suffixes in a Makefile (Franc,ois' "override" idea suffices here) Check to make sure various scripts are executable (IE when looking for them in a directory) Use recode in dist target when MAINT_CHARSET specified. Read caveats in automake.in before doing this. Note the same problem used to apply to the no-dependencies option; maybe it still should? Note also that each Makefile.am must be rewritten at "make dist" time if MAINT_CHARSET and DIST_CHARSET are not identical. NOTE: gettext must arrange for all .po files not to be recoded. In the long term this might be a problem (consider when some systems use Unicode but the rest do not) MAINT_CHARSET *must* be local to each Makefile.am, to enable merged distributions. DIST_CHARSET must be passed down to subdir makes during a "make dist" Handle dist-zoo. Generally add more DOS support. Maybe run "doschk" (why isn't this merged with "pathchk"?) when doing a dist. Do whatever else François says here... Add support for html via an option. Use texi2html. Use "html_TEXINFOS", and htmldir = .../html. Include html files in distribution. Also allow "html_DATA", for raw .html files. [ when will texinfo directly support html? ] uninstall and pkg-dirs should rm -rf the dir. a potential bug: configure puts "blah.o" into LIBOBJS, thus implying these files can't be de-ansified. Not a problem? [ fix by using ansi2knr wrapper program ] In general most .am files should be merged into automake. For instance all the "clean" targets could be merged by keeping lists of things to be removed. This would be a lot nicer looking. Note that the install targets probably should not be merged; it is sometimes useful to only install a small part. Clean up the output: * Order rules sensibly * Ensure every line has a purpose. Omit unused stuff * Eliminate extraneous rules when possible (eg 'install-am' stuff) * Make sure vertical spacing is correct Omit program transform vars from header if no program installed. This is currently pretty hard to do. (But with beautification code it would probably be easy) Lex, yacc support: * It would be nice to automatically support using bison's better features to rename the output files. This requires autoconf support * Consider supporting syntax from autoconf "derived:source", eg: y.tab.c:perly.y for yacc and lex source * allow generating c++ source from lex? Eg using flex? Multi-language support: * should have mapping of file extensions to languages * should automatically handle the linking issue (special-case C++) * must get compile rules for various languages; FORTRAN probably most important unimplemented language This should be integrated in some way with Per's idea. Eg .f.o rules should be recognized & auto-handled in _SOURCES That way any random language can be treated with C/C++ on a first-class basis (maybe) It might be cool to generate .texi dependencies by grepping for @include. (If done, it should be done the same way C dependencies are done) It would be good to check some parts of GNU standards. Already check for install-sh and mkinstalldirs. What else is required to be in package by GNU standards or by automake? Some things for --strictness=gnits: * "cd $(foo); something" is an error in a rule. Should be: "cd $(foo) && something" * Look for 'ln -s' and warn about using $(LN) and AC_PROG_LN_S * Look for $(LN) and require AC_PROG_LN_S Auto-distribute "ChangeLog.[0-9]+"? "ChangeLog.[a-z]+"? Internationalize. [ gettext doesn't have the necessary machinery yet ] am_error should use printf-style arguments (for eventual gettext scheme) François says the ordering of files in a distribution should be as follows: * README * source files * derived files I agree, but I don't see how to implement this yet. It might be easier if "derived files" is limited to those that Automake itself knows about, eg output of yacc. Check all source files to make sure that FSF address is up-to-date. --gnits or --gnu only. Merge each -vars.am file with corresponding ".am" file. Can do this because of changes to &file_contents. Should libexec programs have the name transform done on them? Order the output rules sensibly, so FOO_SOURCES and FOO_OBJECTS are together and rules are in the usual order. Make the output minimal: only output definitions for variables that are used. Look at dist's jmake for ideas. dist is the name of the distribution including Metaconfig. Perl uses it. Should handle directory hierarchies deeper than 2. Right now there is some support for this. Here are some of the issues: * Should handle AC_CONFIG_SUBDIRS, ie must handle configure.in in subdirs * can do this by looking at subdirs, seeing configure.in and auto-running Automake there . Consider supporting guile-style PLUGIN directories automatically? djm says: David> To avoid comments like the one about subdirs getting buried in David> the middle of a Makefile.in, how about pushing comments that David> start with ### to the top of the Makefile.in (in order)? Sort David> of like how Autoconf uses diversions to force initialization David> code to the top of configure. Karl Berry says: Karl> 2) Your Makefile variable names are generally uppercase, but GNU Karl> generally uses lowercase. Not that it matters :-). ================================================================ Stuff for aclocal: probably should put each group of m4 files into a subdir owned by the containing application. ================================================================ Document: rationale for avoiding make CFLAGS="$CFLAGS" ... in subdirs make rule a package that installs its own aclocal macros --cygnus OMIT_DEPENDENCIES write example of using automake with dejagnu follow calc example in dejagnu docs document which variables are actually scanned and which are not. Document customary ordering of Makefile.am. From François. Should include extended version of diagram from Autoconf (suggested by Greg Woods) Make a definition of the term "source" document how to use Automake with CVS. Idea from Mark Galassi. Also include Greg Woods' more sophisticated "cvs-dist" target. document rebuilding configure. CONFIGURE_DEPENDENCIES _DEPENDENCIES -vs- _LIBADD/_LDADD; the tradeoffs -- must document all variables that are supposed to be public knowledge automake must be run in each directory with a configure.in This is insufficiently clear must document the targets required for integration with non-automake-using subdirs use of (eg) EXTRA_PROGRAMS is not very clear right now document EXTRA_foo_SOURCES document why EXTRA_* vars must be statically knowable document the "make SHELL='/bin/sh -x'" trick for debugging section on relationship to GNU make LDFLAGS; maybe why it is different from LIBADD/LDADD document that dependencies: * are put into .deps * are system-dependent ================================================================ Things to do for autoconf: * patch autoreconf to run automake and aclocal. I've done this but it is not really available. It can't be made available until automake is officially released ================================================================ Libraries: * Should support standalone library along with subdir library in same Makefile.am. Maybe: turn off "standalone" mode if library's Makefile.am is not only one specd? [ add an option for this ] ================================================================ Longer term: Would it be useful to integrate in some way with the Debian package building utility? Must check. maybe it would be possible to deal with all the different package utilities somehow. Lately I've been hearing good things about the RedHat packaging utilities. Why are there so many of these? Are they fun to write or something? The RedHat package utility is called RPM; see ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/code/rpm It actually has problems, like no configure script and no documentation. For Cygnus it would probably be good to be able to handle the native package utility on each platform. There are probably 3 or 4 of these (sysv, solaris?, aix?) tcl/unix/Makefile.in has some code to generate a Solaris package. Automake probably can't do all of this on its own. A new tool might be a better idea ================================================================ A tool to guess what the local Makefile.am should look like: (see Gord's Maint program!) * Probably integrate with autoscan * Use various simple rules to determine what to do: * get name of top directory, sans version info * search for .c files with 'main' in them * if in main.c, use directory name for program * if in more than one, generate multiple programs * if not found, generate a library named after directory * order subdir searches correctly: lib first, src last * assume 'testsuite' dir means we are using dejagnu * maybe be smart about reading existing Makefile.am, so tool can be run for incremental changes? You could imagine: Makefile.am: autoproject --incremental ================================================================ Stuff NOT to do, and why: consider auto-including any file that matches "*.in". [ no: po/Makefile.in shouldn't be included ] must look at mkid to see how it works (for subdir usage) [ right now, it doesn't. i don't see a simple fix right now ] if configure.in not found, move up a directory and try again? This could eliminate a common source of problems. [ this is just a bad idea ] * scripts are installed in $exec_prefix/bin, not $prefix/bin Bug or feature? [ the consensus on Gnits is that this isn't required. doubters can work around it anyway ] * make the auto-dep code crash if GNU make not in use? (doesn't it already?) Looked at a program called 'ezmake', which seems to do something similar. The only idea there that is possibly worth stealing is using globs in definitions. Also has negations. Eg in a directory with files a.c, b.c and c.c, the line: foo_SOURCES = *.c ~c.c would be equivalent to: foo_SOURCES = a.c b.c Is this worth implementing? [ No... it is more reliable to spell everything out. ] Scan source directories and warn about missing files, eg .c/.h files that aren't mentioned? [ distcheck makes this less useful ]