X-Git-Url: http://review.tizen.org/git/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=NEWS;h=614eba64d8a9417e9d84fa674b2000c0b472b682;hb=e5eb95ce956adc428b65414ebf28bb5b96d74b9f;hp=1cc00a48c4849229a7753b4dafc87c10c70eb686;hpb=6febcd41b3dcf99a89aaf21329c00fdadcd68771;p=platform%2Fupstream%2Fautomake.git diff --git a/NEWS b/NEWS index 1cc00a4..614eba6 100644 --- a/NEWS +++ b/NEWS @@ -1,23 +1,24 @@ * WARNING: New versioning scheme for Automake. - - Starting with this version onward, Automake will use an update and - more rational versioning scheme, one that will allow users to know - which kind of changes can be expected from a new version, based on - its version number. - - + Micro versions (e.g., 1.13.3, 2.0.1, 3.2.8) will introduce only - documentation updates and bug and regression fixes; they will - not introduce new features, nor any backward-incompatibility (any + - Beginning with the release 1.13.2, Automake has started to use a + more rational versioning scheme, that should allow users to know + which kind of changes can be expected from a new version, based + on its version number. + + + Micro releases (e.g., 1.13.3, 2.0.1, 3.2.8) introduce only bug + and regression fixes and documentation updates; they should not + introduce new features, nor any backward-incompatibility (any such incompatibility would be considered a bug, to be fixed with a further micro release). - + Minor versions (e.g., 1.14, 2.1) can introduce new backward + + Minor releases (e.g., 1.14, 2.1) can introduce new backward compatible features; the only backward-incompatibilities allowed in such a release are new *non-fatal* deprecations and warnings, and possibly fixes for old or non-trivial bugs (or even inefficient - behaviours) that could unfortunately have been seen, and used, by - some developers as "corner case features". Possible disruptions - caused by this kind of fixes should hopefully be quite rare. + behaviours) that could unfortunately have been seen and used by + some as "corner case features". Possible disruptions caused by + this kind of fixes should hopefully be quite rare, and their + effects limited in scope. + Major versions (now expected to be released every 18 or 24 months, and not more often) can introduce new big features (possibly with @@ -29,26 +30,33 @@ should be duly implemented in the preceding minor releases. - According to this new scheme, the next major version of Automake - (the one that has until now been labelled as '1.14') will actually - become "Automake 2.0". Automake 1.14 will be the next minor version, - which will introduce new features, deprecations and bug fixes, but - no serious backward incompatibility. + (the one that had previously been labelled as "1.14") will actually + become "Automake 2.0". Automake 1.14 has already been released as + the last minor release, and the present one is a bug-fixing release + following up on that one. - See discussion about automake bug#13578 for more details and background: +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + * WARNING: Future backward-incompatibilities! - Makefile recipes generated by Automake 2.0 will expect to use an 'rm' program that doesn't complain when called without any non-option argument if the '-f' option is given (so that commands like "rm -f" and "rm -rf" will act as a no-op, instead of raising usage errors). - Accordingly, AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE will expand new shell code checking - that the default 'rm' program in PATH satisfies this requirement, and - aborting the configure process if this is not the case. This behavior - of 'rm' is very widespread in the wild, and it will be required in the - next POSIX version: - + This behavior of 'rm' is very widespread in the wild, and it will be + required in the next POSIX version: + + + + Accordingly, AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE now expands some shell code that checks + that the default 'rm' program in PATH satisfies this requirement, + aborting the configure process if this is not the case. For the + moment, it's still possible to force the configuration process to + succeed even with a broken 'rm', that that will no longer be the case + for Automake 2.0. - Automake 2.0 will require Autoconf 2.70 or later (which is still unreleased at the moment of writing, but is planned to be released @@ -58,11 +66,12 @@ name for the Autoconf input file. You are advised to start using the recommended name 'configure.ac' instead, ASAP. - - The ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS special make variable will be fully deprecated - in Automake 2.0 (where it will raise warnings in the "obsolete" - category). You are advised to start relying on the new Automake - support for AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS instead (which was introduced in - Automake 1.13). + - The ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS special make variable will be fully deprecated in + Automake 2.0: it will raise warnings in the "obsolete" category (but + still no hard error of course, for compatibilities with the many, many + packages that still relies on that variable). You are advised to + start relying on the new Automake support for AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIRS + instead (which was introduced in Automake 1.13). - Automake 2.0 will remove support for automatic dependency tracking with the SGI C/C++ compilers on IRIX. The SGI depmode has been @@ -78,7 +87,11 @@ versions will continue to be fully supported. - Automake-provided scripts and makefile recipes might (finally!) - start assuming a POSIX shell in Automake 2.0. + start assuming a POSIX shell in Automake 2.0. There still is no + certainty about this though: we'd first like to wait and see + whether future Autoconf versions will be enhanced to guarantee + that such a shell is always found and provided by the checks in + ./configure. - Starting from Automake 2.0, third-party m4 files located in the system-wide aclocal directory, as well as in any directory listed @@ -91,48 +104,79 @@ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ +New in 1.14.1: + +* Bugs fixed: + + - The user is no longer allowed to override the --srcdir nor the --prefix + configure options used by "make distcheck" (bug#14991). + + - Fixed a gross inefficiency in the recipes for installing byte-compiled + python files, that was causing an O(N^2) performance on the number N of + files, instead of the expected O(N) performance. Note that this bug + was only relevant when the number of python files was high (which is + unusual in practice). + + - Automake try to offer a more reproducible output for warning messages, + in the face of the newly-introduced randomization for hash keys order + in Perl 5.18. + + - The 'test-driver' script now actually error out with a clear error + message on the most common invalid usages. + + - Several spurious failures/hangs in the testsuite (bugs #14706, #14707, + #14760, #14911, #15181, #15237). + +* Documentation fixes: + + - Fixed typos in the 'fix-timestamp.sh' example script that made it + nonsensical. + +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + New in 1.14: * C compilation, and the AC_PROG_CC and AM_PROG_CC_C_O macros: - - The 'compile' script is now unconditionally required for all - packages that perform C compilation (note that if you are using - the '--add-missing' option, automake will fetch that script for - you, so you shouldn't need any explicit adjustment). - This new behaviour is needed to avoid obscure errors when the - 'subdir-objects' option is used, and the compiler is an inferior - one that doesn't grasp the combined use of both the "-c -o" - options; see discussion about automake bug#13378 for more details: + - The 'compile' script is now unconditionally required for all packages + that perform C compilation (if you are using the '--add-missing' + option, automake will fetch that script for you, so you shouldn't + need any explicit adjustment). This new behaviour is needed to avoid + obscure errors when the 'subdir-objects' option is used, and the + compiler is an inferior one that doesn't grasp the combined use of + both the "-c -o" options; see discussion about automake bug#13378 for + more details: - - The next major Automake version (2.0) will unconditionally turn on + - The next major Automake version (2.0) will unconditionally activate the 'subdir-objects' option. In order to smooth out the transition, we now give a warning (in the category 'unsupported') whenever a source file is present in a subdirectory but the 'subdir-object' is not enabled. For example, the following usage will trigger such a - warning (of course, assuming the 'subdir-objects' option is off): + warning: bin_PROGRAMS = sub/foo sub_foo_SOURCES = sub/main.c sub/bar.c - - Automake will automatically enhance the AC_PROG_CC autoconf macro - to make it check, at configure time, that the C compiler supports - the combined use of both the "-c -o" options. The result of this - check is saved in the cache variable 'am_cv_prog_cc_c_o', and said - result can be overridden by pre-defining that variable. + - Automake will automatically enhance the autoconf-provided macro + AC_PROG_CC to force it to check, at configure time, that the + C compiler supports the combined use of both the '-c' and '-o' + options. The result of this check is saved in the cache variable + 'am_cv_prog_cc_c_o', and said result can be overridden by + pre-defining that variable. - - The AM_PROG_CC_C_O can still be called, but that should no longer - be necessary. This macro is now just a thin wrapper around the + - The AM_PROG_CC_C_O macro can still be called, albeit that should no + longer be necessary. This macro is now just a thin wrapper around the Automake-enhanced AC_PROG_CC. This means, among the other things, that its behaviour is changed in three ways: 1. It no longer invokes the Autoconf-provided AC_PROG_CC_C_O - macros behind the scenes. + macro behind the scenes. - 2. It caches the check result in the 'am_cv_prog_cc_c_o'variable, - and not in a 'ac_cv_prog_cc_*_c_o' variable whose exact name - in only dynamically computed at configure runtime (sic!) from + 2. It caches the check result in the 'am_cv_prog_cc_c_o' variable, + and not in a 'ac_cv_prog_cc_*_c_o' variable whose exact name is + dynamically computed only at configure runtime (really!) from the content of the '$CC' variable. 3. It no longer automatically AC_DEFINE the C preprocessor @@ -149,10 +193,10 @@ New in 1.14: - For quite a long time, Automake has been implementing an undocumented hack which ensured that '.info' files which appeared to be cleaned - (by e.g. being listed in the CLEANFILES or DISTCLEANFILES variables) - were built in the builddir rather than in the srcdir; this hack was - introduced to ensure better backward-compatibility with packages such - as Texinfo, which did things like: + (by being listed in the CLEANFILES or DISTCLEANFILES variables) were + built in the builddir rather than in the srcdir; this hack was + introduced to ensure better backward-compatibility with package + such as Texinfo, which do things like: info_TEXINFOS = texinfo.txi info-stnd.texi info.texi DISTCLEANFILES = texinfo texinfo-* info*.info* @@ -172,19 +216,27 @@ New in 1.14: - The special Automake-time substitutions '%reldir%' and '%canon_reldir%' (and their short versions, '%D%' and '%C%' respectively) can now be used in an included Makefile fragment. The former is substituted with the - relative directory of the included fragment (compared to the top level + relative directory of the included fragment (compared to the top-level including Makefile), and the latter with the canonicalized version of - the same relative directory: + the same relative directory. + # in 'Makefile.am': + bin_PROGRAMS = # will be updated by included Makefile fragments + include src/Makefile.inc + + # in 'src/Makefile.inc': bin_PROGRAMS += %reldir%/foo %canon_reldir%_foo_SOURCES = %reldir%/bar.c + This should be especially useful for packages using a non-recursive + build system. + * Deprecated distribution formats: - The 'shar' and 'compress' distribution formats are deprecated, and scheduled for removal in Automake 2.0. Accordingly, the use of the 'dist-shar' and 'dist-tarZ' will cause warnings at automake runtime - (in the 'obsolete' category), and the recipes for the Automake-generated + (in the 'obsolete' category), and the recipes of the Automake-generated targets 'dist-shar' and 'dist-tarZ' will unconditionally display (non-fatal) warnings at make runtime. @@ -193,13 +245,12 @@ New in 1.14: - To simplify transition to Automake 2.0, the shell code expanded by AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE now checks (at configure runtime) that the default 'rm' program in PATH doesn't complain when called without any - non-option argument if the '-f' option is given (so that commands - like "rm -f" and "rm -rf" act as a no-op, instead of raising usage - error). If this is not the case, - the configure script is aborted, to call the attention of the user - on the issue, and invite him to fix his PATH. The checked 'rm' - behavior is very widespread in the wild, and will be required by - future POSIX version: + non-option argument if the '-f' option is given (so that commands like + "rm -f" and "rm -rf" act as a no-op, instead of raising usage errors). + If this is not the case, the configure script is aborted, to call the + attention of the user on the issue, and invite him to fix his PATH. + The checked 'rm' behavior is very widespread in the wild, and will be + required by future POSIX versions: