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+.\" -*- mode: text; coding: utf-8; -*-
+.\"
+.\" Copyright ©2014 - 2022 Free Software Foundation
+.\" 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110, USA
+.\"
+.\" Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
+.\" obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation
+.\" files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction,
+.\" including, without limitation, the rights to use, copy, modify,
+.\" merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and sell copies of
+.\" the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
+.\" furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
+.\"
+.\" The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
+.\" included in all copies, or substantial portions, of the Software;
+.\"
+.\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS," WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
+.\" EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES
+.\" OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, AND
+.\" NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT
+.\" HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES, OR OTHER LIABILITY,
+.\" WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT, OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
+.\" FROM, OUT OF, OR IN CONNECTION WITH, THE SOFTWARE, OR THE USE OF,
+.\" OR OTHER DEALINGS IN, THE SOFTWARE.
+.\"
+.\" Formatted with the mom macros
+.\" .RW (reduce) and .EW (expand) control track kerning
+.\" .WS controls word spacing
+.\" Hanging punctuation and hyphens are inserted manually
+.\"
+.TITLE "Using Automake in the Groff project"
+.AUTHOR "Bertrand Garrigues"
+.COPYRIGHT "2014, 2017 Free Software Foundation"
+.COVER TITLE AUTHOR DOCTYPE COPYRIGHT
+.
+.PAPER LETTER
+.PRINTSTYLE TYPESET
+.
+.HEADING_STYLE 1 NUMBER
+.HEADING_STYLE 2 NUMBER
+.HEADING_STYLE 3 NUMBER
+.HEADING_STYLE 4 NUMBER
+.
+.QUOTE_INDENT 2m
+.CODE_FONT CB
+.
+\# Table of contents
+.TOC_PADDING 2
+.SPACE_TOC_ITEMS
+.AUTO_RELOCATE_TOC
+.TOC_ENTRY_STYLE 2 FONT I
+.TOC_LEAD 14
+.
+.NO_SHIM \" Flex-spaced
+.
+.START
+.
+.PP
+This is a quick overview of how to use `automake' in the groff
+project, and is intended to help the developers and contributors
+find their way when they have to make changes to the sources files
+or to the data that are installed. If you need more details on
+`automake', here are some reading suggestions:
+.
+.LEFT
+.SP 3p
+.
+.LIST
+.SHIFT_LIST 1m
+.ITEM
+The Automake Manual:
+\*[FWD 1m]\c
+.PDF_WWW_LINK https://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/automake.html
+.SP 3p
+.ITEM
+A book by John Calcote, with good practical examples:
+\*[FWD 1m]\c
+.PDF_WWW_LINK http://fsmsh.com/2753
+.SP 3p
+.ITEM
+This site, by Diego Petteno, with good practical examples too:
+\*[FWD 1m]\c
+.PDF_WWW_LINK https://autotools.io/index.html
+.LIST OFF
+.
+.JUSTIFY
+.HY DEFAULT
+.
+.HEADING 1 "Overview, the initial build"
+.
+.HEADING 2 "First build"
+.
+.PP
+Groff integrates the `gnulib' and uses its `bootstrap' script. When
+compiling from the git repository, you should first invoke this
+script:
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+$ ./bootstrap
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+This will:
+.
+.QUAD LEFT
+.HY OFF
+.
+.LIST
+.SHIFT_LIST 1m
+.ITEM
+.SP 3p
+Clone the gnulib repository as a git submodule in `gnulib',
+add the needed gnulib sources files in `lib',
+add the needed gnulib m4 macros in `gnulib_m4'.
+.SP 3p
+.ITEM
+Invoke autoreconf that will call all the `GNU autotools' (`aclocal',
+`autoheader', `autoconf', `automake') in the right order for
+creating the following files:
+.LIST DASH
+.SHIFT_LIST .5m
+.SP 3p
+.ITEM
+INSTALL (a symlink to gnulib's INSTALL file)
+.ITEM
+Makefile.in
+.ITEM
+aclocal.m4
+.ITEM
+autom4te.cache/
+.ITEM
+build-aux/ (that contains all the helper scripts)
+.ITEM
+configure
+.ITEM
+src/include/config.hin
+.LIST BACK
+.LIST OFF
+.
+.SP 3p
+.JUSTIFY
+.HY DEFAULT
+.
+.WS +2
+.EW .5
+The file aclocal.m4 is generated and the groff m4 macros are
+included via the acinclude.m4 file.
+.WS DEFAULT
+.EW 0
+.
+.PP
+At this point you can invoke the `configure' script and call `make'
+to build the groff project. You can do it in the source tree:
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+$ ./configure
+$ make
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+You can also build groff in an out-of-source build tree, which is
+cleaner:
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+$ mkdir build
+$ cd build
+$ ../configure
+$ make
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+Parallel build is also supported: `make' can be invoked
+with the -j option, which will greatly speed up the build.
+.
+.HEADING 2 "Automake in the autotools process"
+.
+.PP
+Automake's main job is to generate a Makefile.in file (this file is
+maintained manually on projects using only autoconf). The main file
+processed by `automake' is the Makefile.am file, which eventually
+generates a Makefile. The (simplified) process is:
+.
+.SP 3p
+.QUAD LEFT
+.HY OFF
+.
+.LIST
+.SHIFT_LIST 1m
+.ITEM
+`aclocal' generates the `aclocal.m4' file from `configure.ac' and
+the user-defined macros in `acinclude.m4'.
+.ITEM
+`autoheader' generates config.h.in.
+.ITEM
+`autoconf' generates the `configure' script from `aclocal.m4' and `configure.ac'
+.ITEM
+`automake' generates Makefile.in from Makefile.am and the
+`configure.ac' file. It also generates some helper scripts, on the
+groff project they are located in build-aux.
+.ITEM
+`configure' generates `config.status'
+.ITEM
+`config.status' generates the Makefile and config.h.
+.LIST OFF
+.
+.SP 3p
+.JUSTIFY
+.HY DEFAULT
+.
+.WS -2
+.RW .16
+Finally, `autoreconf' is the program that can be used to call these
+various tools in the correct order.
+.RW 0
+.WS DEFAULT
+.
+.PP
+Automake defines a set of special variables that are used to
+generate various build rules in the final Makefile. Note however
+that if Automake's predefined rules are not enough, you still have
+the possibility of adding handwritten standard `make' rules in a
+Makefile.am; these rules will be copied verbatim in the Makefile.in
+and then in the final Makefile.
+.
+.HEADING 2 "Modification of autotools files"
+.
+.PP
+Previously, when groff used `autoconf' only and not `automake',
+you had to invoke manually the autotools, depending on what you
+modified. For example, to change the file `aclocal.m4', you had
+to run the shell command `aclocal -I m4'; to recreate the files
+`configure' and `Makefile', you had to use the command 'autoreconf
+- I m4'.
+.PP
+Now, as groff uses `automake', you don't need to run `autoreconf'.
+If you make some changes in Makefile.am or configure.ac, all the
+files that need to be updated will be regenerated when you execute
+`make'.
+.
+.HEADING 1 "Building a program"
+.
+.HEADING 2 "A program and its source files"
+.
+.PP
+Generally speaking, when using `automake' you will have to write a
+Makefile.am file and use the variable \*[CODE]bin_PROGRAMS\*[CODE OFF]
+to declare a program that should be built, and then list the
+sources of this program in a variable that starts with the name of
+your program and ends with \*[CODE]_SOURCES\*[CODE OFF]\&. In the
+groff project we have only 1 top-level Makefile.am that includes
+several \&.am files.
+.PP
+Take for example the build of grolbp, in src/devices/grolbp/grolbp.am.
+The file starts with:
+.QUOTE ADJUST -4p
+.CODE
+bin_PROGRAMS += grolbp
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+This says that a program named `grolbp' is added to the list of the
+programs that should be built. The variable
+\*[CODE]bin_PROGRAMS\*[CODE OFF] is initialized to an empty string in
+the top-level Makefile.am, which includes grolbp.am. (We will see later
+why we don't write directly
+\*[CODE]bin_PROGRAMS\~=\~grolbp\*[CODE OFF] in a Makefile.am in the
+grolbp directory.)
+.PP
+Then, we list the sources of grolbp like this:
+.QUOTE ADJUST -4p
+.IL 1m
+.HI 1m
+.CODE
+grolbp_SOURCES = \\
+src/devices/grolbp/lbp.cpp \\
+src/devices/grolbp/lbp.h \\
+src/devices/grolbp/charset.h
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+.ILQ
+As you added `grolbp' to \*[CODE]bin_PROGRAMS\*[CODE OFF],
+you need to define the sources of grolbp in the variable
+\*[CODE]grolbp_SOURCES\*[CODE OFF]\&. If you write in another file
+\*[CODE]bin_PROGRAMS += foo\*[CODE OFF] you will list the sources
+of `foo' in \*[CODE]foo_SOURCES\*[CODE OFF]\&.
+.PP
+With these two statements, the resulting generated Makefile
+will contain everything that is needed to build, clean,
+install and uninstall the `grolbp' binary when invoking the
+adequate `make' command. Also, the source files listed in
+\*[CODE]grolbp_SOURCES\*[CODE OFF] will automatically be included in
+the distribution tarball. That is why the headers are also listed
+in \*[CODE]grolbp_SOURCES\*[CODE OFF]: it is not necessary to add
+them in order to correctly build `grolbp', but this way the headers
+will be distributed.
+.
+.SP 3p
+.QUAD LEFT
+.HY OFF
+.
+.LIST
+.SHIFT_LIST 1m
+.ITEM
+The path to the files are relative to the top-level directory.
+.ITEM
+The binaries are generated in the top-level build directory.
+.ITEM
+The \&.o files are generated in the directory where the source files
+are located, or, in the case of an out-of-source build tree, in a
+directory that is the replication of the source tree directory.
+For example if you built groff in a `build' directory, lbp.o
+(object file from src/devices/grolbp/lbp.cpp) will be located in
+build/src/devices/grolbp/lbp.o.
+.LIST OFF
+.
+.SP 3p
+.JUSTIFY
+.HY DEFAULT
+.
+We will also see later the reasons; this is due to the non-recursive
+make design.
+.
+.HEADING 2 "Linking against a library"
+.
+.PP
+To list which libraries grolbp needs to link against, we just write:
+.QUOTE
+.IL
+.HI
+.CODE
+grolbp_LDADD = $(LIBM) \\
+libdriver.a \\
+libgroff.a \\
+lib/libgnu.a
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+.ILQ
+Again, we use the variable \*[CODE]grolbp_LDADD\*[CODE OFF] because
+we added a program named `grolbp'. This will also automatically
+set build dependencies between `grolbp' and the libraries it needs:
+`libdriver.a' and `libgroff.a', that are convenience libraries built
+within the groff project, will be compiled before grolbp.
+.
+.HEADING 2 "Preprocessor flags"
+.
+.PP
+Preprocessor flags that are common to all the binaries are listed
+in the variable \*[CODE]AM_CPPFLAGS\*[CODE OFF] in the top-level
+Makefile.am. If a `foo' binary needs specific preprocessor
+flags, use \*[CODE]foo_CPPFLAGS\*[CODE OFF], for example, in
+src/devices/xditview/xditview.am, extra flags are needed to build
+gxditview and are added like this:
+.QUOTE
+.IL
+.HI
+.CODE
+gxditview_CPPFLAGS = $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(X_CFLAGS) -Dlint \\
+-I$(top_builddir)/src/devices/xditview
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+.ILQ
+.PP
+The use of specific CPPFLAGS changes the name of the generated objects:
+the \&.o object files are prefixed with the name of the program.
+For example, the \&.o file corresponding to
+src/devices/xditview/device.c will be
+src/devices/xditview/gxditview-device.o.
+.
+.HEADING 2 "Cleaning"
+.
+.PP
+You don't need to write rules to clean the programs listed in
+\*[CODE]bin_PROGRAMS\*[CODE OFF], `automake' will write them for
+you. However, some programs might have generated sources that
+should be cleaned. In this case, you have mainly two special
+variables to list extra files that should be cleaned:
+.
+.SP 3p
+.QUAD LEFT
+.HY OFF
+.
+.LIST
+.SHIFT_LIST 1m
+.ITEM
+\*[CODE]MOSTLYCLEANFILES\*[CODE OFF] for files that should be
+cleaned by `make mostlyclean'
+.ITEM
+\*[CODE]CLEANFILES\*[CODE OFF ] for files that should be cleaned by
+`make clean'
+.LIST OFF
+.
+.JUSTIFY
+.HY DEFAULT
+.SP 3p
+.
+There is also the possibility of writing custom rules. We will see
+that later.
+.
+.HEADING 2 "Dependencies"
+.
+.PP
+We have already seen that when linking against a convenience
+library, the dependencies are already created by `automake'.
+However, some dependencies still need to be manually added, for
+example when a source file includes a generated header. In this
+case, the easiest way is to add a plain-make dependency. For
+example, src/roff/groff/groff.cpp includes defs.h, which is a
+generated header. We just add in src/roff/groff/groff.am:
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+src/roff/groff/groff.$(OBJEXT): defs.h
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+.
+.HEADING 2 "Scripts"
+.
+.PP
+Apart from \*[CODE]bin_PROGRAMS\*[CODE OFF], there is another
+similar special variable for scripts: \*[CODE]bin_SCRIPTS\*[CODE OFF]\&.
+The scripts listed in this variable will automatically be
+built (of course you have to provide your custom rule to build the
+script), installed and uninstalled when invoking `make', `make
+install' and `make uninstall'. The main difference is that unlike
+the programs listed in \*[CODE]bin_PROGRAMS\*[CODE OFF], the scripts
+will not be cleaned by default. They are not distributed by default
+either. In the groff project, \*[CODE]bin_SCRIPTS\*[CODE OFF] are
+cleaned because they are added to \*[CODE]MOSTLYCLEANFILES\*[CODE OFF]
+in the top-level Makefile.am.
+.PP
+A simple example are the gropdf and pdfmom scripts in
+src/devices/gropdf/gropdf.am:
+.CODE_SIZE 84
+.QUOTE_INDENT 1
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+bin_SCRIPTS += gropdf pdfmom
+ [...]
+gropdf: $(gropdf_dir)/gropdf.pl $(SH_DEPS_SED_SCRIPT)
+ $(AM_V_GEN)$(RM) $@ \\
+ sed -f $(SH_DEPS_SED_SCRIPT) \\
+ -e "s|[@]VERSION[@]|$(VERSION)|" \\
+ -e "s|[@]PERL[@]|$(PERL)|" \\
+ -e "s|[@]GROFF_FONT_DIR[@]|$(fontpath)|" \\
+ -e "s|[@]RT_SEP[@]|$(RT_SEP)|" $(gropdf_dir)/gropdf.pl \\
+ >$@ \
+ && chmod +x $@
+
+pdfmom: $(gropdf_dir)/pdfmom.pl $(SH_DEPS_SED_SCRIPT)
+ $(AM_V_GEN)$(RM) $@ \\
+ sed -f $(SH_DEPS_SED_SCRIPT) \\
+ -e "s|[@]VERSION[@]|$(VERSION)|" \\
+ -e "s|[@]RT_SEP[@]|$(RT_SEP)|" \\
+ -e "s|[@]PERL[@]|$(PERL)|" $(gropdf_dir)/pdfmom.pl \\
+ >$@
+ && chmod +x $@
+.QUOTE OFF
+.QUOTE_INDENT 2m
+.CODE_SIZE 100
+In this example, the `@' symbol is protected by square brackets to
+prevent the substitution of the variable by `automake'.
+.
+.HEADING 1 "Non-recursive make schema"
+.
+.PP
+There are two possibilities for organizing the Makefile.am of a
+large project, using a recursive or a non-recursive `make'.
+.
+.HEADING 2 "1st possibility: make recursion"
+.
+.PP
+A top level Makefile.am includes another Makefile.am, using the
+\*[CODE]SUBDIRS\*[CODE OFF] directive, and the Makefile.am of each
+sub-directory lists the programs that should be built. If we had
+chosen this type of organization, we would have a Makefile.am in
+src/devices/grolbp and in each directory that contain sources to
+build a program (tbl, eqn, troff, and so on). We would write in the
+top-level Makefile.am:
+.QUOTE
+.IL
+.HI
+.CODE
+SUBDIRS = src/devices/grolbp \\
+\&... (and all the dir that build a program or a script)
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+and in src/devices/grolbp, we would have a file Makefile.am that
+contains:
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+bin_PROGRAMS = grolbp
+grolbp_SOURCES = lbp.cpp lbp.h charset.h
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+.PP
+Only `grolbp' is affected to the variable \*[CODE]bin_PROGRAMS\*[CODE OFF]\&.
+It would be the same in, say, src/roff/troff: you would have a Makefile.am
+with \*[CODE]bin_PROGRAMS = troff\*[CODE OFF]\&. We would have
+one generated Makefile per Makefile.am file: in the build tree
+you will have the top-level Makefile, grolbp's Makefile in
+src/devices/grolbp, troff's Makefile in src/roff/troff, and so on.
+When calling `make' to build everything, `make' will be recursively
+called in all the directories that have a Makefile. Thus, the
+paths are logically relative to the directory that contains the
+Makefile.am.
+.PP
+This approach has the disadvantage of making dependencies harder
+to resolve: each Makefile does not know the targets of the other
+Makfiles. It also makes the build slower.
+.
+.HEADING 2 "Non-recursive make used by the Groff project"
+.
+.PP
+The second possibility, which was chosen for the groff project, is to use
+a non-recursive make schema. It is described in paragraph 7.3 of
+the Automake manual ("An Alternative Approach to Subdirectories"),
+based on the following paper from Peter Miller:
+.PDF_WWW_LINK http://miller.emu.id.au/pmiller/books/rmch/ \
+ SUFFIX . "\*[IT]Recursive Make Considered Harmful\*[PREV]"
+.PP
+The idea is to have a single Makefile that contains all the rules.
+That is why we have only a single Makefile.am in the top-level
+directory which includes all the \&.am files that define rules
+to build the various programs. The inclusion is done with the
+\*[CODE]include\*[CODE OFF] directive, not \*[CODE]SUBDIRS\*[CODE OFF]\&.
+Using `include' is like copying the contents of the included
+file into the top-level Makefile.am, and will not generate other
+Makefile.
+.PP
+We first say in this top-level Makefile.am:
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+bin_PROGAMS =
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+and then all the \&.am files that define a program to be built (e.g.
+src/devices/grolbp/grolbp.am, src/roff/troff/troff.am, and so on)
+overload this variable, so that at the end, all the programs that
+should be built are listed in this \*[CODE]bin_PROGRAMS\*[CODE OFF]
+variable. This is the reason why all the paths in the various \&.am
+files are relative to the top-level directory: at the end we will
+have only one Makefile in the top-level directory of the build tree.
+.PP
+As the resulting single Makefile knows all the targets, the
+dependencies are easier to manage. The build is also faster,
+particularly when compiling a single file: `make' is called once only
+and the file will be instantly rebuilt, while on a recursive make
+system, `make' will have to be invoked in all the sub-directories.
+.PP
+Note also that in order to make `gnulib' work with this
+non-recursive schema, the `--automake-subdir'
+configuration should be selected in bootstrap.conf.
+.
+.HEADING 1 "Installing data"
+.
+.PP
+Variables that end with \*[CODE]_DATA\*[CODE OFF] are special
+variables used to list files that should be installed in a
+particular location. The prefix of the variables should refer to
+another previously defined variable that ends with a `dir' suffix.
+This variable that ends with `dir' defines where the files should be
+installed.
+.
+.HEADING 2 "A simple case"
+.
+.PP
+For example, in font/devX100/devX100.am, we can see this:
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+if !WITHOUT_X11
+devX100fontdir = $(fontdir)/devX100
+devX100font_DATA = $(DEVX100FONTS)
+endif
+.SP
+EXTRA_DIST += $(DEVX100FONTS)
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+.WS -4
+\*[CODE]DEVX100FONTS\*[CODE OFF] is just a list of font files,
+defined at the beginning of devX100.am. \*[CODE]fontdir\*[CODE OFF]
+is where all the font directories are installed, it is defined
+in the top-level Makefile.am. The conditional
+\*[CODE]if\~!WITHOUT_X11\*[CODE OFF]
+is used to prevent the installation of
+these files if X11 is not available.
+.WS DEFAULT
+.PP
+We first define where we wants to install the devX100 fonts with:
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+devX100fontdir = $(fontdir)/devX100
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+Because we declared a variable ending with `dir', we are allowed
+to define \*[CODE]devX100font_DATA\*[CODE OFF] (you remove the
+`dir' suffix and add \*[CODE]_DATA\*[CODE OFF]). Wildcards are not
+supported in the special variables that end with
+\*[CODE]_DATA\*[CODE OFF]\&.
+.PP
+With these two lines, `make install' will install the files
+listed in \*[CODE]DEVX100FONTS\*[CODE OFF] and `make uninstall'
+will uninstall them. \*[CODE]devX100fontdir\*[CODE OFF] will be
+automatically created if missing during the installation
+process, but not removed during the uninstall. The complete
+\*[CODE]fontdir\*[CODE OFF] is removed by a custom uninstall rule
+(uninstall_groffdirs in Makefile.am).
+.PP
+Because the files listed in \*[CODE]devX100font_DATA\*[CODE OFF]
+are not distributed by default, we explicitly added them to the
+\*[CODE]EXTRA_DIST\*[CODE OFF] variable, which lists all the files
+that should be distributed and that are not taken into account by
+the default automake rules.
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+ EXTRA_DIST += $(DEVX100FONTS)
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+Another possibility would have been to add a `dist' prefix to the
+\*[CODE]devX100font_DATA\*[CODE OFF] variable, in this case the use
+of \*[CODE]EXTRA_DIST\*[CODE OFF] is useless (except of course if
+\*[CODE]WITHOUT_X11\*[CODE OFF] is true, in this case we don't
+install the files but we still have to distribute them):
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+if !WITHOUT_X11
+devX100fontdir = $(fontdir)/devX100
+dist_devX100font_DATA = $(DEVX100FONTS)
+else
+EXTRA_DIST += $(DEVX100FONTS)
+endif
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+.
+.HEADING 2 "Dealing with generated files"
+.
+.PP
+In the previous example, all the font files that must be installed
+were already present in the source tree. But in some cases,
+you need to generate the files you intend to install. In this
+case, the files should be installed but not distributed. A
+simple way to deal with this is to add a `nodist' prefix to your
+\*[CODE]xxx_DATA\*[CODE OFF] variable.
+.PP
+For example in font/devps/devps.am, we have a list of
+font files already present in the source tree, defined
+by \*[CODE]DEVPSFONTFILES\*[CODE OFF], and another list
+of font files that are generated, listed in the variable
+\*[CODE]DEVPSFONTFILES_GENERATED\*[CODE OFF]\&. They should all
+by installed in a `devps' directory under the fontdir. Thus
+the following three lines, where we use the `dist' and `nodist'
+prefixes:
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+devpsfontdir = $(fontdir)/devps
+dist_devpsfont_DATA = $(DEVPSFONTFILES)
+nodist_devpsfont_DATA = $(DEVPSFONTFILES_GENERATED)
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+The generated files are not cleaned by default, thus we add:
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+MOSTLYCLEANFILES += $(DEVPSFONTFILES_GENERATED)
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+.
+.HEADING 1 "Extending Automake's rules"
+.
+.HEADING 2 "Local clean rules"
+.
+.PP
+In most of the cases, the files that need to be cleaned are
+automatically determined by `automake', or were added to the
+\*[CODE]MOSTCLEANFILES\*[CODE OFF] or \*[CODE]CLEANFILES\*[CODE OFF]
+variables. However, you might need to define a specific rule
+to clean some files that were not added to any list. Automake
+defines a set of targets to extend the clean targets with your
+own rules: clean-local, mostlyclean-local, distclean-local or
+maintainerclean-local. An example of such extension exists in
+font/devpdf/devpdf.am: because some fonts are not explicitly listed
+in a \*[CODE]xxx_DATA\*[CODE OFF] variable but generated by a custom
+rule, we define an extra rule to extend the `mostlyclean' target:
+.CODE_SIZE 92
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+mostlyclean-local: mostlyclean_devpdf_extra
+mostlyclean_devpdf_extra:
+ @echo Cleaning font/devpdf
+ rm -rf $(top_builddir)/font/devpdf/enc \\
+ $(top_builddir)/font/devpdf/map;
+ if test -d $(top_builddir)/font/devpdf; then \\
+ for f in $(GROFF_FONT_FILES); do \\
+ rm -f $(top_builddir)/font/devpdf/$$f; \\
+ done; \\
+ fi
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+.
+.NO_FLEX OFF \" Prevent upcoming NEWPAGE from disabling flex-spacing.
+.HEADING 2 "Local install/uninstall rules and hooks"
+.
+.PP
+Similarly to the clean rules, there are extensions to install and
+uninstall rules. They come with two flavous, local rules and hooks.
+.
+.SP 3p
+.QUAD LEFT
+.HY OFF
+.
+.LIST
+.SHIFT_LIST 1m
+.ITEM
+There are 2 rules to extend install commands: `install-exec-local'
+for binaries and `install-data-local' for data.
+.ITEM
+There is 1 uninstall local rule: `uninstall-local'.
+.LIST OFF
+.
+.SP 3p
+.JUSTIFY
+.HY DEFAULT
+.
+There are no guarantees on the order of execution of these local
+rules. An example of local rule is the installation of GXditview.ad
+and GXditview-color.ad files in src/devices/xditview/xditview.am: if
+theses files are already installed, the old files are first saved.
+Also, the final file that is installed is stripped from its \&.ad
+suffix. Thus the usage of a custom rule rather than the definition
+of a \*[CODE]xxx_DATA\*[CODE OFF] variable:
+.FLEX
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+# Custom installation of GXditview.ad and GXditview-color.ad
+install-data-local: install_xditview
+uninstall-local: uninstall_xditview
+.SP
+[...]
+install_xditview: $(xditview_srcdir)/GXditview.ad
+ -test -d $(DESTDIR)$(appdefdir) \\
+ || $(mkinstalldirs) $(DESTDIR)$(appdefdir)
+ if test -f $(DESTDIR)$(appdefdir)/GXditview; then \\
+ mv $(DESTDIR)$(appdefdir)/GXditview \\
+ $(DESTDIR)$(appdefdir)/GXditview.old; \\
+ fi
+ [...]
+ $(INSTALL_DATA) $(xditview_srcdir)/GXditview.ad \\
+ $(DESTDIR)$(appdefdir)/GXditview
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+.PP
+Hooks, on the other hand, are guaranteed to be executed after all the
+standard targets have been executed.
+.BR
+.SP 3p
+.QUAD LEFT
+.HY OFF
+.
+.LIST
+.SHIFT_LIST 1m
+.SP 3p
+.ITEM
+There are 2 install hooks: `install-exec-hook' and
+`install-data-hook'.
+.ITEM
+There is 1 uninstall hook: `unintall-hook'
+.LIST OFF
+.
+.SP 3p
+.JUSTIFY
+.HY DEFAULT
+.
+.PP
+An example of hook is the `uninstall_groffdirs' rule in the
+top-level Makefile.am. This hook is used to remove all the
+directories specific to groff introduced by the installation
+process. Obviously it could not be a local extension of `uninstall'
+because the order of execution is not guaranteed.
+.QUOTE
+.CODE
+# directories specific to groff
+uninstall-hook: uninstall_groffdirs
+uninstall_groffdirs:
+ if test -d $(DESTDIR)$(datasubdir); then \\
+ rm -rf $(DESTDIR)$(fontdir); \\
+ rm -rf $(DESTDIR)$(oldfontdir); \\
+ rmdir $(DESTDIR)$(datasubdir); \\
+ fi
+ [...]
+.CODE OFF
+.QUOTE OFF
+.TOC
+.\" Local Variables:
+.\" mode: nroff
+.\" End:
+.\" vim: filetype=groff: