GNU Libtool *********** Introduction ============ This is GNU Libtool, a generic library support script. Libtool hides the complexity of using shared libraries behind a consistent, portable interface. To use libtool, add the new generic library building commands to your Makefile, Makefile.in, or Makefile.am. See the documentation for details. See the info node (libtool)Tested Platforms. (or the file doc/PLATFORMS) for a list of platforms that libtool supports. Libtool's home page is: http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/libtool.html See the file NEWS for a description of recent changes to libtool. See the file INSTALL for instructions on how to build and install libtool. Version Numbering ================= Note the version numbers in the libtool-1.5.x series are a little strange, the micro version (x) jumps by two on each release. The version in cvs always has an odd micro version, while only released versions have even micro versions. This will change again in the future. For more information about version numbers see: http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/contribute.html Reporting Bugs ============== If you have any suggestions or bug reports, or you wish to port libtool to a new platform, please send electronic mail to the libtool mailing list or bug reports to . Be sure to include the version of libtool that you are using - you can find out with `./libtool --version'. Also give as much information as necessary on your OS, compiler and other build tools. The Test Suite ============== Libtool comes with an integrated set of tests to check that your build is sane. You can run the entire suite like this: make check The tests run in groups in the various demo subdirectories, so if one of the tests early in a group FAILs, the rest of the tests in that group will be SKIPPED. If you see a FAIL further into a group, even if a test with the same name PASSes in another test group, you need to take note of the name of the first test in the group if you want to rerun the group with FAILures to get verbose output. To run a test group in isolation (say, you think you have fixed a bug, but don't want to rerun the entire suite), you can do it like this: env TESTS='cdemo-static.test cdemo-make.test cdemo-exec.test' \ make -e check Providing that you have a FAIL from the most recent group from a particular demo directory (like the cdemo-static.test group above), you can explore the state of the directory to help with debugging. If you wish to report a test group failure to the libtool list, you need to send the verbose output of the FAILing group, along with information such as the host OS, compiler tools, shell etc. to the bug report mailing list, . You can generate verbose test output like this: env VERBOSE=1 TESTS='cdemo-static.test cdemo-make.test cdemo-exec.test' \ make -e check Alternatively, because each test is a shell script, in a non VPATH build, you can simply execute the tests, they will be verbose.