+
+# _LT_PROG_LTMAIN
+# ---------------
+# Note that this code is called both from `configure', and `config.status'
+# now that we use AC_CONFIG_COMMANDS to generate libtool. Notably,
+# `config.status' has no value for ac_aux_dir unless we are using Automake,
+# so we pass a copy along to make sure it has a sensible value anyway.
+# _LT_PROG_LTMAIN
+
+
+## ------------------------------------- ##
+## Accumulate code for creating libtool. ##
+## ------------------------------------- ##
+
+# So that we can recreate a full libtool script including additional
+# tags, we accumulate the chunks of code to send to AC_CONFIG_COMMANDS
+# in macros and then make a single call at the end using the `libtool'
+# label.
+
+
+# _LT_CONFIG_LIBTOOL_INIT([INIT-COMMANDS])
+# ----------------------------------------
+# Register INIT-COMMANDS to be passed to AC_CONFIG_COMMANDS later.
+
+
+# Initialize.
+
+
+
+# _LT_CONFIG_LIBTOOL([COMMANDS])
+# ------------------------------
+# Register COMMANDS to be passed to AC_CONFIG_COMMANDS later.
+
+
+# Initialize.
+
+
+
+# _LT_CONFIG_SAVE_COMMANDS([COMMANDS], [INIT_COMMANDS])
+# -----------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+# _LT_FORMAT_COMMENT([COMMENT])
+# -----------------------------
+# Add leading comment marks to the start of each line, and a trailing
+# full-stop to the whole comment if one is not present already.
+
+
+
+
+## ------------------------ ##
+## FIXME: Eliminate VARNAME ##
+## ------------------------ ##
+
+
+# _LT_DECL([CONFIGNAME], VARNAME, VALUE, [DESCRIPTION], [IS-TAGGED?])
+# -------------------------------------------------------------------
+# CONFIGNAME is the name given to the value in the libtool script.
+# VARNAME is the (base) name used in the configure script.
+# VALUE may be 0, 1 or 2 for a computed quote escaped value based on
+# VARNAME. Any other value will be used directly.
+
+
+
+# _LT_TAGDECL([CONFIGNAME], VARNAME, VALUE, [DESCRIPTION])
+# --------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+# lt_decl_tag_varnames([SEPARATOR], [VARNAME1...])
+# ------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+# _lt_decl_filter(SUBKEY, VALUE, [SEPARATOR], [VARNAME1..])
+# ---------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+# lt_decl_quote_varnames([SEPARATOR], [VARNAME1...])
+# --------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+# lt_decl_dquote_varnames([SEPARATOR], [VARNAME1...])
+# ---------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+# lt_decl_varnames_tagged([SEPARATOR], [VARNAME1...])
+# ---------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+# lt_decl_all_varnames([SEPARATOR], [VARNAME1...])
+# ------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+# _LT_CONFIG_STATUS_DECLARE([VARNAME])
+# ------------------------------------
+# Quote a variable value, and forward it to `config.status' so that its
+# declaration there will have the same value as in `configure'. VARNAME
+# must have a single quote delimited value for this to work.
+
+
+
+# _LT_CONFIG_STATUS_DECLARATIONS
+# ------------------------------
+# We delimit libtool config variables with single quotes, so when
+# we write them to config.status, we have to be sure to quote all
+# embedded single quotes properly. In configure, this macro expands
+# each variable declared with _LT_DECL (and _LT_TAGDECL) into:
+#
+# <var>='`$ECHO "$<var>" | $SED "$delay_single_quote_subst"`'
+
+
+
+# _LT_LIBTOOL_TAGS
+# ----------------
+# Output comment and list of tags supported by the script
+
+
+
+# _LT_LIBTOOL_DECLARE(VARNAME, [TAG])
+# -----------------------------------
+# Extract the dictionary values for VARNAME (optionally with TAG) and
+# expand to a commented shell variable setting:
+#
+# # Some comment about what VAR is for.
+# visible_name=$lt_internal_name
+
+
+
+# _LT_LIBTOOL_CONFIG_VARS
+# -----------------------
+# Produce commented declarations of non-tagged libtool config variables
+# suitable for insertion in the LIBTOOL CONFIG section of the `libtool'
+# script. Tagged libtool config variables (even for the LIBTOOL CONFIG
+# section) are produced by _LT_LIBTOOL_TAG_VARS.
+
+
+
+# _LT_LIBTOOL_TAG_VARS(TAG)
+# -------------------------
+
+
+
+# _LT_TAGVAR(VARNAME, [TAGNAME])
+# ------------------------------
+
+
+
+# _LT_CONFIG_COMMANDS
+# -------------------
+# Send accumulated output to $CONFIG_STATUS. Thanks to the lists of
+# variables for single and double quote escaping we saved from calls
+# to _LT_DECL, we can put quote escaped variables declarations
+# into `config.status', and then the shell code to quote escape them in
+# for loops in `config.status'. Finally, any additional code accumulated
+# from calls to _LT_CONFIG_LIBTOOL_INIT is expanded.
+#_LT_CONFIG_COMMANDS
+
+
+# Initialize.
+
+
+# _LT_GENERATED_FILE_INIT(FILE, [COMMENT])
+# ------------------------------------
+# Generate a child script FILE with all initialization necessary to
+# reuse the environment learned by the parent script, and make the
+# file executable. If COMMENT is supplied, it is inserted after the
+# `#!' sequence but before initialization text begins. After this
+# macro, additional text can be appended to FILE to form the body of
+# the child script. The macro ends with non-zero status if the
+# file could not be fully written (such as if the disk is full).
+# _LT_GENERATED_FILE_INIT
+
+# LT_OUTPUT
+# ---------
+# This macro allows early generation of the libtool script (before
+# AC_OUTPUT is called), incase it is used in configure for compilation
+# tests.
+# LT_OUTPUT
+
+
+# _LT_CONFIG(TAG)
+# ---------------
+# If TAG is the built-in tag, create an initial libtool script with a
+# default configuration from the untagged config vars. Otherwise add code
+# to config.status for appending the configuration named by TAG from the
+# matching tagged config vars.
+# _LT_CONFIG
+
+
+# LT_SUPPORTED_TAG(TAG)
+# ---------------------
+# Trace this macro to discover what tags are supported by the libtool
+# --tag option, using:
+# autoconf --trace 'LT_SUPPORTED_TAG:$1'
+
+
+
+# C support is built-in for now
+
+
+
+
+# LT_LANG(LANG)
+# -------------
+# Enable libtool support for the given language if not already enabled.
+# LT_LANG
+
+
+# _LT_LANG(LANGNAME)
+# ------------------
+# _LT_LANG
+
+
+# _LT_LANG_DEFAULT_CONFIG
+# -----------------------
+# _LT_LANG_DEFAULT_CONFIG
+
+# Obsolete macros:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# _LT_TAG_COMPILER
+# ----------------
+# _LT_TAG_COMPILER
+
+
+# _LT_COMPILER_BOILERPLATE
+# ------------------------
+# Check for compiler boilerplate output or warnings with
+# the simple compiler test code.
+# _LT_COMPILER_BOILERPLATE
+
+
+# _LT_LINKER_BOILERPLATE
+# ----------------------
+# Check for linker boilerplate output or warnings with
+# the simple link test code.
+# _LT_LINKER_BOILERPLATE
+
+# _LT_REQUIRED_DARWIN_CHECKS
+# -------------------------
+
+
+
+# _LT_DARWIN_LINKER_FEATURES
+# --------------------------
+# Checks for linker and compiler features on darwin
+
+
+# _LT_SYS_MODULE_PATH_AIX
+# -----------------------
+# Links a minimal program and checks the executable
+# for the system default hardcoded library path. In most cases,
+# this is /usr/lib:/lib, but when the MPI compilers are used
+# the location of the communication and MPI libs are included too.
+# If we don't find anything, use the default library path according
+# to the aix ld manual.
+# _LT_SYS_MODULE_PATH_AIX
+
+
+# _LT_SHELL_INIT(ARG)
+# -------------------
+# _LT_SHELL_INIT
+
+
+
+# _LT_PROG_ECHO_BACKSLASH
+# -----------------------
+# Find how we can fake an echo command that does not interpret backslash.
+# In particular, with Autoconf 2.60 or later we add some code to the start
+# of the generated configure script which will find a shell with a builtin
+# printf (which we can use as an echo command).
+# _LT_PROG_ECHO_BACKSLASH
+
+
+# _LT_ENABLE_LOCK
+# ---------------
+# _LT_ENABLE_LOCK
+
+
+# _LT_CMD_OLD_ARCHIVE
+# -------------------
+# _LT_CMD_OLD_ARCHIVE
+
+
+# _LT_COMPILER_OPTION(MESSAGE, VARIABLE-NAME, FLAGS,
+# [OUTPUT-FILE], [ACTION-SUCCESS], [ACTION-FAILURE])
+# ----------------------------------------------------------------
+# Check whether the given compiler option works
+# _LT_COMPILER_OPTION
+
+# Old name:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# _LT_LINKER_OPTION(MESSAGE, VARIABLE-NAME, FLAGS,
+# [ACTION-SUCCESS], [ACTION-FAILURE])
+# ----------------------------------------------------
+# Check whether the given linker option works
+# _LT_LINKER_OPTION
+
+# Old name:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# LT_CMD_MAX_LEN
+#---------------
+# LT_CMD_MAX_LEN
+
+# Old name:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# _LT_HEADER_DLFCN
+# ----------------
+# _LT_HEADER_DLFCN
+
+
+# _LT_TRY_DLOPEN_SELF (ACTION-IF-TRUE, ACTION-IF-TRUE-W-USCORE,
+# ACTION-IF-FALSE, ACTION-IF-CROSS-COMPILING)
+# ----------------------------------------------------------------
+# _LT_TRY_DLOPEN_SELF
+
+
+# LT_SYS_DLOPEN_SELF
+# ------------------
+# LT_SYS_DLOPEN_SELF
+
+# Old name:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# _LT_COMPILER_C_O([TAGNAME])
+# ---------------------------
+# Check to see if options -c and -o are simultaneously supported by compiler.
+# This macro does not hard code the compiler like AC_PROG_CC_C_O.
+# _LT_COMPILER_C_O
+
+
+# _LT_COMPILER_FILE_LOCKS([TAGNAME])
+# ----------------------------------
+# Check to see if we can do hard links to lock some files if needed
+# _LT_COMPILER_FILE_LOCKS
+
+
+# _LT_CHECK_OBJDIR
+# ----------------
+# _LT_CHECK_OBJDIR
+
+
+# _LT_LINKER_HARDCODE_LIBPATH([TAGNAME])
+# --------------------------------------
+# Check hardcoding attributes.
+# _LT_LINKER_HARDCODE_LIBPATH
+
+
+# _LT_CMD_STRIPLIB
+# ----------------
+# _LT_CMD_STRIPLIB
+
+
+# _LT_SYS_DYNAMIC_LINKER([TAG])
+# -----------------------------
+# PORTME Fill in your ld.so characteristics
+# _LT_SYS_DYNAMIC_LINKER
+
+
+# _LT_PATH_TOOL_PREFIX(TOOL)
+# --------------------------
+# find a file program which can recognize shared library
+# _LT_PATH_TOOL_PREFIX
+
+# Old name:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# _LT_PATH_MAGIC
+# --------------
+# find a file program which can recognize a shared library
+# _LT_PATH_MAGIC
+
+
+# LT_PATH_LD
+# ----------
+# find the pathname to the GNU or non-GNU linker
+# LT_PATH_LD
+
+# Old names:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# _LT_PATH_LD_GNU
+#- --------------
+# _LT_PATH_LD_GNU
+
+
+# _LT_CMD_RELOAD
+# --------------
+# find reload flag for linker
+# -- PORTME Some linkers may need a different reload flag.
+# _LT_CMD_RELOAD
+
+
+# _LT_CHECK_MAGIC_METHOD
+# ----------------------
+# how to check for library dependencies
+# -- PORTME fill in with the dynamic library characteristics
+# _LT_CHECK_MAGIC_METHOD
+
+
+# LT_PATH_NM
+# ----------
+# find the pathname to a BSD- or MS-compatible name lister
+# LT_PATH_NM
+
+# Old names:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# LT_LIB_M
+# --------
+# check for math library
+# LT_LIB_M
+
+# Old name:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# _LT_COMPILER_NO_RTTI([TAGNAME])
+# -------------------------------
+# _LT_COMPILER_NO_RTTI
+
+
+# _LT_CMD_GLOBAL_SYMBOLS
+# ----------------------
+ # _LT_CMD_GLOBAL_SYMBOLS
+
+
+# _LT_COMPILER_PIC([TAGNAME])
+# ---------------------------
+# _LT_COMPILER_PIC
+
+
+# _LT_LINKER_SHLIBS([TAGNAME])
+# ----------------------------
+# See if the linker supports building shared libraries.
+# _LT_LINKER_SHLIBS
+
+
+# _LT_LANG_C_CONFIG([TAG])
+# ------------------------
+# Ensure that the configuration variables for a C compiler are suitably
+# defined. These variables are subsequently used by _LT_CONFIG to write
+# the compiler configuration to `libtool'.
+# _LT_LANG_C_CONFIG
+
+
+# _LT_LANG_CXX_CONFIG([TAG])
+# --------------------------
+# Ensure that the configuration variables for a C++ compiler are suitably
+# defined. These variables are subsequently used by _LT_CONFIG to write
+# the compiler configuration to `libtool'.
+# _LT_LANG_CXX_CONFIG
+
+
+# _LT_SYS_HIDDEN_LIBDEPS([TAGNAME])
+# ---------------------------------
+# Figure out "hidden" library dependencies from verbose
+# compiler output when linking a shared library.
+# Parse the compiler output and extract the necessary
+# objects, libraries and library flags.
+# _LT_SYS_HIDDEN_LIBDEPS
+
+
+# _LT_LANG_F77_CONFIG([TAG])
+# --------------------------
+# Ensure that the configuration variables for a Fortran 77 compiler are
+# suitably defined. These variables are subsequently used by _LT_CONFIG
+# to write the compiler configuration to `libtool'.
+# _LT_LANG_F77_CONFIG
+
+
+# _LT_LANG_FC_CONFIG([TAG])
+# -------------------------
+# Ensure that the configuration variables for a Fortran compiler are
+# suitably defined. These variables are subsequently used by _LT_CONFIG
+# to write the compiler configuration to `libtool'.
+# _LT_LANG_FC_CONFIG
+
+
+# _LT_LANG_GCJ_CONFIG([TAG])
+# --------------------------
+# Ensure that the configuration variables for the GNU Java Compiler compiler
+# are suitably defined. These variables are subsequently used by _LT_CONFIG
+# to write the compiler configuration to `libtool'.
+# _LT_LANG_GCJ_CONFIG
+
+
+# _LT_LANG_RC_CONFIG([TAG])
+# -------------------------
+# Ensure that the configuration variables for the Windows resource compiler
+# are suitably defined. These variables are subsequently used by _LT_CONFIG
+# to write the compiler configuration to `libtool'.
+# _LT_LANG_RC_CONFIG
+
+
+# LT_PROG_GCJ
+# -----------
+
+
+# Old name:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# LT_PROG_RC
+# ----------
+
+
+# Old name:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# _LT_DECL_EGREP
+# --------------
+# If we don't have a new enough Autoconf to choose the best grep
+# available, choose the one first in the user's PATH.
+
+
+
+# _LT_DECL_OBJDUMP
+# --------------
+# If we don't have a new enough Autoconf to choose the best objdump
+# available, choose the one first in the user's PATH.
+
+
+
+# _LT_DECL_SED
+# ------------
+# Check for a fully-functional sed program, that truncates
+# as few characters as possible. Prefer GNU sed if found.
+# _LT_DECL_SED
+
+#m4_ifndef
+
+# Old name:
+# This is what autoupdate's m4 run will expand. It fires
+# the warning (with _au_warn_XXX), outputs it into the
+# updated configure.ac (with AC_DIAGNOSE), and then outputs
+# the replacement expansion.
+
+
+# This is an auxiliary macro that is also run when
+# autoupdate runs m4. It simply calls m4_warning, but
+# we need a wrapper so that each warning is emitted only
+# once. We break the quoting in m4_warning's argument in
+# order to expand this macro's arguments, not AU_DEFUN's.
+
+
+# Finally, this is the expansion that is picked up by
+# autoconf. It tells the user to run autoupdate, and
+# then outputs the replacement expansion. We do not care
+# about autoupdate's warning because that contains
+# information on what to do *after* running autoupdate.
+
+
+
+# _LT_CHECK_SHELL_FEATURES
+# ------------------------
+# Find out whether the shell is Bourne or XSI compatible,
+# or has some other useful features.
+# _LT_CHECK_SHELL_FEATURES
+
+
+# _LT_PROG_XSI_SHELLFNS
+# ---------------------
+# Bourne and XSI compatible variants of some useful shell functions.
+
+
+# Make sure we can run config.sub.
+$SHELL "$ac_aux_dir/config.sub" sun4 >/dev/null 2>&1 ||
+ as_fn_error "cannot run $SHELL $ac_aux_dir/config.sub" "$LINENO" 5
+
+{ $as_echo "$as_me:${as_lineno-$LINENO}: checking build system type" >&5
+$as_echo_n "checking build system type... " >&6; }
+if test "${ac_cv_build+set}" = set; then :
+ $as_echo_n "(cached) " >&6
+else
+ ac_build_alias=$build_alias
+test "x$ac_build_alias" = x &&
+ ac_build_alias=`$SHELL "$ac_aux_dir/config.guess"`
+test "x$ac_build_alias" = x &&
+ as_fn_error "cannot guess build type; you must specify one" "$LINENO" 5
+ac_cv_build=`$SHELL "$ac_aux_dir/config.sub" $ac_build_alias` ||
+ as_fn_error "$SHELL $ac_aux_dir/config.sub $ac_build_alias failed" "$LINENO" 5
+
+fi
+{ $as_echo "$as_me:${as_lineno-$LINENO}: result: $ac_cv_build" >&5
+$as_echo "$ac_cv_build" >&6; }
+case $ac_cv_build in
+*-*-*) ;;
+*) as_fn_error "invalid value of canonical build" "$LINENO" 5;;
+esac
+build=$ac_cv_build
+ac_save_IFS=$IFS; IFS='-'
+set x $ac_cv_build
+shift
+build_cpu=$1
+build_vendor=$2
+shift; shift
+# Remember, the first character of IFS is used to create $*,
+# except with old shells:
+build_os=$*
+IFS=$ac_save_IFS
+case $build_os in *\ *) build_os=`echo "$build_os" | sed 's/ /-/g'`;; esac
+
+
+{ $as_echo "$as_me:${as_lineno-$LINENO}: checking host system type" >&5
+$as_echo_n "checking host system type... " >&6; }
+if test "${ac_cv_host+set}" = set; then :
+ $as_echo_n "(cached) " >&6
+else
+ if test "x$host_alias" = x; then
+ ac_cv_host=$ac_cv_build
+else
+ ac_cv_host=`$SHELL "$ac_aux_dir/config.sub" $host_alias` ||
+ as_fn_error "$SHELL $ac_aux_dir/config.sub $host_alias failed" "$LINENO" 5