* Johan Oudinet wrote on Thu, May 29, 2008 at 06:39:02PM CEST: > On Wed, May 28, 2008 at 5:34 PM, Johan Oudinet <johan.oudinet@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > AC_LANG_PUSH(C++) > > AC_CHECK_LIB([boost_graph], [read_graphviz], , AC_MSG_ERROR([This package needs libboost_graph])) Unrealted side note: this line is underquoted, as the most important quotes (those delimiting macro arguments which contain macro calls themselves) are missing. AC_CHECK_LIB([boost_graph], [read_graphviz], , [AC_MSG_ERROR([This package needs libboost_graph])]) > > AC_LANG_POP > > Unfortunately, the generated code is wrong (since it doesn't use the > > right signature for read_graphviz). > I found a workaround by using a default function (like exit) to check > if libboost_graph exists. Now it works with AC_CHECK_LIB but not with > AC_SEARCH_LIBS because the exit function doesn't need any library. Typical workarounds I've seen so far is to use 'main' in the existance test, because exit may not be declared. > Since I know this library is mandatory for the read_graphviz function, > it's OK. But I would know how to check the presence of a function > defined in a namespace, or with template parameters ? This is a problem; C++ tests don't work well with these macros. You could write a custom AC_LINK_IFELSE test, or look at the known places like the Autoconf Macro Archive, or the source of the package you're checking for, for macros already provided by someone else. Hope that helps. Cheers, Ralf _______________________________________________ Autoconf mailing list Autoconf@xxxxxxx http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/autoconf