Hi. I am having difficulty testing for compiler features like __declspec(dllimport) and switches like -Wall or -Werror. The problem has started like this. I wanted to test compiler for __declspec(dllimport) (for Windows) and if that fails for __attribute__((visibility("default"))) (for *nix/GCC). With GCC this works because it does support both, it supports __declspec(dllimport) even outside Windows. But with e.g. Clang, this fails. Clang accepts the code of the test-case with just warning like: "conftest.cpp:20:12: warning: 'dllexport' attribute ignored" The test-case passes but the compiler does not support the feature. I thought I could "fix" this by trying to test for -Werror first and giving it to the compiler for the test-case. However there is the problem with detecting/collecting -Werror equivalent switches for all the various compilers. Before I started with that, I have noticed the Sun Studio C++ compiler happily accepts -Wall (the test for it passes) even though it warns that it does not know such option. So this method is useless. How is one supposed to test these things with autoconf? It seems to me that the only truly workable option is to fall back to deciding the flags and features of a given compiler from combination of platform, compiler name and compiler version. Am I right or am I missing something, some technique or something else? -- VH
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
_______________________________________________ Autoconf mailing list Autoconf@xxxxxxx http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/autoconf