On 2011-10-18 15:57 +0200, Dmitry Katsubo wrote: > I have the following question concerning the use of special characters > in variables. After reading the documentation chapter [1], I've come to > the conclusion, that I cannot define the following in configure.ac: > > CXXFLAGS="-D__int64=\"long long\" ${CXXFLAGS}" > AC_CHECK_HEADER([jni.h]) > > The result is: > > > configure:4104: checking jni.h usability > > configure:4104: g++ -c -D__int64="long long" -g -O2 -I/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun/include -I/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun/include/linux -I/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun/include/win32 -I/usr/local/include conftest.cpp >&5 > > g++: long": No such file or directory > > <command-line>: warning: missing terminating " character > > configure:4104: $? = 1 > > Even tough the variable is correctly set and can be used in Makefile, > but AC_CHECK_HEADER() fails to treat special characters properly. A possible solution in this case is to just use AC_DEFINE: AC_DEFINE([__int64], [long long], [description if you use autoheader]) AC_CHECK_HEADER([jni.h]) Autoconf will take care of including the definition in subsequent configure tests. If you don't use a config header, automake will take care of putting it on the compiler command line; otherwise, the definition will end up in the config header. Hope that helps, -- Nick Bowler, Elliptic Technologies (http://www.elliptictech.com/) _______________________________________________ Autoconf mailing list Autoconf@xxxxxxx https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/autoconf