On 8/26/19, Sébastien Hinderer <Sebastien.Hinderer@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > Similarly, I kind of remember that if, say, make install is invoked with > a different value of PREFIX that value must be taken into acocunt and > that it is required that PREFIX can have different values during make > and make isntall. I am wondering whether there is a document which > specifies clearly for which variable this is expected to work that way > and couldn't find anything relevant on the web site of the FSF. The GNU Coding Standards[1] cover how this stuff is supposed to work in GNU packages (and Autoconf+Automake are designed to produce build systems which follow these conventions). The standards say the following about prefix: (1) prefix can be set by the user with configure --prefix=/wherever OR with make prefix=/wherever; both options should work. (2) If you run 'make install' with a different setting for prefix compared to what was used at build time, the program should not be recompiled. (1) basically means you must defer all evaluations of prefix that affect installed files to makefile rules, as opposed to substituting directly from configure. This is sometimes annoying to do and some maintainers (quite reasonably, IMO) don't bother to make this work, users should just set prefix when configuring which is less error-prone. (2) looks like it is to enable changing prefix at install time as an alternative to DESTDIR, most likely for hysterical raisins (I expect most uses of this "feature" predates widespread use of DESTDIR). Obviously most programs can't be expected to run correctly from such an installation without first being moved into the correct locations. [1] https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/standards.html Cheers, Nick _______________________________________________ Autoconf mailing list Autoconf@xxxxxxx https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/autoconf