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      1 ## config/mac-pre.in
      2 ## common Macintosh prefix for all Makefile.in in the Kerberos V5 tree.
      3 
      4 #
      5 # MPW-style lines for the MakeFile.
      6 #
      7 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
      8 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
      9 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     10 # Make.
     11 #
     12 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     13 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     14 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     15 # Make.
     16 #
     17 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     18 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     19 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     20 # Make.
     21 #
     22 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     23 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     24 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     25 # Make.
     26 #
     27 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     28 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     29 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     30 # Make.
     31 #
     32 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     33 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     34 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     35 # Make.
     36 #
     37 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     38 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     39 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     40 # Make.
     41 #
     42 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     43 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     44 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     45 # Make.
     46 #
     47 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     48 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     49 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     50 # Make.
     51 #
     52 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     53 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     54 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     55 # Make.
     56 #
     57 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     58 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     59 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     60 # Make.
     61 #
     62 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     63 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     64 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     65 # Make.
     66 #
     67 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     68 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     69 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     70 # Make.
     71 #
     72 # This first part is long enough that NFS/Share doesn't notice the non-ASCII
     73 # characters in the rest of the file, so it claims that the file is type
     74 # TEXT, which is what we want.  The non-ASCII chars are necessary for MPW 
     75 # Make.
     76 
     77 #
     78 # End of MPW-style lines for MakeFile.
     79 #
     80 
     81 WHAT = mac
     82 
     83 # Directory syntax:
     84 R=
     85 C=
     86 S=:
     87 U=:
     88 
     89 BUILDTOP = ../../..
     90 srcdir = .
     91 
     92 # FIXME:  This doesn't translate to MPW yet, srcdir must be same as objdir.
     93 # File in object dir can come from either the current dir or srcdir.
     94 # 
     95 # . : . "{srcdir}"
     96 
     97 # Default rule that puts each file into separate segment.
     98 
     99 .c.o: .c
    100    {CC}  {DepDir}{Default}.c {CFLAGS} -s {Default} -o {TargDir}{Default}.c.o
    101 
    102 CPPFLAGS =  -I$(SRCTOP)/include -I$(BUILDTOP)/include -I$(SRCTOP)/include/krb5 -I$(BUILDTOP)/include/krb5 -i {CIncludes}
    103 DEFS =   $(CPPFLAGS)
    104 CC = c
    105 LD = link
    106 # The funny quoting in the LDFLAGS is to avoid xxx.o being mangled by
    107 # mac-mf.sed into xxx.c.o.
    108 LDFLAGS=-t MPST -c "MPS " -sym on {Libraries}"Runtime."o {CLibraries}"StdClib."o {Libraries}"ToolLibs."o {Libraries}"Interface."o
    109 CCOPTS = 
    110 LIBS = 
    111 KRB5ROOT= @KRB5ROOT@
    112 KRB4=@KRB4@
    113 INSTALL=Duplicate -y
    114 INSTALL_PROGRAM=Duplicate -y
    115 INSTALL_DATA=Duplicate -y
    116 INSTALL_SETUID=Duplicate -y
    117 
    118 KRB5MANROOT = $(KRB5ROOT)$(S)man
    119 ADMIN_BINDIR = $(KRB5ROOT)$(S)admin
    120 SERVER_BINDIR = $(KRB5ROOT)$(S)sbin
    121 CLIENT_BINDIR = $(KRB5ROOT)$(S)bin
    122 ADMIN_MANDIR = $(KRB5MANROOT)$(S)man8
    123 SERVER_MANDIR = $(KRB5MANROOT)$(S)man8
    124 CLIENT_MANDIR = $(KRB5MANROOT)$(S)man1
    125 FILE_MANDIR = $(KRB5MANROOT)$(S)man5
    126 KRB5_LIBDIR = $(KRB5ROOT)$(S)lib
    127 KRB5_INCDIR = $(KRB5ROOT)$(S)include
    128 KRB5_INCSUBDIRS = \
    129 	$(KRB5_INCDIR)$(S)krb5 \
    130 	$(KRB5_INCDIR)$(S)asn.1 \
    131 	$(KRB5_INCDIR)$(S)kerberosIV
    132 
    133 
    134 RM = Delete -y -i
    135 CP = Duplicate -y
    136 MV = mv -f
    137 CHMOD=chmod
    138 RANLIB = @RANLIB@
    139 ARCHIVE = @ARCHIVE@
    140 ARADD = @ARADD@
    141 LN = @LN_S@
    142 AWK = @AWK@
    143 LEX = @LEX@
    144 LEXLIB = @LEXLIB@
    145 YACC = @YACC@
    146 
    147 # FIXME:  This won't work for srcdir != objdir.  But on the Mac, there
    148 # is no easy way to build a relative or absolute path, because : means
    149 # both the path separator, and the "go up a directory" indicator.
    150 #SRCTOP = $(srcdir)$(S)$(BUILDTOP)
    151 SRCTOP = $(BUILDTOP)
    152 SUBDIRS = @subdirs@
    153 
    154 TOPLIBD = $(BUILDTOP)$(S)lib
    155 
    156 OBJEXT = c.o
    157 LIBEXT = a
    158 EXEEXT =
    159 
    160 all::
    161 # Generated automatically from Makefile.in by configure.
    162 CFLAGS = $(CCOPTS) $(DEFS) -I$(srcdir)/../des
    163 
    164 ##DOSBUILDTOP = ..\..\..
    165 ##DOSLIBNAME=..\crypto.lib
    166 ##DOS!include $(BUILDTOP)\config\windows.in
    167 
    168 OBJS=	md5.$(OBJEXT) md5glue.$(OBJEXT) md5crypto.$(OBJEXT)
    169 
    170 SRCS=	$(srcdir)/md5.c $(srcdir)/md5glue.c $(srcdir)/md5crypto.c
    171 
    172 all:: $(OBJS) 
    173 
    174 t_mddriver: t_mddriver.o md5.o
    175 	$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o t_mddriver t_mddriver.o md5.o
    176 
    177 t_mddriver.exe:
    178 	$(CC) $(CFLAGS2) -o t_mddriver.exe t_mddriver.c md5.c
    179 
    180 check:: t_mddriver$(EXEEXT)
    181 	$(C)t_mddriver$(EXEEXT) -x
    182 
    183 clean::
    184 	$(RM) t_mddriver$(EXEEXT) t_mddriver.$(OBJEXT)
    185 # config/post.in
    186 # put all:: first just in case no other rules occur here
    187 #
    188 all::
    189 
    190 check::
    191 
    192 clean:: clean-$(WHAT)
    193 	$(RM) config.log pre.out post.out Makefile.out
    194 
    195 clean-unix::
    196 	if test -n "$(OBJS)" ; then $(RM) $(OBJS); else :; fi
    197 
    198 clean-windows::
    199 	$(RM) *.$(OBJEXT)
    200 	$(RM) msvc.pdb *.err
    201