Lines Matching refs:FIND
70 # Find who we are. Look in the path if we contain no directory separator.
84 # We did not find ourselves, most probably we were run as `sh COMMAND'
90 echo "$as_myself: error: cannot find myself; rerun with an absolute file name" >&2
456 # (the dirname of $[0] is not the place where we might find the
519 # Find out whether ``test -x'' works. Don't use a zero-byte file, as
728 FIND
1262 # Find the source files, if location was not specified.
1298 { echo "$as_me: error: cannot find sources ($ac_unique_file) in $srcdir" >&2
1348 --srcdir=DIR find the sources in DIR [configure dir or \`..']
1492 it to find libraries and programs with nonstandard names/locations.
1960 { { echo "$as_me:$LINENO: error: cannot find install-sh or install.sh in autoconf \"$srcdir\"/autoconf" >&5
1961 echo "$as_me: error: cannot find install-sh or install.sh in autoconf \"$srcdir\"/autoconf" >&2;}
3558 { { echo "$as_me:$LINENO: error: Selected compiler could not find or parse C++ standard library headers. Rerun with CC=c-compiler CXX=c++-compiler ./configure ..." >&5
3559 echo "$as_me: error: Selected compiler could not find or parse C++ standard library headers. Rerun with CC=c-compiler CXX=c++-compiler ./configure ..." >&2;}
6009 continue # so that we can try to find one that supports BSD flags
6187 # Extract the first word of "find", so it can be a program name with args.
6188 set dummy find; ac_word=$2
6194 case $FIND in
6196 ac_cv_path_FIND="$FIND" # Let the user override the test with a path.
6214 test -z "$ac_cv_path_FIND" && ac_cv_path_FIND="find"
6218 FIND=$ac_cv_path_FIND
6219 if test -n "$FIND"; then
6220 { echo "$as_me:$LINENO: result: $FIND" >&5
6221 echo "${ECHO_T}$FIND" >&6; }
7218 # Find a good install program. We prefer a C program (faster),
9615 echo "cannot find nm_test_func in $nlist" >&5
9618 echo "cannot find nm_test_var in $nlist" >&5
10466 echo "configure: cannot find nm_test_func in $ac_nlist" >&5
10520 find out it does not work in some platform. */
10651 # it did *not* use an RPATH in a shared library to find objects the
10668 # is used to find them so we can finally say `yes'.
12332 { { echo "$as_me:$LINENO: error: could not find python 2.5 or higher" >&5
12333 echo "$as_me: error: could not find python 2.5 or higher" >&2;}
21915 # Find who we are. Look in the path if we contain no directory separator.
21929 # We did not find ourselves, most probably we were run as `sh COMMAND'
21935 echo "$as_myself: error: cannot find myself; rerun with an absolute file name" >&2
22035 # (the dirname of $[0] is not the place where we might find the
22098 # Find out whether ``test -x'' works. Don't use a zero-byte file, as
22544 FIND!$FIND$ac_delim
22756 { { echo "$as_me:$LINENO: error: cannot find input file: $ac_f" >&5
22757 echo "$as_me: error: cannot find input file: $ac_f" >&2;}