dnl @synopsis AC_SYS_LARGEFILE_SENSITIVE dnl dnl checker whether the current system is sensitive to -Ddefines making dnl off_t having different types/sizes. Automatically define a config.h dnl symbol LARGEFILE_SENSITIVE if that is the case, otherwise leave dnl everything as is. dnl dnl This macro builds on top of AC_SYS_LARGEFILE to detect whether dnl special options are neede to make the code use 64bit off_t - in dnl many setups this will also make the code use 64bit off_t dnl immediatly. dnl dnl The common use of a LARGEFILE_SENSITIVE config.h-define is to dnl rename exported functions, usually adding a 64 to the original dnl function name. Such renamings are only needed on systems being both dnl (a) 32bit off_t by default and (b) implementing large.file dnl extensions (as for unix98). dnl dnl a renaming section could look like this: dnl dnl #if defined LARGEFILE_SENSITIVE && _FILE_OFFSET_BITS+0 == 64 dnl #define zzip_open zzip_open64 dnl #define zzip_seek zzip_seek64 dnl #endif dnl dnl for libraries, it is best to take advantage of the prefix-config.h dnl macro, otherwise you want to export a renamed LARGEFILE_SENSITIVE dnl in an installed header file. -> see AX_PREFIX_CONFIG_H dnl dnl @category Misc dnl @author Guido U. Draheim dnl @version 2003-02-02 dnl @license GPLWithACException AC_DEFUN([AC_SYS_LARGEFILE_SENSITIVE],[dnl AC_REQUIRE([AC_SYS_LARGEFILE])dnl # we know about some internals of ac_sys_largefile here... AC_MSG_CHECKING(whether system differentiates 64bit off_t by defines) ac_cv_sys_largefile_sensitive="no" if test ".$ac_cv_sys_file_offset_bits$ac_cv_sys_large_files" != ".nono" then ac_cv_sys_largefile_sensitive="yes" AC_DEFINE(LARGEFILE_SENSITIVE, 1, [whether the system defaults to 32bit off_t but can do 64bit when requested]) fi AC_MSG_RESULT([$ac_cv_sys_largefile_sensitive]) ])