dnl @synopsis AC_PROG_CP_S dnl dnl Check how to make a copy by creating a symbolic link to the dnl original - it defines the variable CP_S for further use, which you dnl should in fact treat like it used to be with be LN_S. The actual dnl value is assured to be either LN_S (if the filesystem supports dnl symbolic links) or CP (if the filesystem does not know about dnl symbolic links and you need a copy of original file to have the dnl same text in both places). In a gnu environment it will simply set dnl CP_S="cp -s" since the gnu "cp"-command has the "-s" flag. You dnl shall not try to use this command on directories since it would dnl require a "-r" in the case of a copy that is not supported dnl explicitly here. (I'm not sure if some "cp"-commands out there dnl would barf at usage of "-r" on a normal file). dnl dnl Use CP_S to create a copy of read-only data - if your filesystem dnl supports it then a symbolic link is created - a process that is dnl quicker and space-saving. However, if the target fs does not dnl support symbolic links, just copy the data. Unlike ac_prog_ln_s dnl this macro will never fail to set the CP_S ac_subst to something dnl that works. dnl dnl @category InstalledPackages dnl @author Guido U. Draheim dnl @version 2003-10-29 dnl @license GPLWithACException AC_DEFUN([AC_PROG_CP_S], [AC_REQUIRE([AC_PROG_LN_S])dnl AC_MSG_CHECKING(whether cp -s works) AC_CACHE_VAL(ac_cv_prog_CP_S, [rm -f conftestdata if cp -s X conftestdata 2>/dev/null then rm -f conftestdata ac_cv_prog_CP_S="cp -s" else ac_cv_prog_CP_S=cp fi if test "$LN_S" = "ln -s" ; then ac_cv_prog_CP_S="ln -s" fi])dnl CP_S="$ac_cv_prog_CP_S" if test "$ac_cv_prog_CP_S" = "ln -s"; then AC_MSG_RESULT(using ln -s) elif test "$ac_cv_prog_CP_S" = "cp -s"; then AC_MSG_RESULT(yes) else AC_MSG_RESULT(no, using cp) fi AC_SUBST(CP_S)dnl ])