+2004-08-04 Phil Edwards <phil@codesourcery.com>
+
+ * docs/html/configopts.html: Emphasize that options change.
+ * docs/html/17_intro/configury.html: Update links.
+
2004-08-03 Paolo Carlini <pcarlini@suse.de>
* include/bits/list.tcc: Trivial formatting fixes.
<blockquote>
No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.<br />
-- The Cosmic AC,
-<a href="http://people.inf.elte.hu/simi/szovegek/Asimov1.html">The
+<a href="http://mit.edu/tylerc/www/twt/LQ1.htm">The
Last Question</a>, by Isaac Asimov
</blockquote>
<ul>
alt="Dependency graph in PNG graphics format. (Get a better browser!)" /></p>
<p>Regenerate using a command sequence like
- <code>"aclocal-1.7 && autoconf2.50 && autoheader2.50
+ <code>"aclocal-1.7 && autoconf-2.59 && autoheader-2.59
&& automake-1.7"</code> as needed. And/or configure with
- --enable-maintainer-mode.
+ --enable-maintainer-mode. The version numbers will vary depending on
+ <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/install/prerequisites.html">the current
+ requirements</a> and your vendor's choice of installation names.
</p>
<p>If you're wondering what that line noise in the last example was,
that's how you embed autoconf special characters in output text.
They're called
-<a href="http://www.gnu.org/manual/autoconf/html_node/autoconf_95.html#SEC95"><em>quadrigraphs</em></a>
+<a
+href="http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/manual/autoconf-2.57/html_node/autoconf_95.html#SEC95"><em>quadrigraphs</em></a>
and you should use them whenever necessary.</p></li>
<li><p>HELP-STRING is what you think it is. Do not include the "default"
text like we used to do; it will be done for you by GLIBCXX_ENABLE.
<!-- This SECnn should be the "Choosing Package Options" section. -->
<a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/manual/autoconf-2.57/html_node/autoconf_131.html#SEC131">they
all have opposite forms as well</a>
- (enable/disable and with/without). The defaults are for current
- development sources.
+ (enable/disable and with/without). The defaults are for <strong>current
+ development sources</strong>, which may be different than those for
+ released versions.
</p>
<p>The canonical way to find out the configure options that are
available for a given set of libstdc++ sources is to go to the