source directory irregardless of the destination directory. This means
#include "" and #include <> work as epected and more importantly
running 'make' in the source directory will work as expected. The
-environment variable or make parameter 'BUILD' sets the build directory.
+environment variable or make parameter 'BUILD' set the build directory.
It may be an absolute path or a path relative to the top level directory.
By default build/ will be used with a fall back to ./ This means
you can get all the advantages of a build directory without having to
automake (I really don't know why) and autoconf and requires doing
aclocal -I buidlib
autoconf
+[Altertatively you can run make startup in the top level build dir]
Autoconf is configured to do some basic system probes for optional and
required functionality and generate an environment.mak and include/config.h
ones in the top level tree. Make is not able to resolve rules that
go to the same file through different paths and this will confuse the
depends mechanism. I recommend always using the makefiles in the
-source directory and exporting BUILD
+source directory and exporting BUILD.