> ldconfig
> exit
-On all variants of Unix except Linux (and maybe except *BSD), shared libraries
-are not supportet out of the box due to the utter stupidity of libtool, so you'll
-have to do this to get shared library support:
-
-> ./configure --with-motif --disable-static --enable-shared
-
-Then you'll have to edit the wrongly created libtool script. There are two
-important entries with respect to shared library creation, which are
-
- archive_cmds="\$LD -shared ....
- archive_expsym_cmds="\$LD -shared ....
-
-which should be something like
-
- archive_cmds="\$CC -shared ....
- archive_expsym_cmds="\$CC -shared ....
-
Afterwards you can continue with
> make
binary size. Also fewer crashes during the
actual compilation...
+ --enable-no_deps Enable compilation without creation of
+ dependency information.
+
+ --enable-permissive Enable compilation without creation of
+ giving erros as soon as you compile with
+ Solaris ANSI-defying headers...
+
--enable-mem_tracing Add built-in memory tracing.
--enable-dmalloc Use the dmalloc memory debugger.
2) The other way creates a project within the source code
directories of wxWindows. For this endeavour, you'll need
-the usual number of GNU tools, at least
-
-GNU automake version 1.4
-GNU autoheader version 2.14
-GNU autoconf version 2.14
-GNU libtool version 1.2 (1.3 seems broken)
-
-and quite possibly
-
-GNU make
-GNU C++
+GNU autoconf version 2.14 and add an entry to your Makefile.in
+to the bottom of the configure.in script and run autoconf
+and configure before you can type make.
-and if you have all this then you probably know enough to
-go ahead yourself :-)
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