SYNOPSIS

shtool slo [-p|--prefix str] \*(-- -Ldir -llib [-Ldir -llib ...]

DESCRIPTION

This command separates the linker options ``-L'' and ``-l'' by library class. It's argument line can actually be an arbitrary command line where those options are contained. slo parses these two options only and ignores the remaining contents. The result is a trivial shell script on \*(C`stdout\*(C' which defines six variables containing the ``-L'' and ``-l'' options sorted by class:

``\*(C`SLO_DIRS_OBJ\*(C''' and ``\*(C`SLO_LIBS_OBJ\*(C''' contains the ``-L'' and ``-l'' options of static libraries, ``\*(C`SLO_DIRS_PIC\*(C''' and ``\*(C`SLO_LIBS_PIC\*(C''' contains the ``-L'' and ``-l'' options of static libraries containing \s-1PIC\s0 (\*(L"Position Independent Code\*(R") and ``\*(C`SLO_DIRS_DSO\*(C''' and ``\*(C`SLO_LIBS_DSO\*(C''' contains the ``-L'' and ``-l'' options of shared libraries. The -p option can be used to change the default variable prefix from "\*(C`SLO_\*(C'" to str.

The intent of this separation is to provide a way between static and shared libraries which is important if one wants to link custom DSOs against libraries, because not all platforms all one to link these DSOs against shared libraries. So one first has to separate out the shared libraries and link the \s-1DSO\s0 only against the static libraries. One can use this command also to just sort the options.

OPTIONS

The following command line options are available.

-p, --prefix str
    FIXME
-Ldir

Directory where libraries are searched in.

-llib

Library to search for.

EXAMPLE

# configure.in LINK_STD="$LDFLAGS $LIBS" eval `shtool slo $LINK_STD` LINK_DSO="$SLO_DIRS_OBJ $SLO_LIBS_OBJ $SLO_DIRS_PIC $SLO_LIBS_PIC" :

HISTORY

The \s-1GNU\s0 shtool slo command was originally written by Ralf S. Engelschall <[email protected]> in 1998 for Apache. It was later taken over into \s-1GNU\s0 shtool.

RELATED TO shtool-slo…

shtool\|(1), ld\|(1).