This file contains any messages produced by compilers while running configure, to aid debugging if configure makes a mistake. It was created by PDCurses configure 3.3, which was generated by GNU Autoconf 2.61. Invocation command line was $ ./configure --x-libraries=/usr/X11R6/lib --x-includes=/usr/X11R6/include --prefix=/usr/local i386-unknown-gnu ## --------- ## ## Platform. ## ## --------- ## hostname = darwintel uname -m = x86 uname -r = 8.0.1 uname -s = Darwin uname -v = Darwin Kernel Version 8.0.1: Fri Apr 29 12:18:40 PDT 2005; root:xnu-792.obj/RELEASE_I386 /usr/bin/uname -p = i386 /bin/uname -X = unknown /bin/arch = unknown /usr/bin/arch -k = unknown /usr/convex/getsysinfo = unknown /usr/bin/hostinfo = Mach kernel version: Darwin Kernel Version 8.0.1: Fri Apr 29 12:18:40 PDT 2005; root:xnu-792.obj/RELEASE_I386 Kernel configured for up to 4 processors. 4 processors are physically available. Processor type: pentpro (Intel Pentium Pro) Processors active: 0 1 2 3 Primary memory available: 1023.00 megabytes Default processor set: 150 tasks, 207 threads, 4 processors Load average: 0.65, Mach factor: 3.34 /bin/machine = unknown /usr/bin/oslevel = unknown /bin/universe = unknown PATH: /var/root/usr/local/bin PATH: /var/root/usr/bin PATH: /var/root/usr/X11R6/bin PATH: /Users/proclus/gnu-darwin-func/admin PATH: /usr/local/bin PATH: /usr/X11R6/bin PATH: /sbin PATH: /usr/sbin PATH: /Users/proclus/usr/local/bin PATH: /Users/proclus/usr/bin PATH: /Users/proclus/usr/X11R6/bin PATH: /Users/proclus/gnu-darwin-func/admin PATH: /usr/local/bin PATH: /usr/X11R6/bin PATH: /sbin PATH: /usr/sbin PATH: /Users/proclus/usr/local/bin PATH: /Users/proclus/usr/bin PATH: /Users/proclus/usr/X11R6/bin PATH: /Users/proclus/gnu-darwin-func/admin PATH: /usr/local/bin PATH: /usr/X11R6/bin PATH: /sbin PATH: /usr/sbin PATH: /Users/proclus/usr/local/bin PATH: /Users/proclus/usr/bin PATH: /Users/proclus/usr/X11R6/bin PATH: /Users/proclus/gnu-darwin-func/admin PATH: /usr/local/bin PATH: /usr/X11R6/bin PATH: /sbin PATH: /usr/sbin PATH: /bin PATH: /sbin PATH: /usr/bin PATH: /usr/sbin ## ----------- ## ## Core tests. ## ## ----------- ## configure:1756: checking for i386-unknown-gnu-gcc configure:1783: result: cc configure:2061: checking for C compiler version configure:2068: cc --version >&5 cc (GCC) 3.3 20030304 (Apple Computer, Inc. build 1809) Copyright (C) 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. configure:2071: $? = 0 configure:2078: cc -v >&5 Reading specs from /usr/libexec/gcc/darwin/i386/3.3/specs Thread model: posix gcc version 3.3 20030304 (Apple Computer, Inc. build 1809) configure:2081: $? = 0 configure:2088: cc -V >&5 cc: `-V' option must have argument configure:2091: $? = 1 configure:2114: checking for C compiler default output file name configure:2141: cc -fno-common conftest.c >&5 configure:2144: $? = 0 configure:2182: result: a.out configure:2199: checking whether the C compiler works configure:2209: ./a.out configure:2212: $? = 0 configure:2229: result: yes configure:2236: checking whether we are cross compiling configure:2238: result: no configure:2241: checking for suffix of executables configure:2248: cc -o conftest -fno-common conftest.c >&5 configure:2251: $? = 0 configure:2275: result: configure:2281: checking for suffix of object files configure:2307: cc -c -fno-common conftest.c >&5 configure:2310: $? = 0 configure:2333: result: configure:2337: checking whether we are using the GNU C compiler configure:2366: cc -c -fno-common conftest.c >&5 configure:2372: $? = 0 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | | int | main () | { | #ifndef __GNUC__ | choke me | #endif | | ; | return 0; | } configure:2389: result: no configure:2394: checking whether cc accepts -g configure:2424: cc -c -g conftest.c >&5 configure:2430: $? = 0 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | | int | main () | { | | ; | return 0; | } configure:2462: cc -c conftest.c >&5 configure:2468: $? = 0 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | | int | main () | { | | ; | return 0; | } configure:2501: cc -c -g conftest.c >&5 configure:2507: $? = 0 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | | int | main () | { | | ; | return 0; | } configure:2529: result: no configure:2546: checking for cc option to accept ISO C89 configure:2620: cc -c -fno-common conftest.c >&5 configure:2626: $? = 0 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | #include | #include | #include | #include | /* Most of the following tests are stolen from RCS 5.7's src/conf.sh. */ | struct buf { int x; }; | FILE * (*rcsopen) (struct buf *, struct stat *, int); | static char *e (p, i) | char **p; | int i; | { | return p[i]; | } | static char *f (char * (*g) (char **, int), char **p, ...) | { | char *s; | va_list v; | va_start (v,p); | s = g (p, va_arg (v,int)); | va_end (v); | return s; | } | | /* OSF 4.0 Compaq cc is some sort of almost-ANSI by default. It has | function prototypes and stuff, but not '\xHH' hex character constants. | These don't provoke an error unfortunately, instead are silently treated | as 'x'. The following induces an error, until -std is added to get | proper ANSI mode. Curiously '\x00'!='x' always comes out true, for an | array size at least. It's necessary to write '\x00'==0 to get something | that's true only with -std. */ | int osf4_cc_array ['\x00' == 0 ? 1 : -1]; | | /* IBM C 6 for AIX is almost-ANSI by default, but it replaces macro parameters | inside strings and character constants. */ | #define FOO(x) 'x' | int xlc6_cc_array[FOO(a) == 'x' ? 1 : -1]; | | int test (int i, double x); | struct s1 {int (*f) (int a);}; | struct s2 {int (*f) (double a);}; | int pairnames (int, char **, FILE *(*)(struct buf *, struct stat *, int), int, int); | int argc; | char **argv; | int | main () | { | return f (e, argv, 0) != argv[0] || f (e, argv, 1) != argv[1]; | ; | return 0; | } configure:2620: cc -qlanglvl=extc89 -c -fno-common conftest.c >&5 cc: unrecognized option `-qlanglvl=extc89' configure:2626: $? = 0 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | #include | #include | #include | #include | /* Most of the following tests are stolen from RCS 5.7's src/conf.sh. */ | struct buf { int x; }; | FILE * (*rcsopen) (struct buf *, struct stat *, int); | static char *e (p, i) | char **p; | int i; | { | return p[i]; | } | static char *f (char * (*g) (char **, int), char **p, ...) | { | char *s; | va_list v; | va_start (v,p); | s = g (p, va_arg (v,int)); | va_end (v); | return s; | } | | /* OSF 4.0 Compaq cc is some sort of almost-ANSI by default. It has | function prototypes and stuff, but not '\xHH' hex character constants. | These don't provoke an error unfortunately, instead are silently treated | as 'x'. The following induces an error, until -std is added to get | proper ANSI mode. Curiously '\x00'!='x' always comes out true, for an | array size at least. It's necessary to write '\x00'==0 to get something | that's true only with -std. */ | int osf4_cc_array ['\x00' == 0 ? 1 : -1]; | | /* IBM C 6 for AIX is almost-ANSI by default, but it replaces macro parameters | inside strings and character constants. */ | #define FOO(x) 'x' | int xlc6_cc_array[FOO(a) == 'x' ? 1 : -1]; | | int test (int i, double x); | struct s1 {int (*f) (int a);}; | struct s2 {int (*f) (double a);}; | int pairnames (int, char **, FILE *(*)(struct buf *, struct stat *, int), int, int); | int argc; | char **argv; | int | main () | { | return f (e, argv, 0) != argv[0] || f (e, argv, 1) != argv[1]; | ; | return 0; | } configure:2620: cc -qlanglvl=ansi -c -fno-common conftest.c >&5 cc: unrecognized option `-qlanglvl=ansi' configure:2626: $? = 0 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | #include | #include | #include | #include | /* Most of the following tests are stolen from RCS 5.7's src/conf.sh. */ | struct buf { int x; }; | FILE * (*rcsopen) (struct buf *, struct stat *, int); | static char *e (p, i) | char **p; | int i; | { | return p[i]; | } | static char *f (char * (*g) (char **, int), char **p, ...) | { | char *s; | va_list v; | va_start (v,p); | s = g (p, va_arg (v,int)); | va_end (v); | return s; | } | | /* OSF 4.0 Compaq cc is some sort of almost-ANSI by default. It has | function prototypes and stuff, but not '\xHH' hex character constants. | These don't provoke an error unfortunately, instead are silently treated | as 'x'. The following induces an error, until -std is added to get | proper ANSI mode. Curiously '\x00'!='x' always comes out true, for an | array size at least. It's necessary to write '\x00'==0 to get something | that's true only with -std. */ | int osf4_cc_array ['\x00' == 0 ? 1 : -1]; | | /* IBM C 6 for AIX is almost-ANSI by default, but it replaces macro parameters | inside strings and character constants. */ | #define FOO(x) 'x' | int xlc6_cc_array[FOO(a) == 'x' ? 1 : -1]; | | int test (int i, double x); | struct s1 {int (*f) (int a);}; | struct s2 {int (*f) (double a);}; | int pairnames (int, char **, FILE *(*)(struct buf *, struct stat *, int), int, int); | int argc; | char **argv; | int | main () | { | return f (e, argv, 0) != argv[0] || f (e, argv, 1) != argv[1]; | ; | return 0; | } configure:2620: cc -std -c -fno-common conftest.c >&5 cc1: error: unrecognized option `-std' configure:2626: $? = 1 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | #include | #include | #include | #include | /* Most of the following tests are stolen from RCS 5.7's src/conf.sh. */ | struct buf { int x; }; | FILE * (*rcsopen) (struct buf *, struct stat *, int); | static char *e (p, i) | char **p; | int i; | { | return p[i]; | } | static char *f (char * (*g) (char **, int), char **p, ...) | { | char *s; | va_list v; | va_start (v,p); | s = g (p, va_arg (v,int)); | va_end (v); | return s; | } | | /* OSF 4.0 Compaq cc is some sort of almost-ANSI by default. It has | function prototypes and stuff, but not '\xHH' hex character constants. | These don't provoke an error unfortunately, instead are silently treated | as 'x'. The following induces an error, until -std is added to get | proper ANSI mode. Curiously '\x00'!='x' always comes out true, for an | array size at least. It's necessary to write '\x00'==0 to get something | that's true only with -std. */ | int osf4_cc_array ['\x00' == 0 ? 1 : -1]; | | /* IBM C 6 for AIX is almost-ANSI by default, but it replaces macro parameters | inside strings and character constants. */ | #define FOO(x) 'x' | int xlc6_cc_array[FOO(a) == 'x' ? 1 : -1]; | | int test (int i, double x); | struct s1 {int (*f) (int a);}; | struct s2 {int (*f) (double a);}; | int pairnames (int, char **, FILE *(*)(struct buf *, struct stat *, int), int, int); | int argc; | char **argv; | int | main () | { | return f (e, argv, 0) != argv[0] || f (e, argv, 1) != argv[1]; | ; | return 0; | } configure:2620: cc -Ae -c -fno-common conftest.c >&5 :6:2: missing '(' after predicate configure:2626: $? = 1 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | #include | #include | #include | #include | /* Most of the following tests are stolen from RCS 5.7's src/conf.sh. */ | struct buf { int x; }; | FILE * (*rcsopen) (struct buf *, struct stat *, int); | static char *e (p, i) | char **p; | int i; | { | return p[i]; | } | static char *f (char * (*g) (char **, int), char **p, ...) | { | char *s; | va_list v; | va_start (v,p); | s = g (p, va_arg (v,int)); | va_end (v); | return s; | } | | /* OSF 4.0 Compaq cc is some sort of almost-ANSI by default. It has | function prototypes and stuff, but not '\xHH' hex character constants. | These don't provoke an error unfortunately, instead are silently treated | as 'x'. The following induces an error, until -std is added to get | proper ANSI mode. Curiously '\x00'!='x' always comes out true, for an | array size at least. It's necessary to write '\x00'==0 to get something | that's true only with -std. */ | int osf4_cc_array ['\x00' == 0 ? 1 : -1]; | | /* IBM C 6 for AIX is almost-ANSI by default, but it replaces macro parameters | inside strings and character constants. */ | #define FOO(x) 'x' | int xlc6_cc_array[FOO(a) == 'x' ? 1 : -1]; | | int test (int i, double x); | struct s1 {int (*f) (int a);}; | struct s2 {int (*f) (double a);}; | int pairnames (int, char **, FILE *(*)(struct buf *, struct stat *, int), int, int); | int argc; | char **argv; | int | main () | { | return f (e, argv, 0) != argv[0] || f (e, argv, 1) != argv[1]; | ; | return 0; | } configure:2620: cc -Aa -D_HPUX_SOURCE -c -fno-common conftest.c >&5 :6:2: missing '(' after predicate configure:2626: $? = 1 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | #include | #include | #include | #include | /* Most of the following tests are stolen from RCS 5.7's src/conf.sh. */ | struct buf { int x; }; | FILE * (*rcsopen) (struct buf *, struct stat *, int); | static char *e (p, i) | char **p; | int i; | { | return p[i]; | } | static char *f (char * (*g) (char **, int), char **p, ...) | { | char *s; | va_list v; | va_start (v,p); | s = g (p, va_arg (v,int)); | va_end (v); | return s; | } | | /* OSF 4.0 Compaq cc is some sort of almost-ANSI by default. It has | function prototypes and stuff, but not '\xHH' hex character constants. | These don't provoke an error unfortunately, instead are silently treated | as 'x'. The following induces an error, until -std is added to get | proper ANSI mode. Curiously '\x00'!='x' always comes out true, for an | array size at least. It's necessary to write '\x00'==0 to get something | that's true only with -std. */ | int osf4_cc_array ['\x00' == 0 ? 1 : -1]; | | /* IBM C 6 for AIX is almost-ANSI by default, but it replaces macro parameters | inside strings and character constants. */ | #define FOO(x) 'x' | int xlc6_cc_array[FOO(a) == 'x' ? 1 : -1]; | | int test (int i, double x); | struct s1 {int (*f) (int a);}; | struct s2 {int (*f) (double a);}; | int pairnames (int, char **, FILE *(*)(struct buf *, struct stat *, int), int, int); | int argc; | char **argv; | int | main () | { | return f (e, argv, 0) != argv[0] || f (e, argv, 1) != argv[1]; | ; | return 0; | } configure:2620: cc -Xc -D__EXTENSIONS__ -c -fno-common conftest.c >&5 cc: unrecognized option `-Xc' configure:2626: $? = 0 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | #include | #include | #include | #include | /* Most of the following tests are stolen from RCS 5.7's src/conf.sh. */ | struct buf { int x; }; | FILE * (*rcsopen) (struct buf *, struct stat *, int); | static char *e (p, i) | char **p; | int i; | { | return p[i]; | } | static char *f (char * (*g) (char **, int), char **p, ...) | { | char *s; | va_list v; | va_start (v,p); | s = g (p, va_arg (v,int)); | va_end (v); | return s; | } | | /* OSF 4.0 Compaq cc is some sort of almost-ANSI by default. It has | function prototypes and stuff, but not '\xHH' hex character constants. | These don't provoke an error unfortunately, instead are silently treated | as 'x'. The following induces an error, until -std is added to get | proper ANSI mode. Curiously '\x00'!='x' always comes out true, for an | array size at least. It's necessary to write '\x00'==0 to get something | that's true only with -std. */ | int osf4_cc_array ['\x00' == 0 ? 1 : -1]; | | /* IBM C 6 for AIX is almost-ANSI by default, but it replaces macro parameters | inside strings and character constants. */ | #define FOO(x) 'x' | int xlc6_cc_array[FOO(a) == 'x' ? 1 : -1]; | | int test (int i, double x); | struct s1 {int (*f) (int a);}; | struct s2 {int (*f) (double a);}; | int pairnames (int, char **, FILE *(*)(struct buf *, struct stat *, int), int, int); | int argc; | char **argv; | int | main () | { | return f (e, argv, 0) != argv[0] || f (e, argv, 1) != argv[1]; | ; | return 0; | } configure:2652: result: unsupported configure:2707: checking build system type configure:2725: result: i386-unknown-gnu configure:2747: checking host system type configure:2762: result: i386-unknown-gnu configure:2784: checking target system type configure:2799: result: i386-unknown-gnu configure:2856: checking for maximum signal specifier: configure:2885: cc -c -fno-common conftest.c >&5 configure:2891: $? = 0 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | #include | int | main () | { | return NSIG; | ; | return 0; | } configure:2885: cc -c -fno-common conftest.c >&5 conftest.c: In function `main': conftest.c:12: error: `__sys_nsig' undeclared (first use in this function) conftest.c:12: error: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once conftest.c:12: error: for each function it appears in.) configure:2891: $? = 1 configure: failed program was: | /* confdefs.h. */ | #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" | #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" | #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" | #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" | /* end confdefs.h. */ | #include | int | main () | { | return __sys_nsig; | ; | return 0; | } configure:2913: error: Cannot find a system limit for number of signals. PDCurses cannot be configured on this machine. ## ---------------- ## ## Cache variables. ## ## ---------------- ## ac_cv_build=i386-unknown-gnu ac_cv_c_compiler_gnu=no ac_cv_env_CC_set=set ac_cv_env_CC_value=cc ac_cv_env_CFLAGS_set=set ac_cv_env_CFLAGS_value=-fno-common ac_cv_env_CPPFLAGS_set= ac_cv_env_CPPFLAGS_value= ac_cv_env_CPP_set= ac_cv_env_CPP_value= ac_cv_env_LDFLAGS_set= ac_cv_env_LDFLAGS_value= ac_cv_env_LIBS_set= ac_cv_env_LIBS_value= ac_cv_env_XMKMF_set= ac_cv_env_XMKMF_value= ac_cv_env_build_alias_set=set ac_cv_env_build_alias_value=i386-unknown-gnu ac_cv_env_host_alias_set=set ac_cv_env_host_alias_value=i386-unknown-gnu ac_cv_env_target_alias_set=set ac_cv_env_target_alias_value=i386-unknown-gnu ac_cv_host=i386-unknown-gnu ac_cv_objext= ac_cv_prog_CC=cc ac_cv_prog_cc_c89=no ac_cv_prog_cc_g=no ac_cv_target=i386-unknown-gnu lt_cv_sys_max_cmd_len= ## ----------------- ## ## Output variables. ## ## ----------------- ## CC2O='' CC='cc' CFLAGS='-fno-common' CPP='' CPPFLAGS='' DEFS='' DYN_COMP='' ECHO_C='' ECHO_N='-n' ECHO_T='' EGREP='' EXEEXT='' GREP='' INSTALL_DATA='install -o root -g wheel -m 444' INSTALL_PROGRAM='install -s -o root -g wheel -m 555' INSTALL_SCRIPT='install -o root -g wheel -m 555' LDFLAGS='' LD_RXLIB1='' LIBOBJS='' LIBS='' LTLIBOBJS='' MH_EXTRA_LIBS='' MH_XINC_DIR='' MH_XLIBS='' O2SAVE='' OBJEXT='' PACKAGE_BUGREPORT='wmcbrine@users.sf.net' PACKAGE_NAME='PDCurses' PACKAGE_STRING='PDCurses 3.3' PACKAGE_TARNAME='PDCurses' PACKAGE_VERSION='3.3' PATH_SEPARATOR=':' PURIFY='' RANLIB='' RXPACKEXPORTS='' SAVE2O='' SET_MAKE='' SHELL='/bin/sh' SHLPRE='' SHLPST='' SHL_TARGETS='' SYS_DEFS='' XMKMF='' ac_ct_CC='' bindir='${exec_prefix}/bin' build='i386-unknown-gnu' build_alias='i386-unknown-gnu' build_cpu='i386' build_os='gnu' build_vendor='unknown' datadir='${datarootdir}' datarootdir='${prefix}/share' docdir='${datarootdir}/doc/${PACKAGE_TARNAME}' dvidir='${docdir}' exec_prefix='NONE' host='i386-unknown-gnu' host_alias='i386-unknown-gnu' host_cpu='i386' host_os='gnu' host_vendor='unknown' htmldir='${docdir}' includedir='${prefix}/include' infodir='${datarootdir}/info' libdir='${exec_prefix}/lib' libexecdir='${exec_prefix}/libexec' localedir='${datarootdir}/locale' localstatedir='${prefix}/var' mandir='${datarootdir}/man' oldincludedir='/usr/include' pdfdir='${docdir}' prefix='' program_transform_name='s,x,x,' psdir='${docdir}' sbindir='${exec_prefix}/sbin' sharedstatedir='${prefix}/com' sysconfdir='${prefix}/etc' target='i386-unknown-gnu' target_alias='i386-unknown-gnu' target_cpu='i386' target_os='gnu' target_vendor='unknown' ## ----------- ## ## confdefs.h. ## ## ----------- ## #define PACKAGE_NAME "PDCurses" #define PACKAGE_TARNAME "PDCurses" #define PACKAGE_VERSION "3.3" #define PACKAGE_STRING "PDCurses 3.3" #define PACKAGE_BUGREPORT "wmcbrine@users.sf.net" configure: exit 1