The original change was to always use /usr/bin/libtool on Darwin,
in order to avoid using a GNU libtool installed by the user in the
path ahead of Apple's libtool. However someone might install a
more recent Apple libtool ahead of /usr/bin/libtool. This commit
checks to see if libtool is Apple, and uses /usr/bin/libtool if it
isn't.
crc_table is made using a four-byte integer (when that can be
determined). However get_crc_table() returned a pointer to an
unsigned long, which could be eight bytes. This fixes that by
creating a new z_crc_t type for the crc_table.
This type is also used for the BYFOUR crc calculations that depend
on a four-byte type. The four-byte type can now be determined by
./configure, which also solves a problem where ./configure --solo
would never use BYFOUR. No the Z_U4 #define indicates that four-
byte integer was found either by ./configure or by zconf.h.
SunOS 4.1 claims that it is __STDC__, but it does not have strerror
in string.h. Instead of using __STDC__, this puts a direct test
for strerror in configure, and uses that information in gzguts.h.
Apple removed support for gcov in the default gcc compiler chain,
when they moved to llvm. This can be circumvented in XCode 4.2 by
using the gcc chain with gcc-4.2. This patch allows setting
GCC_CLASSIC to the name of a real gcc executable (e.g. "gcc-4.2")
to allow coverage testing.
Previously ./configure would use any output on stderr as an indication
that the compilation failed. However if some compiler wrapper uses
stderr for some other purpose, e.g. distcc for nodes going down, then
./configure would not properly configure the build. This problem was
noted by Mike Frysinger. For backwards compatibility, ./configure
will revert to the old way, i.e. checking for anything on stderr, if
when it deliberately runs the compiler with an error, a zero exit
status is returned.
This adds the -fprofile-arcs and -ftest-coverage options when compiling
the source code for the static library. Those same options must then be
used when linking the static library into an executable. This updates
Makefile.in to remove and .gitignore to ignore the files generated when
testing coverage.
A common request has been the ability to compile zlib to require no
other libraries. This --solo option provides that ability. The price
is that the gz*, compress*, and uncompress functions are eliminated,
and that the user must provide memory allocation and free routines to
deflate and inflate when initializing.