# Check if gcc -print-prog-name=ld gives a path.
echo $ECHO_N "checking for ld used by GCC... $ECHO_C" 1>&6
echo "configure:3090: checking for ld used by GCC" 1>&5
- case $lt_target in
+ case $target in
*-*-mingw*)
# gcc leaves a trailing carriage return which upsets mingw
ac_prog=`($CC -print-prog-name=ld) 2>&5 | tr -d '\015'` ;;
# SLPJ trace
echo "...$tmp_fn..." 1>&6
- rm -f mpn/${tmp_fn}.[Ssc] mpn/${tmp_fn}.asm
+# This line was
+# rm -f mpn/${tmp_fn}.[Ssc] mpn/${tmp_fn}.asm
+# but I found that on my NT workstation the command
+# would unpredictably hang. rm wasn't an active process,
+# but absolutlely nothing was happening.
+# I *think* that expanding the [Ssc] cures the problem
+# SLPJ May 01
+ rm -f mpn/${tmp_fn}.S mpn/${tmp_fn}.s mpn/${tmp_fn}.c mpn/${tmp_fn}.asm
+
+ echo "...$tmp_fn (done rm)..." 1>&6
# functions that can be provided by multi-function files
tmp_mulfunc=
ac_dest=`echo "$ac_file" | sed 's%:.*%%'`
ac_source=`echo "$ac_file" | sed 's%[^:]*:%%'`
- echo "linking $srcdir/$ac_source to $ac_dest"
+ echo "copying $srcdir/$ac_source to $ac_dest"
if test ! -r $srcdir/$ac_source; then
{ echo "configure: error: $srcdir/$ac_source: File not found" 1>&2; exit 1; }
esac
# Make a symlink if possible; otherwise try a hard link.
- if ln -s $ac_rel_source $ac_dest 2>/dev/null ||
- ln $srcdir/$ac_source $ac_dest; then :
+ #if ln -s $ac_rel_source $ac_dest 2>/dev/null ||
+ # ln $srcdir/$ac_source $ac_dest; then :
+ if cp $srcdir/$ac_source $ac_dest; then :
else
- { echo "configure: error: cannot link $ac_dest to $srcdir/$ac_source" 1>&2; exit 1; }
+ { echo "configure: error: cannot copy $ac_dest to $srcdir/$ac_source" 1>&2; exit 1; }
fi
fi; done
EOF