rtt-f030/components/external/SQLite-3.8.1/Makefile.linux-gcc

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3.6 KiB
Makefile

#!/usr/make
#
# Makefile for SQLITE
#
# This is a template makefile for SQLite. Most people prefer to
# use the autoconf generated "configure" script to generate the
# makefile automatically. But that does not work for everybody
# and in every situation. If you are having problems with the
# "configure" script, you might want to try this makefile as an
# alternative. Create a copy of this file, edit the parameters
# below and type "make".
#
#### The toplevel directory of the source tree. This is the directory
# that contains this "Makefile.in" and the "configure.in" script.
#
TOP = ../sqlite
#### C Compiler and options for use in building executables that
# will run on the platform that is doing the build.
#
BCC = gcc -g -O2
#BCC = /opt/ancic/bin/c89 -0
#### If the target operating system supports the "usleep()" system
# call, then define the HAVE_USLEEP macro for all C modules.
#
#USLEEP =
USLEEP = -DHAVE_USLEEP=1
#### If you want the SQLite library to be safe for use within a
# multi-threaded program, then define the following macro
# appropriately:
#
#THREADSAFE = -DTHREADSAFE=1
THREADSAFE = -DTHREADSAFE=0
#### Specify any extra linker options needed to make the library
# thread safe
#
#THREADLIB = -lpthread
THREADLIB =
#### Specify any extra libraries needed to access required functions.
#
#TLIBS = -lrt # fdatasync on Solaris 8
TLIBS =
#### Leave SQLITE_DEBUG undefined for maximum speed. Use SQLITE_DEBUG=1
# to check for memory leaks. Use SQLITE_DEBUG=2 to print a log of all
# malloc()s and free()s in order to track down memory leaks.
#
# SQLite uses some expensive assert() statements in the inner loop.
# You can make the library go almost twice as fast if you compile
# with -DNDEBUG=1
#
#OPTS = -DSQLITE_DEBUG=2
#OPTS = -DSQLITE_DEBUG=1
#OPTS =
OPTS = -DNDEBUG=1
OPTS += -DHAVE_FDATASYNC=1
#### The suffix to add to executable files. ".exe" for windows.
# Nothing for unix.
#
#EXE = .exe
EXE =
#### C Compile and options for use in building executables that
# will run on the target platform. This is usually the same
# as BCC, unless you are cross-compiling.
#
TCC = gcc -O6
#TCC = gcc -g -O0 -Wall
#TCC = gcc -g -O0 -Wall -fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage
#TCC = /opt/mingw/bin/i386-mingw32-gcc -O6
#TCC = /opt/ansic/bin/c89 -O +z -Wl,-a,archive
#### Tools used to build a static library.
#
AR = ar cr
#AR = /opt/mingw/bin/i386-mingw32-ar cr
RANLIB = ranlib
#RANLIB = /opt/mingw/bin/i386-mingw32-ranlib
MKSHLIB = gcc -shared
SO = so
SHPREFIX = lib
# SO = dll
# SHPREFIX =
#### Extra compiler options needed for programs that use the TCL library.
#
#TCL_FLAGS =
#TCL_FLAGS = -DSTATIC_BUILD=1
TCL_FLAGS = -I/home/drh/tcltk/8.5linux
#TCL_FLAGS = -I/home/drh/tcltk/8.5win -DSTATIC_BUILD=1
#TCL_FLAGS = -I/home/drh/tcltk/8.3hpux
#### Linker options needed to link against the TCL library.
#
#LIBTCL = -ltcl -lm -ldl
LIBTCL = /home/drh/tcltk/8.5linux/libtcl8.5g.a -lm -ldl
#LIBTCL = /home/drh/tcltk/8.5win/libtcl85s.a -lmsvcrt
#LIBTCL = /home/drh/tcltk/8.3hpux/libtcl8.3.a -ldld -lm -lc
#### Additional objects for SQLite library when TCL support is enabled.
#TCLOBJ =
TCLOBJ = tclsqlite.o
#### Compiler options needed for programs that use the readline() library.
#
READLINE_FLAGS =
#READLINE_FLAGS = -DHAVE_READLINE=1 -I/usr/include/readline
#### Linker options needed by programs using readline() must link against.
#
LIBREADLINE =
#LIBREADLINE = -static -lreadline -ltermcap
#### Which "awk" program provides nawk compatibilty
#
# NAWK = nawk
NAWK = awk
# You should not have to change anything below this line
###############################################################################
include $(TOP)/main.mk