# when you have weird things in your .cmucl-init file
# "openmcl --batch"
# to use an OpenMCL binary as a cross-compilation host
+# "clisp"
+# to use a CLISP binary as a cross-compilation host
#
# FIXME: Make a more sophisticated command line parser, probably
# accepting "sh make.sh --xc-host foolisp" instead of the
export SBCL_XC_HOST
echo //SBCL_XC_HOST=\"$SBCL_XC_HOST\"
+# the GNU dialect of "make" -- easier to find or port it than to
+# try to figure out how to port to the local dialect...
+if [ "$GNUMAKE" != "" ] ; then
+ # The user is evidently trying to tell us something.
+ GNUMAKE="$GNUMAKE"
+elif [ -x "`which gmake`" ] ; then
+ # "gmake" is the preferred name in *BSD.
+ GNUMAKE=gmake
+elif [ "GNU Make" = "`make -v | head -n 1 | cut -b 0-8`" ]; then
+ GNUMAKE=make
+else
+ echo "GNU Make not found. Try setting the environment variable GNUMAKE."
+ exit 1
+fi
+
+export GNUMAKE
+echo //GNUMAKE=\"$GNUMAKE\"
+
+
# If you're cross-compiling, you should probably just walk through the
# make-config.sh script by hand doing the right thing on both the host
# and target machines.
# identify the target architecture).
# On the host system:
# SBCL_XC_HOST=<whatever> sh make-host-1.sh
-# Copy src/runtime/sbcl.h from the host system to the target system.
+# Copy src/runtime/genesis/*.h from the host system to the target
+# system.
# On the target system:
# sh make-target-1.sh
# Copy src/runtime/sbcl.nm and output/stuff-groveled-from-headers.lisp