?RCS: $Id: d_strctcpy.U 167 2013-05-08 17:58:00Z rmanfredi $ ?RCS: ?RCS: Copyright (c) 1991-1997, 2004-2006, Raphael Manfredi ?RCS: ?RCS: You may redistribute only under the terms of the Artistic License, ?RCS: as specified in the README file that comes with the distribution. ?RCS: You may reuse parts of this distribution only within the terms of ?RCS: that same Artistic License; a copy of which may be found at the root ?RCS: of the source tree for dist 4.0. ?RCS: ?RCS: $Log: d_strctcpy.U,v $ ?RCS: Revision 3.0 1993/08/18 12:07:34 ram ?RCS: Baseline for dist 3.0 netwide release. ?RCS: ?MAKE:d_strctcpy: cat rm cc Setvar ?MAKE: -pick add $@ %< ?S:d_strctcpy: ?S: This variable conditionally defines the USE_STRUCT_COPY symbol, which ?S: indicates to the C program that this C compiler knows how to copy ?S: structures. ?S:. ?C:USE_STRUCT_COPY (STRUCTCOPY): ?C: This symbol, if defined, indicates that this C compiler knows how ?C: to copy structures. If undefined, you'll need to use a block copy ?C: routine of some sort instead. ?C:. ?H:#$d_strctcpy USE_STRUCT_COPY /**/ ?H:. ?LINT:set d_strctcpy : check for structure copying echo " " echo "Checking to see if your C compiler can copy structs..." >&4 $cat >try.c <<'EOCP' int main() { struct blurfl { int dyick; } foo, bar; foo = bar; } EOCP if $cc -c try.c >/dev/null 2>&1 ; then val="$define" echo "Yup, it can." else val="$undef" echo "Nope, it can't." fi set d_strctcpy eval $setvar $rm -f try.*