# $Id: make.conf,v 1.7 1994/06/15 21:32:38 adam Exp $ # # This file, if present, will be read by make (see /usr/share/mk/sys.mk) # It allows you to override macro definitions to make, without changing # in your source tree, or anything the source tree installs. # # You have to find the things you can put here in the Makefiles and # documentation of the source tree. # # This file must have a syntax as a Makefile. # # One, and probably the most common, use could be: # #CFLAGS= -O -m486 -pipe # A lot of people report that -O2 works fine, but there are known # bugs in gcc. -pipe will almost always speed up compilation. # # # Another useful entry could be: # #NOPROFILE= no_way # Avoid compiling profiled libraries # # # To compile and install the Sun libm instead of the default use: # #WANT_MSUN= yes # # # If you have a FPU (i387, i486DX, Pentium), you can make # the Sun libm use the FPU: # #HAVE_FPU= yes # # # If you do not want unformatted manual pages to be compressed # when they are installed: # #NOMANCOMPRESS= no_way # # # Default format for system documentation, depends on your printer. # Set this to "ascii" for simple printers or screen # #PRINTER= ps # # # How many times to check if a key has been pressed before giving up and # booting the default kernel. 0 actually means check once, but saves the # loop overhead. # #BOOTWAIT=0 #BOOTWAIT=640000 # # # Allow 'cc' to generate all FPU codes. Do not use this if you intend to # generate code to run on machines with broken FPU emulator. Beware, this # is a compile-time static option to 'cc'. # #CCFPU= yes # # # If you use national 8-bit charset and your charset description is # installed into /usr/share/locale (see setlocale(3)), you can # automatically setup all ctype-oriented application to understand # your charset properly by two things: # 1) uncomment following option # 2) set environment variable "LANG" to your charset name # #STARTUP_LOCALE= yes #