/* Master configuration file for W2C for SUN-OS 3.5 and GCC. Almost all the definitions are wrapped with #ifndef's, so that you can override them from the command line, if you want to. */ #ifndef __WEB2C_SITE_H #define __WEB2C_SITE_H /* Define if you're running on 4.2 or 4.3 BSD-based system. */ #ifndef BSD #define BSD #endif /* Define if you're running on System V-based system. */ #ifndef SYSV #undef SYSV #endif /* Define if you're running on an HP-based system (also define BSD). (that is what the WEB2C site.h's say but I think it is a mistake */ #ifndef HP #undef HP #endif /* Define if you're running on an AIX-based system. */ #ifndef AIX #undef AIX #endif /* Define this if the system will be compiled with an ANSI C compiler, and never with a non-ANSI compiler. It changes web2c so that it produces ANSI C as its output. This is a perhaps good idea, but you don't necessarily gain anything in the production programs by doing it. */ #ifndef ANSI #define ANSI #endif /* Define these according to your local setup. It doesn't hurt anything to have `.' in all the paths, but since most users do not have their own fonts or format files, it only slows things down. (And most users never run initex or inimf, so it doesn't hurt to have `.' in the pool paths; if you take . out, `make fmts' and `make bases' will not work properly.) Do not put a leading or trailing colon in these paths, or double a colon in the middle. That might lead to infinite recursion. */ /*RMD; we dont have Metafont */ #define TEXINPUTS ".:/tex/inputs" #define TEXFONTS "/tex/fonts" #define TEXFORMATS "/tex/formats" #define TEXPOOL "/tex/formats" #define MFBASES "/usr/local/lib/mf/bases" #define MFINPUTS ".:/usr/local/lib/mf/macros:/nfs/src/other/TeX+MF/typefaces" #define MFPOOL ".:/usr/local/lib/mf" /* BibTeX search path for .bib files. BibTeX uses TEXINPUTS to search for .bst files. */ #define BIBINPUTS ".:/tex/bibtex" /* Metafont window support: More than one may be defined, as long as you don't try to have both X10 and X11 support (because there are conflicting routine names in the libraries). After you've defined these, make sure to update the top-level Makefile accordingly. Also, if you want X11 support, see the `Online output from Metafont' section in ./README before compiling. */ #undef HP2627WIN /* HP 2627. */ #undef SUNWIN /* SunWindows. */ #undef TEKTRONIXWIN /* Tektronix 4014. */ #undef UNITERMWIN /* Uniterm Tektronix. */ #undef X10WIN /* X Version 10. */ #define X11WIN /* X Version 11. */ #if defined(X10WIN) && defined(X11WIN) sorry #endif /* Default editor command string: `%d' expands to the line number where TeX or Metafont found an error and `%s' expands to the name of the file. The environment variables TEXEDIT and MFEDIT override this. */ #define EDITOR "/usr/local/emacs +%d %s" /* Define this to be the return type of your signal handlers. POSIX says it should be `void', but some older systems want `int'. Check your include file if you're not sure. */ #ifndef SIGNAL_HANDLER_RETURN_TYPE #define SIGNAL_HANDLER_RETURN_TYPE int #endif /* Define this to be what your sprintf(3) routine returns -- most likely `int' or `char *'. Since the calls to sprintf are always cast to void, anyway, this is only necessary to avoid conflicts between declarations. */ #ifndef SPRINTF_RETURN_TYPE #define SPRINTF_RETURN_TYPE char* #endif /* The type `glueratio' should be a floating point type which won't unnecessarily increase the size of the memoryword structure. This is the basic requirement. On most machines, if you're building a normal-sized TeX, then glueratio must probably meet the following restriction: sizeof(glueratio) <= sizeof(integer). Usually, then, glueratio must be `float'. But if you build a big TeX, you can (on most machines) and should make it `double' to avoid loss of precision and conversions to and from double during calculations. (All this also goes for Metafont.) Furthermore, if you have enough memory, it won't hurt to have this defined to be `double' for running the trip/trap tests. */ typedef double glueratio; /* Define this if you want TeX to be compiled with local variables declared as `register'. On SunOS 3.2 and 3.4 (at least), compiling with cc, this will cause problems. If you're using gcc or the SunOS 4.x compiler, and compiling with -O, register declarations are ignored, so there is no point in defining this. */ #ifndef REGFIX #undef REGFIX #endif /* If the type `int' is at least 32 bits (including a sign bit), this symbol should be #undef'd; otherwise, it should be #define'd. If your compiler uses 16-bit int's, arrays larger than 32K may give you problems, especially if indices are automatically cast to int's. */ #ifndef SIXTEENBIT #undef SIXTEENBIT #endif /* Our character set is 8-bit ASCII unless NONASCII is defined. For other character sets, make sure that first_text_char and last_text_char are defined correctly (they're 0 and 255, respectively, by default). In the *.defines files, change the indicated range of type `char' to be the same as first_text_char..last_text_char, `#define NONASCII', and retangle and recompile everything. */ #ifndef NONASCII #undef NONASCII #endif /* The type `schar' should be defined here to be the smallest signed type available. ANSI C compilers may need to use `signed char'. If your char type is unsigned, then define schar to be the type `short'. */ #ifdef AIX typedef int schar; #else typedef char schar; #endif /* The type `integer' must be a signed integer capable of holding at least the range of numbers (-2^31)..(2^32-1). The ANSI C standard says that `long' meets this requirement, but if you don't have an ANSI C compiler, you might have to change this definition. */ typedef long integer; /* Define this if you want subdirectories of directories in the search paths to be searched. (See discussion in ./README of directory hierarchies.) */ #ifndef SEARCH_SUBDIRECTORIES #define SEARCH_SUBDIRECTORIES #endif /* You need not worry about the definitions in `defaults.h', unless something goes wrong. */ #include "defaults.h" #endif /* not __WEB2C_SITE_H */