dnl TP_COMPILER_WARNINGS(VARIABLE, WERROR_BY_DEFAULT, DESIRABLE, UNDESIRABLE) dnl $1 (VARIABLE): the variable to put flags into dnl $2 (WERROR_BY_DEFAULT): a command returning true if -Werror should be the dnl default dnl $3 (DESIRABLE): warning flags we want (e.g. all extra shadow) dnl $4 (UNDESIRABLE): warning flags we don't want (e.g. dnl missing-field-initializers unused-parameter) AC_DEFUN([TP_COMPILER_WARNINGS], [ AC_REQUIRE([AC_ARG_ENABLE])dnl AC_REQUIRE([AC_HELP_STRING])dnl AC_REQUIRE([TP_COMPILER_FLAG])dnl tp_warnings="" for tp_flag in $3; do TP_COMPILER_FLAG([-W$tp_flag], [tp_warnings="$tp_warnings -W$tp_flag"]) done tp_error_flags="-Werror" TP_COMPILER_FLAG([-Werror], [tp_werror=yes], [tp_werror=no]) for tp_flag in $4; do TP_COMPILER_FLAG([-Wno-$tp_flag], [tp_warnings="$tp_warnings -Wno-$tp_flag"]) dnl Yes, we do need to use both -Wno-foo and -Wno-error=foo. Simon says: dnl some warnings we explicitly don't want, like unused-parameter, but dnl they're in -Wall. when a distro using cdbs compiles us, we have: dnl -Werror -Wno-unused-parameter -Wall dnl ^ from us ^ from cdbs dnl which turns -Wunused-parameter back on, in effect TP_COMPILER_FLAG([-Wno-error=$tp_flag], [tp_error_flags="$tp_error_flags -Wno-error=$tp_flag"], [tp_werror=no]) done AC_ARG_ENABLE([Werror], AC_HELP_STRING([--disable-Werror], [compile without -Werror (normally enabled in development builds)]), tp_werror=$enableval, :) if test "x$tp_werror" = xyes && $2; then dnl We put -Wno-error=foo before -Wno-foo because clang interprets -Wall dnl -Werror -Wno-foo -Wno-error=foo as “make foo a non-fatal warning”, but does dnl what we want if you reverse them. $1="$tp_error_flags $tp_warnings" else $1="$tp_warnings" fi ])