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authorH. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>2002-05-06 19:41:57 +0000
committerH. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>2002-05-06 19:41:57 +0000
commitff7ccc00d84437808c2194dfc9c2434d863a0791 (patch)
tree00e4ee865848036de814fecb955a99f452f8d7a0
parent97f0a2bf6b5dca59e3055e6533d1f3d2a97b15ce (diff)
downloadnasm-ff7ccc00d84437808c2194dfc9c2434d863a0791.tar.gz
Change NASMOPT to NASMENV
-rw-r--r--doc/nasmdoc.src12
-rw-r--r--nasm.c4
2 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/doc/nasmdoc.src b/doc/nasmdoc.src
index cca32080..8c8e7c68 100644
--- a/doc/nasmdoc.src
+++ b/doc/nasmdoc.src
@@ -561,7 +561,7 @@ to search for the file \c{foobar.i}...)
If you want to define a \e{standard} \i{include search path},
similar to \c{/usr/include} on Unix systems, you should place one or
-more \c{-i} directives in the \c{NASMOPT} environment variable (see
+more \c{-i} directives in the \c{NASMENV} environment variable (see
\k{nasmenv}).
For Makefile compatibility with many C compilers, this option can also
@@ -762,13 +762,13 @@ and the date on which it was compiled.
You will need the version number if you report a bug.
-\S{nasmenv} The \c{NASMOPT} \i{Environment} Variable
+\S{nasmenv} The \c{NASMENV} \i{Environment} Variable
-If you define an environment variable called \c{NASMOPT}, the program
+If you define an environment variable called \c{NASMENV}, the program
will interpret it as a list of extra command-line options, which are
processed before the real command line. You can use this to define
standard search directories for include files, by putting \c{-i}
-options in the \c{NASMOPT} variable.
+options in the \c{NASMENV} variable.
The value of the variable is split up at white space, so that the
value \c{-s -ic:\\nasmlib} will be treated as two separate options.
@@ -780,7 +780,7 @@ nonsensical words \c{-dNAME="my} and \c{name"}.
To get round this, NASM provides a feature whereby, if you begin the
\c{NASM} environment variable with some character that isn't a minus
sign, then NASM will treat this character as the \i{separator
-character} for options. So setting the \c{NASMOPT} variable to the
+character} for options. So setting the \c{NASMENV} variable to the
value \c{!-s!-ic:\\nasmlib} is equivalent to setting it to \c{-s
-ic:\\nasmlib}, but \c{!-dNAME="my name"} will work.
@@ -5658,7 +5658,7 @@ it.
\b Which version of NASM you're using, and exactly how you invoked
it. Give us the precise command line, and the contents of the
-\c{NASMOPT} environment variable if any.
+\c{NASMENV} environment variable if any.
\b Which versions of any supplementary programs you're using, and
how you invoked them. If the problem only becomes visible at link
diff --git a/nasm.c b/nasm.c
index 266b4eef..f3014a99 100644
--- a/nasm.c
+++ b/nasm.c
@@ -683,9 +683,9 @@ static void parse_cmdline(int argc, char **argv)
*inname = *outname = *listname = '\0';
/*
- * First, process the NASMOPT environment variable.
+ * First, process the NASMENV environment variable.
*/
- envreal = getenv("NASMOPT");
+ envreal = getenv("NASMENV");
arg = NULL;
if (envreal) {
envcopy = nasm_strdup(envreal);