* You currently need GNU make to build the Libtool package itself. * On AIX there are two different styles of shared linking, one in which symbols are bound at link-time and one in which symbols are bound at runtime only, similar to ELF. In case of doubt use `LDFLAGS=-Wl,-brtl' for the latter style. * On AIX, native tools are to be preferred over binutils; especially for C++ code, if using the AIX Toolbox GCC 4.0 and binutils, configure with `AR=/usr/bin/ar LD=/usr/bin/ld NM='/usr/bin/nm -B''. * On AIX, the `/bin/sh' is very slow due to its inefficient handling of here-documents. A modern shell is preferable: CONFIG_SHELL=/bin/bash; export $CONFIG_SHELL $CONFIG_SHELL ./configure [...] * For C++ code with templates, it may be necessary to specify the way the compiler will generate the instantiations. For Portland pgCC version5, use `CXX='pgCC --one_instantiation_per_object'' and avoid parallel `make'. * On Darwin, for C++ code with templates you need two level shared libraries. Libtool builds these by default if `MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET' is set to 10.3 or later at `configure' time. See `rdar://problem/4135857' for more information on this issue. * The default shell on UNICOS 9, a ksh 88e variant, is too buggy to correctly execute the libtool script. Users are advised to install a modern shell such as GNU bash. * Some HP-UX `sed' programs are horribly broken, and cannot handle libtool's requirements, so users may report unusual problems. There is no workaround except to install a working `sed' (such as GNU sed) on these systems. * The vendor-distributed NCR MP-RAS `cc' programs emits copyright on standard error that confuse tests on size of `conftest.err'. The workaround is to specify `CC' when run configure with `CC='cc -Hnocopyr''. * Any earlier DG/UX system with ELF executables, such as R3.10 or R4.10, is also likely to work, but hasn't been explicitly tested. * On Reliant Unix libtool has only been tested with the Siemens C-compiler and an old version of `gcc' provided by Marco Walther. * `libtool.m4', `ltdl.m4' and the `configure.ac' files are marked to use autoconf-mode, which is distributed with GNU Emacs 21, Autoconf itself, and all recent releases of XEmacs. * When building on some linux systems for multilib targets `libtool' sometimes guesses the wrong paths that the linker and dynamic linker search by default. If this occurs, you may override libtool's guesses at `configure' time by setting the `autoconf' cache variables `lt_cv_sys_lib_search_path_spec' and `lt_cv_sys_lib_dlsearch_path_spec' respectively to the correct search paths.