The distributed ares_build.h
in the official release tarballs is only
intended to be used on systems which can also not run the also distributed
configure
or CMake
scripts. It is generated as a copy of
ares_build.h.dist
as can be seen in the code repository.
If you check out from git on a non-configure
or CMake
platform, you must run
the appropriate buildconf*
script to set up ares_build.h
and other local
files before being able to compile the library. There are pre-made makefiles
for a subset of such systems such as Watcom, NMake, and MinGW Makefiles.
On systems capable of running the configure
or CMake
scripts, the process
will overwrite the distributed ares_build.h
file with one that is suitable
and specific to the library being configured and built, this new file is
generated from the ares_build.h.in
and ares_build.h.cmake
template files.
If you intend to distribute an already compiled c-ares library you MUST
also distribute along with it the generated ares_build.h
which has been
used to compile it. Otherwise, the library will be of no use for the users of
the library that you have built. It is your responsibility to provide this
file. No one at the c-ares project can know how you have built the library.
The generated file includes platform and configuration dependent info,
and must not be modified by anyone.
We support both the AutoTools configure
based build system as well as the
CMake
build system. Any new code changes must work with both.
The files that get compiled and are present in the distribution are referenced
in the Makefile.inc
in the current directory. This file gets included in
every build system supported by c-ares so that the list of files doesn't need
to be maintained per build system. Don't forget to reference new header files
otherwise they won't be included in the official release tarballs.
We cannot assume anything else but very basic C89 compiler features being present. The lone exception is the requirement for 64bit integers which is not a requirement for C89 compilers to support. Please do not use any extended features released by later standards.
Newlines must remain unix-style for older compilers' sake.
Comments must be written in the old-style /* unnested C-fashion */
Try to keep line lengths below 80 columns and formatted as the existing code.
There is a .clang-format
in the repository that can be used to run the
automated code formatter as such: clang-format -i */*.c */*.h */*/*.c */*/*.h