* You currently need GNU make to build the Libtool package itself. * On AIX there are two different styles of shared linking, one where symbols are bound at link-time and one where 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 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 GNU/Linux systems for multilib targets 'libtool' sometimes guesses the wrong paths that the linker and dynamic linker search by default. If this occurs for the dynamic library path, you may use the 'LT_SYS_LIBRARY_PATH' environment variable to adjust. Otherwise, at 'configure' time you may override libtool's guesses by setting the 'autoconf' cache variables 'lt_cv_sys_lib_search_path_spec' and 'lt_cv_sys_lib_dlsearch_path_spec' respectively.