dnl /usr/share/aclocal/ac-archive-cvs/acx_restrict.m4 dnl @synopsis ACX_C_RESTRICT dnl dnl @obsoleted Replaced by AC_C_RESTRICT in Autoconf 2.58 dnl dnl This macro determines whether the C compiler supports the dnl "restrict" keyword introduced in ANSI C99, or an equivalent. Does dnl nothing if the compiler accepts the keyword. Otherwise, if the dnl compiler supports an equivalent (like gcc's __restrict__) defines dnl "restrict" to be that. Otherwise, defines "restrict" to be empty. dnl dnl @category Obsolete dnl @author Steven G. Johnson dnl @version 2005-05-31 dnl @license GPLWithACException AC_DEFUN([ACX_C_RESTRICT], [AC_CACHE_CHECK([for C restrict keyword], acx_cv_c_restrict, [acx_cv_c_restrict=unsupported AC_LANG_SAVE AC_LANG_C # Try the official restrict keyword, then gcc's __restrict__, then # SGI's __restrict. __restrict has slightly different semantics than # restrict (it's a bit stronger, in that __restrict pointers can't # overlap even with non __restrict pointers), but I think it should be # okay under the circumstances where restrict is normally used. for acx_kw in restrict __restrict__ __restrict; do AC_TRY_COMPILE([], [float * $acx_kw x;], [acx_cv_c_restrict=$acx_kw; break]) done AC_LANG_RESTORE ]) if test "$acx_cv_c_restrict" != "restrict"; then acx_kw="$acx_cv_c_restrict" if test "$acx_kw" = unsupported; then acx_kw=""; fi AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(restrict, $acx_kw, [Define to equivalent of C99 restrict keyword, or to nothing if this is not supported. Do not define if restrict is supported directly.]) fi ])