grub/m4/locale-fr.m4
Yves Blusseau 15c6926126 Use gnulib-tool to create gnulib source files.
* Add gnulib files generated by gnulib-tool in build-aux, m4 and
    grub-core/gnulib directories
    * .bzignore: Add **/.deps and autogenerated gnulib files
    * configure.ac: Assign auxiliary directory to build-aux, add invocation
    of gnulib macros, add grub-core/gnulib/Makefile
    * Makefile.am: Add gnulib directory in SUBDIRS (removing unnecessary .),
    include m4 directory to aclocal.
    * Makefile.util.def: Remove direct compilation of gnulib source files
    and use the new grub-core/gnulib/libgnu.a.
    * build-aux/config.rpath: move config.rpath from top directory to
    build-aux
    * conf/Makefile.common: Remove the macro _GL_UNUSED already defined
    in gnulib headers
    * conf/Makefile.extra-dist: Add m4/gnulib-cache.m4
    * grub-core/Makefile.core.def: Remove unnecessary extra_dist
    * grub-core/lib/posix_wrap/localcharset.h (locale_charset): Update
    header.
    * grub-core/lib/posix_wrap/langinfo.h (nl_langinfo): Return static
    string.
2010-09-20 12:35:33 +02:00

185 lines
7.3 KiB
Text

# locale-fr.m4 serial 11
dnl Copyright (C) 2003, 2005-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
dnl This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
dnl gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
dnl with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
dnl From Bruno Haible.
dnl Determine the name of a french locale with traditional encoding.
AC_DEFUN([gt_LOCALE_FR],
[
AC_REQUIRE([AC_CANONICAL_HOST])
AC_REQUIRE([AM_LANGINFO_CODESET])
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for a traditional french locale], [gt_cv_locale_fr], [
AC_LANG_CONFTEST([AC_LANG_SOURCE([
changequote(,)dnl
#include <locale.h>
#include <time.h>
#if HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET
# include <langinfo.h>
#endif
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
struct tm t;
char buf[16];
int main () {
/* Check whether the given locale name is recognized by the system. */
if (setlocale (LC_ALL, "") == NULL) return 1;
/* Check whether nl_langinfo(CODESET) is nonempty and not "ASCII" or "646".
On MacOS X 10.3.5 (Darwin 7.5) in the fr_FR locale, nl_langinfo(CODESET)
is empty, and the behaviour of Tcl 8.4 in this locale is not useful.
On OpenBSD 4.0, when an unsupported locale is specified, setlocale()
succeeds but then nl_langinfo(CODESET) is "646". In this situation,
some unit tests fail. */
#if HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET
{
const char *cs = nl_langinfo (CODESET);
if (cs[0] == '\0' || strcmp (cs, "ASCII") == 0 || strcmp (cs, "646") == 0)
return 1;
}
#endif
#ifdef __CYGWIN__
/* On Cygwin, avoid locale names without encoding suffix, because the
locale_charset() function relies on the encoding suffix. Note that
LC_ALL is set on the command line. */
if (strchr (getenv ("LC_ALL"), '.') == NULL) return 1;
#endif
/* Check whether in the abbreviation of the second month, the second
character (should be U+00E9: LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE) is only
one byte long. This excludes the UTF-8 encoding. */
t.tm_year = 1975 - 1900; t.tm_mon = 2 - 1; t.tm_mday = 4;
if (strftime (buf, sizeof (buf), "%b", &t) < 3 || buf[2] != 'v') return 1;
/* Check whether the decimal separator is a comma.
On NetBSD 3.0 in the fr_FR.ISO8859-1 locale, localeconv()->decimal_point
are nl_langinfo(RADIXCHAR) are both ".". */
if (localeconv () ->decimal_point[0] != ',') return 1;
return 0;
}
changequote([,])dnl
])])
if AC_TRY_EVAL([ac_link]) && test -s conftest$ac_exeext; then
# Setting LC_ALL is not enough. Need to set LC_TIME to empty, because
# otherwise on MacOS X 10.3.5 the LC_TIME=C from the beginning of the
# configure script would override the LC_ALL setting. Likewise for
# LC_CTYPE, which is also set at the beginning of the configure script.
# Test for the usual locale name.
if (LC_ALL=fr_FR LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then
gt_cv_locale_fr=fr_FR
else
# Test for the locale name with explicit encoding suffix.
if (LC_ALL=fr_FR.ISO-8859-1 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then
gt_cv_locale_fr=fr_FR.ISO-8859-1
else
# Test for the AIX, OSF/1, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD locale name.
if (LC_ALL=fr_FR.ISO8859-1 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then
gt_cv_locale_fr=fr_FR.ISO8859-1
else
# Test for the HP-UX locale name.
if (LC_ALL=fr_FR.iso88591 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then
gt_cv_locale_fr=fr_FR.iso88591
else
# Test for the Solaris 7 locale name.
if (LC_ALL=fr LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then
gt_cv_locale_fr=fr
else
# None found.
gt_cv_locale_fr=none
fi
fi
fi
fi
fi
fi
rm -fr conftest*
])
LOCALE_FR=$gt_cv_locale_fr
AC_SUBST([LOCALE_FR])
])
dnl Determine the name of a french locale with UTF-8 encoding.
AC_DEFUN([gt_LOCALE_FR_UTF8],
[
AC_REQUIRE([AM_LANGINFO_CODESET])
AC_CACHE_CHECK([for a french Unicode locale], [gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8], [
AC_LANG_CONFTEST([AC_LANG_SOURCE([
changequote(,)dnl
#include <locale.h>
#include <time.h>
#if HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET
# include <langinfo.h>
#endif
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
struct tm t;
char buf[16];
int main () {
/* On BeOS and Haiku, locales are not implemented in libc. Rather, libintl
imitates locale dependent behaviour by looking at the environment
variables, and all locales use the UTF-8 encoding. */
#if !(defined __BEOS__ || defined __HAIKU__)
/* Check whether the given locale name is recognized by the system. */
if (setlocale (LC_ALL, "") == NULL) return 1;
/* Check whether nl_langinfo(CODESET) is nonempty and not "ASCII" or "646".
On MacOS X 10.3.5 (Darwin 7.5) in the fr_FR locale, nl_langinfo(CODESET)
is empty, and the behaviour of Tcl 8.4 in this locale is not useful.
On OpenBSD 4.0, when an unsupported locale is specified, setlocale()
succeeds but then nl_langinfo(CODESET) is "646". In this situation,
some unit tests fail. */
# if HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET
{
const char *cs = nl_langinfo (CODESET);
if (cs[0] == '\0' || strcmp (cs, "ASCII") == 0 || strcmp (cs, "646") == 0)
return 1;
}
# endif
# ifdef __CYGWIN__
/* On Cygwin, avoid locale names without encoding suffix, because the
locale_charset() function relies on the encoding suffix. Note that
LC_ALL is set on the command line. */
if (strchr (getenv ("LC_ALL"), '.') == NULL) return 1;
# endif
/* Check whether in the abbreviation of the second month, the second
character (should be U+00E9: LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE) is
two bytes long, with UTF-8 encoding. */
t.tm_year = 1975 - 1900; t.tm_mon = 2 - 1; t.tm_mday = 4;
if (strftime (buf, sizeof (buf), "%b", &t) < 4
|| buf[1] != (char) 0xc3 || buf[2] != (char) 0xa9 || buf[3] != 'v')
return 1;
#endif
/* Check whether the decimal separator is a comma.
On NetBSD 3.0 in the fr_FR.ISO8859-1 locale, localeconv()->decimal_point
are nl_langinfo(RADIXCHAR) are both ".". */
if (localeconv () ->decimal_point[0] != ',') return 1;
return 0;
}
changequote([,])dnl
])])
if AC_TRY_EVAL([ac_link]) && test -s conftest$ac_exeext; then
# Setting LC_ALL is not enough. Need to set LC_TIME to empty, because
# otherwise on MacOS X 10.3.5 the LC_TIME=C from the beginning of the
# configure script would override the LC_ALL setting. Likewise for
# LC_CTYPE, which is also set at the beginning of the configure script.
# Test for the usual locale name.
if (LC_ALL=fr_FR LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then
gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8=fr_FR
else
# Test for the locale name with explicit encoding suffix.
if (LC_ALL=fr_FR.UTF-8 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then
gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8=fr_FR.UTF-8
else
# Test for the Solaris 7 locale name.
if (LC_ALL=fr.UTF-8 LC_TIME= LC_CTYPE= ./conftest; exit) 2>/dev/null; then
gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8=fr.UTF-8
else
# None found.
gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8=none
fi
fi
fi
fi
rm -fr conftest*
])
LOCALE_FR_UTF8=$gt_cv_locale_fr_utf8
AC_SUBST([LOCALE_FR_UTF8])
])