12.4. Running autogen.pl
You can now run PMIx’s top-level autogen.pl script. This script
will invoke the GNU Autoconf, Automake, and Libtool commands in the
proper order and do a bunch of component discovery and housekeeping to
setup to run PMIx’s top-level configure script.
Running autogen.pl may take a few minutes, depending on your
system. It’s not very exciting to watch.
If you have a multi-processor system, enabling the multi-threaded
behavior in Automake 1.11 (or newer) can result in autogen.pl
running faster. Do this by setting the AUTOMAKE_JOBS environment
variable to the number of processors (threads) that you want it to use
before invoking autogen.pl. For example (you can put this in your
shell startup files):
# For bash/sh/zsh:
export AUTOMAKE_JOBS=4
# For csh/tcsh:
set AUTOMAKE_JOBS 4
Important
autogen.pl will fail and report an error if you
forgot to install the required submodule prior to running the
autogen script. You can either do this by adding the --recursive
flag to your Git clone command, or by manually populating the
submodule by running:
shell$ git submodule update --init
prior to executing autogen.pl.
Important
You generally need to run autogen.pl whenever the
top-level file configure.ac changes, or any files in the
config/ or <project>/config/ directories change (these
directories are where a lot of “include” files for PMIx’s
configure script live).
Note
You do NOT need to re-run autogen.pl if you modify a
Makefile.am.