Jelte Jansen 716006fe1b [1086] Replace addr#port with addr:port il y a 12 ans
..
host 716006fe1b [1086] Replace addr#port with addr:port il y a 12 ans
m4 acd8358522 [2667] minor doc update: mentioning --disable-rpath and not mentioning -rpath il y a 12 ans
AUTHORS 370861e432 [1870] created a separate dir to store example "3rd party" apps using BIND 10. il y a 12 ans
COPYING f00da76cb7 [1870] some more doc cleanups il y a 12 ans
ChangeLog 370861e432 [1870] created a separate dir to store example "3rd party" apps using BIND 10. il y a 12 ans
INSTALL f00da76cb7 [1870] some more doc cleanups il y a 12 ans
Makefile.am 5bc38109a4 [1870] introduced separate m4 files for dependencies. il y a 12 ans
NEWS 370861e432 [1870] created a separate dir to store example "3rd party" apps using BIND 10. il y a 12 ans
README 6ae0d625f0 [master] many misspelling and typo fixes il y a 12 ans
configure.ac acd8358522 [2667] minor doc update: mentioning --disable-rpath and not mentioning -rpath il y a 12 ans

README

This is the top directory for sample programs that can be developed
using public BIND 10 libraries outside of the BIND 10 project. It's
intended to be built with installed BIND 10 header files and library
objects, so it's not a target of the main build tree, and does not
refer to any other part of the BIND 10 source tree that contains
this directory.

On the top (sub) directory (where this README file is stored), we
provide a sample configure.ac and Makefile.am files for GNU automake
environments with helper autoconf macros to detect the availability and
location of BIND 10 header files and library objects.

You can use the configure.ac and Makefile.am files with macros under
the "m4" subdirectory as a template for your own project. The key is
to call the AX_ISC_BIND10 function (as the sample configure.ac does)
from your configure.ac. Then it will check the availability of
necessary stuff and set some corresponding AC variables. You can then
use the resulting variables in your Makefile.in or Makefile.am.

If you use automake, don't forget adding the following line to the top
level Makefile.am:

ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS = -I m4

This is necessary to incorporate the helper macro definitions.

If you don't use automake but autoconf, make sure to add the following
to the configure.ac file:

sinclude(m4/ax_boost_include.m4)
sinclude(m4/ax_isc_bind10.m4)
(and same for other m4 files as they are added under m4/)

On some systems, especially if you have installed the BIND 10
libraries in an uncommon path, programs linked with the BIND 10
library may not work at run time due to the "missing" shared library.
Normally, you should be able to avoid this problem by making sure
to invoking the program explicitly specifying the path to the library,
e.g., "LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib/bind10 ./my_bind10_app", or
you may not even notice the issue if you have installed BIND 10
library in a common library path on your system (sometimes you may
still need to run ldconfig(8) beforehand). Another option is to embed
the path to the library in your program. While this approach is
controversial, and some people rather choose the alternatives, we
provide a helper tool in case you want to use this option: see the
lines using BIND10_RPATH in the sample configure.ac file of this
directory.