/* xmlrpc_config.h is generated from xmlrpc_config.h.in by 'configure'. This file just uses plain AC_SUBST substitution, the same as Makefile.config. Wherever you see @XXX@, that gets replaced by the value of 'configure' variable XXX. Logical macros are 0 or 1 instead of the more traditional defined and undefined. That's so we can distinguish when compiling code between "false" and some problem with the code. */ /* We hope to replace xmlrpc_amconfig.h some day with something that doesn't require a whole special set of software to build, to make xmlrpc-c approachable by dumber developers. */ #include "xmlrpc_amconfig.h" #ifndef __xmlrpc_config_h__ #define __xmlrpc_config_h__ #define VA_LIST_IS_ARRAY @VA_LIST_IS_ARRAY_DEFINE@ #define HAVE_LIBWWW_SSL @HAVE_LIBWWW_SSL_DEFINE@ #define ATTR_UNUSED @ATTR_UNUSED@ #cmakedefine HAVE_UNICODE_WCHAR @HAVE_UNICODE_WCHAR@ #define DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR "@DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR@" #cmakedefine HAVE_PTHREADS @HAVE_PTHREADS@ /* Xmlrpc-c code uses __inline__ to declare functions that should be compiled as inline code. GNU C recognizes the __inline__ keyword. Others recognize 'inline' or '__inline' or nothing at all to say a function should be inlined. We could make 'configure' simply do a trial compile to figure out which one, but for now, this approximation is easier: */ #ifdef _WIN32 # define __inline__ __inline #else # ifndef __GNUC__ # ifndef __inline__ # ifdef __sgi # define __inline__ __inline # else # define __inline__ # endif # endif # endif #endif /* A timeout in milliseconds. */ typedef unsigned long timeout_t; #if !defined(WIN32) && defined(_WIN32) # define WIN32 #endif #if defined(WIN32) #include #include #include #if !defined (vsnprintf) #define vsnprintf _vsnprintf #endif #if !defined (snprintf) #define snprintf _snprintf #endif #include #include #include /* for _chdir() */ /* __inline BOOL setenv(const char* name, const char* value, int i) { return (SetEnvironmentVariable(name, value) != 0) ? TRUE : FALSE; } */ #endif #endif