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+There are two ways to build this code;
+
+(1) Manually
+
+(2) Using all-singing all-dancing (all-confusing) autotools, ie. autoconf,
+automake, and their little friends (autoheader, etc).
+
+=================
+Building Manually
+=================
+
+There is a basic "Makefile" in this directory that gets moved out of the way and
+ignored when building with autoconf et al. This Makefile is suitable for
+building tunala on Linux using gcc. Any other platform probably requires some
+tweaking. Here are the various bits you might need to do if you want to build
+this way and the default Makefile isn't sufficient;
+
+* Compiler: Edit the "CC" definition in Makefile
+
+* Headers, features: tunala.h controls what happens in the non-autoconf world.
+ It, by default, assumes the system has *everything* (except autoconf's
+ "config.h") so if a target system is missing something it must define the
+ appropriate "NO_***" symbols in CFLAGS. These include;
+
+ - NO_HAVE_UNISTD_H, NO_HAVE_FCNTL_H, NO_HAVE_LIMITS_H
+ Indicates the compiling system doesn't have (or need) these header files.
+ - NO_HAVE_STRSTR, NO_HAVE_STRTOUL
+ Indicates the compiling system doesn't have these functions. Replacements
+ are compiled and used in breakage.c
+ - NO_HAVE_SELECT, NO_HAVE_SOCKET
+ Pointless symbols - these indicate select() and/or socket() are missing in
+ which case the program won't compile anyway.
+
+ If you want to specify any of these, add them with "-D" prefixed to each in
+ the CFLAGS definition in Makefile.
+
+* Compilation flags: edit DEBUG_FLAGS and/or CFLAGS directly to control the
+ flags passed to the compiler. This can also be used to change the degree of
+ optimisation.
+
+* Linker flags: some systems (eg. Solaris) require extra linker flags such as;
+ -ldl, -lsocket, -lnsl, etc. If unsure, bring up the man page for whichever
+ function is "undefined" when the linker fails - that usually indicates what
+ you need to add. Make changes to the LINK_FLAGS symbol.
+
+* Linker command: if a different linker syntax or even a different program is
+ required to link, edit the linker line directly in the "tunala:" target
+ definition - it currently assumes the "CC" (compiler) program is used to link.
+
+======================
+Building Automagically
+======================
+
+Automagic building is handled courtesy of autoconf, automake, etc. There are in
+fact two steps required to build, and only the first has to be done on a system
+with these tools installed (and if I was prepared to bloat out the CVS
+repository, I could store these extra files, but I'm not).
+
+First step: "autogunk.sh"
+-------------------------
+
+The "./autogunk.sh" script will call all the necessary autotool commands to
+create missing files and run automake and autoconf. The result is that a
+"./configure" script should be generated and a "Makefile.in" generated from the
+supplied "Makefile.am". NB: This script also moves the "manual" Makefile (see
+above) out of the way and calls it "Makefile.plain" - the "ungunk" script
+reverses this to leave the directory it was previously.
+
+Once "ungunk" has been run, the resulting directory should be able to build on
+other systems without autoconf, automake, or libtool. Which is what the second
+step describes;
+
+Second step: "./configure"
+--------------------------
+
+The second step is to run the generated "./configure" script to create a
+config.h header for your system and to generate a "Makefile" (generated from
+"Makefile.in") tweaked to compile on your system. This is the standard sort of
+thing you see in GNU packages, for example, and the standard tricks also work.
+Eg. to override "configure"'s choice of compiler, set the CC environment
+variable prior to running configure, eg.
+
+ CC=gcc ./configure
+
+would cause "gcc" to be used even if there is an otherwise preferable (to
+autoconf) native compiler on your system.
+
+After this run "make" and it should build the "tunala" executable.
+
+Notes
+-----
+
+- Some versions of autoconf (or automake?) generate a Makefile syntax that gives
+ trouble to some "make" programs on some systems (eg. OpenBSD). If this
+ happens, either build 'Manually' (see above) or use "gmake" instead of "make".
+ I don't like this either but like even less the idea of sifting into all the
+ script magic crud that's involved.
+
+- On a solaris system I tried, the "configure" script specified some broken
+ compiler flags in the resulting Makefile that don't even get echoed to
+ stdout/err when the error happens (evil!). If this happens, go into the
+ generated Makefile, find the two affected targets ("%.o:" and "%.lo"), and
+ remove the offending hidden option in the $(COMPILE) line all the sludge after
+ the two first lines of script (ie. after the "echo" and the "COMPILE" lines).
+ NB: This will probably only function if "--disable-shared" was used, otherwise
+ who knows what would result ...
+