Allow multi-word "install" command.
Autoconf can determine that the correct install command includes flags,
e.g., "/usr/bin/install -c". When using this as a command, we can't
enclose the value in double-quotes, as that makes some shells use the
whole expression as a filename:
# this is the value returned by autoconf and stored in CT_install
$ ins="/usr/bin/install -c"
# if we call it with quotes, the command is not found
$ "${ins}"
bash: /usr/bin/install -c: No such file or directory
# removing the quotes lets it work as expected
$ ${ins}
/usr/bin/install: missing file operand
Try `/usr/bin/install --help' for more information.
Signed-Off-By: Anthony Foiani <anthony.foiani@gmail.com>
1 diff -durN gcc-4.3.2.orig/libgcc/config/sh/t-linux gcc-4.3.2/libgcc/config/sh/t-linux
2 --- gcc-4.3.2.orig/libgcc/config/sh/t-linux 2009-03-07 11:42:38.000000000 +0100
3 +++ gcc-4.3.2/libgcc/config/sh/t-linux 2009-03-07 11:03:39.000000000 +0100
5 -Wl,--soname=@shlib_base_name@.so.1 \
6 -Wl,--version-script=@shlib_map_file@ \
7 -o @multilib_dir@/@shlib_base_name@.so.1.tmp @multilib_flags@ \
8 - @shlib_objs@ -lc && \
10 rm -f @multilib_dir@/@shlib_base_name@.so && \
11 if [ -f @multilib_dir@/@shlib_base_name@.so.1 ]; then \
12 mv -f @multilib_dir@/@shlib_base_name@.so.1 \