# Allow users to override the namespace we define our application's classes in # Arg $1 is the default namespace to use if --enable-namespace isn't present. # In general, $1 should be 'google', so we put all our exported symbols in a # unique namespace that is not likely to conflict with anyone else. However, # when it makes sense -- for instance, when publishing stl-like code -- you # may want to go with a different default, like 'std'. # We guarantee the invariant that GOOGLE_NAMESPACE starts with ::, # unless it's the empty string. Thus, it's always safe to do # GOOGLE_NAMESPACE::foo and be sure you're getting the foo that's # actually in the google namespace, and not some other namespace that # the namespace rules might kick in. AC_DEFUN([AC_DEFINE_GOOGLE_NAMESPACE], [google_namespace_default=[$1] AC_ARG_ENABLE(namespace, [ --enable-namespace=FOO to define these Google classes in the FOO namespace. --disable-namespace to define them in the global namespace. Default is to define them in namespace $1.], [case "$enableval" in yes) google_namespace="$google_namespace_default" ;; no) google_namespace="" ;; *) google_namespace="$enableval" ;; esac], [google_namespace="$google_namespace_default"]) if test -n "$google_namespace"; then ac_google_namespace="::$google_namespace" ac_google_start_namespace="namespace $google_namespace {" ac_google_end_namespace="}" else ac_google_namespace="" ac_google_start_namespace="" ac_google_end_namespace="" fi AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(GOOGLE_NAMESPACE, $ac_google_namespace, Namespace for Google classes) AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(_START_GOOGLE_NAMESPACE_, $ac_google_start_namespace, Puts following code inside the Google namespace) AC_DEFINE_UNQUOTED(_END_GOOGLE_NAMESPACE_, $ac_google_end_namespace, Stops putting the code inside the Google namespace) ])