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I'm trying to build dia on my windows system with the MinGW toolkit.

What I did:

  1. Downloaded GTK all-in-one package and unpackged it to C:\gtk and did the setup described in the readme.
  2. Downloaded intltool-0.50.2 and unpacked it into the C:\gtk dir
  3. Added gtk's bin directory to PATH environment variable
  4. Checked out dia into C:\dia\
  5. Opened a command line with admin privileges
  6. Opened a bash in /c/dia/ and typed autogen.sh

The Script is running until it tries to execute the macro IT_PROG_INTLTOOL(...)

./configure: line 15572: syntax error near unexpected token `0.35.0'
./configure: line 15572: `IT_PROG_INTLTOOL(0.35.0)'

When I go to configure.ac and comment the line (I know I shouldn't do so, just for test purposes) IT_PROG_INTLTOOL([0.35.0]) the next macro error comes up regarding PKG_CHECK_MODULES.

./configure: line 15577: syntax error near unexpected token `GMODULE,'
./configure: line 15577: `PKG_CHECK_MODULES(GMODULE, gmodule-2.0 gobject-2.0)'

As far as I can see, all these required libs (intltool, gmodule, pango, freetype, pkg-config, ...) are installed and can be found. But why do these macros not work?

1 Answer 1

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It looks like the configure script was regenerated and there were some errors while it was generated.

  • You could try touch(1)'ing (however this is done on Windows...) files to avoid that the buildsystem tries to regenerate configure
  • Make sure your autotools are all installed and that autoreconf does not spit out any warnings

  • There are binary packages for dia on Windows available http://dia-installer.de/index.html.en

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  • Thanks for your reply. I am aware of the dia windows installer but I'm particularly interested in building it myself. Somehow the *.m4 files containing the macros could not be found, so as a workaround I copied them by hand into a local m4 directory which did the job. But I think this might not be the cleanest solution one could come up with. Building dia on windows is definitely not trivial... Jul 16, 2014 at 16:58
  • aclocal has an -I flag, so instead of copying the m4 macros, you might as well specify the path were they are found.
    – arved
    Jul 17, 2014 at 11:05

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