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/usr/share/automake-1.9/am/subdirs.am is in automake1.9 1.9.6+nogfdl-4ubuntu1.

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The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.

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## automake - create Makefile.in from Makefile.am
## Copyright (C) 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2005
## Free Software Foundation, Inc.

## This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
## it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
## the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
## any later version.

## This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
## but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
## MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
## GNU General Public License for more details.

## You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
## along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
## Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA
## 02110-1301, USA.

RECURSIVE_TARGETS += \
all-recursive check-recursive installcheck-recursive

.PHONY: $(RECURSIVE_TARGETS)

# This directory's subdirectories are mostly independent; you can cd
# into them and run `make' without going through this Makefile.
# To change the values of `make' variables: instead of editing Makefiles,
# (1) if the variable is set in `config.status', edit `config.status'
#     (which will cause the Makefiles to be regenerated when you run `make');
# (2) otherwise, pass the desired values on the `make' command line.

$(RECURSIVE_TARGETS):
## Using $failcom allows "-k" to keep its natural meaning when running a
## recursive rule.
	@failcom='exit 1'; \
	for f in x $$MAKEFLAGS; do \
	  case $$f in \
	    *=* | --[!k]*);; \
	    *k*) failcom='fail=yes';; \
	  esac; \
	done; \
	dot_seen=no; \
	target=`echo $@ | sed s/-recursive//`; \
	list='$(SUBDIRS)'; for subdir in $$list; do \
	  echo "Making $$target in $$subdir"; \
	  if test "$$subdir" = "."; then \
	    dot_seen=yes; \
	    local_target="$$target-am"; \
	  else \
	    local_target="$$target"; \
	  fi; \
	  (cd $$subdir && $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) $$local_target) \
	  || eval $$failcom; \
	done; \
	if test "$$dot_seen" = "no"; then \
	  $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) "$$target-am" || exit 1; \
	fi; test -z "$$fail"


mostlyclean: mostlyclean-recursive
clean: clean-recursive
distclean: distclean-recursive
maintainer-clean: maintainer-clean-recursive

.PHONY: mostlyclean-recursive clean-recursive distclean-recursive \
maintainer-clean-recursive

## We run all `clean' targets in reverse order.  Why?  It's an attempt
## to alleviate a problem that can happen when dependencies are
## enabled.  In this case, the .P file in one directory can depend on
## some automatically generated header in an earlier directory.  Since
## the dependencies are required before any target is examined, make
## bombs.
mostlyclean-recursive clean-recursive distclean-recursive \
maintainer-clean-recursive:
## Using $failcom allows "-k" to keep its natural meaning when running a
## recursive rule.
	@failcom='exit 1'; \
	for f in x $$MAKEFLAGS; do \
	  case $$f in \
	    *=* | --[!k]*);; \
	    *k*) failcom='fail=yes';; \
	  esac; \
	done; \
	dot_seen=no; \
## For distclean and maintainer-clean we make sure to use the full
## list of subdirectories.  We do this so that `configure; make
## distclean' really is a no-op, even if SUBDIRS is conditional.  For
## other clean targets this doesn't matter.
	case "$@" in \
	  distclean-* | maintainer-clean-*) list='$(DIST_SUBDIRS)' ;; \
	  *) list='$(SUBDIRS)' ;; \
	esac; \
	rev=''; for subdir in $$list; do \
	  if test "$$subdir" = "."; then :; else \
	    rev="$$subdir $$rev"; \
	  fi; \
	done; \
## Always do `.' last.
	rev="$$rev ."; \
	target=`echo $@ | sed s/-recursive//`; \
	for subdir in $$rev; do \
	  echo "Making $$target in $$subdir"; \
	  if test "$$subdir" = "."; then \
	    local_target="$$target-am"; \
	  else \
	    local_target="$$target"; \
	  fi; \
	  (cd $$subdir && $(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) $$local_target) \
	  || eval $$failcom; \
	done && test -z "$$fail"