| This is make.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.5 from make.texi. |
| |
| This file documents the GNU 'make' utility, which determines |
| automatically which pieces of a large program need to be recompiled, and |
| issues the commands to recompile them. |
| |
| This is Edition 0.74, last updated 21 May 2016, of 'The GNU Make |
| Manual', for GNU 'make' version 4.2.1. |
| |
| Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, |
| 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, |
| 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
| Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this |
| document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, |
| Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software |
| Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts |
| being "A GNU Manual," and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) |
| below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled |
| "GNU Free Documentation License." |
| |
| (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: "You have the freedom to copy and |
| modify this GNU manual. Buying copies from the FSF supports it in |
| developing GNU and promoting software freedom." |
| INFO-DIR-SECTION Software development |
| START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY |
| * Make: (make). Remake files automatically. |
| END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Top, Next: Overview, Prev: (dir), Up: (dir) |
| |
| GNU 'make' |
| ********** |
| |
| This file documents the GNU 'make' utility, which determines |
| automatically which pieces of a large program need to be recompiled, and |
| issues the commands to recompile them. |
| |
| This is Edition 0.74, last updated 21 May 2016, of 'The GNU Make |
| Manual', for GNU 'make' version 4.2.1. |
| |
| Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, |
| 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, |
| 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
| Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this |
| document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, |
| Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software |
| Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts |
| being "A GNU Manual," and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) |
| below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled |
| "GNU Free Documentation License." |
| |
| (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: "You have the freedom to copy and |
| modify this GNU manual. Buying copies from the FSF supports it in |
| developing GNU and promoting software freedom." |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Overview:: Overview of 'make'. |
| * Introduction:: An introduction to 'make'. |
| * Makefiles:: Makefiles tell 'make' what to do. |
| * Rules:: Rules describe when a file must be remade. |
| * Recipes:: Recipes say how to remake a file. |
| * Using Variables:: You can use variables to avoid repetition. |
| * Conditionals:: Use or ignore parts of the makefile based |
| on the values of variables. |
| * Functions:: Many powerful ways to manipulate text. |
| * Invoking make: Running. How to invoke 'make' on the command line. |
| * Implicit Rules:: Use implicit rules to treat many files alike, |
| based on their file names. |
| * Archives:: How 'make' can update library archives. |
| * Extending make:: Using extensions to 'make'. |
| * Integrating make:: Integrating 'make' with other tools. |
| * Features:: Features GNU 'make' has over other 'make's. |
| * Missing:: What GNU 'make' lacks from other 'make's. |
| * Makefile Conventions:: Conventions for writing makefiles for |
| GNU programs. |
| * Quick Reference:: A quick reference for experienced users. |
| * Error Messages:: A list of common errors generated by 'make'. |
| * Complex Makefile:: A real example of a straightforward, |
| but nontrivial, makefile. |
| |
| * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual. |
| * Concept Index:: Index of Concepts. |
| * Name Index:: Index of Functions, Variables, & Directives. |
| |
| -- The Detailed Node Listing -- |
| |
| Overview of 'make' |
| |
| * Preparing:: Preparing and running 'make'. |
| * Reading:: On reading this text. |
| * Bugs:: Problems and bugs. |
| |
| An Introduction to Makefiles |
| |
| * Rule Introduction:: What a rule looks like. |
| * Simple Makefile:: A simple makefile. |
| * How Make Works:: How 'make' processes this makefile. |
| * Variables Simplify:: Variables make makefiles simpler. |
| * make Deduces:: Letting 'make' deduce the recipes. |
| * Combine By Prerequisite:: Another style of makefile. |
| * Cleanup:: Rules for cleaning the directory. |
| |
| Writing Makefiles |
| |
| * Makefile Contents:: What makefiles contain. |
| * Makefile Names:: How to name your makefile. |
| * Include:: How one makefile can use another makefile. |
| * MAKEFILES Variable:: The environment can specify extra makefiles. |
| * Remaking Makefiles:: How makefiles get remade. |
| * Overriding Makefiles:: How to override part of one makefile |
| with another makefile. |
| * Reading Makefiles:: How makefiles are parsed. |
| * Secondary Expansion:: How and when secondary expansion is performed. |
| |
| What Makefiles Contain |
| |
| * Splitting Lines:: Splitting long lines in makefiles |
| |
| Writing Rules |
| |
| * Rule Example:: An example explained. |
| * Rule Syntax:: General syntax explained. |
| * Prerequisite Types:: There are two types of prerequisites. |
| * Wildcards:: Using wildcard characters such as '*'. |
| * Directory Search:: Searching other directories for source files. |
| * Phony Targets:: Using a target that is not a real file's name. |
| * Force Targets:: You can use a target without a recipe |
| or prerequisites to mark other targets |
| as phony. |
| * Empty Targets:: When only the date matters and the |
| files are empty. |
| * Special Targets:: Targets with special built-in meanings. |
| * Multiple Targets:: When to make use of several targets in a rule. |
| * Multiple Rules:: How to use several rules with the same target. |
| * Static Pattern:: Static pattern rules apply to multiple targets |
| and can vary the prerequisites according to |
| the target name. |
| * Double-Colon:: How to use a special kind of rule to allow |
| several independent rules for one target. |
| * Automatic Prerequisites:: How to automatically generate rules giving |
| prerequisites from source files themselves. |
| |
| Using Wildcard Characters in File Names |
| |
| * Wildcard Examples:: Several examples. |
| * Wildcard Pitfall:: Problems to avoid. |
| * Wildcard Function:: How to cause wildcard expansion where |
| it does not normally take place. |
| |
| Searching Directories for Prerequisites |
| |
| * General Search:: Specifying a search path that applies |
| to every prerequisite. |
| * Selective Search:: Specifying a search path |
| for a specified class of names. |
| * Search Algorithm:: When and how search paths are applied. |
| * Recipes/Search:: How to write recipes that work together |
| with search paths. |
| * Implicit/Search:: How search paths affect implicit rules. |
| * Libraries/Search:: Directory search for link libraries. |
| |
| Static Pattern Rules |
| |
| * Static Usage:: The syntax of static pattern rules. |
| * Static versus Implicit:: When are they better than implicit rules? |
| |
| Writing Recipes in Rules |
| |
| * Recipe Syntax:: Recipe syntax features and pitfalls. |
| * Echoing:: How to control when recipes are echoed. |
| * Execution:: How recipes are executed. |
| * Parallel:: How recipes can be executed in parallel. |
| * Errors:: What happens after a recipe execution error. |
| * Interrupts:: What happens when a recipe is interrupted. |
| * Recursion:: Invoking 'make' from makefiles. |
| * Canned Recipes:: Defining canned recipes. |
| * Empty Recipes:: Defining useful, do-nothing recipes. |
| |
| Recipe Syntax |
| |
| * Splitting Recipe Lines:: Breaking long recipe lines for readability. |
| * Variables in Recipes:: Using 'make' variables in recipes. |
| |
| Recipe Execution |
| |
| * One Shell:: One shell for all lines in a recipe. |
| * Choosing the Shell:: How 'make' chooses the shell used |
| to run recipes. |
| |
| Parallel Execution |
| |
| * Parallel Output:: Handling output during parallel execution |
| * Parallel Input:: Handling input during parallel execution |
| |
| Recursive Use of 'make' |
| |
| * MAKE Variable:: The special effects of using '$(MAKE)'. |
| * Variables/Recursion:: How to communicate variables to a sub-'make'. |
| * Options/Recursion:: How to communicate options to a sub-'make'. |
| * -w Option:: How the '-w' or '--print-directory' option |
| helps debug use of recursive 'make' commands. |
| |
| How to Use Variables |
| |
| * Reference:: How to use the value of a variable. |
| * Flavors:: Variables come in two flavors. |
| * Advanced:: Advanced features for referencing a variable. |
| * Values:: All the ways variables get their values. |
| * Setting:: How to set a variable in the makefile. |
| * Appending:: How to append more text to the old value |
| of a variable. |
| * Override Directive:: How to set a variable in the makefile even if |
| the user has set it with a command argument. |
| * Multi-Line:: An alternate way to set a variable |
| to a multi-line string. |
| * Undefine Directive:: How to undefine a variable so that it appears |
| as if it was never set. |
| * Environment:: Variable values can come from the environment. |
| * Target-specific:: Variable values can be defined on a per-target |
| basis. |
| * Pattern-specific:: Target-specific variable values can be applied |
| to a group of targets that match a pattern. |
| * Suppressing Inheritance:: Suppress inheritance of variables. |
| * Special Variables:: Variables with special meaning or behavior. |
| |
| Advanced Features for Reference to Variables |
| |
| * Substitution Refs:: Referencing a variable with |
| substitutions on the value. |
| * Computed Names:: Computing the name of the variable to refer to. |
| |
| Conditional Parts of Makefiles |
| |
| * Conditional Example:: Example of a conditional |
| * Conditional Syntax:: The syntax of conditionals. |
| * Testing Flags:: Conditionals that test flags. |
| |
| Functions for Transforming Text |
| |
| * Syntax of Functions:: How to write a function call. |
| * Text Functions:: General-purpose text manipulation functions. |
| * File Name Functions:: Functions for manipulating file names. |
| * Conditional Functions:: Functions that implement conditions. |
| * Foreach Function:: Repeat some text with controlled variation. |
| * File Function:: Write text to a file. |
| * Call Function:: Expand a user-defined function. |
| * Value Function:: Return the un-expanded value of a variable. |
| * Eval Function:: Evaluate the arguments as makefile syntax. |
| * Origin Function:: Find where a variable got its value. |
| * Flavor Function:: Find out the flavor of a variable. |
| * Make Control Functions:: Functions that control how make runs. |
| * Shell Function:: Substitute the output of a shell command. |
| * Guile Function:: Use GNU Guile embedded scripting language. |
| |
| How to Run 'make' |
| |
| * Makefile Arguments:: How to specify which makefile to use. |
| * Goals:: How to use goal arguments to specify which |
| parts of the makefile to use. |
| * Instead of Execution:: How to use mode flags to specify what |
| kind of thing to do with the recipes |
| in the makefile other than simply |
| execute them. |
| * Avoiding Compilation:: How to avoid recompiling certain files. |
| * Overriding:: How to override a variable to specify |
| an alternate compiler and other things. |
| * Testing:: How to proceed past some errors, to |
| test compilation. |
| * Options Summary:: Summary of Options |
| |
| Using Implicit Rules |
| |
| * Using Implicit:: How to use an existing implicit rule |
| to get the recipes for updating a file. |
| * Catalogue of Rules:: A list of built-in rules. |
| * Implicit Variables:: How to change what predefined rules do. |
| * Chained Rules:: How to use a chain of implicit rules. |
| * Pattern Rules:: How to define new implicit rules. |
| * Last Resort:: How to define a recipe for rules which |
| cannot find any. |
| * Suffix Rules:: The old-fashioned style of implicit rule. |
| * Implicit Rule Search:: The precise algorithm for applying |
| implicit rules. |
| |
| Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules |
| |
| * Pattern Intro:: An introduction to pattern rules. |
| * Pattern Examples:: Examples of pattern rules. |
| * Automatic Variables:: How to use automatic variables in the |
| recipe of implicit rules. |
| * Pattern Match:: How patterns match. |
| * Match-Anything Rules:: Precautions you should take prior to |
| defining rules that can match any |
| target file whatever. |
| * Canceling Rules:: How to override or cancel built-in rules. |
| |
| Using 'make' to Update Archive Files |
| |
| * Archive Members:: Archive members as targets. |
| * Archive Update:: The implicit rule for archive member targets. |
| * Archive Pitfalls:: Dangers to watch out for when using archives. |
| * Archive Suffix Rules:: You can write a special kind of suffix rule |
| for updating archives. |
| |
| Implicit Rule for Archive Member Targets |
| |
| * Archive Symbols:: How to update archive symbol directories. |
| |
| Extending GNU 'make' |
| |
| * Guile Integration:: Using Guile as an embedded scripting language. |
| * Loading Objects:: Loading dynamic objects as extensions. |
| |
| GNU Guile Integration |
| |
| * Guile Types:: Converting Guile types to 'make' strings. |
| * Guile Interface:: Invoking 'make' functions from Guile. |
| * Guile Example:: Example using Guile in 'make'. |
| |
| Loading Dynamic Objects |
| |
| * load Directive:: Loading dynamic objects as extensions. |
| * Remaking Loaded Objects:: How loaded objects get remade. |
| * Loaded Object API:: Programmatic interface for loaded objects. |
| * Loaded Object Example:: Example of a loaded object |
| |
| Integrating GNU 'make' |
| |
| * Job Slots:: Share job slots with GNU 'make'. |
| * Terminal Output:: Control output to terminals. |
| |
| Sharing Job Slots with GNU 'make' |
| |
| * POSIX Jobserver:: Using the jobserver on POSIX systems. |
| * Windows Jobserver:: Using the jobserver on Windows systems. |
| |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Overview, Next: Introduction, Prev: Top, Up: Top |
| |
| 1 Overview of 'make' |
| ******************** |
| |
| The 'make' utility automatically determines which pieces of a large |
| program need to be recompiled, and issues commands to recompile them. |
| This manual describes GNU 'make', which was implemented by Richard |
| Stallman and Roland McGrath. Development since Version 3.76 has been |
| handled by Paul D. Smith. |
| |
| GNU 'make' conforms to section 6.2 of 'IEEE Standard 1003.2-1992' |
| (POSIX.2). |
| |
| Our examples show C programs, since they are most common, but you can |
| use 'make' with any programming language whose compiler can be run with |
| a shell command. Indeed, 'make' is not limited to programs. You can |
| use it to describe any task where some files must be updated |
| automatically from others whenever the others change. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Preparing:: Preparing and running 'make'. |
| * Reading:: On reading this text. |
| * Bugs:: Problems and bugs. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Preparing, Next: Reading, Prev: Overview, Up: Overview |
| |
| Preparing and Running Make |
| ========================== |
| |
| To prepare to use 'make', you must write a file called the "makefile" |
| that describes the relationships among files in your program and |
| provides commands for updating each file. In a program, typically, the |
| executable file is updated from object files, which are in turn made by |
| compiling source files. |
| |
| Once a suitable makefile exists, each time you change some source |
| files, this simple shell command: |
| |
| make |
| |
| suffices to perform all necessary recompilations. The 'make' program |
| uses the makefile data base and the last-modification times of the files |
| to decide which of the files need to be updated. For each of those |
| files, it issues the recipes recorded in the data base. |
| |
| You can provide command line arguments to 'make' to control which |
| files should be recompiled, or how. *Note How to Run 'make': Running. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Reading, Next: Bugs, Prev: Preparing, Up: Overview |
| |
| 1.1 How to Read This Manual |
| =========================== |
| |
| If you are new to 'make', or are looking for a general introduction, |
| read the first few sections of each chapter, skipping the later |
| sections. In each chapter, the first few sections contain introductory |
| or general information and the later sections contain specialized or |
| technical information. The exception is the second chapter, *note An |
| Introduction to Makefiles: Introduction, all of which is introductory. |
| |
| If you are familiar with other 'make' programs, see *note Features of |
| GNU 'make': Features, which lists the enhancements GNU 'make' has, and |
| *note Incompatibilities and Missing Features: Missing, which explains |
| the few things GNU 'make' lacks that others have. |
| |
| For a quick summary, see *note Options Summary::, *note Quick |
| Reference::, and *note Special Targets::. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Bugs, Prev: Reading, Up: Overview |
| |
| 1.2 Problems and Bugs |
| ===================== |
| |
| If you have problems with GNU 'make' or think you've found a bug, please |
| report it to the developers; we cannot promise to do anything but we |
| might well want to fix it. |
| |
| Before reporting a bug, make sure you've actually found a real bug. |
| Carefully reread the documentation and see if it really says you can do |
| what you're trying to do. If it's not clear whether you should be able |
| to do something or not, report that too; it's a bug in the |
| documentation! |
| |
| Before reporting a bug or trying to fix it yourself, try to isolate |
| it to the smallest possible makefile that reproduces the problem. Then |
| send us the makefile and the exact results 'make' gave you, including |
| any error or warning messages. Please don't paraphrase these messages: |
| it's best to cut and paste them into your report. When generating this |
| small makefile, be sure to not use any non-free or unusual tools in your |
| recipes: you can almost always emulate what such a tool would do with |
| simple shell commands. Finally, be sure to explain what you expected to |
| occur; this will help us decide whether the problem was really in the |
| documentation. |
| |
| Once you have a precise problem you can report it in one of two ways. |
| Either send electronic mail to: |
| |
| [email protected] |
| |
| or use our Web-based project management tool, at: |
| |
| http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/make/ |
| |
| In addition to the information above, please be careful to include the |
| version number of 'make' you are using. You can get this information |
| with the command 'make --version'. Be sure also to include the type of |
| machine and operating system you are using. One way to obtain this |
| information is by looking at the final lines of output from the command |
| 'make --help'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Introduction, Next: Makefiles, Prev: Overview, Up: Top |
| |
| 2 An Introduction to Makefiles |
| ****************************** |
| |
| You need a file called a "makefile" to tell 'make' what to do. Most |
| often, the makefile tells 'make' how to compile and link a program. |
| |
| In this chapter, we will discuss a simple makefile that describes how |
| to compile and link a text editor which consists of eight C source files |
| and three header files. The makefile can also tell 'make' how to run |
| miscellaneous commands when explicitly asked (for example, to remove |
| certain files as a clean-up operation). To see a more complex example |
| of a makefile, see *note Complex Makefile::. |
| |
| When 'make' recompiles the editor, each changed C source file must be |
| recompiled. If a header file has changed, each C source file that |
| includes the header file must be recompiled to be safe. Each |
| compilation produces an object file corresponding to the source file. |
| Finally, if any source file has been recompiled, all the object files, |
| whether newly made or saved from previous compilations, must be linked |
| together to produce the new executable editor. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Rule Introduction:: What a rule looks like. |
| * Simple Makefile:: A simple makefile. |
| * How Make Works:: How 'make' processes this makefile. |
| * Variables Simplify:: Variables make makefiles simpler. |
| * make Deduces:: Letting 'make' deduce the recipes. |
| * Combine By Prerequisite:: Another style of makefile. |
| * Cleanup:: Rules for cleaning the directory. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Rule Introduction, Next: Simple Makefile, Prev: Introduction, Up: Introduction |
| |
| 2.1 What a Rule Looks Like |
| ========================== |
| |
| A simple makefile consists of "rules" with the following shape: |
| |
| TARGET ... : PREREQUISITES ... |
| RECIPE |
| ... |
| ... |
| |
| A "target" is usually the name of a file that is generated by a |
| program; examples of targets are executable or object files. A target |
| can also be the name of an action to carry out, such as 'clean' (*note |
| Phony Targets::). |
| |
| A "prerequisite" is a file that is used as input to create the |
| target. A target often depends on several files. |
| |
| A "recipe" is an action that 'make' carries out. A recipe may have |
| more than one command, either on the same line or each on its own line. |
| *Please note:* you need to put a tab character at the beginning of every |
| recipe line! This is an obscurity that catches the unwary. If you |
| prefer to prefix your recipes with a character other than tab, you can |
| set the '.RECIPEPREFIX' variable to an alternate character (*note |
| Special Variables::). |
| |
| Usually a recipe is in a rule with prerequisites and serves to create |
| a target file if any of the prerequisites change. However, the rule |
| that specifies a recipe for the target need not have prerequisites. For |
| example, the rule containing the delete command associated with the |
| target 'clean' does not have prerequisites. |
| |
| A "rule", then, explains how and when to remake certain files which |
| are the targets of the particular rule. 'make' carries out the recipe |
| on the prerequisites to create or update the target. A rule can also |
| explain how and when to carry out an action. *Note Writing Rules: |
| Rules. |
| |
| A makefile may contain other text besides rules, but a simple |
| makefile need only contain rules. Rules may look somewhat more |
| complicated than shown in this template, but all fit the pattern more or |
| less. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Simple Makefile, Next: How Make Works, Prev: Rule Introduction, Up: Introduction |
| |
| 2.2 A Simple Makefile |
| ===================== |
| |
| Here is a straightforward makefile that describes the way an executable |
| file called 'edit' depends on eight object files which, in turn, depend |
| on eight C source and three header files. |
| |
| In this example, all the C files include 'defs.h', but only those |
| defining editing commands include 'command.h', and only low level files |
| that change the editor buffer include 'buffer.h'. |
| |
| edit : main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ |
| insert.o search.o files.o utils.o |
| cc -o edit main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ |
| insert.o search.o files.o utils.o |
| |
| main.o : main.c defs.h |
| cc -c main.c |
| kbd.o : kbd.c defs.h command.h |
| cc -c kbd.c |
| command.o : command.c defs.h command.h |
| cc -c command.c |
| display.o : display.c defs.h buffer.h |
| cc -c display.c |
| insert.o : insert.c defs.h buffer.h |
| cc -c insert.c |
| search.o : search.c defs.h buffer.h |
| cc -c search.c |
| files.o : files.c defs.h buffer.h command.h |
| cc -c files.c |
| utils.o : utils.c defs.h |
| cc -c utils.c |
| clean : |
| rm edit main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ |
| insert.o search.o files.o utils.o |
| |
| We split each long line into two lines using backslash/newline; this is |
| like using one long line, but is easier to read. *Note Splitting Long |
| Lines: Splitting Lines. |
| |
| To use this makefile to create the executable file called 'edit', |
| type: |
| |
| make |
| |
| To use this makefile to delete the executable file and all the object |
| files from the directory, type: |
| |
| make clean |
| |
| In the example makefile, the targets include the executable file |
| 'edit', and the object files 'main.o' and 'kbd.o'. The prerequisites |
| are files such as 'main.c' and 'defs.h'. In fact, each '.o' file is |
| both a target and a prerequisite. Recipes include 'cc -c main.c' and |
| 'cc -c kbd.c'. |
| |
| When a target is a file, it needs to be recompiled or relinked if any |
| of its prerequisites change. In addition, any prerequisites that are |
| themselves automatically generated should be updated first. In this |
| example, 'edit' depends on each of the eight object files; the object |
| file 'main.o' depends on the source file 'main.c' and on the header file |
| 'defs.h'. |
| |
| A recipe may follow each line that contains a target and |
| prerequisites. These recipes say how to update the target file. A tab |
| character (or whatever character is specified by the '.RECIPEPREFIX' |
| variable; *note Special Variables::) must come at the beginning of every |
| line in the recipe to distinguish recipes from other lines in the |
| makefile. (Bear in mind that 'make' does not know anything about how |
| the recipes work. It is up to you to supply recipes that will update |
| the target file properly. All 'make' does is execute the recipe you |
| have specified when the target file needs to be updated.) |
| |
| The target 'clean' is not a file, but merely the name of an action. |
| Since you normally do not want to carry out the actions in this rule, |
| 'clean' is not a prerequisite of any other rule. Consequently, 'make' |
| never does anything with it unless you tell it specifically. Note that |
| this rule not only is not a prerequisite, it also does not have any |
| prerequisites, so the only purpose of the rule is to run the specified |
| recipe. Targets that do not refer to files but are just actions are |
| called "phony targets". *Note Phony Targets::, for information about |
| this kind of target. *Note Errors in Recipes: Errors, to see how to |
| cause 'make' to ignore errors from 'rm' or any other command. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: How Make Works, Next: Variables Simplify, Prev: Simple Makefile, Up: Introduction |
| |
| 2.3 How 'make' Processes a Makefile |
| =================================== |
| |
| By default, 'make' starts with the first target (not targets whose names |
| start with '.'). This is called the "default goal". ("Goals" are the |
| targets that 'make' strives ultimately to update. You can override this |
| behavior using the command line (*note Arguments to Specify the Goals: |
| Goals.) or with the '.DEFAULT_GOAL' special variable (*note Other |
| Special Variables: Special Variables.). |
| |
| In the simple example of the previous section, the default goal is to |
| update the executable program 'edit'; therefore, we put that rule first. |
| |
| Thus, when you give the command: |
| |
| make |
| |
| 'make' reads the makefile in the current directory and begins by |
| processing the first rule. In the example, this rule is for relinking |
| 'edit'; but before 'make' can fully process this rule, it must process |
| the rules for the files that 'edit' depends on, which in this case are |
| the object files. Each of these files is processed according to its own |
| rule. These rules say to update each '.o' file by compiling its source |
| file. The recompilation must be done if the source file, or any of the |
| header files named as prerequisites, is more recent than the object |
| file, or if the object file does not exist. |
| |
| The other rules are processed because their targets appear as |
| prerequisites of the goal. If some other rule is not depended on by the |
| goal (or anything it depends on, etc.), that rule is not processed, |
| unless you tell 'make' to do so (with a command such as 'make clean'). |
| |
| Before recompiling an object file, 'make' considers updating its |
| prerequisites, the source file and header files. This makefile does not |
| specify anything to be done for them--the '.c' and '.h' files are not |
| the targets of any rules--so 'make' does nothing for these files. But |
| 'make' would update automatically generated C programs, such as those |
| made by Bison or Yacc, by their own rules at this time. |
| |
| After recompiling whichever object files need it, 'make' decides |
| whether to relink 'edit'. This must be done if the file 'edit' does not |
| exist, or if any of the object files are newer than it. If an object |
| file was just recompiled, it is now newer than 'edit', so 'edit' is |
| relinked. |
| |
| Thus, if we change the file 'insert.c' and run 'make', 'make' will |
| compile that file to update 'insert.o', and then link 'edit'. If we |
| change the file 'command.h' and run 'make', 'make' will recompile the |
| object files 'kbd.o', 'command.o' and 'files.o' and then link the file |
| 'edit'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Variables Simplify, Next: make Deduces, Prev: How Make Works, Up: Introduction |
| |
| 2.4 Variables Make Makefiles Simpler |
| ==================================== |
| |
| In our example, we had to list all the object files twice in the rule |
| for 'edit' (repeated here): |
| |
| edit : main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ |
| insert.o search.o files.o utils.o |
| cc -o edit main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ |
| insert.o search.o files.o utils.o |
| |
| Such duplication is error-prone; if a new object file is added to the |
| system, we might add it to one list and forget the other. We can |
| eliminate the risk and simplify the makefile by using a variable. |
| "Variables" allow a text string to be defined once and substituted in |
| multiple places later (*note How to Use Variables: Using Variables.). |
| |
| It is standard practice for every makefile to have a variable named |
| 'objects', 'OBJECTS', 'objs', 'OBJS', 'obj', or 'OBJ' which is a list of |
| all object file names. We would define such a variable 'objects' with a |
| line like this in the makefile: |
| |
| objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ |
| insert.o search.o files.o utils.o |
| |
| Then, each place we want to put a list of the object file names, we can |
| substitute the variable's value by writing '$(objects)' (*note How to |
| Use Variables: Using Variables.). |
| |
| Here is how the complete simple makefile looks when you use a |
| variable for the object files: |
| |
| objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ |
| insert.o search.o files.o utils.o |
| |
| edit : $(objects) |
| cc -o edit $(objects) |
| main.o : main.c defs.h |
| cc -c main.c |
| kbd.o : kbd.c defs.h command.h |
| cc -c kbd.c |
| command.o : command.c defs.h command.h |
| cc -c command.c |
| display.o : display.c defs.h buffer.h |
| cc -c display.c |
| insert.o : insert.c defs.h buffer.h |
| cc -c insert.c |
| search.o : search.c defs.h buffer.h |
| cc -c search.c |
| files.o : files.c defs.h buffer.h command.h |
| cc -c files.c |
| utils.o : utils.c defs.h |
| cc -c utils.c |
| clean : |
| rm edit $(objects) |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: make Deduces, Next: Combine By Prerequisite, Prev: Variables Simplify, Up: Introduction |
| |
| 2.5 Letting 'make' Deduce the Recipes |
| ===================================== |
| |
| It is not necessary to spell out the recipes for compiling the |
| individual C source files, because 'make' can figure them out: it has an |
| "implicit rule" for updating a '.o' file from a correspondingly named |
| '.c' file using a 'cc -c' command. For example, it will use the recipe |
| 'cc -c main.c -o main.o' to compile 'main.c' into 'main.o'. We can |
| therefore omit the recipes from the rules for the object files. *Note |
| Using Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules. |
| |
| When a '.c' file is used automatically in this way, it is also |
| automatically added to the list of prerequisites. We can therefore omit |
| the '.c' files from the prerequisites, provided we omit the recipe. |
| |
| Here is the entire example, with both of these changes, and a |
| variable 'objects' as suggested above: |
| |
| objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ |
| insert.o search.o files.o utils.o |
| |
| edit : $(objects) |
| cc -o edit $(objects) |
| |
| main.o : defs.h |
| kbd.o : defs.h command.h |
| command.o : defs.h command.h |
| display.o : defs.h buffer.h |
| insert.o : defs.h buffer.h |
| search.o : defs.h buffer.h |
| files.o : defs.h buffer.h command.h |
| utils.o : defs.h |
| |
| .PHONY : clean |
| clean : |
| rm edit $(objects) |
| |
| This is how we would write the makefile in actual practice. (The |
| complications associated with 'clean' are described elsewhere. See |
| *note Phony Targets::, and *note Errors in Recipes: Errors.) |
| |
| Because implicit rules are so convenient, they are important. You |
| will see them used frequently. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Combine By Prerequisite, Next: Cleanup, Prev: make Deduces, Up: Introduction |
| |
| 2.6 Another Style of Makefile |
| ============================= |
| |
| When the objects of a makefile are created only by implicit rules, an |
| alternative style of makefile is possible. In this style of makefile, |
| you group entries by their prerequisites instead of by their targets. |
| Here is what one looks like: |
| |
| objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ |
| insert.o search.o files.o utils.o |
| |
| edit : $(objects) |
| cc -o edit $(objects) |
| |
| $(objects) : defs.h |
| kbd.o command.o files.o : command.h |
| display.o insert.o search.o files.o : buffer.h |
| |
| Here 'defs.h' is given as a prerequisite of all the object files; |
| 'command.h' and 'buffer.h' are prerequisites of the specific object |
| files listed for them. |
| |
| Whether this is better is a matter of taste: it is more compact, but |
| some people dislike it because they find it clearer to put all the |
| information about each target in one place. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Cleanup, Prev: Combine By Prerequisite, Up: Introduction |
| |
| 2.7 Rules for Cleaning the Directory |
| ==================================== |
| |
| Compiling a program is not the only thing you might want to write rules |
| for. Makefiles commonly tell how to do a few other things besides |
| compiling a program: for example, how to delete all the object files and |
| executables so that the directory is 'clean'. |
| |
| Here is how we could write a 'make' rule for cleaning our example |
| editor: |
| |
| clean: |
| rm edit $(objects) |
| |
| In practice, we might want to write the rule in a somewhat more |
| complicated manner to handle unanticipated situations. We would do |
| this: |
| |
| .PHONY : clean |
| clean : |
| -rm edit $(objects) |
| |
| This prevents 'make' from getting confused by an actual file called |
| 'clean' and causes it to continue in spite of errors from 'rm'. (See |
| *note Phony Targets::, and *note Errors in Recipes: Errors.) |
| |
| A rule such as this should not be placed at the beginning of the |
| makefile, because we do not want it to run by default! Thus, in the |
| example makefile, we want the rule for 'edit', which recompiles the |
| editor, to remain the default goal. |
| |
| Since 'clean' is not a prerequisite of 'edit', this rule will not run |
| at all if we give the command 'make' with no arguments. In order to |
| make the rule run, we have to type 'make clean'. *Note How to Run |
| 'make': Running. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Makefiles, Next: Rules, Prev: Introduction, Up: Top |
| |
| 3 Writing Makefiles |
| ******************* |
| |
| The information that tells 'make' how to recompile a system comes from |
| reading a data base called the "makefile". |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Makefile Contents:: What makefiles contain. |
| * Makefile Names:: How to name your makefile. |
| * Include:: How one makefile can use another makefile. |
| * MAKEFILES Variable:: The environment can specify extra makefiles. |
| * Remaking Makefiles:: How makefiles get remade. |
| * Overriding Makefiles:: How to override part of one makefile |
| with another makefile. |
| * Reading Makefiles:: How makefiles are parsed. |
| * Secondary Expansion:: How and when secondary expansion is performed. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Makefile Contents, Next: Makefile Names, Prev: Makefiles, Up: Makefiles |
| |
| 3.1 What Makefiles Contain |
| ========================== |
| |
| Makefiles contain five kinds of things: "explicit rules", "implicit |
| rules", "variable definitions", "directives", and "comments". Rules, |
| variables, and directives are described at length in later chapters. |
| |
| * An "explicit rule" says when and how to remake one or more files, |
| called the rule's "targets". It lists the other files that the |
| targets depend on, called the "prerequisites" of the target, and |
| may also give a recipe to use to create or update the targets. |
| *Note Writing Rules: Rules. |
| |
| * An "implicit rule" says when and how to remake a class of files |
| based on their names. It describes how a target may depend on a |
| file with a name similar to the target and gives a recipe to create |
| or update such a target. *Note Using Implicit Rules: Implicit |
| Rules. |
| |
| * A "variable definition" is a line that specifies a text string |
| value for a variable that can be substituted into the text later. |
| The simple makefile example shows a variable definition for |
| 'objects' as a list of all object files (*note Variables Make |
| Makefiles Simpler: Variables Simplify.). |
| |
| * A "directive" is an instruction for 'make' to do something special |
| while reading the makefile. These include: |
| |
| * Reading another makefile (*note Including Other Makefiles: |
| Include.). |
| |
| * Deciding (based on the values of variables) whether to use or |
| ignore a part of the makefile (*note Conditional Parts of |
| Makefiles: Conditionals.). |
| |
| * Defining a variable from a verbatim string containing multiple |
| lines (*note Defining Multi-Line Variables: Multi-Line.). |
| |
| * '#' in a line of a makefile starts a "comment". It and the rest of |
| the line are ignored, except that a trailing backslash not escaped |
| by another backslash will continue the comment across multiple |
| lines. A line containing just a comment (with perhaps spaces |
| before it) is effectively blank, and is ignored. If you want a |
| literal '#', escape it with a backslash (e.g., '\#'). Comments may |
| appear on any line in the makefile, although they are treated |
| specially in certain situations. |
| |
| You cannot use comments within variable references or function |
| calls: any instance of '#' will be treated literally (rather than |
| as the start of a comment) inside a variable reference or function |
| call. |
| |
| Comments within a recipe are passed to the shell, just as with any |
| other recipe text. The shell decides how to interpret it: whether |
| or not this is a comment is up to the shell. |
| |
| Within a 'define' directive, comments are not ignored during the |
| definition of the variable, but rather kept intact in the value of |
| the variable. When the variable is expanded they will either be |
| treated as 'make' comments or as recipe text, depending on the |
| context in which the variable is evaluated. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Splitting Lines:: Splitting long lines in makefiles |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Splitting Lines, Prev: Makefile Contents, Up: Makefile Contents |
| |
| 3.1.1 Splitting Long Lines |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| Makefiles use a "line-based" syntax in which the newline character is |
| special and marks the end of a statement. GNU 'make' has no limit on |
| the length of a statement line, up to the amount of memory in your |
| computer. |
| |
| However, it is difficult to read lines which are too long to display |
| without wrapping or scrolling. So, you can format your makefiles for |
| readability by adding newlines into the middle of a statement: you do |
| this by escaping the internal newlines with a backslash ('\') character. |
| Where we need to make a distinction we will refer to "physical lines" as |
| a single line ending with a newline (regardless of whether it is |
| escaped) and a "logical line" being a complete statement including all |
| escaped newlines up to the first non-escaped newline. |
| |
| The way in which backslash/newline combinations are handled depends |
| on whether the statement is a recipe line or a non-recipe line. |
| Handling of backslash/newline in a recipe line is discussed later (*note |
| Splitting Recipe Lines::). |
| |
| Outside of recipe lines, backslash/newlines are converted into a |
| single space character. Once that is done, all whitespace around the |
| backslash/newline is condensed into a single space: this includes all |
| whitespace preceding the backslash, all whitespace at the beginning of |
| the line after the backslash/newline, and any consecutive |
| backslash/newline combinations. |
| |
| If the '.POSIX' special target is defined then backslash/newline |
| handling is modified slightly to conform to POSIX.2: first, whitespace |
| preceding a backslash is not removed and second, consecutive |
| backslash/newlines are not condensed. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Makefile Names, Next: Include, Prev: Makefile Contents, Up: Makefiles |
| |
| 3.2 What Name to Give Your Makefile |
| =================================== |
| |
| By default, when 'make' looks for the makefile, it tries the following |
| names, in order: 'GNUmakefile', 'makefile' and 'Makefile'. |
| |
| Normally you should call your makefile either 'makefile' or |
| 'Makefile'. (We recommend 'Makefile' because it appears prominently |
| near the beginning of a directory listing, right near other important |
| files such as 'README'.) The first name checked, 'GNUmakefile', is not |
| recommended for most makefiles. You should use this name if you have a |
| makefile that is specific to GNU 'make', and will not be understood by |
| other versions of 'make'. Other 'make' programs look for 'makefile' and |
| 'Makefile', but not 'GNUmakefile'. |
| |
| If 'make' finds none of these names, it does not use any makefile. |
| Then you must specify a goal with a command argument, and 'make' will |
| attempt to figure out how to remake it using only its built-in implicit |
| rules. *Note Using Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules. |
| |
| If you want to use a nonstandard name for your makefile, you can |
| specify the makefile name with the '-f' or '--file' option. The |
| arguments '-f NAME' or '--file=NAME' tell 'make' to read the file NAME |
| as the makefile. If you use more than one '-f' or '--file' option, you |
| can specify several makefiles. All the makefiles are effectively |
| concatenated in the order specified. The default makefile names |
| 'GNUmakefile', 'makefile' and 'Makefile' are not checked automatically |
| if you specify '-f' or '--file'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Include, Next: MAKEFILES Variable, Prev: Makefile Names, Up: Makefiles |
| |
| 3.3 Including Other Makefiles |
| ============================= |
| |
| The 'include' directive tells 'make' to suspend reading the current |
| makefile and read one or more other makefiles before continuing. The |
| directive is a line in the makefile that looks like this: |
| |
| include FILENAMES... |
| |
| FILENAMES can contain shell file name patterns. If FILENAMES is empty, |
| nothing is included and no error is printed. |
| |
| Extra spaces are allowed and ignored at the beginning of the line, |
| but the first character must not be a tab (or the value of |
| '.RECIPEPREFIX')--if the line begins with a tab, it will be considered a |
| recipe line. Whitespace is required between 'include' and the file |
| names, and between file names; extra whitespace is ignored there and at |
| the end of the directive. A comment starting with '#' is allowed at the |
| end of the line. If the file names contain any variable or function |
| references, they are expanded. *Note How to Use Variables: Using |
| Variables. |
| |
| For example, if you have three '.mk' files, 'a.mk', 'b.mk', and |
| 'c.mk', and '$(bar)' expands to 'bish bash', then the following |
| expression |
| |
| include foo *.mk $(bar) |
| |
| is equivalent to |
| |
| include foo a.mk b.mk c.mk bish bash |
| |
| When 'make' processes an 'include' directive, it suspends reading of |
| the containing makefile and reads from each listed file in turn. When |
| that is finished, 'make' resumes reading the makefile in which the |
| directive appears. |
| |
| One occasion for using 'include' directives is when several programs, |
| handled by individual makefiles in various directories, need to use a |
| common set of variable definitions (*note Setting Variables: Setting.) |
| or pattern rules (*note Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules: Pattern |
| Rules.). |
| |
| Another such occasion is when you want to generate prerequisites from |
| source files automatically; the prerequisites can be put in a file that |
| is included by the main makefile. This practice is generally cleaner |
| than that of somehow appending the prerequisites to the end of the main |
| makefile as has been traditionally done with other versions of 'make'. |
| *Note Automatic Prerequisites::. |
| |
| If the specified name does not start with a slash, and the file is |
| not found in the current directory, several other directories are |
| searched. First, any directories you have specified with the '-I' or |
| '--include-dir' option are searched (*note Summary of Options: Options |
| Summary.). Then the following directories (if they exist) are searched, |
| in this order: 'PREFIX/include' (normally '/usr/local/include' (1)) |
| '/usr/gnu/include', '/usr/local/include', '/usr/include'. |
| |
| If an included makefile cannot be found in any of these directories, |
| a warning message is generated, but it is not an immediately fatal |
| error; processing of the makefile containing the 'include' continues. |
| Once it has finished reading makefiles, 'make' will try to remake any |
| that are out of date or don't exist. *Note How Makefiles Are Remade: |
| Remaking Makefiles. Only after it has tried to find a way to remake a |
| makefile and failed, will 'make' diagnose the missing makefile as a |
| fatal error. |
| |
| If you want 'make' to simply ignore a makefile which does not exist |
| or cannot be remade, with no error message, use the '-include' directive |
| instead of 'include', like this: |
| |
| -include FILENAMES... |
| |
| This acts like 'include' in every way except that there is no error |
| (not even a warning) if any of the FILENAMES (or any prerequisites of |
| any of the FILENAMES) do not exist or cannot be remade. |
| |
| For compatibility with some other 'make' implementations, 'sinclude' |
| is another name for '-include'. |
| |
| ---------- Footnotes ---------- |
| |
| (1) GNU Make compiled for MS-DOS and MS-Windows behaves as if PREFIX |
| has been defined to be the root of the DJGPP tree hierarchy. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: MAKEFILES Variable, Next: Remaking Makefiles, Prev: Include, Up: Makefiles |
| |
| 3.4 The Variable 'MAKEFILES' |
| ============================ |
| |
| If the environment variable 'MAKEFILES' is defined, 'make' considers its |
| value as a list of names (separated by whitespace) of additional |
| makefiles to be read before the others. This works much like the |
| 'include' directive: various directories are searched for those files |
| (*note Including Other Makefiles: Include.). In addition, the default |
| goal is never taken from one of these makefiles (or any makefile |
| included by them) and it is not an error if the files listed in |
| 'MAKEFILES' are not found. |
| |
| The main use of 'MAKEFILES' is in communication between recursive |
| invocations of 'make' (*note Recursive Use of 'make': Recursion.). It |
| usually is not desirable to set the environment variable before a |
| top-level invocation of 'make', because it is usually better not to mess |
| with a makefile from outside. However, if you are running 'make' |
| without a specific makefile, a makefile in 'MAKEFILES' can do useful |
| things to help the built-in implicit rules work better, such as defining |
| search paths (*note Directory Search::). |
| |
| Some users are tempted to set 'MAKEFILES' in the environment |
| automatically on login, and program makefiles to expect this to be done. |
| This is a very bad idea, because such makefiles will fail to work if run |
| by anyone else. It is much better to write explicit 'include' |
| directives in the makefiles. *Note Including Other Makefiles: Include. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Remaking Makefiles, Next: Overriding Makefiles, Prev: MAKEFILES Variable, Up: Makefiles |
| |
| 3.5 How Makefiles Are Remade |
| ============================ |
| |
| Sometimes makefiles can be remade from other files, such as RCS or SCCS |
| files. If a makefile can be remade from other files, you probably want |
| 'make' to get an up-to-date version of the makefile to read in. |
| |
| To this end, after reading in all makefiles, 'make' will consider |
| each as a goal target and attempt to update it. If a makefile has a |
| rule which says how to update it (found either in that very makefile or |
| in another one) or if an implicit rule applies to it (*note Using |
| Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules.), it will be updated if necessary. |
| After all makefiles have been checked, if any have actually been |
| changed, 'make' starts with a clean slate and reads all the makefiles |
| over again. (It will also attempt to update each of them over again, |
| but normally this will not change them again, since they are already up |
| to date.) |
| |
| If you know that one or more of your makefiles cannot be remade and |
| you want to keep 'make' from performing an implicit rule search on them, |
| perhaps for efficiency reasons, you can use any normal method of |
| preventing implicit rule look-up to do so. For example, you can write |
| an explicit rule with the makefile as the target, and an empty recipe |
| (*note Using Empty Recipes: Empty Recipes.). |
| |
| If the makefiles specify a double-colon rule to remake a file with a |
| recipe but no prerequisites, that file will always be remade (*note |
| Double-Colon::). In the case of makefiles, a makefile that has a |
| double-colon rule with a recipe but no prerequisites will be remade |
| every time 'make' is run, and then again after 'make' starts over and |
| reads the makefiles in again. This would cause an infinite loop: 'make' |
| would constantly remake the makefile, and never do anything else. So, |
| to avoid this, 'make' will *not* attempt to remake makefiles which are |
| specified as targets of a double-colon rule with a recipe but no |
| prerequisites. |
| |
| If you do not specify any makefiles to be read with '-f' or '--file' |
| options, 'make' will try the default makefile names; *note What Name to |
| Give Your Makefile: Makefile Names. Unlike makefiles explicitly |
| requested with '-f' or '--file' options, 'make' is not certain that |
| these makefiles should exist. However, if a default makefile does not |
| exist but can be created by running 'make' rules, you probably want the |
| rules to be run so that the makefile can be used. |
| |
| Therefore, if none of the default makefiles exists, 'make' will try |
| to make each of them in the same order in which they are searched for |
| (*note What Name to Give Your Makefile: Makefile Names.) until it |
| succeeds in making one, or it runs out of names to try. Note that it is |
| not an error if 'make' cannot find or make any makefile; a makefile is |
| not always necessary. |
| |
| When you use the '-t' or '--touch' option (*note Instead of Executing |
| Recipes: Instead of Execution.), you would not want to use an |
| out-of-date makefile to decide which targets to touch. So the '-t' |
| option has no effect on updating makefiles; they are really updated even |
| if '-t' is specified. Likewise, '-q' (or '--question') and '-n' (or |
| '--just-print') do not prevent updating of makefiles, because an |
| out-of-date makefile would result in the wrong output for other targets. |
| Thus, 'make -f mfile -n foo' will update 'mfile', read it in, and then |
| print the recipe to update 'foo' and its prerequisites without running |
| it. The recipe printed for 'foo' will be the one specified in the |
| updated contents of 'mfile'. |
| |
| However, on occasion you might actually wish to prevent updating of |
| even the makefiles. You can do this by specifying the makefiles as |
| goals in the command line as well as specifying them as makefiles. When |
| the makefile name is specified explicitly as a goal, the options '-t' |
| and so on do apply to them. |
| |
| Thus, 'make -f mfile -n mfile foo' would read the makefile 'mfile', |
| print the recipe needed to update it without actually running it, and |
| then print the recipe needed to update 'foo' without running that. The |
| recipe for 'foo' will be the one specified by the existing contents of |
| 'mfile'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Overriding Makefiles, Next: Reading Makefiles, Prev: Remaking Makefiles, Up: Makefiles |
| |
| 3.6 Overriding Part of Another Makefile |
| ======================================= |
| |
| Sometimes it is useful to have a makefile that is mostly just like |
| another makefile. You can often use the 'include' directive to include |
| one in the other, and add more targets or variable definitions. |
| However, it is invalid for two makefiles to give different recipes for |
| the same target. But there is another way. |
| |
| In the containing makefile (the one that wants to include the other), |
| you can use a match-anything pattern rule to say that to remake any |
| target that cannot be made from the information in the containing |
| makefile, 'make' should look in another makefile. *Note Pattern |
| Rules::, for more information on pattern rules. |
| |
| For example, if you have a makefile called 'Makefile' that says how |
| to make the target 'foo' (and other targets), you can write a makefile |
| called 'GNUmakefile' that contains: |
| |
| foo: |
| frobnicate > foo |
| |
| %: force |
| @$(MAKE) -f Makefile $@ |
| force: ; |
| |
| If you say 'make foo', 'make' will find 'GNUmakefile', read it, and |
| see that to make 'foo', it needs to run the recipe 'frobnicate > foo'. |
| If you say 'make bar', 'make' will find no way to make 'bar' in |
| 'GNUmakefile', so it will use the recipe from the pattern rule: 'make -f |
| Makefile bar'. If 'Makefile' provides a rule for updating 'bar', 'make' |
| will apply the rule. And likewise for any other target that |
| 'GNUmakefile' does not say how to make. |
| |
| The way this works is that the pattern rule has a pattern of just |
| '%', so it matches any target whatever. The rule specifies a |
| prerequisite 'force', to guarantee that the recipe will be run even if |
| the target file already exists. We give the 'force' target an empty |
| recipe to prevent 'make' from searching for an implicit rule to build |
| it--otherwise it would apply the same match-anything rule to 'force' |
| itself and create a prerequisite loop! |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Reading Makefiles, Next: Secondary Expansion, Prev: Overriding Makefiles, Up: Makefiles |
| |
| 3.7 How 'make' Reads a Makefile |
| =============================== |
| |
| GNU 'make' does its work in two distinct phases. During the first phase |
| it reads all the makefiles, included makefiles, etc. and internalizes |
| all the variables and their values, implicit and explicit rules, and |
| constructs a dependency graph of all the targets and their |
| prerequisites. During the second phase, 'make' uses these internal |
| structures to determine what targets will need to be rebuilt and to |
| invoke the rules necessary to do so. |
| |
| It's important to understand this two-phase approach because it has a |
| direct impact on how variable and function expansion happens; this is |
| often a source of some confusion when writing makefiles. Here we will |
| present a summary of the phases in which expansion happens for different |
| constructs within the makefile. We say that expansion is "immediate" if |
| it happens during the first phase: in this case 'make' will expand any |
| variables or functions in that section of a construct as the makefile is |
| parsed. We say that expansion is "deferred" if expansion is not |
| performed immediately. Expansion of a deferred construct is not |
| performed until either the construct appears later in an immediate |
| context, or until the second phase. |
| |
| You may not be familiar with some of these constructs yet. You can |
| reference this section as you become familiar with them, in later |
| chapters. |
| |
| Variable Assignment |
| ------------------- |
| |
| Variable definitions are parsed as follows: |
| |
| IMMEDIATE = DEFERRED |
| IMMEDIATE ?= DEFERRED |
| IMMEDIATE := IMMEDIATE |
| IMMEDIATE ::= IMMEDIATE |
| IMMEDIATE += DEFERRED or IMMEDIATE |
| IMMEDIATE != IMMEDIATE |
| |
| define IMMEDIATE |
| DEFERRED |
| endef |
| |
| define IMMEDIATE = |
| DEFERRED |
| endef |
| |
| define IMMEDIATE ?= |
| DEFERRED |
| endef |
| |
| define IMMEDIATE := |
| IMMEDIATE |
| endef |
| |
| define IMMEDIATE ::= |
| IMMEDIATE |
| endef |
| |
| define IMMEDIATE += |
| DEFERRED or IMMEDIATE |
| endef |
| |
| define IMMEDIATE != |
| IMMEDIATE |
| endef |
| |
| For the append operator, '+=', the right-hand side is considered |
| immediate if the variable was previously set as a simple variable (':=' |
| or '::='), and deferred otherwise. |
| |
| For the shell assignment operator, '!=', the right-hand side is |
| evaluated immediately and handed to the shell. The result is stored in |
| the variable named on the left, and that variable becomes a simple |
| variable (and will thus be re-evaluated on each reference). |
| |
| Conditional Directives |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| Conditional directives are parsed immediately. This means, for example, |
| that automatic variables cannot be used in conditional directives, as |
| automatic variables are not set until the recipe for that rule is |
| invoked. If you need to use automatic variables in a conditional |
| directive you _must_ move the condition into the recipe and use shell |
| conditional syntax instead. |
| |
| Rule Definition |
| --------------- |
| |
| A rule is always expanded the same way, regardless of the form: |
| |
| IMMEDIATE : IMMEDIATE ; DEFERRED |
| DEFERRED |
| |
| That is, the target and prerequisite sections are expanded |
| immediately, and the recipe used to construct the target is always |
| deferred. This general rule is true for explicit rules, pattern rules, |
| suffix rules, static pattern rules, and simple prerequisite definitions. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Secondary Expansion, Prev: Reading Makefiles, Up: Makefiles |
| |
| 3.8 Secondary Expansion |
| ======================= |
| |
| In the previous section we learned that GNU 'make' works in two distinct |
| phases: a read-in phase and a target-update phase (*note How 'make' |
| Reads a Makefile: Reading Makefiles.). GNU make also has the ability to |
| enable a _second expansion_ of the prerequisites (only) for some or all |
| targets defined in the makefile. In order for this second expansion to |
| occur, the special target '.SECONDEXPANSION' must be defined before the |
| first prerequisite list that makes use of this feature. |
| |
| If that special target is defined then in between the two phases |
| mentioned above, right at the end of the read-in phase, all the |
| prerequisites of the targets defined after the special target are |
| expanded a _second time_. In most circumstances this secondary |
| expansion will have no effect, since all variable and function |
| references will have been expanded during the initial parsing of the |
| makefiles. In order to take advantage of the secondary expansion phase |
| of the parser, then, it's necessary to _escape_ the variable or function |
| reference in the makefile. In this case the first expansion merely |
| un-escapes the reference but doesn't expand it, and expansion is left to |
| the secondary expansion phase. For example, consider this makefile: |
| |
| .SECONDEXPANSION: |
| ONEVAR = onefile |
| TWOVAR = twofile |
| myfile: $(ONEVAR) $$(TWOVAR) |
| |
| After the first expansion phase the prerequisites list of the |
| 'myfile' target will be 'onefile' and '$(TWOVAR)'; the first (unescaped) |
| variable reference to ONEVAR is expanded, while the second (escaped) |
| variable reference is simply unescaped, without being recognized as a |
| variable reference. Now during the secondary expansion the first word |
| is expanded again but since it contains no variable or function |
| references it remains the value 'onefile', while the second word is now |
| a normal reference to the variable TWOVAR, which is expanded to the |
| value 'twofile'. The final result is that there are two prerequisites, |
| 'onefile' and 'twofile'. |
| |
| Obviously, this is not a very interesting case since the same result |
| could more easily have been achieved simply by having both variables |
| appear, unescaped, in the prerequisites list. One difference becomes |
| apparent if the variables are reset; consider this example: |
| |
| .SECONDEXPANSION: |
| AVAR = top |
| onefile: $(AVAR) |
| twofile: $$(AVAR) |
| AVAR = bottom |
| |
| Here the prerequisite of 'onefile' will be expanded immediately, and |
| resolve to the value 'top', while the prerequisite of 'twofile' will not |
| be full expanded until the secondary expansion and yield a value of |
| 'bottom'. |
| |
| This is marginally more exciting, but the true power of this feature |
| only becomes apparent when you discover that secondary expansions always |
| take place within the scope of the automatic variables for that target. |
| This means that you can use variables such as '$@', '$*', etc. during |
| the second expansion and they will have their expected values, just as |
| in the recipe. All you have to do is defer the expansion by escaping |
| the '$'. Also, secondary expansion occurs for both explicit and |
| implicit (pattern) rules. Knowing this, the possible uses for this |
| feature increase dramatically. For example: |
| |
| .SECONDEXPANSION: |
| main_OBJS := main.o try.o test.o |
| lib_OBJS := lib.o api.o |
| |
| main lib: $$($$@_OBJS) |
| |
| Here, after the initial expansion the prerequisites of both the |
| 'main' and 'lib' targets will be '$($@_OBJS)'. During the secondary |
| expansion, the '$@' variable is set to the name of the target and so the |
| expansion for the 'main' target will yield '$(main_OBJS)', or 'main.o |
| try.o test.o', while the secondary expansion for the 'lib' target will |
| yield '$(lib_OBJS)', or 'lib.o api.o'. |
| |
| You can also mix in functions here, as long as they are properly |
| escaped: |
| |
| main_SRCS := main.c try.c test.c |
| lib_SRCS := lib.c api.c |
| |
| .SECONDEXPANSION: |
| main lib: $$(patsubst %.c,%.o,$$($$@_SRCS)) |
| |
| This version allows users to specify source files rather than object |
| files, but gives the same resulting prerequisites list as the previous |
| example. |
| |
| Evaluation of automatic variables during the secondary expansion |
| phase, especially of the target name variable '$$@', behaves similarly |
| to evaluation within recipes. However, there are some subtle |
| differences and "corner cases" which come into play for the different |
| types of rule definitions that 'make' understands. The subtleties of |
| using the different automatic variables are described below. |
| |
| Secondary Expansion of Explicit Rules |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| During the secondary expansion of explicit rules, '$$@' and '$$%' |
| evaluate, respectively, to the file name of the target and, when the |
| target is an archive member, the target member name. The '$$<' variable |
| evaluates to the first prerequisite in the first rule for this target. |
| '$$^' and '$$+' evaluate to the list of all prerequisites of rules _that |
| have already appeared_ for the same target ('$$+' with repetitions and |
| '$$^' without). The following example will help illustrate these |
| behaviors: |
| |
| .SECONDEXPANSION: |
| |
| foo: foo.1 bar.1 $$< $$^ $$+ # line #1 |
| |
| foo: foo.2 bar.2 $$< $$^ $$+ # line #2 |
| |
| foo: foo.3 bar.3 $$< $$^ $$+ # line #3 |
| |
| In the first prerequisite list, all three variables ('$$<', '$$^', |
| and '$$+') expand to the empty string. In the second, they will have |
| values 'foo.1', 'foo.1 bar.1', and 'foo.1 bar.1' respectively. In the |
| third they will have values 'foo.1', 'foo.1 bar.1 foo.2 bar.2', and |
| 'foo.1 bar.1 foo.2 bar.2 foo.1 foo.1 bar.1 foo.1 bar.1' respectively. |
| |
| Rules undergo secondary expansion in makefile order, except that the |
| rule with the recipe is always evaluated last. |
| |
| The variables '$$?' and '$$*' are not available and expand to the |
| empty string. |
| |
| Secondary Expansion of Static Pattern Rules |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Rules for secondary expansion of static pattern rules are identical to |
| those for explicit rules, above, with one exception: for static pattern |
| rules the '$$*' variable is set to the pattern stem. As with explicit |
| rules, '$$?' is not available and expands to the empty string. |
| |
| Secondary Expansion of Implicit Rules |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| As 'make' searches for an implicit rule, it substitutes the stem and |
| then performs secondary expansion for every rule with a matching target |
| pattern. The value of the automatic variables is derived in the same |
| fashion as for static pattern rules. As an example: |
| |
| .SECONDEXPANSION: |
| |
| foo: bar |
| |
| foo foz: fo%: bo% |
| |
| %oo: $$< $$^ $$+ $$* |
| |
| When the implicit rule is tried for target 'foo', '$$<' expands to |
| 'bar', '$$^' expands to 'bar boo', '$$+' also expands to 'bar boo', and |
| '$$*' expands to 'f'. |
| |
| Note that the directory prefix (D), as described in *note Implicit |
| Rule Search Algorithm: Implicit Rule Search, is appended (after |
| expansion) to all the patterns in the prerequisites list. As an |
| example: |
| |
| .SECONDEXPANSION: |
| |
| /tmp/foo.o: |
| |
| %.o: $$(addsuffix /%.c,foo bar) foo.h |
| @echo $^ |
| |
| The prerequisite list printed, after the secondary expansion and |
| directory prefix reconstruction, will be '/tmp/foo/foo.c /tmp/bar/foo.c |
| foo.h'. If you are not interested in this reconstruction, you can use |
| '$$*' instead of '%' in the prerequisites list. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Rules, Next: Recipes, Prev: Makefiles, Up: Top |
| |
| 4 Writing Rules |
| *************** |
| |
| A "rule" appears in the makefile and says when and how to remake certain |
| files, called the rule's "targets" (most often only one per rule). It |
| lists the other files that are the "prerequisites" of the target, and |
| the "recipe" to use to create or update the target. |
| |
| The order of rules is not significant, except for determining the |
| "default goal": the target for 'make' to consider, if you do not |
| otherwise specify one. The default goal is the target of the first rule |
| in the first makefile. If the first rule has multiple targets, only the |
| first target is taken as the default. There are two exceptions: a |
| target starting with a period is not a default unless it contains one or |
| more slashes, '/', as well; and, a target that defines a pattern rule |
| has no effect on the default goal. (*Note Defining and Redefining |
| Pattern Rules: Pattern Rules.) |
| |
| Therefore, we usually write the makefile so that the first rule is |
| the one for compiling the entire program or all the programs described |
| by the makefile (often with a target called 'all'). *Note Arguments to |
| Specify the Goals: Goals. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Rule Example:: An example explained. |
| * Rule Syntax:: General syntax explained. |
| * Prerequisite Types:: There are two types of prerequisites. |
| * Wildcards:: Using wildcard characters such as '*'. |
| * Directory Search:: Searching other directories for source files. |
| * Phony Targets:: Using a target that is not a real file's name. |
| * Force Targets:: You can use a target without a recipe |
| or prerequisites to mark other targets |
| as phony. |
| * Empty Targets:: When only the date matters and the |
| files are empty. |
| * Special Targets:: Targets with special built-in meanings. |
| * Multiple Targets:: When to make use of several targets in a rule. |
| * Multiple Rules:: How to use several rules with the same target. |
| * Static Pattern:: Static pattern rules apply to multiple targets |
| and can vary the prerequisites according to |
| the target name. |
| * Double-Colon:: How to use a special kind of rule to allow |
| several independent rules for one target. |
| * Automatic Prerequisites:: How to automatically generate rules giving |
| prerequisites from source files themselves. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Rule Example, Next: Rule Syntax, Prev: Rules, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.1 Rule Example |
| ================ |
| |
| Here is an example of a rule: |
| |
| foo.o : foo.c defs.h # module for twiddling the frobs |
| cc -c -g foo.c |
| |
| Its target is 'foo.o' and its prerequisites are 'foo.c' and 'defs.h'. |
| It has one command in the recipe: 'cc -c -g foo.c'. The recipe starts |
| with a tab to identify it as a recipe. |
| |
| This rule says two things: |
| |
| * How to decide whether 'foo.o' is out of date: it is out of date if |
| it does not exist, or if either 'foo.c' or 'defs.h' is more recent |
| than it. |
| |
| * How to update the file 'foo.o': by running 'cc' as stated. The |
| recipe does not explicitly mention 'defs.h', but we presume that |
| 'foo.c' includes it, and that that is why 'defs.h' was added to the |
| prerequisites. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Rule Syntax, Next: Prerequisite Types, Prev: Rule Example, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.2 Rule Syntax |
| =============== |
| |
| In general, a rule looks like this: |
| |
| TARGETS : PREREQUISITES |
| RECIPE |
| ... |
| |
| or like this: |
| |
| TARGETS : PREREQUISITES ; RECIPE |
| RECIPE |
| ... |
| |
| The TARGETS are file names, separated by spaces. Wildcard characters |
| may be used (*note Using Wildcard Characters in File Names: Wildcards.) |
| and a name of the form 'A(M)' represents member M in archive file A |
| (*note Archive Members as Targets: Archive Members.). Usually there is |
| only one target per rule, but occasionally there is a reason to have |
| more (*note Multiple Targets in a Rule: Multiple Targets.). |
| |
| The RECIPE lines start with a tab character (or the first character |
| in the value of the '.RECIPEPREFIX' variable; *note Special |
| Variables::). The first recipe line may appear on the line after the |
| prerequisites, with a tab character, or may appear on the same line, |
| with a semicolon. Either way, the effect is the same. There are other |
| differences in the syntax of recipes. *Note Writing Recipes in Rules: |
| Recipes. |
| |
| Because dollar signs are used to start 'make' variable references, if |
| you really want a dollar sign in a target or prerequisite you must write |
| two of them, '$$' (*note How to Use Variables: Using Variables.). If |
| you have enabled secondary expansion (*note Secondary Expansion::) and |
| you want a literal dollar sign in the prerequisites list, you must |
| actually write _four_ dollar signs ('$$$$'). |
| |
| You may split a long line by inserting a backslash followed by a |
| newline, but this is not required, as 'make' places no limit on the |
| length of a line in a makefile. |
| |
| A rule tells 'make' two things: when the targets are out of date, and |
| how to update them when necessary. |
| |
| The criterion for being out of date is specified in terms of the |
| PREREQUISITES, which consist of file names separated by spaces. |
| (Wildcards and archive members (*note Archives::) are allowed here too.) |
| A target is out of date if it does not exist or if it is older than any |
| of the prerequisites (by comparison of last-modification times). The |
| idea is that the contents of the target file are computed based on |
| information in the prerequisites, so if any of the prerequisites |
| changes, the contents of the existing target file are no longer |
| necessarily valid. |
| |
| How to update is specified by a RECIPE. This is one or more lines to |
| be executed by the shell (normally 'sh'), but with some extra features |
| (*note Writing Recipes in Rules: Recipes.). |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Prerequisite Types, Next: Wildcards, Prev: Rule Syntax, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.3 Types of Prerequisites |
| ========================== |
| |
| There are actually two different types of prerequisites understood by |
| GNU 'make': normal prerequisites such as described in the previous |
| section, and "order-only" prerequisites. A normal prerequisite makes |
| two statements: first, it imposes an order in which recipes will be |
| invoked: the recipes for all prerequisites of a target will be completed |
| before the recipe for the target is run. Second, it imposes a |
| dependency relationship: if any prerequisite is newer than the target, |
| then the target is considered out-of-date and must be rebuilt. |
| |
| Normally, this is exactly what you want: if a target's prerequisite |
| is updated, then the target should also be updated. |
| |
| Occasionally, however, you have a situation where you want to impose |
| a specific ordering on the rules to be invoked _without_ forcing the |
| target to be updated if one of those rules is executed. In that case, |
| you want to define "order-only" prerequisites. Order-only prerequisites |
| can be specified by placing a pipe symbol ('|') in the prerequisites |
| list: any prerequisites to the left of the pipe symbol are normal; any |
| prerequisites to the right are order-only: |
| |
| TARGETS : NORMAL-PREREQUISITES | ORDER-ONLY-PREREQUISITES |
| |
| The normal prerequisites section may of course be empty. Also, you |
| may still declare multiple lines of prerequisites for the same target: |
| they are appended appropriately (normal prerequisites are appended to |
| the list of normal prerequisites; order-only prerequisites are appended |
| to the list of order-only prerequisites). Note that if you declare the |
| same file to be both a normal and an order-only prerequisite, the normal |
| prerequisite takes precedence (since they have a strict superset of the |
| behavior of an order-only prerequisite). |
| |
| Consider an example where your targets are to be placed in a separate |
| directory, and that directory might not exist before 'make' is run. In |
| this situation, you want the directory to be created before any targets |
| are placed into it but, because the timestamps on directories change |
| whenever a file is added, removed, or renamed, we certainly don't want |
| to rebuild all the targets whenever the directory's timestamp changes. |
| One way to manage this is with order-only prerequisites: make the |
| directory an order-only prerequisite on all the targets: |
| |
| OBJDIR := objdir |
| OBJS := $(addprefix $(OBJDIR)/,foo.o bar.o baz.o) |
| |
| $(OBJDIR)/%.o : %.c |
| $(COMPILE.c) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $< |
| |
| all: $(OBJS) |
| |
| $(OBJS): | $(OBJDIR) |
| |
| $(OBJDIR): |
| mkdir $(OBJDIR) |
| |
| Now the rule to create the 'objdir' directory will be run, if needed, |
| before any '.o' is built, but no '.o' will be built because the 'objdir' |
| directory timestamp changed. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Wildcards, Next: Directory Search, Prev: Prerequisite Types, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.4 Using Wildcard Characters in File Names |
| =========================================== |
| |
| A single file name can specify many files using "wildcard characters". |
| The wildcard characters in 'make' are '*', '?' and '[...]', the same as |
| in the Bourne shell. For example, '*.c' specifies a list of all the |
| files (in the working directory) whose names end in '.c'. |
| |
| The character '~' at the beginning of a file name also has special |
| significance. If alone, or followed by a slash, it represents your home |
| directory. For example '~/bin' expands to '/home/you/bin'. If the '~' |
| is followed by a word, the string represents the home directory of the |
| user named by that word. For example '~john/bin' expands to |
| '/home/john/bin'. On systems which don't have a home directory for each |
| user (such as MS-DOS or MS-Windows), this functionality can be simulated |
| by setting the environment variable HOME. |
| |
| Wildcard expansion is performed by 'make' automatically in targets |
| and in prerequisites. In recipes, the shell is responsible for wildcard |
| expansion. In other contexts, wildcard expansion happens only if you |
| request it explicitly with the 'wildcard' function. |
| |
| The special significance of a wildcard character can be turned off by |
| preceding it with a backslash. Thus, 'foo\*bar' would refer to a |
| specific file whose name consists of 'foo', an asterisk, and 'bar'. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Wildcard Examples:: Several examples. |
| * Wildcard Pitfall:: Problems to avoid. |
| * Wildcard Function:: How to cause wildcard expansion where |
| it does not normally take place. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Wildcard Examples, Next: Wildcard Pitfall, Prev: Wildcards, Up: Wildcards |
| |
| 4.4.1 Wildcard Examples |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Wildcards can be used in the recipe of a rule, where they are expanded |
| by the shell. For example, here is a rule to delete all the object |
| files: |
| |
| clean: |
| rm -f *.o |
| |
| Wildcards are also useful in the prerequisites of a rule. With the |
| following rule in the makefile, 'make print' will print all the '.c' |
| files that have changed since the last time you printed them: |
| |
| print: *.c |
| lpr -p $? |
| touch print |
| |
| This rule uses 'print' as an empty target file; see *note Empty Target |
| Files to Record Events: Empty Targets. (The automatic variable '$?' is |
| used to print only those files that have changed; see *note Automatic |
| Variables::.) |
| |
| Wildcard expansion does not happen when you define a variable. Thus, |
| if you write this: |
| |
| objects = *.o |
| |
| then the value of the variable 'objects' is the actual string '*.o'. |
| However, if you use the value of 'objects' in a target or prerequisite, |
| wildcard expansion will take place there. If you use the value of |
| 'objects' in a recipe, the shell may perform wildcard expansion when the |
| recipe runs. To set 'objects' to the expansion, instead use: |
| |
| objects := $(wildcard *.o) |
| |
| *Note Wildcard Function::. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Wildcard Pitfall, Next: Wildcard Function, Prev: Wildcard Examples, Up: Wildcards |
| |
| 4.4.2 Pitfalls of Using Wildcards |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| Now here is an example of a naive way of using wildcard expansion, that |
| does not do what you would intend. Suppose you would like to say that |
| the executable file 'foo' is made from all the object files in the |
| directory, and you write this: |
| |
| objects = *.o |
| |
| foo : $(objects) |
| cc -o foo $(CFLAGS) $(objects) |
| |
| The value of 'objects' is the actual string '*.o'. Wildcard expansion |
| happens in the rule for 'foo', so that each _existing_ '.o' file becomes |
| a prerequisite of 'foo' and will be recompiled if necessary. |
| |
| But what if you delete all the '.o' files? When a wildcard matches |
| no files, it is left as it is, so then 'foo' will depend on the |
| oddly-named file '*.o'. Since no such file is likely to exist, 'make' |
| will give you an error saying it cannot figure out how to make '*.o'. |
| This is not what you want! |
| |
| Actually it is possible to obtain the desired result with wildcard |
| expansion, but you need more sophisticated techniques, including the |
| 'wildcard' function and string substitution. *Note The Function |
| 'wildcard': Wildcard Function. |
| |
| Microsoft operating systems (MS-DOS and MS-Windows) use backslashes |
| to separate directories in pathnames, like so: |
| |
| c:\foo\bar\baz.c |
| |
| This is equivalent to the Unix-style 'c:/foo/bar/baz.c' (the 'c:' |
| part is the so-called drive letter). When 'make' runs on these systems, |
| it supports backslashes as well as the Unix-style forward slashes in |
| pathnames. However, this support does _not_ include the wildcard |
| expansion, where backslash is a quote character. Therefore, you _must_ |
| use Unix-style slashes in these cases. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Wildcard Function, Prev: Wildcard Pitfall, Up: Wildcards |
| |
| 4.4.3 The Function 'wildcard' |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| Wildcard expansion happens automatically in rules. But wildcard |
| expansion does not normally take place when a variable is set, or inside |
| the arguments of a function. If you want to do wildcard expansion in |
| such places, you need to use the 'wildcard' function, like this: |
| |
| $(wildcard PATTERN...) |
| |
| This string, used anywhere in a makefile, is replaced by a |
| space-separated list of names of existing files that match one of the |
| given file name patterns. If no existing file name matches a pattern, |
| then that pattern is omitted from the output of the 'wildcard' function. |
| Note that this is different from how unmatched wildcards behave in |
| rules, where they are used verbatim rather than ignored (*note Wildcard |
| Pitfall::). |
| |
| One use of the 'wildcard' function is to get a list of all the C |
| source files in a directory, like this: |
| |
| $(wildcard *.c) |
| |
| We can change the list of C source files into a list of object files |
| by replacing the '.c' suffix with '.o' in the result, like this: |
| |
| $(patsubst %.c,%.o,$(wildcard *.c)) |
| |
| (Here we have used another function, 'patsubst'. *Note Functions for |
| String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions.) |
| |
| Thus, a makefile to compile all C source files in the directory and |
| then link them together could be written as follows: |
| |
| objects := $(patsubst %.c,%.o,$(wildcard *.c)) |
| |
| foo : $(objects) |
| cc -o foo $(objects) |
| |
| (This takes advantage of the implicit rule for compiling C programs, so |
| there is no need to write explicit rules for compiling the files. *Note |
| The Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors, for an explanation of ':=', which |
| is a variant of '='.) |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Directory Search, Next: Phony Targets, Prev: Wildcards, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.5 Searching Directories for Prerequisites |
| =========================================== |
| |
| For large systems, it is often desirable to put sources in a separate |
| directory from the binaries. The "directory search" features of 'make' |
| facilitate this by searching several directories automatically to find a |
| prerequisite. When you redistribute the files among directories, you do |
| not need to change the individual rules, just the search paths. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * General Search:: Specifying a search path that applies |
| to every prerequisite. |
| * Selective Search:: Specifying a search path |
| for a specified class of names. |
| * Search Algorithm:: When and how search paths are applied. |
| * Recipes/Search:: How to write recipes that work together |
| with search paths. |
| * Implicit/Search:: How search paths affect implicit rules. |
| * Libraries/Search:: Directory search for link libraries. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: General Search, Next: Selective Search, Prev: Directory Search, Up: Directory Search |
| |
| 4.5.1 'VPATH': Search Path for All Prerequisites |
| ------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| The value of the 'make' variable 'VPATH' specifies a list of directories |
| that 'make' should search. Most often, the directories are expected to |
| contain prerequisite files that are not in the current directory; |
| however, 'make' uses 'VPATH' as a search list for both prerequisites and |
| targets of rules. |
| |
| Thus, if a file that is listed as a target or prerequisite does not |
| exist in the current directory, 'make' searches the directories listed |
| in 'VPATH' for a file with that name. If a file is found in one of |
| them, that file may become the prerequisite (see below). Rules may then |
| specify the names of files in the prerequisite list as if they all |
| existed in the current directory. *Note Writing Recipes with Directory |
| Search: Recipes/Search. |
| |
| In the 'VPATH' variable, directory names are separated by colons or |
| blanks. The order in which directories are listed is the order followed |
| by 'make' in its search. (On MS-DOS and MS-Windows, semi-colons are |
| used as separators of directory names in 'VPATH', since the colon can be |
| used in the pathname itself, after the drive letter.) |
| |
| For example, |
| |
| VPATH = src:../headers |
| |
| specifies a path containing two directories, 'src' and '../headers', |
| which 'make' searches in that order. |
| |
| With this value of 'VPATH', the following rule, |
| |
| foo.o : foo.c |
| |
| is interpreted as if it were written like this: |
| |
| foo.o : src/foo.c |
| |
| assuming the file 'foo.c' does not exist in the current directory but is |
| found in the directory 'src'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Selective Search, Next: Search Algorithm, Prev: General Search, Up: Directory Search |
| |
| 4.5.2 The 'vpath' Directive |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| Similar to the 'VPATH' variable, but more selective, is the 'vpath' |
| directive (note lower case), which allows you to specify a search path |
| for a particular class of file names: those that match a particular |
| pattern. Thus you can supply certain search directories for one class |
| of file names and other directories (or none) for other file names. |
| |
| There are three forms of the 'vpath' directive: |
| |
| 'vpath PATTERN DIRECTORIES' |
| Specify the search path DIRECTORIES for file names that match |
| PATTERN. |
| |
| The search path, DIRECTORIES, is a list of directories to be |
| searched, separated by colons (semi-colons on MS-DOS and |
| MS-Windows) or blanks, just like the search path used in the |
| 'VPATH' variable. |
| |
| 'vpath PATTERN' |
| Clear out the search path associated with PATTERN. |
| |
| 'vpath' |
| |
| Clear all search paths previously specified with 'vpath' |
| directives. |
| |
| A 'vpath' pattern is a string containing a '%' character. The string |
| must match the file name of a prerequisite that is being searched for, |
| the '%' character matching any sequence of zero or more characters (as |
| in pattern rules; *note Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules: Pattern |
| Rules.). For example, '%.h' matches files that end in '.h'. (If there |
| is no '%', the pattern must match the prerequisite exactly, which is not |
| useful very often.) |
| |
| '%' characters in a 'vpath' directive's pattern can be quoted with |
| preceding backslashes ('\'). Backslashes that would otherwise quote '%' |
| characters can be quoted with more backslashes. Backslashes that quote |
| '%' characters or other backslashes are removed from the pattern before |
| it is compared to file names. Backslashes that are not in danger of |
| quoting '%' characters go unmolested. |
| |
| When a prerequisite fails to exist in the current directory, if the |
| PATTERN in a 'vpath' directive matches the name of the prerequisite |
| file, then the DIRECTORIES in that directive are searched just like (and |
| before) the directories in the 'VPATH' variable. |
| |
| For example, |
| |
| vpath %.h ../headers |
| |
| tells 'make' to look for any prerequisite whose name ends in '.h' in the |
| directory '../headers' if the file is not found in the current |
| directory. |
| |
| If several 'vpath' patterns match the prerequisite file's name, then |
| 'make' processes each matching 'vpath' directive one by one, searching |
| all the directories mentioned in each directive. 'make' handles |
| multiple 'vpath' directives in the order in which they appear in the |
| makefile; multiple directives with the same pattern are independent of |
| each other. |
| |
| Thus, |
| |
| vpath %.c foo |
| vpath % blish |
| vpath %.c bar |
| |
| will look for a file ending in '.c' in 'foo', then 'blish', then 'bar', |
| while |
| |
| vpath %.c foo:bar |
| vpath % blish |
| |
| will look for a file ending in '.c' in 'foo', then 'bar', then 'blish'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Search Algorithm, Next: Recipes/Search, Prev: Selective Search, Up: Directory Search |
| |
| 4.5.3 How Directory Searches are Performed |
| ------------------------------------------ |
| |
| When a prerequisite is found through directory search, regardless of |
| type (general or selective), the pathname located may not be the one |
| that 'make' actually provides you in the prerequisite list. Sometimes |
| the path discovered through directory search is thrown away. |
| |
| The algorithm 'make' uses to decide whether to keep or abandon a path |
| found via directory search is as follows: |
| |
| 1. If a target file does not exist at the path specified in the |
| makefile, directory search is performed. |
| |
| 2. If the directory search is successful, that path is kept and this |
| file is tentatively stored as the target. |
| |
| 3. All prerequisites of this target are examined using this same |
| method. |
| |
| 4. After processing the prerequisites, the target may or may not need |
| to be rebuilt: |
| |
| a. If the target does _not_ need to be rebuilt, the path to the |
| file found during directory search is used for any |
| prerequisite lists which contain this target. In short, if |
| 'make' doesn't need to rebuild the target then you use the |
| path found via directory search. |
| |
| b. If the target _does_ need to be rebuilt (is out-of-date), the |
| pathname found during directory search is _thrown away_, and |
| the target is rebuilt using the file name specified in the |
| makefile. In short, if 'make' must rebuild, then the target |
| is rebuilt locally, not in the directory found via directory |
| search. |
| |
| This algorithm may seem complex, but in practice it is quite often |
| exactly what you want. |
| |
| Other versions of 'make' use a simpler algorithm: if the file does |
| not exist, and it is found via directory search, then that pathname is |
| always used whether or not the target needs to be built. Thus, if the |
| target is rebuilt it is created at the pathname discovered during |
| directory search. |
| |
| If, in fact, this is the behavior you want for some or all of your |
| directories, you can use the 'GPATH' variable to indicate this to |
| 'make'. |
| |
| 'GPATH' has the same syntax and format as 'VPATH' (that is, a space- |
| or colon-delimited list of pathnames). If an out-of-date target is |
| found by directory search in a directory that also appears in 'GPATH', |
| then that pathname is not thrown away. The target is rebuilt using the |
| expanded path. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Recipes/Search, Next: Implicit/Search, Prev: Search Algorithm, Up: Directory Search |
| |
| 4.5.4 Writing Recipes with Directory Search |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| When a prerequisite is found in another directory through directory |
| search, this cannot change the recipe of the rule; they will execute as |
| written. Therefore, you must write the recipe with care so that it will |
| look for the prerequisite in the directory where 'make' finds it. |
| |
| This is done with the "automatic variables" such as '$^' (*note |
| Automatic Variables::). For instance, the value of '$^' is a list of |
| all the prerequisites of the rule, including the names of the |
| directories in which they were found, and the value of '$@' is the |
| target. Thus: |
| |
| foo.o : foo.c |
| cc -c $(CFLAGS) $^ -o $@ |
| |
| (The variable 'CFLAGS' exists so you can specify flags for C compilation |
| by implicit rules; we use it here for consistency so it will affect all |
| C compilations uniformly; *note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: |
| Implicit Variables.) |
| |
| Often the prerequisites include header files as well, which you do |
| not want to mention in the recipe. The automatic variable '$<' is just |
| the first prerequisite: |
| |
| VPATH = src:../headers |
| foo.o : foo.c defs.h hack.h |
| cc -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@ |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Implicit/Search, Next: Libraries/Search, Prev: Recipes/Search, Up: Directory Search |
| |
| 4.5.5 Directory Search and Implicit Rules |
| ----------------------------------------- |
| |
| The search through the directories specified in 'VPATH' or with 'vpath' |
| also happens during consideration of implicit rules (*note Using |
| Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules.). |
| |
| For example, when a file 'foo.o' has no explicit rule, 'make' |
| considers implicit rules, such as the built-in rule to compile 'foo.c' |
| if that file exists. If such a file is lacking in the current |
| directory, the appropriate directories are searched for it. If 'foo.c' |
| exists (or is mentioned in the makefile) in any of the directories, the |
| implicit rule for C compilation is applied. |
| |
| The recipes of implicit rules normally use automatic variables as a |
| matter of necessity; consequently they will use the file names found by |
| directory search with no extra effort. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Libraries/Search, Prev: Implicit/Search, Up: Directory Search |
| |
| 4.5.6 Directory Search for Link Libraries |
| ----------------------------------------- |
| |
| Directory search applies in a special way to libraries used with the |
| linker. This special feature comes into play when you write a |
| prerequisite whose name is of the form '-lNAME'. (You can tell |
| something strange is going on here because the prerequisite is normally |
| the name of a file, and the _file name_ of a library generally looks |
| like 'libNAME.a', not like '-lNAME'.) |
| |
| When a prerequisite's name has the form '-lNAME', 'make' handles it |
| specially by searching for the file 'libNAME.so', and, if it is not |
| found, for the file 'libNAME.a' in the current directory, in directories |
| specified by matching 'vpath' search paths and the 'VPATH' search path, |
| and then in the directories '/lib', '/usr/lib', and 'PREFIX/lib' |
| (normally '/usr/local/lib', but MS-DOS/MS-Windows versions of 'make' |
| behave as if PREFIX is defined to be the root of the DJGPP installation |
| tree). |
| |
| For example, if there is a '/usr/lib/libcurses.a' library on your |
| system (and no '/usr/lib/libcurses.so' file), then |
| |
| foo : foo.c -lcurses |
| cc $^ -o $@ |
| |
| would cause the command 'cc foo.c /usr/lib/libcurses.a -o foo' to be |
| executed when 'foo' is older than 'foo.c' or than |
| '/usr/lib/libcurses.a'. |
| |
| Although the default set of files to be searched for is 'libNAME.so' |
| and 'libNAME.a', this is customizable via the '.LIBPATTERNS' variable. |
| Each word in the value of this variable is a pattern string. When a |
| prerequisite like '-lNAME' is seen, 'make' will replace the percent in |
| each pattern in the list with NAME and perform the above directory |
| searches using each library file name. |
| |
| The default value for '.LIBPATTERNS' is 'lib%.so lib%.a', which |
| provides the default behavior described above. |
| |
| You can turn off link library expansion completely by setting this |
| variable to an empty value. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Phony Targets, Next: Force Targets, Prev: Directory Search, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.6 Phony Targets |
| ================= |
| |
| A phony target is one that is not really the name of a file; rather it |
| is just a name for a recipe to be executed when you make an explicit |
| request. There are two reasons to use a phony target: to avoid a |
| conflict with a file of the same name, and to improve performance. |
| |
| If you write a rule whose recipe will not create the target file, the |
| recipe will be executed every time the target comes up for remaking. |
| Here is an example: |
| |
| clean: |
| rm *.o temp |
| |
| Because the 'rm' command does not create a file named 'clean', probably |
| no such file will ever exist. Therefore, the 'rm' command will be |
| executed every time you say 'make clean'. |
| |
| In this example, the 'clean' target will not work properly if a file |
| named 'clean' is ever created in this directory. Since it has no |
| prerequisites, 'clean' would always be considered up to date and its |
| recipe would not be executed. To avoid this problem you can explicitly |
| declare the target to be phony by making it a prerequisite of the |
| special target '.PHONY' (*note Special Built-in Target Names: Special |
| Targets.) as follows: |
| |
| .PHONY: clean |
| clean: |
| rm *.o temp |
| |
| Once this is done, 'make clean' will run the recipe regardless of |
| whether there is a file named 'clean'. |
| |
| Phony targets are also useful in conjunction with recursive |
| invocations of 'make' (*note Recursive Use of 'make': Recursion.). In |
| this situation the makefile will often contain a variable which lists a |
| number of sub-directories to be built. A simplistic way to handle this |
| is to define one rule with a recipe that loops over the sub-directories, |
| like this: |
| |
| SUBDIRS = foo bar baz |
| |
| subdirs: |
| for dir in $(SUBDIRS); do \ |
| $(MAKE) -C $$dir; \ |
| done |
| |
| There are problems with this method, however. First, any error |
| detected in a sub-make is ignored by this rule, so it will continue to |
| build the rest of the directories even when one fails. This can be |
| overcome by adding shell commands to note the error and exit, but then |
| it will do so even if 'make' is invoked with the '-k' option, which is |
| unfortunate. Second, and perhaps more importantly, you cannot take |
| advantage of 'make''s ability to build targets in parallel (*note |
| Parallel Execution: Parallel.), since there is only one rule. |
| |
| By declaring the sub-directories as '.PHONY' targets (you must do |
| this as the sub-directory obviously always exists; otherwise it won't be |
| built) you can remove these problems: |
| |
| SUBDIRS = foo bar baz |
| |
| .PHONY: subdirs $(SUBDIRS) |
| |
| subdirs: $(SUBDIRS) |
| |
| $(SUBDIRS): |
| $(MAKE) -C $@ |
| |
| foo: baz |
| |
| Here we've also declared that the 'foo' sub-directory cannot be built |
| until after the 'baz' sub-directory is complete; this kind of |
| relationship declaration is particularly important when attempting |
| parallel builds. |
| |
| The implicit rule search (*note Implicit Rules::) is skipped for |
| '.PHONY' targets. This is why declaring a target as '.PHONY' is good |
| for performance, even if you are not worried about the actual file |
| existing. |
| |
| A phony target should not be a prerequisite of a real target file; if |
| it is, its recipe will be run every time 'make' goes to update that |
| file. As long as a phony target is never a prerequisite of a real |
| target, the phony target recipe will be executed only when the phony |
| target is a specified goal (*note Arguments to Specify the Goals: |
| Goals.). |
| |
| Phony targets can have prerequisites. When one directory contains |
| multiple programs, it is most convenient to describe all of the programs |
| in one makefile './Makefile'. Since the target remade by default will |
| be the first one in the makefile, it is common to make this a phony |
| target named 'all' and give it, as prerequisites, all the individual |
| programs. For example: |
| |
| all : prog1 prog2 prog3 |
| .PHONY : all |
| |
| prog1 : prog1.o utils.o |
| cc -o prog1 prog1.o utils.o |
| |
| prog2 : prog2.o |
| cc -o prog2 prog2.o |
| |
| prog3 : prog3.o sort.o utils.o |
| cc -o prog3 prog3.o sort.o utils.o |
| |
| Now you can say just 'make' to remake all three programs, or specify as |
| arguments the ones to remake (as in 'make prog1 prog3'). Phoniness is |
| not inherited: the prerequisites of a phony target are not themselves |
| phony, unless explicitly declared to be so. |
| |
| When one phony target is a prerequisite of another, it serves as a |
| subroutine of the other. For example, here 'make cleanall' will delete |
| the object files, the difference files, and the file 'program': |
| |
| .PHONY: cleanall cleanobj cleandiff |
| |
| cleanall : cleanobj cleandiff |
| rm program |
| |
| cleanobj : |
| rm *.o |
| |
| cleandiff : |
| rm *.diff |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Force Targets, Next: Empty Targets, Prev: Phony Targets, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.7 Rules without Recipes or Prerequisites |
| ========================================== |
| |
| If a rule has no prerequisites or recipe, and the target of the rule is |
| a nonexistent file, then 'make' imagines this target to have been |
| updated whenever its rule is run. This implies that all targets |
| depending on this one will always have their recipe run. |
| |
| An example will illustrate this: |
| |
| clean: FORCE |
| rm $(objects) |
| FORCE: |
| |
| Here the target 'FORCE' satisfies the special conditions, so the |
| target 'clean' that depends on it is forced to run its recipe. There is |
| nothing special about the name 'FORCE', but that is one name commonly |
| used this way. |
| |
| As you can see, using 'FORCE' this way has the same results as using |
| '.PHONY: clean'. |
| |
| Using '.PHONY' is more explicit and more efficient. However, other |
| versions of 'make' do not support '.PHONY'; thus 'FORCE' appears in many |
| makefiles. *Note Phony Targets::. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Empty Targets, Next: Special Targets, Prev: Force Targets, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.8 Empty Target Files to Record Events |
| ======================================= |
| |
| The "empty target" is a variant of the phony target; it is used to hold |
| recipes for an action that you request explicitly from time to time. |
| Unlike a phony target, this target file can really exist; but the file's |
| contents do not matter, and usually are empty. |
| |
| The purpose of the empty target file is to record, with its |
| last-modification time, when the rule's recipe was last executed. It |
| does so because one of the commands in the recipe is a 'touch' command |
| to update the target file. |
| |
| The empty target file should have some prerequisites (otherwise it |
| doesn't make sense). When you ask to remake the empty target, the |
| recipe is executed if any prerequisite is more recent than the target; |
| in other words, if a prerequisite has changed since the last time you |
| remade the target. Here is an example: |
| |
| print: foo.c bar.c |
| lpr -p $? |
| touch print |
| |
| With this rule, 'make print' will execute the 'lpr' command if either |
| source file has changed since the last 'make print'. The automatic |
| variable '$?' is used to print only those files that have changed (*note |
| Automatic Variables::). |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Special Targets, Next: Multiple Targets, Prev: Empty Targets, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.9 Special Built-in Target Names |
| ================================= |
| |
| Certain names have special meanings if they appear as targets. |
| |
| '.PHONY' |
| |
| The prerequisites of the special target '.PHONY' are considered to |
| be phony targets. When it is time to consider such a target, |
| 'make' will run its recipe unconditionally, regardless of whether a |
| file with that name exists or what its last-modification time is. |
| *Note Phony Targets: Phony Targets. |
| |
| '.SUFFIXES' |
| |
| The prerequisites of the special target '.SUFFIXES' are the list of |
| suffixes to be used in checking for suffix rules. *Note |
| Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules: Suffix Rules. |
| |
| '.DEFAULT' |
| |
| The recipe specified for '.DEFAULT' is used for any target for |
| which no rules are found (either explicit rules or implicit rules). |
| *Note Last Resort::. If a '.DEFAULT' recipe is specified, every |
| file mentioned as a prerequisite, but not as a target in a rule, |
| will have that recipe executed on its behalf. *Note Implicit Rule |
| Search Algorithm: Implicit Rule Search. |
| |
| '.PRECIOUS' |
| |
| The targets which '.PRECIOUS' depends on are given the following |
| special treatment: if 'make' is killed or interrupted during the |
| execution of their recipes, the target is not deleted. *Note |
| Interrupting or Killing 'make': Interrupts. Also, if the target is |
| an intermediate file, it will not be deleted after it is no longer |
| needed, as is normally done. *Note Chains of Implicit Rules: |
| Chained Rules. In this latter respect it overlaps with the |
| '.SECONDARY' special target. |
| |
| You can also list the target pattern of an implicit rule (such as |
| '%.o') as a prerequisite file of the special target '.PRECIOUS' to |
| preserve intermediate files created by rules whose target patterns |
| match that file's name. |
| |
| '.INTERMEDIATE' |
| |
| The targets which '.INTERMEDIATE' depends on are treated as |
| intermediate files. *Note Chains of Implicit Rules: Chained Rules. |
| '.INTERMEDIATE' with no prerequisites has no effect. |
| |
| '.SECONDARY' |
| |
| The targets which '.SECONDARY' depends on are treated as |
| intermediate files, except that they are never automatically |
| deleted. *Note Chains of Implicit Rules: Chained Rules. |
| |
| '.SECONDARY' with no prerequisites causes all targets to be treated |
| as secondary (i.e., no target is removed because it is considered |
| intermediate). |
| |
| '.SECONDEXPANSION' |
| |
| If '.SECONDEXPANSION' is mentioned as a target anywhere in the |
| makefile, then all prerequisite lists defined _after_ it appears |
| will be expanded a second time after all makefiles have been read |
| in. *Note Secondary Expansion: Secondary Expansion. |
| |
| '.DELETE_ON_ERROR' |
| |
| If '.DELETE_ON_ERROR' is mentioned as a target anywhere in the |
| makefile, then 'make' will delete the target of a rule if it has |
| changed and its recipe exits with a nonzero exit status, just as it |
| does when it receives a signal. *Note Errors in Recipes: Errors. |
| |
| '.IGNORE' |
| |
| If you specify prerequisites for '.IGNORE', then 'make' will ignore |
| errors in execution of the recipe for those particular files. The |
| recipe for '.IGNORE' (if any) is ignored. |
| |
| If mentioned as a target with no prerequisites, '.IGNORE' says to |
| ignore errors in execution of recipes for all files. This usage of |
| '.IGNORE' is supported only for historical compatibility. Since |
| this affects every recipe in the makefile, it is not very useful; |
| we recommend you use the more selective ways to ignore errors in |
| specific recipes. *Note Errors in Recipes: Errors. |
| |
| '.LOW_RESOLUTION_TIME' |
| |
| If you specify prerequisites for '.LOW_RESOLUTION_TIME', 'make' |
| assumes that these files are created by commands that generate low |
| resolution time stamps. The recipe for the '.LOW_RESOLUTION_TIME' |
| target are ignored. |
| |
| The high resolution file time stamps of many modern file systems |
| lessen the chance of 'make' incorrectly concluding that a file is |
| up to date. Unfortunately, some hosts do not provide a way to set |
| a high resolution file time stamp, so commands like 'cp -p' that |
| explicitly set a file's time stamp must discard its sub-second |
| part. If a file is created by such a command, you should list it |
| as a prerequisite of '.LOW_RESOLUTION_TIME' so that 'make' does not |
| mistakenly conclude that the file is out of date. For example: |
| |
| .LOW_RESOLUTION_TIME: dst |
| dst: src |
| cp -p src dst |
| |
| Since 'cp -p' discards the sub-second part of 'src''s time stamp, |
| 'dst' is typically slightly older than 'src' even when it is up to |
| date. The '.LOW_RESOLUTION_TIME' line causes 'make' to consider |
| 'dst' to be up to date if its time stamp is at the start of the |
| same second that 'src''s time stamp is in. |
| |
| Due to a limitation of the archive format, archive member time |
| stamps are always low resolution. You need not list archive |
| members as prerequisites of '.LOW_RESOLUTION_TIME', as 'make' does |
| this automatically. |
| |
| '.SILENT' |
| |
| If you specify prerequisites for '.SILENT', then 'make' will not |
| print the recipe used to remake those particular files before |
| executing them. The recipe for '.SILENT' is ignored. |
| |
| If mentioned as a target with no prerequisites, '.SILENT' says not |
| to print any recipes before executing them. This usage of |
| '.SILENT' is supported only for historical compatibility. We |
| recommend you use the more selective ways to silence specific |
| recipes. *Note Recipe Echoing: Echoing. If you want to silence |
| all recipes for a particular run of 'make', use the '-s' or |
| '--silent' option (*note Options Summary::). |
| |
| '.EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES' |
| |
| Simply by being mentioned as a target, this tells 'make' to export |
| all variables to child processes by default. *Note Communicating |
| Variables to a Sub-'make': Variables/Recursion. |
| |
| '.NOTPARALLEL' |
| |
| If '.NOTPARALLEL' is mentioned as a target, then this invocation of |
| 'make' will be run serially, even if the '-j' option is given. Any |
| recursively invoked 'make' command will still run recipes in |
| parallel (unless its makefile also contains this target). Any |
| prerequisites on this target are ignored. |
| |
| '.ONESHELL' |
| |
| If '.ONESHELL' is mentioned as a target, then when a target is |
| built all lines of the recipe will be given to a single invocation |
| of the shell rather than each line being invoked separately (*note |
| Recipe Execution: Execution.). |
| |
| '.POSIX' |
| |
| If '.POSIX' is mentioned as a target, then the makefile will be |
| parsed and run in POSIX-conforming mode. This does _not_ mean that |
| only POSIX-conforming makefiles will be accepted: all advanced GNU |
| 'make' features are still available. Rather, this target causes |
| 'make' to behave as required by POSIX in those areas where 'make''s |
| default behavior differs. |
| |
| In particular, if this target is mentioned then recipes will be |
| invoked as if the shell had been passed the '-e' flag: the first |
| failing command in a recipe will cause the recipe to fail |
| immediately. |
| |
| Any defined implicit rule suffix also counts as a special target if |
| it appears as a target, and so does the concatenation of two suffixes, |
| such as '.c.o'. These targets are suffix rules, an obsolete way of |
| defining implicit rules (but a way still widely used). In principle, |
| any target name could be special in this way if you break it in two and |
| add both pieces to the suffix list. In practice, suffixes normally |
| begin with '.', so these special target names also begin with '.'. |
| *Note Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules: Suffix Rules. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Multiple Targets, Next: Multiple Rules, Prev: Special Targets, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.10 Multiple Targets in a Rule |
| =============================== |
| |
| A rule with multiple targets is equivalent to writing many rules, each |
| with one target, and all identical aside from that. The same recipe |
| applies to all the targets, but its effect may vary because you can |
| substitute the actual target name into the recipe using '$@'. The rule |
| contributes the same prerequisites to all the targets also. |
| |
| This is useful in two cases. |
| |
| * You want just prerequisites, no recipe. For example: |
| |
| kbd.o command.o files.o: command.h |
| |
| gives an additional prerequisite to each of the three object files |
| mentioned. |
| |
| * Similar recipes work for all the targets. The recipes do not need |
| to be absolutely identical, since the automatic variable '$@' can |
| be used to substitute the particular target to be remade into the |
| commands (*note Automatic Variables::). For example: |
| |
| bigoutput littleoutput : text.g |
| generate text.g -$(subst output,,$@) > $@ |
| |
| is equivalent to |
| |
| bigoutput : text.g |
| generate text.g -big > bigoutput |
| littleoutput : text.g |
| generate text.g -little > littleoutput |
| |
| Here we assume the hypothetical program 'generate' makes two types |
| of output, one if given '-big' and one if given '-little'. *Note |
| Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions, for |
| an explanation of the 'subst' function. |
| |
| Suppose you would like to vary the prerequisites according to the |
| target, much as the variable '$@' allows you to vary the recipe. You |
| cannot do this with multiple targets in an ordinary rule, but you can do |
| it with a "static pattern rule". *Note Static Pattern Rules: Static |
| Pattern. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Multiple Rules, Next: Static Pattern, Prev: Multiple Targets, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.11 Multiple Rules for One Target |
| ================================== |
| |
| One file can be the target of several rules. All the prerequisites |
| mentioned in all the rules are merged into one list of prerequisites for |
| the target. If the target is older than any prerequisite from any rule, |
| the recipe is executed. |
| |
| There can only be one recipe to be executed for a file. If more than |
| one rule gives a recipe for the same file, 'make' uses the last one |
| given and prints an error message. (As a special case, if the file's |
| name begins with a dot, no error message is printed. This odd behavior |
| is only for compatibility with other implementations of 'make'... you |
| should avoid using it). Occasionally it is useful to have the same |
| target invoke multiple recipes which are defined in different parts of |
| your makefile; you can use "double-colon rules" (*note Double-Colon::) |
| for this. |
| |
| An extra rule with just prerequisites can be used to give a few extra |
| prerequisites to many files at once. For example, makefiles often have |
| a variable, such as 'objects', containing a list of all the compiler |
| output files in the system being made. An easy way to say that all of |
| them must be recompiled if 'config.h' changes is to write the following: |
| |
| objects = foo.o bar.o |
| foo.o : defs.h |
| bar.o : defs.h test.h |
| $(objects) : config.h |
| |
| This could be inserted or taken out without changing the rules that |
| really specify how to make the object files, making it a convenient form |
| to use if you wish to add the additional prerequisite intermittently. |
| |
| Another wrinkle is that the additional prerequisites could be |
| specified with a variable that you set with a command line argument to |
| 'make' (*note Overriding Variables: Overriding.). For example, |
| |
| extradeps= |
| $(objects) : $(extradeps) |
| |
| means that the command 'make extradeps=foo.h' will consider 'foo.h' as a |
| prerequisite of each object file, but plain 'make' will not. |
| |
| If none of the explicit rules for a target has a recipe, then 'make' |
| searches for an applicable implicit rule to find one *note Using |
| Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules.). |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Static Pattern, Next: Double-Colon, Prev: Multiple Rules, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.12 Static Pattern Rules |
| ========================= |
| |
| "Static pattern rules" are rules which specify multiple targets and |
| construct the prerequisite names for each target based on the target |
| name. They are more general than ordinary rules with multiple targets |
| because the targets do not have to have identical prerequisites. Their |
| prerequisites must be _analogous_, but not necessarily _identical_. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Static Usage:: The syntax of static pattern rules. |
| * Static versus Implicit:: When are they better than implicit rules? |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Static Usage, Next: Static versus Implicit, Prev: Static Pattern, Up: Static Pattern |
| |
| 4.12.1 Syntax of Static Pattern Rules |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| Here is the syntax of a static pattern rule: |
| |
| TARGETS ...: TARGET-PATTERN: PREREQ-PATTERNS ... |
| RECIPE |
| ... |
| |
| The TARGETS list specifies the targets that the rule applies to. The |
| targets can contain wildcard characters, just like the targets of |
| ordinary rules (*note Using Wildcard Characters in File Names: |
| Wildcards.). |
| |
| The TARGET-PATTERN and PREREQ-PATTERNS say how to compute the |
| prerequisites of each target. Each target is matched against the |
| TARGET-PATTERN to extract a part of the target name, called the "stem". |
| This stem is substituted into each of the PREREQ-PATTERNS to make the |
| prerequisite names (one from each PREREQ-PATTERN). |
| |
| Each pattern normally contains the character '%' just once. When the |
| TARGET-PATTERN matches a target, the '%' can match any part of the |
| target name; this part is called the "stem". The rest of the pattern |
| must match exactly. For example, the target 'foo.o' matches the pattern |
| '%.o', with 'foo' as the stem. The targets 'foo.c' and 'foo.out' do not |
| match that pattern. |
| |
| The prerequisite names for each target are made by substituting the |
| stem for the '%' in each prerequisite pattern. For example, if one |
| prerequisite pattern is '%.c', then substitution of the stem 'foo' gives |
| the prerequisite name 'foo.c'. It is legitimate to write a prerequisite |
| pattern that does not contain '%'; then this prerequisite is the same |
| for all targets. |
| |
| '%' characters in pattern rules can be quoted with preceding |
| backslashes ('\'). Backslashes that would otherwise quote '%' |
| characters can be quoted with more backslashes. Backslashes that quote |
| '%' characters or other backslashes are removed from the pattern before |
| it is compared to file names or has a stem substituted into it. |
| Backslashes that are not in danger of quoting '%' characters go |
| unmolested. For example, the pattern 'the\%weird\\%pattern\\' has |
| 'the%weird\' preceding the operative '%' character, and 'pattern\\' |
| following it. The final two backslashes are left alone because they |
| cannot affect any '%' character. |
| |
| Here is an example, which compiles each of 'foo.o' and 'bar.o' from |
| the corresponding '.c' file: |
| |
| objects = foo.o bar.o |
| |
| all: $(objects) |
| |
| $(objects): %.o: %.c |
| $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@ |
| |
| Here '$<' is the automatic variable that holds the name of the |
| prerequisite and '$@' is the automatic variable that holds the name of |
| the target; see *note Automatic Variables::. |
| |
| Each target specified must match the target pattern; a warning is |
| issued for each target that does not. If you have a list of files, only |
| some of which will match the pattern, you can use the 'filter' function |
| to remove non-matching file names (*note Functions for String |
| Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions.): |
| |
| files = foo.elc bar.o lose.o |
| |
| $(filter %.o,$(files)): %.o: %.c |
| $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@ |
| $(filter %.elc,$(files)): %.elc: %.el |
| emacs -f batch-byte-compile $< |
| |
| In this example the result of '$(filter %.o,$(files))' is 'bar.o |
| lose.o', and the first static pattern rule causes each of these object |
| files to be updated by compiling the corresponding C source file. The |
| result of '$(filter %.elc,$(files))' is 'foo.elc', so that file is made |
| from 'foo.el'. |
| |
| Another example shows how to use '$*' in static pattern rules: |
| |
| bigoutput littleoutput : %output : text.g |
| generate text.g -$* > $@ |
| |
| When the 'generate' command is run, '$*' will expand to the stem, either |
| 'big' or 'little'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Static versus Implicit, Prev: Static Usage, Up: Static Pattern |
| |
| 4.12.2 Static Pattern Rules versus Implicit Rules |
| ------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| A static pattern rule has much in common with an implicit rule defined |
| as a pattern rule (*note Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules: Pattern |
| Rules.). Both have a pattern for the target and patterns for |
| constructing the names of prerequisites. The difference is in how |
| 'make' decides _when_ the rule applies. |
| |
| An implicit rule _can_ apply to any target that matches its pattern, |
| but it _does_ apply only when the target has no recipe otherwise |
| specified, and only when the prerequisites can be found. If more than |
| one implicit rule appears applicable, only one applies; the choice |
| depends on the order of rules. |
| |
| By contrast, a static pattern rule applies to the precise list of |
| targets that you specify in the rule. It cannot apply to any other |
| target and it invariably does apply to each of the targets specified. |
| If two conflicting rules apply, and both have recipes, that's an error. |
| |
| The static pattern rule can be better than an implicit rule for these |
| reasons: |
| |
| * You may wish to override the usual implicit rule for a few files |
| whose names cannot be categorized syntactically but can be given in |
| an explicit list. |
| |
| * If you cannot be sure of the precise contents of the directories |
| you are using, you may not be sure which other irrelevant files |
| might lead 'make' to use the wrong implicit rule. The choice might |
| depend on the order in which the implicit rule search is done. |
| With static pattern rules, there is no uncertainty: each rule |
| applies to precisely the targets specified. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Double-Colon, Next: Automatic Prerequisites, Prev: Static Pattern, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.13 Double-Colon Rules |
| ======================= |
| |
| "Double-colon" rules are explicit rules written with '::' instead of ':' |
| after the target names. They are handled differently from ordinary |
| rules when the same target appears in more than one rule. Pattern rules |
| with double-colons have an entirely different meaning (*note |
| Match-Anything Rules::). |
| |
| When a target appears in multiple rules, all the rules must be the |
| same type: all ordinary, or all double-colon. If they are double-colon, |
| each of them is independent of the others. Each double-colon rule's |
| recipe is executed if the target is older than any prerequisites of that |
| rule. If there are no prerequisites for that rule, its recipe is always |
| executed (even if the target already exists). This can result in |
| executing none, any, or all of the double-colon rules. |
| |
| Double-colon rules with the same target are in fact completely |
| separate from one another. Each double-colon rule is processed |
| individually, just as rules with different targets are processed. |
| |
| The double-colon rules for a target are executed in the order they |
| appear in the makefile. However, the cases where double-colon rules |
| really make sense are those where the order of executing the recipes |
| would not matter. |
| |
| Double-colon rules are somewhat obscure and not often very useful; |
| they provide a mechanism for cases in which the method used to update a |
| target differs depending on which prerequisite files caused the update, |
| and such cases are rare. |
| |
| Each double-colon rule should specify a recipe; if it does not, an |
| implicit rule will be used if one applies. *Note Using Implicit Rules: |
| Implicit Rules. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Automatic Prerequisites, Prev: Double-Colon, Up: Rules |
| |
| 4.14 Generating Prerequisites Automatically |
| =========================================== |
| |
| In the makefile for a program, many of the rules you need to write often |
| say only that some object file depends on some header file. For |
| example, if 'main.c' uses 'defs.h' via an '#include', you would write: |
| |
| main.o: defs.h |
| |
| You need this rule so that 'make' knows that it must remake 'main.o' |
| whenever 'defs.h' changes. You can see that for a large program you |
| would have to write dozens of such rules in your makefile. And, you |
| must always be very careful to update the makefile every time you add or |
| remove an '#include'. |
| |
| To avoid this hassle, most modern C compilers can write these rules |
| for you, by looking at the '#include' lines in the source files. |
| Usually this is done with the '-M' option to the compiler. For example, |
| the command: |
| |
| cc -M main.c |
| |
| generates the output: |
| |
| main.o : main.c defs.h |
| |
| Thus you no longer have to write all those rules yourself. The compiler |
| will do it for you. |
| |
| Note that such a rule constitutes mentioning 'main.o' in a makefile, |
| so it can never be considered an intermediate file by implicit rule |
| search. This means that 'make' won't ever remove the file after using |
| it; *note Chains of Implicit Rules: Chained Rules. |
| |
| With old 'make' programs, it was traditional practice to use this |
| compiler feature to generate prerequisites on demand with a command like |
| 'make depend'. That command would create a file 'depend' containing all |
| the automatically-generated prerequisites; then the makefile could use |
| 'include' to read them in (*note Include::). |
| |
| In GNU 'make', the feature of remaking makefiles makes this practice |
| obsolete--you need never tell 'make' explicitly to regenerate the |
| prerequisites, because it always regenerates any makefile that is out of |
| date. *Note Remaking Makefiles::. |
| |
| The practice we recommend for automatic prerequisite generation is to |
| have one makefile corresponding to each source file. For each source |
| file 'NAME.c' there is a makefile 'NAME.d' which lists what files the |
| object file 'NAME.o' depends on. That way only the source files that |
| have changed need to be rescanned to produce the new prerequisites. |
| |
| Here is the pattern rule to generate a file of prerequisites (i.e., a |
| makefile) called 'NAME.d' from a C source file called 'NAME.c': |
| |
| %.d: %.c |
| @set -e; rm -f $@; \ |
| $(CC) -M $(CPPFLAGS) $< > $@.$$$$; \ |
| sed 's,\($*\)\.o[ :]*,\1.o $@ : ,g' < $@.$$$$ > $@; \ |
| rm -f $@.$$$$ |
| |
| *Note Pattern Rules::, for information on defining pattern rules. The |
| '-e' flag to the shell causes it to exit immediately if the '$(CC)' |
| command (or any other command) fails (exits with a nonzero status). |
| |
| With the GNU C compiler, you may wish to use the '-MM' flag instead |
| of '-M'. This omits prerequisites on system header files. *Note |
| Options Controlling the Preprocessor: (gcc)Preprocessor Options, for |
| details. |
| |
| The purpose of the 'sed' command is to translate (for example): |
| |
| main.o : main.c defs.h |
| |
| into: |
| |
| main.o main.d : main.c defs.h |
| |
| This makes each '.d' file depend on all the source and header files that |
| the corresponding '.o' file depends on. 'make' then knows it must |
| regenerate the prerequisites whenever any of the source or header files |
| changes. |
| |
| Once you've defined the rule to remake the '.d' files, you then use |
| the 'include' directive to read them all in. *Note Include::. For |
| example: |
| |
| sources = foo.c bar.c |
| |
| include $(sources:.c=.d) |
| |
| (This example uses a substitution variable reference to translate the |
| list of source files 'foo.c bar.c' into a list of prerequisite |
| makefiles, 'foo.d bar.d'. *Note Substitution Refs::, for full |
| information on substitution references.) Since the '.d' files are |
| makefiles like any others, 'make' will remake them as necessary with no |
| further work from you. *Note Remaking Makefiles::. |
| |
| Note that the '.d' files contain target definitions; you should be |
| sure to place the 'include' directive _after_ the first, default goal in |
| your makefiles or run the risk of having a random object file become the |
| default goal. *Note How Make Works::. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Recipes, Next: Using Variables, Prev: Rules, Up: Top |
| |
| 5 Writing Recipes in Rules |
| ************************** |
| |
| The recipe of a rule consists of one or more shell command lines to be |
| executed, one at a time, in the order they appear. Typically, the |
| result of executing these commands is that the target of the rule is |
| brought up to date. |
| |
| Users use many different shell programs, but recipes in makefiles are |
| always interpreted by '/bin/sh' unless the makefile specifies otherwise. |
| *Note Recipe Execution: Execution. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Recipe Syntax:: Recipe syntax features and pitfalls. |
| * Echoing:: How to control when recipes are echoed. |
| * Execution:: How recipes are executed. |
| * Parallel:: How recipes can be executed in parallel. |
| * Errors:: What happens after a recipe execution error. |
| * Interrupts:: What happens when a recipe is interrupted. |
| * Recursion:: Invoking 'make' from makefiles. |
| * Canned Recipes:: Defining canned recipes. |
| * Empty Recipes:: Defining useful, do-nothing recipes. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Recipe Syntax, Next: Echoing, Prev: Recipes, Up: Recipes |
| |
| 5.1 Recipe Syntax |
| ================= |
| |
| Makefiles have the unusual property that there are really two distinct |
| syntaxes in one file. Most of the makefile uses 'make' syntax (*note |
| Writing Makefiles: Makefiles.). However, recipes are meant to be |
| interpreted by the shell and so they are written using shell syntax. |
| The 'make' program does not try to understand shell syntax: it performs |
| only a very few specific translations on the content of the recipe |
| before handing it to the shell. |
| |
| Each line in the recipe must start with a tab (or the first character |
| in the value of the '.RECIPEPREFIX' variable; *note Special |
| Variables::), except that the first recipe line may be attached to the |
| target-and-prerequisites line with a semicolon in between. _Any_ line |
| in the makefile that begins with a tab and appears in a "rule context" |
| (that is, after a rule has been started until another rule or variable |
| definition) will be considered part of a recipe for that rule. Blank |
| lines and lines of just comments may appear among the recipe lines; they |
| are ignored. |
| |
| Some consequences of these rules include: |
| |
| * A blank line that begins with a tab is not blank: it's an empty |
| recipe (*note Empty Recipes::). |
| |
| * A comment in a recipe is not a 'make' comment; it will be passed to |
| the shell as-is. Whether the shell treats it as a comment or not |
| depends on your shell. |
| |
| * A variable definition in a "rule context" which is indented by a |
| tab as the first character on the line, will be considered part of |
| a recipe, not a 'make' variable definition, and passed to the |
| shell. |
| |
| * A conditional expression ('ifdef', 'ifeq', etc. *note Syntax of |
| Conditionals: Conditional Syntax.) in a "rule context" which is |
| indented by a tab as the first character on the line, will be |
| considered part of a recipe and be passed to the shell. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Splitting Recipe Lines:: Breaking long recipe lines for readability. |
| * Variables in Recipes:: Using 'make' variables in recipes. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Splitting Recipe Lines, Next: Variables in Recipes, Prev: Recipe Syntax, Up: Recipe Syntax |
| |
| 5.1.1 Splitting Recipe Lines |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| One of the few ways in which 'make' does interpret recipes is checking |
| for a backslash just before the newline. As in normal makefile syntax, |
| a single logical recipe line can be split into multiple physical lines |
| in the makefile by placing a backslash before each newline. A sequence |
| of lines like this is considered a single recipe line, and one instance |
| of the shell will be invoked to run it. |
| |
| However, in contrast to how they are treated in other places in a |
| makefile (*note Splitting Long Lines: Splitting Lines.), |
| backslash/newline pairs are _not_ removed from the recipe. Both the |
| backslash and the newline characters are preserved and passed to the |
| shell. How the backslash/newline is interpreted depends on your shell. |
| If the first character of the next line after the backslash/newline is |
| the recipe prefix character (a tab by default; *note Special |
| Variables::), then that character (and only that character) is removed. |
| Whitespace is never added to the recipe. |
| |
| For example, the recipe for the all target in this makefile: |
| |
| all : |
| @echo no\ |
| space |
| @echo no\ |
| space |
| @echo one \ |
| space |
| @echo one\ |
| space |
| |
| consists of four separate shell commands where the output is: |
| |
| nospace |
| nospace |
| one space |
| one space |
| |
| As a more complex example, this makefile: |
| |
| all : ; @echo 'hello \ |
| world' ; echo "hello \ |
| world" |
| |
| will invoke one shell with a command of: |
| |
| echo 'hello \ |
| world' ; echo "hello \ |
| world" |
| |
| which, according to shell quoting rules, will yield the following |
| output: |
| |
| hello \ |
| world |
| hello world |
| |
| Notice how the backslash/newline pair was removed inside the string |
| quoted with double quotes ('"..."'), but not from the string quoted with |
| single quotes (''...''). This is the way the default shell ('/bin/sh') |
| handles backslash/newline pairs. If you specify a different shell in |
| your makefiles it may treat them differently. |
| |
| Sometimes you want to split a long line inside of single quotes, but |
| you don't want the backslash/newline to appear in the quoted content. |
| This is often the case when passing scripts to languages such as Perl, |
| where extraneous backslashes inside the script can change its meaning or |
| even be a syntax error. One simple way of handling this is to place the |
| quoted string, or even the entire command, into a 'make' variable then |
| use the variable in the recipe. In this situation the newline quoting |
| rules for makefiles will be used, and the backslash/newline will be |
| removed. If we rewrite our example above using this method: |
| |
| HELLO = 'hello \ |
| world' |
| |
| all : ; @echo $(HELLO) |
| |
| we will get output like this: |
| |
| hello world |
| |
| If you like, you can also use target-specific variables (*note |
| Target-specific Variable Values: Target-specific.) to obtain a tighter |
| correspondence between the variable and the recipe that uses it. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Variables in Recipes, Prev: Splitting Recipe Lines, Up: Recipe Syntax |
| |
| 5.1.2 Using Variables in Recipes |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| The other way in which 'make' processes recipes is by expanding any |
| variable references in them (*note Basics of Variable References: |
| Reference.). This occurs after make has finished reading all the |
| makefiles and the target is determined to be out of date; so, the |
| recipes for targets which are not rebuilt are never expanded. |
| |
| Variable and function references in recipes have identical syntax and |
| semantics to references elsewhere in the makefile. They also have the |
| same quoting rules: if you want a dollar sign to appear in your recipe, |
| you must double it ('$$'). For shells like the default shell, that use |
| dollar signs to introduce variables, it's important to keep clear in |
| your mind whether the variable you want to reference is a 'make' |
| variable (use a single dollar sign) or a shell variable (use two dollar |
| signs). For example: |
| |
| LIST = one two three |
| all: |
| for i in $(LIST); do \ |
| echo $$i; \ |
| done |
| |
| results in the following command being passed to the shell: |
| |
| for i in one two three; do \ |
| echo $i; \ |
| done |
| |
| which generates the expected result: |
| |
| one |
| two |
| three |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Echoing, Next: Execution, Prev: Recipe Syntax, Up: Recipes |
| |
| 5.2 Recipe Echoing |
| ================== |
| |
| Normally 'make' prints each line of the recipe before it is executed. |
| We call this "echoing" because it gives the appearance that you are |
| typing the lines yourself. |
| |
| When a line starts with '@', the echoing of that line is suppressed. |
| The '@' is discarded before the line is passed to the shell. Typically |
| you would use this for a command whose only effect is to print |
| something, such as an 'echo' command to indicate progress through the |
| makefile: |
| |
| @echo About to make distribution files |
| |
| When 'make' is given the flag '-n' or '--just-print' it only echoes |
| most recipes, without executing them. *Note Summary of Options: Options |
| Summary. In this case even the recipe lines starting with '@' are |
| printed. This flag is useful for finding out which recipes 'make' |
| thinks are necessary without actually doing them. |
| |
| The '-s' or '--silent' flag to 'make' prevents all echoing, as if all |
| recipes started with '@'. A rule in the makefile for the special target |
| '.SILENT' without prerequisites has the same effect (*note Special |
| Built-in Target Names: Special Targets.). '.SILENT' is essentially |
| obsolete since '@' is more flexible. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Execution, Next: Parallel, Prev: Echoing, Up: Recipes |
| |
| 5.3 Recipe Execution |
| ==================== |
| |
| When it is time to execute recipes to update a target, they are executed |
| by invoking a new sub-shell for each line of the recipe, unless the |
| '.ONESHELL' special target is in effect (*note Using One Shell: One |
| Shell.) (In practice, 'make' may take shortcuts that do not affect the |
| results.) |
| |
| *Please note:* this implies that setting shell variables and invoking |
| shell commands such as 'cd' that set a context local to each process |
| will not affect the following lines in the recipe.(1) If you want to |
| use 'cd' to affect the next statement, put both statements in a single |
| recipe line. Then 'make' will invoke one shell to run the entire line, |
| and the shell will execute the statements in sequence. For example: |
| |
| foo : bar/lose |
| cd $(@D) && gobble $(@F) > ../$@ |
| |
| Here we use the shell AND operator ('&&') so that if the 'cd' command |
| fails, the script will fail without trying to invoke the 'gobble' |
| command in the wrong directory, which could cause problems (in this case |
| it would certainly cause '../foo' to be truncated, at least). |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * One Shell:: One shell for all lines in a recipe. |
| * Choosing the Shell:: How 'make' chooses the shell used |
| to run recipes. |
| |
| ---------- Footnotes ---------- |
| |
| (1) On MS-DOS, the value of current working directory is *global*, so |
| changing it _will_ affect the following recipe lines on those systems. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: One Shell, Next: Choosing the Shell, Prev: Execution, Up: Execution |
| |
| 5.3.1 Using One Shell |
| --------------------- |
| |
| Sometimes you would prefer that all the lines in the recipe be passed to |
| a single invocation of the shell. There are generally two situations |
| where this is useful: first, it can improve performance in makefiles |
| where recipes consist of many command lines, by avoiding extra |
| processes. Second, you might want newlines to be included in your |
| recipe command (for example perhaps you are using a very different |
| interpreter as your 'SHELL'). If the '.ONESHELL' special target appears |
| anywhere in the makefile then _all_ recipe lines for each target will be |
| provided to a single invocation of the shell. Newlines between recipe |
| lines will be preserved. For example: |
| |
| .ONESHELL: |
| foo : bar/lose |
| cd $(@D) |
| gobble $(@F) > ../$@ |
| |
| would now work as expected even though the commands are on different |
| recipe lines. |
| |
| If '.ONESHELL' is provided, then only the first line of the recipe |
| will be checked for the special prefix characters ('@', '-', and '+'). |
| Subsequent lines will include the special characters in the recipe line |
| when the 'SHELL' is invoked. If you want your recipe to start with one |
| of these special characters you'll need to arrange for them to not be |
| the first characters on the first line, perhaps by adding a comment or |
| similar. For example, this would be a syntax error in Perl because the |
| first '@' is removed by make: |
| |
| .ONESHELL: |
| SHELL = /usr/bin/perl |
| .SHELLFLAGS = -e |
| show : |
| @f = qw(a b c); |
| print "@f\n"; |
| |
| However, either of these alternatives would work properly: |
| |
| .ONESHELL: |
| SHELL = /usr/bin/perl |
| .SHELLFLAGS = -e |
| show : |
| # Make sure "@" is not the first character on the first line |
| @f = qw(a b c); |
| print "@f\n"; |
| |
| or |
| |
| .ONESHELL: |
| SHELL = /usr/bin/perl |
| .SHELLFLAGS = -e |
| show : |
| my @f = qw(a b c); |
| print "@f\n"; |
| |
| As a special feature, if 'SHELL' is determined to be a POSIX-style |
| shell, the special prefix characters in "internal" recipe lines will |
| _removed_ before the recipe is processed. This feature is intended to |
| allow existing makefiles to add the '.ONESHELL' special target and still |
| run properly without extensive modifications. Since the special prefix |
| characters are not legal at the beginning of a line in a POSIX shell |
| script this is not a loss in functionality. For example, this works as |
| expected: |
| |
| .ONESHELL: |
| foo : bar/lose |
| @cd $(@D) |
| @gobble $(@F) > ../$@ |
| |
| Even with this special feature, however, makefiles with '.ONESHELL' |
| will behave differently in ways that could be noticeable. For example, |
| normally if any line in the recipe fails, that causes the rule to fail |
| and no more recipe lines are processed. Under '.ONESHELL' a failure of |
| any but the final recipe line will not be noticed by 'make'. You can |
| modify '.SHELLFLAGS' to add the '-e' option to the shell which will |
| cause any failure anywhere in the command line to cause the shell to |
| fail, but this could itself cause your recipe to behave differently. |
| Ultimately you may need to harden your recipe lines to allow them to |
| work with '.ONESHELL'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Choosing the Shell, Prev: One Shell, Up: Execution |
| |
| 5.3.2 Choosing the Shell |
| ------------------------ |
| |
| The program used as the shell is taken from the variable 'SHELL'. If |
| this variable is not set in your makefile, the program '/bin/sh' is used |
| as the shell. The argument(s) passed to the shell are taken from the |
| variable '.SHELLFLAGS'. The default value of '.SHELLFLAGS' is '-c' |
| normally, or '-ec' in POSIX-conforming mode. |
| |
| Unlike most variables, the variable 'SHELL' is never set from the |
| environment. This is because the 'SHELL' environment variable is used |
| to specify your personal choice of shell program for interactive use. |
| It would be very bad for personal choices like this to affect the |
| functioning of makefiles. *Note Variables from the Environment: |
| Environment. |
| |
| Furthermore, when you do set 'SHELL' in your makefile that value is |
| _not_ exported in the environment to recipe lines that 'make' invokes. |
| Instead, the value inherited from the user's environment, if any, is |
| exported. You can override this behavior by explicitly exporting |
| 'SHELL' (*note Communicating Variables to a Sub-'make': |
| Variables/Recursion.), forcing it to be passed in the environment to |
| recipe lines. |
| |
| However, on MS-DOS and MS-Windows the value of 'SHELL' in the |
| environment *is* used, since on those systems most users do not set this |
| variable, and therefore it is most likely set specifically to be used by |
| 'make'. On MS-DOS, if the setting of 'SHELL' is not suitable for |
| 'make', you can set the variable 'MAKESHELL' to the shell that 'make' |
| should use; if set it will be used as the shell instead of the value of |
| 'SHELL'. |
| |
| Choosing a Shell in DOS and Windows |
| ................................... |
| |
| Choosing a shell in MS-DOS and MS-Windows is much more complex than on |
| other systems. |
| |
| On MS-DOS, if 'SHELL' is not set, the value of the variable 'COMSPEC' |
| (which is always set) is used instead. |
| |
| The processing of lines that set the variable 'SHELL' in Makefiles is |
| different on MS-DOS. The stock shell, 'command.com', is ridiculously |
| limited in its functionality and many users of 'make' tend to install a |
| replacement shell. Therefore, on MS-DOS, 'make' examines the value of |
| 'SHELL', and changes its behavior based on whether it points to a |
| Unix-style or DOS-style shell. This allows reasonable functionality |
| even if 'SHELL' points to 'command.com'. |
| |
| If 'SHELL' points to a Unix-style shell, 'make' on MS-DOS |
| additionally checks whether that shell can indeed be found; if not, it |
| ignores the line that sets 'SHELL'. In MS-DOS, GNU 'make' searches for |
| the shell in the following places: |
| |
| 1. In the precise place pointed to by the value of 'SHELL'. For |
| example, if the makefile specifies 'SHELL = /bin/sh', 'make' will |
| look in the directory '/bin' on the current drive. |
| |
| 2. In the current directory. |
| |
| 3. In each of the directories in the 'PATH' variable, in order. |
| |
| In every directory it examines, 'make' will first look for the |
| specific file ('sh' in the example above). If this is not found, it |
| will also look in that directory for that file with one of the known |
| extensions which identify executable files. For example '.exe', '.com', |
| '.bat', '.btm', '.sh', and some others. |
| |
| If any of these attempts is successful, the value of 'SHELL' will be |
| set to the full pathname of the shell as found. However, if none of |
| these is found, the value of 'SHELL' will not be changed, and thus the |
| line that sets it will be effectively ignored. This is so 'make' will |
| only support features specific to a Unix-style shell if such a shell is |
| actually installed on the system where 'make' runs. |
| |
| Note that this extended search for the shell is limited to the cases |
| where 'SHELL' is set from the Makefile; if it is set in the environment |
| or command line, you are expected to set it to the full pathname of the |
| shell, exactly as things are on Unix. |
| |
| The effect of the above DOS-specific processing is that a Makefile |
| that contains 'SHELL = /bin/sh' (as many Unix makefiles do), will work |
| on MS-DOS unaltered if you have e.g. 'sh.exe' installed in some |
| directory along your 'PATH'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Parallel, Next: Errors, Prev: Execution, Up: Recipes |
| |
| 5.4 Parallel Execution |
| ====================== |
| |
| GNU 'make' knows how to execute several recipes at once. Normally, |
| 'make' will execute only one recipe at a time, waiting for it to finish |
| before executing the next. However, the '-j' or '--jobs' option tells |
| 'make' to execute many recipes simultaneously. You can inhibit |
| parallelism in a particular makefile with the '.NOTPARALLEL' |
| pseudo-target (*note Special Built-in Target Names: Special Targets.). |
| |
| On MS-DOS, the '-j' option has no effect, since that system doesn't |
| support multi-processing. |
| |
| If the '-j' option is followed by an integer, this is the number of |
| recipes to execute at once; this is called the number of "job slots". |
| If there is nothing looking like an integer after the '-j' option, there |
| is no limit on the number of job slots. The default number of job slots |
| is one, which means serial execution (one thing at a time). |
| |
| Handling recursive 'make' invocations raises issues for parallel |
| execution. For more information on this, see *note Communicating |
| Options to a Sub-'make': Options/Recursion. |
| |
| If a recipe fails (is killed by a signal or exits with a nonzero |
| status), and errors are not ignored for that recipe (*note Errors in |
| Recipes: Errors.), the remaining recipe lines to remake the same target |
| will not be run. If a recipe fails and the '-k' or '--keep-going' |
| option was not given (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.), |
| 'make' aborts execution. If make terminates for any reason (including a |
| signal) with child processes running, it waits for them to finish before |
| actually exiting. |
| |
| When the system is heavily loaded, you will probably want to run |
| fewer jobs than when it is lightly loaded. You can use the '-l' option |
| to tell 'make' to limit the number of jobs to run at once, based on the |
| load average. The '-l' or '--max-load' option is followed by a |
| floating-point number. For example, |
| |
| -l 2.5 |
| |
| will not let 'make' start more than one job if the load average is above |
| 2.5. The '-l' option with no following number removes the load limit, |
| if one was given with a previous '-l' option. |
| |
| More precisely, when 'make' goes to start up a job, and it already |
| has at least one job running, it checks the current load average; if it |
| is not lower than the limit given with '-l', 'make' waits until the load |
| average goes below that limit, or until all the other jobs finish. |
| |
| By default, there is no load limit. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Parallel Output:: Handling output during parallel execution |
| * Parallel Input:: Handling input during parallel execution |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Parallel Output, Next: Parallel Input, Prev: Parallel, Up: Parallel |
| |
| 5.4.1 Output During Parallel Execution |
| -------------------------------------- |
| |
| When running several recipes in parallel the output from each recipe |
| appears as soon as it is generated, with the result that messages from |
| different recipes may be interspersed, sometimes even appearing on the |
| same line. This can make reading the output very difficult. |
| |
| To avoid this you can use the '--output-sync' ('-O') option. This |
| option instructs 'make' to save the output from the commands it invokes |
| and print it all once the commands are completed. Additionally, if |
| there are multiple recursive 'make' invocations running in parallel, |
| they will communicate so that only one of them is generating output at a |
| time. |
| |
| If working directory printing is enabled (*note The |
| '--print-directory' Option: -w Option.), the enter/leave messages are |
| printed around each output grouping. If you prefer not to see these |
| messages add the '--no-print-directory' option to 'MAKEFLAGS'. |
| |
| There are four levels of granularity when synchronizing output, |
| specified by giving an argument to the option (e.g., '-Oline' or |
| '--output-sync=recurse'). |
| |
| 'none' |
| This is the default: all output is sent directly as it is generated |
| and no synchronization is performed. |
| |
| 'line' |
| Output from each individual line of the recipe is grouped and |
| printed as soon as that line is complete. If a recipe consists of |
| multiple lines, they may be interspersed with lines from other |
| recipes. |
| |
| 'target' |
| Output from the entire recipe for each target is grouped and |
| printed once the target is complete. This is the default if the |
| '--output-sync' or '-O' option is given with no argument. |
| |
| 'recurse' |
| Output from each recursive invocation of 'make' is grouped and |
| printed once the recursive invocation is complete. |
| |
| Regardless of the mode chosen, the total build time will be the same. |
| The only difference is in how the output appears. |
| |
| The 'target' and 'recurse' modes both collect the output of the |
| entire recipe of a target and display it uninterrupted when the recipe |
| completes. The difference between them is in how recipes that contain |
| recursive invocations of 'make' are treated (*note Recursive Use of |
| 'make': Recursion.). For all recipes which have no recursive lines, the |
| 'target' and 'recurse' modes behave identically. |
| |
| If the 'recurse' mode is chosen, recipes that contain recursive |
| 'make' invocations are treated the same as other targets: the output |
| from the recipe, including the output from the recursive 'make', is |
| saved and printed after the entire recipe is complete. This ensures |
| output from all the targets built by a given recursive 'make' instance |
| are grouped together, which may make the output easier to understand. |
| However it also leads to long periods of time during the build where no |
| output is seen, followed by large bursts of output. If you are not |
| watching the build as it proceeds, but instead viewing a log of the |
| build after the fact, this may be the best option for you. |
| |
| If you are watching the output, the long gaps of quiet during the |
| build can be frustrating. The 'target' output synchronization mode |
| detects when 'make' is going to be invoked recursively, using the |
| standard methods, and it will not synchronize the output of those lines. |
| The recursive 'make' will perform the synchronization for its targets |
| and the output from each will be displayed immediately when it |
| completes. Be aware that output from recursive lines of the recipe are |
| not synchronized (for example if the recursive line prints a message |
| before running 'make', that message will not be synchronized). |
| |
| The 'line' mode can be useful for front-ends that are watching the |
| output of 'make' to track when recipes are started and completed. |
| |
| Some programs invoked by 'make' may behave differently if they |
| determine they're writing output to a terminal versus a file (often |
| described as "interactive" vs. "non-interactive" modes). For example, |
| many programs that can display colorized output will not do so if they |
| determine they are not writing to a terminal. If your makefile invokes |
| a program like this then using the output synchronization options will |
| cause the program to believe it's running in "non-interactive" mode even |
| though the output will ultimately go to the terminal. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Parallel Input, Prev: Parallel Output, Up: Parallel |
| |
| 5.4.2 Input During Parallel Execution |
| ------------------------------------- |
| |
| Two processes cannot both take input from the same device at the same |
| time. To make sure that only one recipe tries to take input from the |
| terminal at once, 'make' will invalidate the standard input streams of |
| all but one running recipe. If another recipe attempts to read from |
| standard input it will usually incur a fatal error (a 'Broken pipe' |
| signal). |
| |
| It is unpredictable which recipe will have a valid standard input |
| stream (which will come from the terminal, or wherever you redirect the |
| standard input of 'make'). The first recipe run will always get it |
| first, and the first recipe started after that one finishes will get it |
| next, and so on. |
| |
| We will change how this aspect of 'make' works if we find a better |
| alternative. In the mean time, you should not rely on any recipe using |
| standard input at all if you are using the parallel execution feature; |
| but if you are not using this feature, then standard input works |
| normally in all recipes. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Errors, Next: Interrupts, Prev: Parallel, Up: Recipes |
| |
| 5.5 Errors in Recipes |
| ===================== |
| |
| After each shell invocation returns, 'make' looks at its exit status. |
| If the shell completed successfully (the exit status is zero), the next |
| line in the recipe is executed in a new shell; after the last line is |
| finished, the rule is finished. |
| |
| If there is an error (the exit status is nonzero), 'make' gives up on |
| the current rule, and perhaps on all rules. |
| |
| Sometimes the failure of a certain recipe line does not indicate a |
| problem. For example, you may use the 'mkdir' command to ensure that a |
| directory exists. If the directory already exists, 'mkdir' will report |
| an error, but you probably want 'make' to continue regardless. |
| |
| To ignore errors in a recipe line, write a '-' at the beginning of |
| the line's text (after the initial tab). The '-' is discarded before |
| the line is passed to the shell for execution. |
| |
| For example, |
| |
| clean: |
| -rm -f *.o |
| |
| This causes 'make' to continue even if 'rm' is unable to remove a file. |
| |
| When you run 'make' with the '-i' or '--ignore-errors' flag, errors |
| are ignored in all recipes of all rules. A rule in the makefile for the |
| special target '.IGNORE' has the same effect, if there are no |
| prerequisites. These ways of ignoring errors are obsolete because '-' |
| is more flexible. |
| |
| When errors are to be ignored, because of either a '-' or the '-i' |
| flag, 'make' treats an error return just like success, except that it |
| prints out a message that tells you the status code the shell exited |
| with, and says that the error has been ignored. |
| |
| When an error happens that 'make' has not been told to ignore, it |
| implies that the current target cannot be correctly remade, and neither |
| can any other that depends on it either directly or indirectly. No |
| further recipes will be executed for these targets, since their |
| preconditions have not been achieved. |
| |
| Normally 'make' gives up immediately in this circumstance, returning |
| a nonzero status. However, if the '-k' or '--keep-going' flag is |
| specified, 'make' continues to consider the other prerequisites of the |
| pending targets, remaking them if necessary, before it gives up and |
| returns nonzero status. For example, after an error in compiling one |
| object file, 'make -k' will continue compiling other object files even |
| though it already knows that linking them will be impossible. *Note |
| Summary of Options: Options Summary. |
| |
| The usual behavior assumes that your purpose is to get the specified |
| targets up to date; once 'make' learns that this is impossible, it might |
| as well report the failure immediately. The '-k' option says that the |
| real purpose is to test as many of the changes made in the program as |
| possible, perhaps to find several independent problems so that you can |
| correct them all before the next attempt to compile. This is why Emacs' |
| 'compile' command passes the '-k' flag by default. |
| |
| Usually when a recipe line fails, if it has changed the target file |
| at all, the file is corrupted and cannot be used--or at least it is not |
| completely updated. Yet the file's time stamp says that it is now up to |
| date, so the next time 'make' runs, it will not try to update that file. |
| The situation is just the same as when the shell is killed by a signal; |
| *note Interrupts::. So generally the right thing to do is to delete the |
| target file if the recipe fails after beginning to change the file. |
| 'make' will do this if '.DELETE_ON_ERROR' appears as a target. This is |
| almost always what you want 'make' to do, but it is not historical |
| practice; so for compatibility, you must explicitly request it. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Interrupts, Next: Recursion, Prev: Errors, Up: Recipes |
| |
| 5.6 Interrupting or Killing 'make' |
| ================================== |
| |
| If 'make' gets a fatal signal while a shell is executing, it may delete |
| the target file that the recipe was supposed to update. This is done if |
| the target file's last-modification time has changed since 'make' first |
| checked it. |
| |
| The purpose of deleting the target is to make sure that it is remade |
| from scratch when 'make' is next run. Why is this? Suppose you type |
| 'Ctrl-c' while a compiler is running, and it has begun to write an |
| object file 'foo.o'. The 'Ctrl-c' kills the compiler, resulting in an |
| incomplete file whose last-modification time is newer than the source |
| file 'foo.c'. But 'make' also receives the 'Ctrl-c' signal and deletes |
| this incomplete file. If 'make' did not do this, the next invocation of |
| 'make' would think that 'foo.o' did not require updating--resulting in a |
| strange error message from the linker when it tries to link an object |
| file half of which is missing. |
| |
| You can prevent the deletion of a target file in this way by making |
| the special target '.PRECIOUS' depend on it. Before remaking a target, |
| 'make' checks to see whether it appears on the prerequisites of |
| '.PRECIOUS', and thereby decides whether the target should be deleted if |
| a signal happens. Some reasons why you might do this are that the |
| target is updated in some atomic fashion, or exists only to record a |
| modification-time (its contents do not matter), or must exist at all |
| times to prevent other sorts of trouble. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Recursion, Next: Canned Recipes, Prev: Interrupts, Up: Recipes |
| |
| 5.7 Recursive Use of 'make' |
| =========================== |
| |
| Recursive use of 'make' means using 'make' as a command in a makefile. |
| This technique is useful when you want separate makefiles for various |
| subsystems that compose a larger system. For example, suppose you have |
| a sub-directory 'subdir' which has its own makefile, and you would like |
| the containing directory's makefile to run 'make' on the sub-directory. |
| You can do it by writing this: |
| |
| subsystem: |
| cd subdir && $(MAKE) |
| |
| or, equivalently, this (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.): |
| |
| subsystem: |
| $(MAKE) -C subdir |
| |
| You can write recursive 'make' commands just by copying this example, |
| but there are many things to know about how they work and why, and about |
| how the sub-'make' relates to the top-level 'make'. You may also find |
| it useful to declare targets that invoke recursive 'make' commands as |
| '.PHONY' (for more discussion on when this is useful, see *note Phony |
| Targets::). |
| |
| For your convenience, when GNU 'make' starts (after it has processed |
| any '-C' options) it sets the variable 'CURDIR' to the pathname of the |
| current working directory. This value is never touched by 'make' again: |
| in particular note that if you include files from other directories the |
| value of 'CURDIR' does not change. The value has the same precedence it |
| would have if it were set in the makefile (by default, an environment |
| variable 'CURDIR' will not override this value). Note that setting this |
| variable has no impact on the operation of 'make' (it does not cause |
| 'make' to change its working directory, for example). |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * MAKE Variable:: The special effects of using '$(MAKE)'. |
| * Variables/Recursion:: How to communicate variables to a sub-'make'. |
| * Options/Recursion:: How to communicate options to a sub-'make'. |
| * -w Option:: How the '-w' or '--print-directory' option |
| helps debug use of recursive 'make' commands. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: MAKE Variable, Next: Variables/Recursion, Prev: Recursion, Up: Recursion |
| |
| 5.7.1 How the 'MAKE' Variable Works |
| ----------------------------------- |
| |
| Recursive 'make' commands should always use the variable 'MAKE', not the |
| explicit command name 'make', as shown here: |
| |
| subsystem: |
| cd subdir && $(MAKE) |
| |
| The value of this variable is the file name with which 'make' was |
| invoked. If this file name was '/bin/make', then the recipe executed is |
| 'cd subdir && /bin/make'. If you use a special version of 'make' to run |
| the top-level makefile, the same special version will be executed for |
| recursive invocations. |
| |
| As a special feature, using the variable 'MAKE' in the recipe of a |
| rule alters the effects of the '-t' ('--touch'), '-n' ('--just-print'), |
| or '-q' ('--question') option. Using the 'MAKE' variable has the same |
| effect as using a '+' character at the beginning of the recipe line. |
| *Note Instead of Executing the Recipes: Instead of Execution. This |
| special feature is only enabled if the 'MAKE' variable appears directly |
| in the recipe: it does not apply if the 'MAKE' variable is referenced |
| through expansion of another variable. In the latter case you must use |
| the '+' token to get these special effects. |
| |
| Consider the command 'make -t' in the above example. (The '-t' |
| option marks targets as up to date without actually running any recipes; |
| see *note Instead of Execution::.) Following the usual definition of |
| '-t', a 'make -t' command in the example would create a file named |
| 'subsystem' and do nothing else. What you really want it to do is run |
| 'cd subdir && make -t'; but that would require executing the recipe, and |
| '-t' says not to execute recipes. |
| |
| The special feature makes this do what you want: whenever a recipe |
| line of a rule contains the variable 'MAKE', the flags '-t', '-n' and |
| '-q' do not apply to that line. Recipe lines containing 'MAKE' are |
| executed normally despite the presence of a flag that causes most |
| recipes not to be run. The usual 'MAKEFLAGS' mechanism passes the flags |
| to the sub-'make' (*note Communicating Options to a Sub-'make': |
| Options/Recursion.), so your request to touch the files, or print the |
| recipes, is propagated to the subsystem. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Variables/Recursion, Next: Options/Recursion, Prev: MAKE Variable, Up: Recursion |
| |
| 5.7.2 Communicating Variables to a Sub-'make' |
| --------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Variable values of the top-level 'make' can be passed to the sub-'make' |
| through the environment by explicit request. These variables are |
| defined in the sub-'make' as defaults, but they do not override |
| variables defined in the makefile used by the sub-'make' unless you use |
| the '-e' switch (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.). |
| |
| To pass down, or "export", a variable, 'make' adds the variable and |
| its value to the environment for running each line of the recipe. The |
| sub-'make', in turn, uses the environment to initialize its table of |
| variable values. *Note Variables from the Environment: Environment. |
| |
| Except by explicit request, 'make' exports a variable only if it is |
| either defined in the environment initially or set on the command line, |
| and if its name consists only of letters, numbers, and underscores. |
| Some shells cannot cope with environment variable names consisting of |
| characters other than letters, numbers, and underscores. |
| |
| The value of the 'make' variable 'SHELL' is not exported. Instead, |
| the value of the 'SHELL' variable from the invoking environment is |
| passed to the sub-'make'. You can force 'make' to export its value for |
| 'SHELL' by using the 'export' directive, described below. *Note |
| Choosing the Shell::. |
| |
| The special variable 'MAKEFLAGS' is always exported (unless you |
| unexport it). 'MAKEFILES' is exported if you set it to anything. |
| |
| 'make' automatically passes down variable values that were defined on |
| the command line, by putting them in the 'MAKEFLAGS' variable. *Note |
| Options/Recursion::. |
| |
| Variables are _not_ normally passed down if they were created by |
| default by 'make' (*note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit |
| Variables.). The sub-'make' will define these for itself. |
| |
| If you want to export specific variables to a sub-'make', use the |
| 'export' directive, like this: |
| |
| export VARIABLE ... |
| |
| If you want to _prevent_ a variable from being exported, use the |
| 'unexport' directive, like this: |
| |
| unexport VARIABLE ... |
| |
| In both of these forms, the arguments to 'export' and 'unexport' are |
| expanded, and so could be variables or functions which expand to a (list |
| of) variable names to be (un)exported. |
| |
| As a convenience, you can define a variable and export it at the same |
| time by doing: |
| |
| export VARIABLE = value |
| |
| has the same result as: |
| |
| VARIABLE = value |
| export VARIABLE |
| |
| and |
| |
| export VARIABLE := value |
| |
| has the same result as: |
| |
| VARIABLE := value |
| export VARIABLE |
| |
| Likewise, |
| |
| export VARIABLE += value |
| |
| is just like: |
| |
| VARIABLE += value |
| export VARIABLE |
| |
| *Note Appending More Text to Variables: Appending. |
| |
| You may notice that the 'export' and 'unexport' directives work in |
| 'make' in the same way they work in the shell, 'sh'. |
| |
| If you want all variables to be exported by default, you can use |
| 'export' by itself: |
| |
| export |
| |
| This tells 'make' that variables which are not explicitly mentioned in |
| an 'export' or 'unexport' directive should be exported. Any variable |
| given in an 'unexport' directive will still _not_ be exported. If you |
| use 'export' by itself to export variables by default, variables whose |
| names contain characters other than alphanumerics and underscores will |
| not be exported unless specifically mentioned in an 'export' directive. |
| |
| The behavior elicited by an 'export' directive by itself was the |
| default in older versions of GNU 'make'. If your makefiles depend on |
| this behavior and you want to be compatible with old versions of 'make', |
| you can write a rule for the special target '.EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES' |
| instead of using the 'export' directive. This will be ignored by old |
| 'make's, while the 'export' directive will cause a syntax error. |
| |
| Likewise, you can use 'unexport' by itself to tell 'make' _not_ to |
| export variables by default. Since this is the default behavior, you |
| would only need to do this if 'export' had been used by itself earlier |
| (in an included makefile, perhaps). You *cannot* use 'export' and |
| 'unexport' by themselves to have variables exported for some recipes and |
| not for others. The last 'export' or 'unexport' directive that appears |
| by itself determines the behavior for the entire run of 'make'. |
| |
| As a special feature, the variable 'MAKELEVEL' is changed when it is |
| passed down from level to level. This variable's value is a string |
| which is the depth of the level as a decimal number. The value is '0' |
| for the top-level 'make'; '1' for a sub-'make', '2' for a |
| sub-sub-'make', and so on. The incrementation happens when 'make' sets |
| up the environment for a recipe. |
| |
| The main use of 'MAKELEVEL' is to test it in a conditional directive |
| (*note Conditional Parts of Makefiles: Conditionals.); this way you can |
| write a makefile that behaves one way if run recursively and another way |
| if run directly by you. |
| |
| You can use the variable 'MAKEFILES' to cause all sub-'make' commands |
| to use additional makefiles. The value of 'MAKEFILES' is a |
| whitespace-separated list of file names. This variable, if defined in |
| the outer-level makefile, is passed down through the environment; then |
| it serves as a list of extra makefiles for the sub-'make' to read before |
| the usual or specified ones. *Note The Variable 'MAKEFILES': MAKEFILES |
| Variable. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Options/Recursion, Next: -w Option, Prev: Variables/Recursion, Up: Recursion |
| |
| 5.7.3 Communicating Options to a Sub-'make' |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Flags such as '-s' and '-k' are passed automatically to the sub-'make' |
| through the variable 'MAKEFLAGS'. This variable is set up automatically |
| by 'make' to contain the flag letters that 'make' received. Thus, if |
| you do 'make -ks' then 'MAKEFLAGS' gets the value 'ks'. |
| |
| As a consequence, every sub-'make' gets a value for 'MAKEFLAGS' in |
| its environment. In response, it takes the flags from that value and |
| processes them as if they had been given as arguments. *Note Summary of |
| Options: Options Summary. |
| |
| Likewise variables defined on the command line are passed to the |
| sub-'make' through 'MAKEFLAGS'. Words in the value of 'MAKEFLAGS' that |
| contain '=', 'make' treats as variable definitions just as if they |
| appeared on the command line. *Note Overriding Variables: Overriding. |
| |
| The options '-C', '-f', '-o', and '-W' are not put into 'MAKEFLAGS'; |
| these options are not passed down. |
| |
| The '-j' option is a special case (*note Parallel Execution: |
| Parallel.). If you set it to some numeric value 'N' and your operating |
| system supports it (most any UNIX system will; others typically won't), |
| the parent 'make' and all the sub-'make's will communicate to ensure |
| that there are only 'N' jobs running at the same time between them all. |
| Note that any job that is marked recursive (*note Instead of Executing |
| Recipes: Instead of Execution.) doesn't count against the total jobs |
| (otherwise we could get 'N' sub-'make's running and have no slots left |
| over for any real work!) |
| |
| If your operating system doesn't support the above communication, |
| then no '-j' is added to 'MAKEFLAGS', so that sub-'make's run in |
| non-parallel mode. If the '-j' option were passed down to sub-'make's |
| you would get many more jobs running in parallel than you asked for. If |
| you give '-j' with no numeric argument, meaning to run as many jobs as |
| possible in parallel, this is passed down, since multiple infinities are |
| no more than one. |
| |
| If you do not want to pass the other flags down, you must change the |
| value of 'MAKEFLAGS', like this: |
| |
| subsystem: |
| cd subdir && $(MAKE) MAKEFLAGS= |
| |
| The command line variable definitions really appear in the variable |
| 'MAKEOVERRIDES', and 'MAKEFLAGS' contains a reference to this variable. |
| If you do want to pass flags down normally, but don't want to pass down |
| the command line variable definitions, you can reset 'MAKEOVERRIDES' to |
| empty, like this: |
| |
| MAKEOVERRIDES = |
| |
| This is not usually useful to do. However, some systems have a small |
| fixed limit on the size of the environment, and putting so much |
| information into the value of 'MAKEFLAGS' can exceed it. If you see the |
| error message 'Arg list too long', this may be the problem. (For strict |
| compliance with POSIX.2, changing 'MAKEOVERRIDES' does not affect |
| 'MAKEFLAGS' if the special target '.POSIX' appears in the makefile. You |
| probably do not care about this.) |
| |
| A similar variable 'MFLAGS' exists also, for historical |
| compatibility. It has the same value as 'MAKEFLAGS' except that it does |
| not contain the command line variable definitions, and it always begins |
| with a hyphen unless it is empty ('MAKEFLAGS' begins with a hyphen only |
| when it begins with an option that has no single-letter version, such as |
| '--warn-undefined-variables'). 'MFLAGS' was traditionally used |
| explicitly in the recursive 'make' command, like this: |
| |
| subsystem: |
| cd subdir && $(MAKE) $(MFLAGS) |
| |
| but now 'MAKEFLAGS' makes this usage redundant. If you want your |
| makefiles to be compatible with old 'make' programs, use this technique; |
| it will work fine with more modern 'make' versions too. |
| |
| The 'MAKEFLAGS' variable can also be useful if you want to have |
| certain options, such as '-k' (*note Summary of Options: Options |
| Summary.), set each time you run 'make'. You simply put a value for |
| 'MAKEFLAGS' in your environment. You can also set 'MAKEFLAGS' in a |
| makefile, to specify additional flags that should also be in effect for |
| that makefile. (Note that you cannot use 'MFLAGS' this way. That |
| variable is set only for compatibility; 'make' does not interpret a |
| value you set for it in any way.) |
| |
| When 'make' interprets the value of 'MAKEFLAGS' (either from the |
| environment or from a makefile), it first prepends a hyphen if the value |
| does not already begin with one. Then it chops the value into words |
| separated by blanks, and parses these words as if they were options |
| given on the command line (except that '-C', '-f', '-h', '-o', '-W', and |
| their long-named versions are ignored; and there is no error for an |
| invalid option). |
| |
| If you do put 'MAKEFLAGS' in your environment, you should be sure not |
| to include any options that will drastically affect the actions of |
| 'make' and undermine the purpose of makefiles and of 'make' itself. For |
| instance, the '-t', '-n', and '-q' options, if put in one of these |
| variables, could have disastrous consequences and would certainly have |
| at least surprising and probably annoying effects. |
| |
| If you'd like to run other implementations of 'make' in addition to |
| GNU 'make', and hence do not want to add GNU 'make'-specific flags to |
| the 'MAKEFLAGS' variable, you can add them to the 'GNUMAKEFLAGS' |
| variable instead. This variable is parsed just before 'MAKEFLAGS', in |
| the same way as 'MAKEFLAGS'. When 'make' constructs 'MAKEFLAGS' to pass |
| to a recursive 'make' it will include all flags, even those taken from |
| 'GNUMAKEFLAGS'. As a result, after parsing 'GNUMAKEFLAGS' GNU 'make' |
| sets this variable to the empty string to avoid duplicating flags during |
| recursion. |
| |
| It's best to use 'GNUMAKEFLAGS' only with flags which won't |
| materially change the behavior of your makefiles. If your makefiles |
| require GNU make anyway then simply use 'MAKEFLAGS'. Flags such as |
| '--no-print-directory' or '--output-sync' may be appropriate for |
| 'GNUMAKEFLAGS'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: -w Option, Prev: Options/Recursion, Up: Recursion |
| |
| 5.7.4 The '--print-directory' Option |
| ------------------------------------ |
| |
| If you use several levels of recursive 'make' invocations, the '-w' or |
| '--print-directory' option can make the output a lot easier to |
| understand by showing each directory as 'make' starts processing it and |
| as 'make' finishes processing it. For example, if 'make -w' is run in |
| the directory '/u/gnu/make', 'make' will print a line of the form: |
| |
| make: Entering directory `/u/gnu/make'. |
| |
| before doing anything else, and a line of the form: |
| |
| make: Leaving directory `/u/gnu/make'. |
| |
| when processing is completed. |
| |
| Normally, you do not need to specify this option because 'make' does |
| it for you: '-w' is turned on automatically when you use the '-C' |
| option, and in sub-'make's. 'make' will not automatically turn on '-w' |
| if you also use '-s', which says to be silent, or if you use |
| '--no-print-directory' to explicitly disable it. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Canned Recipes, Next: Empty Recipes, Prev: Recursion, Up: Recipes |
| |
| 5.8 Defining Canned Recipes |
| =========================== |
| |
| When the same sequence of commands is useful in making various targets, |
| you can define it as a canned sequence with the 'define' directive, and |
| refer to the canned sequence from the recipes for those targets. The |
| canned sequence is actually a variable, so the name must not conflict |
| with other variable names. |
| |
| Here is an example of defining a canned recipe: |
| |
| define run-yacc = |
| yacc $(firstword $^) |
| mv y.tab.c $@ |
| endef |
| |
| Here 'run-yacc' is the name of the variable being defined; 'endef' marks |
| the end of the definition; the lines in between are the commands. The |
| 'define' directive does not expand variable references and function |
| calls in the canned sequence; the '$' characters, parentheses, variable |
| names, and so on, all become part of the value of the variable you are |
| defining. *Note Defining Multi-Line Variables: Multi-Line, for a |
| complete explanation of 'define'. |
| |
| The first command in this example runs Yacc on the first prerequisite |
| of whichever rule uses the canned sequence. The output file from Yacc |
| is always named 'y.tab.c'. The second command moves the output to the |
| rule's target file name. |
| |
| To use the canned sequence, substitute the variable into the recipe |
| of a rule. You can substitute it like any other variable (*note Basics |
| of Variable References: Reference.). Because variables defined by |
| 'define' are recursively expanded variables, all the variable references |
| you wrote inside the 'define' are expanded now. For example: |
| |
| foo.c : foo.y |
| $(run-yacc) |
| |
| 'foo.y' will be substituted for the variable '$^' when it occurs in |
| 'run-yacc''s value, and 'foo.c' for '$@'. |
| |
| This is a realistic example, but this particular one is not needed in |
| practice because 'make' has an implicit rule to figure out these |
| commands based on the file names involved (*note Using Implicit Rules: |
| Implicit Rules.). |
| |
| In recipe execution, each line of a canned sequence is treated just |
| as if the line appeared on its own in the rule, preceded by a tab. In |
| particular, 'make' invokes a separate sub-shell for each line. You can |
| use the special prefix characters that affect command lines ('@', '-', |
| and '+') on each line of a canned sequence. *Note Writing Recipes in |
| Rules: Recipes. For example, using this canned sequence: |
| |
| define frobnicate = |
| @echo "frobnicating target $@" |
| frob-step-1 $< -o $@-step-1 |
| frob-step-2 $@-step-1 -o $@ |
| endef |
| |
| 'make' will not echo the first line, the 'echo' command. But it _will_ |
| echo the following two recipe lines. |
| |
| On the other hand, prefix characters on the recipe line that refers |
| to a canned sequence apply to every line in the sequence. So the rule: |
| |
| frob.out: frob.in |
| @$(frobnicate) |
| |
| does not echo _any_ recipe lines. (*Note Recipe Echoing: Echoing, for a |
| full explanation of '@'.) |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Empty Recipes, Prev: Canned Recipes, Up: Recipes |
| |
| 5.9 Using Empty Recipes |
| ======================= |
| |
| It is sometimes useful to define recipes which do nothing. This is done |
| simply by giving a recipe that consists of nothing but whitespace. For |
| example: |
| |
| target: ; |
| |
| defines an empty recipe for 'target'. You could also use a line |
| beginning with a recipe prefix character to define an empty recipe, but |
| this would be confusing because such a line looks empty. |
| |
| You may be wondering why you would want to define a recipe that does |
| nothing. One reason this is useful is to prevent a target from getting |
| implicit recipes (from implicit rules or the '.DEFAULT' special target; |
| *note Implicit Rules:: and *note Defining Last-Resort Default Rules: |
| Last Resort.). |
| |
| Empty recipes can also be used to avoid errors for targets that will |
| be created as a side-effect of another recipe: if the target does not |
| exist the empty recipe ensures that 'make' won't complain that it |
| doesn't know how to build the target, and 'make' will assume the target |
| is out of date. |
| |
| You may be inclined to define empty recipes for targets that are not |
| actual files, but only exist so that their prerequisites can be remade. |
| However, this is not the best way to do that, because the prerequisites |
| may not be remade properly if the target file actually does exist. |
| *Note Phony Targets: Phony Targets, for a better way to do this. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Using Variables, Next: Conditionals, Prev: Recipes, Up: Top |
| |
| 6 How to Use Variables |
| ********************** |
| |
| A "variable" is a name defined in a makefile to represent a string of |
| text, called the variable's "value". These values are substituted by |
| explicit request into targets, prerequisites, recipes, and other parts |
| of the makefile. (In some other versions of 'make', variables are |
| called "macros".) |
| |
| Variables and functions in all parts of a makefile are expanded when |
| read, except for in recipes, the right-hand sides of variable |
| definitions using '=', and the bodies of variable definitions using the |
| 'define' directive. |
| |
| Variables can represent lists of file names, options to pass to |
| compilers, programs to run, directories to look in for source files, |
| directories to write output in, or anything else you can imagine. |
| |
| A variable name may be any sequence of characters not containing ':', |
| '#', '=', or whitespace. However, variable names containing characters |
| other than letters, numbers, and underscores should be considered |
| carefully, as in some shells they cannot be passed through the |
| environment to a sub-'make' (*note Communicating Variables to a |
| Sub-'make': Variables/Recursion.). Variable names beginning with '.' |
| and an uppercase letter may be given special meaning in future versions |
| of 'make'. |
| |
| Variable names are case-sensitive. The names 'foo', 'FOO', and 'Foo' |
| all refer to different variables. |
| |
| It is traditional to use upper case letters in variable names, but we |
| recommend using lower case letters for variable names that serve |
| internal purposes in the makefile, and reserving upper case for |
| parameters that control implicit rules or for parameters that the user |
| should override with command options (*note Overriding Variables: |
| Overriding.). |
| |
| A few variables have names that are a single punctuation character or |
| just a few characters. These are the "automatic variables", and they |
| have particular specialized uses. *Note Automatic Variables::. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Reference:: How to use the value of a variable. |
| * Flavors:: Variables come in two flavors. |
| * Advanced:: Advanced features for referencing a variable. |
| * Values:: All the ways variables get their values. |
| * Setting:: How to set a variable in the makefile. |
| * Appending:: How to append more text to the old value |
| of a variable. |
| * Override Directive:: How to set a variable in the makefile even if |
| the user has set it with a command argument. |
| * Multi-Line:: An alternate way to set a variable |
| to a multi-line string. |
| * Undefine Directive:: How to undefine a variable so that it appears |
| as if it was never set. |
| * Environment:: Variable values can come from the environment. |
| * Target-specific:: Variable values can be defined on a per-target |
| basis. |
| * Pattern-specific:: Target-specific variable values can be applied |
| to a group of targets that match a pattern. |
| * Suppressing Inheritance:: Suppress inheritance of variables. |
| * Special Variables:: Variables with special meaning or behavior. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Reference, Next: Flavors, Prev: Using Variables, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.1 Basics of Variable References |
| ================================= |
| |
| To substitute a variable's value, write a dollar sign followed by the |
| name of the variable in parentheses or braces: either '$(foo)' or |
| '${foo}' is a valid reference to the variable 'foo'. This special |
| significance of '$' is why you must write '$$' to have the effect of a |
| single dollar sign in a file name or recipe. |
| |
| Variable references can be used in any context: targets, |
| prerequisites, recipes, most directives, and new variable values. Here |
| is an example of a common case, where a variable holds the names of all |
| the object files in a program: |
| |
| objects = program.o foo.o utils.o |
| program : $(objects) |
| cc -o program $(objects) |
| |
| $(objects) : defs.h |
| |
| Variable references work by strict textual substitution. Thus, the |
| rule |
| |
| foo = c |
| prog.o : prog.$(foo) |
| $(foo)$(foo) -$(foo) prog.$(foo) |
| |
| could be used to compile a C program 'prog.c'. Since spaces before the |
| variable value are ignored in variable assignments, the value of 'foo' |
| is precisely 'c'. (Don't actually write your makefiles this way!) |
| |
| A dollar sign followed by a character other than a dollar sign, |
| open-parenthesis or open-brace treats that single character as the |
| variable name. Thus, you could reference the variable 'x' with '$x'. |
| However, this practice is strongly discouraged, except in the case of |
| the automatic variables (*note Automatic Variables::). |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Flavors, Next: Advanced, Prev: Reference, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.2 The Two Flavors of Variables |
| ================================ |
| |
| There are two ways that a variable in GNU 'make' can have a value; we |
| call them the two "flavors" of variables. The two flavors are |
| distinguished in how they are defined and in what they do when expanded. |
| |
| The first flavor of variable is a "recursively expanded" variable. |
| Variables of this sort are defined by lines using '=' (*note Setting |
| Variables: Setting.) or by the 'define' directive (*note Defining |
| Multi-Line Variables: Multi-Line.). The value you specify is installed |
| verbatim; if it contains references to other variables, these references |
| are expanded whenever this variable is substituted (in the course of |
| expanding some other string). When this happens, it is called |
| "recursive expansion". |
| |
| For example, |
| |
| foo = $(bar) |
| bar = $(ugh) |
| ugh = Huh? |
| |
| all:;echo $(foo) |
| |
| will echo 'Huh?': '$(foo)' expands to '$(bar)' which expands to '$(ugh)' |
| which finally expands to 'Huh?'. |
| |
| This flavor of variable is the only sort supported by most other |
| versions of 'make'. It has its advantages and its disadvantages. An |
| advantage (most would say) is that: |
| |
| CFLAGS = $(include_dirs) -O |
| include_dirs = -Ifoo -Ibar |
| |
| will do what was intended: when 'CFLAGS' is expanded in a recipe, it |
| will expand to '-Ifoo -Ibar -O'. A major disadvantage is that you |
| cannot append something on the end of a variable, as in |
| |
| CFLAGS = $(CFLAGS) -O |
| |
| because it will cause an infinite loop in the variable expansion. |
| (Actually 'make' detects the infinite loop and reports an error.) |
| |
| Another disadvantage is that any functions (*note Functions for |
| Transforming Text: Functions.) referenced in the definition will be |
| executed every time the variable is expanded. This makes 'make' run |
| slower; worse, it causes the 'wildcard' and 'shell' functions to give |
| unpredictable results because you cannot easily control when they are |
| called, or even how many times. |
| |
| To avoid all the problems and inconveniences of recursively expanded |
| variables, there is another flavor: simply expanded variables. |
| |
| "Simply expanded variables" are defined by lines using ':=' or '::=' |
| (*note Setting Variables: Setting.). Both forms are equivalent in GNU |
| 'make'; however only the '::=' form is described by the POSIX standard |
| (support for '::=' was added to the POSIX standard in 2012, so older |
| versions of 'make' won't accept this form either). |
| |
| The value of a simply expanded variable is scanned once and for all, |
| expanding any references to other variables and functions, when the |
| variable is defined. The actual value of the simply expanded variable |
| is the result of expanding the text that you write. It does not contain |
| any references to other variables; it contains their values _as of the |
| time this variable was defined_. Therefore, |
| |
| x := foo |
| y := $(x) bar |
| x := later |
| |
| is equivalent to |
| |
| y := foo bar |
| x := later |
| |
| When a simply expanded variable is referenced, its value is |
| substituted verbatim. |
| |
| Here is a somewhat more complicated example, illustrating the use of |
| ':=' in conjunction with the 'shell' function. (*Note The 'shell' |
| Function: Shell Function.) This example also shows use of the variable |
| 'MAKELEVEL', which is changed when it is passed down from level to |
| level. (*Note Communicating Variables to a Sub-'make': |
| Variables/Recursion, for information about 'MAKELEVEL'.) |
| |
| ifeq (0,${MAKELEVEL}) |
| whoami := $(shell whoami) |
| host-type := $(shell arch) |
| MAKE := ${MAKE} host-type=${host-type} whoami=${whoami} |
| endif |
| |
| An advantage of this use of ':=' is that a typical 'descend into a |
| directory' recipe then looks like this: |
| |
| ${subdirs}: |
| ${MAKE} -C $@ all |
| |
| Simply expanded variables generally make complicated makefile |
| programming more predictable because they work like variables in most |
| programming languages. They allow you to redefine a variable using its |
| own value (or its value processed in some way by one of the expansion |
| functions) and to use the expansion functions much more efficiently |
| (*note Functions for Transforming Text: Functions.). |
| |
| You can also use them to introduce controlled leading whitespace into |
| variable values. Leading whitespace characters are discarded from your |
| input before substitution of variable references and function calls; |
| this means you can include leading spaces in a variable value by |
| protecting them with variable references, like this: |
| |
| nullstring := |
| space := $(nullstring) # end of the line |
| |
| Here the value of the variable 'space' is precisely one space. The |
| comment '# end of the line' is included here just for clarity. Since |
| trailing space characters are _not_ stripped from variable values, just |
| a space at the end of the line would have the same effect (but be rather |
| hard to read). If you put whitespace at the end of a variable value, it |
| is a good idea to put a comment like that at the end of the line to make |
| your intent clear. Conversely, if you do _not_ want any whitespace |
| characters at the end of your variable value, you must remember not to |
| put a random comment on the end of the line after some whitespace, such |
| as this: |
| |
| dir := /foo/bar # directory to put the frobs in |
| |
| Here the value of the variable 'dir' is '/foo/bar ' (with four |
| trailing spaces), which was probably not the intention. (Imagine |
| something like '$(dir)/file' with this definition!) |
| |
| There is another assignment operator for variables, '?='. This is |
| called a conditional variable assignment operator, because it only has |
| an effect if the variable is not yet defined. This statement: |
| |
| FOO ?= bar |
| |
| is exactly equivalent to this (*note The 'origin' Function: Origin |
| Function.): |
| |
| ifeq ($(origin FOO), undefined) |
| FOO = bar |
| endif |
| |
| Note that a variable set to an empty value is still defined, so '?=' |
| will not set that variable. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Advanced, Next: Values, Prev: Flavors, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.3 Advanced Features for Reference to Variables |
| ================================================ |
| |
| This section describes some advanced features you can use to reference |
| variables in more flexible ways. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Substitution Refs:: Referencing a variable with |
| substitutions on the value. |
| * Computed Names:: Computing the name of the variable to refer to. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Substitution Refs, Next: Computed Names, Prev: Advanced, Up: Advanced |
| |
| 6.3.1 Substitution References |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| A "substitution reference" substitutes the value of a variable with |
| alterations that you specify. It has the form '$(VAR:A=B)' (or |
| '${VAR:A=B}') and its meaning is to take the value of the variable VAR, |
| replace every A at the end of a word with B in that value, and |
| substitute the resulting string. |
| |
| When we say "at the end of a word", we mean that A must appear either |
| followed by whitespace or at the end of the value in order to be |
| replaced; other occurrences of A in the value are unaltered. For |
| example: |
| |
| foo := a.o b.o c.o |
| bar := $(foo:.o=.c) |
| |
| sets 'bar' to 'a.c b.c c.c'. *Note Setting Variables: Setting. |
| |
| A substitution reference is actually an abbreviation for use of the |
| 'patsubst' expansion function (*note Functions for String Substitution |
| and Analysis: Text Functions.). We provide substitution references as |
| well as 'patsubst' for compatibility with other implementations of |
| 'make'. |
| |
| Another type of substitution reference lets you use the full power of |
| the 'patsubst' function. It has the same form '$(VAR:A=B)' described |
| above, except that now A must contain a single '%' character. This case |
| is equivalent to '$(patsubst A,B,$(VAR))'. *Note Functions for String |
| Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions, for a description of the |
| 'patsubst' function. |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| foo := a.o b.o c.o |
| bar := $(foo:%.o=%.c) |
| |
| sets 'bar' to 'a.c b.c c.c'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Computed Names, Prev: Substitution Refs, Up: Advanced |
| |
| 6.3.2 Computed Variable Names |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| Computed variable names are a complicated concept needed only for |
| sophisticated makefile programming. For most purposes you need not |
| consider them, except to know that making a variable with a dollar sign |
| in its name might have strange results. However, if you are the type |
| that wants to understand everything, or you are actually interested in |
| what they do, read on. |
| |
| Variables may be referenced inside the name of a variable. This is |
| called a "computed variable name" or a "nested variable reference". For |
| example, |
| |
| x = y |
| y = z |
| a := $($(x)) |
| |
| defines 'a' as 'z': the '$(x)' inside '$($(x))' expands to 'y', so |
| '$($(x))' expands to '$(y)' which in turn expands to 'z'. Here the name |
| of the variable to reference is not stated explicitly; it is computed by |
| expansion of '$(x)'. The reference '$(x)' here is nested within the |
| outer variable reference. |
| |
| The previous example shows two levels of nesting, but any number of |
| levels is possible. For example, here are three levels: |
| |
| x = y |
| y = z |
| z = u |
| a := $($($(x))) |
| |
| Here the innermost '$(x)' expands to 'y', so '$($(x))' expands to '$(y)' |
| which in turn expands to 'z'; now we have '$(z)', which becomes 'u'. |
| |
| References to recursively-expanded variables within a variable name |
| are re-expanded in the usual fashion. For example: |
| |
| x = $(y) |
| y = z |
| z = Hello |
| a := $($(x)) |
| |
| defines 'a' as 'Hello': '$($(x))' becomes '$($(y))' which becomes '$(z)' |
| which becomes 'Hello'. |
| |
| Nested variable references can also contain modified references and |
| function invocations (*note Functions for Transforming Text: |
| Functions.), just like any other reference. For example, using the |
| 'subst' function (*note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: |
| Text Functions.): |
| |
| x = variable1 |
| variable2 := Hello |
| y = $(subst 1,2,$(x)) |
| z = y |
| a := $($($(z))) |
| |
| eventually defines 'a' as 'Hello'. It is doubtful that anyone would |
| ever want to write a nested reference as convoluted as this one, but it |
| works: '$($($(z)))' expands to '$($(y))' which becomes '$($(subst |
| 1,2,$(x)))'. This gets the value 'variable1' from 'x' and changes it by |
| substitution to 'variable2', so that the entire string becomes |
| '$(variable2)', a simple variable reference whose value is 'Hello'. |
| |
| A computed variable name need not consist entirely of a single |
| variable reference. It can contain several variable references, as well |
| as some invariant text. For example, |
| |
| a_dirs := dira dirb |
| 1_dirs := dir1 dir2 |
| |
| a_files := filea fileb |
| 1_files := file1 file2 |
| |
| ifeq "$(use_a)" "yes" |
| a1 := a |
| else |
| a1 := 1 |
| endif |
| |
| ifeq "$(use_dirs)" "yes" |
| df := dirs |
| else |
| df := files |
| endif |
| |
| dirs := $($(a1)_$(df)) |
| |
| will give 'dirs' the same value as 'a_dirs', '1_dirs', 'a_files' or |
| '1_files' depending on the settings of 'use_a' and 'use_dirs'. |
| |
| Computed variable names can also be used in substitution references: |
| |
| a_objects := a.o b.o c.o |
| 1_objects := 1.o 2.o 3.o |
| |
| sources := $($(a1)_objects:.o=.c) |
| |
| defines 'sources' as either 'a.c b.c c.c' or '1.c 2.c 3.c', depending on |
| the value of 'a1'. |
| |
| The only restriction on this sort of use of nested variable |
| references is that they cannot specify part of the name of a function to |
| be called. This is because the test for a recognized function name is |
| done before the expansion of nested references. For example, |
| |
| ifdef do_sort |
| func := sort |
| else |
| func := strip |
| endif |
| |
| bar := a d b g q c |
| |
| foo := $($(func) $(bar)) |
| |
| attempts to give 'foo' the value of the variable 'sort a d b g q c' or |
| 'strip a d b g q c', rather than giving 'a d b g q c' as the argument to |
| either the 'sort' or the 'strip' function. This restriction could be |
| removed in the future if that change is shown to be a good idea. |
| |
| You can also use computed variable names in the left-hand side of a |
| variable assignment, or in a 'define' directive, as in: |
| |
| dir = foo |
| $(dir)_sources := $(wildcard $(dir)/*.c) |
| define $(dir)_print = |
| lpr $($(dir)_sources) |
| endef |
| |
| This example defines the variables 'dir', 'foo_sources', and |
| 'foo_print'. |
| |
| Note that "nested variable references" are quite different from |
| "recursively expanded variables" (*note The Two Flavors of Variables: |
| Flavors.), though both are used together in complex ways when doing |
| makefile programming. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Values, Next: Setting, Prev: Advanced, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.4 How Variables Get Their Values |
| ================================== |
| |
| Variables can get values in several different ways: |
| |
| * You can specify an overriding value when you run 'make'. *Note |
| Overriding Variables: Overriding. |
| |
| * You can specify a value in the makefile, either with an assignment |
| (*note Setting Variables: Setting.) or with a verbatim definition |
| (*note Defining Multi-Line Variables: Multi-Line.). |
| |
| * Variables in the environment become 'make' variables. *Note |
| Variables from the Environment: Environment. |
| |
| * Several "automatic" variables are given new values for each rule. |
| Each of these has a single conventional use. *Note Automatic |
| Variables::. |
| |
| * Several variables have constant initial values. *Note Variables |
| Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Setting, Next: Appending, Prev: Values, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.5 Setting Variables |
| ===================== |
| |
| To set a variable from the makefile, write a line starting with the |
| variable name followed by '=', ':=', or '::='. Whatever follows the |
| '=', ':=', or '::=' on the line becomes the value. For example, |
| |
| objects = main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o |
| |
| defines a variable named 'objects'. Whitespace around the variable name |
| and immediately after the '=' is ignored. |
| |
| Variables defined with '=' are "recursively expanded" variables. |
| Variables defined with ':=' or '::=' are "simply expanded" variables; |
| these definitions can contain variable references which will be expanded |
| before the definition is made. *Note The Two Flavors of Variables: |
| Flavors. |
| |
| The variable name may contain function and variable references, which |
| are expanded when the line is read to find the actual variable name to |
| use. |
| |
| There is no limit on the length of the value of a variable except the |
| amount of memory on the computer. You can split the value of a variable |
| into multiple physical lines for readability (*note Splitting Long |
| Lines: Splitting Lines.). |
| |
| Most variable names are considered to have the empty string as a |
| value if you have never set them. Several variables have built-in |
| initial values that are not empty, but you can set them in the usual |
| ways (*note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables.). |
| Several special variables are set automatically to a new value for each |
| rule; these are called the "automatic" variables (*note Automatic |
| Variables::). |
| |
| If you'd like a variable to be set to a value only if it's not |
| already set, then you can use the shorthand operator '?=' instead of |
| '='. These two settings of the variable 'FOO' are identical (*note The |
| 'origin' Function: Origin Function.): |
| |
| FOO ?= bar |
| |
| and |
| |
| ifeq ($(origin FOO), undefined) |
| FOO = bar |
| endif |
| |
| The shell assignment operator '!=' can be used to execute a shell |
| script and set a variable to its output. This operator first evaluates |
| the right-hand side, then passes that result to the shell for execution. |
| If the result of the execution ends in a newline, that one newline is |
| removed; all other newlines are replaced by spaces. The resulting |
| string is then placed into the named recursively-expanded variable. For |
| example: |
| |
| hash != printf '\043' |
| file_list != find . -name '*.c' |
| |
| If the result of the execution could produce a '$', and you don't |
| intend what follows that to be interpreted as a make variable or |
| function reference, then you must replace every '$' with '$$' as part of |
| the execution. Alternatively, you can set a simply expanded variable to |
| the result of running a program using the 'shell' function call. *Note |
| The 'shell' Function: Shell Function. For example: |
| |
| hash := $(shell printf '\043') |
| var := $(shell find . -name "*.c") |
| |
| As with the 'shell' function, the exit status of the just-invoked |
| shell script is stored in the '.SHELLSTATUS' variable. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Appending, Next: Override Directive, Prev: Setting, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.6 Appending More Text to Variables |
| ==================================== |
| |
| Often it is useful to add more text to the value of a variable already |
| defined. You do this with a line containing '+=', like this: |
| |
| objects += another.o |
| |
| This takes the value of the variable 'objects', and adds the text |
| 'another.o' to it (preceded by a single space). Thus: |
| |
| objects = main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o |
| objects += another.o |
| |
| sets 'objects' to 'main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o another.o'. |
| |
| Using '+=' is similar to: |
| |
| objects = main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o |
| objects := $(objects) another.o |
| |
| but differs in ways that become important when you use more complex |
| values. |
| |
| When the variable in question has not been defined before, '+=' acts |
| just like normal '=': it defines a recursively-expanded variable. |
| However, when there _is_ a previous definition, exactly what '+=' does |
| depends on what flavor of variable you defined originally. *Note The |
| Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors, for an explanation of the two flavors |
| of variables. |
| |
| When you add to a variable's value with '+=', 'make' acts essentially |
| as if you had included the extra text in the initial definition of the |
| variable. If you defined it first with ':=' or '::=', making it a |
| simply-expanded variable, '+=' adds to that simply-expanded definition, |
| and expands the new text before appending it to the old value just as |
| ':=' does (see *note Setting Variables: Setting, for a full explanation |
| of ':=' or '::='). In fact, |
| |
| variable := value |
| variable += more |
| |
| is exactly equivalent to: |
| |
| variable := value |
| variable := $(variable) more |
| |
| On the other hand, when you use '+=' with a variable that you defined |
| first to be recursively-expanded using plain '=', 'make' does something |
| a bit different. Recall that when you define a recursively-expanded |
| variable, 'make' does not expand the value you set for variable and |
| function references immediately. Instead it stores the text verbatim, |
| and saves these variable and function references to be expanded later, |
| when you refer to the new variable (*note The Two Flavors of Variables: |
| Flavors.). When you use '+=' on a recursively-expanded variable, it is |
| this unexpanded text to which 'make' appends the new text you specify. |
| |
| variable = value |
| variable += more |
| |
| is roughly equivalent to: |
| |
| temp = value |
| variable = $(temp) more |
| |
| except that of course it never defines a variable called 'temp'. The |
| importance of this comes when the variable's old value contains variable |
| references. Take this common example: |
| |
| CFLAGS = $(includes) -O |
| ... |
| CFLAGS += -pg # enable profiling |
| |
| The first line defines the 'CFLAGS' variable with a reference to another |
| variable, 'includes'. ('CFLAGS' is used by the rules for C compilation; |
| *note Catalogue of Built-In Rules: Catalogue of Rules.) Using '=' for |
| the definition makes 'CFLAGS' a recursively-expanded variable, meaning |
| '$(includes) -O' is _not_ expanded when 'make' processes the definition |
| of 'CFLAGS'. Thus, 'includes' need not be defined yet for its value to |
| take effect. It only has to be defined before any reference to |
| 'CFLAGS'. If we tried to append to the value of 'CFLAGS' without using |
| '+=', we might do it like this: |
| |
| CFLAGS := $(CFLAGS) -pg # enable profiling |
| |
| This is pretty close, but not quite what we want. Using ':=' redefines |
| 'CFLAGS' as a simply-expanded variable; this means 'make' expands the |
| text '$(CFLAGS) -pg' before setting the variable. If 'includes' is not |
| yet defined, we get ' -O -pg', and a later definition of 'includes' will |
| have no effect. Conversely, by using '+=' we set 'CFLAGS' to the |
| _unexpanded_ value '$(includes) -O -pg'. Thus we preserve the reference |
| to 'includes', so if that variable gets defined at any later point, a |
| reference like '$(CFLAGS)' still uses its value. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Override Directive, Next: Multi-Line, Prev: Appending, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.7 The 'override' Directive |
| ============================ |
| |
| If a variable has been set with a command argument (*note Overriding |
| Variables: Overriding.), then ordinary assignments in the makefile are |
| ignored. If you want to set the variable in the makefile even though it |
| was set with a command argument, you can use an 'override' directive, |
| which is a line that looks like this: |
| |
| override VARIABLE = VALUE |
| |
| or |
| |
| override VARIABLE := VALUE |
| |
| To append more text to a variable defined on the command line, use: |
| |
| override VARIABLE += MORE TEXT |
| |
| *Note Appending More Text to Variables: Appending. |
| |
| Variable assignments marked with the 'override' flag have a higher |
| priority than all other assignments, except another 'override'. |
| Subsequent assignments or appends to this variable which are not marked |
| 'override' will be ignored. |
| |
| The 'override' directive was not invented for escalation in the war |
| between makefiles and command arguments. It was invented so you can |
| alter and add to values that the user specifies with command arguments. |
| |
| For example, suppose you always want the '-g' switch when you run the |
| C compiler, but you would like to allow the user to specify the other |
| switches with a command argument just as usual. You could use this |
| 'override' directive: |
| |
| override CFLAGS += -g |
| |
| You can also use 'override' directives with 'define' directives. |
| This is done as you might expect: |
| |
| override define foo = |
| bar |
| endef |
| |
| *Note Defining Multi-Line Variables: Multi-Line. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Multi-Line, Next: Undefine Directive, Prev: Override Directive, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.8 Defining Multi-Line Variables |
| ================================= |
| |
| Another way to set the value of a variable is to use the 'define' |
| directive. This directive has an unusual syntax which allows newline |
| characters to be included in the value, which is convenient for defining |
| both canned sequences of commands (*note Defining Canned Recipes: Canned |
| Recipes.), and also sections of makefile syntax to use with 'eval' |
| (*note Eval Function::). |
| |
| The 'define' directive is followed on the same line by the name of |
| the variable being defined and an (optional) assignment operator, and |
| nothing more. The value to give the variable appears on the following |
| lines. The end of the value is marked by a line containing just the |
| word 'endef'. Aside from this difference in syntax, 'define' works just |
| like any other variable definition. The variable name may contain |
| function and variable references, which are expanded when the directive |
| is read to find the actual variable name to use. |
| |
| You may omit the variable assignment operator if you prefer. If |
| omitted, 'make' assumes it to be '=' and creates a recursively-expanded |
| variable (*note The Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors.). When using a |
| '+=' operator, the value is appended to the previous value as with any |
| other append operation: with a single space separating the old and new |
| values. |
| |
| You may nest 'define' directives: 'make' will keep track of nested |
| directives and report an error if they are not all properly closed with |
| 'endef'. Note that lines beginning with the recipe prefix character are |
| considered part of a recipe, so any 'define' or 'endef' strings |
| appearing on such a line will not be considered 'make' directives. |
| |
| define two-lines = |
| echo foo |
| echo $(bar) |
| endef |
| |
| The value in an ordinary assignment cannot contain a newline; but the |
| newlines that separate the lines of the value in a 'define' become part |
| of the variable's value (except for the final newline which precedes the |
| 'endef' and is not considered part of the value). |
| |
| When used in a recipe, the previous example is functionally |
| equivalent to this: |
| |
| two-lines = echo foo; echo $(bar) |
| |
| since two commands separated by semicolon behave much like two separate |
| shell commands. However, note that using two separate lines means |
| 'make' will invoke the shell twice, running an independent sub-shell for |
| each line. *Note Recipe Execution: Execution. |
| |
| If you want variable definitions made with 'define' to take |
| precedence over command-line variable definitions, you can use the |
| 'override' directive together with 'define': |
| |
| override define two-lines = |
| foo |
| $(bar) |
| endef |
| |
| *Note The 'override' Directive: Override Directive. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Undefine Directive, Next: Environment, Prev: Multi-Line, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.9 Undefining Variables |
| ======================== |
| |
| If you want to clear a variable, setting its value to empty is usually |
| sufficient. Expanding such a variable will yield the same result (empty |
| string) regardless of whether it was set or not. However, if you are |
| using the 'flavor' (*note Flavor Function::) and 'origin' (*note Origin |
| Function::) functions, there is a difference between a variable that was |
| never set and a variable with an empty value. In such situations you |
| may want to use the 'undefine' directive to make a variable appear as if |
| it was never set. For example: |
| |
| foo := foo |
| bar = bar |
| |
| undefine foo |
| undefine bar |
| |
| $(info $(origin foo)) |
| $(info $(flavor bar)) |
| |
| This example will print "undefined" for both variables. |
| |
| If you want to undefine a command-line variable definition, you can |
| use the 'override' directive together with 'undefine', similar to how |
| this is done for variable definitions: |
| |
| override undefine CFLAGS |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Environment, Next: Target-specific, Prev: Undefine Directive, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.10 Variables from the Environment |
| =================================== |
| |
| Variables in 'make' can come from the environment in which 'make' is |
| run. Every environment variable that 'make' sees when it starts up is |
| transformed into a 'make' variable with the same name and value. |
| However, an explicit assignment in the makefile, or with a command |
| argument, overrides the environment. (If the '-e' flag is specified, |
| then values from the environment override assignments in the makefile. |
| *Note Summary of Options: Options Summary. But this is not recommended |
| practice.) |
| |
| Thus, by setting the variable 'CFLAGS' in your environment, you can |
| cause all C compilations in most makefiles to use the compiler switches |
| you prefer. This is safe for variables with standard or conventional |
| meanings because you know that no makefile will use them for other |
| things. (Note this is not totally reliable; some makefiles set 'CFLAGS' |
| explicitly and therefore are not affected by the value in the |
| environment.) |
| |
| When 'make' runs a recipe, variables defined in the makefile are |
| placed into the environment of each shell. This allows you to pass |
| values to sub-'make' invocations (*note Recursive Use of 'make': |
| Recursion.). By default, only variables that came from the environment |
| or the command line are passed to recursive invocations. You can use |
| the 'export' directive to pass other variables. *Note Communicating |
| Variables to a Sub-'make': Variables/Recursion, for full details. |
| |
| Other use of variables from the environment is not recommended. It |
| is not wise for makefiles to depend for their functioning on environment |
| variables set up outside their control, since this would cause different |
| users to get different results from the same makefile. This is against |
| the whole purpose of most makefiles. |
| |
| Such problems would be especially likely with the variable 'SHELL', |
| which is normally present in the environment to specify the user's |
| choice of interactive shell. It would be very undesirable for this |
| choice to affect 'make'; so, 'make' handles the 'SHELL' environment |
| variable in a special way; see *note Choosing the Shell::. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Target-specific, Next: Pattern-specific, Prev: Environment, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.11 Target-specific Variable Values |
| ==================================== |
| |
| Variable values in 'make' are usually global; that is, they are the same |
| regardless of where they are evaluated (unless they're reset, of |
| course). One exception to that is automatic variables (*note Automatic |
| Variables::). |
| |
| The other exception is "target-specific variable values". This |
| feature allows you to define different values for the same variable, |
| based on the target that 'make' is currently building. As with |
| automatic variables, these values are only available within the context |
| of a target's recipe (and in other target-specific assignments). |
| |
| Set a target-specific variable value like this: |
| |
| TARGET ... : VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT |
| |
| Target-specific variable assignments can be prefixed with any or all |
| of the special keywords 'export', 'override', or 'private'; these apply |
| their normal behavior to this instance of the variable only. |
| |
| Multiple TARGET values create a target-specific variable value for |
| each member of the target list individually. |
| |
| The VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT can be any valid form of assignment; |
| recursive ('='), simple (':=' or '::='), appending ('+='), or |
| conditional ('?='). All variables that appear within the |
| VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT are evaluated within the context of the target: |
| thus, any previously-defined target-specific variable values will be in |
| effect. Note that this variable is actually distinct from any "global" |
| value: the two variables do not have to have the same flavor (recursive |
| vs. simple). |
| |
| Target-specific variables have the same priority as any other |
| makefile variable. Variables provided on the command line (and in the |
| environment if the '-e' option is in force) will take precedence. |
| Specifying the 'override' directive will allow the target-specific |
| variable value to be preferred. |
| |
| There is one more special feature of target-specific variables: when |
| you define a target-specific variable that variable value is also in |
| effect for all prerequisites of this target, and all their |
| prerequisites, etc. (unless those prerequisites override that variable |
| with their own target-specific variable value). So, for example, a |
| statement like this: |
| |
| prog : CFLAGS = -g |
| prog : prog.o foo.o bar.o |
| |
| will set 'CFLAGS' to '-g' in the recipe for 'prog', but it will also set |
| 'CFLAGS' to '-g' in the recipes that create 'prog.o', 'foo.o', and |
| 'bar.o', and any recipes which create their prerequisites. |
| |
| Be aware that a given prerequisite will only be built once per |
| invocation of make, at most. If the same file is a prerequisite of |
| multiple targets, and each of those targets has a different value for |
| the same target-specific variable, then the first target to be built |
| will cause that prerequisite to be built and the prerequisite will |
| inherit the target-specific value from the first target. It will ignore |
| the target-specific values from any other targets. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Pattern-specific, Next: Suppressing Inheritance, Prev: Target-specific, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.12 Pattern-specific Variable Values |
| ===================================== |
| |
| In addition to target-specific variable values (*note Target-specific |
| Variable Values: Target-specific.), GNU 'make' supports pattern-specific |
| variable values. In this form, the variable is defined for any target |
| that matches the pattern specified. |
| |
| Set a pattern-specific variable value like this: |
| |
| PATTERN ... : VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT |
| where PATTERN is a %-pattern. As with target-specific variable |
| values, multiple PATTERN values create a pattern-specific variable value |
| for each pattern individually. The VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT can be any valid |
| form of assignment. Any command line variable setting will take |
| precedence, unless 'override' is specified. |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| %.o : CFLAGS = -O |
| |
| will assign 'CFLAGS' the value of '-O' for all targets matching the |
| pattern '%.o'. |
| |
| If a target matches more than one pattern, the matching |
| pattern-specific variables with longer stems are interpreted first. |
| This results in more specific variables taking precedence over the more |
| generic ones, for example: |
| |
| %.o: %.c |
| $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $< -o $@ |
| |
| lib/%.o: CFLAGS := -fPIC -g |
| %.o: CFLAGS := -g |
| |
| all: foo.o lib/bar.o |
| |
| In this example the first definition of the 'CFLAGS' variable will be |
| used to update 'lib/bar.o' even though the second one also applies to |
| this target. Pattern-specific variables which result in the same stem |
| length are considered in the order in which they were defined in the |
| makefile. |
| |
| Pattern-specific variables are searched after any target-specific |
| variables defined explicitly for that target, and before target-specific |
| variables defined for the parent target. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Suppressing Inheritance, Next: Special Variables, Prev: Pattern-specific, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.13 Suppressing Inheritance |
| ============================ |
| |
| As described in previous sections, 'make' variables are inherited by |
| prerequisites. This capability allows you to modify the behavior of a |
| prerequisite based on which targets caused it to be rebuilt. For |
| example, you might set a target-specific variable on a 'debug' target, |
| then running 'make debug' will cause that variable to be inherited by |
| all prerequisites of 'debug', while just running 'make all' (for |
| example) would not have that assignment. |
| |
| Sometimes, however, you may not want a variable to be inherited. For |
| these situations, 'make' provides the 'private' modifier. Although this |
| modifier can be used with any variable assignment, it makes the most |
| sense with target- and pattern-specific variables. Any variable marked |
| 'private' will be visible to its local target but will not be inherited |
| by prerequisites of that target. A global variable marked 'private' |
| will be visible in the global scope but will not be inherited by any |
| target, and hence will not be visible in any recipe. |
| |
| As an example, consider this makefile: |
| EXTRA_CFLAGS = |
| |
| prog: private EXTRA_CFLAGS = -L/usr/local/lib |
| prog: a.o b.o |
| |
| Due to the 'private' modifier, 'a.o' and 'b.o' will not inherit the |
| 'EXTRA_CFLAGS' variable assignment from the 'prog' target. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Special Variables, Prev: Suppressing Inheritance, Up: Using Variables |
| |
| 6.14 Other Special Variables |
| ============================ |
| |
| GNU 'make' supports some variables that have special properties. |
| |
| 'MAKEFILE_LIST' |
| Contains the name of each makefile that is parsed by 'make', in the |
| order in which it was parsed. The name is appended just before |
| 'make' begins to parse the makefile. Thus, if the first thing a |
| makefile does is examine the last word in this variable, it will be |
| the name of the current makefile. Once the current makefile has |
| used 'include', however, the last word will be the just-included |
| makefile. |
| |
| If a makefile named 'Makefile' has this content: |
| |
| name1 := $(lastword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) |
| |
| include inc.mk |
| |
| name2 := $(lastword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) |
| |
| all: |
| @echo name1 = $(name1) |
| @echo name2 = $(name2) |
| |
| then you would expect to see this output: |
| |
| name1 = Makefile |
| name2 = inc.mk |
| |
| '.DEFAULT_GOAL' |
| Sets the default goal to be used if no targets were specified on |
| the command line (*note Arguments to Specify the Goals: Goals.). |
| The '.DEFAULT_GOAL' variable allows you to discover the current |
| default goal, restart the default goal selection algorithm by |
| clearing its value, or to explicitly set the default goal. The |
| following example illustrates these cases: |
| |
| # Query the default goal. |
| ifeq ($(.DEFAULT_GOAL),) |
| $(warning no default goal is set) |
| endif |
| |
| .PHONY: foo |
| foo: ; @echo $@ |
| |
| $(warning default goal is $(.DEFAULT_GOAL)) |
| |
| # Reset the default goal. |
| .DEFAULT_GOAL := |
| |
| .PHONY: bar |
| bar: ; @echo $@ |
| |
| $(warning default goal is $(.DEFAULT_GOAL)) |
| |
| # Set our own. |
| .DEFAULT_GOAL := foo |
| |
| This makefile prints: |
| |
| no default goal is set |
| default goal is foo |
| default goal is bar |
| foo |
| |
| Note that assigning more than one target name to '.DEFAULT_GOAL' is |
| invalid and will result in an error. |
| |
| 'MAKE_RESTARTS' |
| This variable is set only if this instance of 'make' has restarted |
| (*note How Makefiles Are Remade: Remaking Makefiles.): it will |
| contain the number of times this instance has restarted. Note this |
| is not the same as recursion (counted by the 'MAKELEVEL' variable). |
| You should not set, modify, or export this variable. |
| |
| 'MAKE_TERMOUT' |
| 'MAKE_TERMERR' |
| When 'make' starts it will check whether stdout and stderr will |
| show their output on a terminal. If so, it will set 'MAKE_TERMOUT' |
| and 'MAKE_TERMERR', respectively, to the name of the terminal |
| device (or 'true' if this cannot be determined). If set these |
| variables will be marked for export. These variables will not be |
| changed by 'make' and they will not be modified if already set. |
| |
| These values can be used (particularly in combination with output |
| synchronization (*note Output During Parallel Execution: Parallel |
| Output.) to determine whether 'make' itself is writing to a |
| terminal; they can be tested to decide whether to force recipe |
| commands to generate colorized output for example. |
| |
| If you invoke a sub-'make' and redirect its stdout or stderr it is |
| your responsibility to reset or unexport these variables as well, |
| if your makefiles rely on them. |
| |
| '.RECIPEPREFIX' |
| The first character of the value of this variable is used as the |
| character make assumes is introducing a recipe line. If the |
| variable is empty (as it is by default) that character is the |
| standard tab character. For example, this is a valid makefile: |
| |
| .RECIPEPREFIX = > |
| all: |
| > @echo Hello, world |
| |
| The value of '.RECIPEPREFIX' can be changed multiple times; once |
| set it stays in effect for all rules parsed until it is modified. |
| |
| '.VARIABLES' |
| Expands to a list of the _names_ of all global variables defined so |
| far. This includes variables which have empty values, as well as |
| built-in variables (*note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: |
| Implicit Variables.), but does not include any variables which are |
| only defined in a target-specific context. Note that any value you |
| assign to this variable will be ignored; it will always return its |
| special value. |
| |
| '.FEATURES' |
| Expands to a list of special features supported by this version of |
| 'make'. Possible values include, but are not limited to: |
| |
| 'archives' |
| Supports 'ar' (archive) files using special file name syntax. |
| *Note Using 'make' to Update Archive Files: Archives. |
| |
| 'check-symlink' |
| Supports the '-L' ('--check-symlink-times') flag. *Note |
| Summary of Options: Options Summary. |
| |
| 'else-if' |
| Supports "else if" non-nested conditionals. *Note Syntax of |
| Conditionals: Conditional Syntax. |
| |
| 'jobserver' |
| Supports "job server" enhanced parallel builds. *Note |
| Parallel Execution: Parallel. |
| |
| 'oneshell' |
| Supports the '.ONESHELL' special target. *Note Using One |
| Shell: One Shell. |
| |
| 'order-only' |
| Supports order-only prerequisites. *Note Types of |
| Prerequisites: Prerequisite Types. |
| |
| 'second-expansion' |
| Supports secondary expansion of prerequisite lists. |
| |
| 'shortest-stem' |
| Uses the "shortest stem" method of choosing which pattern, of |
| multiple applicable options, will be used. *Note How Patterns |
| Match: Pattern Match. |
| |
| 'target-specific' |
| Supports target-specific and pattern-specific variable |
| assignments. *Note Target-specific Variable Values: |
| Target-specific. |
| |
| 'undefine' |
| Supports the 'undefine' directive. *Note Undefine |
| Directive::. |
| |
| 'guile' |
| Has GNU Guile available as an embedded extension language. |
| *Note GNU Guile Integration: Guile Integration. |
| |
| 'load' |
| Supports dynamically loadable objects for creating custom |
| extensions. *Note Loading Dynamic Objects: Loading Objects. |
| |
| '.INCLUDE_DIRS' |
| Expands to a list of directories that 'make' searches for included |
| makefiles (*note Including Other Makefiles: Include.). |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Conditionals, Next: Functions, Prev: Using Variables, Up: Top |
| |
| 7 Conditional Parts of Makefiles |
| ******************************** |
| |
| A "conditional" directive causes part of a makefile to be obeyed or |
| ignored depending on the values of variables. Conditionals can compare |
| the value of one variable to another, or the value of a variable to a |
| constant string. Conditionals control what 'make' actually "sees" in |
| the makefile, so they _cannot_ be used to control recipes at the time of |
| execution. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Conditional Example:: Example of a conditional |
| * Conditional Syntax:: The syntax of conditionals. |
| * Testing Flags:: Conditionals that test flags. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Conditional Example, Next: Conditional Syntax, Prev: Conditionals, Up: Conditionals |
| |
| 7.1 Example of a Conditional |
| ============================ |
| |
| The following example of a conditional tells 'make' to use one set of |
| libraries if the 'CC' variable is 'gcc', and a different set of |
| libraries otherwise. It works by controlling which of two recipe lines |
| will be used for the rule. The result is that 'CC=gcc' as an argument |
| to 'make' changes not only which compiler is used but also which |
| libraries are linked. |
| |
| libs_for_gcc = -lgnu |
| normal_libs = |
| |
| foo: $(objects) |
| ifeq ($(CC),gcc) |
| $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(libs_for_gcc) |
| else |
| $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(normal_libs) |
| endif |
| |
| This conditional uses three directives: one 'ifeq', one 'else' and |
| one 'endif'. |
| |
| The 'ifeq' directive begins the conditional, and specifies the |
| condition. It contains two arguments, separated by a comma and |
| surrounded by parentheses. Variable substitution is performed on both |
| arguments and then they are compared. The lines of the makefile |
| following the 'ifeq' are obeyed if the two arguments match; otherwise |
| they are ignored. |
| |
| The 'else' directive causes the following lines to be obeyed if the |
| previous conditional failed. In the example above, this means that the |
| second alternative linking command is used whenever the first |
| alternative is not used. It is optional to have an 'else' in a |
| conditional. |
| |
| The 'endif' directive ends the conditional. Every conditional must |
| end with an 'endif'. Unconditional makefile text follows. |
| |
| As this example illustrates, conditionals work at the textual level: |
| the lines of the conditional are treated as part of the makefile, or |
| ignored, according to the condition. This is why the larger syntactic |
| units of the makefile, such as rules, may cross the beginning or the end |
| of the conditional. |
| |
| When the variable 'CC' has the value 'gcc', the above example has |
| this effect: |
| |
| foo: $(objects) |
| $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(libs_for_gcc) |
| |
| When the variable 'CC' has any other value, the effect is this: |
| |
| foo: $(objects) |
| $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(normal_libs) |
| |
| Equivalent results can be obtained in another way by conditionalizing |
| a variable assignment and then using the variable unconditionally: |
| |
| libs_for_gcc = -lgnu |
| normal_libs = |
| |
| ifeq ($(CC),gcc) |
| libs=$(libs_for_gcc) |
| else |
| libs=$(normal_libs) |
| endif |
| |
| foo: $(objects) |
| $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(libs) |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Conditional Syntax, Next: Testing Flags, Prev: Conditional Example, Up: Conditionals |
| |
| 7.2 Syntax of Conditionals |
| ========================== |
| |
| The syntax of a simple conditional with no 'else' is as follows: |
| |
| CONDITIONAL-DIRECTIVE |
| TEXT-IF-TRUE |
| endif |
| |
| The TEXT-IF-TRUE may be any lines of text, to be considered as part of |
| the makefile if the condition is true. If the condition is false, no |
| text is used instead. |
| |
| The syntax of a complex conditional is as follows: |
| |
| CONDITIONAL-DIRECTIVE |
| TEXT-IF-TRUE |
| else |
| TEXT-IF-FALSE |
| endif |
| |
| or: |
| |
| CONDITIONAL-DIRECTIVE-ONE |
| TEXT-IF-ONE-IS-TRUE |
| else CONDITIONAL-DIRECTIVE-TWO |
| TEXT-IF-TWO-IS-TRUE |
| else |
| TEXT-IF-ONE-AND-TWO-ARE-FALSE |
| endif |
| |
| There can be as many "'else' CONDITIONAL-DIRECTIVE" clauses as |
| necessary. Once a given condition is true, TEXT-IF-TRUE is used and no |
| other clause is used; if no condition is true then TEXT-IF-FALSE is |
| used. The TEXT-IF-TRUE and TEXT-IF-FALSE can be any number of lines of |
| text. |
| |
| The syntax of the CONDITIONAL-DIRECTIVE is the same whether the |
| conditional is simple or complex; after an 'else' or not. There are |
| four different directives that test different conditions. Here is a |
| table of them: |
| |
| 'ifeq (ARG1, ARG2)' |
| 'ifeq 'ARG1' 'ARG2'' |
| 'ifeq "ARG1" "ARG2"' |
| 'ifeq "ARG1" 'ARG2'' |
| 'ifeq 'ARG1' "ARG2"' |
| Expand all variable references in ARG1 and ARG2 and compare them. |
| If they are identical, the TEXT-IF-TRUE is effective; otherwise, |
| the TEXT-IF-FALSE, if any, is effective. |
| |
| Often you want to test if a variable has a non-empty value. When |
| the value results from complex expansions of variables and |
| functions, expansions you would consider empty may actually contain |
| whitespace characters and thus are not seen as empty. However, you |
| can use the 'strip' function (*note Text Functions::) to avoid |
| interpreting whitespace as a non-empty value. For example: |
| |
| ifeq ($(strip $(foo)),) |
| TEXT-IF-EMPTY |
| endif |
| |
| will evaluate TEXT-IF-EMPTY even if the expansion of '$(foo)' |
| contains whitespace characters. |
| |
| 'ifneq (ARG1, ARG2)' |
| 'ifneq 'ARG1' 'ARG2'' |
| 'ifneq "ARG1" "ARG2"' |
| 'ifneq "ARG1" 'ARG2'' |
| 'ifneq 'ARG1' "ARG2"' |
| Expand all variable references in ARG1 and ARG2 and compare them. |
| If they are different, the TEXT-IF-TRUE is effective; otherwise, |
| the TEXT-IF-FALSE, if any, is effective. |
| |
| 'ifdef VARIABLE-NAME' |
| The 'ifdef' form takes the _name_ of a variable as its argument, |
| not a reference to a variable. If the value of that variable has a |
| non-empty value, the TEXT-IF-TRUE is effective; otherwise, the |
| TEXT-IF-FALSE, if any, is effective. Variables that have never |
| been defined have an empty value. The text VARIABLE-NAME is |
| expanded, so it could be a variable or function that expands to the |
| name of a variable. For example: |
| |
| bar = true |
| foo = bar |
| ifdef $(foo) |
| frobozz = yes |
| endif |
| |
| The variable reference '$(foo)' is expanded, yielding 'bar', which |
| is considered to be the name of a variable. The variable 'bar' is |
| not expanded, but its value is examined to determine if it is |
| non-empty. |
| |
| Note that 'ifdef' only tests whether a variable has a value. It |
| does not expand the variable to see if that value is nonempty. |
| Consequently, tests using 'ifdef' return true for all definitions |
| except those like 'foo ='. To test for an empty value, use |
| 'ifeq ($(foo),)'. For example, |
| |
| bar = |
| foo = $(bar) |
| ifdef foo |
| frobozz = yes |
| else |
| frobozz = no |
| endif |
| |
| sets 'frobozz' to 'yes', while: |
| |
| foo = |
| ifdef foo |
| frobozz = yes |
| else |
| frobozz = no |
| endif |
| |
| sets 'frobozz' to 'no'. |
| |
| 'ifndef VARIABLE-NAME' |
| If the variable VARIABLE-NAME has an empty value, the TEXT-IF-TRUE |
| is effective; otherwise, the TEXT-IF-FALSE, if any, is effective. |
| The rules for expansion and testing of VARIABLE-NAME are identical |
| to the 'ifdef' directive. |
| |
| Extra spaces are allowed and ignored at the beginning of the |
| conditional directive line, but a tab is not allowed. (If the line |
| begins with a tab, it will be considered part of a recipe for a rule.) |
| Aside from this, extra spaces or tabs may be inserted with no effect |
| anywhere except within the directive name or within an argument. A |
| comment starting with '#' may appear at the end of the line. |
| |
| The other two directives that play a part in a conditional are 'else' |
| and 'endif'. Each of these directives is written as one word, with no |
| arguments. Extra spaces are allowed and ignored at the beginning of the |
| line, and spaces or tabs at the end. A comment starting with '#' may |
| appear at the end of the line. |
| |
| Conditionals affect which lines of the makefile 'make' uses. If the |
| condition is true, 'make' reads the lines of the TEXT-IF-TRUE as part of |
| the makefile; if the condition is false, 'make' ignores those lines |
| completely. It follows that syntactic units of the makefile, such as |
| rules, may safely be split across the beginning or the end of the |
| conditional. |
| |
| 'make' evaluates conditionals when it reads a makefile. |
| Consequently, you cannot use automatic variables in the tests of |
| conditionals because they are not defined until recipes are run (*note |
| Automatic Variables::). |
| |
| To prevent intolerable confusion, it is not permitted to start a |
| conditional in one makefile and end it in another. However, you may |
| write an 'include' directive within a conditional, provided you do not |
| attempt to terminate the conditional inside the included file. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Testing Flags, Prev: Conditional Syntax, Up: Conditionals |
| |
| 7.3 Conditionals that Test Flags |
| ================================ |
| |
| You can write a conditional that tests 'make' command flags such as '-t' |
| by using the variable 'MAKEFLAGS' together with the 'findstring' |
| function (*note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text |
| Functions.). This is useful when 'touch' is not enough to make a file |
| appear up to date. |
| |
| The 'findstring' function determines whether one string appears as a |
| substring of another. If you want to test for the '-t' flag, use 't' as |
| the first string and the value of 'MAKEFLAGS' as the other. |
| |
| For example, here is how to arrange to use 'ranlib -t' to finish |
| marking an archive file up to date: |
| |
| archive.a: ... |
| ifneq (,$(findstring t,$(MAKEFLAGS))) |
| +touch archive.a |
| +ranlib -t archive.a |
| else |
| ranlib archive.a |
| endif |
| |
| The '+' prefix marks those recipe lines as "recursive" so that they will |
| be executed despite use of the '-t' flag. *Note Recursive Use of |
| 'make': Recursion. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Functions, Next: Running, Prev: Conditionals, Up: Top |
| |
| 8 Functions for Transforming Text |
| ********************************* |
| |
| "Functions" allow you to do text processing in the makefile to compute |
| the files to operate on or the commands to use in recipes. You use a |
| function in a "function call", where you give the name of the function |
| and some text (the "arguments") for the function to operate on. The |
| result of the function's processing is substituted into the makefile at |
| the point of the call, just as a variable might be substituted. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Syntax of Functions:: How to write a function call. |
| * Text Functions:: General-purpose text manipulation functions. |
| * File Name Functions:: Functions for manipulating file names. |
| * Conditional Functions:: Functions that implement conditions. |
| * Foreach Function:: Repeat some text with controlled variation. |
| * File Function:: Write text to a file. |
| * Call Function:: Expand a user-defined function. |
| * Value Function:: Return the un-expanded value of a variable. |
| * Eval Function:: Evaluate the arguments as makefile syntax. |
| * Origin Function:: Find where a variable got its value. |
| * Flavor Function:: Find out the flavor of a variable. |
| * Make Control Functions:: Functions that control how make runs. |
| * Shell Function:: Substitute the output of a shell command. |
| * Guile Function:: Use GNU Guile embedded scripting language. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Syntax of Functions, Next: Text Functions, Prev: Functions, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.1 Function Call Syntax |
| ======================== |
| |
| A function call resembles a variable reference. It can appear anywhere |
| a variable reference can appear, and it is expanded using the same rules |
| as variable references. A function call looks like this: |
| |
| $(FUNCTION ARGUMENTS) |
| |
| or like this: |
| |
| ${FUNCTION ARGUMENTS} |
| |
| Here FUNCTION is a function name; one of a short list of names that |
| are part of 'make'. You can also essentially create your own functions |
| by using the 'call' built-in function. |
| |
| The ARGUMENTS are the arguments of the function. They are separated |
| from the function name by one or more spaces or tabs, and if there is |
| more than one argument, then they are separated by commas. Such |
| whitespace and commas are not part of an argument's value. The |
| delimiters which you use to surround the function call, whether |
| parentheses or braces, can appear in an argument only in matching pairs; |
| the other kind of delimiters may appear singly. If the arguments |
| themselves contain other function calls or variable references, it is |
| wisest to use the same kind of delimiters for all the references; write |
| '$(subst a,b,$(x))', not '$(subst a,b,${x})'. This is because it is |
| clearer, and because only one type of delimiter is matched to find the |
| end of the reference. |
| |
| The text written for each argument is processed by substitution of |
| variables and function calls to produce the argument value, which is the |
| text on which the function acts. The substitution is done in the order |
| in which the arguments appear. |
| |
| Commas and unmatched parentheses or braces cannot appear in the text |
| of an argument as written; leading spaces cannot appear in the text of |
| the first argument as written. These characters can be put into the |
| argument value by variable substitution. First define variables 'comma' |
| and 'space' whose values are isolated comma and space characters, then |
| substitute these variables where such characters are wanted, like this: |
| |
| comma:= , |
| empty:= |
| space:= $(empty) $(empty) |
| foo:= a b c |
| bar:= $(subst $(space),$(comma),$(foo)) |
| # bar is now 'a,b,c'. |
| |
| Here the 'subst' function replaces each space with a comma, through the |
| value of 'foo', and substitutes the result. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Text Functions, Next: File Name Functions, Prev: Syntax of Functions, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.2 Functions for String Substitution and Analysis |
| ================================================== |
| |
| Here are some functions that operate on strings: |
| |
| '$(subst FROM,TO,TEXT)' |
| Performs a textual replacement on the text TEXT: each occurrence of |
| FROM is replaced by TO. The result is substituted for the function |
| call. For example, |
| |
| $(subst ee,EE,feet on the street) |
| |
| substitutes the string 'fEEt on the strEEt'. |
| |
| '$(patsubst PATTERN,REPLACEMENT,TEXT)' |
| Finds whitespace-separated words in TEXT that match PATTERN and |
| replaces them with REPLACEMENT. Here PATTERN may contain a '%' |
| which acts as a wildcard, matching any number of any characters |
| within a word. If REPLACEMENT also contains a '%', the '%' is |
| replaced by the text that matched the '%' in PATTERN. Only the |
| first '%' in the PATTERN and REPLACEMENT is treated this way; any |
| subsequent '%' is unchanged. |
| |
| '%' characters in 'patsubst' function invocations can be quoted |
| with preceding backslashes ('\'). Backslashes that would otherwise |
| quote '%' characters can be quoted with more backslashes. |
| Backslashes that quote '%' characters or other backslashes are |
| removed from the pattern before it is compared file names or has a |
| stem substituted into it. Backslashes that are not in danger of |
| quoting '%' characters go unmolested. For example, the pattern |
| 'the\%weird\\%pattern\\' has 'the%weird\' preceding the operative |
| '%' character, and 'pattern\\' following it. The final two |
| backslashes are left alone because they cannot affect any '%' |
| character. |
| |
| Whitespace between words is folded into single space characters; |
| leading and trailing whitespace is discarded. |
| |
| For example, |
| |
| $(patsubst %.c,%.o,x.c.c bar.c) |
| |
| produces the value 'x.c.o bar.o'. |
| |
| Substitution references (*note Substitution References: |
| Substitution Refs.) are a simpler way to get the effect of the |
| 'patsubst' function: |
| |
| $(VAR:PATTERN=REPLACEMENT) |
| |
| is equivalent to |
| |
| $(patsubst PATTERN,REPLACEMENT,$(VAR)) |
| |
| The second shorthand simplifies one of the most common uses of |
| 'patsubst': replacing the suffix at the end of file names. |
| |
| $(VAR:SUFFIX=REPLACEMENT) |
| |
| is equivalent to |
| |
| $(patsubst %SUFFIX,%REPLACEMENT,$(VAR)) |
| |
| For example, you might have a list of object files: |
| |
| objects = foo.o bar.o baz.o |
| |
| To get the list of corresponding source files, you could simply |
| write: |
| |
| $(objects:.o=.c) |
| |
| instead of using the general form: |
| |
| $(patsubst %.o,%.c,$(objects)) |
| |
| '$(strip STRING)' |
| Removes leading and trailing whitespace from STRING and replaces |
| each internal sequence of one or more whitespace characters with a |
| single space. Thus, '$(strip a b c )' results in 'a b c'. |
| |
| The function 'strip' can be very useful when used in conjunction |
| with conditionals. When comparing something with the empty string |
| '' using 'ifeq' or 'ifneq', you usually want a string of just |
| whitespace to match the empty string (*note Conditionals::). |
| |
| Thus, the following may fail to have the desired results: |
| |
| .PHONY: all |
| ifneq "$(needs_made)" "" |
| all: $(needs_made) |
| else |
| all:;@echo 'Nothing to make!' |
| endif |
| |
| Replacing the variable reference '$(needs_made)' with the function |
| call '$(strip $(needs_made))' in the 'ifneq' directive would make |
| it more robust. |
| |
| '$(findstring FIND,IN)' |
| Searches IN for an occurrence of FIND. If it occurs, the value is |
| FIND; otherwise, the value is empty. You can use this function in |
| a conditional to test for the presence of a specific substring in a |
| given string. Thus, the two examples, |
| |
| $(findstring a,a b c) |
| $(findstring a,b c) |
| |
| produce the values 'a' and '' (the empty string), respectively. |
| *Note Testing Flags::, for a practical application of 'findstring'. |
| |
| '$(filter PATTERN...,TEXT)' |
| Returns all whitespace-separated words in TEXT that _do_ match any |
| of the PATTERN words, removing any words that _do not_ match. The |
| patterns are written using '%', just like the patterns used in the |
| 'patsubst' function above. |
| |
| The 'filter' function can be used to separate out different types |
| of strings (such as file names) in a variable. For example: |
| |
| sources := foo.c bar.c baz.s ugh.h |
| foo: $(sources) |
| cc $(filter %.c %.s,$(sources)) -o foo |
| |
| says that 'foo' depends of 'foo.c', 'bar.c', 'baz.s' and 'ugh.h' |
| but only 'foo.c', 'bar.c' and 'baz.s' should be specified in the |
| command to the compiler. |
| |
| '$(filter-out PATTERN...,TEXT)' |
| Returns all whitespace-separated words in TEXT that _do not_ match |
| any of the PATTERN words, removing the words that _do_ match one or |
| more. This is the exact opposite of the 'filter' function. |
| |
| For example, given: |
| |
| objects=main1.o foo.o main2.o bar.o |
| mains=main1.o main2.o |
| |
| the following generates a list which contains all the object files |
| not in 'mains': |
| |
| $(filter-out $(mains),$(objects)) |
| |
| '$(sort LIST)' |
| Sorts the words of LIST in lexical order, removing duplicate words. |
| The output is a list of words separated by single spaces. Thus, |
| |
| $(sort foo bar lose) |
| |
| returns the value 'bar foo lose'. |
| |
| Incidentally, since 'sort' removes duplicate words, you can use it |
| for this purpose even if you don't care about the sort order. |
| |
| '$(word N,TEXT)' |
| Returns the Nth word of TEXT. The legitimate values of N start |
| from 1. If N is bigger than the number of words in TEXT, the value |
| is empty. For example, |
| |
| $(word 2, foo bar baz) |
| |
| returns 'bar'. |
| |
| '$(wordlist S,E,TEXT)' |
| Returns the list of words in TEXT starting with word S and ending |
| with word E (inclusive). The legitimate values of S start from 1; |
| E may start from 0. If S is bigger than the number of words in |
| TEXT, the value is empty. If E is bigger than the number of words |
| in TEXT, words up to the end of TEXT are returned. If S is greater |
| than E, nothing is returned. For example, |
| |
| $(wordlist 2, 3, foo bar baz) |
| |
| returns 'bar baz'. |
| |
| '$(words TEXT)' |
| Returns the number of words in TEXT. Thus, the last word of TEXT |
| is '$(word $(words TEXT),TEXT)'. |
| |
| '$(firstword NAMES...)' |
| The argument NAMES is regarded as a series of names, separated by |
| whitespace. The value is the first name in the series. The rest |
| of the names are ignored. |
| |
| For example, |
| |
| $(firstword foo bar) |
| |
| produces the result 'foo'. Although '$(firstword TEXT)' is the |
| same as '$(word 1,TEXT)', the 'firstword' function is retained for |
| its simplicity. |
| |
| '$(lastword NAMES...)' |
| The argument NAMES is regarded as a series of names, separated by |
| whitespace. The value is the last name in the series. |
| |
| For example, |
| |
| $(lastword foo bar) |
| |
| produces the result 'bar'. Although '$(lastword TEXT)' is the same |
| as '$(word $(words TEXT),TEXT)', the 'lastword' function was added |
| for its simplicity and better performance. |
| |
| Here is a realistic example of the use of 'subst' and 'patsubst'. |
| Suppose that a makefile uses the 'VPATH' variable to specify a list of |
| directories that 'make' should search for prerequisite files (*note |
| 'VPATH' Search Path for All Prerequisites: General Search.). This |
| example shows how to tell the C compiler to search for header files in |
| the same list of directories. |
| |
| The value of 'VPATH' is a list of directories separated by colons, |
| such as 'src:../headers'. First, the 'subst' function is used to change |
| the colons to spaces: |
| |
| $(subst :, ,$(VPATH)) |
| |
| This produces 'src ../headers'. Then 'patsubst' is used to turn each |
| directory name into a '-I' flag. These can be added to the value of the |
| variable 'CFLAGS', which is passed automatically to the C compiler, like |
| this: |
| |
| override CFLAGS += $(patsubst %,-I%,$(subst :, ,$(VPATH))) |
| |
| The effect is to append the text '-Isrc -I../headers' to the previously |
| given value of 'CFLAGS'. The 'override' directive is used so that the |
| new value is assigned even if the previous value of 'CFLAGS' was |
| specified with a command argument (*note The 'override' Directive: |
| Override Directive.). |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: File Name Functions, Next: Conditional Functions, Prev: Text Functions, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.3 Functions for File Names |
| ============================ |
| |
| Several of the built-in expansion functions relate specifically to |
| taking apart file names or lists of file names. |
| |
| Each of the following functions performs a specific transformation on |
| a file name. The argument of the function is regarded as a series of |
| file names, separated by whitespace. (Leading and trailing whitespace |
| is ignored.) Each file name in the series is transformed in the same |
| way and the results are concatenated with single spaces between them. |
| |
| '$(dir NAMES...)' |
| Extracts the directory-part of each file name in NAMES. The |
| directory-part of the file name is everything up through (and |
| including) the last slash in it. If the file name contains no |
| slash, the directory part is the string './'. For example, |
| |
| $(dir src/foo.c hacks) |
| |
| produces the result 'src/ ./'. |
| |
| '$(notdir NAMES...)' |
| Extracts all but the directory-part of each file name in NAMES. If |
| the file name contains no slash, it is left unchanged. Otherwise, |
| everything through the last slash is removed from it. |
| |
| A file name that ends with a slash becomes an empty string. This |
| is unfortunate, because it means that the result does not always |
| have the same number of whitespace-separated file names as the |
| argument had; but we do not see any other valid alternative. |
| |
| For example, |
| |
| $(notdir src/foo.c hacks) |
| |
| produces the result 'foo.c hacks'. |
| |
| '$(suffix NAMES...)' |
| Extracts the suffix of each file name in NAMES. If the file name |
| contains a period, the suffix is everything starting with the last |
| period. Otherwise, the suffix is the empty string. This |
| frequently means that the result will be empty when NAMES is not, |
| and if NAMES contains multiple file names, the result may contain |
| fewer file names. |
| |
| For example, |
| |
| $(suffix src/foo.c src-1.0/bar.c hacks) |
| |
| produces the result '.c .c'. |
| |
| '$(basename NAMES...)' |
| Extracts all but the suffix of each file name in NAMES. If the |
| file name contains a period, the basename is everything starting up |
| to (and not including) the last period. Periods in the directory |
| part are ignored. If there is no period, the basename is the |
| entire file name. For example, |
| |
| $(basename src/foo.c src-1.0/bar hacks) |
| |
| produces the result 'src/foo src-1.0/bar hacks'. |
| |
| '$(addsuffix SUFFIX,NAMES...)' |
| The argument NAMES is regarded as a series of names, separated by |
| whitespace; SUFFIX is used as a unit. The value of SUFFIX is |
| appended to the end of each individual name and the resulting |
| larger names are concatenated with single spaces between them. For |
| example, |
| |
| $(addsuffix .c,foo bar) |
| |
| produces the result 'foo.c bar.c'. |
| |
| '$(addprefix PREFIX,NAMES...)' |
| The argument NAMES is regarded as a series of names, separated by |
| whitespace; PREFIX is used as a unit. The value of PREFIX is |
| prepended to the front of each individual name and the resulting |
| larger names are concatenated with single spaces between them. For |
| example, |
| |
| $(addprefix src/,foo bar) |
| |
| produces the result 'src/foo src/bar'. |
| |
| '$(join LIST1,LIST2)' |
| Concatenates the two arguments word by word: the two first words |
| (one from each argument) concatenated form the first word of the |
| result, the two second words form the second word of the result, |
| and so on. So the Nth word of the result comes from the Nth word |
| of each argument. If one argument has more words that the other, |
| the extra words are copied unchanged into the result. |
| |
| For example, '$(join a b,.c .o)' produces 'a.c b.o'. |
| |
| Whitespace between the words in the lists is not preserved; it is |
| replaced with a single space. |
| |
| This function can merge the results of the 'dir' and 'notdir' |
| functions, to produce the original list of files which was given to |
| those two functions. |
| |
| '$(wildcard PATTERN)' |
| The argument PATTERN is a file name pattern, typically containing |
| wildcard characters (as in shell file name patterns). The result |
| of 'wildcard' is a space-separated list of the names of existing |
| files that match the pattern. *Note Using Wildcard Characters in |
| File Names: Wildcards. |
| |
| '$(realpath NAMES...)' |
| For each file name in NAMES return the canonical absolute name. A |
| canonical name does not contain any '.' or '..' components, nor any |
| repeated path separators ('/') or symlinks. In case of a failure |
| the empty string is returned. Consult the 'realpath(3)' |
| documentation for a list of possible failure causes. |
| |
| '$(abspath NAMES...)' |
| For each file name in NAMES return an absolute name that does not |
| contain any '.' or '..' components, nor any repeated path |
| separators ('/'). Note that, in contrast to 'realpath' function, |
| 'abspath' does not resolve symlinks and does not require the file |
| names to refer to an existing file or directory. Use the |
| 'wildcard' function to test for existence. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Conditional Functions, Next: Foreach Function, Prev: File Name Functions, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.4 Functions for Conditionals |
| ============================== |
| |
| There are three functions that provide conditional expansion. A key |
| aspect of these functions is that not all of the arguments are expanded |
| initially. Only those arguments which need to be expanded, will be |
| expanded. |
| |
| '$(if CONDITION,THEN-PART[,ELSE-PART])' |
| The 'if' function provides support for conditional expansion in a |
| functional context (as opposed to the GNU 'make' makefile |
| conditionals such as 'ifeq' (*note Syntax of Conditionals: |
| Conditional Syntax.). |
| |
| The first argument, CONDITION, first has all preceding and trailing |
| whitespace stripped, then is expanded. If it expands to any |
| non-empty string, then the condition is considered to be true. If |
| it expands to an empty string, the condition is considered to be |
| false. |
| |
| If the condition is true then the second argument, THEN-PART, is |
| evaluated and this is used as the result of the evaluation of the |
| entire 'if' function. |
| |
| If the condition is false then the third argument, ELSE-PART, is |
| evaluated and this is the result of the 'if' function. If there is |
| no third argument, the 'if' function evaluates to nothing (the |
| empty string). |
| |
| Note that only one of the THEN-PART or the ELSE-PART will be |
| evaluated, never both. Thus, either can contain side-effects (such |
| as 'shell' function calls, etc.) |
| |
| '$(or CONDITION1[,CONDITION2[,CONDITION3...]])' |
| The 'or' function provides a "short-circuiting" OR operation. Each |
| argument is expanded, in order. If an argument expands to a |
| non-empty string the processing stops and the result of the |
| expansion is that string. If, after all arguments are expanded, |
| all of them are false (empty), then the result of the expansion is |
| the empty string. |
| |
| '$(and CONDITION1[,CONDITION2[,CONDITION3...]])' |
| The 'and' function provides a "short-circuiting" AND operation. |
| Each argument is expanded, in order. If an argument expands to an |
| empty string the processing stops and the result of the expansion |
| is the empty string. If all arguments expand to a non-empty string |
| then the result of the expansion is the expansion of the last |
| argument. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Foreach Function, Next: File Function, Prev: Conditional Functions, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.5 The 'foreach' Function |
| ========================== |
| |
| The 'foreach' function is very different from other functions. It |
| causes one piece of text to be used repeatedly, each time with a |
| different substitution performed on it. It resembles the 'for' command |
| in the shell 'sh' and the 'foreach' command in the C-shell 'csh'. |
| |
| The syntax of the 'foreach' function is: |
| |
| $(foreach VAR,LIST,TEXT) |
| |
| The first two arguments, VAR and LIST, are expanded before anything else |
| is done; note that the last argument, TEXT, is *not* expanded at the |
| same time. Then for each word of the expanded value of LIST, the |
| variable named by the expanded value of VAR is set to that word, and |
| TEXT is expanded. Presumably TEXT contains references to that variable, |
| so its expansion will be different each time. |
| |
| The result is that TEXT is expanded as many times as there are |
| whitespace-separated words in LIST. The multiple expansions of TEXT are |
| concatenated, with spaces between them, to make the result of 'foreach'. |
| |
| This simple example sets the variable 'files' to the list of all |
| files in the directories in the list 'dirs': |
| |
| dirs := a b c d |
| files := $(foreach dir,$(dirs),$(wildcard $(dir)/*)) |
| |
| Here TEXT is '$(wildcard $(dir)/*)'. The first repetition finds the |
| value 'a' for 'dir', so it produces the same result as '$(wildcard |
| a/*)'; the second repetition produces the result of '$(wildcard b/*)'; |
| and the third, that of '$(wildcard c/*)'. |
| |
| This example has the same result (except for setting 'dirs') as the |
| following example: |
| |
| files := $(wildcard a/* b/* c/* d/*) |
| |
| When TEXT is complicated, you can improve readability by giving it a |
| name, with an additional variable: |
| |
| find_files = $(wildcard $(dir)/*) |
| dirs := a b c d |
| files := $(foreach dir,$(dirs),$(find_files)) |
| |
| Here we use the variable 'find_files' this way. We use plain '=' to |
| define a recursively-expanding variable, so that its value contains an |
| actual function call to be re-expanded under the control of 'foreach'; a |
| simply-expanded variable would not do, since 'wildcard' would be called |
| only once at the time of defining 'find_files'. |
| |
| The 'foreach' function has no permanent effect on the variable VAR; |
| its value and flavor after the 'foreach' function call are the same as |
| they were beforehand. The other values which are taken from LIST are in |
| effect only temporarily, during the execution of 'foreach'. The |
| variable VAR is a simply-expanded variable during the execution of |
| 'foreach'. If VAR was undefined before the 'foreach' function call, it |
| is undefined after the call. *Note The Two Flavors of Variables: |
| Flavors. |
| |
| You must take care when using complex variable expressions that |
| result in variable names because many strange things are valid variable |
| names, but are probably not what you intended. For example, |
| |
| files := $(foreach Esta-escrito-en-espanol!,b c ch,$(find_files)) |
| |
| might be useful if the value of 'find_files' references the variable |
| whose name is 'Esta-escrito-en-espanol!' (es un nombre bastante largo, |
| no?), but it is more likely to be a mistake. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: File Function, Next: Call Function, Prev: Foreach Function, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.6 The 'file' Function |
| ======================= |
| |
| The 'file' function allows the makefile to write to or read from a file. |
| Two modes of writing are supported: overwrite, where the text is written |
| to the beginning of the file and any existing content is lost, and |
| append, where the text is written to the end of the file, preserving the |
| existing content. In both cases the file is created if it does not |
| exist. It is a fatal error if the file cannot be opened for writing, or |
| if the write operation fails. The 'file' function expands to the empty |
| string when writing to a file. |
| |
| When reading from a file, the 'file' function expands to the verbatim |
| contents of the file, except that the final newline (if there is one) |
| will be stripped. Attempting to read from a non-existent file expands |
| to the empty string. |
| |
| The syntax of the 'file' function is: |
| |
| $(file OP FILENAME[,TEXT]) |
| |
| When the 'file' function is evaluated all its arguments are expanded |
| first, then the file indicated by FILENAME will be opened in the mode |
| described by OP. |
| |
| The operator OP can be '>' to indicate the file will be overwritten |
| with new content, '>>' to indicate the current contents of the file will |
| be appended to, or '<' to indicate the contents of the file will be read |
| in. The FILENAME specifies the file to be written to or read from. |
| There may optionally be whitespace between the operator and the file |
| name. |
| |
| When reading files, it is an error to provide a TEXT value. |
| |
| When writing files, TEXT will be written to the file. If TEXT does |
| not already end in a newline a final newline will be written (even if |
| TEXT is the empty string). If the TEXT argument is not given at all, |
| nothing will be written. |
| |
| For example, the 'file' function can be useful if your build system |
| has a limited command line size and your recipe runs a command that can |
| accept arguments from a file as well. Many commands use the convention |
| that an argument prefixed with an '@' specifies a file containing more |
| arguments. Then you might write your recipe in this way: |
| |
| program: $(OBJECTS) |
| $(file >[email protected],$^) |
| $(CMD) $(CMDFLAGS) @[email protected] |
| @rm [email protected] |
| |
| If the command required each argument to be on a separate line of the |
| input file, you might write your recipe like this: |
| |
| program: $(OBJECTS) |
| $(file >[email protected]) $(foreach O,$^,$(file >>[email protected],$O)) |
| $(CMD) $(CMDFLAGS) @[email protected] |
| @rm [email protected] |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Call Function, Next: Value Function, Prev: File Function, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.7 The 'call' Function |
| ======================= |
| |
| The 'call' function is unique in that it can be used to create new |
| parameterized functions. You can write a complex expression as the |
| value of a variable, then use 'call' to expand it with different values. |
| |
| The syntax of the 'call' function is: |
| |
| $(call VARIABLE,PARAM,PARAM,...) |
| |
| When 'make' expands this function, it assigns each PARAM to temporary |
| variables '$(1)', '$(2)', etc. The variable '$(0)' will contain |
| VARIABLE. There is no maximum number of parameter arguments. There is |
| no minimum, either, but it doesn't make sense to use 'call' with no |
| parameters. |
| |
| Then VARIABLE is expanded as a 'make' variable in the context of |
| these temporary assignments. Thus, any reference to '$(1)' in the value |
| of VARIABLE will resolve to the first PARAM in the invocation of 'call'. |
| |
| Note that VARIABLE is the _name_ of a variable, not a _reference_ to |
| that variable. Therefore you would not normally use a '$' or |
| parentheses when writing it. (You can, however, use a variable |
| reference in the name if you want the name not to be a constant.) |
| |
| If VARIABLE is the name of a built-in function, the built-in function |
| is always invoked (even if a 'make' variable by that name also exists). |
| |
| The 'call' function expands the PARAM arguments before assigning them |
| to temporary variables. This means that VARIABLE values containing |
| references to built-in functions that have special expansion rules, like |
| 'foreach' or 'if', may not work as you expect. |
| |
| Some examples may make this clearer. |
| |
| This macro simply reverses its arguments: |
| |
| reverse = $(2) $(1) |
| |
| foo = $(call reverse,a,b) |
| |
| Here FOO will contain 'b a'. |
| |
| This one is slightly more interesting: it defines a macro to search |
| for the first instance of a program in 'PATH': |
| |
| pathsearch = $(firstword $(wildcard $(addsuffix /$(1),$(subst :, ,$(PATH))))) |
| |
| LS := $(call pathsearch,ls) |
| |
| Now the variable LS contains '/bin/ls' or similar. |
| |
| The 'call' function can be nested. Each recursive invocation gets |
| its own local values for '$(1)', etc. that mask the values of |
| higher-level 'call'. For example, here is an implementation of a "map" |
| function: |
| |
| map = $(foreach a,$(2),$(call $(1),$(a))) |
| |
| Now you can MAP a function that normally takes only one argument, |
| such as 'origin', to multiple values in one step: |
| |
| o = $(call map,origin,o map MAKE) |
| |
| and end up with O containing something like 'file file default'. |
| |
| A final caution: be careful when adding whitespace to the arguments |
| to 'call'. As with other functions, any whitespace contained in the |
| second and subsequent arguments is kept; this can cause strange effects. |
| It's generally safest to remove all extraneous whitespace when providing |
| parameters to 'call'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Value Function, Next: Eval Function, Prev: Call Function, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.8 The 'value' Function |
| ======================== |
| |
| The 'value' function provides a way for you to use the value of a |
| variable _without_ having it expanded. Please note that this does not |
| undo expansions which have already occurred; for example if you create a |
| simply expanded variable its value is expanded during the definition; in |
| that case the 'value' function will return the same result as using the |
| variable directly. |
| |
| The syntax of the 'value' function is: |
| |
| $(value VARIABLE) |
| |
| Note that VARIABLE is the _name_ of a variable, not a _reference_ to |
| that variable. Therefore you would not normally use a '$' or |
| parentheses when writing it. (You can, however, use a variable |
| reference in the name if you want the name not to be a constant.) |
| |
| The result of this function is a string containing the value of |
| VARIABLE, without any expansion occurring. For example, in this |
| makefile: |
| |
| FOO = $PATH |
| |
| all: |
| @echo $(FOO) |
| @echo $(value FOO) |
| |
| The first output line would be 'ATH', since the "$P" would be expanded |
| as a 'make' variable, while the second output line would be the current |
| value of your '$PATH' environment variable, since the 'value' function |
| avoided the expansion. |
| |
| The 'value' function is most often used in conjunction with the |
| 'eval' function (*note Eval Function::). |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Eval Function, Next: Origin Function, Prev: Value Function, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.9 The 'eval' Function |
| ======================= |
| |
| The 'eval' function is very special: it allows you to define new |
| makefile constructs that are not constant; which are the result of |
| evaluating other variables and functions. The argument to the 'eval' |
| function is expanded, then the results of that expansion are parsed as |
| makefile syntax. The expanded results can define new 'make' variables, |
| targets, implicit or explicit rules, etc. |
| |
| The result of the 'eval' function is always the empty string; thus, |
| it can be placed virtually anywhere in a makefile without causing syntax |
| errors. |
| |
| It's important to realize that the 'eval' argument is expanded |
| _twice_; first by the 'eval' function, then the results of that |
| expansion are expanded again when they are parsed as makefile syntax. |
| This means you may need to provide extra levels of escaping for "$" |
| characters when using 'eval'. The 'value' function (*note Value |
| Function::) can sometimes be useful in these situations, to circumvent |
| unwanted expansions. |
| |
| Here is an example of how 'eval' can be used; this example combines a |
| number of concepts and other functions. Although it might seem overly |
| complex to use 'eval' in this example, rather than just writing out the |
| rules, consider two things: first, the template definition (in |
| 'PROGRAM_template') could need to be much more complex than it is here; |
| and second, you might put the complex, "generic" part of this example |
| into another makefile, then include it in all the individual makefiles. |
| Now your individual makefiles are quite straightforward. |
| |
| PROGRAMS = server client |
| |
| server_OBJS = server.o server_priv.o server_access.o |
| server_LIBS = priv protocol |
| |
| client_OBJS = client.o client_api.o client_mem.o |
| client_LIBS = protocol |
| |
| # Everything after this is generic |
| |
| .PHONY: all |
| all: $(PROGRAMS) |
| |
| define PROGRAM_template = |
| $(1): $$($(1)_OBJS) $$($(1)_LIBS:%=-l%) |
| ALL_OBJS += $$($(1)_OBJS) |
| endef |
| |
| $(foreach prog,$(PROGRAMS),$(eval $(call PROGRAM_template,$(prog)))) |
| |
| $(PROGRAMS): |
| $(LINK.o) $^ $(LDLIBS) -o $@ |
| |
| clean: |
| rm -f $(ALL_OBJS) $(PROGRAMS) |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Origin Function, Next: Flavor Function, Prev: Eval Function, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.10 The 'origin' Function |
| ========================== |
| |
| The 'origin' function is unlike most other functions in that it does not |
| operate on the values of variables; it tells you something _about_ a |
| variable. Specifically, it tells you where it came from. |
| |
| The syntax of the 'origin' function is: |
| |
| $(origin VARIABLE) |
| |
| Note that VARIABLE is the _name_ of a variable to inquire about, not |
| a _reference_ to that variable. Therefore you would not normally use a |
| '$' or parentheses when writing it. (You can, however, use a variable |
| reference in the name if you want the name not to be a constant.) |
| |
| The result of this function is a string telling you how the variable |
| VARIABLE was defined: |
| |
| 'undefined' |
| |
| if VARIABLE was never defined. |
| |
| 'default' |
| |
| if VARIABLE has a default definition, as is usual with 'CC' and so |
| on. *Note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables. |
| Note that if you have redefined a default variable, the 'origin' |
| function will return the origin of the later definition. |
| |
| 'environment' |
| |
| if VARIABLE was inherited from the environment provided to 'make'. |
| |
| 'environment override' |
| |
| if VARIABLE was inherited from the environment provided to 'make', |
| and is overriding a setting for VARIABLE in the makefile as a |
| result of the '-e' option (*note Summary of Options: Options |
| Summary.). |
| |
| 'file' |
| |
| if VARIABLE was defined in a makefile. |
| |
| 'command line' |
| |
| if VARIABLE was defined on the command line. |
| |
| 'override' |
| |
| if VARIABLE was defined with an 'override' directive in a makefile |
| (*note The 'override' Directive: Override Directive.). |
| |
| 'automatic' |
| |
| if VARIABLE is an automatic variable defined for the execution of |
| the recipe for each rule (*note Automatic Variables::). |
| |
| This information is primarily useful (other than for your curiosity) |
| to determine if you want to believe the value of a variable. For |
| example, suppose you have a makefile 'foo' that includes another |
| makefile 'bar'. You want a variable 'bletch' to be defined in 'bar' if |
| you run the command 'make -f bar', even if the environment contains a |
| definition of 'bletch'. However, if 'foo' defined 'bletch' before |
| including 'bar', you do not want to override that definition. This |
| could be done by using an 'override' directive in 'foo', giving that |
| definition precedence over the later definition in 'bar'; unfortunately, |
| the 'override' directive would also override any command line |
| definitions. So, 'bar' could include: |
| |
| ifdef bletch |
| ifeq "$(origin bletch)" "environment" |
| bletch = barf, gag, etc. |
| endif |
| endif |
| |
| If 'bletch' has been defined from the environment, this will redefine |
| it. |
| |
| If you want to override a previous definition of 'bletch' if it came |
| from the environment, even under '-e', you could instead write: |
| |
| ifneq "$(findstring environment,$(origin bletch))" "" |
| bletch = barf, gag, etc. |
| endif |
| |
| Here the redefinition takes place if '$(origin bletch)' returns |
| either 'environment' or 'environment override'. *Note Functions for |
| String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Flavor Function, Next: Make Control Functions, Prev: Origin Function, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.11 The 'flavor' Function |
| ========================== |
| |
| The 'flavor' function, like the 'origin' function, does not operate on |
| the values of variables but rather it tells you something _about_ a |
| variable. Specifically, it tells you the flavor of a variable (*note |
| The Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors.). |
| |
| The syntax of the 'flavor' function is: |
| |
| $(flavor VARIABLE) |
| |
| Note that VARIABLE is the _name_ of a variable to inquire about, not |
| a _reference_ to that variable. Therefore you would not normally use a |
| '$' or parentheses when writing it. (You can, however, use a variable |
| reference in the name if you want the name not to be a constant.) |
| |
| The result of this function is a string that identifies the flavor of |
| the variable VARIABLE: |
| |
| 'undefined' |
| |
| if VARIABLE was never defined. |
| |
| 'recursive' |
| |
| if VARIABLE is a recursively expanded variable. |
| |
| 'simple' |
| |
| if VARIABLE is a simply expanded variable. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Make Control Functions, Next: Shell Function, Prev: Flavor Function, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.12 Functions That Control Make |
| ================================ |
| |
| These functions control the way make runs. Generally, they are used to |
| provide information to the user of the makefile or to cause make to stop |
| if some sort of environmental error is detected. |
| |
| '$(error TEXT...)' |
| Generates a fatal error where the message is TEXT. Note that the |
| error is generated whenever this function is evaluated. So, if you |
| put it inside a recipe or on the right side of a recursive variable |
| assignment, it won't be evaluated until later. The TEXT will be |
| expanded before the error is generated. |
| |
| For example, |
| |
| ifdef ERROR1 |
| $(error error is $(ERROR1)) |
| endif |
| |
| will generate a fatal error during the read of the makefile if the |
| 'make' variable 'ERROR1' is defined. Or, |
| |
| ERR = $(error found an error!) |
| |
| .PHONY: err |
| err: ; $(ERR) |
| |
| will generate a fatal error while 'make' is running, if the 'err' |
| target is invoked. |
| |
| '$(warning TEXT...)' |
| This function works similarly to the 'error' function, above, |
| except that 'make' doesn't exit. Instead, TEXT is expanded and the |
| resulting message is displayed, but processing of the makefile |
| continues. |
| |
| The result of the expansion of this function is the empty string. |
| |
| '$(info TEXT...)' |
| This function does nothing more than print its (expanded) |
| argument(s) to standard output. No makefile name or line number is |
| added. The result of the expansion of this function is the empty |
| string. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Shell Function, Next: Guile Function, Prev: Make Control Functions, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.13 The 'shell' Function |
| ========================= |
| |
| The 'shell' function is unlike any other function other than the |
| 'wildcard' function (*note The Function 'wildcard': Wildcard Function.) |
| in that it communicates with the world outside of 'make'. |
| |
| The 'shell' function performs the same function that backquotes ('`') |
| perform in most shells: it does "command expansion". This means that it |
| takes as an argument a shell command and evaluates to the output of the |
| command. The only processing 'make' does on the result is to convert |
| each newline (or carriage-return / newline pair) to a single space. If |
| there is a trailing (carriage-return and) newline it will simply be |
| removed. |
| |
| The commands run by calls to the 'shell' function are run when the |
| function calls are expanded (*note How 'make' Reads a Makefile: Reading |
| Makefiles.). Because this function involves spawning a new shell, you |
| should carefully consider the performance implications of using the |
| 'shell' function within recursively expanded variables vs. simply |
| expanded variables (*note The Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors.). |
| |
| After the 'shell' function or '!=' assignment operator is used, its |
| exit status is placed in the '.SHELLSTATUS' variable. |
| |
| Here are some examples of the use of the 'shell' function: |
| |
| contents := $(shell cat foo) |
| |
| sets 'contents' to the contents of the file 'foo', with a space (rather |
| than a newline) separating each line. |
| |
| files := $(shell echo *.c) |
| |
| sets 'files' to the expansion of '*.c'. Unless 'make' is using a very |
| strange shell, this has the same result as '$(wildcard *.c)' (as long as |
| at least one '.c' file exists). |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Guile Function, Prev: Shell Function, Up: Functions |
| |
| 8.14 The 'guile' Function |
| ========================= |
| |
| If GNU 'make' is built with support for GNU Guile as an embedded |
| extension language then the 'guile' function will be available. The |
| 'guile' function takes one argument which is first expanded by 'make' in |
| the normal fashion, then passed to the GNU Guile evaluator. The result |
| of the evaluator is converted into a string and used as the expansion of |
| the 'guile' function in the makefile. See *note GNU Guile Integration: |
| Guile Integration. for details on writing extensions to 'make' in Guile. |
| |
| You can determine whether GNU Guile support is available by checking |
| the '.FEATURES' variable for the word GUILE. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Running, Next: Implicit Rules, Prev: Functions, Up: Top |
| |
| 9 How to Run 'make' |
| ******************* |
| |
| A makefile that says how to recompile a program can be used in more than |
| one way. The simplest use is to recompile every file that is out of |
| date. Usually, makefiles are written so that if you run 'make' with no |
| arguments, it does just that. |
| |
| But you might want to update only some of the files; you might want |
| to use a different compiler or different compiler options; you might |
| want just to find out which files are out of date without changing them. |
| |
| By giving arguments when you run 'make', you can do any of these |
| things and many others. |
| |
| The exit status of 'make' is always one of three values: |
| '0' |
| The exit status is zero if 'make' is successful. |
| '2' |
| The exit status is two if 'make' encounters any errors. It will |
| print messages describing the particular errors. |
| '1' |
| The exit status is one if you use the '-q' flag and 'make' |
| determines that some target is not already up to date. *Note |
| Instead of Executing Recipes: Instead of Execution. |
| |
| * Menu: |
| |
| * Makefile Arguments:: How to specify which makefile to use. |
| * Goals:: How to use goal arguments to specify which |
| parts of the makefile to use. |
| * Instead of Execution:: How to use mode flags to specify what |
| kind of thing to do with the recipes |
| in the makefile other than simply |
| execute them. |
| * Avoiding Compilation:: How to avoid recompiling certain files. |
| * Overriding:: How to override a variable to specify |
| an alternate compiler and other things. |
| * Testing:: How to proceed past some errors, to |
| test compilation. |
| * Options Summary:: Summary of Options |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Makefile Arguments, Next: Goals, Prev: Running, Up: Running |
| |
| 9.1 Arguments to Specify the Makefile |
| ===================================== |
| |
| The way to specify the name of the makefile is with the '-f' or '--file' |
| option ('--makefile' also works). For example, '-f altmake' says to use |
| the file 'altmake' as the makefile. |
| |
| If you use the '-f' flag several times and follow each '-f' with an |
| argument, all the specified files are used jointly as makefiles. |
| |
| If you do not use the '-f' or '--file' flag, the default is to try |
| 'GNUmakefile', 'makefile', and 'Makefile', in that order, and use the |
| first of these three which exists or can be made (*note Writing |
| Makefiles: Makefiles.). |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Goals, Next: Instead of Execution, Prev: Makefile Arguments, Up: Running |
| |
| 9.2 Arguments to Specify the Goals |
| ================================== |
| |
| The "goals" are the targets that 'make' should strive ultimately to |
| update. Other targets are updated as well if they appear as |
| prerequisites of goals, or prerequisites of prerequisites of goals, etc. |
| |
| By default, the goal is the first target in the makefile (not |
| counting targets that start with a period). Therefore, makefiles are |
| usually written so that the first target is for compiling the entire |
| program or programs they describe. If the first rule in the makefile |
| has several targets, only the first target in the rule becomes the |
| default goal, not the whole list. You can manage the selection of the |
| default goal from within your makefile using the '.DEFAULT_GOAL' |
| variable (*note Other Special Variables: Special Variables.). |
| |
| You can also specify a different goal or goals with command line |
| arguments to 'make'. Use the name of the goal as an argument. If you |
| specify several goals, 'make' processes each of them in turn, in the |
| order you name them. |
| |
| Any target in the makefile may be specified as a goal (unless it |
| starts with '-' or contains an '=', in which case it will be parsed as a |
| switch or variable definition, respectively). Even targets not in the |
| makefile may be specified, if 'make' can find implicit rules that say |
| how to make them. |
| |
| 'Make' will set the special variable 'MAKECMDGOALS' to the list of |
| goals you specified on the command line. If no goals were given on the |
| command line, this variable is empty. Note that this variable should be |
| used only in special circumstances. |
| |
| An example of appropriate use is to avoid including '.d' files during |
| 'clean' rules (*note Automatic Prerequisites::), so 'make' won't create |
| them only to immediately remove them again: |
| |
| sources = foo.c bar.c |
| |
| ifneq ($(MAKECMDGOALS),clean) |
| include $(sources:.c=.d) |
| endif |
| |
| One use of specifying a goal is if you want to compile only a part of |
| the program, or only one of several programs. Specify as a goal each |
| file that you wish to remake. For example, consider a directory |
| containing several programs, with a makefile that starts like this: |
| |
| .PHONY: all |
| all: size nm ld ar as |
| |
| If you are working on the program 'size', you might want to say |
| 'make size' so that only the files of that program are recompiled. |
| |
| Another use of specifying a goal is to make files that are not |
| normally made. For example, there may be a file of debugging output, or |
| a version of the program that is compiled specially for testing, which |
| has a rule in the makefile but is not a prerequisite of the default |
| goal. |
| |
| Another use of specifying a goal is to run the recipe associated with |
| a phony target (*note Phony Targets::) or empty target (*note Empty |
| Target Files to Record Events: Empty Targets.). Many makefiles contain |
| a phony target named 'clean' which deletes everything except source |
| files. Naturally, this is done only if you request it explicitly with |
| 'make clean'. Following is a list of typical phony and empty target |
| names. *Note Standard Targets::, for a detailed list of all the |
| standard target names which GNU software packages use. |
| |
| 'all' |
| Make all the top-level targets the makefile knows about. |
| |
| 'clean' |
| Delete all files that are normally created by running 'make'. |
| |
| 'mostlyclean' |
| Like 'clean', but may refrain from deleting a few files that people |
| normally don't want to recompile. For example, the 'mostlyclean' |
| target for GCC does not delete 'libgcc.a', because recompiling it |
| is rarely necessary and takes a lot of time. |
| |
| 'distclean' |
| 'realclean' |
| 'clobber' |
| Any of these targets might be defined to delete _more_ files than |
| 'clean' does. For example, this would delete configuration files |
| or links that you would normally create as preparation for |
| compilation, even if the makefile itself cannot create these files. |
| |
| 'install' |
| Copy the executable file into a directory that users typically |
| search for commands; copy any auxiliary files that the executable |
| uses into the directories where it will look for them. |
| |
| 'print' |
| Print listings of the source files that have changed. |
| |
| 'tar' |
| Create a tar file of the source files. |
| |
| 'shar' |
| Create a shell archive (shar file) of the source files. |
| |
| 'dist' |
| Create a distribution file of the source files. This might be a |
| tar file, or a shar file, or a compressed version of one of the |
| above, or even more than one of the above. |
| |
| 'TAGS' |
| Update a tags table for this program. |
| |
| 'check' |
| 'test' |
| Perform self tests on the program this makefile builds. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Instead of Execution, Next: Avoiding Compilation, Prev: Goals, Up: Running |
| |
| 9.3 Instead of Executing Recipes |
| ================================ |
| |
| The makefile tells 'make' how to tell whether a target is up to date, |
| and how to update each target. But updating the targets is not always |
| what you want. Certain options specify other activities for 'make'. |
| |
| '-n' |
| '--just-print' |
| '--dry-run' |
| '--recon' |
| |
| "No-op". Causes 'make' to print the recipes that are needed to |
| make the targets up to date, but not actually execute them. Note |
| that some recipes are still executed, even with this flag (*note |
| How the 'MAKE' Variable Works: MAKE Variable.). Also any recipes |
| needed to update included makefiles are still executed (*note How |
| Makefiles Are Remade: Remaking Makefiles.). |
| |
| '-t' |
| '--touch' |
| |
| "Touch". Marks targets as up to date without actually changing |
| them. In other words, 'make' pretends to update the targets but |
| does not really change their contents; instead only their modified |
| times are updated. |
| |
| '-q' |
| '--question' |
| |
| "Question". Silently check whether the targets are up to date, but |
| do not execute recipes; the exit code shows whether any updates are |
| needed. |
| |
| '-W FILE' |
| '--what-if=FILE' |
| '--assume-new=FILE' |
| '--new-file=FILE' |
| |
| "What if". Each '-W' flag is followed by a file name. The given |
| files' modification times are recorded by 'make' as being the |
| present time, although the actual modification times remain the |
| same. You can use the '-W' flag in conjunction with the '-n' flag |
| to see what would happen if you were to modify specific files. |
| |
| With the '-n' flag, 'make' prints the recipe that it would normally |
| execute but usually does not execute it. |
| |
| With the '-t' flag, 'make' ignores the recipes in the rules and uses |
| (in effect) the command 'touch' for each target that needs to be remade. |
| The 'touch' command is also printed, unless '-s' or '.SILENT' is used. |
| For speed, 'make' does not actually invoke the program 'touch'. It does |
| the work directly. |
| |
| With the '-q' flag, 'make' prints nothing and executes no recipes, |
| but the exit status code it returns is zero if and only if the targets |
| to be considered are already up to date. If the exit status is one, |
| then some updating needs to be done. If 'make' encounters an error, the |
| exit status is two, so you can distinguish an error from a target that |
| is not up to date. |
| |
| It is an error to use more than one of these three flags in the same |
| invocation of 'make'. |
| |
| The '-n', '-t', and '-q' options do not affect recipe lines that |
| begin with '+' characters or contain the strings '$(MAKE)' or '${MAKE}'. |
| Note that only the line containing the '+' character or the strings |
| '$(MAKE)' or '${MAKE}' is run regardless of these options. Other lines |
| in the same rule are not run unless they too begin with '+' or contain |
| '$(MAKE)' or '${MAKE}' (*Note How the 'MAKE' Variable Works: MAKE |
| Variable.) |
| |
| The '-t' flag prevents phony targets (*note Phony Targets::) from |
| being updated, unless there are recipe lines beginning with '+' or |
| containing '$(MAKE)' or '${MAKE}'. |
| |
| The '-W' flag provides two features: |
| |
| * If you also use the '-n' or '-q' flag, you can see what 'make' |
| would do if you were to modify some files. |
| |
| * Without the '-n' or '-q' flag, when 'make' is actually executing |
| recipes, the '-W' flag can direct 'make' to act as if some files |
| had been modified, without actually running the recipes for those |
| files. |
| |
| Note that the options '-p' and '-v' allow you to obtain other |
| information about 'make' or about the makefiles in use (*note Summary of |
| Options: Options Summary.). |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Avoiding Compilation, Next: Overriding, Prev: Instead of Execution, Up: Running |
| |
| 9.4 Avoiding Recompilation of Some Files |
| ======================================== |
| |
| Sometimes you may have changed a source file but you do not want to |
| recompile all the files that depend on it. For example, suppose you add |
| a macro or a declaration to a header file that many other files depend |
| on. Being conservative, 'make' assumes that any change in the header |
| file requires recompilation of all dependent files, but you know that |
| they do not need to be recompiled and you would rather not waste the |
| time waiting for them to compile. |
| |
| If you anticipate the problem before changing the header file, you |
| can use the '-t' flag. This flag tells 'make' not to run the recipes in |
| the rules, but rather to mark the target up to date by changing its |
| last-modification date. You would follow this procedure: |
| |
| 1. Use the command 'make' to recompile the source files that really |
| need recompilation, ensuring that the object files are up-to-date |
| before you begin. |
| |
| 2. Make the changes in the header files. |
| |
| 3. Use the command 'make -t' to mark all the object files as up to |
| date. The next time you run 'make', the changes in the header |
| files will not cause any recompilation. |
| |
| If you have already changed the header file at a time when some files |
| do need recompilation, it is too late to do this. Instead, you can use |
| the '-o FILE' flag, which marks a specified file as "old" (*note Summary |
| of Options: Options Summary.). This means that the file itself will not |
| be remade, and nothing else will be remade on its account. Follow this |
| procedure: |
| |
| 1. Recompile the source files that need compilation for reasons |
| independent of the particular header file, with 'make -o |
| HEADERFILE'. If several header files are involved, use a separate |
| '-o' option for each header file. |
| |
| 2. Touch all the object files with 'make -t'. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Overriding, Next: Testing, Prev: Avoiding Compilation, Up: Running |
| |
| 9.5 Overriding Variables |
| ======================== |
| |
| An argument that contains '=' specifies the value of a variable: 'V=X' |
| sets the value of the variable V to X. If you specify a value in this |
| way, all ordinary assignments of the same variable in the makefile are |
| ignored; we say they have been "overridden" by the command line |
| argument. |
| |
| The most common way to use this facility is to pass extra flags to |
| compilers. For example, in a properly written makefile, the variable |
| 'CFLAGS' is included in each recipe that runs the C compiler, so a file |
| 'foo.c' would be compiled something like this: |
| |
| cc -c $(CFLAGS) foo.c |
| |
| Thus, whatever value you set for 'CFLAGS' affects each compilation |
| that occurs. The makefile probably specifies the usual value for |
| 'CFLAGS', like this: |
| |
| CFLAGS=-g |
| |
| Each time you run 'make', you can override this value if you wish. |
| For example, if you say 'make CFLAGS='-g -O'', each C compilation will |
| be done with 'cc -c -g -O'. (This also illustrates how you can use |
| quoting in the shell to enclose spaces and other special characters in |
| the value of a variable when you override it.) |
| |
| The variable 'CFLAGS' is only one of many standard variables that |
| exist just so that you can change them this way. *Note Variables Used |
| by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables, for a complete list. |
| |
| You can also program the makefile to look at additional variables of |
| your own, giving the user the ability to control other aspects of how |
| the makefile works by changing the variables. |
| |
| When you override a variable with a command line argument, you can |
| define either a recursively-expanded variable or a simply-expanded |
| variable. The examples shown above make a recursively-expanded |
| variable; to make a simply-expanded variable, write ':=' or '::=' |
| instead of '='. But, unless you want to include a variable reference or |
| function call in the _value_ that you specify, it makes no difference |
| which kind of variable you create. |
| |
| There is one way that the makefile can change a variable that you |
| have overridden. This is to use the 'override' directive, which is a |
| line that looks like this: 'override VARIABLE = VALUE' (*note The |
| 'override' Directive: Override Directive.). |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Testing, Next: Options Summary, Prev: Overriding, Up: Running |
| |
| 9.6 Testing the Compilation of a Program |
| ======================================== |
| |
| Normally, when an error happens in executing a shell command, 'make' |
| gives up immediately, returning a nonzero status. No further recipes |
| are executed for any target. The error implies that the goal cannot be |
| correctly remade, and 'make' reports this as soon as it knows. |
| |
| When you are compiling a program that you have just changed, this is |
| not what you want. Instead, you would rather that 'make' try compiling |
| every file that can be tried, to show you as many compilation errors as |
| possible. |
| |
| On these occasions, you should use the '-k' or '--keep-going' flag. |
| This tells 'make' to continue to consider the other prerequisites of the |
| pending targets, remaking them if necessary, before it gives up and |
| returns nonzero status. For example, after an error in compiling one |
| object file, 'make -k' will continue compiling other object files even |
| though it already knows that linking them will be impossible. In |
| addition to continuing after failed shell commands, 'make -k' will |
| continue as much as possible after discovering that it does not know how |
| to make a target or prerequisite file. This will always cause an error |
| message, but without '-k', it is a fatal error (*note Summary of |
| Options: Options Summary.). |
| |
| The usual behavior of 'make' assumes that your purpose is to get the |
| goals up to date; once 'make' learns that this is impossible, it might |
| as well report the failure immediately. The '-k' flag says that the |
| real purpose is to test as much as possible of the changes made in the |
| program, perhaps to find several independent problems so that you can |
| correct them all before the next attempt to compile. This is why Emacs' |
| 'M-x compile' command passes the '-k' flag by default. |
| |
| |
| File: make.info, Node: Options Summary, Prev: Testing, Up: Running |
| |
| 9.7 Summary of Options |
| ====================== |
| |
| Here is a table of all the options 'make' understands: |
| |
| '-b' |
| '-m' |
| These options are ignored for compatibility with other versions of |
| 'make'. |
| |
| '-B' |
| '--always-make' |
| Consider all targets out-of-date. GNU 'make' proceeds to consider |
| targets and their prerequisites using the normal algorithms; |
| however, all targets so considered are always remade regardless of |
| the status of their prerequisites. To avoid infinite recursion, if |
| 'MAKE_RESTARTS' (*note Other Special Variables: Special Variables.) |
| is set to a number greater than 0 this option is disabled when |
| considering whether to remake makefiles (*note How Makefiles Are |
| Remade: Remaking Makefiles.). |
| |
| '-C DIR' |
| '--directory=DIR' |
| Change to directory DIR before reading the makefiles. If multiple |
| '-C' options are specified, each is interpreted relative to the |
| previous one: '-C / -C etc' is equivalent to '-C /etc'. This is |
| typically used with recursive invocations of 'make' (*note |
| Recursive Use of 'make': Recursion.). |
| |
| '-d' |
| |
| Print debugging information in addition to normal processing. The |
| debugging information says which files are being considered for |
| remaking, which file-times are being compared and with what |
| results, which files actually need to be remade, which implicit |
| rules are considered and which are applied--everything interesting |
| about how 'make' decides what to do. The '-d' option is equivalent |
| to '--debug=a' (see below). |
| |
| '--debug[=OPTIONS]' |
| |
| Print debugging information in addition to normal processing. |
| Various levels and types of output can be chosen. With no |
| arguments, print the "basic" level of debugging. Possible |
| arguments are below; only the first character is considered, and |
| values must be comma- or space-separated. |
| |
| 'a (all)' |
| All types of debugging output are enabled. This is equivalent |
| to using '-d'. |
| |
| 'b (basic)' |
| Basic debugging prints each target that was found to be |
| out-of-date, and whether the build was successful or not. |
| |
| 'v (verbose)' |
| A level above 'basic'; includes messages about which makefiles |
| were parsed, prerequisites that did not need to be rebuilt, |
| etc. This option also enables 'basic' messages. |
| |
| 'i (implicit)' |
| Prints messages describing the implicit rule searches for each |
| target. This option also enables 'basic' messages. |
| |
| 'j (jobs)' |
| Prints messages giving details on the invocation of specific |
| sub-commands. |
| |
| 'm (makefile)' |
| By default, the above messages are not enabled while trying to |
| remake the makefiles. This option enables messages while |
| rebuilding makefiles, too. Note that the 'all' option does |
| enable this option. This option also enables 'basic' |
| messages. |
| |
| 'n (none)' |
| Disable all debugging currently enabled. If additional |
| debugging flags are encountered after this they will still |
| take effect. |
| |
| '-e' |
| '--environment-overrides' |
| Give variables taken from the environment precedence over variables |
| from makefiles. *Note Variables from the Environment: Environment. |
| |
| '--eval=STRING' |
| |
| Evaluate STRING as makefile syntax. This is a command-line version |
| of the 'eval' function (*note Eval Function::). The evaluation is |
| performed after the default rules and variables have been defined, |
| but before any makefiles are read. |
| |
| '-f FILE' |
| '--file=FILE' |
| '--makefile=FILE' |
| Read the file named FILE as a makefile. *Note Writing Makefiles: |
| Makefiles. |
| |
| '-h' |
| '--help' |
| |
| Remind you of the options that 'make' understands and then exit. |
| |
| '-i' |
| '--ignore-errors' |
| Ignore all errors in recipes executed to remake files. *Note |
| Errors in Recipes: Errors. |
| |
| '-I DIR' |
| '--include-dir=DIR' |
| Specifies a directory DIR to search for included makefiles. *Note |
| Including Other Makefiles: Include. If several '-I' options are |
| used to specify several directories, the directories are searched |
| in the order specified. |
| |
| '-j [JOBS]' |
| '--jobs[=JOBS]' |
| Specifies the number of recipes (jobs) to run simultaneously. With |
| no argument, 'make' runs as many recipes simultaneously as |
| possible. If there is more than one '-j' option, the last one is |
| effective. *Note Parallel Execution: Parallel, for more |
| information on how recipes are run. Note that this option is |
| ignored on MS-DOS. |
| |
| '-k' |
| '--keep-going' |
| Continue as much as possible after an error. While the target that |
| failed, and those that depend on it, cannot be remade, the other |
| prerequisites of these targets can be processed all the same. |
| *Note Testing the Compilation of a Program: Testing. |
| |
| '-l [LOAD]' |
| '--load-average[=LOAD]' |
| '--max-load[=LOAD]' |
| Specifies that no new recipes should be started if there are other |
| recipes running and the load average is at least LOAD (a |
| floating-point number). With no argument, removes a previous load |
| limit. *Note Parallel Execution: Parallel. |
| |
| '-L' |
| '--check-symlink-times' |
| On systems that support symbolic links, this option causes 'make' |
| to consider the timestamps on any symbolic links in addition to the |
| timestamp on the file referenced by those links. When this option |
| is provided, the most recent timestamp among the file and the |
| symbolic links is taken as the modification time for this target |
| file. |
| |
| '-n' |
| '--just-print' |
| '--dry-run' |
| '--recon' |
| |
| Print the recipe that would be executed, but do not execute it |
| (except in certain circumstances). *Note Instead of Executing |
| Recipes: Instead of Execution. |
| |
| '-o FILE' |
| '--old-file=FILE' |
| '--assume-old=FILE' |
| Do not remake the file FILE even if it is older than its |
| prerequisites, and do not remake anything on account of changes in |
| FILE. Essentially the file is treated as very old and its rules |
| are ignored. *Note Avoiding Recompilation of Some Files: Avoiding |
| Compilation. |
| |
| '-O[TYPE]' |
| '--output-sync[=TYPE]' |
| Ensure that the complete output from each recipe is printed in one |
| uninterrupted sequence. This option is only useful when using the |
| '--jobs' option to run multiple recipes simultaneously (*note |
| Parallel Execution: Parallel.) Without this option output will be |
| displayed as it is generated by the recipes. |
| |
| With no type or the type 'target', output from the entire recipe of |
| each target is grouped together. With the type 'line', output from |
| each line in the recipe is grouped together. With the type |
| 'recurse', the output from an entire recursive make is grouped |
| together. With the type 'none', no output synchronization is |
| performed. *Note Output During Parallel Execution: Parallel |
| Output. |
| |
| '-p' |
| '--print-data-base' |
| Print the data base (rules and variable values) that results from |
| reading the makefiles; then execute as usual or as otherwise |
| specified. This also prints the version information given by the |
| '-v' switch (see below). To print the data base without trying to |
| remake any files, use 'make -qp'. To print the data base of |
| predefined rules and variables, use 'make -p -f /dev/null'. The |
| data base output contains file name and line number information for |
| recipe and variable definitions, so it can be a useful debugging |
| tool in complex environments. |
| |
| '-q' |
| '--question' |
| "Question mode". Do not run any recipes, or print anything; just |
| return an exit status that is zero if the specified targets are |
| already up to date, one if any remaking is required, or two if an |
| error is encountered. *Note Instead of Executing Recipes: Instead |
| of Execution. |
| |
| '-r' |
| '--no-builtin-rules' |
| Eliminate use of the built-in implicit rules (*note Using Implicit |
| Rules: Implicit Rules.). You can still define your own by writing |
| pattern rules (*note Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules: Pattern |
| Rules.). The '-r' option also clears out the default list of |
| suffixes for suffix rules (*note Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules: Suffix |
| Rules.). But you can still define your own suffixes with a rule |
| for '.SUFFIXES', and then define your own suffix rules. Note that |
| only _rules_ are affected by the '-r' option; default variables |
| remain in effect (*note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit |
| Variables.); see the '-R' option below. |
| |
| '-R' |
| '--no-builtin-variables' |
| Eliminate use of the built-in rule-specific variables (*note |
| Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables.). You can |
| still define your own, of course. The '-R' option also |
| automatically enables the '-r' option (see above), since it doesn't |
| make sense to have implicit rules without any definitions for the |
| variables that they use. |
| |
| '-s' |
| '--silent' |
| '--quiet' |
| |
| Silent operation; do not print the recipes as they are executed. |
| *Note Recipe Echoing: Echoing. |
| |
| '-S' |
| '--no-keep-going' |
| '--stop' |
| |
| Cancel the effect of the '-k' option. This is never necessary |
| except in a recursive 'make' where '-k' might be inherited from the |
| top-level 'make' via 'MAKEFLAGS' (*note Recursive Use of 'make': |
| Recursion.) or if you set '-k' in 'MAKEFLAGS' in your environment. |
| |
| '-t' |
| '--touch' |
| |
| Touch files (mark them up to date without really changing them) |
| instead of running their recipes. This is used to pretend that the |
| recipes were done, in order to fool future invocations of 'make'. |
| *Note Instead of Executing Recipes: Instead of Execution. |
| |
| '--trace' |
| Show tracing information for 'make' execution. Prints the entire |
| recipe to be executed, even for recipes that are normally silent |
| (due to '.SILENT' or '@'). Also prints the makefile name and line |
| number where the recipe was defined, and information on why the |
| target is being rebuilt. |
| |
| '-v' |
| '--version' |
| Print the version of the 'make' program plus a copyright, a list of |
| authors, and a notice that there is no warranty; then exit. |
| |
| '-w' |
| '--print-directory' |
| Print a message containing the working directory both before and |
| after executing the makefile. This may be useful for tracking down |
| errors from complicated nests of recursive 'make' commands. *Note |
| Recursive Use of 'make': Recursion. (In practice, you rarely need |
| to specify this option since 'make' does it for you; see *note The |
| '--print-directory' Option: -w Option.) |
| |
| '--no-print-directory' |
| Disable printing of the working directory under '-w'. This option |
| is useful when '-w' is turned on automatically, but you do not want |
| to see the extra messages. *Note The '--print-directory' Option: |
| -w Option. |
| |
| '-W FILE' |
| '--what-if=FILE' |
| '--new-file=FILE' |
| '--assume-new=FILE' |
| Pretend that the target FILE has just been modified. When used |
| with the '-n' flag, this shows you what would happen if you were to |
| modify that file. Without '-n', it is almost the same as running a |
| 'touch' command on the given file before running 'make', except |
| that the modification time is changed only in the imagination of |
| 'make'. *Note Instead of Executing Recipes: Instead of Execution. |
| |
| '--warn-undefined-variables' |
| Issue a warning message whenever 'make' sees a reference to an |
| undefined variable. This can be helpful when you are trying to |
| debug makefiles which use variables in complex ways. |
| |