1 \input texinfo @c -*- Texinfo -*-
4 @settitle GNU @code{make}
8 @c FSF publishers: format makebook.texi instead of using this file directly.
10 @set RCSID $Id: make.texinfo,v 2.154 1995/08/22 18:45:01 hag Exp $
12 @set VERSION 3.74 Beta
13 @set UPDATED 14 August 1995
14 @set UPDATE-MONTH August 1995
15 @comment The ISBN number might need to change on next publication.
16 @set ISBN 1-882114-78-7
20 @c ISPELL CHECK: done, 10 June 1993 --roland
22 @c Combine the variable and function indices:
24 @c Combine the program and concept indices:
28 This file documents the GNU Make utility, which determines
29 automatically which pieces of a large program need to be recompiled,
30 and issues the commands to recompile them.
32 This is Edition @value{EDITION}, last updated @value{UPDATED},
33 of @cite{The GNU Make Manual}, for @code{make}, Version @value{VERSION}.
35 Copyright (C) 1988, '89, '90, '91, '92, '93, '94, '95
36 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
38 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
39 this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
40 are preserved on all copies.
43 Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the
44 results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
45 notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
46 (this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
49 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
50 manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
51 resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
52 notice identical to this one.
54 Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
55 into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
56 except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved
57 by the Free Software Foundation.
61 @shorttitlepage GNU Make
65 @subtitle A Program for Directing Recompilation
66 @subtitle Edition @value{EDITION}, for @code{make} Version @value{VERSION}.
67 @subtitle @value{UPDATE-MONTH}
68 @author Richard M. Stallman and Roland McGrath
70 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
71 Copyright @copyright{} 1988, '89, '90, '91, '92, '93, '94, '95 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
73 Published by the Free Software Foundation @*
74 59 Temple Place -- Suite 330, @*
75 Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA @*
76 Printed copies are available for $20 each. @*
79 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
80 this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
81 are preserved on all copies.
83 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
84 manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
85 resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
86 notice identical to this one.
88 Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
89 into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
90 except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved
91 by the Free Software Foundation.
93 Cover art by Etienne Suvasa.
98 @node Top, Overview, (dir), (dir)
101 The GNU @code{make} utility automatically determines which pieces of a
102 large program need to be recompiled, and issues the commands to
103 recompile them.@refill
105 This is Edition @value{EDITION} of the @cite{GNU Make Manual},
106 last updated @value{UPDATED}
107 for @code{make} Version @value{VERSION}.@refill
109 This manual describes @code{make} and contains the following chapters:@refill
113 * Overview:: Overview of @code{make}.
114 * Introduction:: An introduction to @code{make}.
115 * Makefiles:: Makefiles tell @code{make} what to do.
116 * Rules:: Rules describe when a file must be remade.
117 * Commands:: Commands say how to remake a file.
118 * Using Variables:: You can use variables to avoid repetition.
119 * Conditionals:: Use or ignore parts of the makefile based
120 on the values of variables.
121 * Functions:: Many powerful ways to manipulate text.
122 * make Invocation: Running. How to invoke @code{make} on the command line.
123 * Implicit Rules:: Use implicit rules to treat many files alike,
124 based on their file names.
125 * Archives:: How @code{make} can update library archives.
126 * Features:: Features GNU @code{make} has over other @code{make}s.
127 * Missing:: What GNU @code{make} lacks from other @code{make}s.
128 * Makefile Conventions:: Conventions for makefiles in GNU programs.
129 * Quick Reference:: A quick reference for experienced users.
130 * Complex Makefile:: A real example of a straightforward,
131 but nontrivial, makefile.
132 * Concept Index:: Index of Concepts
133 * Name Index:: Index of Functions, Variables, & Directives
135 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
137 Overview of @code{make}
139 * Preparing:: Preparing and Running Make
140 * Reading:: On Reading this Text
141 * Bugs:: Problems and Bugs
143 An Introduction to Makefiles
145 * Rule Introduction:: What a rule looks like.
146 * Simple Makefile:: A Simple Makefile
147 * How Make Works:: How @code{make} Processes This Makefile
148 * Variables Simplify:: Variables Make Makefiles Simpler
149 * make Deduces:: Letting @code{make} Deduce the Commands
150 * Combine By Dependency:: Another Style of Makefile
151 * Cleanup:: Rules for Cleaning the Directory
155 * Makefile Contents:: What makefiles contain.
156 * Makefile Names:: How to name your makefile.
157 * Include:: How one makefile can use another makefile.
158 * MAKEFILES Variable:: The environment can specify extra makefiles.
159 * Remaking Makefiles:: How makefiles get remade.
160 * Overriding Makefiles:: How to override part of one makefile
161 with another makefile.
165 * Rule Example:: An example explained.
166 * Rule Syntax:: General syntax explained.
167 * Wildcards:: Using wildcard characters such as `*'.
168 * Directory Search:: Searching other directories for source files.
169 * Phony Targets:: Using a target that is not a real file's name.
170 * Force Targets:: You can use a target without commands
171 or dependencies to mark other
173 * Empty Targets:: When only the date matters and the
175 * Special Targets:: Targets with special built-in meanings.
176 * Multiple Targets:: When to make use of several targets in a rule.
177 * Multiple Rules:: How to use several rules with the same target.
178 * Static Pattern:: Static pattern rules apply to multiple targets
179 and can vary the dependencies according to
181 * Double-Colon:: How to use a special kind of rule to allow
182 several independent rules for one target.
183 * Automatic Dependencies:: How to automatically generate rules giving
184 dependencies from the source files themselves.
186 Using Wildcard Characters in File Names
188 * Wildcard Examples:: Several examples
189 * Wildcard Pitfall:: Problems to avoid.
190 * Wildcard Function:: How to cause wildcard expansion where
191 it does not normally take place.
193 Searching Directories for Dependencies
195 * General Search:: Specifying a search path that applies
197 * Selective Search:: Specifying a search path
198 for a specified class of names.
199 * Commands/Search:: How to write shell commands that work together
201 * Implicit/Search:: How search paths affect implicit rules.
202 * Libraries/Search:: Directory search for link libraries.
206 * Static Usage:: The syntax of static pattern rules.
207 * Static versus Implicit:: When are they better than implicit rules?
209 Writing the Commands in Rules
211 * Echoing:: How to control when commands are echoed.
212 * Execution:: How commands are executed.
213 * Parallel:: How commands can be executed in parallel.
214 * Errors:: What happens after a command execution error.
215 * Interrupts:: What happens when a command is interrupted.
216 * Recursion:: Invoking @code{make} from makefiles.
217 * Sequences:: Defining canned sequences of commands.
218 * Empty Commands:: Defining useful, do-nothing commands.
220 Recursive Use of @code{make}
222 * MAKE Variable:: The special effects of using @samp{$(MAKE)}.
223 * Variables/Recursion:: How to communicate variables to a sub-@code{make}.
224 * Options/Recursion:: How to communicate options to a sub-@code{make}.
225 * -w Option:: How the @samp{-w} or @samp{--print-directory} option
226 helps debug use of recursive @code{make} commands.
230 * Reference:: How to use the value of a variable.
231 * Flavors:: Variables come in two flavors.
232 * Advanced:: Advanced features for referencing a variable.
233 * Values:: All the ways variables get their values.
234 * Setting:: How to set a variable in the makefile.
235 * Appending:: How to append more text to the old value
237 * Override Directive:: How to set a variable in the makefile even if
238 the user has set it with a command argument.
239 * Defining:: An alternate way to set a variable
240 to a verbatim string.
241 * Environment:: Variable values can come from the environment.
243 Advanced Features for Reference to Variables
245 * Substitution Refs:: Referencing a variable with
246 substitutions on the value.
247 * Computed Names:: Computing the name of the variable to refer to.
249 Conditional Parts of Makefiles
251 * Conditional Example:: Example of a conditional
252 * Conditional Syntax:: The syntax of conditionals.
253 * Testing Flags:: Conditionals that test flags.
255 Functions for Transforming Text
257 * Syntax of Functions:: How to write a function call.
258 * Text Functions:: General-purpose text manipulation functions.
259 * Filename Functions:: Functions for manipulating file names.
260 * Foreach Function:: Repeat some text with controlled variation.
261 * Origin Function:: Find where a variable got its value.
262 * Shell Function:: Substitute the output of a shell command.
264 How to Run @code{make}
266 * Makefile Arguments:: How to specify which makefile to use.
267 * Goals:: How to use goal arguments to specify which
268 parts of the makefile to use.
269 * Instead of Execution:: How to use mode flags to specify what
270 kind of thing to do with the commands
271 in the makefile other than simply
273 * Avoiding Compilation:: How to avoid recompiling certain files.
274 * Overriding:: How to override a variable to specify
275 an alternate compiler and other things.
276 * Testing:: How to proceed past some errors, to
278 * Options Summary:: Summary of Options
282 * Using Implicit:: How to use an existing implicit rule
283 to get the commands for updating a file.
284 * Catalogue of Rules:: A list of built-in implicit rules.
285 * Implicit Variables:: How to change what predefined rules do.
286 * Chained Rules:: How to use a chain of implicit rules.
287 * Pattern Rules:: How to define new implicit rules.
288 * Last Resort:: How to defining commands for rules
289 which cannot find any.
290 * Suffix Rules:: The old-fashioned style of implicit rule.
291 * Search Algorithm:: The precise algorithm for applying
294 Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules
296 * Pattern Intro:: An introduction to pattern rules.
297 * Pattern Examples:: Examples of pattern rules.
298 * Automatic:: How to use automatic variables in the
299 commands of implicit rules.
300 * Pattern Match:: How patterns match.
301 * Match-Anything Rules:: Precautions you should take prior to
302 defining rules that can match any
303 target file whatever.
304 * Canceling Rules:: How to override or cancel built-in rules.
306 Using @code{make} to Update Archive Files
308 * Archive Members:: Archive members as targets.
309 * Archive Update:: The implicit rule for archive member targets.
310 * Archive Suffix Rules:: You can write a special kind of suffix rule
311 for updating archives.
313 Implicit Rule for Archive Member Targets
315 * Archive Symbols:: How to update archive symbol directories.
318 @node Overview, Introduction, Top, Top
319 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
320 @chapter Overview of @code{make}
322 The @code{make} utility automatically determines which pieces of a large
323 program need to be recompiled, and issues commands to recompile them.
324 This manual describes GNU @code{make}, which was implemented by Richard
325 Stallman and Roland McGrath. GNU @code{make} conforms to section 6.2 of
326 @cite{IEEE Standard 1003.2-1992} (POSIX.2).
328 @cindex IEEE Standard 1003.2
329 @cindex standards conformance
331 Our examples show C programs, since they are most common, but you can use
332 @code{make} with any programming language whose compiler can be run with a
333 shell command. Indeed, @code{make} is not limited to programs. You can
334 use it to describe any task where some files must be updated automatically
335 from others whenever the others change.
338 * Preparing:: Preparing and Running Make
339 * Reading:: On Reading this Text
340 * Bugs:: Problems and Bugs
343 @node Preparing, Reading, , Overview
345 @heading Preparing and Running Make
348 To prepare to use @code{make}, you must write a file called
349 the @dfn{makefile} that describes the relationships among files
350 in your program and provides commands for updating each file.
351 In a program, typically, the executable file is updated from object
352 files, which are in turn made by compiling source files.@refill
354 Once a suitable makefile exists, each time you change some source files,
355 this simple shell command:
362 suffices to perform all necessary recompilations. The @code{make} program
363 uses the makefile data base and the last-modification times of the files to
364 decide which of the files need to be updated. For each of those files, it
365 issues the commands recorded in the data base.
367 You can provide command line arguments to @code{make} to control which
368 files should be recompiled, or how. @xref{Running, ,How to Run
371 @node Reading, Bugs, Preparing, Overview
372 @section How to Read This Manual
374 If you are new to @code{make}, or are looking for a general
375 introduction, read the first few sections of each chapter, skipping the
376 later sections. In each chapter, the first few sections contain
377 introductory or general information and the later sections contain
378 specialized or technical information.
380 The exception is the second chapter, @ref{Introduction, ,An
381 Introduction to Makefiles}, all of which is introductory.
384 The exception is @ref{Introduction, ,An Introduction to Makefiles},
385 all of which is introductory.
388 If you are familiar with other @code{make} programs, see @ref{Features,
389 ,Features of GNU @code{make}}, which lists the enhancements GNU
390 @code{make} has, and @ref{Missing, ,Incompatibilities and Missing
391 Features}, which explains the few things GNU @code{make} lacks that
394 For a quick summary, see @ref{Options Summary}, @ref{Quick Reference},
395 and @ref{Special Targets}.
397 @node Bugs, , Reading, Overview
398 @section Problems and Bugs
399 @cindex reporting bugs
400 @cindex bugs, reporting
401 @cindex problems and bugs, reporting
403 If you have problems with GNU @code{make} or think you've found a bug,
404 please report it to the developers; we cannot promise to do anything but
405 we might well want to fix it.
407 Before reporting a bug, make sure you've actually found a real bug.
408 Carefully reread the documentation and see if it really says you can do
409 what you're trying to do. If it's not clear whether you should be able
410 to do something or not, report that too; it's a bug in the
413 Before reporting a bug or trying to fix it yourself, try to isolate it
414 to the smallest possible makefile that reproduces the problem. Then
415 send us the makefile and the exact results @code{make} gave you. Also
416 say what you expected to occur; this will help us decide whether the
417 problem was really in the documentation.
419 Once you've got a precise problem, please send electronic mail either
420 through the Internet or via UUCP:
424 @r{Internet address:}
425 bug-gnu-utils@@prep.ai.mit.edu
428 mit-eddie!prep.ai.mit.edu!bug-gnu-utils
433 Please include the version number of @code{make} you are using. You can
434 get this information with the command @samp{make --version}.
435 Be sure also to include the type of machine and operating system you are
436 using. If possible, include the contents of the file @file{config.h}
437 that is generated by the configuration process.
439 @node Introduction, Makefiles, Overview, Top
440 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
441 @chapter An Introduction to Makefiles
443 You need a file called a @dfn{makefile} to tell @code{make} what to do.
444 Most often, the makefile tells @code{make} how to compile and link a
448 In this chapter, we will discuss a simple makefile that describes how to
449 compile and link a text editor which consists of eight C source files
450 and three header files. The makefile can also tell @code{make} how to
451 run miscellaneous commands when explicitly asked (for example, to remove
452 certain files as a clean-up operation). To see a more complex example
453 of a makefile, see @ref{Complex Makefile}.
455 When @code{make} recompiles the editor, each changed C source file
456 must be recompiled. If a header file has changed, each C source file
457 that includes the header file must be recompiled to be safe. Each
458 compilation produces an object file corresponding to the source file.
459 Finally, if any source file has been recompiled, all the object files,
460 whether newly made or saved from previous compilations, must be linked
461 together to produce the new executable editor.
462 @cindex recompilation
466 * Rule Introduction:: What a rule looks like.
467 * Simple Makefile:: A Simple Makefile
468 * How Make Works:: How @code{make} Processes This Makefile
469 * Variables Simplify:: Variables Make Makefiles Simpler
470 * make Deduces:: Letting @code{make} Deduce the Commands
471 * Combine By Dependency:: Another Style of Makefile
472 * Cleanup:: Rules for Cleaning the Directory
475 @node Rule Introduction, Simple Makefile, , Introduction
476 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
477 @section What a Rule Looks Like
478 @cindex rule, introduction to
479 @cindex makefile rule parts
480 @cindex parts of makefile rule
482 A simple makefile consists of ``rules'' with the following shape:
484 @cindex targets, introduction to
485 @cindex dependencies, introduction to
486 @cindex commands, introduction to
489 @var{target} @dots{} : @var{dependencies} @dots{}
496 A @dfn{target} is usually the name of a file that is generated by a
497 program; examples of targets are executable or object files. A target
498 can also be the name of an action to carry out, such as @samp{clean}
499 (@pxref{Phony Targets}).
501 A @dfn{dependency} is a file that is used as input to create the
502 target. A target often depends on several files.
504 @cindex tabs in rules
505 A @dfn{command} is an action that @code{make} carries out.
506 A rule may have more than one command, each on its own line.
507 @strong{Please note:} you need to put a tab character at the beginning of
508 every command line! This is an obscurity that catches the unwary.
510 Usually a command is in a rule with dependencies and serves to create a
511 target file if any of the dependencies change. However, the rule that
512 specifies commands for the target need not have dependencies. For
513 example, the rule containing the delete command associated with the
514 target @samp{clean} does not have dependencies.
516 A @dfn{rule}, then, explains how and when to remake certain files
517 which are the targets of the particular rule. @code{make} carries out
518 the commands on the dependencies to create or update the target. A
519 rule can also explain how and when to carry out an action.
520 @xref{Rules, , Writing Rules}.
522 A makefile may contain other text besides rules, but a simple makefile
523 need only contain rules. Rules may look somewhat more complicated
524 than shown in this template, but all fit the pattern more or less.
526 @node Simple Makefile, How Make Works, Rule Introduction, Introduction
527 @section A Simple Makefile
528 @cindex simple makefile
529 @cindex makefile, simple
531 Here is a straightforward makefile that describes the way an
532 executable file called @code{edit} depends on eight object files
533 which, in turn, depend on eight C source and three header files.
535 In this example, all the C files include @file{defs.h}, but only those
536 defining editing commands include @file{command.h}, and only low
537 level files that change the editor buffer include @file{buffer.h}.
541 edit : main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \
542 insert.o search.o files.o utils.o
543 cc -o edit main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \
544 insert.o search.o files.o utils.o
546 main.o : main.c defs.h
548 kbd.o : kbd.c defs.h command.h
550 command.o : command.c defs.h command.h
552 display.o : display.c defs.h buffer.h
554 insert.o : insert.c defs.h buffer.h
556 search.o : search.c defs.h buffer.h
558 files.o : files.c defs.h buffer.h command.h
560 utils.o : utils.c defs.h
563 rm edit main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \
564 insert.o search.o files.o utils.o
569 We split each long line into two lines using backslash-newline; this is
570 like using one long line, but is easier to read.
571 @cindex continuation lines
572 @cindex @code{\} (backslash), for continuation lines
573 @cindex backslash (@code{\}), for continuation lines
574 @cindex quoting newline, in makefile
575 @cindex newline, quoting, in makefile
577 To use this makefile to create the executable file called @file{edit},
584 To use this makefile to delete the executable file and all the object
585 files from the directory, type:
591 In the example makefile, the targets include the executable file
592 @samp{edit}, and the object files @samp{main.o} and @samp{kbd.o}. The
593 dependencies are files such as @samp{main.c} and @samp{defs.h}.
594 In fact, each @samp{.o} file is both a target and a dependency.
595 Commands include @w{@samp{cc -c main.c}} and @w{@samp{cc -c kbd.c}}.
597 When a target is a file, it needs to be recompiled or relinked if any
598 of its dependencies change. In addition, any dependencies that are
599 themselves automatically generated should be updated first. In this
600 example, @file{edit} depends on each of the eight object files; the
601 object file @file{main.o} depends on the source file @file{main.c} and
602 on the header file @file{defs.h}.
604 A shell command follows each line that contains a target and
605 dependencies. These shell commands say how to update the target file.
606 A tab character must come at the beginning of every command line to
607 distinguish commands lines from other lines in the makefile. (Bear in
608 mind that @code{make} does not know anything about how the commands
609 work. It is up to you to supply commands that will update the target
610 file properly. All @code{make} does is execute the commands in the rule
611 you have specified when the target file needs to be updated.)
612 @cindex shell command
614 The target @samp{clean} is not a file, but merely the name of an
617 do not want to carry out the actions in this rule, @samp{clean} is not a dependency of any other rule.
618 Consequently, @code{make} never does anything with it unless you tell
619 it specifically. Note that this rule not only is not a dependency, it
620 also does not have any dependencies, so the only purpose of the rule
621 is to run the specified commands. Targets that do not refer to files
622 but are just actions are called @dfn{phony targets}. @xref{Phony
623 Targets}, for information about this kind of target. @xref{Errors, ,
624 Errors in Commands}, to see how to cause @code{make} to ignore errors
625 from @code{rm} or any other command.
626 @cindex @code{clean} target
627 @cindex @code{rm} (shell command)
629 @node How Make Works, Variables Simplify, Simple Makefile, Introduction
630 @comment node-name, next, previous, up
631 @section How @code{make} Processes a Makefile
632 @cindex processing a makefile
633 @cindex makefile, how @code{make} processes
635 By default, @code{make} starts with the first rule (not counting rules
636 whose target names start with @samp{.}). This is called the
637 @dfn{default goal}. (@dfn{Goals} are the targets that @code{make}
638 strives ultimately to update. @xref{Goals, , Arguments to Specify the
641 @cindex goal, default
644 In the simple example of the previous section, the default goal is to
645 update the executable program @file{edit}; therefore, we put that rule
648 Thus, when you give the command:
655 @code{make} reads the makefile in the current directory and begins by
656 processing the first rule. In the example, this rule is for relinking
657 @file{edit}; but before @code{make} can fully process this rule, it
658 must process the rules for the files that @file{edit} depends on,
659 which in this case are the object files. Each of these files is
660 processed according to its own rule. These rules say to update each
661 @samp{.o} file by compiling its source file. The recompilation must
662 be done if the source file, or any of the header files named as
663 dependencies, is more recent than the object file, or if the object
666 The other rules are processed because their targets appear as
667 dependencies of the goal. If some other rule is not depended on by the
668 goal (or anything it depends on, etc.), that rule is not processed,
669 unless you tell @code{make} to do so (with a command such as
670 @w{@code{make clean}}).
672 Before recompiling an object file, @code{make} considers updating its
673 dependencies, the source file and header files. This makefile does not
674 specify anything to be done for them---the @samp{.c} and @samp{.h} files
675 are not the targets of any rules---so @code{make} does nothing for these
676 files. But @code{make} would update automatically generated C programs,
677 such as those made by Bison or Yacc, by their own rules at this time.
679 After recompiling whichever object files need it, @code{make} decides
680 whether to relink @file{edit}. This must be done if the file
681 @file{edit} does not exist, or if any of the object files are newer than
682 it. If an object file was just recompiled, it is now newer than
683 @file{edit}, so @file{edit} is relinked.
686 Thus, if we change the file @file{insert.c} and run @code{make},
687 @code{make} will compile that file to update @file{insert.o}, and then
688 link @file{edit}. If we change the file @file{command.h} and run
689 @code{make}, @code{make} will recompile the object files @file{kbd.o},
690 @file{command.o} and @file{files.o} and then link the file @file{edit}.
692 @node Variables Simplify, make Deduces, How Make Works, Introduction
693 @section Variables Make Makefiles Simpler
695 @cindex simplifying with variables
697 In our example, we had to list all the object files twice in the rule for
698 @file{edit} (repeated here):
702 edit : main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \
703 insert.o search.o files.o utils.o
704 cc -o edit main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \
705 insert.o search.o files.o utils.o
709 @cindex @code{objects}
710 Such duplication is error-prone; if a new object file is added to the
711 system, we might add it to one list and forget the other. We can eliminate
712 the risk and simplify the makefile by using a variable. @dfn{Variables}
713 allow a text string to be defined once and substituted in multiple places
714 later (@pxref{Using Variables, ,How to Use Variables}).
716 @cindex @code{OBJECTS}
721 It is standard practice for every makefile to have a variable named
722 @code{objects}, @code{OBJECTS}, @code{objs}, @code{OBJS}, @code{obj},
723 or @code{OBJ} which is a list of all object file names. We would
724 define such a variable @code{objects} with a line like this in the
729 objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \
730 insert.o search.o files.o utils.o
735 Then, each place we want to put a list of the object file names, we can
736 substitute the variable's value by writing @samp{$(objects)}
737 (@pxref{Using Variables, ,How to Use Variables}).
739 Here is how the complete simple makefile looks when you use a variable
740 for the object files:
744 objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \
745 insert.o search.o files.o utils.o
748 cc -o edit $(objects)
749 main.o : main.c defs.h
751 kbd.o : kbd.c defs.h command.h
753 command.o : command.c defs.h command.h
755 display.o : display.c defs.h buffer.h
757 insert.o : insert.c defs.h buffer.h
759 search.o : search.c defs.h buffer.h
761 files.o : files.c defs.h buffer.h command.h
763 utils.o : utils.c defs.h
770 @node make Deduces, Combine By Dependency, Variables Simplify, Introduction
771 @section Letting @code{make} Deduce the Commands
772 @cindex deducing commands (implicit rules)
773 @cindex implicit rule, introduction to
774 @cindex rule, implicit, introduction to
776 It is not necessary to spell out the commands for compiling the individual
777 C source files, because @code{make} can figure them out: it has an
778 @dfn{implicit rule} for updating a @samp{.o} file from a correspondingly
779 named @samp{.c} file using a @samp{cc -c} command. For example, it will
780 use the command @samp{cc -c main.c -o main.o} to compile @file{main.c} into
781 @file{main.o}. We can therefore omit the commands from the rules for the
782 object files. @xref{Implicit Rules, ,Using Implicit Rules}.@refill
784 When a @samp{.c} file is used automatically in this way, it is also
785 automatically added to the list of dependencies. We can therefore omit
786 the @samp{.c} files from the dependencies, provided we omit the commands.
788 Here is the entire example, with both of these changes, and a variable
789 @code{objects} as suggested above:
793 objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \
794 insert.o search.o files.o utils.o
797 cc -o edit $(objects)
800 kbd.o : defs.h command.h
801 command.o : defs.h command.h
802 display.o : defs.h buffer.h
803 insert.o : defs.h buffer.h
804 search.o : defs.h buffer.h
805 files.o : defs.h buffer.h command.h
815 This is how we would write the makefile in actual practice. (The
816 complications associated with @samp{clean} are described elsewhere.
817 See @ref{Phony Targets}, and @ref{Errors, ,Errors in Commands}.)
819 Because implicit rules are so convenient, they are important. You
820 will see them used frequently.@refill
822 @node Combine By Dependency, Cleanup, make Deduces, Introduction
823 @section Another Style of Makefile
824 @cindex combining rules by dependency
826 When the objects of a makefile are created only by implicit rules, an
827 alternative style of makefile is possible. In this style of makefile,
828 you group entries by their dependencies instead of by their targets.
829 Here is what one looks like:
833 objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \
834 insert.o search.o files.o utils.o
837 cc -o edit $(objects)
840 kbd.o command.o files.o : command.h
841 display.o insert.o search.o files.o : buffer.h
846 Here @file{defs.h} is given as a dependency of all the object files;
847 @file{command.h} and @file{buffer.h} are dependencies of the specific
848 object files listed for them.
850 Whether this is better is a matter of taste: it is more compact, but some
851 people dislike it because they find it clearer to put all the information
852 about each target in one place.
854 @node Cleanup, , Combine By Dependency, Introduction
855 @section Rules for Cleaning the Directory
857 @cindex removing, to clean up
859 Compiling a program is not the only thing you might want to write rules
860 for. Makefiles commonly tell how to do a few other things besides
861 compiling a program: for example, how to delete all the object files
862 and executables so that the directory is @samp{clean}.
864 @cindex @code{clean} target
866 could write a @code{make} rule for cleaning our example editor:
875 In practice, we might want to write the rule in a somewhat more
876 complicated manner to handle unanticipated situations. We would do this:
887 This prevents @code{make} from getting confused by an actual file
888 called @file{clean} and causes it to continue in spite of errors from
889 @code{rm}. (See @ref{Phony Targets}, and @ref{Errors, ,Errors in
893 A rule such as this should not be placed at the beginning of the
894 makefile, because we do not want it to run by default! Thus, in the
895 example makefile, we want the rule for @code{edit}, which recompiles
896 the editor, to remain the default goal.
898 Since @code{clean} is not a dependency of @code{edit}, this rule will not
899 run at all if we give the command @samp{make} with no arguments. In
900 order to make the rule run, we have to type @samp{make clean}.
901 @xref{Running, ,How to Run @code{make}}.
903 @node Makefiles, Rules, Introduction, Top
904 @chapter Writing Makefiles
906 @cindex makefile, how to write
907 The information that tells @code{make} how to recompile a system comes from
908 reading a data base called the @dfn{makefile}.
911 * Makefile Contents:: What makefiles contain.
912 * Makefile Names:: How to name your makefile.
913 * Include:: How one makefile can use another makefile.
914 * MAKEFILES Variable:: The environment can specify extra makefiles.
915 * Remaking Makefiles:: How makefiles get remade.
916 * Overriding Makefiles:: How to override part of one makefile
917 with another makefile.
920 @node Makefile Contents, Makefile Names, , Makefiles
921 @section What Makefiles Contain
923 Makefiles contain five kinds of things: @dfn{explicit rules},
924 @dfn{implicit rules}, @dfn{variable definitions}, @dfn{directives},
925 and @dfn{comments}. Rules, variables, and directives are described at
926 length in later chapters.@refill
929 @cindex rule, explicit, definition of
930 @cindex explicit rule, definition of
932 An @dfn{explicit rule} says when and how to remake one or more files,
933 called the rule's targets. It lists the other files that the targets
934 @dfn{depend on}, and may also give commands to use to create or update
935 the targets. @xref{Rules, ,Writing Rules}.
937 @cindex rule, implicit, definition of
938 @cindex implicit rule, definition of
940 An @dfn{implicit rule} says when and how to remake a class of files
941 based on their names. It describes how a target may depend on a file
942 with a name similar to the target and gives commands to create or
943 update such a target. @xref{Implicit Rules, ,Using Implicit Rules}.
945 @cindex variable definition
947 A @dfn{variable definition} is a line that specifies a text string
948 value for a variable that can be substituted into the text later. The
949 simple makefile example shows a variable definition for @code{objects}
950 as a list of all object files (@pxref{Variables Simplify, , Variables
951 Make Makefiles Simpler}).
955 A @dfn{directive} is a command for @code{make} to do something special while
956 reading the makefile. These include:
960 Reading another makefile (@pxref{Include, ,Including Other Makefiles}).
963 Deciding (based on the values of variables) whether to use or
964 ignore a part of the makefile (@pxref{Conditionals, ,Conditional Parts of Makefiles}).
967 Defining a variable from a verbatim string containing multiple lines
968 (@pxref{Defining, ,Defining Variables Verbatim}).
971 @cindex comments, in makefile
972 @cindex @code{#} (comments), in makefile
974 @samp{#} in a line of a makefile starts a @dfn{comment}. It and the rest of
975 the line are ignored, except that a trailing backslash not escaped by
976 another backslash will continue the comment across multiple lines.
977 Comments may appear on any of the lines in the makefile, except within a
978 @code{define} directive, and perhaps within commands (where the shell
979 decides what is a comment). A line containing just a comment (with
980 perhaps spaces before it) is effectively blank, and is ignored.@refill
983 @node Makefile Names, Include, Makefile Contents, Makefiles
984 @section What Name to Give Your Makefile
985 @cindex makefile name
986 @cindex name of makefile
987 @cindex default makefile name
988 @cindex file name of makefile
990 @c following paragraph rewritten to avoid overfull hbox
991 By default, when @code{make} looks for the makefile, it tries the
992 following names, in order: @file{GNUmakefile}, @file{makefile}
993 and @file{Makefile}.@refill
998 @cindex @code{README}
999 Normally you should call your makefile either @file{makefile} or
1000 @file{Makefile}. (We recommend @file{Makefile} because it appears
1001 prominently near the beginning of a directory listing, right near other
1002 important files such as @file{README}.) The first name checked,
1003 @file{GNUmakefile}, is not recommended for most makefiles. You should
1004 use this name if you have a makefile that is specific to GNU
1005 @code{make}, and will not be understood by other versions of
1006 @code{make}. Other @code{make} programs look for @file{makefile} and
1007 @file{Makefile}, but not @file{GNUmakefile}.
1009 If @code{make} finds none of these names, it does not use any makefile.
1010 Then you must specify a goal with a command argument, and @code{make}
1011 will attempt to figure out how to remake it using only its built-in
1012 implicit rules. @xref{Implicit Rules, ,Using Implicit Rules}.
1015 @cindex @code{--file}
1016 @cindex @code{--makefile}
1017 If you want to use a nonstandard name for your makefile, you can specify
1018 the makefile name with the @samp{-f} or @samp{--file} option. The
1019 arguments @w{@samp{-f @var{name}}} or @w{@samp{--file=@var{name}}} tell
1020 @code{make} to read the file @var{name} as the makefile. If you use
1021 more than one @samp{-f} or @samp{--file} option, you can specify several
1022 makefiles. All the makefiles are effectively concatenated in the order
1023 specified. The default makefile names @file{GNUmakefile},
1024 @file{makefile} and @file{Makefile} are not checked automatically if you
1025 specify @samp{-f} or @samp{--file}.@refill
1026 @cindex specifying makefile name
1027 @cindex makefile name, how to specify
1028 @cindex name of makefile, how to specify
1029 @cindex file name of makefile, how to specify
1031 @node Include, MAKEFILES Variable, Makefile Names, Makefiles
1032 @section Including Other Makefiles
1033 @cindex including other makefiles
1034 @cindex makefile, including
1037 The @code{include} directive tells @code{make} to suspend reading the
1038 current makefile and read one or more other makefiles before continuing.
1039 The directive is a line in the makefile that looks like this:
1042 include @var{filenames}@dots{}
1046 @var{filenames} can contain shell file name patterns.
1047 @cindex shell file name pattern (in @code{include})
1048 @cindex shell wildcards (in @code{include})
1049 @cindex wildcard, in @code{include}
1051 Extra spaces are allowed and ignored at the beginning of the line, but
1052 a tab is not allowed. (If the line begins with a tab, it will be
1053 considered a command line.) Whitespace is required between
1054 @code{include} and the file names, and between file names; extra
1055 whitespace is ignored there and at the end of the directive. A
1056 comment starting with @samp{#} is allowed at the end of the line. If
1057 the file names contain any variable or function references, they are
1058 expanded. @xref{Using Variables, ,How to Use Variables}.
1060 For example, if you have three @file{.mk} files, @file{a.mk},
1061 @file{b.mk}, and @file{c.mk}, and @code{$(bar)} expands to
1062 @code{bish bash}, then the following expression
1065 include foo *.mk $(bar)
1071 include foo a.mk b.mk c.mk bish bash
1074 When @code{make} processes an @code{include} directive, it suspends
1075 reading of the containing makefile and reads from each listed file in
1076 turn. When that is finished, @code{make} resumes reading the
1077 makefile in which the directive appears.
1079 One occasion for using @code{include} directives is when several programs,
1080 handled by individual makefiles in various directories, need to use a
1081 common set of variable definitions
1082 (@pxref{Setting, ,Setting Variables}) or pattern rules
1083 (@pxref{Pattern Rules, ,Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules}).
1085 Another such occasion is when you want to generate dependencies from
1086 source files automatically; the dependencies can be put in a file that
1087 is included by the main makefile. This practice is generally cleaner
1088 than that of somehow appending the dependencies to the end of the main
1089 makefile as has been traditionally done with other versions of
1090 @code{make}. @xref{Automatic Dependencies}.
1091 @cindex dependencies, automatic generation
1092 @cindex automatic generation of dependencies
1093 @cindex generating dependencies automatically
1096 @cindex @code{--include-dir}
1097 @findex /usr/gnu/include
1098 @findex /usr/local/include
1099 @findex /usr/include
1100 If the specified name does not start with a slash, and the file is not
1101 found in the current directory, several other directories are searched.
1102 First, any directories you have specified with the @samp{-I} or
1103 @samp{--include-dir} option are searched
1104 (@pxref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options}).
1105 Then the following directories (if they exist)
1106 are searched, in this order:
1107 @file{@var{prefix}/include} (normally @file{/usr/local/include})
1108 @file{/usr/gnu/include},
1109 @file{/usr/local/include}, @file{/usr/include}.
1111 If an included makefile cannot be found in any of these directories, a
1112 warning message is generated, but it is not an immediately fatal error;
1113 processing of the makefile containing the @code{include} continues.
1114 Once it has finished reading makefiles, @code{make} will try to remake
1115 any that are out of date or don't exist.
1116 @xref{Remaking Makefiles, ,How Makefiles Are Remade}.
1117 Only after it has tried to find a way to remake a makefile and failed,
1118 will @code{make} diagnose the missing makefile as a fatal error.
1120 If you want @code{make} to simply ignore a makefile which does not exist
1121 and cannot be remade, with no error message, use the @w{@code{-include}}
1122 directive instead of @code{include}, like this:
1125 -include @var{filenames}@dots{}
1128 This is acts like @code{include} in every way except that there is no
1129 error (not even a warning) if any of the @var{filenames} do not exist.
1131 @node MAKEFILES Variable, Remaking Makefiles, Include, Makefiles
1132 @section The Variable @code{MAKEFILES}
1133 @cindex makefile, and @code{MAKEFILES} variable
1134 @cindex including (@code{MAKEFILES} variable)
1137 If the environment variable @code{MAKEFILES} is defined, @code{make}
1138 considers its value as a list of names (separated by whitespace) of
1139 additional makefiles to be read before the others. This works much like
1140 the @code{include} directive: various directories are searched for those
1141 files (@pxref{Include, ,Including Other Makefiles}). In addition, the
1142 default goal is never taken from one of these makefiles and it is not an
1143 error if the files listed in @code{MAKEFILES} are not found.@refill
1145 @cindex recursion, and @code{MAKEFILES} variable
1146 The main use of @code{MAKEFILES} is in communication between recursive
1147 invocations of @code{make} (@pxref{Recursion, ,Recursive Use of
1148 @code{make}}). It usually is not desirable to set the environment
1149 variable before a top-level invocation of @code{make}, because it is
1150 usually better not to mess with a makefile from outside. However, if
1151 you are running @code{make} without a specific makefile, a makefile in
1152 @code{MAKEFILES} can do useful things to help the built-in implicit
1153 rules work better, such as defining search paths (@pxref{Directory Search}).
1155 Some users are tempted to set @code{MAKEFILES} in the environment
1156 automatically on login, and program makefiles to expect this to be done.
1157 This is a very bad idea, because such makefiles will fail to work if run by
1158 anyone else. It is much better to write explicit @code{include} directives
1159 in the makefiles. @xref{Include, , Including Other Makefiles}.
1161 @node Remaking Makefiles, Overriding Makefiles, MAKEFILES Variable, Makefiles
1162 @section How Makefiles Are Remade
1164 @cindex updating makefiles
1165 @cindex remaking makefiles
1166 @cindex makefile, remaking of
1167 Sometimes makefiles can be remade from other files, such as RCS or SCCS
1168 files. If a makefile can be remade from other files, you probably want
1169 @code{make} to get an up-to-date version of the makefile to read in.
1171 To this end, after reading in all makefiles, @code{make} will consider
1172 each as a goal target and attempt to update it. If a makefile has a
1173 rule which says how to update it (found either in that very makefile or
1174 in another one) or if an implicit rule applies to it (@pxref{Implicit
1175 Rules, ,Using Implicit Rules}), it will be updated if necessary. After
1176 all makefiles have been checked, if any have actually been changed,
1177 @code{make} starts with a clean slate and reads all the makefiles over
1178 again. (It will also attempt to update each of them over again, but
1179 normally this will not change them again, since they are already up to
1182 If the makefiles specify a double-colon rule to remake a file with
1183 commands but no dependencies, that file will always be remade
1184 (@pxref{Double-Colon}). In the case of makefiles, a makefile that has a
1185 double-colon rule with commands but no dependencies will be remade every
1186 time @code{make} is run, and then again after @code{make} starts over
1187 and reads the makefiles in again. This would cause an infinite loop:
1188 @code{make} would constantly remake the makefile, and never do anything
1189 else. So, to avoid this, @code{make} will @strong{not} attempt to
1190 remake makefiles which are specified as double-colon targets but have no
1191 dependencies.@refill
1193 If you do not specify any makefiles to be read with @samp{-f} or
1194 @samp{--file} options, @code{make} will try the default makefile names;
1195 @pxref{Makefile Names, ,What Name to Give Your Makefile}. Unlike
1196 makefiles explicitly requested with @samp{-f} or @samp{--file} options,
1197 @code{make} is not certain that these makefiles should exist. However,
1198 if a default makefile does not exist but can be created by running
1199 @code{make} rules, you probably want the rules to be run so that the
1200 makefile can be used.
1202 Therefore, if none of the default makefiles exists, @code{make} will try
1203 to make each of them in the same order in which they are searched for
1204 (@pxref{Makefile Names, ,What Name to Give Your Makefile})
1205 until it succeeds in making one, or it runs out of names to try. Note
1206 that it is not an error if @code{make} cannot find or make any makefile;
1207 a makefile is not always necessary.@refill
1209 When you use the @samp{-t} or @samp{--touch} option
1210 (@pxref{Instead of Execution, ,Instead of Executing the Commands}),
1211 you would not want to use an out-of-date makefile to decide which
1212 targets to touch. So the @samp{-t} option has no effect on updating
1213 makefiles; they are really updated even if @samp{-t} is specified.
1214 Likewise, @samp{-q} (or @samp{--question}) and @samp{-n} (or
1215 @samp{--just-print}) do not prevent updating of makefiles, because an
1216 out-of-date makefile would result in the wrong output for other targets.
1217 Thus, @samp{make -f mfile -n foo} will update @file{mfile}, read it in,
1218 and then print the commands to update @file{foo} and its dependencies
1219 without running them. The commands printed for @file{foo} will be those
1220 specified in the updated contents of @file{mfile}.
1222 However, on occasion you might actually wish to prevent updating of even
1223 the makefiles. You can do this by specifying the makefiles as goals in
1224 the command line as well as specifying them as makefiles. When the
1225 makefile name is specified explicitly as a goal, the options @samp{-t}
1226 and so on do apply to them.
1228 Thus, @samp{make -f mfile -n mfile foo} would read the makefile
1229 @file{mfile}, print the commands needed to update it without actually
1230 running them, and then print the commands needed to update @file{foo}
1231 without running them. The commands for @file{foo} will be those
1232 specified by the existing contents of @file{mfile}.
1234 @node Overriding Makefiles, , Remaking Makefiles, Makefiles
1235 @section Overriding Part of Another Makefile
1237 @cindex overriding makefiles
1238 @cindex makefile, overriding
1239 Sometimes it is useful to have a makefile that is mostly just like
1240 another makefile. You can often use the @samp{include} directive to
1241 include one in the other, and add more targets or variable definitions.
1242 However, if the two makefiles give different commands for the same
1243 target, @code{make} will not let you just do this. But there is another way.
1245 @cindex match-anything rule, used to override
1246 In the containing makefile (the one that wants to include the other),
1247 you can use a match-anything pattern rule to say that to remake any
1248 target that cannot be made from the information in the containing
1249 makefile, @code{make} should look in another makefile.
1250 @xref{Pattern Rules}, for more information on pattern rules.
1252 For example, if you have a makefile called @file{Makefile} that says how
1253 to make the target @samp{foo} (and other targets), you can write a
1254 makefile called @file{GNUmakefile} that contains:
1261 @@$(MAKE) -f Makefile $@@
1265 If you say @samp{make foo}, @code{make} will find @file{GNUmakefile},
1266 read it, and see that to make @file{foo}, it needs to run the command
1267 @samp{frobnicate > foo}. If you say @samp{make bar}, @code{make} will
1268 find no way to make @file{bar} in @file{GNUmakefile}, so it will use the
1269 commands from the pattern rule: @samp{make -f Makefile bar}. If
1270 @file{Makefile} provides a rule for updating @file{bar}, @code{make}
1271 will apply the rule. And likewise for any other target that
1272 @file{GNUmakefile} does not say how to make.
1274 The way this works is that the pattern rule has a pattern of just
1275 @samp{%}, so it matches any target whatever. The rule specifies a
1276 dependency @file{force}, to guarantee that the commands will be run even
1277 if the target file already exists. We give @file{force} target empty
1278 commands to prevent @code{make} from searching for an implicit rule to
1279 build it---otherwise it would apply the same match-anything rule to
1280 @file{force} itself and create a dependency loop!
1282 @node Rules, Commands, Makefiles, Top
1283 @chapter Writing Rules
1284 @cindex writing rules
1285 @cindex rule, how to write
1289 A @dfn{rule} appears in the makefile and says when and how to remake
1290 certain files, called the rule's @dfn{targets} (most often only one per rule).
1291 It lists the other files that are the @dfn{dependencies} of the target, and
1292 @dfn{commands} to use to create or update the target.
1294 @cindex default goal
1295 @cindex goal, default
1296 The order of rules is not significant, except for determining the
1297 @dfn{default goal}: the target for @code{make} to consider, if you do
1298 not otherwise specify one. The default goal is the target of the first
1299 rule in the first makefile. If the first rule has multiple targets,
1300 only the first target is taken as the default. There are two
1301 exceptions: a target starting with a period is not a default unless it
1302 contains one or more slashes, @samp{/}, as well; and, a target that
1303 defines a pattern rule has no effect on the default goal.
1304 (@xref{Pattern Rules, ,Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules}.)
1306 Therefore, we usually write the makefile so that the first rule is the
1307 one for compiling the entire program or all the programs described by
1308 the makefile (often with a target called @samp{all}).
1309 @xref{Goals, ,Arguments to Specify the Goals}.
1312 * Rule Example:: An example explained.
1313 * Rule Syntax:: General syntax explained.
1314 * Wildcards:: Using wildcard characters such as `*'.
1315 * Directory Search:: Searching other directories for source files.
1316 * Phony Targets:: Using a target that is not a real file's name.
1317 * Force Targets:: You can use a target without commands
1318 or dependencies to mark other
1320 * Empty Targets:: When only the date matters and the
1322 * Special Targets:: Targets with special built-in meanings.
1323 * Multiple Targets:: When to make use of several targets in a rule.
1324 * Multiple Rules:: How to use several rules with the same target.
1325 * Static Pattern:: Static pattern rules apply to multiple targets
1326 and can vary the dependencies according to
1328 * Double-Colon:: How to use a special kind of rule to allow
1329 several independent rules for one target.
1330 * Automatic Dependencies:: How to automatically generate rules giving
1331 dependencies from the source files themselves.
1335 @node Rule Example, Rule Syntax, , Rules
1336 @section Rule Example
1338 Here is an example of a rule:
1341 foo.o : foo.c defs.h # module for twiddling the frobs
1345 Its target is @file{foo.o} and its dependencies are @file{foo.c} and
1346 @file{defs.h}. It has one command, which is @samp{cc -c -g foo.c}.
1347 The command line starts with a tab to identify it as a command.
1349 This rule says two things:
1353 How to decide whether @file{foo.o} is out of date: it is out of date
1354 if it does not exist, or if either @file{foo.c} or @file{defs.h} is
1355 more recent than it.
1358 How to update the file @file{foo.o}: by running @code{cc} as stated.
1359 The command does not explicitly mention @file{defs.h}, but we presume
1360 that @file{foo.c} includes it, and that that is why @file{defs.h} was
1361 added to the dependencies.
1365 @node Rule Syntax, Wildcards, Rule Example, Rules
1366 @section Rule Syntax
1369 @cindex syntax of rules
1370 In general, a rule looks like this:
1373 @var{targets} : @var{dependencies}
1382 @var{targets} : @var{dependencies} ; @var{command}
1388 @cindex rule targets
1389 The @var{targets} are file names, separated by spaces. Wildcard
1390 characters may be used (@pxref{Wildcards, ,Using Wildcard Characters
1391 in File Names}) and a name of the form @file{@var{a}(@var{m})}
1392 represents member @var{m} in archive file @var{a}
1393 (@pxref{Archive Members, ,Archive Members as Targets}).
1394 Usually there is only one
1395 target per rule, but occasionally there is a reason to have more
1396 (@pxref{Multiple Targets, , Multiple Targets in a Rule}).@refill
1399 @cindex tab character (in commands)
1400 The @var{command} lines start with a tab character. The first command may
1401 appear on the line after the dependencies, with a tab character, or may
1402 appear on the same line, with a semicolon. Either way, the effect is the
1403 same. @xref{Commands, ,Writing the Commands in Rules}.
1405 @cindex dollar sign (@code{$}), in rules
1406 @cindex @code{$}, in rules
1407 @cindex rule, and @code{$}
1408 Because dollar signs are used to start variable references, if you really
1409 want a dollar sign in a rule you must write two of them, @samp{$$}
1410 (@pxref{Using Variables, ,How to Use Variables}).
1411 You may split a long line by inserting a backslash
1412 followed by a newline, but this is not required, as @code{make} places no
1413 limit on the length of a line in a makefile.
1415 A rule tells @code{make} two things: when the targets are out of date,
1416 and how to update them when necessary.
1418 @cindex dependencies
1419 @cindex rule dependencies
1420 The criterion for being out of date is specified in terms of the
1421 @var{dependencies}, which consist of file names separated by spaces.
1422 (Wildcards and archive members (@pxref{Archives}) are allowed here too.)
1423 A target is out of date if it does not exist or if it is older than any
1424 of the dependencies (by comparison of last-modification times). The
1425 idea is that the contents of the target file are computed based on
1426 information in the dependencies, so if any of the dependencies changes,
1427 the contents of the existing target file are no longer necessarily
1430 How to update is specified by @var{commands}. These are lines to be
1431 executed by the shell (normally @samp{sh}), but with some extra features
1432 (@pxref{Commands, ,Writing the Commands in Rules}).
1434 @node Wildcards, Directory Search, Rule Syntax, Rules
1435 @section Using Wildcard Characters in File Names
1437 @cindex file name with wildcards
1438 @cindex globbing (wildcards)
1440 @cindex @code{*} (wildcard character)
1441 @cindex @code{?} (wildcard character)
1442 @cindex @code{[@dots{}]} (wildcard characters)
1443 A single file name can specify many files using @dfn{wildcard characters}.
1444 The wildcard characters in @code{make} are @samp{*}, @samp{?} and
1445 @samp{[@dots{}]}, the same as in the Bourne shell. For example, @file{*.c}
1446 specifies a list of all the files (in the working directory) whose names
1447 end in @samp{.c}.@refill
1449 @cindex @code{~} (tilde)
1450 @cindex tilde (@code{~})
1451 @cindex home directory
1452 The character @samp{~} at the beginning of a file name also has special
1453 significance. If alone, or followed by a slash, it represents your home
1454 directory. For example @file{~/bin} expands to @file{/home/you/bin}.
1455 If the @samp{~} is followed by a word, the string represents the home
1456 directory of the user named by that word. For example @file{~john/bin}
1457 expands to @file{/home/john/bin}.@refill
1459 Wildcard expansion happens automatically in targets, in dependencies,
1460 and in commands (where the shell does the expansion). In other
1461 contexts, wildcard expansion happens only if you request it explicitly
1462 with the @code{wildcard} function.
1464 The special significance of a wildcard character can be turned off by
1465 preceding it with a backslash. Thus, @file{foo\*bar} would refer to a
1466 specific file whose name consists of @samp{foo}, an asterisk, and
1470 * Wildcard Examples:: Several examples
1471 * Wildcard Pitfall:: Problems to avoid.
1472 * Wildcard Function:: How to cause wildcard expansion where
1473 it does not normally take place.
1476 @node Wildcard Examples, Wildcard Pitfall, , Wildcards
1477 @subsection Wildcard Examples
1479 Wildcards can be used in the commands of a rule, where they are expanded
1480 by the shell. For example, here is a rule to delete all the object files:
1488 @cindex @code{rm} (shell command)
1490 Wildcards are also useful in the dependencies of a rule. With the
1491 following rule in the makefile, @samp{make print} will print all the
1492 @samp{.c} files that have changed since the last time you printed them:
1500 @cindex @code{print} target
1501 @cindex @code{lpr} (shell command)
1502 @cindex @code{touch} (shell command)
1504 This rule uses @file{print} as an empty target file; see @ref{Empty
1505 Targets, ,Empty Target Files to Record Events}. (The automatic variable
1506 @samp{$?} is used to print only those files that have changed; see
1507 @ref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}.)@refill
1509 Wildcard expansion does not happen when you define a variable. Thus, if
1517 then the value of the variable @code{objects} is the actual string
1518 @samp{*.o}. However, if you use the value of @code{objects} in a target,
1519 dependency or command, wildcard expansion will take place at that time.
1520 To set @code{objects} to the expansion, instead use:
1523 objects := $(wildcard *.o)
1527 @xref{Wildcard Function}.
1529 @node Wildcard Pitfall, Wildcard Function, Wildcard Examples, Wildcards
1530 @subsection Pitfalls of Using Wildcards
1531 @cindex wildcard pitfalls
1532 @cindex pitfalls of wildcards
1533 @cindex mistakes with wildcards
1534 @cindex errors with wildcards
1535 @cindex problems with wildcards
1537 Now here is an example of a naive way of using wildcard expansion, that
1538 does not do what you would intend. Suppose you would like to say that the
1539 executable file @file{foo} is made from all the object files in the
1540 directory, and you write this:
1546 cc -o foo $(CFLAGS) $(objects)
1550 The value of @code{objects} is the actual string @samp{*.o}. Wildcard
1551 expansion happens in the rule for @file{foo}, so that each @emph{existing}
1552 @samp{.o} file becomes a dependency of @file{foo} and will be recompiled if
1555 But what if you delete all the @samp{.o} files? When a wildcard matches
1556 no files, it is left as it is, so then @file{foo} will depend on the
1557 oddly-named file @file{*.o}. Since no such file is likely to exist,
1558 @code{make} will give you an error saying it cannot figure out how to
1559 make @file{*.o}. This is not what you want!
1561 Actually it is possible to obtain the desired result with wildcard
1562 expansion, but you need more sophisticated techniques, including the
1563 @code{wildcard} function and string substitution.
1565 @xref{Wildcard Function, ,The Function @code{wildcard}}.
1568 These are described in the following section.
1571 @node Wildcard Function, , Wildcard Pitfall, Wildcards
1572 @subsection The Function @code{wildcard}
1575 Wildcard expansion happens automatically in rules. But wildcard expansion
1576 does not normally take place when a variable is set, or inside the
1577 arguments of a function. If you want to do wildcard expansion in such
1578 places, you need to use the @code{wildcard} function, like this:
1581 $(wildcard @var{pattern}@dots{})
1585 This string, used anywhere in a makefile, is replaced by a
1586 space-separated list of names of existing files that match one of the
1587 given file name patterns. If no existing file name matches a pattern,
1588 then that pattern is omitted from the output of the @code{wildcard}
1589 function. Note that this is different from how unmatched wildcards
1590 behave in rules, where they are used verbatim rather than ignored
1591 (@pxref{Wildcard Pitfall}).
1593 One use of the @code{wildcard} function is to get a list of all the C source
1594 files in a directory, like this:
1600 We can change the list of C source files into a list of object files by
1601 replacing the @samp{.o} suffix with @samp{.c} in the result, like this:
1604 $(patsubst %.c,%.o,$(wildcard *.c))
1608 (Here we have used another function, @code{patsubst}.
1609 @xref{Text Functions, ,Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}.)@refill
1611 Thus, a makefile to compile all C source files in the directory and then
1612 link them together could be written as follows:
1615 objects := $(patsubst %.c,%.o,$(wildcard *.c))
1618 cc -o foo $(objects)
1622 (This takes advantage of the implicit rule for compiling C programs, so
1623 there is no need to write explicit rules for compiling the files.
1624 @xref{Flavors, ,The Two Flavors of Variables}, for an explanation of
1625 @samp{:=}, which is a variant of @samp{=}.)
1627 @node Directory Search, Phony Targets, Wildcards, Rules
1628 @section Searching Directories for Dependencies
1632 @cindex search path for dependencies (@code{VPATH})
1633 @cindex directory search (@code{VPATH})
1635 For large systems, it is often desirable to put sources in a separate
1636 directory from the binaries. The @dfn{directory search} features of
1637 @code{make} facilitate this by searching several directories
1638 automatically to find a dependency. When you redistribute the files
1639 among directories, you do not need to change the individual rules,
1640 just the search paths.
1643 * General Search:: Specifying a search path that applies
1644 to every dependency.
1645 * Selective Search:: Specifying a search path
1646 for a specified class of names.
1647 * Commands/Search:: How to write shell commands that work together
1649 * Implicit/Search:: How search paths affect implicit rules.
1650 * Libraries/Search:: Directory search for link libraries.
1653 @node General Search, Selective Search, , Directory Search
1654 @subsection @code{VPATH}: Search Path for All Dependencies
1657 The value of the @code{make} variable @code{VPATH} specifies a list of
1658 directories that @code{make} should search. Most often, the
1659 directories are expected to contain dependency files that are not in the
1660 current directory; however, @code{VPATH} specifies a search list that
1661 @code{make} applies for all files, including files which are targets of
1664 Thus, if a file that is listed as a target or dependency does not exist
1665 in the current directory, @code{make} searches the directories listed in
1666 @code{VPATH} for a file with that name. If a file is found in one of
1667 them, that file becomes the dependency. Rules may then specify the
1668 names of source files in the dependencies as if they all existed in the
1669 current directory. @xref{Commands/Search, ,Writing Shell Commands with
1672 In the @code{VPATH} variable, directory names are separated by colons or
1673 blanks. The order in which directories are listed is the order followed
1674 by @code{make} in its search.
1679 VPATH = src:../headers
1683 specifies a path containing two directories, @file{src} and
1684 @file{../headers}, which @code{make} searches in that order.
1686 With this value of @code{VPATH}, the following rule,
1693 is interpreted as if it were written like this:
1700 assuming the file @file{foo.c} does not exist in the current directory but
1701 is found in the directory @file{src}.
1703 @node Selective Search, Commands/Search, General Search, Directory Search
1704 @subsection The @code{vpath} Directive
1707 Similar to the @code{VPATH} variable but more selective is the @code{vpath}
1708 directive (note lower case), which allows you to specify a search path for a particular class
1709 of file names, those that match a particular pattern. Thus you can supply
1710 certain search directories for one class of file names and other directories
1711 (or none) for other file names.
1713 There are three forms of the @code{vpath} directive:
1716 @item vpath @var{pattern} @var{directories}
1717 Specify the search path @var{directories} for file names that match
1720 The search path, @var{directories}, is a list of directories to be
1721 searched, separated by colons or blanks, just like the search path used
1722 in the @code{VPATH} variable.
1724 @item vpath @var{pattern}
1725 Clear out the search path associated with @var{pattern}.
1727 @c Extra blank line makes sure this gets two lines.
1730 Clear all search paths previously specified with @code{vpath} directives.
1733 A @code{vpath} pattern is a string containing a @samp{%} character. The
1734 string must match the file name of a dependency that is being searched
1735 for, the @samp{%} character matching any sequence of zero or more
1736 characters (as in pattern rules; @pxref{Pattern Rules, ,Defining and
1737 Redefining Pattern Rules}). For example, @code{%.h} matches files that
1738 end in @code{.h}. (If there is no @samp{%}, the pattern must match the
1739 dependency exactly, which is not useful very often.)
1741 @cindex @code{%}, quoting in @code{vpath}
1742 @cindex @code{%}, quoting with @code{\} (backslash)
1743 @cindex @code{\} (backslash), to quote @code{%}
1744 @cindex backslash (@code{\}), to quote @code{%}
1745 @cindex quoting @code{%}, in @code{vpath}
1746 @samp{%} characters in a @code{vpath} directive's pattern can be quoted
1747 with preceding backslashes (@samp{\}). Backslashes that would otherwise
1748 quote @samp{%} characters can be quoted with more backslashes.
1749 Backslashes that quote @samp{%} characters or other backslashes are
1750 removed from the pattern before it is compared to file names. Backslashes
1751 that are not in danger of quoting @samp{%} characters go unmolested.@refill
1753 When a dependency fails to exist in the current directory, if the
1754 @var{pattern} in a @code{vpath} directive matches the name of the
1755 dependency file, then the @var{directories} in that directive are searched
1756 just like (and before) the directories in the @code{VPATH} variable.
1761 vpath %.h ../headers
1765 tells @code{make} to look for any dependency whose name ends in @file{.h}
1766 in the directory @file{../headers} if the file is not found in the current
1769 If several @code{vpath} patterns match the dependency file's name, then
1770 @code{make} processes each matching @code{vpath} directive one by one,
1771 searching all the directories mentioned in each directive. @code{make}
1772 handles multiple @code{vpath} directives in the order in which they
1773 appear in the makefile; multiple directives with the same pattern are
1774 independent of each other.
1788 will look for a file ending in @samp{.c} in @file{foo}, then
1789 @file{blish}, then @file{bar}, while
1799 will look for a file ending in @samp{.c} in @file{foo}, then
1800 @file{bar}, then @file{blish}.
1802 @node Commands/Search, Implicit/Search, Selective Search, Directory Search
1803 @subsection Writing Shell Commands with Directory Search
1804 @cindex shell command, and directory search
1805 @cindex directory search (@code{VPATH}), and shell commands
1807 When a dependency is found in another directory through directory search,
1808 this cannot change the commands of the rule; they will execute as written.
1809 Therefore, you must write the commands with care so that they will look for
1810 the dependency in the directory where @code{make} finds it.
1812 This is done with the @dfn{automatic variables} such as @samp{$^}
1813 (@pxref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}).
1814 For instance, the value of @samp{$^} is a
1815 list of all the dependencies of the rule, including the names of
1816 the directories in which they were found, and the value of
1817 @samp{$@@} is the target. Thus:@refill
1821 cc -c $(CFLAGS) $^ -o $@@
1825 (The variable @code{CFLAGS} exists so you can specify flags for C
1826 compilation by implicit rules; we use it here for consistency so it will
1827 affect all C compilations uniformly;
1828 @pxref{Implicit Variables, ,Variables Used by Implicit Rules}.)
1830 Often the dependencies include header files as well, which you do not
1831 want to mention in the commands. The automatic variable @samp{$<} is
1832 just the first dependency:
1835 VPATH = src:../headers
1836 foo.o : foo.c defs.h hack.h
1837 cc -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@@
1840 @node Implicit/Search, Libraries/Search, Commands/Search, Directory Search
1841 @subsection Directory Search and Implicit Rules
1842 @cindex @code{VPATH}, and implicit rules
1843 @cindex directory search (@code{VPATH}), and implicit rules
1844 @cindex search path for dependencies (@code{VPATH}), and implicit rules
1845 @cindex implicit rule, and directory search
1846 @cindex implicit rule, and @code{VPATH}
1847 @cindex rule, implicit, and directory search
1848 @cindex rule, implicit, and @code{VPATH}
1850 The search through the directories specified in @code{VPATH} or with
1851 @code{vpath} also happens during consideration of implicit rules
1852 (@pxref{Implicit Rules, ,Using Implicit Rules}).
1854 For example, when a file @file{foo.o} has no explicit rule, @code{make}
1855 considers implicit rules, such as the built-in rule to compile
1856 @file{foo.c} if that file exists. If such a file is lacking in the
1857 current directory, the appropriate directories are searched for it. If
1858 @file{foo.c} exists (or is mentioned in the makefile) in any of the
1859 directories, the implicit rule for C compilation is applied.
1861 The commands of implicit rules normally use automatic variables as a
1862 matter of necessity; consequently they will use the file names found by
1863 directory search with no extra effort.
1865 @node Libraries/Search, , Implicit/Search, Directory Search
1866 @subsection Directory Search for Link Libraries
1867 @cindex link libraries, and directory search
1868 @cindex libraries for linking, directory search
1869 @cindex directory search (@code{VPATH}), and link libraries
1870 @cindex @code{VPATH}, and link libraries
1871 @cindex search path for dependencies (@code{VPATH}), and link libraries
1872 @cindex @code{-l} (library search)
1874 Directory search applies in a special way to libraries used with the
1875 linker. This special feature comes into play when you write a dependency
1876 whose name is of the form @samp{-l@var{name}}. (You can tell something
1877 strange is going on here because the dependency is normally the name of a
1878 file, and the @emph{file name} of the library looks like
1879 @file{lib@var{name}.a}, not like @samp{-l@var{name}}.)@refill
1881 When a dependency's name has the form @samp{-l@var{name}}, @code{make}
1882 handles it specially by searching for the file @file{lib@var{name}.a} in
1883 the current directory, in directories specified by matching @code{vpath}
1884 search paths and the @code{VPATH} search path, and then in the
1885 directories @file{/lib}, @file{/usr/lib}, and @file{@var{prefix}/lib}
1886 (normally @file{/usr/local/lib}).
1892 foo : foo.c -lcurses
1898 would cause the command @samp{cc foo.c /usr/lib/libcurses.a -o foo} to
1899 be executed when @file{foo} is older than @file{foo.c} or than
1900 @file{/usr/lib/libcurses.a}.@refill
1902 @node Phony Targets, Force Targets, Directory Search, Rules
1903 @section Phony Targets
1904 @cindex phony targets
1905 @cindex targets, phony
1906 @cindex targets without a file
1908 A phony target is one that is not really the name of a file. It is just a
1909 name for some commands to be executed when you make an explicit request.
1910 There are two reasons to use a phony target: to avoid a conflict with
1911 a file of the same name, and to improve performance.
1913 If you write a rule whose commands will not create the target file, the
1914 commands will be executed every time the target comes up for remaking.
1925 Because the @code{rm} command does not create a file named @file{clean},
1926 probably no such file will ever exist. Therefore, the @code{rm} command
1927 will be executed every time you say @samp{make clean}.
1928 @cindex @code{rm} (shell command)
1931 The phony target will cease to work if anything ever does create a file
1932 named @file{clean} in this directory. Since it has no dependencies, the
1933 file @file{clean} would inevitably be considered up to date, and its
1934 commands would not be executed. To avoid this problem, you can explicitly
1935 declare the target to be phony, using the special target @code{.PHONY}
1936 (@pxref{Special Targets, ,Special Built-in Target Names}) as follows:
1943 Once this is done, @samp{make clean} will run the commands regardless of
1944 whether there is a file named @file{clean}.
1946 Since it knows that phony targets do not name actual files that could be
1947 remade from other files, @code{make} skips the implicit rule search for
1948 phony targets (@pxref{Implicit Rules}). This is why declaring a target
1949 phony is good for performance, even if you are not worried about the
1950 actual file existing.
1952 Thus, you first write the line that states that @code{clean} is a
1953 phony target, then you write the rule, like this:
1963 A phony target should not be a dependency of a real target file; if it
1964 is, its commands are run every time @code{make} goes to update that
1965 file. As long as a phony target is never a dependency of a real
1966 target, the phony target commands will be executed only when the phony
1967 target is a specified goal (@pxref{Goals, ,Arguments to Specify the
1970 Phony targets can have dependencies. When one directory contains multiple
1971 programs, it is most convenient to describe all of the programs in one
1972 makefile @file{./Makefile}. Since the target remade by default will be the
1973 first one in the makefile, it is common to make this a phony target named
1974 @samp{all} and give it, as dependencies, all the individual programs. For
1978 all : prog1 prog2 prog3
1981 prog1 : prog1.o utils.o
1982 cc -o prog1 prog1.o utils.o
1987 prog3 : prog3.o sort.o utils.o
1988 cc -o prog3 prog3.o sort.o utils.o
1992 Now you can say just @samp{make} to remake all three programs, or specify
1993 as arguments the ones to remake (as in @samp{make prog1 prog3}).
1995 When one phony target is a dependency of another, it serves as a subroutine
1996 of the other. For example, here @samp{make cleanall} will delete the
1997 object files, the difference files, and the file @file{program}:
2000 .PHONY: cleanall cleanobj cleandiff
2002 cleanall : cleanobj cleandiff
2012 @node Force Targets, Empty Targets, Phony Targets, Rules
2013 @section Rules without Commands or Dependencies
2014 @cindex force targets
2015 @cindex targets, force
2016 @cindex @code{FORCE}
2017 @cindex rule, no commands or dependencies
2019 If a rule has no dependencies or commands, and the target of the rule
2020 is a nonexistent file, then @code{make} imagines this target to have
2021 been updated whenever its rule is run. This implies that all targets
2022 depending on this one will always have their commands run.
2024 An example will illustrate this:
2034 Here the target @samp{FORCE} satisfies the special conditions, so the
2035 target @file{clean} that depends on it is forced to run its commands.
2036 There is nothing special about the name @samp{FORCE}, but that is one name
2037 commonly used this way.
2039 As you can see, using @samp{FORCE} this way has the same results as using
2040 @samp{.PHONY: clean}.
2042 Using @samp{.PHONY} is more explicit and more efficient. However,
2043 other versions of @code{make} do not support @samp{.PHONY}; thus
2044 @samp{FORCE} appears in many makefiles. @xref{Phony Targets}.
2046 @node Empty Targets, Special Targets, Force Targets, Rules
2047 @section Empty Target Files to Record Events
2048 @cindex empty targets
2049 @cindex targets, empty
2050 @cindex recording events with empty targets
2052 The @dfn{empty target} is a variant of the phony target; it is used to hold
2053 commands for an action that you request explicitly from time to time.
2054 Unlike a phony target, this target file can really exist; but the file's
2055 contents do not matter, and usually are empty.
2057 The purpose of the empty target file is to record, with its
2058 last-modification time, when the rule's commands were last executed. It
2059 does so because one of the commands is a @code{touch} command to update the
2062 The empty target file must have some dependencies. When you ask to remake
2063 the empty target, the commands are executed if any dependency is more
2064 recent than the target; in other words, if a dependency has changed since
2065 the last time you remade the target. Here is an example:
2072 @cindex @code{print} target
2073 @cindex @code{lpr} (shell command)
2074 @cindex @code{touch} (shell command)
2077 With this rule, @samp{make print} will execute the @code{lpr} command if
2078 either source file has changed since the last @samp{make print}. The
2079 automatic variable @samp{$?} is used to print only those files that have
2080 changed (@pxref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}).
2082 @node Special Targets, Multiple Targets, Empty Targets, Rules
2083 @section Special Built-in Target Names
2084 @cindex special targets
2085 @cindex built-in special targets
2086 @cindex targets, built-in special
2088 Certain names have special meanings if they appear as targets.
2094 The dependencies of the special target @code{.PHONY} are considered to
2095 be phony targets. When it is time to consider such a target,
2096 @code{make} will run its commands unconditionally, regardless of
2097 whether a file with that name exists or what its last-modification
2098 time is. @xref{Phony Targets, ,Phony Targets}.
2103 The dependencies of the special target @code{.SUFFIXES} are the list
2104 of suffixes to be used in checking for suffix rules.
2105 @xref{Suffix Rules, , Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules}.
2110 The commands specified for @code{.DEFAULT} are used for any target for
2111 which no rules are found (either explicit rules or implicit rules).
2112 @xref{Last Resort}. If @code{.DEFAULT} commands are specified, every
2113 file mentioned as a dependency, but not as a target in a rule, will have
2114 these commands executed on its behalf. @xref{Search Algorithm,
2115 ,Implicit Rule Search Algorithm}.
2119 @cindex precious targets
2120 @cindex preserving with @code{.PRECIOUS}
2122 The targets which @code{.PRECIOUS} depends on are given the following
2123 special treatment: if @code{make} is killed or interrupted during the
2124 execution of their commands, the target is not deleted.
2125 @xref{Interrupts, ,Interrupting or Killing @code{make}}.
2126 Also, if the target is an intermediate file, it will not be deleted
2127 after it is no longer needed, as is normally done.
2128 @xref{Chained Rules, ,Chains of Implicit Rules}.
2130 You can also list the target pattern of an implicit rule (such as
2131 @samp{%.o}) as a dependency file of the special target @code{.PRECIOUS}
2132 to preserve intermediate files created by rules whose target patterns
2133 match that file's name.
2138 If you specify dependencies for @code{.IGNORE}, then @code{make} will
2139 ignore errors in execution of the commands run for those particular
2140 files. The commands for @code{.IGNORE} are not meaningful.
2142 If mentioned as a target with no dependencies, @code{.IGNORE} says to
2143 ignore errors in execution of commands for all files. This usage of
2144 @samp{.IGNORE} is supported only for historical compatibility. Since
2145 this affects every command in the makefile, it is not very useful; we
2146 recommend you use the more selective ways to ignore errors in specific
2147 commands. @xref{Errors, ,Errors in Commands}.
2152 If you specify dependencies for @code{.SILENT}, then @code{make} will
2153 not the print commands to remake those particular files before executing
2154 them. The commands for @code{.SILENT} are not meaningful.
2156 If mentioned as a target with no dependencies, @code{.SILENT} says not
2157 to print any commands before executing them. This usage of
2158 @samp{.SILENT} is supported only for historical compatibility. We
2159 recommend you use the more selective ways to silence specific commands.
2160 @xref{Echoing, ,Command Echoing}. If you want to silence all commands
2161 for a particular run of @code{make}, use the @samp{-s} or
2162 @w{@samp{--silent}} option (@pxref{Options Summary}).
2164 @findex .EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES
2165 @item .EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES
2167 Simply by being mentioned as a target, this tells @code{make} to
2168 export all variables to child processes by default.
2169 @xref{Variables/Recursion, ,Communicating Variables to a
2173 Any defined implicit rule suffix also counts as a special target if it
2174 appears as a target, and so does the concatenation of two suffixes, such
2175 as @samp{.c.o}. These targets are suffix rules, an obsolete way of
2176 defining implicit rules (but a way still widely used). In principle, any
2177 target name could be special in this way if you break it in two and add
2178 both pieces to the suffix list. In practice, suffixes normally begin with
2179 @samp{.}, so these special target names also begin with @samp{.}.
2180 @xref{Suffix Rules, ,Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules}.
2182 @node Multiple Targets, Multiple Rules, Special Targets, Rules
2183 @section Multiple Targets in a Rule
2184 @cindex multiple targets
2185 @cindex several targets in a rule
2186 @cindex targets, multiple
2187 @cindex rule, with multiple targets
2189 A rule with multiple targets is equivalent to writing many rules, each with
2190 one target, and all identical aside from that. The same commands apply to
2191 all the targets, but their effects may vary because you can substitute the
2192 actual target name into the command using @samp{$@@}. The rule contributes
2193 the same dependencies to all the targets also.
2195 This is useful in two cases.
2199 You want just dependencies, no commands. For example:
2202 kbd.o command.o files.o: command.h
2206 gives an additional dependency to each of the three object files
2210 Similar commands work for all the targets. The commands do not need
2211 to be absolutely identical, since the automatic variable @samp{$@@}
2212 can be used to substitute the particular target to be remade into the
2213 commands (@pxref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}). For example:
2217 bigoutput littleoutput : text.g
2218 generate text.g -$(subst output,,$@@) > $@@
2228 generate text.g -big > bigoutput
2229 littleoutput : text.g
2230 generate text.g -little > littleoutput
2234 Here we assume the hypothetical program @code{generate} makes two
2235 types of output, one if given @samp{-big} and one if given
2237 @xref{Text Functions, ,Functions for String Substitution and Analysis},
2238 for an explanation of the @code{subst} function.
2241 Suppose you would like to vary the dependencies according to the target,
2242 much as the variable @samp{$@@} allows you to vary the commands.
2243 You cannot do this with multiple targets in an ordinary rule, but you can
2244 do it with a @dfn{static pattern rule}.
2245 @xref{Static Pattern, ,Static Pattern Rules}.
2247 @node Multiple Rules, Static Pattern, Multiple Targets, Rules
2248 @section Multiple Rules for One Target
2249 @cindex multiple rules for one target
2250 @cindex several rules for one target
2251 @cindex rule, multiple for one target
2252 @cindex target, multiple rules for one
2254 One file can be the target of several rules. All the dependencies
2255 mentioned in all the rules are merged into one list of dependencies for
2256 the target. If the target is older than any dependency from any rule,
2257 the commands are executed.
2259 There can only be one set of commands to be executed for a file.
2260 If more than one rule gives commands for the same file,
2261 @code{make} uses the last set given and prints an error message.
2262 (As a special case, if the file's name begins with a dot, no
2263 error message is printed. This odd behavior is only for
2264 compatibility with other implementations of @code{make}.)
2265 There is no reason to
2266 write your makefiles this way; that is why @code{make} gives you
2267 an error message.@refill
2269 An extra rule with just dependencies can be used to give a few extra
2270 dependencies to many files at once. For example, one usually has a
2271 variable named @code{objects} containing a list of all the compiler output
2272 files in the system being made. An easy way to say that all of them must
2273 be recompiled if @file{config.h} changes is to write the following:
2276 objects = foo.o bar.o
2278 bar.o : defs.h test.h
2279 $(objects) : config.h
2282 This could be inserted or taken out without changing the rules that really
2283 specify how to make the object files, making it a convenient form to use if
2284 you wish to add the additional dependency intermittently.
2286 Another wrinkle is that the additional dependencies could be specified with
2287 a variable that you set with a command argument to @code{make}
2288 (@pxref{Overriding, ,Overriding Variables}). For example,
2293 $(objects) : $(extradeps)
2298 means that the command @samp{make extradeps=foo.h} will consider
2299 @file{foo.h} as a dependency of each object file, but plain @samp{make}
2302 If none of the explicit rules for a target has commands, then @code{make}
2303 searches for an applicable implicit rule to find some commands
2304 @pxref{Implicit Rules, ,Using Implicit Rules}).
2306 @node Static Pattern, Double-Colon, Multiple Rules, Rules
2307 @section Static Pattern Rules
2308 @cindex static pattern rule
2309 @cindex rule, static pattern
2310 @cindex pattern rules, static (not implicit)
2311 @cindex varying dependencies
2312 @cindex dependencies, varying (static pattern)
2314 @dfn{Static pattern rules} are rules which specify multiple targets and
2315 construct the dependency names for each target based on the target name.
2316 They are more general than ordinary rules with multiple targets because the
2317 targets do not have to have identical dependencies. Their dependencies must
2318 be @emph{analogous}, but not necessarily @emph{identical}.
2321 * Static Usage:: The syntax of static pattern rules.
2322 * Static versus Implicit:: When are they better than implicit rules?
2325 @node Static Usage, Static versus Implicit, , Static Pattern
2326 @subsection Syntax of Static Pattern Rules
2327 @cindex static pattern rule, syntax of
2328 @cindex pattern rules, static, syntax of
2330 Here is the syntax of a static pattern rule:
2333 @var{targets} @dots{}: @var{target-pattern}: @var{dep-patterns} @dots{}
2339 The @var{targets} list specifies the targets that the rule applies to.
2340 The targets can contain wildcard characters, just like the targets of
2341 ordinary rules (@pxref{Wildcards, ,Using Wildcard Characters in File
2344 @cindex target pattern, static (not implicit)
2346 The @var{target-pattern} and @var{dep-patterns} say how to compute the
2347 dependencies of each target. Each target is matched against the
2348 @var{target-pattern} to extract a part of the target name, called the
2349 @dfn{stem}. This stem is substituted into each of the @var{dep-patterns}
2350 to make the dependency names (one from each @var{dep-pattern}).
2352 Each pattern normally contains the character @samp{%} just once. When the
2353 @var{target-pattern} matches a target, the @samp{%} can match any part of
2354 the target name; this part is called the @dfn{stem}. The rest of the
2355 pattern must match exactly. For example, the target @file{foo.o} matches
2356 the pattern @samp{%.o}, with @samp{foo} as the stem. The targets
2357 @file{foo.c} and @file{foo.out} do not match that pattern.@refill
2359 @cindex dependency pattern, static (not implicit)
2360 The dependency names for each target are made by substituting the stem
2361 for the @samp{%} in each dependency pattern. For example, if one
2362 dependency pattern is @file{%.c}, then substitution of the stem
2363 @samp{foo} gives the dependency name @file{foo.c}. It is legitimate
2364 to write a dependency pattern that does not contain @samp{%}; then this
2365 dependency is the same for all targets.
2367 @cindex @code{%}, quoting in static pattern
2368 @cindex @code{%}, quoting with @code{\} (backslash)
2369 @cindex @code{\} (backslash), to quote @code{%}
2370 @cindex backslash (@code{\}), to quote @code{%}
2371 @cindex quoting @code{%}, in static pattern
2372 @samp{%} characters in pattern rules can be quoted with preceding
2373 backslashes (@samp{\}). Backslashes that would otherwise quote @samp{%}
2374 characters can be quoted with more backslashes. Backslashes that quote
2375 @samp{%} characters or other backslashes are removed from the pattern
2376 before it is compared to file names or has a stem substituted into it.
2377 Backslashes that are not in danger of quoting @samp{%} characters go
2378 unmolested. For example, the pattern @file{the\%weird\\%pattern\\} has
2379 @samp{the%weird\} preceding the operative @samp{%} character, and
2380 @samp{pattern\\} following it. The final two backslashes are left alone
2381 because they cannot affect any @samp{%} character.@refill
2383 Here is an example, which compiles each of @file{foo.o} and @file{bar.o}
2384 from the corresponding @file{.c} file:
2388 objects = foo.o bar.o
2390 $(objects): %.o: %.c
2391 $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@@
2396 Here @samp{$<} is the automatic variable that holds the name of the
2397 dependency and @samp{$@@} is the automatic variable that holds the name
2398 of the target; see @ref{Automatic, , Automatic Variables}.
2400 Each target specified must match the target pattern; a warning is issued
2401 for each target that does not. If you have a list of files, only some of
2402 which will match the pattern, you can use the @code{filter} function to
2403 remove nonmatching file names (@pxref{Text Functions, ,Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}):
2406 files = foo.elc bar.o lose.o
2408 $(filter %.o,$(files)): %.o: %.c
2409 $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@@
2410 $(filter %.elc,$(files)): %.elc: %.el
2411 emacs -f batch-byte-compile $<
2415 In this example the result of @samp{$(filter %.o,$(files))} is
2416 @file{bar.o lose.o}, and the first static pattern rule causes each of
2417 these object files to be updated by compiling the corresponding C source
2418 file. The result of @w{@samp{$(filter %.elc,$(files))}} is
2419 @file{foo.elc}, so that file is made from @file{foo.el}.@refill
2421 Another example shows how to use @code{$*} in static pattern rules:
2422 @vindex $*@r{, and static pattern}
2426 bigoutput littleoutput : %output : text.g
2427 generate text.g -$* > $@@
2432 When the @code{generate} command is run, @code{$*} will expand to the
2433 stem, either @samp{big} or @samp{little}.
2435 @node Static versus Implicit, , Static Usage, Static Pattern
2436 @subsection Static Pattern Rules versus Implicit Rules
2437 @cindex rule, static pattern versus implicit
2438 @cindex static pattern rule, versus implicit
2440 A static pattern rule has much in common with an implicit rule defined as a
2441 pattern rule (@pxref{Pattern Rules, ,Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules}).
2442 Both have a pattern for the target and patterns for constructing the
2443 names of dependencies. The difference is in how @code{make} decides
2444 @emph{when} the rule applies.
2446 An implicit rule @emph{can} apply to any target that matches its pattern,
2447 but it @emph{does} apply only when the target has no commands otherwise
2448 specified, and only when the dependencies can be found. If more than one
2449 implicit rule appears applicable, only one applies; the choice depends on
2452 By contrast, a static pattern rule applies to the precise list of targets
2453 that you specify in the rule. It cannot apply to any other target and it
2454 invariably does apply to each of the targets specified. If two conflicting
2455 rules apply, and both have commands, that's an error.
2457 The static pattern rule can be better than an implicit rule for these
2462 You may wish to override the usual implicit rule for a few
2463 files whose names cannot be categorized syntactically but
2464 can be given in an explicit list.
2467 If you cannot be sure of the precise contents of the directories
2468 you are using, you may not be sure which other irrelevant files
2469 might lead @code{make} to use the wrong implicit rule. The choice
2470 might depend on the order in which the implicit rule search is done.
2471 With static pattern rules, there is no uncertainty: each rule applies
2472 to precisely the targets specified.
2475 @node Double-Colon, Automatic Dependencies, Static Pattern, Rules
2476 @section Double-Colon Rules
2477 @cindex double-colon rules
2478 @cindex rule, double-colon (@code{::})
2479 @cindex multiple rules for one target (@code{::})
2480 @cindex @code{::} rules (double-colon)
2482 @dfn{Double-colon} rules are rules written with @samp{::} instead of
2483 @samp{:} after the target names. They are handled differently from
2484 ordinary rules when the same target appears in more than one rule.
2486 When a target appears in multiple rules, all the rules must be the same
2487 type: all ordinary, or all double-colon. If they are double-colon, each of
2488 them is independent of the others. Each double-colon rule's commands are
2489 executed if the target is older than any dependencies of that rule. This
2490 can result in executing none, any, or all of the double-colon rules.
2492 Double-colon rules with the same target are in fact completely separate
2493 from one another. Each double-colon rule is processed individually, just
2494 as rules with different targets are processed.
2496 The double-colon rules for a target are executed in the order they appear
2497 in the makefile. However, the cases where double-colon rules really make
2498 sense are those where the order of executing the commands would not matter.
2500 Double-colon rules are somewhat obscure and not often very useful; they
2501 provide a mechanism for cases in which the method used to update a target
2502 differs depending on which dependency files caused the update, and such
2505 Each double-colon rule should specify commands; if it does not, an
2506 implicit rule will be used if one applies.
2507 @xref{Implicit Rules, ,Using Implicit Rules}.
2509 @node Automatic Dependencies, , Double-Colon, Rules
2510 @section Generating Dependencies Automatically
2511 @cindex dependencies, automatic generation
2512 @cindex automatic generation of dependencies
2513 @cindex generating dependencies automatically
2515 In the makefile for a program, many of the rules you need to write often
2516 say only that some object file depends on some header
2517 file. For example, if @file{main.c} uses @file{defs.h} via an
2518 @code{#include}, you would write:
2525 You need this rule so that @code{make} knows that it must remake
2526 @file{main.o} whenever @file{defs.h} changes. You can see that for a
2527 large program you would have to write dozens of such rules in your
2528 makefile. And, you must always be very careful to update the makefile
2529 every time you add or remove an @code{#include}.
2530 @cindex @code{#include}
2532 @cindex @code{-M} (to compiler)
2533 To avoid this hassle, most modern C compilers can write these rules for
2534 you, by looking at the @code{#include} lines in the source files.
2535 Usually this is done with the @samp{-M} option to the compiler.
2536 For example, the command:
2543 generates the output:
2546 main.o : main.c defs.h
2550 Thus you no longer have to write all those rules yourself.
2551 The compiler will do it for you.
2553 Note that such a dependency constitutes mentioning @file{main.o} in a
2554 makefile, so it can never be considered an intermediate file by implicit
2555 rule search. This means that @code{make} won't ever remove the file
2556 after using it; @pxref{Chained Rules, ,Chains of Implicit Rules}.
2558 @cindex @code{make depend}
2559 With old @code{make} programs, it was traditional practice to use this
2560 compiler feature to generate dependencies on demand with a command like
2561 @samp{make depend}. That command would create a file @file{depend}
2562 containing all the automatically-generated dependencies; then the
2563 makefile could use @code{include} to read them in (@pxref{Include}).
2565 In GNU @code{make}, the feature of remaking makefiles makes this
2566 practice obsolete---you need never tell @code{make} explicitly to
2567 regenerate the dependencies, because it always regenerates any makefile
2568 that is out of date. @xref{Remaking Makefiles}.
2570 The practice we recommend for automatic dependency generation is to have
2571 one makefile corresponding to each source file. For each source file
2572 @file{@var{name}.c} there is a makefile @file{@var{name}.d} which lists
2573 what files the object file @file{@var{name}.o} depends on. That way
2574 only the source files that have changed need to be rescanned to produce
2575 the new dependencies.
2577 Here is the pattern rule to generate a file of dependencies (i.e., a makefile)
2578 called @file{@var{name}.d} from a C source file called @file{@var{name}.c}:
2583 $(SHELL) -ec '$(CC) -M $(CPPFLAGS) $< \
2584 | sed '\''s/$*\\.o[ :]*/& $@@/g'\'' > $@@'
2589 @xref{Pattern Rules}, for information on defining pattern rules. The
2590 @samp{-e} flag to the shell makes it exit immediately if the
2591 @code{$(CC)} command fails (exits with a nonzero status). Normally the
2592 shell exits with the status of the last command in the pipeline
2593 (@code{sed} in this case), so @code{make} would not notice a nonzero
2594 status from the compiler.
2595 @cindex @code{-e} (shell flag)
2597 @cindex @code{-MM} (to GNU compiler)
2598 With the GNU C compiler, you may wish to use the @samp{-MM} flag instead
2599 of @samp{-M}. This omits dependencies on system header files.
2600 @xref{Preprocessor Options, , Options Controlling the Preprocessor,
2601 gcc.info, Using GNU CC}, for details.
2603 @cindex @code{sed} (shell command)
2604 The purpose of the @code{sed} command is to translate (for example):
2607 main.o : main.c defs.h
2614 main.o main.d : main.c defs.h
2619 This makes each @samp{.d} file depend on all the source and header files
2620 that the corresponding @samp{.o} file depends on. @code{make} then
2621 knows it must regenerate the dependencies whenever any of the source or
2622 header files changes.
2624 Once you've defined the rule to remake the @samp{.d} files,
2625 you then use the @code{include} directive to read them all in.
2626 @xref{Include}. For example:
2630 sources = foo.c bar.c
2632 include $(sources:.c=.d)
2637 (This example uses a substitution variable reference to translate the
2638 list of source files @samp{foo.c bar.c} into a list of dependency
2639 makefiles, @samp{foo.d bar.d}. @xref{Substitution Refs}, for full
2640 information on substitution references.) Since the @samp{.d} files are
2641 makefiles like any others, @code{make} will remake them as necessary
2642 with no further work from you. @xref{Remaking Makefiles}.
2644 @node Commands, Using Variables, Rules, Top
2645 @chapter Writing the Commands in Rules
2646 @cindex commands, how to write
2647 @cindex rule commands
2648 @cindex writing rule commands
2650 The commands of a rule consist of shell command lines to be executed one
2651 by one. Each command line must start with a tab, except that the first
2652 command line may be attached to the target-and-dependencies line with a
2653 semicolon in between. Blank lines and lines of just comments may appear
2654 among the command lines; they are ignored. (But beware, an apparently
2655 ``blank'' line that begins with a tab is @emph{not} blank! It is an
2656 empty command; @pxref{Empty Commands}.)
2658 Users use many different shell programs, but commands in makefiles are
2659 always interpreted by @file{/bin/sh} unless the makefile specifies
2660 otherwise. @xref{Execution, ,Command Execution}.
2662 @cindex comments, in commands
2663 @cindex commands, comments in
2664 @cindex @code{#} (comments), in commands
2665 The shell that is in use determines whether comments can be written on
2666 command lines, and what syntax they use. When the shell is
2667 @file{/bin/sh}, a @samp{#} starts a comment that extends to the end of
2668 the line. The @samp{#} does not have to be at the beginning of a line.
2669 Text on a line before a @samp{#} is not part of the comment.
2672 * Echoing:: How to control when commands are echoed.
2673 * Execution:: How commands are executed.
2674 * Parallel:: How commands can be executed in parallel.
2675 * Errors:: What happens after a command execution error.
2676 * Interrupts:: What happens when a command is interrupted.
2677 * Recursion:: Invoking @code{make} from makefiles.
2678 * Sequences:: Defining canned sequences of commands.
2679 * Empty Commands:: Defining useful, do-nothing commands.
2682 @node Echoing, Execution, , Commands
2683 @section Command Echoing
2684 @cindex echoing of commands
2685 @cindex silent operation
2686 @cindex @code{@@} (in commands)
2687 @cindex commands, echoing
2688 @cindex printing of commands
2690 Normally @code{make} prints each command line before it is executed.
2691 We call this @dfn{echoing} because it gives the appearance that you
2692 are typing the commands yourself.
2694 When a line starts with @samp{@@}, the echoing of that line is suppressed.
2695 The @samp{@@} is discarded before the command is passed to the shell.
2696 Typically you would use this for a command whose only effect is to print
2697 something, such as an @code{echo} command to indicate progress through
2701 @@echo About to make distribution files
2705 @cindex @code{--just-print}
2706 @cindex @code{--dry-run}
2707 @cindex @code{--recon}
2708 When @code{make} is given the flag @samp{-n} or @samp{--just-print},
2709 echoing is all that happens, no execution. @xref{Options Summary,
2710 ,Summary of Options}. In this case and only this case, even the
2711 commands starting with @samp{@@} are printed. This flag is useful for
2712 finding out which commands @code{make} thinks are necessary without
2713 actually doing them.
2716 @cindex @code{--silent}
2717 @cindex @code{--quiet}
2719 The @samp{-s} or @samp{--silent}
2720 flag to @code{make} prevents all echoing, as if all commands
2721 started with @samp{@@}. A rule in the makefile for the special target
2722 @code{.SILENT} without dependencies has the same effect
2723 (@pxref{Special Targets, ,Special Built-in Target Names}).
2724 @code{.SILENT} is essentially obsolete since @samp{@@} is more flexible.@refill
2726 @node Execution, Parallel, Echoing, Commands
2727 @section Command Execution
2728 @cindex commands, execution
2729 @cindex execution, of commands
2730 @cindex shell command, execution
2731 @vindex SHELL @r{(command execution)}
2733 When it is time to execute commands to update a target, they are executed
2734 by making a new subshell for each line. (In practice, @code{make} may
2735 take shortcuts that do not affect the results.)
2737 @cindex @code{cd} (shell command)
2738 @strong{Please note:} this implies that shell commands such as
2739 @code{cd} that set variables local to each process will not affect the
2740 following command lines. If you want to use @code{cd} to affect the
2741 next command, put the two on a single line with a semicolon between
2742 them. Then @code{make} will consider them a single command and pass
2743 them, together, to a shell which will execute them in sequence. For
2748 cd bar; gobble lose > ../foo
2751 @cindex commands, backslash (@code{\}) in
2752 @cindex commands, quoting newlines in
2753 @cindex backslash (@code{\}), in commands
2754 @cindex @code{\} (backslash), in commands
2755 @cindex quoting newline, in commands
2756 @cindex newline, quoting, in commands
2757 If you would like to split a single shell command into multiple lines of
2758 text, you must use a backslash at the end of all but the last subline.
2759 Such a sequence of lines is combined into a single line, by deleting the
2760 backslash-newline sequences, before passing it to the shell. Thus, the
2761 following is equivalent to the preceding example:
2767 gobble lose > ../foo
2772 The program used as the shell is taken from the variable @code{SHELL}.
2773 By default, the program @file{/bin/sh} is used.
2775 @cindex environment, @code{SHELL} in
2776 Unlike most variables, the variable @code{SHELL} is never set from the
2777 environment. This is because the @code{SHELL} environment variable is
2778 used to specify your personal choice of shell program for interactive
2779 use. It would be very bad for personal choices like this to affect
2780 the functioning of makefiles. @xref{Environment, ,Variables from the
2783 @node Parallel, Errors, Execution, Commands
2784 @section Parallel Execution
2785 @cindex commands, execution in parallel
2786 @cindex parallel execution
2787 @cindex execution, in parallel
2790 @cindex @code{--jobs}
2792 GNU @code{make} knows how to execute several commands at once.
2793 Normally, @code{make} will execute only one command at a time, waiting
2794 for it to finish before executing the next. However, the @samp{-j} or
2795 @samp{--jobs} option tells @code{make} to execute many commands
2796 simultaneously.@refill
2798 If the @samp{-j} option is followed by an integer, this is the number of
2799 commands to execute at once; this is called the number of @dfn{job slots}.
2800 If there is nothing looking like an integer after the @samp{-j} option,
2801 there is no limit on the number of job slots. The default number of job
2802 slots is one, which means serial execution (one thing at a time).
2804 One unpleasant consequence of running several commands simultaneously is
2805 that output from all of the commands comes when the commands send it, so
2806 messages from different commands may be interspersed.
2808 Another problem is that two processes cannot both take input from the
2809 same device; so to make sure that only one command tries to take input
2810 from the terminal at once, @code{make} will invalidate the standard
2811 input streams of all but one running command. This means that
2812 attempting to read from standard input will usually be a fatal error (a
2813 @samp{Broken pipe} signal) for most child processes if there are
2816 @cindex standard input
2818 It is unpredictable which command will have a valid standard input stream
2819 (which will come from the terminal, or wherever you redirect the standard
2820 input of @code{make}). The first command run will always get it first, and
2821 the first command started after that one finishes will get it next, and so
2824 We will change how this aspect of @code{make} works if we find a better
2825 alternative. In the mean time, you should not rely on any command using
2826 standard input at all if you are using the parallel execution feature; but
2827 if you are not using this feature, then standard input works normally in
2830 If a command fails (is killed by a signal or exits with a nonzero
2831 status), and errors are not ignored for that command
2832 (@pxref{Errors, ,Errors in Commands}),
2833 the remaining command lines to remake the same target will not be run.
2834 If a command fails and the @samp{-k} or @samp{--keep-going}
2835 option was not given
2836 (@pxref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options}),
2837 @code{make} aborts execution. If make
2838 terminates for any reason (including a signal) with child processes
2839 running, it waits for them to finish before actually exiting.@refill
2841 @cindex load average
2842 @cindex limiting jobs based on load
2843 @cindex jobs, limiting based on load
2844 @cindex @code{-l} (load average)
2845 @cindex @code{--max-load}
2846 @cindex @code{--load-average}
2847 When the system is heavily loaded, you will probably want to run fewer jobs
2848 than when it is lightly loaded. You can use the @samp{-l} option to tell
2849 @code{make} to limit the number of jobs to run at once, based on the load
2850 average. The @samp{-l} or @samp{--max-load}
2851 option is followed by a floating-point number. For
2859 will not let @code{make} start more than one job if the load average is
2860 above 2.5. The @samp{-l} option with no following number removes the
2861 load limit, if one was given with a previous @samp{-l} option.@refill
2863 More precisely, when @code{make} goes to start up a job, and it already has
2864 at least one job running, it checks the current load average; if it is not
2865 lower than the limit given with @samp{-l}, @code{make} waits until the load
2866 average goes below that limit, or until all the other jobs finish.
2868 By default, there is no load limit.
2870 @node Errors, Interrupts, Parallel, Commands
2871 @section Errors in Commands
2872 @cindex errors (in commands)
2873 @cindex commands, errors in
2874 @cindex exit status (errors)
2876 After each shell command returns, @code{make} looks at its exit status.
2877 If the command completed successfully, the next command line is executed
2878 in a new shell; after the last command line is finished, the rule is
2881 If there is an error (the exit status is nonzero), @code{make} gives up on
2882 the current rule, and perhaps on all rules.
2884 Sometimes the failure of a certain command does not indicate a problem.
2885 For example, you may use the @code{mkdir} command to ensure that a
2886 directory exists. If the directory already exists, @code{mkdir} will
2887 report an error, but you probably want @code{make} to continue regardless.
2889 @cindex @code{-} (in commands)
2890 To ignore errors in a command line, write a @samp{-} at the beginning of
2891 the line's text (after the initial tab). The @samp{-} is discarded before
2892 the command is passed to the shell for execution.
2902 @cindex @code{rm} (shell command)
2905 This causes @code{rm} to continue even if it is unable to remove a file.
2908 @cindex @code{--ignore-errors}
2910 When you run @code{make} with the @samp{-i} or @samp{--ignore-errors}
2911 flag, errors are ignored in all commands of all rules. A rule in the
2912 makefile for the special target @code{.IGNORE} has the same effect, if
2913 there are no dependencies. These ways of ignoring errors are obsolete
2914 because @samp{-} is more flexible.
2916 When errors are to be ignored, because of either a @samp{-} or the
2917 @samp{-i} flag, @code{make} treats an error return just like success,
2918 except that it prints out a message that tells you the status code
2919 the command exited with, and says that the error has been ignored.
2921 When an error happens that @code{make} has not been told to ignore,
2922 it implies that the current target cannot be correctly remade, and neither
2923 can any other that depends on it either directly or indirectly. No further
2924 commands will be executed for these targets, since their preconditions
2925 have not been achieved.
2929 @cindex @code{--keep-going}
2930 Normally @code{make} gives up immediately in this circumstance, returning a
2931 nonzero status. However, if the @samp{-k} or @samp{--keep-going}
2932 flag is specified, @code{make}
2933 continues to consider the other dependencies of the pending targets,
2934 remaking them if necessary, before it gives up and returns nonzero status.
2935 For example, after an error in compiling one object file, @samp{make -k}
2936 will continue compiling other object files even though it already knows
2937 that linking them will be impossible. @xref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options}.
2939 The usual behavior assumes that your purpose is to get the specified
2940 targets up to date; once @code{make} learns that this is impossible, it
2941 might as well report the failure immediately. The @samp{-k} option says
2942 that the real purpose is to test as many of the changes made in the
2943 program as possible, perhaps to find several independent problems so
2944 that you can correct them all before the next attempt to compile. This
2945 is why Emacs' @code{compile} command passes the @samp{-k} flag by
2947 @cindex Emacs (@code{M-x compile})
2949 @findex .DELETE_ON_ERROR
2950 @cindex deletion of target files
2951 @cindex removal of target files
2952 @cindex target, deleting on error
2953 Usually when a command fails, if it has changed the target file at all,
2954 the file is corrupted and cannot be used---or at least it is not
2955 completely updated. Yet the file's timestamp says that it is now up to
2956 date, so the next time @code{make} runs, it will not try to update that
2957 file. The situation is just the same as when the command is killed by a
2958 signal; @pxref{Interrupts}. So generally the right thing to do is to
2959 delete the target file if the command fails after beginning to change
2960 the file. @code{make} will do this if @code{.DELETE_ON_ERROR} appears
2961 as a target. This is almost always what you want @code{make} to do, but
2962 it is not historical practice; so for compatibility, you must explicitly
2965 @node Interrupts, Recursion, Errors, Commands
2966 @section Interrupting or Killing @code{make}
2969 @cindex deletion of target files
2970 @cindex removal of target files
2971 @cindex target, deleting on interrupt
2972 @cindex killing (interruption)
2974 If @code{make} gets a fatal signal while a command is executing, it may
2975 delete the target file that the command was supposed to update. This is
2976 done if the target file's last-modification time has changed since
2977 @code{make} first checked it.
2979 The purpose of deleting the target is to make sure that it is remade from
2980 scratch when @code{make} is next run. Why is this? Suppose you type
2981 @kbd{Ctrl-c} while a compiler is running, and it has begun to write an
2982 object file @file{foo.o}. The @kbd{Ctrl-c} kills the compiler, resulting
2983 in an incomplete file whose last-modification time is newer than the source
2984 file @file{foo.c}. But @code{make} also receives the @kbd{Ctrl-c} signal
2985 and deletes this incomplete file. If @code{make} did not do this, the next
2986 invocation of @code{make} would think that @file{foo.o} did not require
2987 updating---resulting in a strange error message from the linker when it
2988 tries to link an object file half of which is missing.
2991 You can prevent the deletion of a target file in this way by making the
2992 special target @code{.PRECIOUS} depend on it. Before remaking a target,
2993 @code{make} checks to see whether it appears on the dependencies of
2994 @code{.PRECIOUS}, and thereby decides whether the target should be deleted
2995 if a signal happens. Some reasons why you might do this are that the
2996 target is updated in some atomic fashion, or exists only to record a
2997 modification-time (its contents do not matter), or must exist at all
2998 times to prevent other sorts of trouble.
3000 @node Recursion, Sequences, Interrupts, Commands
3001 @section Recursive Use of @code{make}
3003 @cindex subdirectories, recursion for
3005 Recursive use of @code{make} means using @code{make} as a command in a
3006 makefile. This technique is useful when you want separate makefiles for
3007 various subsystems that compose a larger system. For example, suppose you
3008 have a subdirectory @file{subdir} which has its own makefile, and you would
3009 like the containing directory's makefile to run @code{make} on the
3010 subdirectory. You can do it by writing this:
3018 or, equivalently, this (@pxref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options}):
3025 @cindex @code{--directory}
3027 You can write recursive @code{make} commands just by copying this example,
3028 but there are many things to know about how they work and why, and about
3029 how the sub-@code{make} relates to the top-level @code{make}.
3032 * MAKE Variable:: The special effects of using @samp{$(MAKE)}.
3033 * Variables/Recursion:: How to communicate variables to a sub-@code{make}.
3034 * Options/Recursion:: How to communicate options to a sub-@code{make}.
3035 * -w Option:: How the @samp{-w} or @samp{--print-directory} option
3036 helps debug use of recursive @code{make} commands.
3039 @node MAKE Variable, Variables/Recursion, , Recursion
3040 @subsection How the @code{MAKE} Variable Works
3042 @cindex recursion, and @code{MAKE} variable
3044 Recursive @code{make} commands should always use the variable @code{MAKE},
3045 not the explicit command name @samp{make}, as shown here:
3054 The value of this variable is the file name with which @code{make} was
3055 invoked. If this file name was @file{/bin/make}, then the command executed
3056 is @samp{cd subdir; /bin/make}. If you use a special version of
3057 @code{make} to run the top-level makefile, the same special version will be
3058 executed for recursive invocations.
3059 @cindex @code{cd} (shell command)
3061 As a special feature, using the variable @code{MAKE} in the commands of
3062 a rule alters the effects of the @samp{-t} (@samp{--touch}), @samp{-n}
3063 (@samp{--just-print}), or @samp{-q} (@w{@samp{--question}}) option.
3064 Using the @code{MAKE} variable has the same effect as using a @samp{+}
3065 character at the beginning of the command line. @xref{Instead of
3066 Execution, ,Instead of Executing the Commands}.@refill
3068 Consider the command @samp{make -t} in the above example. (The
3069 @samp{-t} option marks targets as up to date without actually running
3070 any commands; see @ref{Instead of Execution}.) Following the usual
3071 definition of @samp{-t}, a @samp{make -t} command in the example would
3072 create a file named @file{subsystem} and do nothing else. What you
3073 really want it to do is run @samp{@w{cd subdir;} @w{make -t}}; but that would
3074 require executing the command, and @samp{-t} says not to execute
3076 @cindex @code{-t}, and recursion
3077 @cindex recursion, and @code{-t}
3078 @cindex @code{--touch}, and recursion
3080 The special feature makes this do what you want: whenever a command
3081 line of a rule contains the variable @code{MAKE}, the flags @samp{-t},
3082 @samp{-n} and @samp{-q} do not apply to that line. Command lines
3083 containing @code{MAKE} are executed normally despite the presence of a
3084 flag that causes most commands not to be run. The usual
3085 @code{MAKEFLAGS} mechanism passes the flags to the sub-@code{make}
3086 (@pxref{Options/Recursion, ,Communicating Options to a
3087 Sub-@code{make}}), so your request to touch the files, or print the
3088 commands, is propagated to the subsystem.@refill
3090 @node Variables/Recursion, Options/Recursion, MAKE Variable, Recursion
3091 @subsection Communicating Variables to a Sub-@code{make}
3092 @cindex sub-@code{make}
3093 @cindex environment, and recursion
3094 @cindex exporting variables
3095 @cindex variables, environment
3096 @cindex variables, exporting
3097 @cindex recursion, and environment
3098 @cindex recursion, and variables
3100 Variable values of the top-level @code{make} can be passed to the
3101 sub-@code{make} through the environment by explicit request. These
3102 variables are defined in the sub-@code{make} as defaults, but do not
3103 override what is specified in the makefile used by the sub-@code{make}
3104 makefile unless you use the @samp{-e} switch (@pxref{Options Summary,
3105 ,Summary of Options}).@refill
3107 To pass down, or @dfn{export}, a variable, @code{make} adds the variable
3108 and its value to the environment for running each command. The
3109 sub-@code{make}, in turn, uses the environment to initialize its table
3110 of variable values. @xref{Environment, ,Variables from the
3113 Except by explicit request, @code{make} exports a variable only if it
3114 is either defined in the environment initially or set on the command
3115 line, and if its name consists only of letters, numbers, and underscores.
3116 Some shells cannot cope with environment variable names consisting of
3117 characters other than letters, numbers, and underscores.
3119 The special variables @code{SHELL} and @code{MAKEFLAGS} are always
3120 exported (unless you unexport them).
3121 @code{MAKEFILES} is exported if you set it to anything.
3123 @code{make} automatically passes down variable values that were defined
3124 on the command line, by putting them in the @code{MAKEFLAGS} variable.
3126 See the next section.
3129 @xref{Options/Recursion}.
3132 Variables are @emph{not} normally passed down if they were created by
3133 default by @code{make} (@pxref{Implicit Variables, ,Variables Used by
3134 Implicit Rules}). The sub-@code{make} will define these for
3138 If you want to export specific variables to a sub-@code{make}, use the
3139 @code{export} directive, like this:
3142 export @var{variable} @dots{}
3147 If you want to @emph{prevent} a variable from being exported, use the
3148 @code{unexport} directive, like this:
3151 unexport @var{variable} @dots{}
3155 As a convenience, you can define a variable and export it at the same
3159 export @var{variable} = value
3163 has the same result as:
3166 @var{variable} = value
3167 export @var{variable}
3174 export @var{variable} := value
3178 has the same result as:
3181 @var{variable} := value
3182 export @var{variable}
3188 export @var{variable} += value
3195 @var{variable} += value
3196 export @var{variable}
3200 @xref{Appending, ,Appending More Text to Variables}.
3202 You may notice that the @code{export} and @code{unexport} directives
3203 work in @code{make} in the same way they work in the shell, @code{sh}.
3205 If you want all variables to be exported by default, you can use
3206 @code{export} by itself:
3213 This tells @code{make} that variables which are not explicitly mentioned
3214 in an @code{export} or @code{unexport} directive should be exported.
3215 Any variable given in an @code{unexport} directive will still @emph{not}
3216 be exported. If you use @code{export} by itself to export variables by
3217 default, variables whose names contain characters other than
3218 alphanumerics and underscores will not be exported unless specifically
3219 mentioned in an @code{export} directive.@refill
3221 @findex .EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES
3222 The behavior elicited by an @code{export} directive by itself was the
3223 default in older versions of GNU @code{make}. If your makefiles depend
3224 on this behavior and you want to be compatible with old versions of
3225 @code{make}, you can write a rule for the special target
3226 @code{.EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES} instead of using the @code{export} directive.
3227 This will be ignored by old @code{make}s, while the @code{export}
3228 directive will cause a syntax error.@refill
3229 @cindex compatibility in exporting
3231 Likewise, you can use @code{unexport} by itself to tell @code{make}
3232 @emph{not} to export variables by default. Since this is the default
3233 behavior, you would only need to do this if @code{export} had been used
3234 by itself earlier (in an included makefile, perhaps). You
3235 @strong{cannot} use @code{export} and @code{unexport} by themselves to
3236 have variables exported for some commands and not for others. The last
3237 @code{export} or @code{unexport} directive that appears by itself
3238 determines the behavior for the entire run of @code{make}.@refill
3241 @cindex recursion, level of
3242 As a special feature, the variable @code{MAKELEVEL} is changed when it
3243 is passed down from level to level. This variable's value is a string
3244 which is the depth of the level as a decimal number. The value is
3245 @samp{0} for the top-level @code{make}; @samp{1} for a sub-@code{make},
3246 @samp{2} for a sub-sub-@code{make}, and so on. The incrementation
3247 happens when @code{make} sets up the environment for a command.@refill
3249 The main use of @code{MAKELEVEL} is to test it in a conditional
3250 directive (@pxref{Conditionals, ,Conditional Parts of Makefiles}); this
3251 way you can write a makefile that behaves one way if run recursively and
3252 another way if run directly by you.@refill
3255 You can use the variable @code{MAKEFILES} to cause all sub-@code{make}
3256 commands to use additional makefiles. The value of @code{MAKEFILES} is
3257 a whitespace-separated list of file names. This variable, if defined in
3258 the outer-level makefile, is passed down through the environment; then
3259 it serves as a list of extra makefiles for the sub-@code{make} to read
3260 before the usual or specified ones. @xref{MAKEFILES Variable, ,The
3261 Variable @code{MAKEFILES}}.@refill
3263 @node Options/Recursion, -w Option, Variables/Recursion, Recursion
3264 @subsection Communicating Options to a Sub-@code{make}
3265 @cindex options, and recursion
3266 @cindex recursion, and options
3269 Flags such as @samp{-s} and @samp{-k} are passed automatically to the
3270 sub-@code{make} through the variable @code{MAKEFLAGS}. This variable is
3271 set up automatically by @code{make} to contain the flag letters that
3272 @code{make} received. Thus, if you do @w{@samp{make -ks}} then
3273 @code{MAKEFLAGS} gets the value @samp{ks}.@refill
3275 As a consequence, every sub-@code{make} gets a value for @code{MAKEFLAGS}
3276 in its environment. In response, it takes the flags from that value and
3277 processes them as if they had been given as arguments.
3278 @xref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options}.
3280 @cindex command line variable definitions, and recursion
3281 @cindex variables, command line, and recursion
3282 @cindex recursion, and command line variable definitions
3283 Likewise variables defined on the command line are passed to the
3284 sub-@code{make} through @code{MAKEFLAGS}. Words in the value of
3285 @code{MAKEFLAGS} that contain @samp{=}, @code{make} treats as variable
3286 definitions just as if they appeared on the command line.
3287 @xref{Overriding, ,Overriding Variables}.
3289 @cindex @code{-C}, and recursion
3290 @cindex @code{-f}, and recursion
3291 @cindex @code{-o}, and recursion
3292 @cindex @code{-W}, and recursion
3293 @cindex @code{--directory}, and recursion
3294 @cindex @code{--file}, and recursion
3295 @cindex @code{--old-file}, and recursion
3296 @cindex @code{--assume-old}, and recursion
3297 @cindex @code{--assume-new}, and recursion
3298 @cindex @code{--new-file}, and recursion
3299 @cindex recursion, and @code{-C}
3300 @cindex recursion, and @code{-f}
3301 @cindex recursion, and @code{-o}
3302 @cindex recursion, and @code{-W}
3303 The options @samp{-C}, @samp{-f}, @samp{-o}, and @samp{-W} are not put
3304 into @code{MAKEFLAGS}; these options are not passed down.@refill
3306 @cindex @code{-j}, and recursion
3307 @cindex @code{--jobs}, and recursion
3308 @cindex recursion, and @code{-j}
3309 @cindex job slots, and recursion
3310 The @samp{-j} option is a special case (@pxref{Parallel, ,Parallel Execution}).
3311 If you set it to some numeric value, @samp{-j 1} is always put into
3312 @code{MAKEFLAGS} instead of the value you specified. This is because if
3313 the @w{@samp{-j}} option were passed down to sub-@code{make}s, you would
3314 get many more jobs running in parallel than you asked for. If you give
3315 @samp{-j} with no numeric argument, meaning to run as many jobs as
3316 possible in parallel, this is passed down, since multiple infinities are
3317 no more than one.@refill
3319 If you do not want to pass the other flags down, you must change the
3320 value of @code{MAKEFLAGS}, like this:
3332 cd subdir; $(MAKE) MAKEFLAGS=
3335 @vindex MAKEOVERRIDES
3336 The command line variable definitions really appear in the variable
3337 @code{MAKEOVERRIDES}, and @code{MAKEFLAGS} contains a reference to this
3338 variable. If you do want to pass flags down normally, but don't want to
3339 pass down the command line variable definitions, you can reset
3340 @code{MAKEOVERRIDES} to empty, like this:
3347 @cindex Arg list too long
3349 This is not usually useful to do. However, some systems have a small
3350 fixed limit on the size of the environment, and putting so much
3351 information in into the value of @code{MAKEFLAGS} can exceed it.
3352 If you see the error message @samp{Arg list too long}, this may be the problem.
3355 (For strict compliance with POSIX.2, changing @code{MAKEOVERRIDES} does
3356 not affect @code{MAKEFLAGS} if the special target @samp{.POSIX} appears
3357 in the makefile. You probably do not care about this.)
3360 A similar variable @code{MFLAGS} exists also, for historical
3361 compatibility. It has the same value as @code{MAKEFLAGS} except that it
3362 does not contain the command line variable definitions, and it always
3363 begins with a hyphen unless it is empty (@code{MAKEFLAGS} begins with a
3364 hyphen only when it begins with an option that has no single-letter
3365 version, such as @samp{--warn-undefined-variables}). @code{MFLAGS} was
3366 traditionally used explicitly in the recursive @code{make} command, like
3371 cd subdir; $(MAKE) $(MFLAGS)
3375 but now @code{MAKEFLAGS} makes this usage redundant. If you want your
3376 makefiles to be compatible with old @code{make} programs, use this
3377 technique; it will work fine with more modern @code{make} versions too.
3379 @cindex setting options from environment
3380 @cindex options, setting from environment
3381 @cindex setting options in makefiles
3382 @cindex options, setting in makefiles
3383 The @code{MAKEFLAGS} variable can also be useful if you want to have
3384 certain options, such as @samp{-k} (@pxref{Options Summary, ,Summary of
3385 Options}), set each time you run @code{make}. You simply put a value for
3386 @code{MAKEFLAGS} in your environment. You can also set @code{MAKEFLAGS} in
3387 a makefile, to specify additional flags that should also be in effect for
3388 that makefile. (Note that you cannot use @code{MFLAGS} this way. That
3389 variable is set only for compatibility; @code{make} does not interpret a
3390 value you set for it in any way.)
3392 When @code{make} interprets the value of @code{MAKEFLAGS} (either from the
3393 environment or from a makefile), it first prepends a hyphen if the value
3394 does not already begin with one. Then it chops the value into words
3395 separated by blanks, and parses these words as if they were options given
3396 on the command line (except that @samp{-C}, @samp{-f}, @samp{-h},
3397 @samp{-o}, @samp{-W}, and their long-named versions are ignored; and there
3398 is no error for an invalid option).
3400 If you do put @code{MAKEFLAGS} in your environment, you should be sure not
3401 to include any options that will drastically affect the actions of
3402 @code{make} and undermine the purpose of makefiles and of @code{make}
3403 itself. For instance, the @samp{-t}, @samp{-n}, and @samp{-q} options, if
3404 put in one of these variables, could have disastrous consequences and would
3405 certainly have at least surprising and probably annoying effects.@refill
3407 @node -w Option, , Options/Recursion, Recursion
3408 @subsection The @samp{--print-directory} Option
3409 @cindex directories, printing them
3410 @cindex printing directories
3411 @cindex recursion, and printing directories
3413 If you use several levels of recursive @code{make} invocations, the
3414 @samp{-w} or @w{@samp{--print-directory}} option can make the output a
3415 lot easier to understand by showing each directory as @code{make}
3416 starts processing it and as @code{make} finishes processing it. For
3417 example, if @samp{make -w} is run in the directory @file{/u/gnu/make},
3418 @code{make} will print a line of the form:@refill
3421 make: Entering directory `/u/gnu/make'.
3425 before doing anything else, and a line of the form:
3428 make: Leaving directory `/u/gnu/make'.
3432 when processing is completed.
3434 @cindex @code{-C}, and @code{-w}
3435 @cindex @code{--directory}, and @code{--print-directory}
3436 @cindex recursion, and @code{-w}
3437 @cindex @code{-w}, and @code{-C}
3438 @cindex @code{-w}, and recursion
3439 @cindex @code{--print-directory}, and @code{--directory}
3440 @cindex @code{--print-directory}, and recursion
3441 @cindex @code{--no-print-directory}
3442 @cindex @code{--print-directory}, disabling
3443 @cindex @code{-w}, disabling
3444 Normally, you do not need to specify this option because @samp{make}
3445 does it for you: @samp{-w} is turned on automatically when you use the
3446 @samp{-C} option, and in sub-@code{make}s. @code{make} will not
3447 automatically turn on @samp{-w} if you also use @samp{-s}, which says to
3448 be silent, or if you use @samp{--no-print-directory} to explicitly
3451 @node Sequences, Empty Commands, Recursion, Commands
3452 @section Defining Canned Command Sequences
3453 @cindex sequences of commands
3454 @cindex commands, sequences of
3456 When the same sequence of commands is useful in making various targets, you
3457 can define it as a canned sequence with the @code{define} directive, and
3458 refer to the canned sequence from the rules for those targets. The canned
3459 sequence is actually a variable, so the name must not conflict with other
3462 Here is an example of defining a canned sequence of commands:
3466 yacc $(firstword $^)
3473 Here @code{run-yacc} is the name of the variable being defined;
3474 @code{endef} marks the end of the definition; the lines in between are the
3475 commands. The @code{define} directive does not expand variable references
3476 and function calls in the canned sequence; the @samp{$} characters,
3477 parentheses, variable names, and so on, all become part of the value of the
3478 variable you are defining.
3479 @xref{Defining, ,Defining Variables Verbatim},
3480 for a complete explanation of @code{define}.
3482 The first command in this example runs Yacc on the first dependency of
3483 whichever rule uses the canned sequence. The output file from Yacc is
3484 always named @file{y.tab.c}. The second command moves the output to the
3485 rule's target file name.
3487 To use the canned sequence, substitute the variable into the commands of a
3488 rule. You can substitute it like any other variable
3489 (@pxref{Reference, ,Basics of Variable References}).
3490 Because variables defined by @code{define} are recursively expanded
3491 variables, all the variable references you wrote inside the @code{define}
3492 are expanded now. For example:
3500 @samp{foo.y} will be substituted for the variable @samp{$^} when it occurs in
3501 @code{run-yacc}'s value, and @samp{foo.c} for @samp{$@@}.@refill
3503 This is a realistic example, but this particular one is not needed in
3504 practice because @code{make} has an implicit rule to figure out these
3505 commands based on the file names involved
3506 (@pxref{Implicit Rules, ,Using Implicit Rules}).
3508 @cindex @@, and @code{define}
3509 @cindex -, and @code{define}
3510 @cindex +, and @code{define}
3511 In command execution, each line of a canned sequence is treated just as
3512 if the line appeared on its own in the rule, preceded by a tab. In
3513 particular, @code{make} invokes a separate subshell for each line. You
3514 can use the special prefix characters that affect command lines
3515 (@samp{@@}, @samp{-}, and @samp{+}) on each line of a canned sequence.
3516 @xref{Commands, ,Writing the Commands in Rules}.
3517 For example, using this canned sequence:
3521 @@echo "frobnicating target $@@"
3522 frob-step-1 $< -o $@@-step-1
3523 frob-step-2 $@@-step-1 -o $@@
3528 @code{make} will not echo the first line, the @code{echo} command.
3529 But it @emph{will} echo the following two command lines.
3531 On the other hand, prefix characters on the command line that refers to
3532 a canned sequence apply to every line in the sequence. So the rule:
3540 does not echo @emph{any} commands.
3541 (@xref{Echoing, ,Command Echoing}, for a full explanation of @samp{@@}.)
3543 @node Empty Commands, , Sequences, Commands
3544 @section Using Empty Commands
3545 @cindex empty commands
3546 @cindex commands, empty
3548 It is sometimes useful to define commands which do nothing. This is done
3549 simply by giving a command that consists of nothing but whitespace. For
3557 defines an empty command string for @file{target}. You could also use a
3558 line beginning with a tab character to define an empty command string,
3559 but this would be confusing because such a line looks empty.
3561 @findex .DEFAULT@r{, and empty commands}
3562 You may be wondering why you would want to define a command string that
3563 does nothing. The only reason this is useful is to prevent a target
3564 from getting implicit commands (from implicit rules or the
3565 @code{.DEFAULT} special target; @pxref{Implicit Rules} and
3566 @pxref{Last Resort, ,Defining Last-Resort Default Rules}).@refill
3568 You may be inclined to define empty command strings for targets that are
3569 not actual files, but only exist so that their dependencies can be
3570 remade. However, this is not the best way to do that, because the
3571 dependencies may not be remade properly if the target file actually does exist.
3572 @xref{Phony Targets, ,Phony Targets}, for a better way to do this.
3574 @node Using Variables, Conditionals, Commands, Top
3575 @chapter How to Use Variables
3578 @cindex recursive variable expansion
3579 @cindex simple variable expansion
3581 A @dfn{variable} is a name defined in a makefile to represent a string
3582 of text, called the variable's @dfn{value}. These values are
3583 substituted by explicit request into targets, dependencies, commands,
3584 and other parts of the makefile. (In some other versions of @code{make},
3585 variables are called @dfn{macros}.)
3588 Variables and functions in all parts of a makefile are expanded when
3589 read, except for the shell commands in rules, the right-hand sides of
3590 variable definitions using @samp{=}, and the bodies of variable
3591 definitions using the @code{define} directive.@refill
3593 Variables can represent lists of file names, options to pass to compilers,
3594 programs to run, directories to look in for source files, directories to
3595 write output in, or anything else you can imagine.
3597 A variable name may be any sequence of characters not containing @samp{:},
3598 @samp{#}, @samp{=}, or leading or trailing whitespace. However,
3599 variable names containing characters other than letters, numbers, and
3600 underscores should be avoided, as they may be given special meanings in the
3601 future, and with some shells they cannot be passed through the environment to a
3603 (@pxref{Variables/Recursion, ,Communicating Variables to a Sub-@code{make}}).
3605 Variable names are case-sensitive. The names @samp{foo}, @samp{FOO},
3606 and @samp{Foo} all refer to different variables.
3608 It is traditional to use upper case letters in variable names, but we
3609 recommend using lower case letters for variable names that serve internal
3610 purposes in the makefile, and reserving upper case for parameters that
3611 control implicit rules or for parameters that the user should override with
3612 command options (@pxref{Overriding, ,Overriding Variables}).
3614 A few variables have names that are a single punctuation character or
3615 just a few characters. These are the @dfn{automatic variables}, and
3616 they have particular specialized uses. @xref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}.
3619 * Reference:: How to use the value of a variable.
3620 * Flavors:: Variables come in two flavors.
3621 * Advanced:: Advanced features for referencing a variable.
3622 * Values:: All the ways variables get their values.
3623 * Setting:: How to set a variable in the makefile.
3624 * Appending:: How to append more text to the old value
3626 * Override Directive:: How to set a variable in the makefile even if
3627 the user has set it with a command argument.
3628 * Defining:: An alternate way to set a variable
3629 to a verbatim string.
3630 * Environment:: Variable values can come from the environment.
3631 * Automatic:: Some special variables have predefined
3632 meanings for use with implicit rules.
3635 @node Reference, Flavors, , Using Variables
3636 @section Basics of Variable References
3637 @cindex variables, how to reference
3638 @cindex reference to variables
3639 @cindex @code{$}, in variable reference
3640 @cindex dollar sign (@code{$}), in variable reference
3642 To substitute a variable's value, write a dollar sign followed by the name
3643 of the variable in parentheses or braces: either @samp{$(foo)} or
3644 @samp{$@{foo@}} is a valid reference to the variable @code{foo}. This
3645 special significance of @samp{$} is why you must write @samp{$$} to have
3646 the effect of a single dollar sign in a file name or command.
3648 Variable references can be used in any context: targets, dependencies,
3649 commands, most directives, and new variable values. Here is an
3650 example of a common case, where a variable holds the names of all the
3651 object files in a program:
3655 objects = program.o foo.o utils.o
3656 program : $(objects)
3657 cc -o program $(objects)
3663 Variable references work by strict textual substitution. Thus, the rule
3668 prog.o : prog.$(foo)
3669 $(foo)$(foo) -$(foo) prog.$(foo)
3674 could be used to compile a C program @file{prog.c}. Since spaces before
3675 the variable value are ignored in variable assignments, the value of
3676 @code{foo} is precisely @samp{c}. (Don't actually write your makefiles
3679 A dollar sign followed by a character other than a dollar sign,
3680 open-parenthesis or open-brace treats that single character as the
3681 variable name. Thus, you could reference the variable @code{x} with
3682 @samp{$x}. However, this practice is strongly discouraged, except in
3683 the case of the automatic variables (@pxref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}).
3685 @node Flavors, Advanced, Reference, Using Variables
3686 @section The Two Flavors of Variables
3687 @cindex flavors of variables
3688 @cindex recursive variable expansion
3689 @cindex variables, flavors
3690 @cindex recursively expanded variables
3691 @cindex variables, recursively expanded
3693 There are two ways that a variable in GNU @code{make} can have a value;
3694 we call them the two @dfn{flavors} of variables. The two flavors are
3695 distinguished in how they are defined and in what they do when expanded.
3698 The first flavor of variable is a @dfn{recursively expanded} variable.
3699 Variables of this sort are defined by lines using @samp{=}
3700 (@pxref{Setting, ,Setting Variables}) or by the @code{define} directive
3701 (@pxref{Defining, ,Defining Variables Verbatim}). The value you specify
3702 is installed verbatim; if it contains references to other variables,
3703 these references are expanded whenever this variable is substituted (in
3704 the course of expanding some other string). When this happens, it is
3705 called @dfn{recursive expansion}.@refill
3718 will echo @samp{Huh?}: @samp{$(foo)} expands to @samp{$(bar)} which
3719 expands to @samp{$(ugh)} which finally expands to @samp{Huh?}.@refill
3721 This flavor of variable is the only sort supported by other versions of
3722 @code{make}. It has its advantages and its disadvantages. An advantage
3723 (most would say) is that:
3726 CFLAGS = $(include_dirs) -O
3727 include_dirs = -Ifoo -Ibar
3731 will do what was intended: when @samp{CFLAGS} is expanded in a command,
3732 it will expand to @samp{-Ifoo -Ibar -O}. A major disadvantage is that you
3733 cannot append something on the end of a variable, as in
3736 CFLAGS = $(CFLAGS) -O
3740 because it will cause an infinite loop in the variable expansion.
3741 (Actually @code{make} detects the infinite loop and reports an error.)
3742 @cindex loops in variable expansion
3743 @cindex variables, loops in expansion
3745 Another disadvantage is that any functions
3746 (@pxref{Functions, ,Functions for Transforming Text})
3747 referenced in the definition will be executed every time the variable is
3748 expanded. This makes @code{make} run slower; worse, it causes the
3749 @code{wildcard} and @code{shell} functions to give unpredictable results
3750 because you cannot easily control when they are called, or even how many
3753 To avoid all the problems and inconveniences of recursively expanded
3754 variables, there is another flavor: simply expanded variables.
3756 @cindex simply expanded variables
3757 @cindex variables, simply expanded
3759 @dfn{Simply expanded variables} are defined by lines using @samp{:=}
3760 (@pxref{Setting, ,Setting Variables}).
3761 The value of a simply expanded variable is scanned
3762 once and for all, expanding any references to other variables and
3763 functions, when the variable is defined. The actual value of the simply
3764 expanded variable is the result of expanding the text that you write.
3765 It does not contain any references to other variables; it contains their
3766 values @emph{as of the time this variable was defined}. Therefore,
3782 When a simply expanded variable is referenced, its value is substituted
3785 Here is a somewhat more complicated example, illustrating the use of
3786 @samp{:=} in conjunction with the @code{shell} function.
3787 (@xref{Shell Function, , The @code{shell} Function}.) This example
3788 also shows use of the variable @code{MAKELEVEL}, which is changed
3789 when it is passed down from level to level.
3790 (@xref{Variables/Recursion, , Communicating Variables to a
3791 Sub-@code{make}}, for information about @code{MAKELEVEL}.)
3797 ifeq (0,$@{MAKELEVEL@})
3798 cur-dir := $(shell pwd)
3799 whoami := $(shell whoami)
3800 host-type := $(shell arch)
3801 MAKE := $@{MAKE@} host-type=$@{host-type@} whoami=$@{whoami@}
3807 An advantage of this use of @samp{:=} is that a typical
3808 `descend into a directory' command then looks like this:
3813 $@{MAKE@} cur-dir=$@{cur-dir@}/$@@ -C $@@ all
3817 Simply expanded variables generally make complicated makefile programming
3818 more predictable because they work like variables in most programming
3819 languages. They allow you to redefine a variable using its own value (or
3820 its value processed in some way by one of the expansion functions) and to
3821 use the expansion functions much more efficiently
3822 (@pxref{Functions, ,Functions for Transforming Text}).
3824 @cindex spaces, in variable values
3825 @cindex whitespace, in variable values
3826 @cindex variables, spaces in values
3827 You can also use them to introduce controlled leading whitespace into
3828 variable values. Leading whitespace characters are discarded from your
3829 input before substitution of variable references and function calls;
3830 this means you can include leading spaces in a variable value by
3831 protecting them with variable references, like this:
3835 space := $(nullstring) # end of the line
3839 Here the value of the variable @code{space} is precisely one space. The
3840 comment @w{@samp{# end of the line}} is included here just for clarity.
3841 Since trailing space characters are @emph{not} stripped from variable
3842 values, just a space at the end of the line would have the same effect
3843 (but be rather hard to read). If you put whitespace at the end of a
3844 variable value, it is a good idea to put a comment like that at the end
3845 of the line to make your intent clear. Conversely, if you do @emph{not}
3846 want any whitespace characters at the end of your variable value, you
3847 must remember not to put a random comment on the end of the line after
3848 some whitespace, such as this:
3851 dir := /foo/bar # directory to put the frobs in
3855 Here the value of the variable @code{dir} is @w{@samp{/foo/bar }}
3856 (with four trailing spaces), which was probably not the intention.
3857 (Imagine something like @w{@samp{$(dir)/file}} with this definition!)
3859 @node Advanced, Values, Flavors, Using Variables
3860 @section Advanced Features for Reference to Variables
3861 @cindex reference to variables
3863 This section describes some advanced features you can use to reference
3864 variables in more flexible ways.
3867 * Substitution Refs:: Referencing a variable with
3868 substitutions on the value.
3869 * Computed Names:: Computing the name of the variable to refer to.
3872 @node Substitution Refs, Computed Names, , Advanced
3873 @subsection Substitution References
3874 @cindex modified variable reference
3875 @cindex substitution variable reference
3876 @cindex variables, modified reference
3877 @cindex variables, substitution reference
3879 @cindex variables, substituting suffix in
3880 @cindex suffix, substituting in variables
3881 A @dfn{substitution reference} substitutes the value of a variable with
3882 alterations that you specify. It has the form
3883 @samp{$(@var{var}:@var{a}=@var{b})} (or
3884 @samp{$@{@var{var}:@var{a}=@var{b}@}}) and its meaning is to take the value
3885 of the variable @var{var}, replace every @var{a} at the end of a word with
3886 @var{b} in that value, and substitute the resulting string.
3888 When we say ``at the end of a word'', we mean that @var{a} must appear
3889 either followed by whitespace or at the end of the value in order to be
3890 replaced; other occurrences of @var{a} in the value are unaltered. For
3899 sets @samp{bar} to @samp{a.c b.c c.c}. @xref{Setting, ,Setting Variables}.
3901 A substitution reference is actually an abbreviation for use of the
3902 @code{patsubst} expansion function (@pxref{Text Functions, ,Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}). We provide
3903 substitution references as well as @code{patsubst} for compatibility with
3904 other implementations of @code{make}.
3907 Another type of substitution reference lets you use the full power of
3908 the @code{patsubst} function. It has the same form
3909 @samp{$(@var{var}:@var{a}=@var{b})} described above, except that now
3910 @var{a} must contain a single @samp{%} character. This case is
3911 equivalent to @samp{$(patsubst @var{a},@var{b},$(@var{var}))}.
3912 @xref{Text Functions, ,Functions for String Substitution and Analysis},
3913 for a description of the @code{patsubst} function.@refill
3917 @exdent For example:
3920 bar := $(foo:%.o=%.c)
3925 sets @samp{bar} to @samp{a.c b.c c.c}.
3927 @node Computed Names, , Substitution Refs, Advanced
3928 @subsection Computed Variable Names
3929 @cindex nested variable reference
3930 @cindex computed variable name
3931 @cindex variables, computed names
3932 @cindex variables, nested references
3933 @cindex variables, @samp{$} in name
3934 @cindex @code{$}, in variable name
3935 @cindex dollar sign (@code{$}), in variable name
3937 Computed variable names are a complicated concept needed only for
3938 sophisticated makefile programming. For most purposes you need not
3939 consider them, except to know that making a variable with a dollar sign
3940 in its name might have strange results. However, if you are the type
3941 that wants to understand everything, or you are actually interested in
3942 what they do, read on.
3944 Variables may be referenced inside the name of a variable. This is
3945 called a @dfn{computed variable name} or a @dfn{nested variable
3946 reference}. For example,
3955 defines @code{a} as @samp{z}: the @samp{$(x)} inside @samp{$($(x))} expands
3956 to @samp{y}, so @samp{$($(x))} expands to @samp{$(y)} which in turn expands
3957 to @samp{z}. Here the name of the variable to reference is not stated
3958 explicitly; it is computed by expansion of @samp{$(x)}. The reference
3959 @samp{$(x)} here is nested within the outer variable reference.
3961 The previous example shows two levels of nesting, but any number of levels
3962 is possible. For example, here are three levels:
3972 Here the innermost @samp{$(x)} expands to @samp{y}, so @samp{$($(x))}
3973 expands to @samp{$(y)} which in turn expands to @samp{z}; now we have
3974 @samp{$(z)}, which becomes @samp{u}.
3976 References to recursively-expanded variables within a variable name are
3977 reexpanded in the usual fashion. For example:
3987 defines @code{a} as @samp{Hello}: @samp{$($(x))} becomes @samp{$($(y))}
3988 which becomes @samp{$(z)} which becomes @samp{Hello}.
3990 Nested variable references can also contain modified references and
3991 function invocations (@pxref{Functions, ,Functions for Transforming Text}),
3992 just like any other reference.
3993 For example, using the @code{subst} function
3994 (@pxref{Text Functions, ,Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}):
4000 y = $(subst 1,2,$(x))
4007 eventually defines @code{a} as @samp{Hello}. It is doubtful that anyone
4008 would ever want to write a nested reference as convoluted as this one, but
4009 it works: @samp{$($($(z)))} expands to @samp{$($(y))} which becomes
4010 @samp{$($(subst 1,2,$(x)))}. This gets the value @samp{variable1} from
4011 @code{x} and changes it by substitution to @samp{variable2}, so that the
4012 entire string becomes @samp{$(variable2)}, a simple variable reference
4013 whose value is @samp{Hello}.@refill
4015 A computed variable name need not consist entirely of a single variable
4016 reference. It can contain several variable references, as well as some
4017 invariant text. For example,
4026 a_files := filea fileb
4027 1_files := file1 file2
4031 ifeq "$(use_a)" "yes"
4039 ifeq "$(use_dirs)" "yes"
4045 dirs := $($(a1)_$(df))
4050 will give @code{dirs} the same value as @code{a_dirs}, @code{1_dirs},
4051 @code{a_files} or @code{1_files} depending on the settings of @code{use_a}
4052 and @code{use_dirs}.@refill
4054 Computed variable names can also be used in substitution references:
4058 a_objects := a.o b.o c.o
4059 1_objects := 1.o 2.o 3.o
4061 sources := $($(a1)_objects:.o=.c)
4066 defines @code{sources} as either @samp{a.c b.c c.c} or @samp{1.c 2.c 3.c},
4067 depending on the value of @code{a1}.
4069 The only restriction on this sort of use of nested variable references
4070 is that they cannot specify part of the name of a function to be called.
4071 This is because the test for a recognized function name is done before
4072 the expansion of nested references. For example,
4088 foo := $($(func) $(bar))
4093 attempts to give @samp{foo} the value of the variable @samp{sort a d b g
4094 q c} or @samp{strip a d b g q c}, rather than giving @samp{a d b g q c}
4095 as the argument to either the @code{sort} or the @code{strip} function.
4096 This restriction could be removed in the future if that change is shown
4099 You can also use computed variable names in the left-hand side of a
4100 variable assignment, or in a @code{define} directive, as in:
4104 $(dir)_sources := $(wildcard $(dir)/*.c)
4106 lpr $($(dir)_sources)
4111 This example defines the variables @samp{dir}, @samp{foo_sources}, and
4114 Note that @dfn{nested variable references} are quite different from
4115 @dfn{recursively expanded variables}
4116 (@pxref{Flavors, ,The Two Flavors of Variables}), though both are
4117 used together in complex ways when doing makefile programming.@refill
4119 @node Values, Setting, Advanced, Using Variables
4120 @section How Variables Get Their Values
4121 @cindex variables, how they get their values
4122 @cindex value, how a variable gets it
4124 Variables can get values in several different ways:
4128 You can specify an overriding value when you run @code{make}.
4129 @xref{Overriding, ,Overriding Variables}.
4132 You can specify a value in the makefile, either
4133 with an assignment (@pxref{Setting, ,Setting Variables}) or with a
4134 verbatim definition (@pxref{Defining, ,Defining Variables Verbatim}).@refill
4137 Variables in the environment become @code{make} variables.
4138 @xref{Environment, ,Variables from the Environment}.
4141 Several @dfn{automatic} variables are given new values for each rule.
4142 Each of these has a single conventional use.
4143 @xref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}.
4146 Several variables have constant initial values.
4147 @xref{Implicit Variables, ,Variables Used by Implicit Rules}.
4150 @node Setting, Appending, Values, Using Variables
4151 @section Setting Variables
4152 @cindex setting variables
4153 @cindex variables, setting
4157 To set a variable from the makefile, write a line starting with the
4158 variable name followed by @samp{=} or @samp{:=}. Whatever follows the
4159 @samp{=} or @samp{:=} on the line becomes the value. For example,
4162 objects = main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o
4166 defines a variable named @code{objects}. Whitespace around the variable
4167 name and immediately after the @samp{=} is ignored.
4169 Variables defined with @samp{=} are @dfn{recursively expanded} variables.
4170 Variables defined with @samp{:=} are @dfn{simply expanded} variables; these
4171 definitions can contain variable references which will be expanded before
4172 the definition is made. @xref{Flavors, ,The Two Flavors of Variables}.
4174 The variable name may contain function and variable references, which
4175 are expanded when the line is read to find the actual variable name to use.
4177 There is no limit on the length of the value of a variable except the
4178 amount of swapping space on the computer. When a variable definition is
4179 long, it is a good idea to break it into several lines by inserting
4180 backslash-newline at convenient places in the definition. This will not
4181 affect the functioning of @code{make}, but it will make the makefile easier
4184 Most variable names are considered to have the empty string as a value if
4185 you have never set them. Several variables have built-in initial values
4186 that are not empty, but you can set them in the usual ways
4187 (@pxref{Implicit Variables, ,Variables Used by Implicit Rules}).
4188 Several special variables are set
4189 automatically to a new value for each rule; these are called the
4190 @dfn{automatic} variables (@pxref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}).
4192 @node Appending, Override Directive, Setting, Using Variables
4193 @section Appending More Text to Variables
4195 @cindex appending to variables
4196 @cindex variables, appending to
4198 Often it is useful to add more text to the value of a variable already defined.
4199 You do this with a line containing @samp{+=}, like this:
4202 objects += another.o
4206 This takes the value of the variable @code{objects}, and adds the text
4207 @samp{another.o} to it (preceded by a single space). Thus:
4210 objects = main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o
4211 objects += another.o
4215 sets @code{objects} to @samp{main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o another.o}.
4217 Using @samp{+=} is similar to:
4220 objects = main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o
4221 objects := $(objects) another.o
4225 but differs in ways that become important when you use more complex values.
4227 When the variable in question has not been defined before, @samp{+=}
4228 acts just like normal @samp{=}: it defines a recursively-expanded
4229 variable. However, when there @emph{is} a previous definition, exactly
4230 what @samp{+=} does depends on what flavor of variable you defined
4231 originally. @xref{Flavors, ,The Two Flavors of Variables}, for an
4232 explanation of the two flavors of variables.
4234 When you add to a variable's value with @samp{+=}, @code{make} acts
4235 essentially as if you had included the extra text in the initial
4236 definition of the variable. If you defined it first with @samp{:=},
4237 making it a simply-expanded variable, @samp{+=} adds to that
4238 simply-expanded definition, and expands the new text before appending it
4239 to the old value just as @samp{:=} does
4240 (@pxref{Setting, ,Setting Variables}, for a full explanation of @samp{:=}).
4249 is exactly equivalent to:
4254 variable := $(variable) more
4257 On the other hand, when you use @samp{+=} with a variable that you defined
4258 first to be recursively-expanded using plain @samp{=}, @code{make} does
4259 something a bit different. Recall that when you define a
4260 recursively-expanded variable, @code{make} does not expand the value you set
4261 for variable and function references immediately. Instead it stores the text
4262 verbatim, and saves these variable and function references to be expanded
4263 later, when you refer to the new variable (@pxref{Flavors, ,The Two Flavors
4264 of Variables}). When you use @samp{+=} on a recursively-expanded variable,
4265 it is this unexpanded text to which @code{make} appends the new text you
4276 is roughly equivalent to:
4281 variable = $(temp) more
4286 except that of course it never defines a variable called @code{temp}.
4287 The importance of this comes when the variable's old value contains
4288 variable references. Take this common example:
4291 CFLAGS = $(includes) -O
4293 CFLAGS += -pg # enable profiling
4297 The first line defines the @code{CFLAGS} variable with a reference to another
4298 variable, @code{includes}. (@code{CFLAGS} is used by the rules for C
4299 compilation; @pxref{Catalogue of Rules, ,Catalogue of Implicit Rules}.)
4300 Using @samp{=} for the definition makes @code{CFLAGS} a recursively-expanded
4301 variable, meaning @w{@samp{$(includes) -O}} is @emph{not} expanded when
4302 @code{make} processes the definition of @code{CFLAGS}. Thus, @code{includes}
4303 need not be defined yet for its value to take effect. It only has to be
4304 defined before any reference to @code{CFLAGS}. If we tried to append to the
4305 value of @code{CFLAGS} without using @samp{+=}, we might do it like this:
4308 CFLAGS := $(CFLAGS) -pg # enable profiling
4312 This is pretty close, but not quite what we want. Using @samp{:=}
4313 redefines @code{CFLAGS} as a simply-expanded variable; this means
4314 @code{make} expands the text @w{@samp{$(CFLAGS) -pg}} before setting the
4315 variable. If @code{includes} is not yet defined, we get @w{@samp{ -O
4316 -pg}}, and a later definition of @code{includes} will have no effect.
4317 Conversely, by using @samp{+=} we set @code{CFLAGS} to the
4318 @emph{unexpanded} value @w{@samp{$(includes) -O -pg}}. Thus we preserve
4319 the reference to @code{includes}, so if that variable gets defined at
4320 any later point, a reference like @samp{$(CFLAGS)} still uses its
4323 @node Override Directive, Defining, Appending, Using Variables
4324 @section The @code{override} Directive
4326 @cindex overriding with @code{override}
4327 @cindex variables, overriding
4329 If a variable has been set with a command argument
4330 (@pxref{Overriding, ,Overriding Variables}),
4331 then ordinary assignments in the makefile are ignored. If you want to set
4332 the variable in the makefile even though it was set with a command
4333 argument, you can use an @code{override} directive, which is a line that
4334 looks like this:@refill
4337 override @var{variable} = @var{value}
4344 override @var{variable} := @var{value}
4347 To append more text to a variable defined on the command line, use:
4350 override @var{variable} += @var{more text}
4354 @xref{Appending, ,Appending More Text to Variables}.
4356 The @code{override} directive was not invented for escalation in the war
4357 between makefiles and command arguments. It was invented so you can alter
4358 and add to values that the user specifies with command arguments.
4360 For example, suppose you always want the @samp{-g} switch when you run the
4361 C compiler, but you would like to allow the user to specify the other
4362 switches with a command argument just as usual. You could use this
4363 @code{override} directive:
4366 override CFLAGS += -g
4369 You can also use @code{override} directives with @code{define} directives.
4370 This is done as you might expect:
4380 See the next section for information about @code{define}.
4383 @xref{Defining, ,Defining Variables Verbatim}.
4386 @node Defining, Environment, Override Directive, Using Variables
4387 @section Defining Variables Verbatim
4390 @cindex verbatim variable definition
4391 @cindex defining variables verbatim
4392 @cindex variables, defining verbatim
4394 Another way to set the value of a variable is to use the @code{define}
4395 directive. This directive has an unusual syntax which allows newline
4396 characters to be included in the value, which is convenient for defining
4397 canned sequences of commands
4398 (@pxref{Sequences, ,Defining Canned Command Sequences}).
4400 The @code{define} directive is followed on the same line by the name of the
4401 variable and nothing more. The value to give the variable appears on the
4402 following lines. The end of the value is marked by a line containing just
4403 the word @code{endef}. Aside from this difference in syntax, @code{define}
4404 works just like @samp{=}: it creates a recursively-expanded variable
4405 (@pxref{Flavors, ,The Two Flavors of Variables}).
4406 The variable name may contain function and variable references, which
4407 are expanded when the directive is read to find the actual variable name
4417 The value in an ordinary assignment cannot contain a newline; but the
4418 newlines that separate the lines of the value in a @code{define} become
4419 part of the variable's value (except for the final newline which precedes
4420 the @code{endef} and is not considered part of the value).@refill
4423 The previous example is functionally equivalent to this:
4426 two-lines = echo foo; echo $(bar)
4430 since two commands separated by semicolon behave much like two separate
4431 shell commands. However, note that using two separate lines means
4432 @code{make} will invoke the shell twice, running an independent subshell
4433 for each line. @xref{Execution, ,Command Execution}.
4435 If you want variable definitions made with @code{define} to take
4436 precedence over command-line variable definitions, you can use the
4437 @code{override} directive together with @code{define}:
4440 override define two-lines
4447 @xref{Override Directive, ,The @code{override} Directive}.
4449 @node Environment, , Defining, Using Variables
4450 @section Variables from the Environment
4452 @cindex variables, environment
4454 Variables in @code{make} can come from the environment in which
4455 @code{make} is run. Every environment variable that @code{make} sees when
4456 it starts up is transformed into a @code{make} variable with the same name
4457 and value. But an explicit assignment in the makefile, or with a command
4458 argument, overrides the environment. (If the @samp{-e} flag is specified,
4459 then values from the environment override assignments in the makefile.
4460 @xref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options}.
4461 But this is not recommended practice.)
4463 Thus, by setting the variable @code{CFLAGS} in your environment, you can
4464 cause all C compilations in most makefiles to use the compiler switches you
4465 prefer. This is safe for variables with standard or conventional meanings
4466 because you know that no makefile will use them for other things. (But
4467 this is not totally reliable; some makefiles set @code{CFLAGS} explicitly
4468 and therefore are not affected by the value in the environment.)
4470 When @code{make} is invoked recursively, variables defined in the
4471 outer invocation can be passed to inner invocations through the
4472 environment (@pxref{Recursion, ,Recursive Use of @code{make}}). By
4473 default, only variables that came from the environment or the command
4474 line are passed to recursive invocations. You can use the
4475 @code{export} directive to pass other variables.
4476 @xref{Variables/Recursion, , Communicating Variables to a
4477 Sub-@code{make}}, for full details.
4479 Other use of variables from the environment is not recommended. It is not
4480 wise for makefiles to depend for their functioning on environment variables
4481 set up outside their control, since this would cause different users to get
4482 different results from the same makefile. This is against the whole
4483 purpose of most makefiles.
4485 Such problems would be especially likely with the variable @code{SHELL},
4486 which is normally present in the environment to specify the user's choice
4487 of interactive shell. It would be very undesirable for this choice to
4488 affect @code{make}. So @code{make} ignores the environment value of
4489 @code{SHELL}.@refill
4491 @node Conditionals, Functions, Using Variables, Top
4492 @chapter Conditional Parts of Makefiles
4494 @cindex conditionals
4495 A @dfn{conditional} causes part of a makefile to be obeyed or ignored
4496 depending on the values of variables. Conditionals can compare the
4497 value of one variable to another, or the value of a variable to
4498 a constant string. Conditionals control what @code{make} actually
4499 ``sees'' in the makefile, so they @emph{cannot} be used to control shell
4500 commands at the time of execution.@refill
4503 * Conditional Example:: Example of a conditional
4504 * Conditional Syntax:: The syntax of conditionals.
4505 * Testing Flags:: Conditionals that test flags.
4508 @node Conditional Example, Conditional Syntax, , Conditionals
4509 @section Example of a Conditional
4511 The following example of a conditional tells @code{make} to use one set
4512 of libraries if the @code{CC} variable is @samp{gcc}, and a different
4513 set of libraries otherwise. It works by controlling which of two
4514 command lines will be used as the command for a rule. The result is
4515 that @samp{CC=gcc} as an argument to @code{make} changes not only which
4516 compiler is used but also which libraries are linked.
4519 libs_for_gcc = -lgnu
4524 $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(libs_for_gcc)
4526 $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(normal_libs)
4530 This conditional uses three directives: one @code{ifeq}, one @code{else}
4531 and one @code{endif}.
4533 The @code{ifeq} directive begins the conditional, and specifies the
4534 condition. It contains two arguments, separated by a comma and surrounded
4535 by parentheses. Variable substitution is performed on both arguments and
4536 then they are compared. The lines of the makefile following the
4537 @code{ifeq} are obeyed if the two arguments match; otherwise they are
4540 The @code{else} directive causes the following lines to be obeyed if the
4541 previous conditional failed. In the example above, this means that the
4542 second alternative linking command is used whenever the first alternative
4543 is not used. It is optional to have an @code{else} in a conditional.
4545 The @code{endif} directive ends the conditional. Every conditional must
4546 end with an @code{endif}. Unconditional makefile text follows.
4548 As this example illustrates, conditionals work at the textual level:
4549 the lines of the conditional are treated as part of the makefile, or
4550 ignored, according to the condition. This is why the larger syntactic
4551 units of the makefile, such as rules, may cross the beginning or the
4552 end of the conditional.
4554 When the variable @code{CC} has the value @samp{gcc}, the above example has
4559 $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(libs_for_gcc)
4563 When the variable @code{CC} has any other value, the effect is this:
4567 $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(normal_libs)
4570 Equivalent results can be obtained in another way by conditionalizing a
4571 variable assignment and then using the variable unconditionally:
4574 libs_for_gcc = -lgnu
4578 libs=$(libs_for_gcc)
4584 $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(libs)
4587 @node Conditional Syntax, Testing Flags, Conditional Example, Conditionals
4588 @section Syntax of Conditionals
4596 The syntax of a simple conditional with no @code{else} is as follows:
4599 @var{conditional-directive}
4605 The @var{text-if-true} may be any lines of text, to be considered as part
4606 of the makefile if the condition is true. If the condition is false, no
4607 text is used instead.
4609 The syntax of a complex conditional is as follows:
4612 @var{conditional-directive}
4620 If the condition is true, @var{text-if-true} is used; otherwise,
4621 @var{text-if-false} is used instead. The @var{text-if-false} can be any
4622 number of lines of text.
4624 The syntax of the @var{conditional-directive} is the same whether the
4625 conditional is simple or complex. There are four different directives that
4626 test different conditions. Here is a table of them:
4629 @item ifeq (@var{arg1}, @var{arg2})
4630 @itemx ifeq '@var{arg1}' '@var{arg2}'
4631 @itemx ifeq "@var{arg1}" "@var{arg2}"
4632 @itemx ifeq "@var{arg1}" '@var{arg2}'
4633 @itemx ifeq '@var{arg1}' "@var{arg2}"
4634 Expand all variable references in @var{arg1} and @var{arg2} and
4635 compare them. If they are identical, the @var{text-if-true} is
4636 effective; otherwise, the @var{text-if-false}, if any, is effective.
4638 Often you want to test if a variable has a non-empty value. When the
4639 value results from complex expansions of variables and functions,
4640 expansions you would consider empty may actually contain whitespace
4641 characters and thus are not seen as empty. However, you can use the
4642 @code{strip} function (@pxref{Text Functions}) to avoid interpreting
4643 whitespace as a non-empty value. For example:
4647 ifeq ($(strip $(foo)),)
4654 will evaluate @var{text-if-empty} even if the expansion of
4655 @code{$(foo)} contains whitespace characters.
4657 @item ifneq (@var{arg1}, @var{arg2})
4658 @itemx ifneq '@var{arg1}' '@var{arg2}'
4659 @itemx ifneq "@var{arg1}" "@var{arg2}"
4660 @itemx ifneq "@var{arg1}" '@var{arg2}'
4661 @itemx ifneq '@var{arg1}' "@var{arg2}"
4662 Expand all variable references in @var{arg1} and @var{arg2} and
4663 compare them. If they are different, the @var{text-if-true} is
4664 effective; otherwise, the @var{text-if-false}, if any, is effective.
4666 @item ifdef @var{variable-name}
4667 If the variable @var{variable-name} has a non-empty value, the
4668 @var{text-if-true} is effective; otherwise, the @var{text-if-false},
4669 if any, is effective. Variables that have never been defined have an
4672 Note that @code{ifdef} only tests whether a variable has a value. It
4673 does not expand the variable to see if that value is nonempty.
4674 Consequently, tests using @code{ifdef} return true for all definitions
4675 except those like @code{foo =}. To test for an empty value, use
4676 @w{@code{ifeq ($(foo),)}}. For example,
4689 sets @samp{frobozz} to @samp{yes}, while:
4701 sets @samp{frobozz} to @samp{no}.
4703 @item ifndef @var{variable-name}
4704 If the variable @var{variable-name} has an empty value, the
4705 @var{text-if-true} is effective; otherwise, the @var{text-if-false},
4706 if any, is effective.
4709 Extra spaces are allowed and ignored at the beginning of the conditional
4710 directive line, but a tab is not allowed. (If the line begins with a tab,
4711 it will be considered a command for a rule.) Aside from this, extra spaces
4712 or tabs may be inserted with no effect anywhere except within the directive
4713 name or within an argument. A comment starting with @samp{#} may appear at
4714 the end of the line.
4716 The other two directives that play a part in a conditional are @code{else}
4717 and @code{endif}. Each of these directives is written as one word, with no
4718 arguments. Extra spaces are allowed and ignored at the beginning of the
4719 line, and spaces or tabs at the end. A comment starting with @samp{#} may
4720 appear at the end of the line.
4722 Conditionals affect which lines of the makefile @code{make} uses. If
4723 the condition is true, @code{make} reads the lines of the
4724 @var{text-if-true} as part of the makefile; if the condition is false,
4725 @code{make} ignores those lines completely. It follows that syntactic
4726 units of the makefile, such as rules, may safely be split across the
4727 beginning or the end of the conditional.@refill
4729 @code{make} evaluates conditionals when it reads a makefile.
4730 Consequently, you cannot use automatic variables in the tests of
4731 conditionals because they are not defined until commands are run
4732 (@pxref{Automatic, , Automatic Variables}).
4734 To prevent intolerable confusion, it is not permitted to start a
4735 conditional in one makefile and end it in another. However, you may
4736 write an @code{include} directive within a conditional, provided you do
4737 not attempt to terminate the conditional inside the included file.
4739 @node Testing Flags, , Conditional Syntax, Conditionals
4740 @section Conditionals that Test Flags
4742 You can write a conditional that tests @code{make} command flags such as
4743 @samp{-t} by using the variable @code{MAKEFLAGS} together with the
4744 @code{findstring} function
4745 (@pxref{Text Functions, , Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}).
4746 This is useful when @code{touch} is not enough to make a file appear up
4749 The @code{findstring} function determines whether one string appears as a
4750 substring of another. If you want to test for the @samp{-t} flag,
4751 use @samp{t} as the first string and the value of @code{MAKEFLAGS} as
4754 For example, here is how to arrange to use @samp{ranlib -t} to finish
4755 marking an archive file up to date:
4759 ifneq (,$(findstring t,$(MAKEFLAGS)))
4761 +ranlib -t archive.a
4768 The @samp{+} prefix marks those command lines as ``recursive'' so
4769 that they will be executed despite use of the @samp{-t} flag.
4770 @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive Use of @code{make}}.
4772 @node Functions, Running, Conditionals, Top
4773 @chapter Functions for Transforming Text
4776 @dfn{Functions} allow you to do text processing in the makefile to compute
4777 the files to operate on or the commands to use. You use a function in a
4778 @dfn{function call}, where you give the name of the function and some text
4779 (the @dfn{arguments}) for the function to operate on. The result of the
4780 function's processing is substituted into the makefile at the point of the
4781 call, just as a variable might be substituted.
4784 * Syntax of Functions:: How to write a function call.
4785 * Text Functions:: General-purpose text manipulation functions.
4786 * Filename Functions:: Functions for manipulating file names.
4787 * Foreach Function:: Repeat some text with controlled variation.
4788 * Origin Function:: Find where a variable got its value.
4789 * Shell Function:: Substitute the output of a shell command.
4792 @node Syntax of Functions, Text Functions, , Functions
4793 @section Function Call Syntax
4794 @cindex @code{$}, in function call
4795 @cindex dollar sign (@code{$}), in function call
4796 @cindex arguments of functions
4797 @cindex functions, syntax of
4799 A function call resembles a variable reference. It looks like this:
4802 $(@var{function} @var{arguments})
4809 $@{@var{function} @var{arguments}@}
4812 Here @var{function} is a function name; one of a short list of names that
4813 are part of @code{make}. There is no provision for defining new functions.
4815 The @var{arguments} are the arguments of the function. They are
4816 separated from the function name by one or more spaces or tabs, and if
4817 there is more than one argument, then they are separated by commas.
4818 Such whitespace and commas are not part of an argument's value. The
4819 delimiters which you use to surround the function call, whether
4820 parentheses or braces, can appear in an argument only in matching pairs;
4821 the other kind of delimiters may appear singly. If the arguments
4822 themselves contain other function calls or variable references, it is
4823 wisest to use the same kind of delimiters for all the references; write
4824 @w{@samp{$(subst a,b,$(x))}}, not @w{@samp{$(subst a,b,$@{x@})}}. This
4825 is because it is clearer, and because only one type of delimiter is
4826 matched to find the end of the reference.
4828 The text written for each argument is processed by substitution of
4829 variables and function calls to produce the argument value, which
4830 is the text on which the function acts. The substitution is done in the
4831 order in which the arguments appear.
4833 Commas and unmatched parentheses or braces cannot appear in the text of an
4834 argument as written; leading spaces cannot appear in the text of the first
4835 argument as written. These characters can be put into the argument value
4836 by variable substitution. First define variables @code{comma} and
4837 @code{space} whose values are isolated comma and space characters, then
4838 substitute these variables where such characters are wanted, like this:
4844 space:= $(empty) $(empty)
4846 bar:= $(subst $(space),$(comma),$(foo))
4847 # @r{bar is now `a,b,c'.}
4852 Here the @code{subst} function replaces each space with a comma, through
4853 the value of @code{foo}, and substitutes the result.
4855 @node Text Functions, Filename Functions, Syntax of Functions, Functions
4856 @section Functions for String Substitution and Analysis
4857 @cindex functions, for text
4859 Here are some functions that operate on strings:
4862 @item $(subst @var{from},@var{to},@var{text})
4864 Performs a textual replacement on the text @var{text}: each occurrence
4865 of @var{from} is replaced by @var{to}. The result is substituted for
4866 the function call. For example,
4869 $(subst ee,EE,feet on the street)
4872 substitutes the string @samp{fEEt on the strEEt}.
4874 @item $(patsubst @var{pattern},@var{replacement},@var{text})
4876 Finds whitespace-separated words in @var{text} that match
4877 @var{pattern} and replaces them with @var{replacement}. Here
4878 @var{pattern} may contain a @samp{%} which acts as a wildcard,
4879 matching any number of any characters within a word. If
4880 @var{replacement} also contains a @samp{%}, the @samp{%} is replaced
4881 by the text that matched the @samp{%} in @var{pattern}.@refill
4883 @cindex @code{%}, quoting in @code{patsubst}
4884 @cindex @code{%}, quoting with @code{\} (backslash)
4885 @cindex @code{\} (backslash), to quote @code{%}
4886 @cindex backslash (@code{\}), to quote @code{%}
4887 @cindex quoting @code{%}, in @code{patsubst}
4888 @samp{%} characters in @code{patsubst} function invocations can be
4889 quoted with preceding backslashes (@samp{\}). Backslashes that would
4890 otherwise quote @samp{%} characters can be quoted with more backslashes.
4891 Backslashes that quote @samp{%} characters or other backslashes are
4892 removed from the pattern before it is compared file names or has a stem
4893 substituted into it. Backslashes that are not in danger of quoting
4894 @samp{%} characters go unmolested. For example, the pattern
4895 @file{the\%weird\\%pattern\\} has @samp{the%weird\} preceding the
4896 operative @samp{%} character, and @samp{pattern\\} following it. The
4897 final two backslashes are left alone because they cannot affect any
4898 @samp{%} character.@refill
4900 Whitespace between words is folded into single space characters;
4901 leading and trailing whitespace is discarded.
4906 $(patsubst %.c,%.o,x.c.c bar.c)
4910 produces the value @samp{x.c.o bar.o}.
4912 Substitution references (@pxref{Substitution Refs, ,Substitution
4913 References}) are a simpler way to get the effect of the @code{patsubst}
4917 $(@var{var}:@var{pattern}=@var{replacement})
4924 $(patsubst @var{pattern},@var{replacement},$(@var{var}))
4927 The second shorthand simplifies one of the most common uses of
4928 @code{patsubst}: replacing the suffix at the end of file names.
4931 $(@var{var}:@var{suffix}=@var{replacement})
4938 $(patsubst %@var{suffix},%@var{replacement},$(@var{var}))
4942 For example, you might have a list of object files:
4945 objects = foo.o bar.o baz.o
4949 To get the list of corresponding source files, you could simply write:
4956 instead of using the general form:
4959 $(patsubst %.o,%.c,$(objects))
4962 @item $(strip @var{string})
4963 @cindex stripping whitespace
4964 @cindex whitespace, stripping
4965 @cindex spaces, stripping
4967 Removes leading and trailing whitespace from @var{string} and replaces
4968 each internal sequence of one or more whitespace characters with a
4969 single space. Thus, @samp{$(strip a b c )} results in @w{@samp{a b c}}.
4971 The function @code{strip} can be very useful when used in conjunction
4972 with conditionals. When comparing something with the empty string
4973 @samp{} using @code{ifeq} or @code{ifneq}, you usually want a string of
4974 just whitespace to match the empty string (@pxref{Conditionals}).
4976 Thus, the following may fail to have the desired results:
4980 ifneq "$(needs_made)" ""
4983 all:;@@echo 'Nothing to make!'
4988 Replacing the variable reference @w{@samp{$(needs_made)}} with the
4989 function call @w{@samp{$(strip $(needs_made))}} in the @code{ifneq}
4990 directive would make it more robust.@refill
4992 @item $(findstring @var{find},@var{in})
4994 @cindex searching for strings
4995 @cindex finding strings
4996 @cindex strings, searching for
4997 Searches @var{in} for an occurrence of @var{find}. If it occurs, the
4998 value is @var{find}; otherwise, the value is empty. You can use this
4999 function in a conditional to test for the presence of a specific
5000 substring in a given string. Thus, the two examples,
5003 $(findstring a,a b c)
5008 produce the values @samp{a} and @samp{} (the empty string),
5009 respectively. @xref{Testing Flags}, for a practical application of
5010 @code{findstring}.@refill
5014 @cindex filtering words
5015 @cindex words, filtering
5016 @item $(filter @var{pattern}@dots{},@var{text})
5017 Removes all whitespace-separated words in @var{text} that do
5018 @emph{not} match any of the @var{pattern} words, returning only
5019 matching words. The patterns are written using @samp{%}, just like
5020 the patterns used in the @code{patsubst} function above.@refill
5022 The @code{filter} function can be used to separate out different types
5023 of strings (such as file names) in a variable. For example:
5026 sources := foo.c bar.c baz.s ugh.h
5028 cc $(filter %.c %.s,$(sources)) -o foo
5032 says that @file{foo} depends of @file{foo.c}, @file{bar.c},
5033 @file{baz.s} and @file{ugh.h} but only @file{foo.c}, @file{bar.c} and
5034 @file{baz.s} should be specified in the command to the
5037 @item $(filter-out @var{pattern}@dots{},@var{text})
5039 @cindex filtering out words
5040 @cindex words, filtering out
5041 Removes all whitespace-separated words in @var{text} that @emph{do}
5042 match the @var{pattern} words, returning only the words that @emph{do
5043 not} match. This is the exact opposite of the @code{filter}
5050 objects=main1.o foo.o main2.o bar.o
5051 mains=main1.o main2.o
5056 the following generates a list which contains all the object files not
5060 $(filter-out $(mains),$(objects))
5065 @cindex sorting words
5066 @item $(sort @var{list})
5067 Sorts the words of @var{list} in lexical order, removing duplicate
5068 words. The output is a list of words separated by single spaces.
5072 $(sort foo bar lose)
5076 returns the value @samp{bar foo lose}.
5078 @cindex removing duplicate words
5079 @cindex duplicate words, removing
5080 @cindex words, removing duplicates
5081 Incidentally, since @code{sort} removes duplicate words, you can use
5082 it for this purpose even if you don't care about the sort order.
5085 Here is a realistic example of the use of @code{subst} and
5086 @code{patsubst}. Suppose that a makefile uses the @code{VPATH} variable
5087 to specify a list of directories that @code{make} should search for
5089 (@pxref{General Search, , @code{VPATH} Search Path for All Dependencies}).
5090 This example shows how to
5091 tell the C compiler to search for header files in the same list of
5094 The value of @code{VPATH} is a list of directories separated by colons,
5095 such as @samp{src:../headers}. First, the @code{subst} function is used to
5096 change the colons to spaces:
5099 $(subst :, ,$(VPATH))
5103 This produces @samp{src ../headers}. Then @code{patsubst} is used to turn
5104 each directory name into a @samp{-I} flag. These can be added to the
5105 value of the variable @code{CFLAGS}, which is passed automatically to the C
5106 compiler, like this:
5109 override CFLAGS += $(patsubst %,-I%,$(subst :, ,$(VPATH)))
5113 The effect is to append the text @samp{-Isrc -I../headers} to the
5114 previously given value of @code{CFLAGS}. The @code{override} directive is
5115 used so that the new value is assigned even if the previous value of
5116 @code{CFLAGS} was specified with a command argument (@pxref{Override
5117 Directive, , The @code{override} Directive}).
5119 @node Filename Functions, Foreach Function, Text Functions, Functions
5120 @section Functions for File Names
5121 @cindex functions, for file names
5122 @cindex file name functions
5124 Several of the built-in expansion functions relate specifically to
5125 taking apart file names or lists of file names.
5127 Each of the following functions performs a specific transformation on a
5128 file name. The argument of the function is regarded as a series of file
5129 names, separated by whitespace. (Leading and trailing whitespace is
5130 ignored.) Each file name in the series is transformed in the same way and
5131 the results are concatenated with single spaces between them.
5134 @item $(dir @var{names}@dots{})
5136 @cindex directory part
5137 @cindex file name, directory part
5138 Extracts the directory-part of each file name in @var{names}. The
5139 directory-part of the file name is everything up through (and
5140 including) the last slash in it. If the file name contains no slash,
5141 the directory part is the string @samp{./}. For example,
5144 $(dir src/foo.c hacks)
5148 produces the result @samp{src/ ./}.
5150 @item $(notdir @var{names}@dots{})
5152 @cindex file name, nondirectory part
5153 @cindex nondirectory part
5154 Extracts all but the directory-part of each file name in @var{names}.
5155 If the file name contains no slash, it is left unchanged. Otherwise,
5156 everything through the last slash is removed from it.
5158 A file name that ends with a slash becomes an empty string. This is
5159 unfortunate, because it means that the result does not always have the
5160 same number of whitespace-separated file names as the argument had;
5161 but we do not see any other valid alternative.
5166 $(notdir src/foo.c hacks)
5170 produces the result @samp{foo.c hacks}.
5172 @item $(suffix @var{names}@dots{})
5174 @cindex suffix, function to find
5175 @cindex file name suffix
5176 Extracts the suffix of each file name in @var{names}. If the file name
5177 contains a period, the suffix is everything starting with the last
5178 period. Otherwise, the suffix is the empty string. This frequently
5179 means that the result will be empty when @var{names} is not, and if
5180 @var{names} contains multiple file names, the result may contain fewer
5186 $(suffix src/foo.c hacks)
5190 produces the result @samp{.c}.
5192 @item $(basename @var{names}@dots{})
5195 @cindex file name, basename of
5196 Extracts all but the suffix of each file name in @var{names}. If the
5197 file name contains a period, the basename is everything starting up to
5198 (and not including) the last period. Otherwise, the basename is the
5199 entire file name. For example,
5202 $(basename src/foo.c hacks)
5206 produces the result @samp{src/foo hacks}.
5208 @c plural convention with dots (be consistent)
5209 @item $(addsuffix @var{suffix},@var{names}@dots{})
5211 @cindex suffix, adding
5212 @cindex file name suffix, adding
5213 The argument @var{names} is regarded as a series of names, separated
5214 by whitespace; @var{suffix} is used as a unit. The value of
5215 @var{suffix} is appended to the end of each individual name and the
5216 resulting larger names are concatenated with single spaces between
5220 $(addsuffix .c,foo bar)
5224 produces the result @samp{foo.c bar.c}.
5226 @item $(addprefix @var{prefix},@var{names}@dots{})
5228 @cindex prefix, adding
5229 @cindex file name prefix, adding
5230 The argument @var{names} is regarded as a series of names, separated
5231 by whitespace; @var{prefix} is used as a unit. The value of
5232 @var{prefix} is prepended to the front of each individual name and the
5233 resulting larger names are concatenated with single spaces between
5237 $(addprefix src/,foo bar)
5241 produces the result @samp{src/foo src/bar}.
5243 @item $(join @var{list1},@var{list2})
5245 @cindex joining lists of words
5246 @cindex words, joining lists
5247 Concatenates the two arguments word by word: the two first words (one
5248 from each argument) concatenated form the first word of the result, the
5249 two second words form the second word of the result, and so on. So the
5250 @var{n}th word of the result comes from the @var{n}th word of each
5251 argument. If one argument has more words that the other, the extra
5252 words are copied unchanged into the result.
5254 For example, @samp{$(join a b,.c .o)} produces @samp{a.c b.o}.
5256 Whitespace between the words in the lists is not preserved; it is
5257 replaced with a single space.
5259 This function can merge the results of the @code{dir} and
5260 @code{notdir} functions, to produce the original list of files which
5261 was given to those two functions.@refill
5263 @item $(word @var{n},@var{text})
5265 @cindex words, selecting
5266 @cindex selecting words
5267 Returns the @var{n}th word of @var{text}. The legitimate values of
5268 @var{n} start from 1. If @var{n} is bigger than the number of words
5269 in @var{text}, the value is empty. For example,
5272 $(word 2, foo bar baz)
5278 @c Following item phrased to prevent overfull hbox. --RJC 17 Jul 92
5279 @item $(words @var{text})
5281 @cindex words, finding number
5282 Returns the number of words in @var{text}.
5283 Thus, the last word of @var{text} is
5284 @w{@code{$(word $(words @var{text}),@var{text})}}.@refill
5286 @item $(firstword @var{names}@dots{})
5288 @cindex words, extracting first
5289 The argument @var{names} is regarded as a series of names, separated
5290 by whitespace. The value is the first name in the series. The rest
5291 of the names are ignored.
5296 $(firstword foo bar)
5300 produces the result @samp{foo}. Although @code{$(firstword
5301 @var{text})} is the same as @code{$(word 1,@var{text})}, the
5302 @code{firstword} function is retained for its simplicity.@refill
5304 @item $(wildcard @var{pattern})
5306 @cindex wildcard, function
5307 The argument @var{pattern} is a file name pattern, typically containing
5308 wildcard characters (as in shell file name patterns). The result of
5309 @code{wildcard} is a space-separated list of the names of existing files
5310 that match the pattern.
5311 @xref{Wildcards, ,Using Wildcard Characters in File Names}.
5314 @node Foreach Function, Origin Function, Filename Functions, Functions
5315 @section The @code{foreach} Function
5317 @cindex words, iterating over
5319 The @code{foreach} function is very different from other functions. It
5320 causes one piece of text to be used repeatedly, each time with a different
5321 substitution performed on it. It resembles the @code{for} command in the
5322 shell @code{sh} and the @code{foreach} command in the C-shell @code{csh}.
5324 The syntax of the @code{foreach} function is:
5327 $(foreach @var{var},@var{list},@var{text})
5331 The first two arguments, @var{var} and @var{list}, are expanded before
5332 anything else is done; note that the last argument, @var{text}, is
5333 @strong{not} expanded at the same time. Then for each word of the expanded
5334 value of @var{list}, the variable named by the expanded value of @var{var}
5335 is set to that word, and @var{text} is expanded. Presumably @var{text}
5336 contains references to that variable, so its expansion will be different
5339 The result is that @var{text} is expanded as many times as there are
5340 whitespace-separated words in @var{list}. The multiple expansions of
5341 @var{text} are concatenated, with spaces between them, to make the result
5344 This simple example sets the variable @samp{files} to the list of all files
5345 in the directories in the list @samp{dirs}:
5349 files := $(foreach dir,$(dirs),$(wildcard $(dir)/*))
5352 Here @var{text} is @samp{$(wildcard $(dir)/*)}. The first repetition
5353 finds the value @samp{a} for @code{dir}, so it produces the same result
5354 as @samp{$(wildcard a/*)}; the second repetition produces the result
5355 of @samp{$(wildcard b/*)}; and the third, that of @samp{$(wildcard c/*)}.
5357 This example has the same result (except for setting @samp{dirs}) as
5358 the following example:
5361 files := $(wildcard a/* b/* c/* d/*)
5364 When @var{text} is complicated, you can improve readability by giving it
5365 a name, with an additional variable:
5368 find_files = $(wildcard $(dir)/*)
5370 files := $(foreach dir,$(dirs),$(find_files))
5374 Here we use the variable @code{find_files} this way. We use plain @samp{=}
5375 to define a recursively-expanding variable, so that its value contains an
5376 actual function call to be reexpanded under the control of @code{foreach};
5377 a simply-expanded variable would not do, since @code{wildcard} would be
5378 called only once at the time of defining @code{find_files}.
5380 The @code{foreach} function has no permanent effect on the variable
5381 @var{var}; its value and flavor after the @code{foreach} function call are
5382 the same as they were beforehand. The other values which are taken from
5383 @var{list} are in effect only temporarily, during the execution of
5384 @code{foreach}. The variable @var{var} is a simply-expanded variable
5385 during the execution of @code{foreach}. If @var{var} was undefined
5386 before the @code{foreach} function call, it is undefined after the call.
5387 @xref{Flavors, ,The Two Flavors of Variables}.@refill
5389 You must take care when using complex variable expressions that result in
5390 variable names because many strange things are valid variable names, but
5391 are probably not what you intended. For example,
5394 files := $(foreach Esta escrito en espanol!,b c ch,$(find_files))
5398 might be useful if the value of @code{find_files} references the variable
5399 whose name is @samp{Esta escrito en espanol!} (es un nombre bastante largo,
5400 no?), but it is more likely to be a mistake.
5402 @node Origin Function, Shell Function, Foreach Function, Functions
5403 @section The @code{origin} Function
5405 @cindex variables, origin of
5406 @cindex origin of variable
5408 The @code{origin} function is unlike most other functions in that it does
5409 not operate on the values of variables; it tells you something @emph{about}
5410 a variable. Specifically, it tells you where it came from.
5412 The syntax of the @code{origin} function is:
5415 $(origin @var{variable})
5418 Note that @var{variable} is the @emph{name} of a variable to inquire about;
5419 not a @emph{reference} to that variable. Therefore you would not normally
5420 use a @samp{$} or parentheses when writing it. (You can, however, use a
5421 variable reference in the name if you want the name not to be a constant.)
5423 The result of this function is a string telling you how the variable
5424 @var{variable} was defined:
5429 if @var{variable} was never defined.
5433 if @var{variable} has a default definition, as is usual with @code{CC}
5434 and so on. @xref{Implicit Variables, ,Variables Used by Implicit Rules}.
5435 Note that if you have redefined a default variable, the @code{origin}
5436 function will return the origin of the later definition.
5440 if @var{variable} was defined as an environment variable and the
5441 @samp{-e} option is @emph{not} turned on (@pxref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options}).
5443 @item environment override
5445 if @var{variable} was defined as an environment variable and the
5446 @w{@samp{-e}} option @emph{is} turned on (@pxref{Options Summary,
5447 ,Summary of Options}).@refill
5451 if @var{variable} was defined in a makefile.
5455 if @var{variable} was defined on the command line.
5459 if @var{variable} was defined with an @code{override} directive in a
5460 makefile (@pxref{Override Directive, ,The @code{override} Directive}).
5464 if @var{variable} is an automatic variable defined for the
5465 execution of the commands for each rule
5466 (@pxref{Automatic, , Automatic Variables}).
5469 This information is primarily useful (other than for your curiosity) to
5470 determine if you want to believe the value of a variable. For example,
5471 suppose you have a makefile @file{foo} that includes another makefile
5472 @file{bar}. You want a variable @code{bletch} to be defined in @file{bar}
5473 if you run the command @w{@samp{make -f bar}}, even if the environment contains
5474 a definition of @code{bletch}. However, if @file{foo} defined
5475 @code{bletch} before including @file{bar}, you do not want to override that
5476 definition. This could be done by using an @code{override} directive in
5477 @file{foo}, giving that definition precedence over the later definition in
5478 @file{bar}; unfortunately, the @code{override} directive would also
5479 override any command line definitions. So, @file{bar} could
5485 ifeq "$(origin bletch)" "environment"
5486 bletch = barf, gag, etc.
5493 If @code{bletch} has been defined from the environment, this will redefine
5496 If you want to override a previous definition of @code{bletch} if it came
5497 from the environment, even under @samp{-e}, you could instead write:
5501 ifneq "$(findstring environment,$(origin bletch))" ""
5502 bletch = barf, gag, etc.
5507 Here the redefinition takes place if @samp{$(origin bletch)} returns either
5508 @samp{environment} or @samp{environment override}.
5509 @xref{Text Functions, , Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}.
5511 @node Shell Function, , Origin Function, Functions
5512 @section The @code{shell} Function
5514 @cindex commands, expansion
5516 @cindex shell command, function for
5518 The @code{shell} function is unlike any other function except the
5519 @code{wildcard} function
5520 (@pxref{Wildcard Function, ,The Function @code{wildcard}}) in that it
5521 communicates with the world outside of @code{make}.
5523 The @code{shell} function performs the same function that backquotes
5524 (@samp{`}) perform in most shells: it does @dfn{command expansion}. This
5525 means that it takes an argument that is a shell command and returns the
5526 output of the command. The only processing @code{make} does on the result,
5527 before substituting it into the surrounding text, is to convert newlines to
5530 The commands run by calls to the @code{shell} function are run when the
5531 function calls are expanded. In most cases, this is when the makefile is
5532 read in. The exception is that function calls in the commands of the rules
5533 are expanded when the commands are run, and this applies to @code{shell}
5534 function calls like all others.
5536 Here are some examples of the use of the @code{shell} function:
5539 contents := $(shell cat foo)
5543 sets @code{contents} to the contents of the file @file{foo}, with a space
5544 (rather than a newline) separating each line.
5547 files := $(shell echo *.c)
5551 sets @code{files} to the expansion of @samp{*.c}. Unless @code{make} is
5552 using a very strange shell, this has the same result as
5553 @w{@samp{$(wildcard *.c)}}.@refill
5555 @node Running, Implicit Rules, Functions, Top
5556 @chapter How to Run @code{make}
5558 A makefile that says how to recompile a program can be used in more
5559 than one way. The simplest use is to recompile every file that is out
5560 of date. Usually, makefiles are written so that if you run
5561 @code{make} with no arguments, it does just that.
5563 But you might want to update only some of the files; you might want to use
5564 a different compiler or different compiler options; you might want just to
5565 find out which files are out of date without changing them.
5567 By giving arguments when you run @code{make}, you can do any of these
5568 things and many others.
5570 The exit status of @code{make} is always one of three values:
5573 The exit status is zero if @code{make} is successful.
5575 The exit status is two if @code{make} encounters any errors.
5576 It will print messages describing the particular errors.
5578 The exit status is one if you use the @samp{-q} flag and @code{make}
5579 determines that some target is not already up to date.
5580 @xref{Instead of Execution, ,Instead of Executing the Commands}.
5584 * Makefile Arguments:: How to specify which makefile to use.
5585 * Goals:: How to use goal arguments to specify which
5586 parts of the makefile to use.
5587 * Instead of Execution:: How to use mode flags to specify what
5588 kind of thing to do with the commands
5589 in the makefile other than simply
5591 * Avoiding Compilation:: How to avoid recompiling certain files.
5592 * Overriding:: How to override a variable to specify
5593 an alternate compiler and other things.
5594 * Testing:: How to proceed past some errors, to
5596 * Options Summary:: Summary of Options
5599 @node Makefile Arguments, Goals, , Running
5600 @section Arguments to Specify the Makefile
5601 @cindex @code{--file}
5602 @cindex @code{--makefile}
5605 The way to specify the name of the makefile is with the @samp{-f} or
5606 @samp{--file} option (@samp{--makefile} also works). For example,
5607 @samp{-f altmake} says to use the file @file{altmake} as the makefile.
5609 If you use the @samp{-f} flag several times and follow each @samp{-f}
5610 with an argument, all the specified files are used jointly as
5613 If you do not use the @samp{-f} or @samp{--file} flag, the default is
5614 to try @file{GNUmakefile}, @file{makefile}, and @file{Makefile}, in
5615 that order, and use the first of these three which exists or can be made
5616 (@pxref{Makefiles, ,Writing Makefiles}).@refill
5618 @node Goals, Instead of Execution, Makefile Arguments, Running
5619 @section Arguments to Specify the Goals
5620 @cindex goal, how to specify
5622 The @dfn{goals} are the targets that @code{make} should strive ultimately
5623 to update. Other targets are updated as well if they appear as
5624 dependencies of goals, or dependencies of dependencies of goals, etc.
5626 By default, the goal is the first target in the makefile (not counting
5627 targets that start with a period). Therefore, makefiles are usually
5628 written so that the first target is for compiling the entire program or
5629 programs they describe. If the first rule in the makefile has several
5630 targets, only the first target in the rule becomes the default goal, not
5633 You can specify a different goal or goals with arguments to @code{make}.
5634 Use the name of the goal as an argument. If you specify several goals,
5635 @code{make} processes each of them in turn, in the order you name them.
5637 Any target in the makefile may be specified as a goal (unless it
5638 starts with @samp{-} or contains an @samp{=}, in which case it will be
5639 parsed as a switch or variable definition, respectively). Even
5640 targets not in the makefile may be specified, if @code{make} can find
5641 implicit rules that say how to make them.
5643 One use of specifying a goal is if you want to compile only a part of
5644 the program, or only one of several programs. Specify as a goal each
5645 file that you wish to remake. For example, consider a directory containing
5646 several programs, with a makefile that starts like this:
5650 all: size nm ld ar as
5653 If you are working on the program @code{size}, you might want to say
5654 @w{@samp{make size}} so that only the files of that program are recompiled.
5656 Another use of specifying a goal is to make files that are not normally
5657 made. For example, there may be a file of debugging output, or a
5658 version of the program that is compiled specially for testing, which has
5659 a rule in the makefile but is not a dependency of the default goal.
5661 Another use of specifying a goal is to run the commands associated with
5662 a phony target (@pxref{Phony Targets}) or empty target (@pxref{Empty
5663 Targets, ,Empty Target Files to Record Events}). Many makefiles contain
5664 a phony target named @file{clean} which deletes everything except source
5665 files. Naturally, this is done only if you request it explicitly with
5666 @w{@samp{make clean}}. Following is a list of typical phony and empty
5667 target names. @xref{Standard Targets}, for a detailed list of all the
5668 standard target names which GNU software packages use.
5672 @cindex @code{all} @r{(standard target)}
5673 Make all the top-level targets the makefile knows about.
5676 @cindex @code{clean} @r{(standard target)}
5677 Delete all files that are normally created by running @code{make}.
5680 @cindex @code{mostlyclean} @r{(standard target)}
5681 Like @samp{clean}, but may refrain from deleting a few files that people
5682 normally don't want to recompile. For example, the @samp{mostlyclean}
5683 target for GCC does not delete @file{libgcc.a}, because recompiling it
5684 is rarely necessary and takes a lot of time.
5687 @cindex @code{distclean} @r{(standard target)}
5689 @cindex @code{realclean} @r{(standard target)}
5691 @cindex @code{clobber} @r{(standard target)}
5692 Any of these targets might be defined to delete @emph{more} files than
5693 @samp{clean} does. For example, this would delete configuration files
5694 or links that you would normally create as preparation for compilation,
5695 even if the makefile itself cannot create these files.
5698 @cindex @code{install} @r{(standard target)}
5699 Copy the executable file into a directory that users typically search
5700 for commands; copy any auxiliary files that the executable uses into
5701 the directories where it will look for them.
5704 @cindex @code{print} @r{(standard target)}
5705 Print listings of the source files that have changed.
5708 @cindex @code{tar} @r{(standard target)}
5709 Create a tar file of the source files.
5712 @cindex @code{shar} @r{(standard target)}
5713 Create a shell archive (shar file) of the source files.
5716 @cindex @code{dist} @r{(standard target)}
5717 Create a distribution file of the source files. This might
5718 be a tar file, or a shar file, or a compressed version of one of the
5719 above, or even more than one of the above.
5722 @cindex @code{TAGS} @r{(standard target)}
5723 Update a tags table for this program.
5726 @cindex @code{check} @r{(standard target)}
5728 @cindex @code{test} @r{(standard target)}
5729 Perform self tests on the program this makefile builds.
5732 @node Instead of Execution, Avoiding Compilation, Goals, Running
5733 @section Instead of Executing the Commands
5734 @cindex execution, instead of
5735 @cindex commands, instead of executing
5737 The makefile tells @code{make} how to tell whether a target is up to date,
5738 and how to update each target. But updating the targets is not always
5739 what you want. Certain options specify other activities for @code{make}.
5741 @comment Extra blank lines make it print better.
5747 @cindex @code{--just-print}
5748 @cindex @code{--dry-run}
5749 @cindex @code{--recon}
5752 ``No-op''. The activity is to print what commands would be used to make
5753 the targets up to date, but not actually execute them.
5757 @cindex @code{--touch}
5758 @cindex touching files
5759 @cindex target, touching
5762 ``Touch''. The activity is to mark the targets as up to date without
5763 actually changing them. In other words, @code{make} pretends to compile
5764 the targets but does not really change their contents.
5768 @cindex @code{--question}
5770 @cindex question mode
5772 ``Question''. The activity is to find out silently whether the targets
5773 are up to date already; but execute no commands in either case. In other
5774 words, neither compilation nor output will occur.
5777 @itemx --what-if=@var{file}
5778 @itemx --assume-new=@var{file}
5779 @itemx --new-file=@var{file}
5780 @cindex @code{--what-if}
5782 @cindex @code{--assume-new}
5783 @cindex @code{--new-file}
5785 @cindex files, assuming new
5787 ``What if''. Each @samp{-W} flag is followed by a file name. The given
5788 files' modification times are recorded by @code{make} as being the present
5789 time, although the actual modification times remain the same.
5790 You can use the @samp{-W} flag in conjunction with the @samp{-n} flag
5791 to see what would happen if you were to modify specific files.@refill
5794 With the @samp{-n} flag, @code{make} prints the commands that it would
5795 normally execute but does not execute them.
5797 With the @samp{-t} flag, @code{make} ignores the commands in the rules
5798 and uses (in effect) the command @code{touch} for each target that needs to
5799 be remade. The @code{touch} command is also printed, unless @samp{-s} or
5800 @code{.SILENT} is used. For speed, @code{make} does not actually invoke
5801 the program @code{touch}. It does the work directly.
5803 With the @samp{-q} flag, @code{make} prints nothing and executes no
5804 commands, but the exit status code it returns is zero if and only if the
5805 targets to be considered are already up to date. If the exit status is
5806 one, then some updating needs to be done. If @code{make} encounters an
5807 error, the exit status is two, so you can distinguish an error from a
5808 target that is not up to date.
5810 It is an error to use more than one of these three flags in the same
5811 invocation of @code{make}.
5813 The @samp{-n}, @samp{-t}, and @samp{-q} options do not affect command
5814 lines that begin with @samp{+} characters or contain the strings
5815 @samp{$(MAKE)} or @samp{$@{MAKE@}}. Note that only the line containing
5816 the @samp{+} character or the strings @samp{$(MAKE)} or @samp{$@{MAKE@}}
5817 is run regardless of these options. Other lines in the same rule are
5818 not run unless they too begin with @samp{+} or contain @samp{$(MAKE)} or
5819 @samp{$@{MAKE@}} (@xref{MAKE Variable, ,How the @code{MAKE} Variable Works}.)
5821 The @samp{-W} flag provides two features:
5825 If you also use the @samp{-n} or @samp{-q} flag, you can see what
5826 @code{make} would do if you were to modify some files.
5829 Without the @samp{-n} or @samp{-q} flag, when @code{make} is actually
5830 executing commands, the @samp{-W} flag can direct @code{make} to act
5831 as if some files had been modified, without actually modifying the
5835 Note that the options @samp{-p} and @samp{-v} allow you to obtain other
5836 information about @code{make} or about the makefiles in use
5837 (@pxref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options}).@refill
5839 @node Avoiding Compilation, Overriding, Instead of Execution, Running
5840 @section Avoiding Recompilation of Some Files
5842 @cindex @code{--old-file}
5843 @cindex @code{--assume-old}
5844 @cindex files, assuming old
5845 @cindex files, avoiding recompilation of
5846 @cindex recompilation, avoiding
5848 Sometimes you may have changed a source file but you do not want to
5849 recompile all the files that depend on it. For example, suppose you add a
5850 macro or a declaration to a header file that many other files depend on.
5851 Being conservative, @code{make} assumes that any change in the header file
5852 requires recompilation of all dependent files, but you know that they do not
5853 need to be recompiled and you would rather not waste the time waiting for
5856 If you anticipate the problem before changing the header file, you can
5857 use the @samp{-t} flag. This flag tells @code{make} not to run the
5858 commands in the rules, but rather to mark the target up to date by
5859 changing its last-modification date. You would follow this procedure:
5863 Use the command @samp{make} to recompile the source files that really
5867 Make the changes in the header files.
5870 Use the command @samp{make -t} to mark all the object files as
5871 up to date. The next time you run @code{make}, the changes in the
5872 header files will not cause any recompilation.
5875 If you have already changed the header file at a time when some files
5876 do need recompilation, it is too late to do this. Instead, you can
5877 use the @w{@samp{-o @var{file}}} flag, which marks a specified file as
5878 ``old'' (@pxref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options}). This means
5879 that the file itself will not be remade, and nothing else will be
5880 remade on its account. Follow this procedure:
5884 Recompile the source files that need compilation for reasons independent
5885 of the particular header file, with @samp{make -o @var{headerfile}}.
5886 If several header files are involved, use a separate @samp{-o} option
5887 for each header file.
5890 Touch all the object files with @samp{make -t}.
5893 @node Overriding, Testing, Avoiding Compilation, Running
5894 @section Overriding Variables
5895 @cindex overriding variables with arguments
5896 @cindex variables, overriding with arguments
5897 @cindex command line variables
5898 @cindex variables, command line
5900 An argument that contains @samp{=} specifies the value of a variable:
5901 @samp{@var{v}=@var{x}} sets the value of the variable @var{v} to @var{x}.
5902 If you specify a value in this way, all ordinary assignments of the same
5903 variable in the makefile are ignored; we say they have been
5904 @dfn{overridden} by the command line argument.
5906 The most common way to use this facility is to pass extra flags to
5907 compilers. For example, in a properly written makefile, the variable
5908 @code{CFLAGS} is included in each command that runs the C compiler, so a
5909 file @file{foo.c} would be compiled something like this:
5912 cc -c $(CFLAGS) foo.c
5915 Thus, whatever value you set for @code{CFLAGS} affects each compilation
5916 that occurs. The makefile probably specifies the usual value for
5917 @code{CFLAGS}, like this:
5923 Each time you run @code{make}, you can override this value if you
5924 wish. For example, if you say @samp{make CFLAGS='-g -O'}, each C
5925 compilation will be done with @samp{cc -c -g -O}. (This illustrates
5926 how you can use quoting in the shell to enclose spaces and other
5927 special characters in the value of a variable when you override it.)
5929 The variable @code{CFLAGS} is only one of many standard variables that
5930 exist just so that you can change them this way. @xref{Implicit
5931 Variables, , Variables Used by Implicit Rules}, for a complete list.
5933 You can also program the makefile to look at additional variables of your
5934 own, giving the user the ability to control other aspects of how the
5935 makefile works by changing the variables.
5937 When you override a variable with a command argument, you can define either
5938 a recursively-expanded variable or a simply-expanded variable. The
5939 examples shown above make a recursively-expanded variable; to make a
5940 simply-expanded variable, write @samp{:=} instead of @samp{=}. But, unless
5941 you want to include a variable reference or function call in the
5942 @emph{value} that you specify, it makes no difference which kind of
5943 variable you create.
5945 There is one way that the makefile can change a variable that you have
5946 overridden. This is to use the @code{override} directive, which is a line
5947 that looks like this: @samp{override @var{variable} = @var{value}}
5948 (@pxref{Override Directive, ,The @code{override} Directive}).
5950 @node Testing, Options Summary, Overriding, Running
5951 @section Testing the Compilation of a Program
5952 @cindex testing compilation
5953 @cindex compilation, testing
5955 Normally, when an error happens in executing a shell command, @code{make}
5956 gives up immediately, returning a nonzero status. No further commands are
5957 executed for any target. The error implies that the goal cannot be
5958 correctly remade, and @code{make} reports this as soon as it knows.
5960 When you are compiling a program that you have just changed, this is not
5961 what you want. Instead, you would rather that @code{make} try compiling
5962 every file that can be tried, to show you as many compilation errors
5966 @cindex @code{--keep-going}
5967 On these occasions, you should use the @samp{-k} or
5968 @samp{--keep-going} flag. This tells @code{make} to continue to
5969 consider the other dependencies of the pending targets, remaking them
5970 if necessary, before it gives up and returns nonzero status. For
5971 example, after an error in compiling one object file, @samp{make -k}
5972 will continue compiling other object files even though it already
5973 knows that linking them will be impossible. In addition to continuing
5974 after failed shell commands, @samp{make -k} will continue as much as
5975 possible after discovering that it does not know how to make a target
5976 or dependency file. This will always cause an error message, but
5977 without @samp{-k}, it is a fatal error (@pxref{Options Summary,
5978 ,Summary of Options}).@refill
5980 The usual behavior of @code{make} assumes that your purpose is to get the
5981 goals up to date; once @code{make} learns that this is impossible, it might
5982 as well report the failure immediately. The @samp{-k} flag says that the
5983 real purpose is to test as much as possible of the changes made in the
5984 program, perhaps to find several independent problems so that you can
5985 correct them all before the next attempt to compile. This is why Emacs'
5986 @kbd{M-x compile} command passes the @samp{-k} flag by default.
5988 @node Options Summary, , Testing, Running
5989 @section Summary of Options
5994 Here is a table of all the options @code{make} understands:
6001 These options are ignored for compatibility with other versions of @code{make}.
6005 @itemx --directory=@var{dir}
6006 @cindex @code{--directory}
6007 Change to directory @var{dir} before reading the makefiles. If multiple
6008 @samp{-C} options are specified, each is interpreted relative to the
6009 previous one: @samp{-C / -C etc} is equivalent to @samp{-C /etc}.
6010 This is typically used with recursive invocations of @code{make}
6011 (@pxref{Recursion, ,Recursive Use of @code{make}}).
6016 @cindex @code{--debug}
6017 @c Extra blank line here makes the table look better.
6019 Print debugging information in addition to normal processing. The
6020 debugging information says which files are being considered for
6021 remaking, which file-times are being compared and with what results,
6022 which files actually need to be remade, which implicit rules are
6023 considered and which are applied---everything interesting about how
6024 @code{make} decides what to do.
6028 @itemx --environment-overrides
6029 @cindex @code{--environment-overrides}
6030 Give variables taken from the environment precedence
6031 over variables from makefiles.
6032 @xref{Environment, ,Variables from the Environment}.
6036 @itemx --file=@var{file}
6037 @cindex @code{--file}
6038 @itemx --makefile=@var{file}
6039 @cindex @code{--makefile}
6040 Read the file named @var{file} as a makefile.
6041 @xref{Makefiles, ,Writing Makefiles}.
6046 @cindex @code{--help}
6047 @c Extra blank line here makes the table look better.
6049 Remind you of the options that @code{make} understands and then exit.
6053 @itemx --ignore-errors
6054 @cindex @code{--ignore-errors}
6055 Ignore all errors in commands executed to remake files.
6056 @xref{Errors, ,Errors in Commands}.
6060 @itemx --include-dir=@var{dir}
6061 @cindex @code{--include-dir}
6062 Specifies a directory @var{dir} to search for included makefiles.
6063 @xref{Include, ,Including Other Makefiles}. If several @samp{-I}
6064 options are used to specify several directories, the directories are
6065 searched in the order specified.
6067 @item -j [@var{jobs}]
6069 @itemx --jobs=[@var{jobs}]
6070 @cindex @code{--jobs}
6071 Specifies the number of jobs (commands) to run simultaneously. With no
6072 argument, @code{make} runs as many jobs simultaneously as possible. If
6073 there is more than one @samp{-j} option, the last one is effective.
6074 @xref{Parallel, ,Parallel Execution},
6075 for more information on how commands are run.
6080 @cindex @code{--keep-going}
6081 Continue as much as possible after an error. While the target that
6082 failed, and those that depend on it, cannot be remade, the other
6083 dependencies of these targets can be processed all the same.
6084 @xref{Testing, ,Testing the Compilation of a Program}.
6086 @item -l [@var{load}]
6088 @itemx --load-average[=@var{load}]
6089 @cindex @code{--load-average}
6090 @itemx --max-load[=@var{load}]
6091 @cindex @code{--max-load}
6092 Specifies that no new jobs (commands) should be started if there are
6093 other jobs running and the load average is at least @var{load} (a
6094 floating-point number). With no argument, removes a previous load
6095 limit. @xref{Parallel, ,Parallel Execution}.
6100 @cindex @code{--just-print}
6102 @cindex @code{--dry-run}
6104 @cindex @code{--recon}
6105 @c Extra blank line here makes the table look better.
6107 Print the commands that would be executed, but do not execute them.
6108 @xref{Instead of Execution, ,Instead of Executing the Commands}.
6112 @itemx --old-file=@var{file}
6113 @cindex @code{--old-file}
6114 @itemx --assume-old=@var{file}
6115 @cindex @code{--assume-old}
6116 Do not remake the file @var{file} even if it is older than its
6117 dependencies, and do not remake anything on account of changes in
6118 @var{file}. Essentially the file is treated as very old and its rules
6119 are ignored. @xref{Avoiding Compilation, ,Avoiding Recompilation of
6124 @itemx --print-data-base
6125 @cindex @code{--print-data-base}
6126 Print the data base (rules and variable values) that results from
6127 reading the makefiles; then execute as usual or as otherwise
6128 specified. This also prints the version information given by
6129 the @samp{-v} switch (see below). To print the data base without
6130 trying to remake any files, use @w{@samp{make -p -f /dev/null}}.
6135 @cindex @code{--question}
6136 ``Question mode''. Do not run any commands, or print anything; just
6137 return an exit status that is zero if the specified targets are already
6138 up to date, one if any remaking is required, or two if an error is
6139 encountered. @xref{Instead of Execution, ,Instead of Executing the
6144 @itemx --no-builtin-rules
6145 @cindex @code{--no-builtin-rules}
6146 Eliminate use of the built-in implicit rules (@pxref{Implicit Rules,
6147 ,Using Implicit Rules}). You can still define your own by writing
6148 pattern rules (@pxref{Pattern Rules, ,Defining and Redefining Pattern
6149 Rules}). The @samp{-r} option also clears out the default list of
6150 suffixes for suffix rules (@pxref{Suffix Rules, ,Old-Fashioned Suffix
6151 Rules}). But you can still define your own suffixes with a rule for
6152 @code{.SUFFIXES}, and then define your own suffix rules.
6157 @cindex @code{--silent}
6159 @cindex @code{--quiet}
6160 @c Extra blank line here makes the table look better.
6162 Silent operation; do not print the commands as they are executed.
6163 @xref{Echoing, ,Command Echoing}.
6167 @itemx --no-keep-going
6168 @cindex @code{--no-keep-going}
6170 @cindex @code{--stop}
6171 @c Extra blank line here makes the table look better.
6173 Cancel the effect of the @samp{-k} option. This is never necessary
6174 except in a recursive @code{make} where @samp{-k} might be inherited
6175 from the top-level @code{make} via @code{MAKEFLAGS}
6176 (@pxref{Recursion, ,Recursive Use of @code{make}})
6177 or if you set @samp{-k} in @code{MAKEFLAGS} in your environment.@refill
6182 @cindex @code{--touch}
6183 @c Extra blank line here makes the table look better.
6185 Touch files (mark them up to date without really changing them)
6186 instead of running their commands. This is used to pretend that the
6187 commands were done, in order to fool future invocations of
6188 @code{make}. @xref{Instead of Execution, ,Instead of Executing the Commands}.
6193 @cindex @code{--version}
6194 Print the version of the @code{make} program plus a copyright, a list
6195 of authors, and a notice that there is no warranty; then exit.
6199 @itemx --print-directory
6200 @cindex @code{--print-directory}
6201 Print a message containing the working directory both before and after
6202 executing the makefile. This may be useful for tracking down errors
6203 from complicated nests of recursive @code{make} commands.
6204 @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive Use of @code{make}}. (In practice, you
6205 rarely need to specify this option since @samp{make} does it for you;
6206 see @ref{-w Option, ,The @samp{--print-directory} Option}.)
6208 @itemx --no-print-directory
6209 @cindex @code{--no-print-directory}
6210 Disable printing of the working directory under @code{-w}.
6211 This option is useful when @code{-w} is turned on automatically,
6212 but you do not want to see the extra messages.
6213 @xref{-w Option, ,The @samp{--print-directory} Option}.
6217 @itemx --what-if=@var{file}
6218 @cindex @code{--what-if}
6219 @itemx --new-file=@var{file}
6220 @cindex @code{--new-file}
6221 @itemx --assume-new=@var{file}
6222 @cindex @code{--assume-new}
6223 Pretend that the target @var{file} has just been modified. When used
6224 with the @samp{-n} flag, this shows you what would happen if you were
6225 to modify that file. Without @samp{-n}, it is almost the same as
6226 running a @code{touch} command on the given file before running
6227 @code{make}, except that the modification time is changed only in the
6228 imagination of @code{make}.
6229 @xref{Instead of Execution, ,Instead of Executing the Commands}.
6231 @item --warn-undefined-variables
6232 @cindex @code{--warn-undefined-variables}
6233 @cindex variables, warning for undefined
6234 @cindex undefined variables, warning message
6235 Issue a warning message whenever @code{make} sees a reference to an
6236 undefined variable. This can be helpful when you are trying to debug
6237 makefiles which use variables in complex ways.
6240 @node Implicit Rules, Archives, Running, Top
6241 @chapter Using Implicit Rules
6242 @cindex implicit rule
6243 @cindex rule, implicit
6245 Certain standard ways of remaking target files are used very often. For
6246 example, one customary way to make an object file is from a C source file
6247 using the C compiler, @code{cc}.
6249 @dfn{Implicit rules} tell @code{make} how to use customary techniques so
6250 that you do not have to specify them in detail when you want to use
6251 them. For example, there is an implicit rule for C compilation. File
6252 names determine which implicit rules are run. For example, C
6253 compilation typically takes a @file{.c} file and makes a @file{.o} file.
6254 So @code{make} applies the implicit rule for C compilation when it sees
6255 this combination of file name endings.@refill
6257 A chain of implicit rules can apply in sequence; for example, @code{make}
6258 will remake a @file{.o} file from a @file{.y} file by way of a @file{.c} file.
6260 @xref{Chained Rules, ,Chains of Implicit Rules}.
6263 The built-in implicit rules use several variables in their commands so
6264 that, by changing the values of the variables, you can change the way the
6265 implicit rule works. For example, the variable @code{CFLAGS} controls the
6266 flags given to the C compiler by the implicit rule for C compilation.
6268 @xref{Implicit Variables, ,Variables Used by Implicit Rules}.
6271 You can define your own implicit rules by writing @dfn{pattern rules}.
6273 @xref{Pattern Rules, ,Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules}.
6276 @dfn{Suffix rules} are a more limited way to define implicit rules.
6277 Pattern rules are more general and clearer, but suffix rules are
6278 retained for compatibility.
6280 @xref{Suffix Rules, ,Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules}.
6284 * Using Implicit:: How to use an existing implicit rule
6285 to get the commands for updating a file.
6286 * Catalogue of Rules:: A list of built-in implicit rules.
6287 * Implicit Variables:: How to change what predefined rules do.
6288 * Chained Rules:: How to use a chain of implicit rules.
6289 * Pattern Rules:: How to define new implicit rules.
6290 * Last Resort:: How to defining commands for rules
6291 which cannot find any.
6292 * Suffix Rules:: The old-fashioned style of implicit rule.
6293 * Search Algorithm:: The precise algorithm for applying
6297 @node Using Implicit, Catalogue of Rules, , Implicit Rules
6298 @section Using Implicit Rules
6299 @cindex implicit rule, how to use
6300 @cindex rule, implicit, how to use
6302 To allow @code{make} to find a customary method for updating a target file,
6303 all you have to do is refrain from specifying commands yourself. Either
6304 write a rule with no command lines, or don't write a rule at all. Then
6305 @code{make} will figure out which implicit rule to use based on which
6306 kind of source file exists or can be made.
6308 For example, suppose the makefile looks like this:
6312 cc -o foo foo.o bar.o $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS)
6316 Because you mention @file{foo.o} but do not give a rule for it, @code{make}
6317 will automatically look for an implicit rule that tells how to update it.
6318 This happens whether or not the file @file{foo.o} currently exists.
6320 If an implicit rule is found, it can supply both commands and one or
6321 more dependencies (the source files). You would want to write a rule
6322 for @file{foo.o} with no command lines if you need to specify additional
6323 dependencies, such as header files, that the implicit rule cannot
6326 Each implicit rule has a target pattern and dependency patterns. There may
6327 be many implicit rules with the same target pattern. For example, numerous
6328 rules make @samp{.o} files: one, from a @samp{.c} file with the C compiler;
6329 another, from a @samp{.p} file with the Pascal compiler; and so on. The rule
6330 that actually applies is the one whose dependencies exist or can be made.
6331 So, if you have a file @file{foo.c}, @code{make} will run the C compiler;
6332 otherwise, if you have a file @file{foo.p}, @code{make} will run the Pascal
6333 compiler; and so on.
6335 Of course, when you write the makefile, you know which implicit rule you
6336 want @code{make} to use, and you know it will choose that one because you
6337 know which possible dependency files are supposed to exist.
6338 @xref{Catalogue of Rules, ,Catalogue of Implicit Rules},
6339 for a catalogue of all the predefined implicit rules.
6341 Above, we said an implicit rule applies if the required dependencies ``exist
6342 or can be made''. A file ``can be made'' if it is mentioned explicitly in
6343 the makefile as a target or a dependency, or if an implicit rule can be
6344 recursively found for how to make it. When an implicit dependency is the
6345 result of another implicit rule, we say that @dfn{chaining} is occurring.
6346 @xref{Chained Rules, ,Chains of Implicit Rules}.
6348 In general, @code{make} searches for an implicit rule for each target, and
6349 for each double-colon rule, that has no commands. A file that is mentioned
6350 only as a dependency is considered a target whose rule specifies nothing,
6351 so implicit rule search happens for it. @xref{Search Algorithm, ,Implicit Rule Search Algorithm}, for the
6352 details of how the search is done.
6354 Note that explicit dependencies do not influence implicit rule search.
6355 For example, consider this explicit rule:
6362 The dependency on @file{foo.p} does not necessarily mean that
6363 @code{make} will remake @file{foo.o} according to the implicit rule to
6364 make an object file, a @file{.o} file, from a Pascal source file, a
6365 @file{.p} file. For example, if @file{foo.c} also exists, the implicit
6366 rule to make an object file from a C source file is used instead,
6367 because it appears before the Pascal rule in the list of predefined
6368 implicit rules (@pxref{Catalogue of Rules, , Catalogue of Implicit
6371 If you do not want an implicit rule to be used for a target that has no
6372 commands, you can give that target empty commands by writing a semicolon
6373 (@pxref{Empty Commands, ,Defining Empty Commands}).
6375 @node Catalogue of Rules, Implicit Variables, Using Implicit, Implicit Rules
6376 @section Catalogue of Implicit Rules
6377 @cindex implicit rule, predefined
6378 @cindex rule, implicit, predefined
6380 Here is a catalogue of predefined implicit rules which are always
6381 available unless the makefile explicitly overrides or cancels them.
6382 @xref{Canceling Rules, ,Canceling Implicit Rules}, for information on
6383 canceling or overriding an implicit rule. The @samp{-r} or
6384 @samp{--no-builtin-rules} option cancels all predefined rules.
6386 Not all of these rules will always be defined, even when the @samp{-r}
6387 option is not given. Many of the predefined implicit rules are
6388 implemented in @code{make} as suffix rules, so which ones will be
6389 defined depends on the @dfn{suffix list} (the list of dependencies of
6390 the special target @code{.SUFFIXES}). The default suffix list is:
6391 @code{.out}, @code{.a}, @code{.ln}, @code{.o}, @code{.c}, @code{.cc},
6392 @code{.C}, @code{.p}, @code{.f}, @code{.F}, @code{.r}, @code{.y},
6393 @code{.l}, @code{.s}, @code{.S}, @code{.mod}, @code{.sym}, @code{.def},
6394 @code{.h}, @code{.info}, @code{.dvi}, @code{.tex}, @code{.texinfo},
6395 @code{.texi}, @code{.txinfo}, @code{.w}, @code{.ch} @code{.web},
6396 @code{.sh}, @code{.elc}, @code{.el}. All of the implicit rules
6397 described below whose dependencies have one of these suffixes are
6398 actually suffix rules. If you modify the suffix list, the only
6399 predefined suffix rules in effect will be those named by one or two of
6400 the suffixes that are on the list you specify; rules whose suffixes fail
6401 to be on the list are disabled. @xref{Suffix Rules, ,Old-Fashioned
6402 Suffix Rules}, for full details on suffix rules.
6405 @item Compiling C programs
6406 @cindex C, rule to compile
6411 @file{@var{n}.o} is made automatically from @file{@var{n}.c} with
6412 a command of the form @samp{$(CC) -c $(CPPFLAGS) $(CFLAGS)}.@refill
6414 @item Compiling C++ programs
6415 @cindex C++, rule to compile
6419 @file{@var{n}.o} is made automatically from @file{@var{n}.cc} or
6420 @file{@var{n}.C} with a command of the form @samp{$(CXX) -c $(CPPFLAGS)
6421 $(CXXFLAGS)}. We encourage you to use the suffix @samp{.cc} for C++
6422 source files instead of @samp{.C}.@refill
6424 @item Compiling Pascal programs
6425 @cindex Pascal, rule to compile
6428 @file{@var{n}.o} is made automatically from @file{@var{n}.p}
6429 with the command @samp{$(PC) -c $(PFLAGS)}.@refill
6431 @item Compiling Fortran and Ratfor programs
6432 @cindex Fortran, rule to compile
6433 @cindex Ratfor, rule to compile
6438 @file{@var{n}.o} is made automatically from @file{@var{n}.r},
6439 @file{@var{n}.F} or @file{@var{n}.f} by running the
6440 Fortran compiler. The precise command used is as follows:@refill
6444 @samp{$(FC) -c $(FFLAGS)}.
6446 @samp{$(FC) -c $(FFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS)}.
6448 @samp{$(FC) -c $(FFLAGS) $(RFLAGS)}.
6451 @item Preprocessing Fortran and Ratfor programs
6452 @file{@var{n}.f} is made automatically from @file{@var{n}.r} or
6453 @file{@var{n}.F}. This rule runs just the preprocessor to convert a
6454 Ratfor or preprocessable Fortran program into a strict Fortran
6455 program. The precise command used is as follows:@refill
6459 @samp{$(FC) -F $(CPPFLAGS) $(FFLAGS)}.
6461 @samp{$(FC) -F $(FFLAGS) $(RFLAGS)}.
6464 @item Compiling Modula-2 programs
6465 @cindex Modula-2, rule to compile
6470 @file{@var{n}.sym} is made from @file{@var{n}.def} with a command
6471 of the form @samp{$(M2C) $(M2FLAGS) $(DEFFLAGS)}. @file{@var{n}.o}
6472 is made from @file{@var{n}.mod}; the form is:
6473 @w{@samp{$(M2C) $(M2FLAGS) $(MODFLAGS)}}.@refill
6476 @item Assembling and preprocessing assembler programs
6477 @cindex assembly, rule to compile
6480 @file{@var{n}.o} is made automatically from @file{@var{n}.s} by
6481 running the assembler, @code{as}. The precise command is
6482 @samp{$(AS) $(ASFLAGS)}.@refill
6485 @file{@var{n}.s} is made automatically from @file{@var{n}.S} by
6486 running the C preprocessor, @code{cpp}. The precise command is
6487 @w{@samp{$(CPP) $(CPPFLAGS)}}.
6489 @item Linking a single object file
6490 @cindex linking, predefined rule for
6493 @file{@var{n}} is made automatically from @file{@var{n}.o} by running
6494 the linker (usually called @code{ld}) via the C compiler. The precise
6495 command used is @w{@samp{$(CC) $(LDFLAGS) @var{n}.o $(LOADLIBES)}}.
6497 This rule does the right thing for a simple program with only one
6498 source file. It will also do the right thing if there are multiple
6499 object files (presumably coming from various other source files), one
6500 of which has a name matching that of the executable file. Thus,
6507 when @file{x.c}, @file{y.c} and @file{z.c} all exist will execute:
6522 In more complicated cases, such as when there is no object file whose
6523 name derives from the executable file name, you must write an explicit
6524 command for linking.
6526 Each kind of file automatically made into @samp{.o} object files will
6527 be automatically linked by using the compiler (@samp{$(CC)},
6528 @samp{$(FC)} or @samp{$(PC)}; the C compiler @samp{$(CC)} is used to
6529 assemble @samp{.s} files) without the @samp{-c} option. This could be
6530 done by using the @samp{.o} object files as intermediates, but it is
6531 faster to do the compiling and linking in one step, so that's how it's
6534 @item Yacc for C programs
6536 @cindex Yacc, rule to run
6538 @file{@var{n}.c} is made automatically from @file{@var{n}.y} by
6539 running Yacc with the command @samp{$(YACC) $(YFLAGS)}.
6541 @item Lex for C programs
6543 @cindex Lex, rule to run
6545 @file{@var{n}.c} is made automatically from @file{@var{n}.l} by
6546 by running Lex. The actual command is @samp{$(LEX) $(LFLAGS)}.
6548 @item Lex for Ratfor programs
6549 @file{@var{n}.r} is made automatically from @file{@var{n}.l} by
6550 by running Lex. The actual command is @samp{$(LEX) $(LFLAGS)}.
6552 The convention of using the same suffix @samp{.l} for all Lex files
6553 regardless of whether they produce C code or Ratfor code makes it
6554 impossible for @code{make} to determine automatically which of the two
6555 languages you are using in any particular case. If @code{make} is
6556 called upon to remake an object file from a @samp{.l} file, it must
6557 guess which compiler to use. It will guess the C compiler, because
6558 that is more common. If you are using Ratfor, make sure @code{make}
6559 knows this by mentioning @file{@var{n}.r} in the makefile. Or, if you
6560 are using Ratfor exclusively, with no C files, remove @samp{.c} from
6561 the list of implicit rule suffixes with:@refill
6566 .SUFFIXES: .o .r .f .l @dots{}
6570 @item Making Lint Libraries from C, Yacc, or Lex programs
6572 @cindex @code{lint}, rule to run
6574 @file{@var{n}.ln} is made from @file{@var{n}.c} by running @code{lint}.
6575 The precise command is @w{@samp{$(LINT) $(LINTFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -i}}.
6576 The same command is used on the C code produced from
6577 @file{@var{n}.y} or @file{@var{n}.l}.@refill
6579 @item @TeX{} and Web
6580 @cindex @TeX{}, rule to run
6581 @cindex Web, rule to run
6592 @file{@var{n}.dvi} is made from @file{@var{n}.tex} with the command
6593 @samp{$(TEX)}. @file{@var{n}.tex} is made from @file{@var{n}.web} with
6594 @samp{$(WEAVE)}, or from @file{@var{n}.w} (and from @file{@var{n}.ch} if
6595 it exists or can be made) with @samp{$(CWEAVE)}. @file{@var{n}.p} is
6596 made from @file{@var{n}.web} with @samp{$(TANGLE)} and @file{@var{n}.c}
6597 is made from @file{@var{n}.w} (and from @file{@var{n}.ch} if it exists
6598 or can be made) with @samp{$(CTANGLE)}.@refill
6600 @item Texinfo and Info
6601 @cindex Texinfo, rule to format
6602 @cindex Info, rule to format
6609 @file{@var{n}.dvi} is made from @file{@var{n}.texinfo},
6610 @file{@var{n}.texi}, or @file{@var{n}.txinfo}, with the command
6611 @w{@samp{$(TEXI2DVI) $(TEXI2DVI_FLAGS)}}. @file{@var{n}.info} is made from
6612 @file{@var{n}.texinfo}, @file{@var{n}.texi}, or @file{@var{n}.txinfo}, with
6613 the command @w{@samp{$(MAKEINFO) $(MAKEINFO_FLAGS)}}.
6616 @cindex RCS, rule to extract from
6618 @pindex ,v @r{(RCS file extension)}
6619 Any file @file{@var{n}} is extracted if necessary from an RCS file
6620 named either @file{@var{n},v} or @file{RCS/@var{n},v}. The precise
6621 command used is @w{@samp{$(CO) $(COFLAGS)}}. @file{@var{n}} will not be
6622 extracted from RCS if it already exists, even if the RCS file is
6623 newer. The rules for RCS are terminal
6624 (@pxref{Match-Anything Rules, ,Match-Anything Pattern Rules}),
6625 so RCS files cannot be generated from another source; they must
6626 actually exist.@refill
6629 @cindex SCCS, rule to extract from
6631 @pindex s. @r{(SCCS file prefix)}
6632 Any file @file{@var{n}} is extracted if necessary from an SCCS file
6633 named either @file{s.@var{n}} or @file{SCCS/s.@var{n}}. The precise
6634 command used is @w{@samp{$(GET) $(GFLAGS)}}. The rules for SCCS are
6635 terminal (@pxref{Match-Anything Rules, ,Match-Anything Pattern Rules}),
6636 so SCCS files cannot be generated from another source; they must
6637 actually exist.@refill
6640 For the benefit of SCCS, a file @file{@var{n}} is copied from
6641 @file{@var{n}.sh} and made executable (by everyone). This is for
6642 shell scripts that are checked into SCCS. Since RCS preserves the
6643 execution permission of a file, you do not need to use this feature
6646 We recommend that you avoid using of SCCS. RCS is widely held to be
6647 superior, and is also free. By choosing free software in place of
6648 comparable (or inferior) proprietary software, you support the free
6652 Usually, you want to change only the variables listed in the table
6653 above, which are documented in the following section.
6655 However, the commands in built-in implicit rules actually use
6656 variables such as @code{COMPILE.c}, @code{LINK.p}, and
6657 @code{PREPROCESS.S}, whose values contain the commands listed above.
6659 @code{make} follows the convention that the rule to compile a
6660 @file{.@var{x}} source file uses the variable @code{COMPILE.@var{x}}.
6661 Similarly, the rule to produce an executable from a @file{.@var{x}}
6662 file uses @code{LINK.@var{x}}; and the rule to preprocess a
6663 @file{.@var{x}} file uses @code{PREPROCESS.@var{x}}.
6665 @vindex OUTPUT_OPTION
6666 Every rule that produces an object file uses the variable
6667 @code{OUTPUT_OPTION}. @code{make} defines this variable either to
6668 contain @samp{-o $@@}, or to be empty, depending on a compile-time
6669 option. You need the @samp{-o} option to ensure that the output goes
6670 into the right file when the source file is in a different directory,
6671 as when using @code{VPATH} (@pxref{Directory Search}). However,
6672 compilers on some systems do not accept a @samp{-o} switch for object
6673 files. If you use such a system, and use @code{VPATH}, some
6674 compilations will put their output in the wrong place.
6675 A possible workaround for this problem is to give @code{OUTPUT_OPTION}
6676 the value @w{@samp{; mv $*.o $@@}}.
6678 @node Implicit Variables, Chained Rules, Catalogue of Rules, Implicit Rules
6679 @section Variables Used by Implicit Rules
6680 @cindex flags for compilers
6682 The commands in built-in implicit rules make liberal use of certain
6683 predefined variables. You can alter these variables in the makefile,
6684 with arguments to @code{make}, or in the environment to alter how the
6685 implicit rules work without redefining the rules themselves.
6687 For example, the command used to compile a C source file actually says
6688 @samp{$(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS)}. The default values of the variables
6689 used are @samp{cc} and nothing, resulting in the command @samp{cc -c}. By
6690 redefining @samp{CC} to @samp{ncc}, you could cause @samp{ncc} to be
6691 used for all C compilations performed by the implicit rule. By redefining
6692 @samp{CFLAGS} to be @samp{-g}, you could pass the @samp{-g} option to
6693 each compilation. @emph{All} implicit rules that do C compilation use
6694 @samp{$(CC)} to get the program name for the compiler and @emph{all}
6695 include @samp{$(CFLAGS)} among the arguments given to the compiler.@refill
6697 The variables used in implicit rules fall into two classes: those that are
6698 names of programs (like @code{CC}) and those that contain arguments for the
6699 programs (like @code{CFLAGS}). (The ``name of a program'' may also contain
6700 some command arguments, but it must start with an actual executable program
6701 name.) If a variable value contains more than one argument, separate them
6704 Here is a table of variables used as names of programs in built-in rules:
6709 Archive-maintaining program; default @samp{ar}.
6714 Program for doing assembly; default @samp{as}.
6719 Program for compiling C programs; default @samp{cc}.
6724 Program for compiling C++ programs; default @samp{g++}.
6729 Program for extracting a file from RCS; default @samp{co}.
6734 Program for running the C preprocessor, with results to standard output;
6735 default @samp{$(CC) -E}.
6739 Program for compiling or preprocessing Fortran and Ratfor programs;
6745 Program for extracting a file from SCCS; default @samp{get}.
6750 Program to use to turn Lex grammars into C programs or Ratfor programs;
6756 Program for compiling Pascal programs; default @samp{pc}.
6761 Program to use to turn Yacc grammars into C programs; default @samp{yacc}.
6766 Program to use to turn Yacc grammars into Ratfor
6767 programs; default @samp{yacc -r}.
6771 Program to convert a Texinfo source file into an Info file; default
6777 Program to make @TeX{} @sc{dvi} files from @TeX{} source;
6783 Program to make @TeX{} @sc{dvi} files from Texinfo source;
6784 default @samp{texi2dvi}.
6789 Program to translate Web into @TeX{}; default @samp{weave}.
6794 Program to translate C Web into @TeX{}; default @samp{cweave}.
6799 Program to translate Web into Pascal; default @samp{tangle}.
6804 Program to translate C Web into C; default @samp{ctangle}.
6809 Command to remove a file; default @samp{rm -f}.
6813 Here is a table of variables whose values are additional arguments for the
6814 programs above. The default values for all of these is the empty
6815 string, unless otherwise noted.
6820 Flags to give the archive-maintaining program; default @samp{rv}.
6824 Extra flags to give to the assembler (when explicitly
6825 invoked on a @samp{.s} or @samp{.S} file).
6829 Extra flags to give to the C compiler.
6833 Extra flags to give to the C++ compiler.
6837 Extra flags to give to the RCS @code{co} program.
6841 Extra flags to give to the C preprocessor and programs
6842 that use it (the C and Fortran compilers).
6846 Extra flags to give to the Fortran compiler.
6850 Extra flags to give to the SCCS @code{get} program.
6854 Extra flags to give to compilers when they are
6855 supposed to invoke the linker, @samp{ld}.
6859 Extra flags to give to Lex.
6863 Extra flags to give to the Pascal compiler.
6867 Extra flags to give to the Fortran compiler for Ratfor programs.
6871 Extra flags to give to Yacc.
6874 @node Chained Rules, Pattern Rules, Implicit Variables, Implicit Rules
6875 @section Chains of Implicit Rules
6877 @cindex chains of rules
6878 @cindex rule, implicit, chains of
6879 Sometimes a file can be made by a sequence of implicit rules. For example,
6880 a file @file{@var{n}.o} could be made from @file{@var{n}.y} by running
6881 first Yacc and then @code{cc}. Such a sequence is called a @dfn{chain}.
6883 If the file @file{@var{n}.c} exists, or is mentioned in the makefile, no
6884 special searching is required: @code{make} finds that the object file can
6885 be made by C compilation from @file{@var{n}.c}; later on, when considering
6886 how to make @file{@var{n}.c}, the rule for running Yacc is
6887 used. Ultimately both @file{@var{n}.c} and @file{@var{n}.o} are
6890 @cindex intermediate files
6891 @cindex files, intermediate
6892 However, even if @file{@var{n}.c} does not exist and is not mentioned,
6893 @code{make} knows how to envision it as the missing link between
6894 @file{@var{n}.o} and @file{@var{n}.y}! In this case, @file{@var{n}.c} is
6895 called an @dfn{intermediate file}. Once @code{make} has decided to use the
6896 intermediate file, it is entered in the data base as if it had been
6897 mentioned in the makefile, along with the implicit rule that says how to
6900 Intermediate files are remade using their rules just like all other
6901 files. The difference is that the intermediate file is deleted when
6902 @code{make} is finished. Therefore, the intermediate file which did not
6903 exist before @code{make} also does not exist after @code{make}. The
6904 deletion is reported to you by printing a @samp{rm -f} command that
6905 shows what @code{make} is doing. (You can list the target pattern of an
6906 implicit rule (such as @samp{%.o}) as a dependency of the special
6907 target @code{.PRECIOUS} to preserve intermediate files made by implicit
6908 rules whose target patterns match that file's name;
6909 see @ref{Interrupts}.)@refill
6910 @cindex intermediate files, preserving
6911 @cindex preserving intermediate files
6912 @cindex preserving with @code{.PRECIOUS}
6913 @cindex @code{.PRECIOUS} intermediate files
6915 A chain can involve more than two implicit rules. For example, it is
6916 possible to make a file @file{foo} from @file{RCS/foo.y,v} by running RCS,
6917 Yacc and @code{cc}. Then both @file{foo.y} and @file{foo.c} are
6918 intermediate files that are deleted at the end.@refill
6920 No single implicit rule can appear more than once in a chain. This means
6921 that @code{make} will not even consider such a ridiculous thing as making
6922 @file{foo} from @file{foo.o.o} by running the linker twice. This
6923 constraint has the added benefit of preventing any infinite loop in the
6924 search for an implicit rule chain.
6926 There are some special implicit rules to optimize certain cases that would
6927 otherwise be handled by rule chains. For example, making @file{foo} from
6928 @file{foo.c} could be handled by compiling and linking with separate
6929 chained rules, using @file{foo.o} as an intermediate file. But what
6930 actually happens is that a special rule for this case does the compilation
6931 and linking with a single @code{cc} command. The optimized rule is used in
6932 preference to the step-by-step chain because it comes earlier in the
6935 @node Pattern Rules, Last Resort, Chained Rules, Implicit Rules
6936 @section Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules
6938 You define an implicit rule by writing a @dfn{pattern rule}. A pattern
6939 rule looks like an ordinary rule, except that its target contains the
6940 character @samp{%} (exactly one of them). The target is considered a
6941 pattern for matching file names; the @samp{%} can match any nonempty
6942 substring, while other characters match only themselves. The dependencies
6943 likewise use @samp{%} to show how their names relate to the target name.
6945 Thus, a pattern rule @samp{%.o : %.c} says how to make any file
6946 @file{@var{stem}.o} from another file @file{@var{stem}.c}.@refill
6948 Note that expansion using @samp{%} in pattern rules occurs
6949 @strong{after} any variable or function expansions, which take place
6950 when the makefile is read. @xref{Using Variables, , How to Use
6951 Variables}, and @ref{Functions, ,Functions for Transforming Text}.
6954 * Pattern Intro:: An introduction to pattern rules.
6955 * Pattern Examples:: Examples of pattern rules.
6956 * Automatic:: How to use automatic variables in the
6957 commands of implicit rules.
6958 * Pattern Match:: How patterns match.
6959 * Match-Anything Rules:: Precautions you should take prior to
6960 defining rules that can match any
6961 target file whatever.
6962 * Canceling Rules:: How to override or cancel built-in rules.
6965 @node Pattern Intro, Pattern Examples, , Pattern Rules
6966 @subsection Introduction to Pattern Rules
6967 @cindex pattern rule
6968 @cindex rule, pattern
6970 A pattern rule contains the character @samp{%} (exactly one of them)
6971 in the target; otherwise, it looks exactly like an ordinary rule. The
6972 target is a pattern for matching file names; the @samp{%} matches any
6973 nonempty substring, while other characters match only themselves.
6974 @cindex target pattern, implicit
6975 @cindex @code{%}, in pattern rules
6977 For example, @samp{%.c} as a pattern matches any file name that ends in
6978 @samp{.c}. @samp{s.%.c} as a pattern matches any file name that starts
6979 with @samp{s.}, ends in @samp{.c} and is at least five characters long.
6980 (There must be at least one character to match the @samp{%}.) The substring
6981 that the @samp{%} matches is called the @dfn{stem}.@refill
6983 @samp{%} in a dependency of a pattern rule stands for the same stem
6984 that was matched by the @samp{%} in the target. In order for
6985 the pattern rule to apply, its target pattern must match the file name
6986 under consideration, and its dependency patterns must name files that
6987 exist or can be made. These files become dependencies of the target.
6988 @cindex dependency pattern, implicit
6990 Thus, a rule of the form
6993 %.o : %.c ; @var{command}@dots{}
6997 specifies how to make a file @file{@var{n}.o}, with another file
6998 @file{@var{n}.c} as its dependency, provided that @file{@var{n}.c}
6999 exists or can be made.
7001 There may also be dependencies that do not use @samp{%}; such a dependency
7002 attaches to every file made by this pattern rule. These unvarying
7003 dependencies are useful occasionally.
7005 A pattern rule need not have any dependencies that contain @samp{%}, or
7006 in fact any dependencies at all. Such a rule is effectively a general
7007 wildcard. It provides a way to make any file that matches the target
7008 pattern. @xref{Last Resort}.
7010 @c !!! The end of of this paragraph should be rewritten. --bob
7011 Pattern rules may have more than one target. Unlike normal rules, this
7012 does not act as many different rules with the same dependencies and
7013 commands. If a pattern rule has multiple targets, @code{make} knows that
7014 the rule's commands are responsible for making all of the targets. The
7015 commands are executed only once to make all the targets. When searching
7016 for a pattern rule to match a target, the target patterns of a rule other
7017 than the one that matches the target in need of a rule are incidental:
7018 @code{make} worries only about giving commands and dependencies to the file
7019 presently in question. However, when this file's commands are run, the
7020 other targets are marked as having been updated themselves.
7021 @cindex multiple targets, in pattern rule
7022 @cindex target, multiple in pattern rule
7024 The order in which pattern rules appear in the makefile is important
7025 since this is the order in which they are considered.
7026 Of equally applicable
7027 rules, only the first one found is used. The rules you write take precedence
7028 over those that are built in. Note however, that a rule whose
7029 dependencies actually exist or are mentioned always takes priority over a
7030 rule with dependencies that must be made by chaining other implicit rules.
7031 @cindex pattern rules, order of
7032 @cindex order of pattern rules
7034 @node Pattern Examples, Automatic, Pattern Intro, Pattern Rules
7035 @subsection Pattern Rule Examples
7037 Here are some examples of pattern rules actually predefined in
7038 @code{make}. First, the rule that compiles @samp{.c} files into @samp{.o}
7043 $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $< -o $@@
7047 defines a rule that can make any file @file{@var{x}.o} from
7048 @file{@var{x}.c}. The command uses the automatic variables @samp{$@@} and
7049 @samp{$<} to substitute the names of the target file and the source file
7050 in each case where the rule applies (@pxref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}).@refill
7052 Here is a second built-in rule:
7060 defines a rule that can make any file @file{@var{x}} whatsoever from a
7061 corresponding file @file{@var{x},v} in the subdirectory @file{RCS}. Since
7062 the target is @samp{%}, this rule will apply to any file whatever, provided
7063 the appropriate dependency file exists. The double colon makes the rule
7064 @dfn{terminal}, which means that its dependency may not be an intermediate
7065 file (@pxref{Match-Anything Rules, ,Match-Anything Pattern Rules}).@refill
7068 This pattern rule has two targets:
7072 %.tab.c %.tab.h: %.y
7078 @c The following paragraph is rewritten to avoid overfull hboxes
7079 This tells @code{make} that the command @samp{bison -d @var{x}.y} will
7080 make both @file{@var{x}.tab.c} and @file{@var{x}.tab.h}. If the file
7081 @file{foo} depends on the files @file{parse.tab.o} and @file{scan.o}
7082 and the file @file{scan.o} depends on the file @file{parse.tab.h},
7083 when @file{parse.y} is changed, the command @samp{bison -d parse.y}
7084 will be executed only once, and the dependencies of both
7085 @file{parse.tab.o} and @file{scan.o} will be satisfied. (Presumably
7086 the file @file{parse.tab.o} will be recompiled from @file{parse.tab.c}
7087 and the file @file{scan.o} from @file{scan.c}, while @file{foo} is
7088 linked from @file{parse.tab.o}, @file{scan.o}, and its other
7089 dependencies, and it will execute happily ever after.)@refill
7091 @node Automatic, Pattern Match, Pattern Examples, Pattern Rules
7092 @subsection Automatic Variables
7093 @cindex automatic variables
7094 @cindex variables, automatic
7095 @cindex variables, and implicit rule
7097 Suppose you are writing a pattern rule to compile a @samp{.c} file into a
7098 @samp{.o} file: how do you write the @samp{cc} command so that it operates
7099 on the right source file name? You cannot write the name in the command,
7100 because the name is different each time the implicit rule is applied.
7102 What you do is use a special feature of @code{make}, the @dfn{automatic
7103 variables}. These variables have values computed afresh for each rule that
7104 is executed, based on the target and dependencies of the rule. In this
7105 example, you would use @samp{$@@} for the object file name and @samp{$<}
7106 for the source file name.
7108 Here is a table of automatic variables:
7112 @vindex @@ @r{(automatic variable)}
7114 The file name of the target of the rule. If the target is an archive
7115 member, then @samp{$@@} is the name of the archive file. In a pattern
7116 rule that has multiple targets (@pxref{Pattern Intro, ,Introduction to
7117 Pattern Rules}), @samp{$@@} is the name of whichever target caused the
7118 rule's commands to be run.
7121 @vindex % @r{(automatic variable)}
7123 The target member name, when the target is an archive member.
7124 @xref{Archives}. For example, if the target is @file{foo.a(bar.o)} then
7125 @samp{$%} is @file{bar.o} and @samp{$@@} is @file{foo.a}. @samp{$%} is
7126 empty when the target is not an archive member.
7129 @vindex < @r{(automatic variable)}
7131 The name of the first dependency. If the target got its commands from
7132 an implicit rule, this will be the first dependency added by the
7133 implicit rule (@pxref{Implicit Rules}).
7136 @vindex ? @r{(automatic variable)}
7138 The names of all the dependencies that are newer than the target, with
7139 spaces between them. For dependencies which are archive members, only
7140 the member named is used (@pxref{Archives}).
7141 @cindex dependencies, list of changed
7142 @cindex list of changed dependencies
7145 @vindex ^ @r{(automatic variable)}
7147 The names of all the dependencies, with spaces between them. For
7148 dependencies which are archive members, only the member named is used
7149 (@pxref{Archives}). A target has only one dependency on each other file
7150 it depends on, no matter how many times each file is listed as a
7151 dependency. So if you list a dependency more than once for a target,
7152 the value of @code{$^} contains just one copy of the name.
7153 @cindex dependencies, list of all
7154 @cindex list of all dependencies
7157 @vindex + @r{(automatic variable)}
7159 This is like @samp{$^}, but dependencies listed more than once are
7160 duplicated in the order they were listed in the makefile. This is
7161 primarily useful for use in linking commands where it is meaningful to
7162 repeat library file names in a particular order.
7165 @vindex * @r{(automatic variable)}
7167 The stem with which an implicit rule matches (@pxref{Pattern Match, ,How
7168 Patterns Match}). If the target is @file{dir/a.foo.b} and the target
7169 pattern is @file{a.%.b} then the stem is @file{dir/foo}. The stem is
7170 useful for constructing names of related files.@refill
7171 @cindex stem, variable for
7173 In a static pattern rule, the stem is part of the file name that matched
7174 the @samp{%} in the target pattern.
7176 In an explicit rule, there is no stem; so @samp{$*} cannot be determined
7177 in that way. Instead, if the target name ends with a recognized suffix
7178 (@pxref{Suffix Rules, ,Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules}), @samp{$*} is set to
7179 the target name minus the suffix. For example, if the target name is
7180 @samp{foo.c}, then @samp{$*} is set to @samp{foo}, since @samp{.c} is a
7181 suffix. GNU @code{make} does this bizarre thing only for compatibility
7182 with other implementations of @code{make}. You should generally avoid
7183 using @samp{$*} except in implicit rules or static pattern rules.@refill
7185 If the target name in an explicit rule does not end with a recognized
7186 suffix, @samp{$*} is set to the empty string for that rule.
7189 @samp{$?} is useful even in explicit rules when you wish to operate on only
7190 the dependencies that have changed. For example, suppose that an archive
7191 named @file{lib} is supposed to contain copies of several object files.
7192 This rule copies just the changed object files into the archive:
7196 lib: foo.o bar.o lose.o win.o
7201 Of the variables listed above, four have values that are single file
7202 names, and two have values that are lists of file names. These six have
7203 variants that get just the file's directory name or just the file name
7204 within the directory. The variant variables' names are formed by
7205 appending @samp{D} or @samp{F}, respectively. These variants are
7206 semi-obsolete in GNU @code{make} since the functions @code{dir} and
7207 @code{notdir} can be used to get a similar effect (@pxref{Filename
7208 Functions, , Functions for File Names}). Note, however, that the
7209 @samp{F} variants all omit the trailing slash which always appears in
7210 the output of the @code{dir} function. Here is a table of the variants:
7214 @vindex @@D @r{(automatic variable)}
7216 The directory part of the file name of the target, with the trailing
7217 slash removed. If the value of @samp{$@@} is @file{dir/foo.o} then
7218 @samp{$(@@D)} is @file{dir}. This value is @file{.} if @samp{$@@} does
7219 not contain a slash.
7222 @vindex @@F @r{(automatic variable)}
7224 The file-within-directory part of the file name of the target. If the
7225 value of @samp{$@@} is @file{dir/foo.o} then @samp{$(@@F)} is
7226 @file{foo.o}. @samp{$(@@F)} is equivalent to @samp{$(notdir $@@)}.
7229 @vindex *D @r{(automatic variable)}
7232 @vindex *F @r{(automatic variable)}
7234 The directory part and the file-within-directory
7235 part of the stem; @file{dir} and @file{foo} in this example.
7238 @vindex %D @r{(automatic variable)}
7241 @vindex %F @r{(automatic variable)}
7243 The directory part and the file-within-directory part of the target
7244 archive member name. This makes sense only for archive member targets
7245 of the form @file{@var{archive}(@var{member})} and is useful only when
7246 @var{member} may contain a directory name. (@xref{Archive Members,
7247 ,Archive Members as Targets}.)
7250 @vindex <D @r{(automatic variable)}
7253 @vindex <F @r{(automatic variable)}
7255 The directory part and the file-within-directory
7256 part of the first dependency.
7259 @vindex ^D @r{(automatic variable)}
7262 @vindex ^F @r{(automatic variable)}
7264 Lists of the directory parts and the file-within-directory
7265 parts of all dependencies.
7268 @vindex ?D @r{(automatic variable)}
7271 @vindex ?F @r{(automatic variable)}
7273 Lists of the directory parts and the file-within-directory parts of
7274 all dependencies that are newer than the target.
7277 Note that we use a special stylistic convention when we talk about these
7278 automatic variables; we write ``the value of @samp{$<}'', rather than
7279 @w{``the variable @code{<}''} as we would write for ordinary variables
7280 such as @code{objects} and @code{CFLAGS}. We think this convention
7281 looks more natural in this special case. Please do not assume it has a
7282 deep significance; @samp{$<} refers to the variable named @code{<} just
7283 as @samp{$(CFLAGS)} refers to the variable named @code{CFLAGS}.
7284 You could just as well use @samp{$(<)} in place of @samp{$<}.
7286 @node Pattern Match, Match-Anything Rules, Automatic, Pattern Rules
7287 @subsection How Patterns Match
7290 A target pattern is composed of a @samp{%} between a prefix and a suffix,
7291 either or both of which may be empty. The pattern matches a file name only
7292 if the file name starts with the prefix and ends with the suffix, without
7293 overlap. The text between the prefix and the suffix is called the
7294 @dfn{stem}. Thus, when the pattern @samp{%.o} matches the file name
7295 @file{test.o}, the stem is @samp{test}. The pattern rule dependencies are
7296 turned into actual file names by substituting the stem for the character
7297 @samp{%}. Thus, if in the same example one of the dependencies is written
7298 as @samp{%.c}, it expands to @samp{test.c}.@refill
7300 When the target pattern does not contain a slash (and it usually does
7301 not), directory names in the file names are removed from the file name
7302 before it is compared with the target prefix and suffix. After the
7303 comparison of the file name to the target pattern, the directory
7304 names, along with the slash that ends them, are added on to the
7305 dependency file names generated from the pattern rule's dependency
7306 patterns and the file name. The directories are ignored only for the
7307 purpose of finding an implicit rule to use, not in the application of
7308 that rule. Thus, @samp{e%t} matches the file name @file{src/eat},
7309 with @samp{src/a} as the stem. When dependencies are turned into file
7310 names, the directories from the stem are added at the front, while the
7311 rest of the stem is substituted for the @samp{%}. The stem
7312 @samp{src/a} with a dependency pattern @samp{c%r} gives the file name
7313 @file{src/car}.@refill
7315 @node Match-Anything Rules, Canceling Rules, Pattern Match, Pattern Rules
7316 @subsection Match-Anything Pattern Rules
7318 @cindex match-anything rule
7319 @cindex terminal rule
7320 When a pattern rule's target is just @samp{%}, it matches any file name
7321 whatever. We call these rules @dfn{match-anything} rules. They are very
7322 useful, but it can take a lot of time for @code{make} to think about them,
7323 because it must consider every such rule for each file name listed either
7324 as a target or as a dependency.
7326 Suppose the makefile mentions @file{foo.c}. For this target, @code{make}
7327 would have to consider making it by linking an object file @file{foo.c.o},
7328 or by C compilation-and-linking in one step from @file{foo.c.c}, or by
7329 Pascal compilation-and-linking from @file{foo.c.p}, and many other
7332 We know these possibilities are ridiculous since @file{foo.c} is a C source
7333 file, not an executable. If @code{make} did consider these possibilities,
7334 it would ultimately reject them, because files such as @file{foo.c.o} and
7335 @file{foo.c.p} would not exist. But these possibilities are so
7336 numerous that @code{make} would run very slowly if it had to consider
7339 To gain speed, we have put various constraints on the way @code{make}
7340 considers match-anything rules. There are two different constraints that
7341 can be applied, and each time you define a match-anything rule you must
7342 choose one or the other for that rule.
7344 One choice is to mark the match-anything rule as @dfn{terminal} by defining
7345 it with a double colon. When a rule is terminal, it does not apply unless
7346 its dependencies actually exist. Dependencies that could be made with
7347 other implicit rules are not good enough. In other words, no further
7348 chaining is allowed beyond a terminal rule.
7350 For example, the built-in implicit rules for extracting sources from RCS
7351 and SCCS files are terminal; as a result, if the file @file{foo.c,v} does
7352 not exist, @code{make} will not even consider trying to make it as an
7353 intermediate file from @file{foo.c,v.o} or from @file{RCS/SCCS/s.foo.c,v}.
7354 RCS and SCCS files are generally ultimate source files, which should not be
7355 remade from any other files; therefore, @code{make} can save time by not
7356 looking for ways to remake them.@refill
7358 If you do not mark the match-anything rule as terminal, then it is
7359 nonterminal. A nonterminal match-anything rule cannot apply to a file name
7360 that indicates a specific type of data. A file name indicates a specific
7361 type of data if some non-match-anything implicit rule target matches it.
7363 For example, the file name @file{foo.c} matches the target for the pattern
7364 rule @samp{%.c : %.y} (the rule to run Yacc). Regardless of whether this
7365 rule is actually applicable (which happens only if there is a file
7366 @file{foo.y}), the fact that its target matches is enough to prevent
7367 consideration of any nonterminal match-anything rules for the file
7368 @file{foo.c}. Thus, @code{make} will not even consider trying to make
7369 @file{foo.c} as an executable file from @file{foo.c.o}, @file{foo.c.c},
7370 @file{foo.c.p}, etc.@refill
7372 The motivation for this constraint is that nonterminal match-anything
7373 rules are used for making files containing specific types of data (such as
7374 executable files) and a file name with a recognized suffix indicates some
7375 other specific type of data (such as a C source file).
7377 Special built-in dummy pattern rules are provided solely to recognize
7378 certain file names so that nonterminal match-anything rules will not be
7379 considered. These dummy rules have no dependencies and no commands, and
7380 they are ignored for all other purposes. For example, the built-in
7388 exists to make sure that Pascal source files such as @file{foo.p} match a
7389 specific target pattern and thereby prevent time from being wasted looking
7390 for @file{foo.p.o} or @file{foo.p.c}.
7392 Dummy pattern rules such as the one for @samp{%.p} are made for every
7393 suffix listed as valid for use in suffix rules (@pxref{Suffix Rules, ,Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules}).
7395 @node Canceling Rules, , Match-Anything Rules, Pattern Rules
7396 @subsection Canceling Implicit Rules
7398 You can override a built-in implicit rule (or one you have defined
7399 yourself) by defining a new pattern rule with the same target and
7400 dependencies, but different commands. When the new rule is defined, the
7401 built-in one is replaced. The new rule's position in the sequence of
7402 implicit rules is determined by where you write the new rule.
7404 You can cancel a built-in implicit rule by defining a pattern rule with the
7405 same target and dependencies, but no commands. For example, the following
7406 would cancel the rule that runs the assembler:
7412 @node Last Resort, Suffix Rules, Pattern Rules, Implicit Rules
7413 @section Defining Last-Resort Default Rules
7414 @cindex last-resort default rules
7415 @cindex default rules, last-resort
7417 You can define a last-resort implicit rule by writing a terminal
7418 match-anything pattern rule with no dependencies (@pxref{Match-Anything
7419 Rules}). This is just like any other pattern rule; the only thing
7420 special about it is that it will match any target. So such a rule's
7421 commands are used for all targets and dependencies that have no commands
7422 of their own and for which no other implicit rule applies.
7424 For example, when testing a makefile, you might not care if the source
7425 files contain real data, only that they exist. Then you might do this:
7433 to cause all the source files needed (as dependencies) to be created
7437 You can instead define commands to be used for targets for which there
7438 are no rules at all, even ones which don't specify commands. You do
7439 this by writing a rule for the target @code{.DEFAULT}. Such a rule's
7440 commands are used for all dependencies which do not appear as targets in
7441 any explicit rule, and for which no implicit rule applies. Naturally,
7442 there is no @code{.DEFAULT} rule unless you write one.
7444 If you use @code{.DEFAULT} with no commands or dependencies:
7451 the commands previously stored for @code{.DEFAULT} are cleared.
7452 Then @code{make} acts as if you had never defined @code{.DEFAULT} at all.
7454 If you do not want a target to get the commands from a match-anything
7455 pattern rule or @code{.DEFAULT}, but you also do not want any commands
7456 to be run for the target, you can give it empty commands (@pxref{Empty
7457 Commands, ,Defining Empty Commands}).@refill
7459 You can use a last-resort rule to override part of another makefile.
7460 @xref{Overriding Makefiles, , Overriding Part of Another Makefile}.
7462 @node Suffix Rules, Search Algorithm, Last Resort, Implicit Rules
7463 @section Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules
7464 @cindex old-fashioned suffix rules
7467 @dfn{Suffix rules} are the old-fashioned way of defining implicit rules for
7468 @code{make}. Suffix rules are obsolete because pattern rules are more
7469 general and clearer. They are supported in GNU @code{make} for
7470 compatibility with old makefiles. They come in two kinds:
7471 @dfn{double-suffix} and @dfn{single-suffix}.@refill
7473 A double-suffix rule is defined by a pair of suffixes: the target suffix
7474 and the source suffix. It matches any file whose name ends with the
7475 target suffix. The corresponding implicit dependency is made by
7476 replacing the target suffix with the source suffix in the file name. A
7477 two-suffix rule whose target and source suffixes are @samp{.o} and
7478 @samp{.c} is equivalent to the pattern rule @samp{%.o : %.c}.
7480 A single-suffix rule is defined by a single suffix, which is the source
7481 suffix. It matches any file name, and the corresponding implicit
7482 dependency name is made by appending the source suffix. A single-suffix
7483 rule whose source suffix is @samp{.c} is equivalent to the pattern rule
7486 Suffix rule definitions are recognized by comparing each rule's target
7487 against a defined list of known suffixes. When @code{make} sees a rule
7488 whose target is a known suffix, this rule is considered a single-suffix
7489 rule. When @code{make} sees a rule whose target is two known suffixes
7490 concatenated, this rule is taken as a double-suffix rule.
7492 For example, @samp{.c} and @samp{.o} are both on the default list of
7493 known suffixes. Therefore, if you define a rule whose target is
7494 @samp{.c.o}, @code{make} takes it to be a double-suffix rule with source
7495 suffix @samp{.c} and target suffix @samp{.o}. Here is the old-fashioned
7496 way to define the rule for compiling a C source file:@refill
7500 $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -o $@@ $<
7503 Suffix rules cannot have any dependencies of their own. If they have any,
7504 they are treated as normal files with funny names, not as suffix rules.
7509 $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -o $@@ $<
7513 tells how to make the file @file{.c.o} from the dependency file
7514 @file{foo.h}, and is not at all like the pattern rule:
7518 $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -o $@@ $<
7522 which tells how to make @samp{.o} files from @samp{.c} files, and makes all
7523 @samp{.o} files using this pattern rule also depend on @file{foo.h}.
7525 Suffix rules with no commands are also meaningless. They do not remove
7526 previous rules as do pattern rules with no commands (@pxref{Canceling
7527 Rules, , Canceling Implicit Rules}). They simply enter the suffix or pair of suffixes concatenated as
7528 a target in the data base.@refill
7531 The known suffixes are simply the names of the dependencies of the special
7532 target @code{.SUFFIXES}. You can add your own suffixes by writing a rule
7533 for @code{.SUFFIXES} that adds more dependencies, as in:
7536 .SUFFIXES: .hack .win
7540 which adds @samp{.hack} and @samp{.win} to the end of the list of suffixes.
7542 If you wish to eliminate the default known suffixes instead of just adding
7543 to them, write a rule for @code{.SUFFIXES} with no dependencies. By
7544 special dispensation, this eliminates all existing dependencies of
7545 @code{.SUFFIXES}. You can then write another rule to add the suffixes you
7550 .SUFFIXES: # @r{Delete the default suffixes}
7551 .SUFFIXES: .c .o .h # @r{Define our suffix list}
7555 The @samp{-r} or @samp{--no-builtin-rules} flag causes the default
7556 list of suffixes to be empty.
7559 The variable @code{SUFFIXES} is defined to the default list of suffixes
7560 before @code{make} reads any makefiles. You can change the list of suffixes
7561 with a rule for the special target @code{.SUFFIXES}, but that does not alter
7564 @node Search Algorithm, , Suffix Rules, Implicit Rules
7565 @section Implicit Rule Search Algorithm
7566 @cindex implicit rule, search algorithm
7567 @cindex search algorithm, implicit rule
7569 Here is the procedure @code{make} uses for searching for an implicit rule
7570 for a target @var{t}. This procedure is followed for each double-colon
7571 rule with no commands, for each target of ordinary rules none of which have
7572 commands, and for each dependency that is not the target of any rule. It
7573 is also followed recursively for dependencies that come from implicit
7574 rules, in the search for a chain of rules.
7576 Suffix rules are not mentioned in this algorithm because suffix rules are
7577 converted to equivalent pattern rules once the makefiles have been read in.
7579 For an archive member target of the form
7580 @samp{@var{archive}(@var{member})}, the following algorithm is run
7581 twice, first using the entire target name @var{t}, and second using
7582 @samp{(@var{member})} as the target @var{t} if the first run found no
7587 Split @var{t} into a directory part, called @var{d}, and the rest,
7588 called @var{n}. For example, if @var{t} is @samp{src/foo.o}, then
7589 @var{d} is @samp{src/} and @var{n} is @samp{foo.o}.@refill
7592 Make a list of all the pattern rules one of whose targets matches
7593 @var{t} or @var{n}. If the target pattern contains a slash, it is
7594 matched against @var{t}; otherwise, against @var{n}.
7597 If any rule in that list is @emph{not} a match-anything rule, then
7598 remove all nonterminal match-anything rules from the list.
7601 Remove from the list all rules with no commands.
7604 For each pattern rule in the list:
7608 Find the stem @var{s}, which is the nonempty part of @var{t} or @var{n}
7609 matched by the @samp{%} in the target pattern.@refill
7612 Compute the dependency names by substituting @var{s} for @samp{%}; if
7613 the target pattern does not contain a slash, append @var{d} to
7614 the front of each dependency name.@refill
7617 Test whether all the dependencies exist or ought to exist. (If a
7618 file name is mentioned in the makefile as a target or as an explicit
7619 dependency, then we say it ought to exist.)
7621 If all dependencies exist or ought to exist, or there are no dependencies,
7622 then this rule applies.
7626 If no pattern rule has been found so far, try harder.
7627 For each pattern rule in the list:
7631 If the rule is terminal, ignore it and go on to the next rule.
7634 Compute the dependency names as before.
7637 Test whether all the dependencies exist or ought to exist.
7640 For each dependency that does not exist, follow this algorithm
7641 recursively to see if the dependency can be made by an implicit
7645 If all dependencies exist, ought to exist, or can be
7646 made by implicit rules, then this rule applies.
7650 If no implicit rule applies, the rule for @code{.DEFAULT}, if any,
7651 applies. In that case, give @var{t} the same commands that
7652 @code{.DEFAULT} has. Otherwise, there are no commands for @var{t}.
7655 Once a rule that applies has been found, for each target pattern of the
7656 rule other than the one that matched @var{t} or @var{n}, the @samp{%} in
7657 the pattern is replaced with @var{s} and the resultant file name is stored
7658 until the commands to remake the target file @var{t} are executed. After
7659 these commands are executed, each of these stored file names are entered
7660 into the data base and marked as having been updated and having the same
7661 update status as the file @var{t}.
7663 When the commands of a pattern rule are executed for @var{t}, the automatic
7664 variables are set corresponding to the target and dependencies.
7665 @xref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}.
7667 @node Archives, Features, Implicit Rules, Top
7668 @chapter Using @code{make} to Update Archive Files
7671 @dfn{Archive files} are files containing named subfiles called
7672 @dfn{members}; they are maintained with the program @code{ar} and their
7673 main use is as subroutine libraries for linking.
7676 * Archive Members:: Archive members as targets.
7677 * Archive Update:: The implicit rule for archive member targets.
7678 * Archive Pitfalls:: Dangers to watch out for when using archives.
7679 * Archive Suffix Rules:: You can write a special kind of suffix rule
7680 for updating archives.
7683 @node Archive Members, Archive Update, , Archives
7684 @section Archive Members as Targets
7685 @cindex archive member targets
7687 An individual member of an archive file can be used as a target or
7688 dependency in @code{make}. You specify the member named @var{member} in
7689 archive file @var{archive} as follows:
7692 @var{archive}(@var{member})
7696 This construct is available only in targets and dependencies, not in
7697 commands! Most programs that you might use in commands do not support this
7698 syntax and cannot act directly on archive members. Only @code{ar} and
7699 other programs specifically designed to operate on archives can do so.
7700 Therefore, valid commands to update an archive member target probably must
7701 use @code{ar}. For example, this rule says to create a member
7702 @file{hack.o} in archive @file{foolib} by copying the file @file{hack.o}:
7705 foolib(hack.o) : hack.o
7709 In fact, nearly all archive member targets are updated in just this way
7710 and there is an implicit rule to do it for you. @strong{Note:} The
7711 @samp{c} flag to @code{ar} is required if the archive file does not
7714 To specify several members in the same archive, you can write all the
7715 member names together between the parentheses. For example:
7718 foolib(hack.o kludge.o)
7725 foolib(hack.o) foolib(kludge.o)
7728 @cindex wildcard, in archive member
7729 You can also use shell-style wildcards in an archive member reference.
7730 @xref{Wildcards, ,Using Wildcard Characters in File Names}. For
7731 example, @w{@samp{foolib(*.o)}} expands to all existing members of the
7732 @file{foolib} archive whose names end in @samp{.o}; perhaps
7733 @samp{@w{foolib(hack.o)} @w{foolib(kludge.o)}}.
7735 @node Archive Update
7736 @section Implicit Rule for Archive Member Targets
7738 Recall that a target that looks like @file{@var{a}(@var{m})} stands for the
7739 member named @var{m} in the archive file @var{a}.
7741 When @code{make} looks for an implicit rule for such a target, as a special
7742 feature it considers implicit rules that match @file{(@var{m})}, as well as
7743 those that match the actual target @file{@var{a}(@var{m})}.
7745 This causes one special rule whose target is @file{(%)} to match. This
7746 rule updates the target @file{@var{a}(@var{m})} by copying the file @var{m}
7747 into the archive. For example, it will update the archive member target
7748 @file{foo.a(bar.o)} by copying the @emph{file} @file{bar.o} into the
7749 archive @file{foo.a} as a @emph{member} named @file{bar.o}.
7751 When this rule is chained with others, the result is very powerful.
7752 Thus, @samp{make "foo.a(bar.o)"} (the quotes are needed to protect the
7753 @samp{(} and @samp{)} from being interpreted specially by the shell) in
7754 the presence of a file @file{bar.c} is enough to cause the following
7755 commands to be run, even without a makefile:
7758 cc -c bar.c -o bar.o
7764 Here @code{make} has envisioned the file @file{bar.o} as an intermediate
7765 file. @xref{Chained Rules, ,Chains of Implicit Rules}.
7767 Implicit rules such as this one are written using the automatic variable
7768 @samp{$%}. @xref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}.
7770 An archive member name in an archive cannot contain a directory name, but
7771 it may be useful in a makefile to pretend that it does. If you write an
7772 archive member target @file{foo.a(dir/file.o)}, @code{make} will perform
7773 automatic updating with this command:
7776 ar r foo.a dir/file.o
7780 which has the effect of copying the file @file{dir/file.o} into a member
7781 named @file{file.o}. In connection with such usage, the automatic variables
7782 @code{%D} and @code{%F} may be useful.
7785 * Archive Symbols:: How to update archive symbol directories.
7788 @node Archive Symbols, , , Archive Update
7789 @subsection Updating Archive Symbol Directories
7790 @cindex @code{__.SYMDEF}
7791 @cindex updating archive symbol directories
7792 @cindex archive symbol directory updating
7793 @cindex symbol directories, updating archive
7794 @cindex directories, updating archive symbol
7796 An archive file that is used as a library usually contains a special member
7797 named @file{__.SYMDEF} that contains a directory of the external symbol
7798 names defined by all the other members. After you update any other
7799 members, you need to update @file{__.SYMDEF} so that it will summarize the
7800 other members properly. This is done by running the @code{ranlib} program:
7803 ranlib @var{archivefile}
7806 Normally you would put this command in the rule for the archive file,
7807 and make all the members of the archive file dependencies of that rule.
7811 libfoo.a: libfoo.a(x.o) libfoo.a(y.o) @dots{}
7816 The effect of this is to update archive members @file{x.o}, @file{y.o},
7817 etc., and then update the symbol directory member @file{__.SYMDEF} by
7818 running @code{ranlib}. The rules for updating the members are not shown
7819 here; most likely you can omit them and use the implicit rule which copies
7820 files into the archive, as described in the preceding section.
7822 This is not necessary when using the GNU @code{ar} program, which
7823 updates the @file{__.SYMDEF} member automatically.
7825 @node Archive Pitfalls
7826 @section Dangers When Using Archives
7827 @cindex archive, and parallel execution
7828 @cindex parallel execution, and archive update
7829 @cindex archive, and @code{-j}
7830 @cindex @code{-j}, and archive update
7832 It is important to be careful when using parallel execution (the
7833 @code{-j} switch; @pxref{Parallel, ,Parallel Execution}) and archives.
7834 If multiple @code{ar} commands run at the same time on the same archive
7835 file, they will not know about each other and can corrupt the file.
7837 Possibly a future version of @code{make} will provide a mechanism to
7838 circumvent this problem by serializing all commands that operate on the
7839 same archive file. But for the time being, you must either write your
7840 makefiles to avoid this problem in some other way, or not use @code{-j}.
7842 @node Archive Suffix Rules, , Archive Pitfalls, Archives
7843 @section Suffix Rules for Archive Files
7844 @cindex suffix rule, for archive
7845 @cindex archive, suffix rule for
7846 @cindex library archive, suffix rule for
7847 @cindex @code{.a} (archives)
7849 You can write a special kind of suffix rule for dealing with archive
7850 files. @xref{Suffix Rules}, for a full explanation of suffix rules.
7851 Archive suffix rules are obsolete in GNU @code{make}, because pattern
7852 rules for archives are a more general mechanism (@pxref{Archive
7853 Update}). But they are retained for compatibility with other
7856 To write a suffix rule for archives, you simply write a suffix rule
7857 using the target suffix @samp{.a} (the usual suffix for archive files).
7858 For example, here is the old-fashioned suffix rule to update a library
7859 archive from C source files:
7864 $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -c $< -o $*.o
7871 This works just as if you had written the pattern rule:
7876 $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -c $< -o $*.o
7882 In fact, this is just what @code{make} does when it sees a suffix rule
7883 with @samp{.a} as the target suffix. Any double-suffix rule
7884 @w{@samp{.@var{x}.a}} is converted to a pattern rule with the target
7885 pattern @samp{(%.o)} and a dependency pattern of @samp{%.@var{x}}.
7887 Since you might want to use @samp{.a} as the suffix for some other kind
7888 of file, @code{make} also converts archive suffix rules to pattern rules
7889 in the normal way (@pxref{Suffix Rules}). Thus a double-suffix rule
7890 @w{@samp{.@var{x}.a}} produces two pattern rules: @samp{@w{(%.o):}
7891 @w{%.@var{x}}} and @samp{@w{%.a}: @w{%.@var{x}}}.@refill
7893 @node Features, Missing, Archives, Top
7894 @chapter Features of GNU @code{make}
7895 @cindex features of GNU @code{make}
7897 @cindex compatibility
7899 Here is a summary of the features of GNU @code{make}, for comparison
7900 with and credit to other versions of @code{make}. We consider the
7901 features of @code{make} in 4.2 BSD systems as a baseline. If you are
7902 concerned with writing portable makefiles, you should use only the
7903 features of @code{make} @emph{not} listed here or in @ref{Missing}.
7905 Many features come from the version of @code{make} in System V.
7909 The @code{VPATH} variable and its special meaning.
7910 @xref{Directory Search, , Searching Directories for Dependencies}.
7911 This feature exists in System V @code{make}, but is undocumented.
7912 It is documented in 4.3 BSD @code{make} (which says it mimics System V's
7913 @code{VPATH} feature).@refill
7916 Included makefiles. @xref{Include, ,Including Other Makefiles}.
7917 Allowing multiple files to be included with a single directive is a GNU
7921 Variables are read from and communicated via the environment.
7922 @xref{Environment, ,Variables from the Environment}.
7925 Options passed through the variable @code{MAKEFLAGS} to recursive
7926 invocations of @code{make}.
7927 @xref{Options/Recursion, ,Communicating Options to a Sub-@code{make}}.
7930 The automatic variable @code{$%} is set to the member name
7931 in an archive reference. @xref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}.
7934 The automatic variables @code{$@@}, @code{$*}, @code{$<}, @code{$%},
7935 and @code{$?} have corresponding forms like @code{$(@@F)} and
7936 @code{$(@@D)}. We have generalized this to @code{$^} as an obvious
7937 extension. @xref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}.@refill
7940 Substitution variable references.
7941 @xref{Reference, ,Basics of Variable References}.
7944 The command-line options @samp{-b} and @samp{-m}, accepted and
7945 ignored. In System V @code{make}, these options actually do something.
7948 Execution of recursive commands to run @code{make} via the variable
7949 @code{MAKE} even if @samp{-n}, @samp{-q} or @samp{-t} is specified.
7950 @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive Use of @code{make}}.
7953 Support for suffix @samp{.a} in suffix rules. @xref{Archive Suffix
7954 Rules}. This feature is obsolete in GNU @code{make}, because the
7955 general feature of rule chaining (@pxref{Chained Rules, ,Chains of
7956 Implicit Rules}) allows one pattern rule for installing members in an
7957 archive (@pxref{Archive Update}) to be sufficient.
7960 The arrangement of lines and backslash-newline combinations in
7961 commands is retained when the commands are printed, so they appear as
7962 they do in the makefile, except for the stripping of initial
7966 The following features were inspired by various other versions of
7967 @code{make}. In some cases it is unclear exactly which versions inspired
7972 Pattern rules using @samp{%}.
7973 This has been implemented in several versions of @code{make}.
7974 We're not sure who invented it first, but it's been spread around a bit.
7975 @xref{Pattern Rules, ,Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules}.@refill
7978 Rule chaining and implicit intermediate files.
7979 This was implemented by Stu Feldman in his version of @code{make}
7980 for AT&T Eighth Edition Research Unix, and later by Andrew Hume of
7981 AT&T Bell Labs in his @code{mk} program (where he terms it
7982 ``transitive closure''). We do not really know if
7983 we got this from either of them or thought it up ourselves at the
7984 same time. @xref{Chained Rules, ,Chains of Implicit Rules}.
7987 The automatic variable @code{$^} containing a list of all dependencies
7988 of the current target. We did not invent this, but we have no idea who
7989 did. @xref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables}. The automatic variable
7990 @code{$+} is a simple extension of @code{$^}.
7993 The ``what if'' flag (@samp{-W} in GNU @code{make}) was (as far as we know)
7994 invented by Andrew Hume in @code{mk}.
7995 @xref{Instead of Execution, ,Instead of Executing the Commands}.
7998 The concept of doing several things at once (parallelism) exists in
7999 many incarnations of @code{make} and similar programs, though not in the
8000 System V or BSD implementations. @xref{Execution, ,Command Execution}.
8003 Modified variable references using pattern substitution come from
8004 SunOS 4. @xref{Reference, ,Basics of Variable References}.
8005 This functionality was provided in GNU @code{make} by the
8006 @code{patsubst} function before the alternate syntax was implemented
8007 for compatibility with SunOS 4. It is not altogether clear who
8008 inspired whom, since GNU @code{make} had @code{patsubst} before SunOS
8009 4 was released.@refill
8012 The special significance of @samp{+} characters preceding command lines
8013 (@pxref{Instead of Execution, ,Instead of Executing the Commands}) is
8015 @cite{IEEE Standard 1003.2-1992} (POSIX.2).
8018 The @samp{+=} syntax to append to the value of a variable comes from SunOS
8019 4 @code{make}. @xref{Appending, , Appending More Text to Variables}.
8022 The syntax @w{@samp{@var{archive}(@var{mem1} @var{mem2}@dots{})}} to list
8023 multiple members in a single archive file comes from SunOS 4 @code{make}.
8024 @xref{Archive Members}.
8027 The @code{-include} directive to include makefiles with no error for a
8028 nonexistent file comes from SunOS 4 @code{make}. (But note that SunOS 4
8029 @code{make} does not allow multiple makefiles to be specified in one
8030 @code{-include} directive.)
8033 The remaining features are inventions new in GNU @code{make}:
8037 Use the @samp{-v} or @samp{--version} option to print version and
8038 copyright information.
8041 Use the @samp{-h} or @samp{--help} option to summarize the options to
8045 Simply-expanded variables. @xref{Flavors, ,The Two Flavors of Variables}.
8048 Pass command-line variable assignments automatically through the
8049 variable @code{MAKE} to recursive @code{make} invocations.
8050 @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive Use of @code{make}}.
8053 Use the @samp{-C} or @samp{--directory} command option to change
8054 directory. @xref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options}.
8057 Make verbatim variable definitions with @code{define}.
8058 @xref{Defining, ,Defining Variables Verbatim}.
8061 Declare phony targets with the special target @code{.PHONY}.
8063 Andrew Hume of AT&T Bell Labs implemented a similar feature with a
8064 different syntax in his @code{mk} program. This seems to be a case of
8065 parallel discovery. @xref{Phony Targets, ,Phony Targets}.
8068 Manipulate text by calling functions.
8069 @xref{Functions, ,Functions for Transforming Text}.
8072 Use the @samp{-o} or @samp{--old-file}
8073 option to pretend a file's modification-time is old.
8074 @xref{Avoiding Compilation, ,Avoiding Recompilation of Some Files}.
8077 Conditional execution.
8079 This feature has been implemented numerous times in various versions
8080 of @code{make}; it seems a natural extension derived from the features
8081 of the C preprocessor and similar macro languages and is not a
8082 revolutionary concept. @xref{Conditionals, ,Conditional Parts of Makefiles}.
8085 Specify a search path for included makefiles.
8086 @xref{Include, ,Including Other Makefiles}.
8089 Specify extra makefiles to read with an environment variable.
8090 @xref{MAKEFILES Variable, ,The Variable @code{MAKEFILES}}.
8093 Strip leading sequences of @samp{./} from file names, so that
8094 @file{./@var{file}} and @file{@var{file}} are considered to be the
8098 Use a special search method for library dependencies written in the
8099 form @samp{-l@var{name}}.
8100 @xref{Libraries/Search, ,Directory Search for Link Libraries}.
8103 Allow suffixes for suffix rules
8104 (@pxref{Suffix Rules, ,Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules}) to contain any
8105 characters. In other versions of @code{make}, they must begin with
8106 @samp{.} and not contain any @samp{/} characters.
8109 Keep track of the current level of @code{make} recursion using the
8110 variable @code{MAKELEVEL}. @xref{Recursion, ,Recursive Use of @code{make}}.
8113 Specify static pattern rules. @xref{Static Pattern, ,Static Pattern Rules}.
8116 Provide selective @code{vpath} search.
8117 @xref{Directory Search, ,Searching Directories for Dependencies}.
8120 Provide computed variable references.
8121 @xref{Reference, ,Basics of Variable References}.
8124 Update makefiles. @xref{Remaking Makefiles, ,How Makefiles Are Remade}.
8125 System V @code{make} has a very, very limited form of this
8126 functionality in that it will check out SCCS files for makefiles.
8129 Various new built-in implicit rules.
8130 @xref{Catalogue of Rules, ,Catalogue of Implicit Rules}.
8133 The built-in variable @samp{MAKE_VERSION} gives the version number of
8137 @node Missing, Makefile Conventions, Features, Top
8138 @chapter Incompatibilities and Missing Features
8139 @cindex incompatibilities
8140 @cindex missing features
8141 @cindex features, missing
8143 The @code{make} programs in various other systems support a few features
8144 that are not implemented in GNU @code{make}. The POSIX.2 standard
8145 (@cite{IEEE Standard 1003.2-1992}) which specifies @code{make} does not
8146 require any of these features.@refill
8150 A target of the form @samp{@var{file}((@var{entry}))} stands for a member
8151 of archive file @var{file}. The member is chosen, not by name, but by
8152 being an object file which defines the linker symbol @var{entry}.@refill
8154 This feature was not put into GNU @code{make} because of the
8155 nonmodularity of putting knowledge into @code{make} of the internal
8156 format of archive file symbol tables.
8157 @xref{Archive Symbols, ,Updating Archive Symbol Directories}.
8160 Suffixes (used in suffix rules) that end with the character @samp{~}
8161 have a special meaning to System V @code{make};
8162 they refer to the SCCS file that corresponds
8163 to the file one would get without the @samp{~}. For example, the
8164 suffix rule @samp{.c~.o} would make the file @file{@var{n}.o} from
8165 the SCCS file @file{s.@var{n}.c}. For complete coverage, a whole
8166 series of such suffix rules is required.
8167 @xref{Suffix Rules, ,Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules}.
8169 In GNU @code{make}, this entire series of cases is handled by two
8170 pattern rules for extraction from SCCS, in combination with the
8171 general feature of rule chaining.
8172 @xref{Chained Rules, ,Chains of Implicit Rules}.
8175 In System V @code{make}, the string @samp{$$@@} has the strange meaning
8176 that, in the dependencies of a rule with multiple targets, it stands
8177 for the particular target that is being processed.
8179 This is not defined in GNU @code{make} because @samp{$$} should always
8180 stand for an ordinary @samp{$}.
8182 It is possible to get this functionality through the use of static pattern
8183 rules (@pxref{Static Pattern, ,Static Pattern Rules}).
8184 The System V @code{make} rule:
8187 $(targets): $$@@.o lib.a
8191 can be replaced with the GNU @code{make} static pattern rule:
8194 $(targets): %: %.o lib.a
8198 In System V and 4.3 BSD @code{make}, files found by @code{VPATH} search
8199 (@pxref{Directory Search, ,Searching Directories for Dependencies}) have their names changed inside command
8200 strings. We feel it is much cleaner to always use automatic variables
8201 and thus make this feature obsolete.@refill
8204 In some Unix @code{make}s, the automatic variable @code{$*} appearing in
8205 the dependencies of a rule has the amazingly strange ``feature'' of
8206 expanding to the full name of the @emph{target of that rule}. We cannot
8207 imagine what went on in the minds of Unix @code{make} developers to do
8208 this; it is utterly inconsistent with the normal definition of @code{$*}.
8209 @vindex * @r{(automatic variable), unsupported bizarre usage}
8212 In some Unix @code{make}s, implicit rule search
8213 (@pxref{Implicit Rules, ,Using Implicit Rules}) is apparently done for
8214 @emph{all} targets, not just those without commands. This means you can
8225 and Unix @code{make} will intuit that @file{foo.o} depends on
8226 @file{foo.c}.@refill
8228 We feel that such usage is broken. The dependency properties of
8229 @code{make} are well-defined (for GNU @code{make}, at least),
8230 and doing such a thing simply does not fit the model.@refill
8233 GNU @code{make} does not include any built-in implicit rules for
8234 compiling or preprocessing EFL programs. If we hear of anyone who is
8235 using EFL, we will gladly add them.
8238 It appears that in SVR4 @code{make}, a suffix rule can be specified with
8239 no commands, and it is treated as if it had empty commands
8240 (@pxref{Empty Commands}). For example:
8247 will override the built-in @file{.c.a} suffix rule.
8249 We feel that it is cleaner for a rule without commands to always simply
8250 add to the dependency list for the target. The above example can be
8251 easily rewritten to get the desired behavior in GNU @code{make}:
8258 Some versions of @code{make} invoke the shell with the @samp{-e} flag,
8259 except under @samp{-k} (@pxref{Testing, ,Testing the Compilation of a
8260 Program}). The @samp{-e} flag tells the shell to exit as soon as any
8261 program it runs returns a nonzero status. We feel it is cleaner to
8262 write each shell command line to stand on its own and not require this
8266 @comment The makefile standards are in a separate file that is also
8267 @comment included by standards.texi.
8268 @include make-stds.texi
8270 @node Quick Reference, Complex Makefile, Makefile Conventions, Top
8271 @appendix Quick Reference
8273 This appendix summarizes the directives, text manipulation functions,
8274 and special variables which GNU @code{make} understands.
8275 @xref{Special Targets}, @ref{Catalogue of Rules, ,Catalogue of Implicit Rules},
8276 and @ref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options},
8277 for other summaries.
8279 Here is a summary of the directives GNU @code{make} recognizes:
8282 @item define @var{variable}
8285 Define a multi-line, recursively-expanded variable.@*
8288 @item ifdef @var{variable}
8289 @itemx ifndef @var{variable}
8290 @itemx ifeq (@var{a},@var{b})
8291 @itemx ifeq "@var{a}" "@var{b}"
8292 @itemx ifeq '@var{a}' '@var{b}'
8293 @itemx ifneq (@var{a},@var{b})
8294 @itemx ifneq "@var{a}" "@var{b}"
8295 @itemx ifneq '@var{a}' '@var{b}'
8299 Conditionally evaluate part of the makefile.@*
8300 @xref{Conditionals}.
8302 @item include @var{file}
8304 Include another makefile.@*
8305 @xref{Include, ,Including Other Makefiles}.
8307 @item override @var{variable} = @var{value}
8308 @itemx override @var{variable} := @var{value}
8309 @itemx override @var{variable} += @var{value}
8310 @itemx override define @var{variable}
8313 Define a variable, overriding any previous definition, even one from
8315 @xref{Override Directive, ,The @code{override} Directive}.
8319 Tell @code{make} to export all variables to child processes by default.@*
8320 @xref{Variables/Recursion, , Communicating Variables to a Sub-@code{make}}.
8322 @item export @var{variable}
8323 @itemx export @var{variable} = @var{value}
8324 @itemx export @var{variable} := @var{value}
8325 @itemx export @var{variable} += @var{value}
8326 @itemx unexport @var{variable}
8327 Tell @code{make} whether or not to export a particular variable to child
8329 @xref{Variables/Recursion, , Communicating Variables to a Sub-@code{make}}.
8331 @item vpath @var{pattern} @var{path}
8332 Specify a search path for files matching a @samp{%} pattern.@*
8333 @xref{Selective Search, , The @code{vpath} Directive}.
8335 @item vpath @var{pattern}
8336 Remove all search paths previously specified for @var{pattern}.
8339 Remove all search paths previously specified in any @code{vpath}
8343 Here is a summary of the text manipulation functions (@pxref{Functions}):
8346 @item $(subst @var{from},@var{to},@var{text})
8347 Replace @var{from} with @var{to} in @var{text}.@*
8348 @xref{Text Functions, , Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}.
8350 @item $(patsubst @var{pattern},@var{replacement},@var{text})
8351 Replace words matching @var{pattern} with @var{replacement} in @var{text}.@*
8352 @xref{Text Functions, , Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}.
8354 @item $(strip @var{string})
8355 Remove excess whitespace characters from @var{string}.@*
8356 @xref{Text Functions, , Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}.
8358 @item $(findstring @var{find},@var{text})
8359 Locate @var{find} in @var{text}.@*
8360 @xref{Text Functions, , Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}.
8362 @item $(filter @var{pattern}@dots{},@var{text})
8363 Select words in @var{text} that match one of the @var{pattern} words.@*
8364 @xref{Text Functions, , Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}.
8366 @item $(filter-out @var{pattern}@dots{},@var{text})
8367 Select words in @var{text} that @emph{do not} match any of the @var{pattern} words.@*
8368 @xref{Text Functions, , Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}.
8370 @item $(sort @var{list})
8371 Sort the words in @var{list} lexicographically, removing duplicates.@*
8372 @xref{Text Functions, , Functions for String Substitution and Analysis}.
8374 @item $(dir @var{names}@dots{})
8375 Extract the directory part of each file name.@*
8376 @xref{Filename Functions, ,Functions for File Names}.
8378 @item $(notdir @var{names}@dots{})
8379 Extract the non-directory part of each file name.@*
8380 @xref{Filename Functions, ,Functions for File Names}.
8382 @item $(suffix @var{names}@dots{})
8383 Extract the suffix (the last @samp{.} and following characters) of each file name.@*
8384 @xref{Filename Functions, ,Functions for File Names}.
8386 @item $(basename @var{names}@dots{})
8387 Extract the base name (name without suffix) of each file name.@*
8388 @xref{Filename Functions, ,Functions for File Names}.
8390 @item $(addsuffix @var{suffix},@var{names}@dots{})
8391 Append @var{suffix} to each word in @var{names}.@*
8392 @xref{Filename Functions, ,Functions for File Names}.
8394 @item $(addprefix @var{prefix},@var{names}@dots{})
8395 Prepend @var{prefix} to each word in @var{names}.@*
8396 @xref{Filename Functions, ,Functions for File Names}.
8398 @item $(join @var{list1},@var{list2})
8399 Join two parallel lists of words.@*
8400 @xref{Filename Functions, ,Functions for File Names}.
8402 @item $(word @var{n},@var{text})
8403 Extract the @var{n}th word (one-origin) of @var{text}.@*
8404 @xref{Filename Functions, ,Functions for File Names}.
8406 @item $(words @var{text})
8407 Count the number of words in @var{text}.@*
8408 @xref{Filename Functions, ,Functions for File Names}.
8410 @item $(firstword @var{names}@dots{})
8411 Extract the first word of @var{names}.@*
8412 @xref{Filename Functions, ,Functions for File Names}.
8414 @item $(wildcard @var{pattern}@dots{})
8415 Find file names matching a shell file name pattern (@emph{not} a
8416 @samp{%} pattern).@*
8417 @xref{Wildcard Function, ,The Function @code{wildcard}}.
8419 @item $(shell @var{command})
8421 Execute a shell command and return its output.@*
8422 @xref{Shell Function, , The @code{shell} Function}.
8424 @item $(origin @var{variable})
8426 Return a string describing how the @code{make} variable @var{variable} was
8428 @xref{Origin Function, , The @code{origin} Function}.
8430 @item $(foreach @var{var},@var{words},@var{text})
8432 Evaluate @var{text} with @var{var} bound to each word in @var{words},
8433 and concatenate the results.@*
8434 @xref{Foreach Function, ,The @code{foreach} Function}.
8437 Here is a summary of the automatic variables.
8438 @xref{Automatic, ,Automatic Variables},
8439 for full information.
8443 The file name of the target.
8446 The target member name, when the target is an archive member.
8449 The name of the first dependency.
8452 The names of all the dependencies that are
8453 newer than the target, with spaces between them.
8454 For dependencies which are archive members, only
8455 the member named is used (@pxref{Archives}).
8459 The names of all the dependencies, with spaces between them. For
8460 dependencies which are archive members, only the member named is used
8461 (@pxref{Archives}). The value of @code{$^} omits duplicate
8462 dependencies, while @code{$+} retains them and preserves their order.
8465 The stem with which an implicit rule matches
8466 (@pxref{Pattern Match, ,How Patterns Match}).
8470 The directory part and the file-within-directory part of @code{$@@}.
8474 The directory part and the file-within-directory part of @code{$*}.
8478 The directory part and the file-within-directory part of @code{$%}.
8482 The directory part and the file-within-directory part of @code{$<}.
8486 The directory part and the file-within-directory part of @code{$^}.
8490 The directory part and the file-within-directory part of @code{$+}.
8494 The directory part and the file-within-directory part of @code{$?}.
8497 These variables are used specially by GNU @code{make}:
8502 Makefiles to be read on every invocation of @code{make}.@*
8503 @xref{MAKEFILES Variable, ,The Variable @code{MAKEFILES}}.
8507 Directory search path for files not found in the current directory.@*
8508 @xref{General Search, , @code{VPATH} Search Path for All Dependencies}.
8512 The name of the system default command interpreter, usually @file{/bin/sh}.
8513 You can set @code{SHELL} in the makefile to change the shell used to run
8514 commands. @xref{Execution, ,Command Execution}.
8518 The name with which @code{make} was invoked.
8519 Using this variable in commands has special meaning.
8520 @xref{MAKE Variable, ,How the @code{MAKE} Variable Works}.
8524 The number of levels of recursion (sub-@code{make}s).@*
8525 @xref{Variables/Recursion}.
8529 The flags given to @code{make}. You can set this in the environment or
8530 a makefile to set flags.@*
8531 @xref{Options/Recursion, ,Communicating Options to a Sub-@code{make}}.
8535 The default list of suffixes before @code{make} reads any makefiles.
8538 @node Complex Makefile, Concept Index, Quick Reference, Top
8539 @appendix Complex Makefile Example
8541 Here is the makefile for the GNU @code{tar} program. This is a
8542 moderately complex makefile.
8544 Because it is the first target, the default goal is @samp{all}. An
8545 interesting feature of this makefile is that @file{testpad.h} is a
8546 source file automatically created by the @code{testpad} program,
8547 itself compiled from @file{testpad.c}.
8549 If you type @samp{make} or @samp{make all}, then @code{make} creates
8550 the @file{tar} executable, the @file{rmt} daemon that provides
8551 remote tape access, and the @file{tar.info} Info file.
8553 If you type @samp{make install}, then @code{make} not only creates
8554 @file{tar}, @file{rmt}, and @file{tar.info}, but also installs
8557 If you type @samp{make clean}, then @code{make} removes the @samp{.o}
8558 files, and the @file{tar}, @file{rmt}, @file{testpad},
8559 @file{testpad.h}, and @file{core} files.
8561 If you type @samp{make distclean}, then @code{make} not only removes
8562 the same files as does @samp{make clean} but also the
8563 @file{TAGS}, @file{Makefile}, and @file{config.status} files.
8564 (Although it is not evident, this makefile (and
8565 @file{config.status}) is generated by the user with the
8566 @code{configure} program, which is provided in the @code{tar}
8567 distribution, but is not shown here.)
8569 If you type @samp{make realclean}, then @code{make} removes the same
8570 files as does @samp{make distclean} and also removes the Info files
8571 generated from @file{tar.texinfo}.
8573 In addition, there are targets @code{shar} and @code{dist} that create
8578 # Generated automatically from Makefile.in by configure.
8579 # Un*x Makefile for GNU tar program.
8580 # Copyright (C) 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
8584 # This program is free software; you can redistribute
8585 # it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
8586 # General Public License @dots{}
8593 #### Start of system configuration section. ####
8598 # If you use gcc, you should either run the
8599 # fixincludes script that comes with it or else use
8600 # gcc with the -traditional option. Otherwise ioctl
8601 # calls will be compiled incorrectly on some systems.
8604 INSTALL = /usr/local/bin/install -c
8605 INSTALLDATA = /usr/local/bin/install -c -m 644
8608 # Things you might add to DEFS:
8609 # -DSTDC_HEADERS If you have ANSI C headers and
8611 # -DPOSIX If you have POSIX.1 headers and
8613 # -DBSD42 If you have sys/dir.h (unless
8614 # you use -DPOSIX), sys/file.h,
8615 # and st_blocks in `struct stat'.
8616 # -DUSG If you have System V/ANSI C
8617 # string and memory functions
8618 # and headers, sys/sysmacros.h,
8619 # fcntl.h, getcwd, no valloc,
8620 # and ndir.h (unless
8621 # you use -DDIRENT).
8622 # -DNO_MEMORY_H If USG or STDC_HEADERS but do not
8624 # -DDIRENT If USG and you have dirent.h
8625 # instead of ndir.h.
8626 # -DSIGTYPE=int If your signal handlers
8627 # return int, not void.
8628 # -DNO_MTIO If you lack sys/mtio.h
8630 # -DNO_REMOTE If you do not have a remote shell
8632 # -DUSE_REXEC To use rexec for remote tape
8633 # operations instead of
8634 # forking rsh or remsh.
8635 # -DVPRINTF_MISSING If you lack vprintf function
8636 # (but have _doprnt).
8637 # -DDOPRNT_MISSING If you lack _doprnt function.
8638 # Also need to define
8639 # -DVPRINTF_MISSING.
8640 # -DFTIME_MISSING If you lack ftime system call.
8641 # -DSTRSTR_MISSING If you lack strstr function.
8642 # -DVALLOC_MISSING If you lack valloc function.
8643 # -DMKDIR_MISSING If you lack mkdir and
8644 # rmdir system calls.
8645 # -DRENAME_MISSING If you lack rename system call.
8646 # -DFTRUNCATE_MISSING If you lack ftruncate
8648 # -DV7 On Version 7 Unix (not
8649 # tested in a long time).
8650 # -DEMUL_OPEN3 If you lack a 3-argument version
8651 # of open, and want to emulate it
8652 # with system calls you do have.
8653 # -DNO_OPEN3 If you lack the 3-argument open
8654 # and want to disable the tar -k
8655 # option instead of emulating open.
8656 # -DXENIX If you have sys/inode.h
8657 # and need it 94 to be included.
8659 DEFS = -DSIGTYPE=int -DDIRENT -DSTRSTR_MISSING \
8660 -DVPRINTF_MISSING -DBSD42
8661 # Set this to rtapelib.o unless you defined NO_REMOTE,
8662 # in which case make it empty.
8663 RTAPELIB = rtapelib.o
8665 DEF_AR_FILE = /dev/rmt8
8670 CFLAGS = $(CDEBUG) -I. -I$(srcdir) $(DEFS) \
8671 -DDEF_AR_FILE=\"$(DEF_AR_FILE)\" \
8672 -DDEFBLOCKING=$(DEFBLOCKING)
8678 # Prefix for each installed program,
8679 # normally empty or `g'.
8682 # The directory to install tar in.
8683 bindir = $(prefix)/bin
8685 # The directory to install the info files in.
8686 infodir = $(prefix)/info
8689 #### End of system configuration section. ####
8691 SRC1 = tar.c create.c extract.c buffer.c \
8692 getoldopt.c update.c gnu.c mangle.c
8693 SRC2 = version.c list.c names.c diffarch.c \
8694 port.c wildmat.c getopt.c
8695 SRC3 = getopt1.c regex.c getdate.y
8696 SRCS = $(SRC1) $(SRC2) $(SRC3)
8697 OBJ1 = tar.o create.o extract.o buffer.o \
8698 getoldopt.o update.o gnu.o mangle.o
8699 OBJ2 = version.o list.o names.o diffarch.o \
8700 port.o wildmat.o getopt.o
8701 OBJ3 = getopt1.o regex.o getdate.o $(RTAPELIB)
8702 OBJS = $(OBJ1) $(OBJ2) $(OBJ3)
8704 AUX = README COPYING ChangeLog Makefile.in \
8705 makefile.pc configure configure.in \
8706 tar.texinfo tar.info* texinfo.tex \
8707 tar.h port.h open3.h getopt.h regex.h \
8708 rmt.h rmt.c rtapelib.c alloca.c \
8709 msd_dir.h msd_dir.c tcexparg.c \
8710 level-0 level-1 backup-specs testpad.c
8713 all: tar rmt tar.info
8717 $(CC) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@@ $(OBJS) $(LIBS)
8722 $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@@ rmt.c
8726 tar.info: tar.texinfo
8727 makeinfo tar.texinfo
8732 $(INSTALL) tar $(bindir)/$(binprefix)tar
8733 -test ! -f rmt || $(INSTALL) rmt /etc/rmt
8734 $(INSTALLDATA) $(srcdir)/tar.info* $(infodir)
8738 $(OBJS): tar.h port.h testpad.h
8739 regex.o buffer.o tar.o: regex.h
8740 # getdate.y has 8 shift/reduce conflicts.
8750 $(CC) -o $@@ testpad.o
8760 rm -f *.o tar rmt testpad testpad.h core
8765 rm -f TAGS Makefile config.status
8769 realclean: distclean
8774 shar: $(SRCS) $(AUX)
8775 shar $(SRCS) $(AUX) | compress \
8776 > tar-`sed -e '/version_string/!d' \
8777 -e 's/[^0-9.]*\([0-9.]*\).*/\1/' \
8783 dist: $(SRCS) $(AUX)
8785 -e '/version_string/!d' \
8786 -e 's/[^0-9.]*\([0-9.]*\).*/\1/' \
8789 -rm -rf `cat .fname`
8791 ln $(SRCS) $(AUX) `cat .fname`
8792 -rm -rf `cat .fname` .fname
8793 tar chZf `cat .fname`.tar.Z `cat .fname`
8797 tar.zoo: $(SRCS) $(AUX)
8801 for X in $(SRCS) $(AUX) ; do \
8803 sed 's/$$/^M/' $$X \
8804 > tmp.dir/$$X ; done
8805 cd tmp.dir ; zoo aM ../tar.zoo *
8810 @node Concept Index, Name Index, Complex Makefile, Top
8811 @unnumbered Index of Concepts
8815 @node Name Index, , Concept Index, Top
8816 @unnumbered Index of Functions, Variables, & Directives