This file documents the GNU Make utility, which determines automatically which pieces of a large program need to be recompiled, and issues the commands to recompile them. This is Edition 0.55, last updated 04 April 2000, of `The GNU Make Manual', for `make', Version 3.79. Copyright (C) 1988, '89, '90, '91, '92, '93, '94, '95, '96, '97, '98, '99, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved by the Free Software Foundation. Make **** The GNU `make' utility automatically determines which pieces of a large program need to be recompiled, and issues the commands to recompile them. This edition of the `GNU Make Manual', last updated 04 April 2000, documents GNU `make' Version 3.79. This manual describes `make' and contains the following chapters: Overview of `make' ****************** The `make' utility automatically determines which pieces of a large program need to be recompiled, and issues commands to recompile them. This manual describes GNU `make', which was implemented by Richard Stallman and Roland McGrath. Development since Version 3.76 has been handled by Paul D. Smith. GNU `make' conforms to section 6.2 of `IEEE Standard 1003.2-1992' (POSIX.2). Our examples show C programs, since they are most common, but you can use `make' with any programming language whose compiler can be run with a shell command. Indeed, `make' is not limited to programs. You can use it to describe any task where some files must be updated automatically from others whenever the others change. Preparing and Running Make ========================== To prepare to use `make', you must write a file called the "makefile" that describes the relationships among files in your program and provides commands for updating each file. In a program, typically, the executable file is updated from object files, which are in turn made by compiling source files. Once a suitable makefile exists, each time you change some source files, this simple shell command: make suffices to perform all necessary recompilations. The `make' program uses the makefile data base and the last-modification times of the files to decide which of the files need to be updated. For each of those files, it issues the commands recorded in the data base. You can provide command line arguments to `make' to control which files should be recompiled, or how. *Note How to Run `make': Running. How to Read This Manual ======================= If you are new to `make', or are looking for a general introduction, read the first few sections of each chapter, skipping the later sections. In each chapter, the first few sections contain introductory or general information and the later sections contain specialized or technical information. The exception is the second chapter, *Note An Introduction to Makefiles: Introduction, all of which is introductory. If you are familiar with other `make' programs, see *Note Features of GNU `make': Features, which lists the enhancements GNU `make' has, and *Note Incompatibilities and Missing Features: Missing, which explains the few things GNU `make' lacks that others have. For a quick summary, see *Note Options Summary::, *Note Quick Reference::, and *Note Special Targets::. Problems and Bugs ================= If you have problems with GNU `make' or think you've found a bug, please report it to the developers; we cannot promise to do anything but we might well want to fix it. Before reporting a bug, make sure you've actually found a real bug. Carefully reread the documentation and see if it really says you can do what you're trying to do. If it's not clear whether you should be able to do something or not, report that too; it's a bug in the documentation! Before reporting a bug or trying to fix it yourself, try to isolate it to the smallest possible makefile that reproduces the problem. Then send us the makefile and the exact results `make' gave you. Also say what you expected to occur; this will help us decide whether the problem was really in the documentation. Once you've got a precise problem, please send electronic mail to: bug-make@gnu.org Please include the version number of `make' you are using. You can get this information with the command `make --version'. Be sure also to include the type of machine and operating system you are using. If possible, include the contents of the file `config.h' that is generated by the configuration process. An Introduction to Makefiles **************************** You need a file called a "makefile" to tell `make' what to do. Most often, the makefile tells `make' how to compile and link a program. In this chapter, we will discuss a simple makefile that describes how to compile and link a text editor which consists of eight C source files and three header files. The makefile can also tell `make' how to run miscellaneous commands when explicitly asked (for example, to remove certain files as a clean-up operation). To see a more complex example of a makefile, see *Note Complex Makefile::. When `make' recompiles the editor, each changed C source file must be recompiled. If a header file has changed, each C source file that includes the header file must be recompiled to be safe. Each compilation produces an object file corresponding to the source file. Finally, if any source file has been recompiled, all the object files, whether newly made or saved from previous compilations, must be linked together to produce the new executable editor. What a Rule Looks Like ====================== A simple makefile consists of "rules" with the following shape: TARGET ... : PREREQUISITES ... COMMAND ... ... A "target" is usually the name of a file that is generated by a program; examples of targets are executable or object files. A target can also be the name of an action to carry out, such as `clean' (*note Phony Targets::.). A "prerequisite" is a file that is used as input to create the target. A target often depends on several files. A "command" is an action that `make' carries out. A rule may have more than one command, each on its own line. *Please note:* you need to put a tab character at the beginning of every command line! This is an obscurity that catches the unwary. Usually a command is in a rule with prerequisites and serves to create a target file if any of the prerequisites change. However, the rule that specifies commands for the target need not have prerequisites. For example, the rule containing the delete command associated with the target `clean' does not have prerequisites. A "rule", then, explains how and when to remake certain files which are the targets of the particular rule. `make' carries out the commands on the prerequisites to create or update the target. A rule can also explain how and when to carry out an action. *Note Writing Rules: Rules. A makefile may contain other text besides rules, but a simple makefile need only contain rules. Rules may look somewhat more complicated than shown in this template, but all fit the pattern more or less. A Simple Makefile ================= Here is a straightforward makefile that describes the way an executable file called `edit' depends on eight object files which, in turn, depend on eight C source and three header files. In this example, all the C files include `defs.h', but only those defining editing commands include `command.h', and only low level files that change the editor buffer include `buffer.h'. edit : main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ insert.o search.o files.o utils.o cc -o edit main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ insert.o search.o files.o utils.o main.o : main.c defs.h cc -c main.c kbd.o : kbd.c defs.h command.h cc -c kbd.c command.o : command.c defs.h command.h cc -c command.c display.o : display.c defs.h buffer.h cc -c display.c insert.o : insert.c defs.h buffer.h cc -c insert.c search.o : search.c defs.h buffer.h cc -c search.c files.o : files.c defs.h buffer.h command.h cc -c files.c utils.o : utils.c defs.h cc -c utils.c clean : rm edit main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ insert.o search.o files.o utils.o We split each long line into two lines using backslash-newline; this is like using one long line, but is easier to read. To use this makefile to create the executable file called `edit', type: make To use this makefile to delete the executable file and all the object files from the directory, type: make clean In the example makefile, the targets include the executable file `edit', and the object files `main.o' and `kbd.o'. The prerequisites are files such as `main.c' and `defs.h'. In fact, each `.o' file is both a target and a prerequisite. Commands include `cc -c main.c' and `cc -c kbd.c'. When a target is a file, it needs to be recompiled or relinked if any of its prerequisites change. In addition, any prerequisites that are themselves automatically generated should be updated first. In this example, `edit' depends on each of the eight object files; the object file `main.o' depends on the source file `main.c' and on the header file `defs.h'. A shell command follows each line that contains a target and prerequisites. These shell commands say how to update the target file. A tab character must come at the beginning of every command line to distinguish commands lines from other lines in the makefile. (Bear in mind that `make' does not know anything about how the commands work. It is up to you to supply commands that will update the target file properly. All `make' does is execute the commands in the rule you have specified when the target file needs to be updated.) The target `clean' is not a file, but merely the name of an action. Since you normally do not want to carry out the actions in this rule, `clean' is not a prerequisite of any other rule. Consequently, `make' never does anything with it unless you tell it specifically. Note that this rule not only is not a prerequisite, it also does not have any prerequisites, so the only purpose of the rule is to run the specified commands. Targets that do not refer to files but are just actions are called "phony targets". *Note Phony Targets::, for information about this kind of target. *Note Errors in Commands: Errors, to see how to cause `make' to ignore errors from `rm' or any other command. How `make' Processes a Makefile =============================== By default, `make' starts with the first target (not targets whose names start with `.'). This is called the "default goal". ("Goals" are the targets that `make' strives ultimately to update. *Note Arguments to Specify the Goals: Goals.) In the simple example of the previous section, the default goal is to update the executable program `edit'; therefore, we put that rule first. Thus, when you give the command: make `make' reads the makefile in the current directory and begins by processing the first rule. In the example, this rule is for relinking `edit'; but before `make' can fully process this rule, it must process the rules for the files that `edit' depends on, which in this case are the object files. Each of these files is processed according to its own rule. These rules say to update each `.o' file by compiling its source file. The recompilation must be done if the source file, or any of the header files named as prerequisites, is more recent than the object file, or if the object file does not exist. The other rules are processed because their targets appear as prerequisites of the goal. If some other rule is not depended on by the goal (or anything it depends on, etc.), that rule is not processed, unless you tell `make' to do so (with a command such as `make clean'). Before recompiling an object file, `make' considers updating its prerequisites, the source file and header files. This makefile does not specify anything to be done for them--the `.c' and `.h' files are not the targets of any rules--so `make' does nothing for these files. But `make' would update automatically generated C programs, such as those made by Bison or Yacc, by their own rules at this time. After recompiling whichever object files need it, `make' decides whether to relink `edit'. This must be done if the file `edit' does not exist, or if any of the object files are newer than it. If an object file was just recompiled, it is now newer than `edit', so `edit' is relinked. Thus, if we change the file `insert.c' and run `make', `make' will compile that file to update `insert.o', and then link `edit'. If we change the file `command.h' and run `make', `make' will recompile the object files `kbd.o', `command.o' and `files.o' and then link the file `edit'. Variables Make Makefiles Simpler ================================ In our example, we had to list all the object files twice in the rule for `edit' (repeated here): edit : main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ insert.o search.o files.o utils.o cc -o edit main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ insert.o search.o files.o utils.o Such duplication is error-prone; if a new object file is added to the system, we might add it to one list and forget the other. We can eliminate the risk and simplify the makefile by using a variable. "Variables" allow a text string to be defined once and substituted in multiple places later (*note How to Use Variables: Using Variables.). It is standard practice for every makefile to have a variable named `objects', `OBJECTS', `objs', `OBJS', `obj', or `OBJ' which is a list of all object file names. We would define such a variable `objects' with a line like this in the makefile: objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ insert.o search.o files.o utils.o Then, each place we want to put a list of the object file names, we can substitute the variable's value by writing `$(objects)' (*note How to Use Variables: Using Variables.). Here is how the complete simple makefile looks when you use a variable for the object files: objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ insert.o search.o files.o utils.o edit : $(objects) cc -o edit $(objects) main.o : main.c defs.h cc -c main.c kbd.o : kbd.c defs.h command.h cc -c kbd.c command.o : command.c defs.h command.h cc -c command.c display.o : display.c defs.h buffer.h cc -c display.c insert.o : insert.c defs.h buffer.h cc -c insert.c search.o : search.c defs.h buffer.h cc -c search.c files.o : files.c defs.h buffer.h command.h cc -c files.c utils.o : utils.c defs.h cc -c utils.c clean : rm edit $(objects) Letting `make' Deduce the Commands ================================== It is not necessary to spell out the commands for compiling the individual C source files, because `make' can figure them out: it has an "implicit rule" for updating a `.o' file from a correspondingly named `.c' file using a `cc -c' command. For example, it will use the command `cc -c main.c -o main.o' to compile `main.c' into `main.o'. We can therefore omit the commands from the rules for the object files. *Note Using Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules. When a `.c' file is used automatically in this way, it is also automatically added to the list of prerequisites. We can therefore omit the `.c' files from the prerequisites, provided we omit the commands. Here is the entire example, with both of these changes, and a variable `objects' as suggested above: objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ insert.o search.o files.o utils.o edit : $(objects) cc -o edit $(objects) main.o : defs.h kbd.o : defs.h command.h command.o : defs.h command.h display.o : defs.h buffer.h insert.o : defs.h buffer.h search.o : defs.h buffer.h files.o : defs.h buffer.h command.h utils.o : defs.h .PHONY : clean clean : -rm edit $(objects) This is how we would write the makefile in actual practice. (The complications associated with `clean' are described elsewhere. See *Note Phony Targets::, and *Note Errors in Commands: Errors.) Because implicit rules are so convenient, they are important. You will see them used frequently. Another Style of Makefile ========================= When the objects of a makefile are created only by implicit rules, an alternative style of makefile is possible. In this style of makefile, you group entries by their prerequisites instead of by their targets. Here is what one looks like: objects = main.o kbd.o command.o display.o \ insert.o search.o files.o utils.o edit : $(objects) cc -o edit $(objects) $(objects) : defs.h kbd.o command.o files.o : command.h display.o insert.o search.o files.o : buffer.h Here `defs.h' is given as a prerequisite of all the object files; `command.h' and `buffer.h' are prerequisites of the specific object files listed for them. Whether this is better is a matter of taste: it is more compact, but some people dislike it because they find it clearer to put all the information about each target in one place. Rules for Cleaning the Directory ================================ Compiling a program is not the only thing you might want to write rules for. Makefiles commonly tell how to do a few other things besides compiling a program: for example, how to delete all the object files and executables so that the directory is `clean'. Here is how we could write a `make' rule for cleaning our example editor: clean: rm edit $(objects) In practice, we might want to write the rule in a somewhat more complicated manner to handle unanticipated situations. We would do this: .PHONY : clean clean : -rm edit $(objects) This prevents `make' from getting confused by an actual file called `clean' and causes it to continue in spite of errors from `rm'. (See *Note Phony Targets::, and *Note Errors in Commands: Errors.) A rule such as this should not be placed at the beginning of the makefile, because we do not want it to run by default! Thus, in the example makefile, we want the rule for `edit', which recompiles the editor, to remain the default goal. Since `clean' is not a prerequisite of `edit', this rule will not run at all if we give the command `make' with no arguments. In order to make the rule run, we have to type `make clean'. *Note How to Run `make': Running. Writing Makefiles ***************** The information that tells `make' how to recompile a system comes from reading a data base called the "makefile". What Makefiles Contain ====================== Makefiles contain five kinds of things: "explicit rules", "implicit rules", "variable definitions", "directives", and "comments". Rules, variables, and directives are described at length in later chapters. * An "explicit rule" says when and how to remake one or more files, called the rule's targets. It lists the other files that the targets depend on, call the "prerequisites" of the target, and may also give commands to use to create or update the targets. *Note Writing Rules: Rules. * An "implicit rule" says when and how to remake a class of files based on their names. It describes how a target may depend on a file with a name similar to the target and gives commands to create or update such a target. *Note Using Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules. * A "variable definition" is a line that specifies a text string value for a variable that can be substituted into the text later. The simple makefile example shows a variable definition for `objects' as a list of all object files (*note Variables Make Makefiles Simpler: Variables Simplify.). * A "directive" is a command for `make' to do something special while reading the makefile. These include: * Reading another makefile (*note Including Other Makefiles: Include.). * Deciding (based on the values of variables) whether to use or ignore a part of the makefile (*note Conditional Parts of Makefiles: Conditionals.). * Defining a variable from a verbatim string containing multiple lines (*note Defining Variables Verbatim: Defining.). * `#' in a line of a makefile starts a "comment". It and the rest of the line are ignored, except that a trailing backslash not escaped by another backslash will continue the comment across multiple lines. Comments may appear on any of the lines in the makefile, except within a `define' directive, and perhaps within commands (where the shell decides what is a comment). A line containing just a comment (with perhaps spaces before it) is effectively blank, and is ignored. What Name to Give Your Makefile =============================== By default, when `make' looks for the makefile, it tries the following names, in order: `GNUmakefile', `makefile' and `Makefile'. Normally you should call your makefile either `makefile' or `Makefile'. (We recommend `Makefile' because it appears prominently near the beginning of a directory listing, right near other important files such as `README'.) The first name checked, `GNUmakefile', is not recommended for most makefiles. You should use this name if you have a makefile that is specific to GNU `make', and will not be understood by other versions of `make'. Other `make' programs look for `makefile' and `Makefile', but not `GNUmakefile'. If `make' finds none of these names, it does not use any makefile. Then you must specify a goal with a command argument, and `make' will attempt to figure out how to remake it using only its built-in implicit rules. *Note Using Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules. If you want to use a nonstandard name for your makefile, you can specify the makefile name with the `-f' or `--file' option. The arguments `-f NAME' or `--file=NAME' tell `make' to read the file NAME as the makefile. If you use more than one `-f' or `--file' option, you can specify several makefiles. All the makefiles are effectively concatenated in the order specified. The default makefile names `GNUmakefile', `makefile' and `Makefile' are not checked automatically if you specify `-f' or `--file'. Including Other Makefiles ========================= The `include' directive tells `make' to suspend reading the current makefile and read one or more other makefiles before continuing. The directive is a line in the makefile that looks like this: include FILENAMES... FILENAMES can contain shell file name patterns. Extra spaces are allowed and ignored at the beginning of the line, but a tab is not allowed. (If the line begins with a tab, it will be considered a command line.) Whitespace is required between `include' and the file names, and between file names; extra whitespace is ignored there and at the end of the directive. A comment starting with `#' is allowed at the end of the line. If the file names contain any variable or function references, they are expanded. *Note How to Use Variables: Using Variables. For example, if you have three `.mk' files, `a.mk', `b.mk', and `c.mk', and `$(bar)' expands to `bish bash', then the following expression include foo *.mk $(bar) is equivalent to include foo a.mk b.mk c.mk bish bash When `make' processes an `include' directive, it suspends reading of the containing makefile and reads from each listed file in turn. When that is finished, `make' resumes reading the makefile in which the directive appears. One occasion for using `include' directives is when several programs, handled by individual makefiles in various directories, need to use a common set of variable definitions (*note Setting Variables: Setting.) or pattern rules (*note Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules: Pattern Rules.). Another such occasion is when you want to generate prerequisites from source files automatically; the prerequisites can be put in a file that is included by the main makefile. This practice is generally cleaner than that of somehow appending the prerequisites to the end of the main makefile as has been traditionally done with other versions of `make'. *Note Automatic Prerequisites::. If the specified name does not start with a slash, and the file is not found in the current directory, several other directories are searched. First, any directories you have specified with the `-I' or `--include-dir' option are searched (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.). Then the following directories (if they exist) are searched, in this order: `PREFIX/include' (normally `/usr/local/include' (1)) `/usr/gnu/include', `/usr/local/include', `/usr/include'. If an included makefile cannot be found in any of these directories, a warning message is generated, but it is not an immediately fatal error; processing of the makefile containing the `include' continues. Once it has finished reading makefiles, `make' will try to remake any that are out of date or don't exist. *Note How Makefiles Are Remade: Remaking Makefiles. Only after it has tried to find a way to remake a makefile and failed, will `make' diagnose the missing makefile as a fatal error. If you want `make' to simply ignore a makefile which does not exist and cannot be remade, with no error message, use the `-include' directive instead of `include', like this: -include FILENAMES... This is acts like `include' in every way except that there is no error (not even a warning) if any of the FILENAMES do not exist. For compatibility with some other `make' implementations, `sinclude' is another name for `-include'. ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) GNU Make compiled for MS-DOS and MS-Windows behaves as if PREFIX has been defined to be the root of the DJGPP tree hierarchy. The Variable `MAKEFILES' ======================== If the environment variable `MAKEFILES' is defined, `make' considers its value as a list of names (separated by whitespace) of additional makefiles to be read before the others. This works much like the `include' directive: various directories are searched for those files (*note Including Other Makefiles: Include.). In addition, the default goal is never taken from one of these makefiles and it is not an error if the files listed in `MAKEFILES' are not found. The main use of `MAKEFILES' is in communication between recursive invocations of `make' (*note Recursive Use of `make': Recursion.). It usually is not desirable to set the environment variable before a top-level invocation of `make', because it is usually better not to mess with a makefile from outside. However, if you are running `make' without a specific makefile, a makefile in `MAKEFILES' can do useful things to help the built-in implicit rules work better, such as defining search paths (*note Directory Search::.). Some users are tempted to set `MAKEFILES' in the environment automatically on login, and program makefiles to expect this to be done. This is a very bad idea, because such makefiles will fail to work if run by anyone else. It is much better to write explicit `include' directives in the makefiles. *Note Including Other Makefiles: Include. How Makefiles Are Remade ======================== Sometimes makefiles can be remade from other files, such as RCS or SCCS files. If a makefile can be remade from other files, you probably want `make' to get an up-to-date version of the makefile to read in. To this end, after reading in all makefiles, `make' will consider each as a goal target and attempt to update it. If a makefile has a rule which says how to update it (found either in that very makefile or in another one) or if an implicit rule applies to it (*note Using Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules.), it will be updated if necessary. After all makefiles have been checked, if any have actually been changed, `make' starts with a clean slate and reads all the makefiles over again. (It will also attempt to update each of them over again, but normally this will not change them again, since they are already up to date.) If you know that one or more of your makefiles cannot be remade and you want to keep `make' from performing an implicit rule search on them, perhaps for efficiency reasons, you can use any normal method of preventing implicit rule lookup to do so. For example, you can write an explicit rule with the makefile as the target, and an empty command string (*note Using Empty Commands: Empty Commands.). If the makefiles specify a double-colon rule to remake a file with commands but no prerequisites, that file will always be remade (*note Double-Colon::.). In the case of makefiles, a makefile that has a double-colon rule with commands but no prerequisites will be remade every time `make' is run, and then again after `make' starts over and reads the makefiles in again. This would cause an infinite loop: `make' would constantly remake the makefile, and never do anything else. So, to avoid this, `make' will *not* attempt to remake makefiles which are specified as targets of a double-colon rule with commands but no prerequisites. If you do not specify any makefiles to be read with `-f' or `--file' options, `make' will try the default makefile names; *note What Name to Give Your Makefile: Makefile Names.. Unlike makefiles explicitly requested with `-f' or `--file' options, `make' is not certain that these makefiles should exist. However, if a default makefile does not exist but can be created by running `make' rules, you probably want the rules to be run so that the makefile can be used. Therefore, if none of the default makefiles exists, `make' will try to make each of them in the same order in which they are searched for (*note What Name to Give Your Makefile: Makefile Names.) until it succeeds in making one, or it runs out of names to try. Note that it is not an error if `make' cannot find or make any makefile; a makefile is not always necessary. When you use the `-t' or `--touch' option (*note Instead of Executing the Commands: Instead of Execution.), you would not want to use an out-of-date makefile to decide which targets to touch. So the `-t' option has no effect on updating makefiles; they are really updated even if `-t' is specified. Likewise, `-q' (or `--question') and `-n' (or `--just-print') do not prevent updating of makefiles, because an out-of-date makefile would result in the wrong output for other targets. Thus, `make -f mfile -n foo' will update `mfile', read it in, and then print the commands to update `foo' and its prerequisites without running them. The commands printed for `foo' will be those specified in the updated contents of `mfile'. However, on occasion you might actually wish to prevent updating of even the makefiles. You can do this by specifying the makefiles as goals in the command line as well as specifying them as makefiles. When the makefile name is specified explicitly as a goal, the options `-t' and so on do apply to them. Thus, `make -f mfile -n mfile foo' would read the makefile `mfile', print the commands needed to update it without actually running them, and then print the commands needed to update `foo' without running them. The commands for `foo' will be those specified by the existing contents of `mfile'. Overriding Part of Another Makefile =================================== Sometimes it is useful to have a makefile that is mostly just like another makefile. You can often use the `include' directive to include one in the other, and add more targets or variable definitions. However, if the two makefiles give different commands for the same target, `make' will not let you just do this. But there is another way. In the containing makefile (the one that wants to include the other), you can use a match-anything pattern rule to say that to remake any target that cannot be made from the information in the containing makefile, `make' should look in another makefile. *Note Pattern Rules::, for more information on pattern rules. For example, if you have a makefile called `Makefile' that says how to make the target `foo' (and other targets), you can write a makefile called `GNUmakefile' that contains: foo: frobnicate > foo %: force @$(MAKE) -f Makefile $@ force: ; If you say `make foo', `make' will find `GNUmakefile', read it, and see that to make `foo', it needs to run the command `frobnicate > foo'. If you say `make bar', `make' will find no way to make `bar' in `GNUmakefile', so it will use the commands from the pattern rule: `make -f Makefile bar'. If `Makefile' provides a rule for updating `bar', `make' will apply the rule. And likewise for any other target that `GNUmakefile' does not say how to make. The way this works is that the pattern rule has a pattern of just `%', so it matches any target whatever. The rule specifies a prerequisite `force', to guarantee that the commands will be run even if the target file already exists. We give `force' target empty commands to prevent `make' from searching for an implicit rule to build it--otherwise it would apply the same match-anything rule to `force' itself and create a prerequisite loop! How `make' Reads a Makefile =========================== GNU `make' does its work in two distinct phases. During the first phase it reads all the makefiles, included makefiles, etc. and internalizes all the variables and their values, implicit and explicit rules, and constructs a dependency graph of all the targets and their prerequisites. During the second phase, `make' uses these internal structures to determine what targets will need to be rebuilt and to invoke the rules necessary to do so. It's important to understand this two-phase approach because it has a direct impact on how variable and function expansion happens; this is often a source of some confusion when writing makefiles. Here we will present a summary of the phases in which expansion happens for different constructs within the makefile. We say that expansion is "immediate" if it happens during the first phase: in this case `make' will expand any variables or functions in that section of a construct as the makefile is parsed. We say that expansion is "deferred" if expansion is not performed immediately. Expansion of deferred construct is not performed until either the construct appears later in an immediate context, or until the second phase. You may not be familiar with some of these constructs yet. You can reference this section as you become familiar with them, in later chapters. Variable Assignment ------------------- Variable definitions are parsed as follows: IMMEDIATE = DEFERRED IMMEDIATE ?= DEFERRED IMMEDIATE := IMMEDIATE IMMEDIATE += DEFERRED or IMMEDIATE define IMMEDIATE DEFERRED endef For the append operator, `+=', the right-hand side is considered immediate if the variable was previously set as a simple variable (`:='), and deferred otherwise. Conditional Syntax ------------------ All instances of conditional syntax are parsed immediately, in their entirety; this includes the `ifdef', `ifeq', `ifndef', and `ifneq' forms. Rule Definition --------------- A rule is always expanded the same way, regardless of the form: IMMEDIATE : IMMEDIATE ; DEFERRED DEFERRED That is, the target and prerequisite sections are expanded immediately, and the commands used to construct the target are always deferred. This general rule is true for explicit rules, pattern rules, suffix rules, static pattern rules, and simple prerequisite definitions. Writing Rules ************* A "rule" appears in the makefile and says when and how to remake certain files, called the rule's "targets" (most often only one per rule). It lists the other files that are the "prerequisites" of the target, and "commands" to use to create or update the target. The order of rules is not significant, except for determining the "default goal": the target for `make' to consider, if you do not otherwise specify one. The default goal is the target of the first rule in the first makefile. If the first rule has multiple targets, only the first target is taken as the default. There are two exceptions: a target starting with a period is not a default unless it contains one or more slashes, `/', as well; and, a target that defines a pattern rule has no effect on the default goal. (*Note Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules: Pattern Rules.) Therefore, we usually write the makefile so that the first rule is the one for compiling the entire program or all the programs described by the makefile (often with a target called `all'). *Note Arguments to Specify the Goals: Goals. Rule Example ============ Here is an example of a rule: foo.o : foo.c defs.h # module for twiddling the frobs cc -c -g foo.c Its target is `foo.o' and its prerequisites are `foo.c' and `defs.h'. It has one command, which is `cc -c -g foo.c'. The command line starts with a tab to identify it as a command. This rule says two things: * How to decide whether `foo.o' is out of date: it is out of date if it does not exist, or if either `foo.c' or `defs.h' is more recent than it. * How to update the file `foo.o': by running `cc' as stated. The command does not explicitly mention `defs.h', but we presume that `foo.c' includes it, and that that is why `defs.h' was added to the prerequisites. Rule Syntax =========== In general, a rule looks like this: TARGETS : PREREQUISITES COMMAND ... or like this: TARGETS : PREREQUISITES ; COMMAND COMMAND ... The TARGETS are file names, separated by spaces. Wildcard characters may be used (*note Using Wildcard Characters in File Names: Wildcards.) and a name of the form `A(M)' represents member M in archive file A (*note Archive Members as Targets: Archive Members.). Usually there is only one target per rule, but occasionally there is a reason to have more (*note Multiple Targets in a Rule: Multiple Targets.). The COMMAND lines start with a tab character. The first command may appear on the line after the prerequisites, with a tab character, or may appear on the same line, with a semicolon. Either way, the effect is the same. *Note Writing the Commands in Rules: Commands. Because dollar signs are used to start variable references, if you really want a dollar sign in a rule you must write two of them, `$$' (*note How to Use Variables: Using Variables.). You may split a long line by inserting a backslash followed by a newline, but this is not required, as `make' places no limit on the length of a line in a makefile. A rule tells `make' two things: when the targets are out of date, and how to update them when necessary. The criterion for being out of date is specified in terms of the PREREQUISITES, which consist of file names separated by spaces. (Wildcards and archive members (*note Archives::.) are allowed here too.) A target is out of date if it does not exist or if it is older than any of the prerequisites (by comparison of last-modification times). The idea is that the contents of the target file are computed based on information in the prerequisites, so if any of the prerequisites changes, the contents of the existing target file are no longer necessarily valid. How to update is specified by COMMANDS. These are lines to be executed by the shell (normally `sh'), but with some extra features (*note Writing the Commands in Rules: Commands.). Using Wildcard Characters in File Names ======================================= A single file name can specify many files using "wildcard characters". The wildcard characters in `make' are `*', `?' and `[...]', the same as in the Bourne shell. For example, `*.c' specifies a list of all the files (in the working directory) whose names end in `.c'. The character `~' at the beginning of a file name also has special significance. If alone, or followed by a slash, it represents your home directory. For example `~/bin' expands to `/home/you/bin'. If the `~' is followed by a word, the string represents the home directory of the user named by that word. For example `~john/bin' expands to `/home/john/bin'. On systems which don't have a home directory for each user (such as MS-DOS or MS-Windows), this functionality can be simulated by setting the environment variable HOME. Wildcard expansion happens automatically in targets, in prerequisites, and in commands (where the shell does the expansion). In other contexts, wildcard expansion happens only if you request it explicitly with the `wildcard' function. The special significance of a wildcard character can be turned off by preceding it with a backslash. Thus, `foo\*bar' would refer to a specific file whose name consists of `foo', an asterisk, and `bar'. Wildcard Examples ----------------- Wildcards can be used in the commands of a rule, where they are expanded by the shell. For example, here is a rule to delete all the object files: clean: rm -f *.o Wildcards are also useful in the prerequisites of a rule. With the following rule in the makefile, `make print' will print all the `.c' files that have changed since the last time you printed them: print: *.c lpr -p $? touch print This rule uses `print' as an empty target file; see *Note Empty Target Files to Record Events: Empty Targets. (The automatic variable `$?' is used to print only those files that have changed; see *Note Automatic Variables: Automatic.) Wildcard expansion does not happen when you define a variable. Thus, if you write this: objects = *.o then the value of the variable `objects' is the actual string `*.o'. However, if you use the value of `objects' in a target, prerequisite or command, wildcard expansion will take place at that time. To set `objects' to the expansion, instead use: objects := $(wildcard *.o) *Note Wildcard Function::. Pitfalls of Using Wildcards --------------------------- Now here is an example of a naive way of using wildcard expansion, that does not do what you would intend. Suppose you would like to say that the executable file `foo' is made from all the object files in the directory, and you write this: objects = *.o foo : $(objects) cc -o foo $(CFLAGS) $(objects) The value of `objects' is the actual string `*.o'. Wildcard expansion happens in the rule for `foo', so that each *existing* `.o' file becomes a prerequisite of `foo' and will be recompiled if necessary. But what if you delete all the `.o' files? When a wildcard matches no files, it is left as it is, so then `foo' will depend on the oddly-named file `*.o'. Since no such file is likely to exist, `make' will give you an error saying it cannot figure out how to make `*.o'. This is not what you want! Actually it is possible to obtain the desired result with wildcard expansion, but you need more sophisticated techniques, including the `wildcard' function and string substitution. *Note The Function `wildcard': Wildcard Function. Microsoft operating systems (MS-DOS and MS-Windows) use backslashes to separate directories in pathnames, like so: c:\foo\bar\baz.c This is equivalent to the Unix-style `c:/foo/bar/baz.c' (the `c:' part is the so-called drive letter). When `make' runs on these systems, it supports backslashes as well as the Unix-style forward slashes in pathnames. However, this support does *not* include the wildcard expansion, where backslash is a quote character. Therefore, you *must* use Unix-style slashes in these cases. The Function `wildcard' ----------------------- Wildcard expansion happens automatically in rules. But wildcard expansion does not normally take place when a variable is set, or inside the arguments of a function. If you want to do wildcard expansion in such places, you need to use the `wildcard' function, like this: $(wildcard PATTERN...) This string, used anywhere in a makefile, is replaced by a space-separated list of names of existing files that match one of the given file name patterns. If no existing file name matches a pattern, then that pattern is omitted from the output of the `wildcard' function. Note that this is different from how unmatched wildcards behave in rules, where they are used verbatim rather than ignored (*note Wildcard Pitfall::.). One use of the `wildcard' function is to get a list of all the C source files in a directory, like this: $(wildcard *.c) We can change the list of C source files into a list of object files by replacing the `.c' suffix with `.o' in the result, like this: $(patsubst %.c,%.o,$(wildcard *.c)) (Here we have used another function, `patsubst'. *Note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions.) Thus, a makefile to compile all C source files in the directory and then link them together could be written as follows: objects := $(patsubst %.c,%.o,$(wildcard *.c)) foo : $(objects) cc -o foo $(objects) (This takes advantage of the implicit rule for compiling C programs, so there is no need to write explicit rules for compiling the files. *Note The Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors, for an explanation of `:=', which is a variant of `='.) Searching Directories for Prerequisites ======================================= For large systems, it is often desirable to put sources in a separate directory from the binaries. The "directory search" features of `make' facilitate this by searching several directories automatically to find a prerequisite. When you redistribute the files among directories, you do not need to change the individual rules, just the search paths. `VPATH': Search Path for All Prerequisites ------------------------------------------ The value of the `make' variable `VPATH' specifies a list of directories that `make' should search. Most often, the directories are expected to contain prerequisite files that are not in the current directory; however, `VPATH' specifies a search list that `make' applies for all files, including files which are targets of rules. Thus, if a file that is listed as a target or prerequisite does not exist in the current directory, `make' searches the directories listed in `VPATH' for a file with that name. If a file is found in one of them, that file may become the prerequisite (see below). Rules may then specify the names of files in the prerequisite list as if they all existed in the current directory. *Note Writing Shell Commands with Directory Search: Commands/Search. In the `VPATH' variable, directory names are separated by colons or blanks. The order in which directories are listed is the order followed by `make' in its search. (On MS-DOS and MS-Windows, semi-colons are used as separators of directory names in `VPATH', since the colon can be used in the pathname itself, after the drive letter.) For example, VPATH = src:../headers specifies a path containing two directories, `src' and `../headers', which `make' searches in that order. With this value of `VPATH', the following rule, foo.o : foo.c is interpreted as if it were written like this: foo.o : src/foo.c assuming the file `foo.c' does not exist in the current directory but is found in the directory `src'. The `vpath' Directive --------------------- Similar to the `VPATH' variable, but more selective, is the `vpath' directive (note lower case), which allows you to specify a search path for a particular class of file names: those that match a particular pattern. Thus you can supply certain search directories for one class of file names and other directories (or none) for other file names. There are three forms of the `vpath' directive: `vpath PATTERN DIRECTORIES' Specify the search path DIRECTORIES for file names that match PATTERN. The search path, DIRECTORIES, is a list of directories to be searched, separated by colons (semi-colons on MS-DOS and MS-Windows) or blanks, just like the search path used in the `VPATH' variable. `vpath PATTERN' Clear out the search path associated with PATTERN. `vpath' Clear all search paths previously specified with `vpath' directives. A `vpath' pattern is a string containing a `%' character. The string must match the file name of a prerequisite that is being searched for, the `%' character matching any sequence of zero or more characters (as in pattern rules; *note Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules: Pattern Rules.). For example, `%.h' matches files that end in `.h'. (If there is no `%', the pattern must match the prerequisite exactly, which is not useful very often.) `%' characters in a `vpath' directive's pattern can be quoted with preceding backslashes (`\'). Backslashes that would otherwise quote `%' characters can be quoted with more backslashes. Backslashes that quote `%' characters or other backslashes are removed from the pattern before it is compared to file names. Backslashes that are not in danger of quoting `%' characters go unmolested. When a prerequisite fails to exist in the current directory, if the PATTERN in a `vpath' directive matches the name of the prerequisite file, then the DIRECTORIES in that directive are searched just like (and before) the directories in the `VPATH' variable. For example, vpath %.h ../headers tells `make' to look for any prerequisite whose name ends in `.h' in the directory `../headers' if the file is not found in the current directory. If several `vpath' patterns match the prerequisite file's name, then `make' processes each matching `vpath' directive one by one, searching all the directories mentioned in each directive. `make' handles multiple `vpath' directives in the order in which they appear in the makefile; multiple directives with the same pattern are independent of each other. Thus, vpath %.c foo vpath % blish vpath %.c bar will look for a file ending in `.c' in `foo', then `blish', then `bar', while vpath %.c foo:bar vpath % blish will look for a file ending in `.c' in `foo', then `bar', then `blish'. How Directory Searches are Performed ------------------------------------ When a prerequisite is found through directory search, regardless of type (general or selective), the pathname located may not be the one that `make' actually provides you in the prerequisite list. Sometimes the path discovered through directory search is thrown away. The algorithm `make' uses to decide whether to keep or abandon a path found via directory search is as follows: 1. If a target file does not exist at the path specified in the makefile, directory search is performed. 2. If the directory search is successful, that path is kept and this file is tentatively stored as the target. 3. All prerequisites of this target are examined using this same method. 4. After processing the prerequisites, the target may or may not need to be rebuilt: a. If the target does *not* need to be rebuilt, the path to the file found during directory search is used for any prerequisite lists which contain this target. In short, if `make' doesn't need to rebuild the target then you use the path found via directory search. b. If the target *does* need to be rebuilt (is out-of-date), the pathname found during directory search is *thrown away*, and the target is rebuilt using the file name specified in the makefile. In short, if `make' must rebuild, then the target is rebuilt locally, not in the directory found via directory search. This algorithm may seem complex, but in practice it is quite often exactly what you want. Other versions of `make' use a simpler algorithm: if the file does not exist, and it is found via directory search, then that pathname is always used whether or not the target needs to be built. Thus, if the target is rebuilt it is created at the pathname discovered during directory search. If, in fact, this is the behavior you want for some or all of your directories, you can use the `GPATH' variable to indicate this to `make'. `GPATH' has the same syntax and format as `VPATH' (that is, a space- or colon-delimited list of pathnames). If an out-of-date target is found by directory search in a directory that also appears in `GPATH', then that pathname is not thrown away. The target is rebuilt using the expanded path. Writing Shell Commands with Directory Search -------------------------------------------- When a prerequisite is found in another directory through directory search, this cannot change the commands of the rule; they will execute as written. Therefore, you must write the commands with care so that they will look for the prerequisite in the directory where `make' finds it. This is done with the "automatic variables" such as `$^' (*note Automatic Variables: Automatic.). For instance, the value of `$^' is a list of all the prerequisites of the rule, including the names of the directories in which they were found, and the value of `$@' is the target. Thus: foo.o : foo.c cc -c $(CFLAGS) $^ -o $@ (The variable `CFLAGS' exists so you can specify flags for C compilation by implicit rules; we use it here for consistency so it will affect all C compilations uniformly; *note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables..) Often the prerequisites include header files as well, which you do not want to mention in the commands. The automatic variable `$<' is just the first prerequisite: VPATH = src:../headers foo.o : foo.c defs.h hack.h cc -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@ Directory Search and Implicit Rules ----------------------------------- The search through the directories specified in `VPATH' or with `vpath' also happens during consideration of implicit rules (*note Using Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules.). For example, when a file `foo.o' has no explicit rule, `make' considers implicit rules, such as the built-in rule to compile `foo.c' if that file exists. If such a file is lacking in the current directory, the appropriate directories are searched for it. If `foo.c' exists (or is mentioned in the makefile) in any of the directories, the implicit rule for C compilation is applied. The commands of implicit rules normally use automatic variables as a matter of necessity; consequently they will use the file names found by directory search with no extra effort. Directory Search for Link Libraries ----------------------------------- Directory search applies in a special way to libraries used with the linker. This special feature comes into play when you write a prerequisite whose name is of the form `-lNAME'. (You can tell something strange is going on here because the prerequisite is normally the name of a file, and the *file name* of a library generally looks like `libNAME.a', not like `-lNAME'.) When a prerequisite's name has the form `-lNAME', `make' handles it specially by searching for the file `libNAME.so' in the current directory, in directories specified by matching `vpath' search paths and the `VPATH' search path, and then in the directories `/lib', `/usr/lib', and `PREFIX/lib' (normally `/usr/local/lib', but MS-DOS/MS-Windows versions of `make' behave as if PREFIX is defined to be the root of the DJGPP installation tree). If that file is not found, then the file `libNAME.a' is searched for, in the same directories as above. For example, if there is a `/usr/lib/libcurses.a' library on your system (and no `/usr/lib/libcurses.so' file), then foo : foo.c -lcurses cc $^ -o $@ would cause the command `cc foo.c /usr/lib/libcurses.a -o foo' to be executed when `foo' is older than `foo.c' or than `/usr/lib/libcurses.a'. Although the default set of files to be searched for is `libNAME.so' and `libNAME.a', this is customizable via the `.LIBPATTERNS' variable. Each word in the value of this variable is a pattern string. When a prerequisite like `-lNAME' is seen, `make' will replace the percent in each pattern in the list with NAME and perform the above directory searches using that library filename. If no library is found, the next word in the list will be used. The default value for `.LIBPATTERNS' is "`lib%.so lib%.a'", which provides the default behavior described above. You can turn off link library expansion completely by setting this variable to an empty value. Phony Targets ============= A phony target is one that is not really the name of a file. It is just a name for some commands to be executed when you make an explicit request. There are two reasons to use a phony target: to avoid a conflict with a file of the same name, and to improve performance. If you write a rule whose commands will not create the target file, the commands will be executed every time the target comes up for remaking. Here is an example: clean: rm *.o temp Because the `rm' command does not create a file named `clean', probably no such file will ever exist. Therefore, the `rm' command will be executed every time you say `make clean'. The phony target will cease to work if anything ever does create a file named `clean' in this directory. Since it has no prerequisites, the file `clean' would inevitably be considered up to date, and its commands would not be executed. To avoid this problem, you can explicitly declare the target to be phony, using the special target `.PHONY' (*note Special Built-in Target Names: Special Targets.) as follows: .PHONY : clean Once this is done, `make clean' will run the commands regardless of whether there is a file named `clean'. Since it knows that phony targets do not name actual files that could be remade from other files, `make' skips the implicit rule search for phony targets (*note Implicit Rules::.). This is why declaring a target phony is good for performance, even if you are not worried about the actual file existing. Thus, you first write the line that states that `clean' is a phony target, then you write the rule, like this: .PHONY: clean clean: rm *.o temp Another example of the usefulness of phony targets is in conjunction with recursive invocations of `make'. In this case the makefile will often contain a variable which lists a number of subdirectories to be built. One way to handle this is with one rule whose command is a shell loop over the subdirectories, like this: SUBDIRS = foo bar baz subdirs: for dir in $(SUBDIRS); do \ $(MAKE) -C $$dir; \ done There are a few of problems with this method, however. First, any error detected in a submake is not noted by this rule, so it will continue to build the rest of the directories even when one fails. This can be overcome by adding shell commands to note the error and exit, but then it will do so even if `make' is invoked with the `-k' option, which is unfortunate. Second, and perhaps more importantly, you cannot take advantage of the parallel build capabilities of make using this method, since there is only one rule. By declaring the subdirectories as phony targets (you must do this as the subdirectory obviously always exists; otherwise it won't be built) you can remove these problems: SUBDIRS = foo bar baz .PHONY: subdirs $(SUBDIRS) subdirs: $(SUBDIRS) $(SUBDIRS): $(MAKE) -C $ foo: baz Here we've also declared that the `foo' subdirectory cannot be built until after the `baz' subdirectory is complete; this kind of relationship declaration is particularly important when attempting parallel builds. A phony target should not be a prerequisite of a real target file; if it is, its commands are run every time `make' goes to update that file. As long as a phony target is never a prerequisite of a real target, the phony target commands will be executed only when the phony target is a specified goal (*note Arguments to Specify the Goals: Goals.). Phony targets can have prerequisites. When one directory contains multiple programs, it is most convenient to describe all of the programs in one makefile `./Makefile'. Since the target remade by default will be the first one in the makefile, it is common to make this a phony target named `all' and give it, as prerequisites, all the individual programs. For example: all : prog1 prog2 prog3 .PHONY : all prog1 : prog1.o utils.o cc -o prog1 prog1.o utils.o prog2 : prog2.o cc -o prog2 prog2.o prog3 : prog3.o sort.o utils.o cc -o prog3 prog3.o sort.o utils.o Now you can say just `make' to remake all three programs, or specify as arguments the ones to remake (as in `make prog1 prog3'). When one phony target is a prerequisite of another, it serves as a subroutine of the other. For example, here `make cleanall' will delete the object files, the difference files, and the file `program': .PHONY: cleanall cleanobj cleandiff cleanall : cleanobj cleandiff rm program cleanobj : rm *.o cleandiff : rm *.diff Rules without Commands or Prerequisites ======================================= If a rule has no prerequisites or commands, and the target of the rule is a nonexistent file, then `make' imagines this target to have been updated whenever its rule is run. This implies that all targets depending on this one will always have their commands run. An example will illustrate this: clean: FORCE rm $(objects) FORCE: Here the target `FORCE' satisfies the special conditions, so the target `clean' that depends on it is forced to run its commands. There is nothing special about the name `FORCE', but that is one name commonly used this way. As you can see, using `FORCE' this way has the same results as using `.PHONY: clean'. Using `.PHONY' is more explicit and more efficient. However, other versions of `make' do not support `.PHONY'; thus `FORCE' appears in many makefiles. *Note Phony Targets::. Empty Target Files to Record Events =================================== The "empty target" is a variant of the phony target; it is used to hold commands for an action that you request explicitly from time to time. Unlike a phony target, this target file can really exist; but the file's contents do not matter, and usually are empty. The purpose of the empty target file is to record, with its last-modification time, when the rule's commands were last executed. It does so because one of the commands is a `touch' command to update the target file. The empty target file should have some prerequisites (otherwise it doesn't make sense). When you ask to remake the empty target, the commands are executed if any prerequisite is more recent than the target; in other words, if a prerequisite has changed since the last time you remade the target. Here is an example: print: foo.c bar.c lpr -p $? touch print With this rule, `make print' will execute the `lpr' command if either source file has changed since the last `make print'. The automatic variable `$?' is used to print only those files that have changed (*note Automatic Variables: Automatic.). Special Built-in Target Names ============================= Certain names have special meanings if they appear as targets. `.PHONY' The prerequisites of the special target `.PHONY' are considered to be phony targets. When it is time to consider such a target, `make' will run its commands unconditionally, regardless of whether a file with that name exists or what its last-modification time is. *Note Phony Targets: Phony Targets. `.SUFFIXES' The prerequisites of the special target `.SUFFIXES' are the list of suffixes to be used in checking for suffix rules. *Note Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules: Suffix Rules. `.DEFAULT' The commands specified for `.DEFAULT' are used for any target for which no rules are found (either explicit rules or implicit rules). *Note Last Resort::. If `.DEFAULT' commands are specified, every file mentioned as a prerequisite, but not as a target in a rule, will have these commands executed on its behalf. *Note Implicit Rule Search Algorithm: Implicit Rule Search. `.PRECIOUS' The targets which `.PRECIOUS' depends on are given the following special treatment: if `make' is killed or interrupted during the execution of their commands, the target is not deleted. *Note Interrupting or Killing `make': Interrupts. Also, if the target is an intermediate file, it will not be deleted after it is no longer needed, as is normally done. *Note Chains of Implicit Rules: Chained Rules. In this latter respect it overlaps with the `.SECONDARY' special target. You can also list the target pattern of an implicit rule (such as `%.o') as a prerequisite file of the special target `.PRECIOUS' to preserve intermediate files created by rules whose target patterns match that file's name. `.INTERMEDIATE' The targets which `.INTERMEDIATE' depends on are treated as intermediate files. *Note Chains of Implicit Rules: Chained Rules. `.INTERMEDIATE' with no prerequisites has no effect. `.SECONDARY' The targets which `.SECONDARY' depends on are treated as intermediate files, except that they are never automatically deleted. *Note Chains of Implicit Rules: Chained Rules. `.SECONDARY' with no prerequisites causes all targets to be treated as secondary (i.e., no target is removed because it is considered intermediate). `.DELETE_ON_ERROR' If `.DELETE_ON_ERROR' is mentioned as a target anywhere in the makefile, then `make' will delete the target of a rule if it has changed and its commands exit with a nonzero exit status, just as it does when it receives a signal. *Note Errors in Commands: Errors. `.IGNORE' If you specify prerequisites for `.IGNORE', then `make' will ignore errors in execution of the commands run for those particular files. The commands for `.IGNORE' are not meaningful. If mentioned as a target with no prerequisites, `.IGNORE' says to ignore errors in execution of commands for all files. This usage of `.IGNORE' is supported only for historical compatibility. Since this affects every command in the makefile, it is not very useful; we recommend you use the more selective ways to ignore errors in specific commands. *Note Errors in Commands: Errors. `.SILENT' If you specify prerequisites for `.SILENT', then `make' will not print the commands to remake those particular files before executing them. The commands for `.SILENT' are not meaningful. If mentioned as a target with no prerequisites, `.SILENT' says not to print any commands before executing them. This usage of `.SILENT' is supported only for historical compatibility. We recommend you use the more selective ways to silence specific commands. *Note Command Echoing: Echoing. If you want to silence all commands for a particular run of `make', use the `-s' or `--silent' option (*note Options Summary::.). `.EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES' Simply by being mentioned as a target, this tells `make' to export all variables to child processes by default. *Note Communicating Variables to a Sub-`make': Variables/Recursion. `.NOTPARALLEL' If `.NOTPARALLEL' is mentioned as a target, then this invocation of `make' will be run serially, even if the `-j' option is given. Any recursively invoked `make' command will still be run in parallel (unless its makefile contains this target). Any prerequisites on this target are ignored. Any defined implicit rule suffix also counts as a special target if it appears as a target, and so does the concatenation of two suffixes, such as `.c.o'. These targets are suffix rules, an obsolete way of defining implicit rules (but a way still widely used). In principle, any target name could be special in this way if you break it in two and add both pieces to the suffix list. In practice, suffixes normally begin with `.', so these special target names also begin with `.'. *Note Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules: Suffix Rules. Multiple Targets in a Rule ========================== A rule with multiple targets is equivalent to writing many rules, each with one target, and all identical aside from that. The same commands apply to all the targets, but their effects may vary because you can substitute the actual target name into the command using `$@'. The rule contributes the same prerequisites to all the targets also. This is useful in two cases. * You want just prerequisites, no commands. For example: kbd.o command.o files.o: command.h gives an additional prerequisite to each of the three object files mentioned. * Similar commands work for all the targets. The commands do not need to be absolutely identical, since the automatic variable `$@' can be used to substitute the particular target to be remade into the commands (*note Automatic Variables: Automatic.). For example: bigoutput littleoutput : text.g generate text.g -$(subst output,,$@) > $@ is equivalent to bigoutput : text.g generate text.g -big > bigoutput littleoutput : text.g generate text.g -little > littleoutput Here we assume the hypothetical program `generate' makes two types of output, one if given `-big' and one if given `-little'. *Note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions, for an explanation of the `subst' function. Suppose you would like to vary the prerequisites according to the target, much as the variable `$@' allows you to vary the commands. You cannot do this with multiple targets in an ordinary rule, but you can do it with a "static pattern rule". *Note Static Pattern Rules: Static Pattern. Multiple Rules for One Target ============================= One file can be the target of several rules. All the prerequisites mentioned in all the rules are merged into one list of prerequisites for the target. If the target is older than any prerequisite from any rule, the commands are executed. There can only be one set of commands to be executed for a file. If more than one rule gives commands for the same file, `make' uses the last set given and prints an error message. (As a special case, if the file's name begins with a dot, no error message is printed. This odd behavior is only for compatibility with other implementations of `make'.) There is no reason to write your makefiles this way; that is why `make' gives you an error message. An extra rule with just prerequisites can be used to give a few extra prerequisites to many files at once. For example, one usually has a variable named `objects' containing a list of all the compiler output files in the system being made. An easy way to say that all of them must be recompiled if `config.h' changes is to write the following: objects = foo.o bar.o foo.o : defs.h bar.o : defs.h test.h $(objects) : config.h This could be inserted or taken out without changing the rules that really specify how to make the object files, making it a convenient form to use if you wish to add the additional prerequisite intermittently. Another wrinkle is that the additional prerequisites could be specified with a variable that you set with a command argument to `make' (*note Overriding Variables: Overriding.). For example, extradeps= $(objects) : $(extradeps) means that the command `make extradeps=foo.h' will consider `foo.h' as a prerequisite of each object file, but plain `make' will not. If none of the explicit rules for a target has commands, then `make' searches for an applicable implicit rule to find some commands *note Using Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules.). Static Pattern Rules ==================== "Static pattern rules" are rules which specify multiple targets and construct the prerequisite names for each target based on the target name. They are more general than ordinary rules with multiple targets because the targets do not have to have identical prerequisites. Their prerequisites must be *analogous*, but not necessarily *identical*. Syntax of Static Pattern Rules ------------------------------ Here is the syntax of a static pattern rule: TARGETS ...: TARGET-PATTERN: DEP-PATTERNS ... COMMANDS ... The TARGETS list specifies the targets that the rule applies to. The targets can contain wildcard characters, just like the targets of ordinary rules (*note Using Wildcard Characters in File Names: Wildcards.). The TARGET-PATTERN and DEP-PATTERNS say how to compute the prerequisites of each target. Each target is matched against the TARGET-PATTERN to extract a part of the target name, called the "stem". This stem is substituted into each of the DEP-PATTERNS to make the prerequisite names (one from each DEP-PATTERN). Each pattern normally contains the character `%' just once. When the TARGET-PATTERN matches a target, the `%' can match any part of the target name; this part is called the "stem". The rest of the pattern must match exactly. For example, the target `foo.o' matches the pattern `%.o', with `foo' as the stem. The targets `foo.c' and `foo.out' do not match that pattern. The prerequisite names for each target are made by substituting the stem for the `%' in each prerequisite pattern. For example, if one prerequisite pattern is `%.c', then substitution of the stem `foo' gives the prerequisite name `foo.c'. It is legitimate to write a prerequisite pattern that does not contain `%'; then this prerequisite is the same for all targets. `%' characters in pattern rules can be quoted with preceding backslashes (`\'). Backslashes that would otherwise quote `%' characters can be quoted with more backslashes. Backslashes that quote `%' characters or other backslashes are removed from the pattern before it is compared to file names or has a stem substituted into it. Backslashes that are not in danger of quoting `%' characters go unmolested. For example, the pattern `the\%weird\\%pattern\\' has `the%weird\' preceding the operative `%' character, and `pattern\\' following it. The final two backslashes are left alone because they cannot affect any `%' character. Here is an example, which compiles each of `foo.o' and `bar.o' from the corresponding `.c' file: objects = foo.o bar.o all: $(objects) $(objects): %.o: %.c $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@ Here `$<' is the automatic variable that holds the name of the prerequisite and `$@' is the automatic variable that holds the name of the target; see *Note Automatic Variables: Automatic. Each target specified must match the target pattern; a warning is issued for each target that does not. If you have a list of files, only some of which will match the pattern, you can use the `filter' function to remove nonmatching file names (*note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions.): files = foo.elc bar.o lose.o $(filter %.o,$(files)): %.o: %.c $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@ $(filter %.elc,$(files)): %.elc: %.el emacs -f batch-byte-compile $< In this example the result of `$(filter %.o,$(files))' is `bar.o lose.o', and the first static pattern rule causes each of these object files to be updated by compiling the corresponding C source file. The result of `$(filter %.elc,$(files))' is `foo.elc', so that file is made from `foo.el'. Another example shows how to use `$*' in static pattern rules: bigoutput littleoutput : %output : text.g generate text.g -$* > $@ When the `generate' command is run, `$*' will expand to the stem, either `big' or `little'. Static Pattern Rules versus Implicit Rules ------------------------------------------ A static pattern rule has much in common with an implicit rule defined as a pattern rule (*note Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules: Pattern Rules.). Both have a pattern for the target and patterns for constructing the names of prerequisites. The difference is in how `make' decides *when* the rule applies. An implicit rule *can* apply to any target that matches its pattern, but it *does* apply only when the target has no commands otherwise specified, and only when the prerequisites can be found. If more than one implicit rule appears applicable, only one applies; the choice depends on the order of rules. By contrast, a static pattern rule applies to the precise list of targets that you specify in the rule. It cannot apply to any other target and it invariably does apply to each of the targets specified. If two conflicting rules apply, and both have commands, that's an error. The static pattern rule can be better than an implicit rule for these reasons: * You may wish to override the usual implicit rule for a few files whose names cannot be categorized syntactically but can be given in an explicit list. * If you cannot be sure of the precise contents of the directories you are using, you may not be sure which other irrelevant files might lead `make' to use the wrong implicit rule. The choice might depend on the order in which the implicit rule search is done. With static pattern rules, there is no uncertainty: each rule applies to precisely the targets specified. Double-Colon Rules ================== "Double-colon" rules are rules written with `::' instead of `:' after the target names. They are handled differently from ordinary rules when the same target appears in more than one rule. When a target appears in multiple rules, all the rules must be the same type: all ordinary, or all double-colon. If they are double-colon, each of them is independent of the others. Each double-colon rule's commands are executed if the target is older than any prerequisites of that rule. This can result in executing none, any, or all of the double-colon rules. Double-colon rules with the same target are in fact completely separate from one another. Each double-colon rule is processed individually, just as rules with different targets are processed. The double-colon rules for a target are executed in the order they appear in the makefile. However, the cases where double-colon rules really make sense are those where the order of executing the commands would not matter. Double-colon rules are somewhat obscure and not often very useful; they provide a mechanism for cases in which the method used to update a target differs depending on which prerequisite files caused the update, and such cases are rare. Each double-colon rule should specify commands; if it does not, an implicit rule will be used if one applies. *Note Using Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules. Generating Prerequisites Automatically ====================================== In the makefile for a program, many of the rules you need to write often say only that some object file depends on some header file. For example, if `main.c' uses `defs.h' via an `#include', you would write: main.o: defs.h You need this rule so that `make' knows that it must remake `main.o' whenever `defs.h' changes. You can see that for a large program you would have to write dozens of such rules in your makefile. And, you must always be very careful to update the makefile every time you add or remove an `#include'. To avoid this hassle, most modern C compilers can write these rules for you, by looking at the `#include' lines in the source files. Usually this is done with the `-M' option to the compiler. For example, the command: cc -M main.c generates the output: main.o : main.c defs.h Thus you no longer have to write all those rules yourself. The compiler will do it for you. Note that such a prerequisite constitutes mentioning `main.o' in a makefile, so it can never be considered an intermediate file by implicit rule search. This means that `make' won't ever remove the file after using it; *note Chains of Implicit Rules: Chained Rules.. With old `make' programs, it was traditional practice to use this compiler feature to generate prerequisites on demand with a command like `make depend'. That command would create a file `depend' containing all the automatically-generated prerequisites; then the makefile could use `include' to read them in (*note Include::.). In GNU `make', the feature of remaking makefiles makes this practice obsolete--you need never tell `make' explicitly to regenerate the prerequisites, because it always regenerates any makefile that is out of date. *Note Remaking Makefiles::. The practice we recommend for automatic prerequisite generation is to have one makefile corresponding to each source file. For each source file `NAME.c' there is a makefile `NAME.d' which lists what files the object file `NAME.o' depends on. That way only the source files that have changed need to be rescanned to produce the new prerequisites. Here is the pattern rule to generate a file of prerequisites (i.e., a makefile) called `NAME.d' from a C source file called `NAME.c': %.d: %.c set -e; $(CC) -M $(CPPFLAGS) $< \ | sed 's/\($*\)\.o[ :]*/\1.o $@ : /g' > $@; \ [ -s $@ ] || rm -f $@ *Note Pattern Rules::, for information on defining pattern rules. The `-e' flag to the shell makes it exit immediately if the `$(CC)' command fails (exits with a nonzero status). Normally the shell exits with the status of the last command in the pipeline (`sed' in this case), so `make' would not notice a nonzero status from the compiler. With the GNU C compiler, you may wish to use the `-MM' flag instead of `-M'. This omits prerequisites on system header files. *Note Options Controlling the Preprocessor: (gcc.info)Preprocessor Options, for details. The purpose of the `sed' command is to translate (for example): main.o : main.c defs.h into: main.o main.d : main.c defs.h This makes each `.d' file depend on all the source and header files that the corresponding `.o' file depends on. `make' then knows it must regenerate the prerequisites whenever any of the source or header files changes. Once you've defined the rule to remake the `.d' files, you then use the `include' directive to read them all in. *Note Include::. For example: sources = foo.c bar.c include $(sources:.c=.d) (This example uses a substitution variable reference to translate the list of source files `foo.c bar.c' into a list of prerequisite makefiles, `foo.d bar.d'. *Note Substitution Refs::, for full information on substitution references.) Since the `.d' files are makefiles like any others, `make' will remake them as necessary with no further work from you. *Note Remaking Makefiles::. Writing the Commands in Rules ***************************** The commands of a rule consist of shell command lines to be executed one by one. Each command line must start with a tab, except that the first command line may be attached to the target-and-prerequisites line with a semicolon in between. Blank lines and lines of just comments may appear among the command lines; they are ignored. (But beware, an apparently "blank" line that begins with a tab is *not* blank! It is an empty command; *note Empty Commands::..) Users use many different shell programs, but commands in makefiles are always interpreted by `/bin/sh' unless the makefile specifies otherwise. *Note Command Execution: Execution. The shell that is in use determines whether comments can be written on command lines, and what syntax they use. When the shell is `/bin/sh', a `#' starts a comment that extends to the end of the line. The `#' does not have to be at the beginning of a line. Text on a line before a `#' is not part of the comment. Command Echoing =============== Normally `make' prints each command line before it is executed. We call this "echoing" because it gives the appearance that you are typing the commands yourself. When a line starts with `@', the echoing of that line is suppressed. The `@' is discarded before the command is passed to the shell. Typically you would use this for a command whose only effect is to print something, such as an `echo' command to indicate progress through the makefile: @echo About to make distribution files When `make' is given the flag `-n' or `--just-print' it only echoes commands, it won't execute them. *Note Summary of Options: Options Summary. In this case and only this case, even the commands starting with `@' are printed. This flag is useful for finding out which commands `make' thinks are necessary without actually doing them. The `-s' or `--silent' flag to `make' prevents all echoing, as if all commands started with `@'. A rule in the makefile for the special target `.SILENT' without prerequisites has the same effect (*note Special Built-in Target Names: Special Targets.). `.SILENT' is essentially obsolete since `@' is more flexible. Command Execution ================= When it is time to execute commands to update a target, they are executed by making a new subshell for each line. (In practice, `make' may take shortcuts that do not affect the results.) *Please note:* this implies that shell commands such as `cd' that set variables local to each process will not affect the following command lines. (1) If you want to use `cd' to affect the next command, put the two on a single line with a semicolon between them. Then `make' will consider them a single command and pass them, together, to a shell which will execute them in sequence. For example: foo : bar/lose cd bar; gobble lose > ../foo If you would like to split a single shell command into multiple lines of text, you must use a backslash at the end of all but the last subline. Such a sequence of lines is combined into a single line, by deleting the backslash-newline sequences, before passing it to the shell. Thus, the following is equivalent to the preceding example: foo : bar/lose cd bar; \ gobble lose > ../foo The program used as the shell is taken from the variable `SHELL'. By default, the program `/bin/sh' is used. On MS-DOS, if `SHELL' is not set, the value of the variable `COMSPEC' (which is always set) is used instead. The processing of lines that set the variable `SHELL' in Makefiles is different on MS-DOS. The stock shell, `command.com', is ridiculously limited in its functionality and many users of `make' tend to install a replacement shell. Therefore, on MS-DOS, `make' examines the value of `SHELL', and changes its behavior based on whether it points to a Unix-style or DOS-style shell. This allows reasonable functionality even if `SHELL' points to `command.com'. If `SHELL' points to a Unix-style shell, `make' on MS-DOS additionally checks whether that shell can indeed be found; if not, it ignores the line that sets `SHELL'. In MS-DOS, GNU `make' searches for the shell in the following places: 1. In the precise place pointed to by the value of `SHELL'. For example, if the makefile specifies `SHELL = /bin/sh', `make' will look in the directory `/bin' on the current drive. 2. In the current directory. 3. In each of the directories in the `PATH' variable, in order. In every directory it examines, `make' will first look for the specific file (`sh' in the example above). If this is not found, it will also look in that directory for that file with one of the known extensions which identify executable files. For example `.exe', `.com', `.bat', `.btm', `.sh', and some others. If any of these attempts is successful, the value of `SHELL' will be set to the full pathname of the shell as found. However, if none of these is found, the value of `SHELL' will not be changed, and thus the line that sets it will be effectively ignored. This is so `make' will only support features specific to a Unix-style shell if such a shell is actually installed on the system where `make' runs. Note that this extended search for the shell is limited to the cases where `SHELL' is set from the Makefile; if it is set in the environment or command line, you are expected to set it to the full pathname of the shell, exactly as things are on Unix. The effect of the above DOS-specific processing is that a Makefile that says `SHELL = /bin/sh' (as many Unix makefiles do), will work on MS-DOS unaltered if you have e.g. `sh.exe' installed in some directory along your `PATH'. Unlike most variables, the variable `SHELL' is never set from the environment. This is because the `SHELL' environment variable is used to specify your personal choice of shell program for interactive use. It would be very bad for personal choices like this to affect the functioning of makefiles. *Note Variables from the Environment: Environment. However, on MS-DOS and MS-Windows the value of `SHELL' in the environment *is* used, since on those systems most users do not set this variable, and therefore it is most likely set specifically to be used by `make'. On MS-DOS, if the setting of `SHELL' is not suitable for `make', you can set the variable `MAKESHELL' to the shell that `make' should use; this will override the value of `SHELL'. ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) On MS-DOS, the value of current working directory is *global*, so changing it *will* affect the following command lines on those systems. Parallel Execution ================== GNU `make' knows how to execute several commands at once. Normally, `make' will execute only one command at a time, waiting for it to finish before executing the next. However, the `-j' or `--jobs' option tells `make' to execute many commands simultaneously. On MS-DOS, the `-j' option has no effect, since that system doesn't support multi-processing. If the `-j' option is followed by an integer, this is the number of commands to execute at once; this is called the number of "job slots". If there is nothing looking like an integer after the `-j' option, there is no limit on the number of job slots. The default number of job slots is one, which means serial execution (one thing at a time). One unpleasant consequence of running several commands simultaneously is that output generated by the commands appears whenever each command sends it, so messages from different commands may be interspersed. Another problem is that two processes cannot both take input from the same device; so to make sure that only one command tries to take input from the terminal at once, `make' will invalidate the standard input streams of all but one running command. This means that attempting to read from standard input will usually be a fatal error (a `Broken pipe' signal) for most child processes if there are several. It is unpredictable which command will have a valid standard input stream (which will come from the terminal, or wherever you redirect the standard input of `make'). The first command run will always get it first, and the first command started after that one finishes will get it next, and so on. We will change how this aspect of `make' works if we find a better alternative. In the mean time, you should not rely on any command using standard input at all if you are using the parallel execution feature; but if you are not using this feature, then standard input works normally in all commands. Finally, handling recursive `make' invocations raises issues. For more information on this, see *Note Communicating Options to a Sub-`make': Options/Recursion. If a command fails (is killed by a signal or exits with a nonzero status), and errors are not ignored for that command (*note Errors in Commands: Errors.), the remaining command lines to remake the same target will not be run. If a command fails and the `-k' or `--keep-going' option was not given (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.), `make' aborts execution. If make terminates for any reason (including a signal) with child processes running, it waits for them to finish before actually exiting. When the system is heavily loaded, you will probably want to run fewer jobs than when it is lightly loaded. You can use the `-l' option to tell `make' to limit the number of jobs to run at once, based on the load average. The `-l' or `--max-load' option is followed by a floating-point number. For example, -l 2.5 will not let `make' start more than one job if the load average is above 2.5. The `-l' option with no following number removes the load limit, if one was given with a previous `-l' option. More precisely, when `make' goes to start up a job, and it already has at least one job running, it checks the current load average; if it is not lower than the limit given with `-l', `make' waits until the load average goes below that limit, or until all the other jobs finish. By default, there is no load limit. Errors in Commands ================== After each shell command returns, `make' looks at its exit status. If the command completed successfully, the next command line is executed in a new shell; after the last command line is finished, the rule is finished. If there is an error (the exit status is nonzero), `make' gives up on the current rule, and perhaps on all rules. Sometimes the failure of a certain command does not indicate a problem. For example, you may use the `mkdir' command to ensure that a directory exists. If the directory already exists, `mkdir' will report an error, but you probably want `make' to continue regardless. To ignore errors in a command line, write a `-' at the beginning of the line's text (after the initial tab). The `-' is discarded before the command is passed to the shell for execution. For example, clean: -rm -f *.o This causes `rm' to continue even if it is unable to remove a file. When you run `make' with the `-i' or `--ignore-errors' flag, errors are ignored in all commands of all rules. A rule in the makefile for the special target `.IGNORE' has the same effect, if there are no prerequisites. These ways of ignoring errors are obsolete because `-' is more flexible. When errors are to be ignored, because of either a `-' or the `-i' flag, `make' treats an error return just like success, except that it prints out a message that tells you the status code the command exited with, and says that the error has been ignored. When an error happens that `make' has not been told to ignore, it implies that the current target cannot be correctly remade, and neither can any other that depends on it either directly or indirectly. No further commands will be executed for these targets, since their preconditions have not been achieved. Normally `make' gives up immediately in this circumstance, returning a nonzero status. However, if the `-k' or `--keep-going' flag is specified, `make' continues to consider the other prerequisites of the pending targets, remaking them if necessary, before it gives up and returns nonzero status. For example, after an error in compiling one object file, `make -k' will continue compiling other object files even though it already knows that linking them will be impossible. *Note Summary of Options: Options Summary. The usual behavior assumes that your purpose is to get the specified targets up to date; once `make' learns that this is impossible, it might as well report the failure immediately. The `-k' option says that the real purpose is to test as many of the changes made in the program as possible, perhaps to find several independent problems so that you can correct them all before the next attempt to compile. This is why Emacs' `compile' command passes the `-k' flag by default. Usually when a command fails, if it has changed the target file at all, the file is corrupted and cannot be used--or at least it is not completely updated. Yet the file's timestamp says that it is now up to date, so the next time `make' runs, it will not try to update that file. The situation is just the same as when the command is killed by a signal; *note Interrupts::.. So generally the right thing to do is to delete the target file if the command fails after beginning to change the file. `make' will do this if `.DELETE_ON_ERROR' appears as a target. This is almost always what you want `make' to do, but it is not historical practice; so for compatibility, you must explicitly request it. Interrupting or Killing `make' ============================== If `make' gets a fatal signal while a command is executing, it may delete the target file that the command was supposed to update. This is done if the target file's last-modification time has changed since `make' first checked it. The purpose of deleting the target is to make sure that it is remade from scratch when `make' is next run. Why is this? Suppose you type `Ctrl-c' while a compiler is running, and it has begun to write an object file `foo.o'. The `Ctrl-c' kills the compiler, resulting in an incomplete file whose last-modification time is newer than the source file `foo.c'. But `make' also receives the `Ctrl-c' signal and deletes this incomplete file. If `make' did not do this, the next invocation of `make' would think that `foo.o' did not require updating--resulting in a strange error message from the linker when it tries to link an object file half of which is missing. You can prevent the deletion of a target file in this way by making the special target `.PRECIOUS' depend on it. Before remaking a target, `make' checks to see whether it appears on the prerequisites of `.PRECIOUS', and thereby decides whether the target should be deleted if a signal happens. Some reasons why you might do this are that the target is updated in some atomic fashion, or exists only to record a modification-time (its contents do not matter), or must exist at all times to prevent other sorts of trouble. Recursive Use of `make' ======================= Recursive use of `make' means using `make' as a command in a makefile. This technique is useful when you want separate makefiles for various subsystems that compose a larger system. For example, suppose you have a subdirectory `subdir' which has its own makefile, and you would like the containing directory's makefile to run `make' on the subdirectory. You can do it by writing this: subsystem: cd subdir && $(MAKE) or, equivalently, this (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.): subsystem: $(MAKE) -C subdir You can write recursive `make' commands just by copying this example, but there are many things to know about how they work and why, and about how the sub-`make' relates to the top-level `make'. For your convenience, GNU `make' sets the variable `CURDIR' to the pathname of the current working directory for you. If `-C' is in effect, it will contain the path of the new directory, not the original. The value has the same precedence it would have if it were set in the makefile (by default, an environment variable `CURDIR' will not override this value). Note that setting this variable has no effect on the operation of `make' How the `MAKE' Variable Works ----------------------------- Recursive `make' commands should always use the variable `MAKE', not the explicit command name `make', as shown here: subsystem: cd subdir && $(MAKE) The value of this variable is the file name with which `make' was invoked. If this file name was `/bin/make', then the command executed is `cd subdir && /bin/make'. If you use a special version of `make' to run the top-level makefile, the same special version will be executed for recursive invocations. As a special feature, using the variable `MAKE' in the commands of a rule alters the effects of the `-t' (`--touch'), `-n' (`--just-print'), or `-q' (`--question') option. Using the `MAKE' variable has the same effect as using a `+' character at the beginning of the command line. *Note Instead of Executing the Commands: Instead of Execution. Consider the command `make -t' in the above example. (The `-t' option marks targets as up to date without actually running any commands; see *Note Instead of Execution::.) Following the usual definition of `-t', a `make -t' command in the example would create a file named `subsystem' and do nothing else. What you really want it to do is run `cd subdir && make -t'; but that would require executing the command, and `-t' says not to execute commands. The special feature makes this do what you want: whenever a command line of a rule contains the variable `MAKE', the flags `-t', `-n' and `-q' do not apply to that line. Command lines containing `MAKE' are executed normally despite the presence of a flag that causes most commands not to be run. The usual `MAKEFLAGS' mechanism passes the flags to the sub-`make' (*note Communicating Options to a Sub-`make': Options/Recursion.), so your request to touch the files, or print the commands, is propagated to the subsystem. Communicating Variables to a Sub-`make' --------------------------------------- Variable values of the top-level `make' can be passed to the sub-`make' through the environment by explicit request. These variables are defined in the sub-`make' as defaults, but do not override what is specified in the makefile used by the sub-`make' makefile unless you use the `-e' switch (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.). To pass down, or "export", a variable, `make' adds the variable and its value to the environment for running each command. The sub-`make', in turn, uses the environment to initialize its table of variable values. *Note Variables from the Environment: Environment. Except by explicit request, `make' exports a variable only if it is either defined in the environment initially or set on the command line, and if its name consists only of letters, numbers, and underscores. Some shells cannot cope with environment variable names consisting of characters other than letters, numbers, and underscores. The special variables `SHELL' and `MAKEFLAGS' are always exported (unless you unexport them). `MAKEFILES' is exported if you set it to anything. `make' automatically passes down variable values that were defined on the command line, by putting them in the `MAKEFLAGS' variable. *Note Options/Recursion::. Variables are *not* normally passed down if they were created by default by `make' (*note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables.). The sub-`make' will define these for itself. If you want to export specific variables to a sub-`make', use the `export' directive, like this: export VARIABLE ... If you want to *prevent* a variable from being exported, use the `unexport' directive, like this: unexport VARIABLE ... As a convenience, you can define a variable and export it at the same time by doing: export VARIABLE = value has the same result as: VARIABLE = value export VARIABLE and export VARIABLE := value has the same result as: VARIABLE := value export VARIABLE Likewise, export VARIABLE += value is just like: VARIABLE += value export VARIABLE *Note Appending More Text to Variables: Appending. You may notice that the `export' and `unexport' directives work in `make' in the same way they work in the shell, `sh'. If you want all variables to be exported by default, you can use `export' by itself: export This tells `make' that variables which are not explicitly mentioned in an `export' or `unexport' directive should be exported. Any variable given in an `unexport' directive will still *not* be exported. If you use `export' by itself to export variables by default, variables whose names contain characters other than alphanumerics and underscores will not be exported unless specifically mentioned in an `export' directive. The behavior elicited by an `export' directive by itself was the default in older versions of GNU `make'. If your makefiles depend on this behavior and you want to be compatible with old versions of `make', you can write a rule for the special target `.EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES' instead of using the `export' directive. This will be ignored by old `make's, while the `export' directive will cause a syntax error. Likewise, you can use `unexport' by itself to tell `make' *not* to export variables by default. Since this is the default behavior, you would only need to do this if `export' had been used by itself earlier (in an included makefile, perhaps). You *cannot* use `export' and `unexport' by themselves to have variables exported for some commands and not for others. The last `export' or `unexport' directive that appears by itself determines the behavior for the entire run of `make'. As a special feature, the variable `MAKELEVEL' is changed when it is passed down from level to level. This variable's value is a string which is the depth of the level as a decimal number. The value is `0' for the top-level `make'; `1' for a sub-`make', `2' for a sub-sub-`make', and so on. The incrementation happens when `make' sets up the environment for a command. The main use of `MAKELEVEL' is to test it in a conditional directive (*note Conditional Parts of Makefiles: Conditionals.); this way you can write a makefile that behaves one way if run recursively and another way if run directly by you. You can use the variable `MAKEFILES' to cause all sub-`make' commands to use additional makefiles. The value of `MAKEFILES' is a whitespace-separated list of file names. This variable, if defined in the outer-level makefile, is passed down through the environment; then it serves as a list of extra makefiles for the sub-`make' to read before the usual or specified ones. *Note The Variable `MAKEFILES': MAKEFILES Variable. Communicating Options to a Sub-`make' ------------------------------------- Flags such as `-s' and `-k' are passed automatically to the sub-`make' through the variable `MAKEFLAGS'. This variable is set up automatically by `make' to contain the flag letters that `make' received. Thus, if you do `make -ks' then `MAKEFLAGS' gets the value `ks'. As a consequence, every sub-`make' gets a value for `MAKEFLAGS' in its environment. In response, it takes the flags from that value and processes them as if they had been given as arguments. *Note Summary of Options: Options Summary. Likewise variables defined on the command line are passed to the sub-`make' through `MAKEFLAGS'. Words in the value of `MAKEFLAGS' that contain `=', `make' treats as variable definitions just as if they appeared on the command line. *Note Overriding Variables: Overriding. The options `-C', `-f', `-o', and `-W' are not put into `MAKEFLAGS'; these options are not passed down. The `-j' option is a special case (*note Parallel Execution: Parallel.). If you set it to some numeric value `N' and your operating system supports it (most any UNIX system will; others typically won't), the parent `make' and all the sub-`make's will communicate to ensure that there are only `N' jobs running at the same time between them all. Note that any job that is marked recursive (*note Instead of Executing the Commands: Instead of Execution.) doesn't count against the total jobs (otherwise we could get `N' sub-`make's running and have no slots left over for any real work!) If your operating system doesn't support the above communication, then `-j 1' is always put into `MAKEFLAGS' instead of the value you specified. This is because if the `-j' option were passed down to sub-`make's, you would get many more jobs running in parallel than you asked for. If you give `-j' with no numeric argument, meaning to run as many jobs as possible in parallel, this is passed down, since multiple infinities are no more than one. If you do not want to pass the other flags down, you must change the value of `MAKEFLAGS', like this: subsystem: cd subdir && $(MAKE) MAKEFLAGS= The command line variable definitions really appear in the variable `MAKEOVERRIDES', and `MAKEFLAGS' contains a reference to this variable. If you do want to pass flags down normally, but don't want to pass down the command line variable definitions, you can reset `MAKEOVERRIDES' to empty, like this: MAKEOVERRIDES = This is not usually useful to do. However, some systems have a small fixed limit on the size of the environment, and putting so much information into the value of `MAKEFLAGS' can exceed it. If you see the error message `Arg list too long', this may be the problem. (For strict compliance with POSIX.2, changing `MAKEOVERRIDES' does not affect `MAKEFLAGS' if the special target `.POSIX' appears in the makefile. You probably do not care about this.) A similar variable `MFLAGS' exists also, for historical compatibility. It has the same value as `MAKEFLAGS' except that it does not contain the command line variable definitions, and it always begins with a hyphen unless it is empty (`MAKEFLAGS' begins with a hyphen only when it begins with an option that has no single-letter version, such as `--warn-undefined-variables'). `MFLAGS' was traditionally used explicitly in the recursive `make' command, like this: subsystem: cd subdir && $(MAKE) $(MFLAGS) but now `MAKEFLAGS' makes this usage redundant. If you want your makefiles to be compatible with old `make' programs, use this technique; it will work fine with more modern `make' versions too. The `MAKEFLAGS' variable can also be useful if you want to have certain options, such as `-k' (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.), set each time you run `make'. You simply put a value for `MAKEFLAGS' in your environment. You can also set `MAKEFLAGS' in a makefile, to specify additional flags that should also be in effect for that makefile. (Note that you cannot use `MFLAGS' this way. That variable is set only for compatibility; `make' does not interpret a value you set for it in any way.) When `make' interprets the value of `MAKEFLAGS' (either from the environment or from a makefile), it first prepends a hyphen if the value does not already begin with one. Then it chops the value into words separated by blanks, and parses these words as if they were options given on the command line (except that `-C', `-f', `-h', `-o', `-W', and their long-named versions are ignored; and there is no error for an invalid option). If you do put `MAKEFLAGS' in your environment, you should be sure not to include any options that will drastically affect the actions of `make' and undermine the purpose of makefiles and of `make' itself. For instance, the `-t', `-n', and `-q' options, if put in one of these variables, could have disastrous consequences and would certainly have at least surprising and probably annoying effects. The `--print-directory' Option ------------------------------ If you use several levels of recursive `make' invocations, the `-w' or `--print-directory' option can make the output a lot easier to understand by showing each directory as `make' starts processing it and as `make' finishes processing it. For example, if `make -w' is run in the directory `/u/gnu/make', `make' will print a line of the form: make: Entering directory `/u/gnu/make'. before doing anything else, and a line of the form: make: Leaving directory `/u/gnu/make'. when processing is completed. Normally, you do not need to specify this option because `make' does it for you: `-w' is turned on automatically when you use the `-C' option, and in sub-`make's. `make' will not automatically turn on `-w' if you also use `-s', which says to be silent, or if you use `--no-print-directory' to explicitly disable it. Defining Canned Command Sequences ================================= When the same sequence of commands is useful in making various targets, you can define it as a canned sequence with the `define' directive, and refer to the canned sequence from the rules for those targets. The canned sequence is actually a variable, so the name must not conflict with other variable names. Here is an example of defining a canned sequence of commands: define run-yacc yacc $(firstword $^) mv y.tab.c $@ endef Here `run-yacc' is the name of the variable being defined; `endef' marks the end of the definition; the lines in between are the commands. The `define' directive does not expand variable references and function calls in the canned sequence; the `$' characters, parentheses, variable names, and so on, all become part of the value of the variable you are defining. *Note Defining Variables Verbatim: Defining, for a complete explanation of `define'. The first command in this example runs Yacc on the first prerequisite of whichever rule uses the canned sequence. The output file from Yacc is always named `y.tab.c'. The second command moves the output to the rule's target file name. To use the canned sequence, substitute the variable into the commands of a rule. You can substitute it like any other variable (*note Basics of Variable References: Reference.). Because variables defined by `define' are recursively expanded variables, all the variable references you wrote inside the `define' are expanded now. For example: foo.c : foo.y $(run-yacc) `foo.y' will be substituted for the variable `$^' when it occurs in `run-yacc''s value, and `foo.c' for `$@'. This is a realistic example, but this particular one is not needed in practice because `make' has an implicit rule to figure out these commands based on the file names involved (*note Using Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules.). In command execution, each line of a canned sequence is treated just as if the line appeared on its own in the rule, preceded by a tab. In particular, `make' invokes a separate subshell for each line. You can use the special prefix characters that affect command lines (`@', `-', and `+') on each line of a canned sequence. *Note Writing the Commands in Rules: Commands. For example, using this canned sequence: define frobnicate @echo "frobnicating target $@" frob-step-1 $< -o $@-step-1 frob-step-2 $@-step-1 -o $@ endef `make' will not echo the first line, the `echo' command. But it *will* echo the following two command lines. On the other hand, prefix characters on the command line that refers to a canned sequence apply to every line in the sequence. So the rule: frob.out: frob.in @$(frobnicate) does not echo *any* commands. (*Note Command Echoing: Echoing, for a full explanation of `@'.) Using Empty Commands ==================== It is sometimes useful to define commands which do nothing. This is done simply by giving a command that consists of nothing but whitespace. For example: target: ; defines an empty command string for `target'. You could also use a line beginning with a tab character to define an empty command string, but this would be confusing because such a line looks empty. You may be wondering why you would want to define a command string that does nothing. The only reason this is useful is to prevent a target from getting implicit commands (from implicit rules or the `.DEFAULT' special target; *note Implicit Rules::. and *note Defining Last-Resort Default Rules: Last Resort.). You may be inclined to define empty command strings for targets that are not actual files, but only exist so that their prerequisites can be remade. However, this is not the best way to do that, because the prerequisites may not be remade properly if the target file actually does exist. *Note Phony Targets: Phony Targets, for a better way to do this. How to Use Variables ******************** A "variable" is a name defined in a makefile to represent a string of text, called the variable's "value". These values are substituted by explicit request into targets, prerequisites, commands, and other parts of the makefile. (In some other versions of `make', variables are called "macros".) Variables and functions in all parts of a makefile are expanded when read, except for the shell commands in rules, the right-hand sides of variable definitions using `=', and the bodies of variable definitions using the `define' directive. Variables can represent lists of file names, options to pass to compilers, programs to run, directories to look in for source files, directories to write output in, or anything else you can imagine. A variable name may be any sequence of characters not containing `:', `#', `=', or leading or trailing whitespace. However, variable names containing characters other than letters, numbers, and underscores should be avoided, as they may be given special meanings in the future, and with some shells they cannot be passed through the environment to a sub-`make' (*note Communicating Variables to a Sub-`make': Variables/Recursion.). Variable names are case-sensitive. The names `foo', `FOO', and `Foo' all refer to different variables. It is traditional to use upper case letters in variable names, but we recommend using lower case letters for variable names that serve internal purposes in the makefile, and reserving upper case for parameters that control implicit rules or for parameters that the user should override with command options (*note Overriding Variables: Overriding.). A few variables have names that are a single punctuation character or just a few characters. These are the "automatic variables", and they have particular specialized uses. *Note Automatic Variables: Automatic. Basics of Variable References ============================= To substitute a variable's value, write a dollar sign followed by the name of the variable in parentheses or braces: either `$(foo)' or `${foo}' is a valid reference to the variable `foo'. This special significance of `$' is why you must write `$$' to have the effect of a single dollar sign in a file name or command. Variable references can be used in any context: targets, prerequisites, commands, most directives, and new variable values. Here is an example of a common case, where a variable holds the names of all the object files in a program: objects = program.o foo.o utils.o program : $(objects) cc -o program $(objects) $(objects) : defs.h Variable references work by strict textual substitution. Thus, the rule foo = c prog.o : prog.$(foo) $(foo)$(foo) -$(foo) prog.$(foo) could be used to compile a C program `prog.c'. Since spaces before the variable value are ignored in variable assignments, the value of `foo' is precisely `c'. (Don't actually write your makefiles this way!) A dollar sign followed by a character other than a dollar sign, open-parenthesis or open-brace treats that single character as the variable name. Thus, you could reference the variable `x' with `$x'. However, this practice is strongly discouraged, except in the case of the automatic variables (*note Automatic Variables: Automatic.). The Two Flavors of Variables ============================ There are two ways that a variable in GNU `make' can have a value; we call them the two "flavors" of variables. The two flavors are distinguished in how they are defined and in what they do when expanded. The first flavor of variable is a "recursively expanded" variable. Variables of this sort are defined by lines using `=' (*note Setting Variables: Setting.) or by the `define' directive (*note Defining Variables Verbatim: Defining.). The value you specify is installed verbatim; if it contains references to other variables, these references are expanded whenever this variable is substituted (in the course of expanding some other string). When this happens, it is called "recursive expansion". For example, foo = $(bar) bar = $(ugh) ugh = Huh? all:;echo $(foo) will echo `Huh?': `$(foo)' expands to `$(bar)' which expands to `$(ugh)' which finally expands to `Huh?'. This flavor of variable is the only sort supported by other versions of `make'. It has its advantages and its disadvantages. An advantage (most would say) is that: CFLAGS = $(include_dirs) -O include_dirs = -Ifoo -Ibar will do what was intended: when `CFLAGS' is expanded in a command, it will expand to `-Ifoo -Ibar -O'. A major disadvantage is that you cannot append something on the end of a variable, as in CFLAGS = $(CFLAGS) -O because it will cause an infinite loop in the variable expansion. (Actually `make' detects the infinite loop and reports an error.) Another disadvantage is that any functions (*note Functions for Transforming Text: Functions.) referenced in the definition will be executed every time the variable is expanded. This makes `make' run slower; worse, it causes the `wildcard' and `shell' functions to give unpredictable results because you cannot easily control when they are called, or even how many times. To avoid all the problems and inconveniences of recursively expanded variables, there is another flavor: simply expanded variables. "Simply expanded variables" are defined by lines using `:=' (*note Setting Variables: Setting.). The value of a simply expanded variable is scanned once and for all, expanding any references to other variables and functions, when the variable is defined. The actual value of the simply expanded variable is the result of expanding the text that you write. It does not contain any references to other variables; it contains their values *as of the time this variable was defined*. Therefore, x := foo y := $(x) bar x := later is equivalent to y := foo bar x := later When a simply expanded variable is referenced, its value is substituted verbatim. Here is a somewhat more complicated example, illustrating the use of `:=' in conjunction with the `shell' function. (*Note The `shell' Function: Shell Function.) This example also shows use of the variable `MAKELEVEL', which is changed when it is passed down from level to level. (*Note Communicating Variables to a Sub-`make': Variables/Recursion, for information about `MAKELEVEL'.) ifeq (0,${MAKELEVEL}) cur-dir := $(shell pwd) whoami := $(shell whoami) host-type := $(shell arch) MAKE := ${MAKE} host-type=${host-type} whoami=${whoami} endif An advantage of this use of `:=' is that a typical `descend into a directory' command then looks like this: ${subdirs}: ${MAKE} cur-dir=${cur-dir}/$@ -C $@ all Simply expanded variables generally make complicated makefile programming more predictable because they work like variables in most programming languages. They allow you to redefine a variable using its own value (or its value processed in some way by one of the expansion functions) and to use the expansion functions much more efficiently (*note Functions for Transforming Text: Functions.). You can also use them to introduce controlled leading whitespace into variable values. Leading whitespace characters are discarded from your input before substitution of variable references and function calls; this means you can include leading spaces in a variable value by protecting them with variable references, like this: nullstring := space := $(nullstring) # end of the line Here the value of the variable `space' is precisely one space. The comment `# end of the line' is included here just for clarity. Since trailing space characters are *not* stripped from variable values, just a space at the end of the line would have the same effect (but be rather hard to read). If you put whitespace at the end of a variable value, it is a good idea to put a comment like that at the end of the line to make your intent clear. Conversely, if you do *not* want any whitespace characters at the end of your variable value, you must remember not to put a random comment on the end of the line after some whitespace, such as this: dir := /foo/bar # directory to put the frobs in Here the value of the variable `dir' is `/foo/bar ' (with four trailing spaces), which was probably not the intention. (Imagine something like `$(dir)/file' with this definition!) There is another assignment operator for variables, `?='. This is called a conditional variable assignment operator, because it only has an effect if the variable is not yet defined. This statement: FOO ?= bar is exactly equivalent to this (*note The `origin' Function: Origin Function.): ifeq ($(origin FOO), undefined) FOO = bar endif Note that a variable set to an empty value is still defined, so `?=' will not set that variable. Advanced Features for Reference to Variables ============================================ This section describes some advanced features you can use to reference variables in more flexible ways. Substitution References ----------------------- A "substitution reference" substitutes the value of a variable with alterations that you specify. It has the form `$(VAR:A=B)' (or `${VAR:A=B}') and its meaning is to take the value of the variable VAR, replace every A at the end of a word with B in that value, and substitute the resulting string. When we say "at the end of a word", we mean that A must appear either followed by whitespace or at the end of the value in order to be replaced; other occurrences of A in the value are unaltered. For example: foo := a.o b.o c.o bar := $(foo:.o=.c) sets `bar' to `a.c b.c c.c'. *Note Setting Variables: Setting. A substitution reference is actually an abbreviation for use of the `patsubst' expansion function (*note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions.). We provide substitution references as well as `patsubst' for compatibility with other implementations of `make'. Another type of substitution reference lets you use the full power of the `patsubst' function. It has the same form `$(VAR:A=B)' described above, except that now A must contain a single `%' character. This case is equivalent to `$(patsubst A,B,$(VAR))'. *Note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions, for a description of the `patsubst' function. For example: foo := a.o b.o c.o bar := $(foo:%.o=%.c) sets `bar' to `a.c b.c c.c'. Computed Variable Names ----------------------- Computed variable names are a complicated concept needed only for sophisticated makefile programming. For most purposes you need not consider them, except to know that making a variable with a dollar sign in its name might have strange results. However, if you are the type that wants to understand everything, or you are actually interested in what they do, read on. Variables may be referenced inside the name of a variable. This is called a "computed variable name" or a "nested variable reference". For example, x = y y = z a := $($(x)) defines `a' as `z': the `$(x)' inside `$($(x))' expands to `y', so `$($(x))' expands to `$(y)' which in turn expands to `z'. Here the name of the variable to reference is not stated explicitly; it is computed by expansion of `$(x)'. The reference `$(x)' here is nested within the outer variable reference. The previous example shows two levels of nesting, but any number of levels is possible. For example, here are three levels: x = y y = z z = u a := $($($(x))) Here the innermost `$(x)' expands to `y', so `$($(x))' expands to `$(y)' which in turn expands to `z'; now we have `$(z)', which becomes `u'. References to recursively-expanded variables within a variable name are reexpanded in the usual fashion. For example: x = $(y) y = z z = Hello a := $($(x)) defines `a' as `Hello': `$($(x))' becomes `$($(y))' which becomes `$(z)' which becomes `Hello'. Nested variable references can also contain modified references and function invocations (*note Functions for Transforming Text: Functions.), just like any other reference. For example, using the `subst' function (*note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions.): x = variable1 variable2 := Hello y = $(subst 1,2,$(x)) z = y a := $($($(z))) eventually defines `a' as `Hello'. It is doubtful that anyone would ever want to write a nested reference as convoluted as this one, but it works: `$($($(z)))' expands to `$($(y))' which becomes `$($(subst 1,2,$(x)))'. This gets the value `variable1' from `x' and changes it by substitution to `variable2', so that the entire string becomes `$(variable2)', a simple variable reference whose value is `Hello'. A computed variable name need not consist entirely of a single variable reference. It can contain several variable references, as well as some invariant text. For example, a_dirs := dira dirb 1_dirs := dir1 dir2 a_files := filea fileb 1_files := file1 file2 ifeq "$(use_a)" "yes" a1 := a else a1 := 1 endif ifeq "$(use_dirs)" "yes" df := dirs else df := files endif dirs := $($(a1)_$(df)) will give `dirs' the same value as `a_dirs', `1_dirs', `a_files' or `1_files' depending on the settings of `use_a' and `use_dirs'. Computed variable names can also be used in substitution references: a_objects := a.o b.o c.o 1_objects := 1.o 2.o 3.o sources := $($(a1)_objects:.o=.c) defines `sources' as either `a.c b.c c.c' or `1.c 2.c 3.c', depending on the value of `a1'. The only restriction on this sort of use of nested variable references is that they cannot specify part of the name of a function to be called. This is because the test for a recognized function name is done before the expansion of nested references. For example, ifdef do_sort func := sort else func := strip endif bar := a d b g q c foo := $($(func) $(bar)) attempts to give `foo' the value of the variable `sort a d b g q c' or `strip a d b g q c', rather than giving `a d b g q c' as the argument to either the `sort' or the `strip' function. This restriction could be removed in the future if that change is shown to be a good idea. You can also use computed variable names in the left-hand side of a variable assignment, or in a `define' directive, as in: dir = foo $(dir)_sources := $(wildcard $(dir)/*.c) define $(dir)_print lpr $($(dir)_sources) endef This example defines the variables `dir', `foo_sources', and `foo_print'. Note that "nested variable references" are quite different from "recursively expanded variables" (*note The Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors.), though both are used together in complex ways when doing makefile programming. How Variables Get Their Values ============================== Variables can get values in several different ways: * You can specify an overriding value when you run `make'. *Note Overriding Variables: Overriding. * You can specify a value in the makefile, either with an assignment (*note Setting Variables: Setting.) or with a verbatim definition (*note Defining Variables Verbatim: Defining.). * Variables in the environment become `make' variables. *Note Variables from the Environment: Environment. * Several "automatic" variables are given new values for each rule. Each of these has a single conventional use. *Note Automatic Variables: Automatic. * Several variables have constant initial values. *Note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables. Setting Variables ================= To set a variable from the makefile, write a line starting with the variable name followed by `=' or `:='. Whatever follows the `=' or `:=' on the line becomes the value. For example, objects = main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o defines a variable named `objects'. Whitespace around the variable name and immediately after the `=' is ignored. Variables defined with `=' are "recursively expanded" variables. Variables defined with `:=' are "simply expanded" variables; these definitions can contain variable references which will be expanded before the definition is made. *Note The Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors. The variable name may contain function and variable references, which are expanded when the line is read to find the actual variable name to use. There is no limit on the length of the value of a variable except the amount of swapping space on the computer. When a variable definition is long, it is a good idea to break it into several lines by inserting backslash-newline at convenient places in the definition. This will not affect the functioning of `make', but it will make the makefile easier to read. Most variable names are considered to have the empty string as a value if you have never set them. Several variables have built-in initial values that are not empty, but you can set them in the usual ways (*note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables.). Several special variables are set automatically to a new value for each rule; these are called the "automatic" variables (*note Automatic Variables: Automatic.). If you'd like a variable to be set to a value only if it's not already set, then you can use the shorthand operator `?=' instead of `='. These two settings of the variable `FOO' are identical (*note The `origin' Function: Origin Function.): FOO ?= bar and ifeq ($(origin FOO), undefined) FOO = bar endif Appending More Text to Variables ================================ Often it is useful to add more text to the value of a variable already defined. You do this with a line containing `+=', like this: objects += another.o This takes the value of the variable `objects', and adds the text `another.o' to it (preceded by a single space). Thus: objects = main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o objects += another.o sets `objects' to `main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o another.o'. Using `+=' is similar to: objects = main.o foo.o bar.o utils.o objects := $(objects) another.o but differs in ways that become important when you use more complex values. When the variable in question has not been defined before, `+=' acts just like normal `=': it defines a recursively-expanded variable. However, when there *is* a previous definition, exactly what `+=' does depends on what flavor of variable you defined originally. *Note The Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors, for an explanation of the two flavors of variables. When you add to a variable's value with `+=', `make' acts essentially as if you had included the extra text in the initial definition of the variable. If you defined it first with `:=', making it a simply-expanded variable, `+=' adds to that simply-expanded definition, and expands the new text before appending it to the old value just as `:=' does (*note Setting Variables: Setting., for a full explanation of `:='). In fact, variable := value variable += more is exactly equivalent to: variable := value variable := $(variable) more On the other hand, when you use `+=' with a variable that you defined first to be recursively-expanded using plain `=', `make' does something a bit different. Recall that when you define a recursively-expanded variable, `make' does not expand the value you set for variable and function references immediately. Instead it stores the text verbatim, and saves these variable and function references to be expanded later, when you refer to the new variable (*note The Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors.). When you use `+=' on a recursively-expanded variable, it is this unexpanded text to which `make' appends the new text you specify. variable = value variable += more is roughly equivalent to: temp = value variable = $(temp) more except that of course it never defines a variable called `temp'. The importance of this comes when the variable's old value contains variable references. Take this common example: CFLAGS = $(includes) -O ... CFLAGS += -pg # enable profiling The first line defines the `CFLAGS' variable with a reference to another variable, `includes'. (`CFLAGS' is used by the rules for C compilation; *note Catalogue of Implicit Rules: Catalogue of Rules..) Using `=' for the definition makes `CFLAGS' a recursively-expanded variable, meaning `$(includes) -O' is *not* expanded when `make' processes the definition of `CFLAGS'. Thus, `includes' need not be defined yet for its value to take effect. It only has to be defined before any reference to `CFLAGS'. If we tried to append to the value of `CFLAGS' without using `+=', we might do it like this: CFLAGS := $(CFLAGS) -pg # enable profiling This is pretty close, but not quite what we want. Using `:=' redefines `CFLAGS' as a simply-expanded variable; this means `make' expands the text `$(CFLAGS) -pg' before setting the variable. If `includes' is not yet defined, we get ` -O -pg', and a later definition of `includes' will have no effect. Conversely, by using `+=' we set `CFLAGS' to the *unexpanded* value `$(includes) -O -pg'. Thus we preserve the reference to `includes', so if that variable gets defined at any later point, a reference like `$(CFLAGS)' still uses its value. The `override' Directive ======================== If a variable has been set with a command argument (*note Overriding Variables: Overriding.), then ordinary assignments in the makefile are ignored. If you want to set the variable in the makefile even though it was set with a command argument, you can use an `override' directive, which is a line that looks like this: override VARIABLE = VALUE or override VARIABLE := VALUE To append more text to a variable defined on the command line, use: override VARIABLE += MORE TEXT *Note Appending More Text to Variables: Appending. The `override' directive was not invented for escalation in the war between makefiles and command arguments. It was invented so you can alter and add to values that the user specifies with command arguments. For example, suppose you always want the `-g' switch when you run the C compiler, but you would like to allow the user to specify the other switches with a command argument just as usual. You could use this `override' directive: override CFLAGS += -g You can also use `override' directives with `define' directives. This is done as you might expect: override define foo bar endef *Note Defining Variables Verbatim: Defining. Defining Variables Verbatim =========================== Another way to set the value of a variable is to use the `define' directive. This directive has an unusual syntax which allows newline characters to be included in the value, which is convenient for defining canned sequences of commands (*note Defining Canned Command Sequences: Sequences.). The `define' directive is followed on the same line by the name of the variable and nothing more. The value to give the variable appears on the following lines. The end of the value is marked by a line containing just the word `endef'. Aside from this difference in syntax, `define' works just like `=': it creates a recursively-expanded variable (*note The Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors.). The variable name may contain function and variable references, which are expanded when the directive is read to find the actual variable name to use. define two-lines echo foo echo $(bar) endef The value in an ordinary assignment cannot contain a newline; but the newlines that separate the lines of the value in a `define' become part of the variable's value (except for the final newline which precedes the `endef' and is not considered part of the value). The previous example is functionally equivalent to this: two-lines = echo foo; echo $(bar) since two commands separated by semicolon behave much like two separate shell commands. However, note that using two separate lines means `make' will invoke the shell twice, running an independent subshell for each line. *Note Command Execution: Execution. If you want variable definitions made with `define' to take precedence over command-line variable definitions, you can use the `override' directive together with `define': override define two-lines foo $(bar) endef *Note The `override' Directive: Override Directive. Variables from the Environment ============================== Variables in `make' can come from the environment in which `make' is run. Every environment variable that `make' sees when it starts up is transformed into a `make' variable with the same name and value. But an explicit assignment in the makefile, or with a command argument, overrides the environment. (If the `-e' flag is specified, then values from the environment override assignments in the makefile. *Note Summary of Options: Options Summary. But this is not recommended practice.) Thus, by setting the variable `CFLAGS' in your environment, you can cause all C compilations in most makefiles to use the compiler switches you prefer. This is safe for variables with standard or conventional meanings because you know that no makefile will use them for other things. (But this is not totally reliable; some makefiles set `CFLAGS' explicitly and therefore are not affected by the value in the environment.) When `make' is invoked recursively, variables defined in the outer invocation can be passed to inner invocations through the environment (*note Recursive Use of `make': Recursion.). By default, only variables that came from the environment or the command line are passed to recursive invocations. You can use the `export' directive to pass other variables. *Note Communicating Variables to a Sub-`make': Variables/Recursion, for full details. Other use of variables from the environment is not recommended. It is not wise for makefiles to depend for their functioning on environment variables set up outside their control, since this would cause different users to get different results from the same makefile. This is against the whole purpose of most makefiles. Such problems would be especially likely with the variable `SHELL', which is normally present in the environment to specify the user's choice of interactive shell. It would be very undesirable for this choice to affect `make'. So `make' ignores the environment value of `SHELL' (except on MS-DOS and MS-Windows, where `SHELL' is usually not set. *Note Special handling of SHELL on MS-DOS: Execution.) Target-specific Variable Values =============================== Variable values in `make' are usually global; that is, they are the same regardless of where they are evaluated (unless they're reset, of course). One exception to that is automatic variables (*note Automatic Variables: Automatic.). The other exception is "target-specific variable values". This feature allows you to define different values for the same variable, based on the target that `make' is currently building. As with automatic variables, these values are only available within the context of a target's command script (and in other target-specific assignments). Set a target-specific variable value like this: TARGET ... : VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT or like this: TARGET ... : override VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT Multiple TARGET values create a target-specific variable value for each member of the target list individually. The VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT can be any valid form of assignment; recursive (`='), static (`:='), appending (`+='), or conditional (`?='). All variables that appear within the VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT are evaluated within the context of the target: thus, any previously-defined target-specific variable values will be in effect. Note that this variable is actually distinct from any "global" value: the two variables do not have to have the same flavor (recursive vs. static). Target-specific variables have the same priority as any other makefile variable. Variables provided on the command-line (and in the environment if the `-e' option is in force) will take precedence. Specifying the `override' directive will allow the target-specific variable value to be preferred. There is one more special feature of target-specific variables: when you define a target-specific variable, that variable value is also in effect for all prerequisites of this target (unless those prerequisites override it with their own target-specific variable value). So, for example, a statement like this: prog : CFLAGS = -g prog : prog.o foo.o bar.o will set `CFLAGS' to `-g' in the command script for `prog', but it will also set `CFLAGS' to `-g' in the command scripts that create `prog.o', `foo.o', and `bar.o', and any command scripts which create their prerequisites. Pattern-specific Variable Values ================================ In addition to target-specific variable values (*note Target-specific Variable Values: Target-specific.), GNU `make' supports pattern-specific variable values. In this form, a variable is defined for any target that matches the pattern specified. Variables defined in this way are searched after any target-specific variables defined explicitly for that target, and before target-specific variables defined for the parent target. Set a pattern-specific variable value like this: PATTERN ... : VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT or like this: PATTERN ... : override VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT where PATTERN is a %-pattern. As with target-specific variable values, multiple PATTERN values create a pattern-specific variable value for each pattern individually. The VARIABLE-ASSIGNMENT can be any valid form of assignment. Any command-line variable setting will take precedence, unless `override' is specified. For example: %.o : CFLAGS = -O will assign `CFLAGS' the value of `-O' for all targets matching the pattern `%.o'. Conditional Parts of Makefiles ****************************** A "conditional" causes part of a makefile to be obeyed or ignored depending on the values of variables. Conditionals can compare the value of one variable to another, or the value of a variable to a constant string. Conditionals control what `make' actually "sees" in the makefile, so they *cannot* be used to control shell commands at the time of execution. Example of a Conditional ======================== The following example of a conditional tells `make' to use one set of libraries if the `CC' variable is `gcc', and a different set of libraries otherwise. It works by controlling which of two command lines will be used as the command for a rule. The result is that `CC=gcc' as an argument to `make' changes not only which compiler is used but also which libraries are linked. libs_for_gcc = -lgnu normal_libs = foo: $(objects) ifeq ($(CC),gcc) $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(libs_for_gcc) else $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(normal_libs) endif This conditional uses three directives: one `ifeq', one `else' and one `endif'. The `ifeq' directive begins the conditional, and specifies the condition. It contains two arguments, separated by a comma and surrounded by parentheses. Variable substitution is performed on both arguments and then they are compared. The lines of the makefile following the `ifeq' are obeyed if the two arguments match; otherwise they are ignored. The `else' directive causes the following lines to be obeyed if the previous conditional failed. In the example above, this means that the second alternative linking command is used whenever the first alternative is not used. It is optional to have an `else' in a conditional. The `endif' directive ends the conditional. Every conditional must end with an `endif'. Unconditional makefile text follows. As this example illustrates, conditionals work at the textual level: the lines of the conditional are treated as part of the makefile, or ignored, according to the condition. This is why the larger syntactic units of the makefile, such as rules, may cross the beginning or the end of the conditional. When the variable `CC' has the value `gcc', the above example has this effect: foo: $(objects) $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(libs_for_gcc) When the variable `CC' has any other value, the effect is this: foo: $(objects) $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(normal_libs) Equivalent results can be obtained in another way by conditionalizing a variable assignment and then using the variable unconditionally: libs_for_gcc = -lgnu normal_libs = ifeq ($(CC),gcc) libs=$(libs_for_gcc) else libs=$(normal_libs) endif foo: $(objects) $(CC) -o foo $(objects) $(libs) Syntax of Conditionals ====================== The syntax of a simple conditional with no `else' is as follows: CONDITIONAL-DIRECTIVE TEXT-IF-TRUE endif The TEXT-IF-TRUE may be any lines of text, to be considered as part of the makefile if the condition is true. If the condition is false, no text is used instead. The syntax of a complex conditional is as follows: CONDITIONAL-DIRECTIVE TEXT-IF-TRUE else TEXT-IF-FALSE endif If the condition is true, TEXT-IF-TRUE is used; otherwise, TEXT-IF-FALSE is used instead. The TEXT-IF-FALSE can be any number of lines of text. The syntax of the CONDITIONAL-DIRECTIVE is the same whether the conditional is simple or complex. There are four different directives that test different conditions. Here is a table of them: `ifeq (ARG1, ARG2)' `ifeq 'ARG1' 'ARG2'' `ifeq "ARG1" "ARG2"' `ifeq "ARG1" 'ARG2'' `ifeq 'ARG1' "ARG2"' Expand all variable references in ARG1 and ARG2 and compare them. If they are identical, the TEXT-IF-TRUE is effective; otherwise, the TEXT-IF-FALSE, if any, is effective. Often you want to test if a variable has a non-empty value. When the value results from complex expansions of variables and functions, expansions you would consider empty may actually contain whitespace characters and thus are not seen as empty. However, you can use the `strip' function (*note Text Functions::.) to avoid interpreting whitespace as a non-empty value. For example: ifeq ($(strip $(foo)),) TEXT-IF-EMPTY endif will evaluate TEXT-IF-EMPTY even if the expansion of `$(foo)' contains whitespace characters. `ifneq (ARG1, ARG2)' `ifneq 'ARG1' 'ARG2'' `ifneq "ARG1" "ARG2"' `ifneq "ARG1" 'ARG2'' `ifneq 'ARG1' "ARG2"' Expand all variable references in ARG1 and ARG2 and compare them. If they are different, the TEXT-IF-TRUE is effective; otherwise, the TEXT-IF-FALSE, if any, is effective. `ifdef VARIABLE-NAME' If the variable VARIABLE-NAME has a non-empty value, the TEXT-IF-TRUE is effective; otherwise, the TEXT-IF-FALSE, if any, is effective. Variables that have never been defined have an empty value. Note that `ifdef' only tests whether a variable has a value. It does not expand the variable to see if that value is nonempty. Consequently, tests using `ifdef' return true for all definitions except those like `foo ='. To test for an empty value, use `ifeq ($(foo),)'. For example, bar = foo = $(bar) ifdef foo frobozz = yes else frobozz = no endif sets `frobozz' to `yes', while: foo = ifdef foo frobozz = yes else frobozz = no endif sets `frobozz' to `no'. `ifndef VARIABLE-NAME' If the variable VARIABLE-NAME has an empty value, the TEXT-IF-TRUE is effective; otherwise, the TEXT-IF-FALSE, if any, is effective. Extra spaces are allowed and ignored at the beginning of the conditional directive line, but a tab is not allowed. (If the line begins with a tab, it will be considered a command for a rule.) Aside from this, extra spaces or tabs may be inserted with no effect anywhere except within the directive name or within an argument. A comment starting with `#' may appear at the end of the line. The other two directives that play a part in a conditional are `else' and `endif'. Each of these directives is written as one word, with no arguments. Extra spaces are allowed and ignored at the beginning of the line, and spaces or tabs at the end. A comment starting with `#' may appear at the end of the line. Conditionals affect which lines of the makefile `make' uses. If the condition is true, `make' reads the lines of the TEXT-IF-TRUE as part of the makefile; if the condition is false, `make' ignores those lines completely. It follows that syntactic units of the makefile, such as rules, may safely be split across the beginning or the end of the conditional. `make' evaluates conditionals when it reads a makefile. Consequently, you cannot use automatic variables in the tests of conditionals because they are not defined until commands are run (*note Automatic Variables: Automatic.). To prevent intolerable confusion, it is not permitted to start a conditional in one makefile and end it in another. However, you may write an `include' directive within a conditional, provided you do not attempt to terminate the conditional inside the included file. Conditionals that Test Flags ============================ You can write a conditional that tests `make' command flags such as `-t' by using the variable `MAKEFLAGS' together with the `findstring' function (*note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions.). This is useful when `touch' is not enough to make a file appear up to date. The `findstring' function determines whether one string appears as a substring of another. If you want to test for the `-t' flag, use `t' as the first string and the value of `MAKEFLAGS' as the other. For example, here is how to arrange to use `ranlib -t' to finish marking an archive file up to date: archive.a: ... ifneq (,$(findstring t,$(MAKEFLAGS))) +touch archive.a +ranlib -t archive.a else ranlib archive.a endif The `+' prefix marks those command lines as "recursive" so that they will be executed despite use of the `-t' flag. *Note Recursive Use of `make': Recursion. Functions for Transforming Text ******************************* "Functions" allow you to do text processing in the makefile to compute the files to operate on or the commands to use. You use a function in a "function call", where you give the name of the function and some text (the "arguments") for the function to operate on. The result of the function's processing is substituted into the makefile at the point of the call, just as a variable might be substituted. Function Call Syntax ==================== A function call resembles a variable reference. It looks like this: $(FUNCTION ARGUMENTS) or like this: ${FUNCTION ARGUMENTS} Here FUNCTION is a function name; one of a short list of names that are part of `make'. You can also essentially create your own functions by using the `call' builtin function. The ARGUMENTS are the arguments of the function. They are separated from the function name by one or more spaces or tabs, and if there is more than one argument, then they are separated by commas. Such whitespace and commas are not part of an argument's value. The delimiters which you use to surround the function call, whether parentheses or braces, can appear in an argument only in matching pairs; the other kind of delimiters may appear singly. If the arguments themselves contain other function calls or variable references, it is wisest to use the same kind of delimiters for all the references; write `$(subst a,b,$(x))', not `$(subst a,b,${x})'. This is because it is clearer, and because only one type of delimiter is matched to find the end of the reference. The text written for each argument is processed by substitution of variables and function calls to produce the argument value, which is the text on which the function acts. The substitution is done in the order in which the arguments appear. Commas and unmatched parentheses or braces cannot appear in the text of an argument as written; leading spaces cannot appear in the text of the first argument as written. These characters can be put into the argument value by variable substitution. First define variables `comma' and `space' whose values are isolated comma and space characters, then substitute these variables where such characters are wanted, like this: comma:= , empty:= space:= $(empty) $(empty) foo:= a b c bar:= $(subst $(space),$(comma),$(foo)) # bar is now `a,b,c'. Here the `subst' function replaces each space with a comma, through the value of `foo', and substitutes the result. Functions for String Substitution and Analysis ============================================== Here are some functions that operate on strings: `$(subst FROM,TO,TEXT)' Performs a textual replacement on the text TEXT: each occurrence of FROM is replaced by TO. The result is substituted for the function call. For example, $(subst ee,EE,feet on the street) substitutes the string `fEEt on the strEEt'. `$(patsubst PATTERN,REPLACEMENT,TEXT)' Finds whitespace-separated words in TEXT that match PATTERN and replaces them with REPLACEMENT. Here PATTERN may contain a `%' which acts as a wildcard, matching any number of any characters within a word. If REPLACEMENT also contains a `%', the `%' is replaced by the text that matched the `%' in PATTERN. `%' characters in `patsubst' function invocations can be quoted with preceding backslashes (`\'). Backslashes that would otherwise quote `%' characters can be quoted with more backslashes. Backslashes that quote `%' characters or other backslashes are removed from the pattern before it is compared file names or has a stem substituted into it. Backslashes that are not in danger of quoting `%' characters go unmolested. For example, the pattern `the\%weird\\%pattern\\' has `the%weird\' preceding the operative `%' character, and `pattern\\' following it. The final two backslashes are left alone because they cannot affect any `%' character. Whitespace between words is folded into single space characters; leading and trailing whitespace is discarded. For example, $(patsubst %.c,%.o,x.c.c bar.c) produces the value `x.c.o bar.o'. Substitution references (*note Substitution References: Substitution Refs.) are a simpler way to get the effect of the `patsubst' function: $(VAR:PATTERN=REPLACEMENT) is equivalent to $(patsubst PATTERN,REPLACEMENT,$(VAR)) The second shorthand simplifies one of the most common uses of `patsubst': replacing the suffix at the end of file names. $(VAR:SUFFIX=REPLACEMENT) is equivalent to $(patsubst %SUFFIX,%REPLACEMENT,$(VAR)) For example, you might have a list of object files: objects = foo.o bar.o baz.o To get the list of corresponding source files, you could simply write: $(objects:.o=.c) instead of using the general form: $(patsubst %.o,%.c,$(objects)) `$(strip STRING)' Removes leading and trailing whitespace from STRING and replaces each internal sequence of one or more whitespace characters with a single space. Thus, `$(strip a b c )' results in `a b c'. The function `strip' can be very useful when used in conjunction with conditionals. When comparing something with the empty string `' using `ifeq' or `ifneq', you usually want a string of just whitespace to match the empty string (*note Conditionals::.). Thus, the following may fail to have the desired results: .PHONY: all ifneq "$(needs_made)" "" all: $(needs_made) else all:;@echo 'Nothing to make!' endif Replacing the variable reference `$(needs_made)' with the function call `$(strip $(needs_made))' in the `ifneq' directive would make it more robust. `$(findstring FIND,IN)' Searches IN for an occurrence of FIND. If it occurs, the value is FIND; otherwise, the value is empty. You can use this function in a conditional to test for the presence of a specific substring in a given string. Thus, the two examples, $(findstring a,a b c) $(findstring a,b c) produce the values `a' and `' (the empty string), respectively. *Note Testing Flags::, for a practical application of `findstring'. `$(filter PATTERN...,TEXT)' Returns all whitespace-separated words in TEXT that *do* match any of the PATTERN words, removing any words that *do not* match. The patterns are written using `%', just like the patterns used in the `patsubst' function above. The `filter' function can be used to separate out different types of strings (such as file names) in a variable. For example: sources := foo.c bar.c baz.s ugh.h foo: $(sources) cc $(filter %.c %.s,$(sources)) -o foo says that `foo' depends of `foo.c', `bar.c', `baz.s' and `ugh.h' but only `foo.c', `bar.c' and `baz.s' should be specified in the command to the compiler. `$(filter-out PATTERN...,TEXT)' Returns all whitespace-separated words in TEXT that *do not* match any of the PATTERN words, removing the words that *do* match one or more. This is the exact opposite of the `filter' function. Removes all whitespace-separated words in TEXT that *do* match the PATTERN words, returning only the words that *do not* match. This is the exact opposite of the `filter' function. For example, given: objects=main1.o foo.o main2.o bar.o mains=main1.o main2.o the following generates a list which contains all the object files not in `mains': $(filter-out $(mains),$(objects)) `$(sort LIST)' Sorts the words of LIST in lexical order, removing duplicate words. The output is a list of words separated by single spaces. Thus, $(sort foo bar lose) returns the value `bar foo lose'. Incidentally, since `sort' removes duplicate words, you can use it for this purpose even if you don't care about the sort order. Here is a realistic example of the use of `subst' and `patsubst'. Suppose that a makefile uses the `VPATH' variable to specify a list of directories that `make' should search for prerequisite files (*note `VPATH' Search Path for All Prerequisites: General Search.). This example shows how to tell the C compiler to search for header files in the same list of directories. The value of `VPATH' is a list of directories separated by colons, such as `src:../headers'. First, the `subst' function is used to change the colons to spaces: $(subst :, ,$(VPATH)) This produces `src ../headers'. Then `patsubst' is used to turn each directory name into a `-I' flag. These can be added to the value of the variable `CFLAGS', which is passed automatically to the C compiler, like this: override CFLAGS += $(patsubst %,-I%,$(subst :, ,$(VPATH))) The effect is to append the text `-Isrc -I../headers' to the previously given value of `CFLAGS'. The `override' directive is used so that the new value is assigned even if the previous value of `CFLAGS' was specified with a command argument (*note The `override' Directive: Override Directive.). Functions for File Names ======================== Several of the built-in expansion functions relate specifically to taking apart file names or lists of file names. Each of the following functions performs a specific transformation on a file name. The argument of the function is regarded as a series of file names, separated by whitespace. (Leading and trailing whitespace is ignored.) Each file name in the series is transformed in the same way and the results are concatenated with single spaces between them. `$(dir NAMES...)' Extracts the directory-part of each file name in NAMES. The directory-part of the file name is everything up through (and including) the last slash in it. If the file name contains no slash, the directory part is the string `./'. For example, $(dir src/foo.c hacks) produces the result `src/ ./'. `$(notdir NAMES...)' Extracts all but the directory-part of each file name in NAMES. If the file name contains no slash, it is left unchanged. Otherwise, everything through the last slash is removed from it. A file name that ends with a slash becomes an empty string. This is unfortunate, because it means that the result does not always have the same number of whitespace-separated file names as the argument had; but we do not see any other valid alternative. For example, $(notdir src/foo.c hacks) produces the result `foo.c hacks'. `$(suffix NAMES...)' Extracts the suffix of each file name in NAMES. If the file name contains a period, the suffix is everything starting with the last period. Otherwise, the suffix is the empty string. This frequently means that the result will be empty when NAMES is not, and if NAMES contains multiple file names, the result may contain fewer file names. For example, $(suffix src/foo.c src-1.0/bar.c hacks) produces the result `.c .c'. `$(basename NAMES...)' Extracts all but the suffix of each file name in NAMES. If the file name contains a period, the basename is everything starting up to (and not including) the last period. Periods in the directory part are ignored. If there is no period, the basename is the entire file name. For example, $(basename src/foo.c src-1.0/bar hacks) produces the result `src/foo src-1.0/bar hacks'. `$(addsuffix SUFFIX,NAMES...)' The argument NAMES is regarded as a series of names, separated by whitespace; SUFFIX is used as a unit. The value of SUFFIX is appended to the end of each individual name and the resulting larger names are concatenated with single spaces between them. For example, $(addsuffix .c,foo bar) produces the result `foo.c bar.c'. `$(addprefix PREFIX,NAMES...)' The argument NAMES is regarded as a series of names, separated by whitespace; PREFIX is used as a unit. The value of PREFIX is prepended to the front of each individual name and the resulting larger names are concatenated with single spaces between them. For example, $(addprefix src/,foo bar) produces the result `src/foo src/bar'. `$(join LIST1,LIST2)' Concatenates the two arguments word by word: the two first words (one from each argument) concatenated form the first word of the result, the two second words form the second word of the result, and so on. So the Nth word of the result comes from the Nth word of each argument. If one argument has more words that the other, the extra words are copied unchanged into the result. For example, `$(join a b,.c .o)' produces `a.c b.o'. Whitespace between the words in the lists is not preserved; it is replaced with a single space. This function can merge the results of the `dir' and `notdir' functions, to produce the original list of files which was given to those two functions. `$(word N,TEXT)' Returns the Nth word of TEXT. The legitimate values of N start from 1. If N is bigger than the number of words in TEXT, the value is empty. For example, $(word 2, foo bar baz) returns `bar'. `$(wordlist S,E,TEXT)' Returns the list of words in TEXT starting with word S and ending with word E (inclusive). The legitimate values of S and E start from 1. If S is bigger than the number of words in TEXT, the value is empty. If E is bigger than the number of words in TEXT, words up to the end of TEXT are returned. If S is greater than E, nothing is returned. For example, $(wordlist 2, 3, foo bar baz) returns `bar baz'. `$(words TEXT)' Returns the number of words in TEXT. Thus, the last word of TEXT is `$(word $(words TEXT),TEXT)'. `$(firstword NAMES...)' The argument NAMES is regarded as a series of names, separated by whitespace. The value is the first name in the series. The rest of the names are ignored. For example, $(firstword foo bar) produces the result `foo'. Although `$(firstword TEXT)' is the same as `$(word 1,TEXT)', the `firstword' function is retained for its simplicity. `$(wildcard PATTERN)' The argument PATTERN is a file name pattern, typically containing wildcard characters (as in shell file name patterns). The result of `wildcard' is a space-separated list of the names of existing files that match the pattern. *Note Using Wildcard Characters in File Names: Wildcards. The `foreach' Function ====================== The `foreach' function is very different from other functions. It causes one piece of text to be used repeatedly, each time with a different substitution performed on it. It resembles the `for' command in the shell `sh' and the `foreach' command in the C-shell `csh'. The syntax of the `foreach' function is: $(foreach VAR,LIST,TEXT) The first two arguments, VAR and LIST, are expanded before anything else is done; note that the last argument, TEXT, is *not* expanded at the same time. Then for each word of the expanded value of LIST, the variable named by the expanded value of VAR is set to that word, and TEXT is expanded. Presumably TEXT contains references to that variable, so its expansion will be different each time. The result is that TEXT is expanded as many times as there are whitespace-separated words in LIST. The multiple expansions of TEXT are concatenated, with spaces between them, to make the result of `foreach'. This simple example sets the variable `files' to the list of all files in the directories in the list `dirs': dirs := a b c d files := $(foreach dir,$(dirs),$(wildcard $(dir)/*)) Here TEXT is `$(wildcard $(dir)/*)'. The first repetition finds the value `a' for `dir', so it produces the same result as `$(wildcard a/*)'; the second repetition produces the result of `$(wildcard b/*)'; and the third, that of `$(wildcard c/*)'. This example has the same result (except for setting `dirs') as the following example: files := $(wildcard a/* b/* c/* d/*) When TEXT is complicated, you can improve readability by giving it a name, with an additional variable: find_files = $(wildcard $(dir)/*) dirs := a b c d files := $(foreach dir,$(dirs),$(find_files)) Here we use the variable `find_files' this way. We use plain `=' to define a recursively-expanding variable, so that its value contains an actual function call to be reexpanded under the control of `foreach'; a simply-expanded variable would not do, since `wildcard' would be called only once at the time of defining `find_files'. The `foreach' function has no permanent effect on the variable VAR; its value and flavor after the `foreach' function call are the same as they were beforehand. The other values which are taken from LIST are in effect only temporarily, during the execution of `foreach'. The variable VAR is a simply-expanded variable during the execution of `foreach'. If VAR was undefined before the `foreach' function call, it is undefined after the call. *Note The Two Flavors of Variables: Flavors. You must take care when using complex variable expressions that result in variable names because many strange things are valid variable names, but are probably not what you intended. For example, files := $(foreach Esta escrito en espanol!,b c ch,$(find_files)) might be useful if the value of `find_files' references the variable whose name is `Esta escrito en espanol!' (es un nombre bastante largo, no?), but it is more likely to be a mistake. The `if' Function ================= The `if' function provides support for conditional expansion in a functional context (as opposed to the GNU `make' makefile conditionals such as `ifeq' (*note Syntax of Conditionals: Conditional Syntax.). An `if' function call can contain either two or three arguments: $(if CONDITION,THEN-PART[,ELSE-PART]) The first argument, CONDITION, first has all preceding and trailing whitespace stripped, then is expanded. If it expands to any non-empty string, then the condition is considered to be true. If it expands to an empty string, the condition is considered to be false. If the condition is true then the second argument, THEN-PART, is evaluated and this is used as the result of the evaluation of the entire `if' function. If the condition is false then the third argument, ELSE-PART, is evaluated and this is the result of the `if' function. If there is no third argument, the `if' function evaluates to nothing (the empty string). Note that only one of the THEN-PART or the ELSE-PART will be evaluated, never both. Thus, either can contain side-effects (such as `shell' function calls, etc.) The `call' Function =================== The `call' function is unique in that it can be used to create new parameterized functions. You can write a complex expression as the value of a variable, then use `call' to expand it with different values. The syntax of the `call' function is: $(call VARIABLE,PARAM,PARAM,...) When `make' expands this function, it assigns each PARAM to temporary variables `$(1)', `$(2)', etc. The variable `$(0)' will contain VARIABLE. There is no maximum number of parameter arguments. There is no minimum, either, but it doesn't make sense to use `call' with no parameters. Then VARIABLE is expanded as a `make' variable in the context of these temporary assignments. Thus, any reference to `$(1)' in the value of VARIABLE will resolve to the first PARAM in the invocation of `call'. Note that VARIABLE is the *name* of a variable, not a *reference* to that variable. Therefore you would not normally use a `$' or parentheses when writing it. (You can, however, use a variable reference in the name if you want the name not to be a constant.) If VARIABLE is the name of a builtin function, the builtin function is always invoked (even if a `make' variable by that name also exists). The `call' function expands the PARAM arguments before assigning them to temporary variables. This means that VARIABLE values containing references to builtin functions that have special expansion rules, like `foreach' or `if', may not work as you expect. Some examples may make this clearer. This macro simply reverses its arguments: reverse = $(2) $(1) foo = $(call reverse,a,b) Here FOO will contain `b a'. This one is slightly more interesting: it defines a macro to search for the first instance of a program in `PATH': pathsearch = $(firstword $(wildcard $(addsufix /$(1),$(subst :, ,$(PATH))))) LS := $(call pathsearch,ls) Now the variable LS contains `/bin/ls' or similar. The `call' function can be nested. Each recursive invocation gets its own local values for `$(1)', etc. that mask the values of higher-level `call'. For example, here is an implementation of a "map" function: map = $(foreach a,$(2),$(call $(1),$(a))) Now you can MAP a function that normally takes only one argument, such as `origin', to multiple values in one step: o = $(call map,origin,o map MAKE) and end up with O containing something like `file file default'. A final caution: be careful when adding whitespace to the arguments to `call'. As with other functions, any whitespace contained in the second and subsequent arguments is kept; this can cause strange effects. It's generally safest to remove all extraneous whitespace when providing parameters to `call'. The `origin' Function ===================== The `origin' function is unlike most other functions in that it does not operate on the values of variables; it tells you something *about* a variable. Specifically, it tells you where it came from. The syntax of the `origin' function is: $(origin VARIABLE) Note that VARIABLE is the *name* of a variable to inquire about; not a *reference* to that variable. Therefore you would not normally use a `$' or parentheses when writing it. (You can, however, use a variable reference in the name if you want the name not to be a constant.) The result of this function is a string telling you how the variable VARIABLE was defined: `undefined' if VARIABLE was never defined. `default' if VARIABLE has a default definition, as is usual with `CC' and so on. *Note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables. Note that if you have redefined a default variable, the `origin' function will return the origin of the later definition. `environment' if VARIABLE was defined as an environment variable and the `-e' option is *not* turned on (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.). `environment override' if VARIABLE was defined as an environment variable and the `-e' option *is* turned on (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.). `file' if VARIABLE was defined in a makefile. `command line' if VARIABLE was defined on the command line. `override' if VARIABLE was defined with an `override' directive in a makefile (*note The `override' Directive: Override Directive.). `automatic' if VARIABLE is an automatic variable defined for the execution of the commands for each rule (*note Automatic Variables: Automatic.). This information is primarily useful (other than for your curiosity) to determine if you want to believe the value of a variable. For example, suppose you have a makefile `foo' that includes another makefile `bar'. You want a variable `bletch' to be defined in `bar' if you run the command `make -f bar', even if the environment contains a definition of `bletch'. However, if `foo' defined `bletch' before including `bar', you do not want to override that definition. This could be done by using an `override' directive in `foo', giving that definition precedence over the later definition in `bar'; unfortunately, the `override' directive would also override any command line definitions. So, `bar' could include: ifdef bletch ifeq "$(origin bletch)" "environment" bletch = barf, gag, etc. endif endif If `bletch' has been defined from the environment, this will redefine it. If you want to override a previous definition of `bletch' if it came from the environment, even under `-e', you could instead write: ifneq "$(findstring environment,$(origin bletch))" "" bletch = barf, gag, etc. endif Here the redefinition takes place if `$(origin bletch)' returns either `environment' or `environment override'. *Note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions. The `shell' Function ==================== The `shell' function is unlike any other function except the `wildcard' function (*note The Function `wildcard': Wildcard Function.) in that it communicates with the world outside of `make'. The `shell' function performs the same function that backquotes (``') perform in most shells: it does "command expansion". This means that it takes an argument that is a shell command and returns the output of the command. The only processing `make' does on the result, before substituting it into the surrounding text, is to convert each newline or carriage-return / newline pair to a single space. It also removes the trailing (carriage-return and) newline, if it's the last thing in the result. The commands run by calls to the `shell' function are run when the function calls are expanded. In most cases, this is when the makefile is read in. The exception is that function calls in the commands of the rules are expanded when the commands are run, and this applies to `shell' function calls like all others. Here are some examples of the use of the `shell' function: contents := $(shell cat foo) sets `contents' to the contents of the file `foo', with a space (rather than a newline) separating each line. files := $(shell echo *.c) sets `files' to the expansion of `*.c'. Unless `make' is using a very strange shell, this has the same result as `$(wildcard *.c)'. Functions That Control Make =========================== These functions control the way make runs. Generally, they are used to provide information to the user of the makefile or to cause make to stop if some sort of environmental error is detected. `$(error TEXT...)' Generates a fatal error where the message is TEXT. Note that the error is generated whenever this function is evaluated. So, if you put it inside a command script or on the right side of a recursive variable assignment, it won't be evaluated until later. The TEXT will be expanded before the error is generated. For example, ifdef ERROR1 $(error error is $(ERROR1)) endif will generate a fatal error during the read of the makefile if the `make' variable `ERROR1' is defined. Or, ERR = $(error found an error!) .PHONY: err err: ; $(ERR) will generate a fatal error while `make' is running, if the `err' target is invoked. `$(warning TEXT...)' This function works similarly to the `error' function, above, except that `make' doesn't exit. Instead, TEXT is expanded and the resulting message is displayed, but processing of the makefile continues. The result of the expansion of this function is the empty string. How to Run `make' ***************** A makefile that says how to recompile a program can be used in more than one way. The simplest use is to recompile every file that is out of date. Usually, makefiles are written so that if you run `make' with no arguments, it does just that. But you might want to update only some of the files; you might want to use a different compiler or different compiler options; you might want just to find out which files are out of date without changing them. By giving arguments when you run `make', you can do any of these things and many others. The exit status of `make' is always one of three values: `0' The exit status is zero if `make' is successful. `2' The exit status is two if `make' encounters any errors. It will print messages describing the particular errors. `1' The exit status is one if you use the `-q' flag and `make' determines that some target is not already up to date. *Note Instead of Executing the Commands: Instead of Execution. Arguments to Specify the Makefile ================================= The way to specify the name of the makefile is with the `-f' or `--file' option (`--makefile' also works). For example, `-f altmake' says to use the file `altmake' as the makefile. If you use the `-f' flag several times and follow each `-f' with an argument, all the specified files are used jointly as makefiles. If you do not use the `-f' or `--file' flag, the default is to try `GNUmakefile', `makefile', and `Makefile', in that order, and use the first of these three which exists or can be made (*note Writing Makefiles: Makefiles.). Arguments to Specify the Goals ============================== The "goals" are the targets that `make' should strive ultimately to update. Other targets are updated as well if they appear as prerequisites of goals, or prerequisites of prerequisites of goals, etc. By default, the goal is the first target in the makefile (not counting targets that start with a period). Therefore, makefiles are usually written so that the first target is for compiling the entire program or programs they describe. If the first rule in the makefile has several targets, only the first target in the rule becomes the default goal, not the whole list. You can specify a different goal or goals with arguments to `make'. Use the name of the goal as an argument. If you specify several goals, `make' processes each of them in turn, in the order you name them. Any target in the makefile may be specified as a goal (unless it starts with `-' or contains an `=', in which case it will be parsed as a switch or variable definition, respectively). Even targets not in the makefile may be specified, if `make' can find implicit rules that say how to make them. `Make' will set the special variable `MAKECMDGOALS' to the list of goals you specified on the command line. If no goals were given on the command line, this variable is empty. Note that this variable should be used only in special circumstances. An example of appropriate use is to avoid including `.d' files during `clean' rules (*note Automatic Prerequisites::.), so `make' won't create them only to immediately remove them again: sources = foo.c bar.c ifneq ($(MAKECMDGOALS),clean) include $(sources:.c=.d) endif One use of specifying a goal is if you want to compile only a part of the program, or only one of several programs. Specify as a goal each file that you wish to remake. For example, consider a directory containing several programs, with a makefile that starts like this: .PHONY: all all: size nm ld ar as If you are working on the program `size', you might want to say `make size' so that only the files of that program are recompiled. Another use of specifying a goal is to make files that are not normally made. For example, there may be a file of debugging output, or a version of the program that is compiled specially for testing, which has a rule in the makefile but is not a prerequisite of the default goal. Another use of specifying a goal is to run the commands associated with a phony target (*note Phony Targets::.) or empty target (*note Empty Target Files to Record Events: Empty Targets.). Many makefiles contain a phony target named `clean' which deletes everything except source files. Naturally, this is done only if you request it explicitly with `make clean'. Following is a list of typical phony and empty target names. *Note Standard Targets::, for a detailed list of all the standard target names which GNU software packages use. `all' Make all the top-level targets the makefile knows about. `clean' Delete all files that are normally created by running `make'. `mostlyclean' Like `clean', but may refrain from deleting a few files that people normally don't want to recompile. For example, the `mostlyclean' target for GCC does not delete `libgcc.a', because recompiling it is rarely necessary and takes a lot of time. `distclean' `realclean' `clobber' Any of these targets might be defined to delete *more* files than `clean' does. For example, this would delete configuration files or links that you would normally create as preparation for compilation, even if the makefile itself cannot create these files. `install' Copy the executable file into a directory that users typically search for commands; copy any auxiliary files that the executable uses into the directories where it will look for them. `print' Print listings of the source files that have changed. `tar' Create a tar file of the source files. `shar' Create a shell archive (shar file) of the source files. `dist' Create a distribution file of the source files. This might be a tar file, or a shar file, or a compressed version of one of the above, or even more than one of the above. `TAGS' Update a tags table for this program. `check' `test' Perform self tests on the program this makefile builds. Instead of Executing the Commands ================================= The makefile tells `make' how to tell whether a target is up to date, and how to update each target. But updating the targets is not always what you want. Certain options specify other activities for `make'. `-n' `--just-print' `--dry-run' `--recon' "No-op". The activity is to print what commands would be used to make the targets up to date, but not actually execute them. `-t' `--touch' "Touch". The activity is to mark the targets as up to date without actually changing them. In other words, `make' pretends to compile the targets but does not really change their contents. `-q' `--question' "Question". The activity is to find out silently whether the targets are up to date already; but execute no commands in either case. In other words, neither compilation nor output will occur. `-W FILE' `--what-if=FILE' `--assume-new=FILE' `--new-file=FILE' "What if". Each `-W' flag is followed by a file name. The given files' modification times are recorded by `make' as being the present time, although the actual modification times remain the same. You can use the `-W' flag in conjunction with the `-n' flag to see what would happen if you were to modify specific files. With the `-n' flag, `make' prints the commands that it would normally execute but does not execute them. With the `-t' flag, `make' ignores the commands in the rules and uses (in effect) the command `touch' for each target that needs to be remade. The `touch' command is also printed, unless `-s' or `.SILENT' is used. For speed, `make' does not actually invoke the program `touch'. It does the work directly. With the `-q' flag, `make' prints nothing and executes no commands, but the exit status code it returns is zero if and only if the targets to be considered are already up to date. If the exit status is one, then some updating needs to be done. If `make' encounters an error, the exit status is two, so you can distinguish an error from a target that is not up to date. It is an error to use more than one of these three flags in the same invocation of `make'. The `-n', `-t', and `-q' options do not affect command lines that begin with `+' characters or contain the strings `$(MAKE)' or `${MAKE}'. Note that only the line containing the `+' character or the strings `$(MAKE)' or `${MAKE}' is run regardless of these options. Other lines in the same rule are not run unless they too begin with `+' or contain `$(MAKE)' or `${MAKE}' (*Note How the `MAKE' Variable Works: MAKE Variable.) The `-W' flag provides two features: * If you also use the `-n' or `-q' flag, you can see what `make' would do if you were to modify some files. * Without the `-n' or `-q' flag, when `make' is actually executing commands, the `-W' flag can direct `make' to act as if some files had been modified, without actually modifying the files. Note that the options `-p' and `-v' allow you to obtain other information about `make' or about the makefiles in use (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.). Avoiding Recompilation of Some Files ==================================== Sometimes you may have changed a source file but you do not want to recompile all the files that depend on it. For example, suppose you add a macro or a declaration to a header file that many other files depend on. Being conservative, `make' assumes that any change in the header file requires recompilation of all dependent files, but you know that they do not need to be recompiled and you would rather not waste the time waiting for them to compile. If you anticipate the problem before changing the header file, you can use the `-t' flag. This flag tells `make' not to run the commands in the rules, but rather to mark the target up to date by changing its last-modification date. You would follow this procedure: 1. Use the command `make' to recompile the source files that really need recompilation. 2. Make the changes in the header files. 3. Use the command `make -t' to mark all the object files as up to date. The next time you run `make', the changes in the header files will not cause any recompilation. If you have already changed the header file at a time when some files do need recompilation, it is too late to do this. Instead, you can use the `-o FILE' flag, which marks a specified file as "old" (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.). This means that the file itself will not be remade, and nothing else will be remade on its account. Follow this procedure: 1. Recompile the source files that need compilation for reasons independent of the particular header file, with `make -o HEADERFILE'. If several header files are involved, use a separate `-o' option for each header file. 2. Touch all the object files with `make -t'. Overriding Variables ==================== An argument that contains `=' specifies the value of a variable: `V=X' sets the value of the variable V to X. If you specify a value in this way, all ordinary assignments of the same variable in the makefile are ignored; we say they have been "overridden" by the command line argument. The most common way to use this facility is to pass extra flags to compilers. For example, in a properly written makefile, the variable `CFLAGS' is included in each command that runs the C compiler, so a file `foo.c' would be compiled something like this: cc -c $(CFLAGS) foo.c Thus, whatever value you set for `CFLAGS' affects each compilation that occurs. The makefile probably specifies the usual value for `CFLAGS', like this: CFLAGS=-g Each time you run `make', you can override this value if you wish. For example, if you say `make CFLAGS='-g -O'', each C compilation will be done with `cc -c -g -O'. (This illustrates how you can use quoting in the shell to enclose spaces and other special characters in the value of a variable when you override it.) The variable `CFLAGS' is only one of many standard variables that exist just so that you can change them this way. *Note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables, for a complete list. You can also program the makefile to look at additional variables of your own, giving the user the ability to control other aspects of how the makefile works by changing the variables. When you override a variable with a command argument, you can define either a recursively-expanded variable or a simply-expanded variable. The examples shown above make a recursively-expanded variable; to make a simply-expanded variable, write `:=' instead of `='. But, unless you want to include a variable reference or function call in the *value* that you specify, it makes no difference which kind of variable you create. There is one way that the makefile can change a variable that you have overridden. This is to use the `override' directive, which is a line that looks like this: `override VARIABLE = VALUE' (*note The `override' Directive: Override Directive.). Testing the Compilation of a Program ==================================== Normally, when an error happens in executing a shell command, `make' gives up immediately, returning a nonzero status. No further commands are executed for any target. The error implies that the goal cannot be correctly remade, and `make' reports this as soon as it knows. When you are compiling a program that you have just changed, this is not what you want. Instead, you would rather that `make' try compiling every file that can be tried, to show you as many compilation errors as possible. On these occasions, you should use the `-k' or `--keep-going' flag. This tells `make' to continue to consider the other prerequisites of the pending targets, remaking them if necessary, before it gives up and returns nonzero status. For example, after an error in compiling one object file, `make -k' will continue compiling other object files even though it already knows that linking them will be impossible. In addition to continuing after failed shell commands, `make -k' will continue as much as possible after discovering that it does not know how to make a target or prerequisite file. This will always cause an error message, but without `-k', it is a fatal error (*note Summary of Options: Options Summary.). The usual behavior of `make' assumes that your purpose is to get the goals up to date; once `make' learns that this is impossible, it might as well report the failure immediately. The `-k' flag says that the real purpose is to test as much as possible of the changes made in the program, perhaps to find several independent problems so that you can correct them all before the next attempt to compile. This is why Emacs' `M-x compile' command passes the `-k' flag by default. Summary of Options ================== Here is a table of all the options `make' understands: `-b' `-m' These options are ignored for compatibility with other versions of `make'. `-C DIR' `--directory=DIR' Change to directory DIR before reading the makefiles. If multiple `-C' options are specified, each is interpreted relative to the previous one: `-C / -C etc' is equivalent to `-C /etc'. This is typically used with recursive invocations of `make' (*note Recursive Use of `make': Recursion.). `-d' Print debugging information in addition to normal processing. The debugging information says which files are being considered for remaking, which file-times are being compared and with what results, which files actually need to be remade, which implicit rules are considered and which are applied--everything interesting about how `make' decides what to do. The `-d' option is equivalent to `--debug=a' (see below). `--debug[=OPTIONS]' Print debugging information in addition to normal processing. Various levels and types of output can be chosen. With no arguments, print the "basic" level of debugging. Possible arguments are below; only the first character is considered, and values must be comma- or space-separated. `a (all)' All types of debugging output are enabled. This is equivalent to using `-d'. `b (basic)' Basic debugging prints each target that was found to be out-of-date, and whether the build was successful or not. `v (verbose)' A level above `basic'; includes messages about which makefiles were parsed, prerequisites that did not need to be rebuilt, etc. This option also enables `basic' messages. `i (implicit)' Prints messages describing the implicit rule searches for each target. This option also enables `basic' messages. `j (jobs)' Prints messages giving details on the invocation of specific subcommands. `m (makefile)' By default, the above messages are not enabled while trying to remake the makefiles. This option enables messages while rebuilding makefiles, too. Note that the `all' option does enable this option. This option also enables `basic' messages. `-e' `--environment-overrides' Give variables taken from the environment precedence over variables from makefiles. *Note Variables from the Environment: Environment. `-f FILE' `--file=FILE' `--makefile=FILE' Read the file named FILE as a makefile. *Note Writing Makefiles: Makefiles. `-h' `--help' Remind you of the options that `make' understands and then exit. `-i' `--ignore-errors' Ignore all errors in commands executed to remake files. *Note Errors in Commands: Errors. `-I DIR' `--include-dir=DIR' Specifies a directory DIR to search for included makefiles. *Note Including Other Makefiles: Include. If several `-I' options are used to specify several directories, the directories are searched in the order specified. `-j [JOBS]' `--jobs[=JOBS]' Specifies the number of jobs (commands) to run simultaneously. With no argument, `make' runs as many jobs simultaneously as possible. If there is more than one `-j' option, the last one is effective. *Note Parallel Execution: Parallel, for more information on how commands are run. Note that this option is ignored on MS-DOS. `-k' `--keep-going' Continue as much as possible after an error. While the target that failed, and those that depend on it, cannot be remade, the other prerequisites of these targets can be processed all the same. *Note Testing the Compilation of a Program: Testing. `-l [LOAD]' `--load-average[=LOAD]' `--max-load[=LOAD]' Specifies that no new jobs (commands) should be started if there are other jobs running and the load average is at least LOAD (a floating-point number). With no argument, removes a previous load limit. *Note Parallel Execution: Parallel. `-n' `--just-print' `--dry-run' `--recon' Print the commands that would be executed, but do not execute them. *Note Instead of Executing the Commands: Instead of Execution. `-o FILE' `--old-file=FILE' `--assume-old=FILE' Do not remake the file FILE even if it is older than its prerequisites, and do not remake anything on account of changes in FILE. Essentially the file is treated as very old and its rules are ignored. *Note Avoiding Recompilation of Some Files: Avoiding Compilation. `-p' `--print-data-base' Print the data base (rules and variable values) that results from reading the makefiles; then execute as usual or as otherwise specified. This also prints the version information given by the `-v' switch (see below). To print the data base without trying to remake any files, use `make -qp'. To print the data base of predefined rules and variables, use `make -p -f /dev/null'. The data base output contains filename and linenumber information for command and variable definitions, so it can be a useful debugging tool in complex environments. `-q' `--question' "Question mode". Do not run any commands, or print anything; just return an exit status that is zero if the specified targets are already up to date, one if any remaking is required, or two if an error is encountered. *Note Instead of Executing the Commands: Instead of Execution. `-r' `--no-builtin-rules' Eliminate use of the built-in implicit rules (*note Using Implicit Rules: Implicit Rules.). You can still define your own by writing pattern rules (*note Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules: Pattern Rules.). The `-r' option also clears out the default list of suffixes for suffix rules (*note Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules: Suffix Rules.). But you can still define your own suffixes with a rule for `.SUFFIXES', and then define your own suffix rules. Note that only *rules* are affected by the `-r' option; default variables remain in effect (*note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables.); see the `-R' option below. `-R' `--no-builtin-variables' Eliminate use of the built-in rule-specific variables (*note Variables Used by Implicit Rules: Implicit Variables.). You can still define your own, of course. The `-R' option also automatically enables the `-r' option (see above), since it doesn't make sense to have implicit rules without any definitions for the variables that they use. `-s' `--silent' `--quiet' Silent operation; do not print the commands as they are executed. *Note Command Echoing: Echoing. `-S' `--no-keep-going' `--stop' Cancel the effect of the `-k' option. This is never necessary except in a recursive `make' where `-k' might be inherited from the top-level `make' via `MAKEFLAGS' (*note Recursive Use of `make': Recursion.) or if you set `-k' in `MAKEFLAGS' in your environment. `-t' `--touch' Touch files (mark them up to date without really changing them) instead of running their commands. This is used to pretend that the commands were done, in order to fool future invocations of `make'. *Note Instead of Executing the Commands: Instead of Execution. `-v' `--version' Print the version of the `make' program plus a copyright, a list of authors, and a notice that there is no warranty; then exit. `-w' `--print-directory' Print a message containing the working directory both before and after executing the makefile. This may be useful for tracking down errors from complicated nests of recursive `make' commands. *Note Recursive Use of `make': Recursion. (In practice, you rarely need to specify this option since `make' does it for you; see *Note The `--print-directory' Option: -w Option.) `--no-print-directory' Disable printing of the working directory under `-w'. This option is useful when `-w' is turned on automatically, but you do not want to see the extra messages. *Note The `--print-directory' Option: -w Option. `-W FILE' `--what-if=FILE' `--new-file=FILE' `--assume-new=FILE' Pretend that the target FILE has just been modified. When used with the `-n' flag, this shows you what would happen if you were to modify that file. Without `-n', it is almost the same as running a `touch' command on the given file before running `make', except that the modification time is changed only in the imagination of `make'. *Note Instead of Executing the Commands: Instead of Execution. `--warn-undefined-variables' Issue a warning message whenever `make' sees a reference to an undefined variable. This can be helpful when you are trying to debug makefiles which use variables in complex ways. Using Implicit Rules ******************** Certain standard ways of remaking target files are used very often. For example, one customary way to make an object file is from a C source file using the C compiler, `cc'. "Implicit rules" tell `make' how to use customary techniques so that you do not have to specify them in detail when you want to use them. For example, there is an implicit rule for C compilation. File names determine which implicit rules are run. For example, C compilation typically takes a `.c' file and makes a `.o' file. So `make' applies the implicit rule for C compilation when it sees this combination of file name endings. A chain of implicit rules can apply in sequence; for example, `make' will remake a `.o' file from a `.y' file by way of a `.c' file. The built-in implicit rules use several variables in their commands so that, by changing the values of the variables, you can change the way the implicit rule works. For example, the variable `CFLAGS' controls the flags given to the C compiler by the implicit rule for C compilation. You can define your own implicit rules by writing "pattern rules". "Suffix rules" are a more limited way to define implicit rules. Pattern rules are more general and clearer, but suffix rules are retained for compatibility. Using Implicit Rules ==================== To allow `make' to find a customary method for updating a target file, all you have to do is refrain from specifying commands yourself. Either write a rule with no command lines, or don't write a rule at all. Then `make' will figure out which implicit rule to use based on which kind of source file exists or can be made. For example, suppose the makefile looks like this: foo : foo.o bar.o cc -o foo foo.o bar.o $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) Because you mention `foo.o' but do not give a rule for it, `make' will automatically look for an implicit rule that tells how to update it. This happens whether or not the file `foo.o' currently exists. If an implicit rule is found, it can supply both commands and one or more prerequisites (the source files). You would want to write a rule for `foo.o' with no command lines if you need to specify additional prerequisites, such as header files, that the implicit rule cannot supply. Each implicit rule has a target pattern and prerequisite patterns. There may be many implicit rules with the same target pattern. For example, numerous rules make `.o' files: one, from a `.c' file with the C compiler; another, from a `.p' file with the Pascal compiler; and so on. The rule that actually applies is the one whose prerequisites exist or can be made. So, if you have a file `foo.c', `make' will run the C compiler; otherwise, if you have a file `foo.p', `make' will run the Pascal compiler; and so on. Of course, when you write the makefile, you know which implicit rule you want `make' to use, and you know it will choose that one because you know which possible prerequisite files are supposed to exist. *Note Catalogue of Implicit Rules: Catalogue of Rules, for a catalogue of all the predefined implicit rules. Above, we said an implicit rule applies if the required prerequisites "exist or can be made". A file "can be made" if it is mentioned explicitly in the makefile as a target or a prerequisite, or if an implicit rule can be recursively found for how to make it. When an implicit prerequisite is the result of another implicit rule, we say that "chaining" is occurring. *Note Chains of Implicit Rules: Chained Rules. In general, `make' searches for an implicit rule for each target, and for each double-colon rule, that has no commands. A file that is mentioned only as a prerequisite is considered a target whose rule specifies nothing, so implicit rule search happens for it. *Note Implicit Rule Search Algorithm: Implicit Rule Search, for the details of how the search is done. Note that explicit prerequisites do not influence implicit rule search. For example, consider this explicit rule: foo.o: foo.p The prerequisite on `foo.p' does not necessarily mean that `make' will remake `foo.o' according to the implicit rule to make an object file, a `.o' file, from a Pascal source file, a `.p' file. For example, if `foo.c' also exists, the implicit rule to make an object file from a C source file is used instead, because it appears before the Pascal rule in the list of predefined implicit rules (*note Catalogue of Implicit Rules: Catalogue of Rules.). If you do not want an implicit rule to be used for a target that has no commands, you can give that target empty commands by writing a semicolon (*note Defining Empty Commands: Empty Commands.). Catalogue of Implicit Rules =========================== Here is a catalogue of predefined implicit rules which are always available unless the makefile explicitly overrides or cancels them. *Note Canceling Implicit Rules: Canceling Rules, for information on canceling or overriding an implicit rule. The `-r' or `--no-builtin-rules' option cancels all predefined rules. Not all of these rules will always be defined, even when the `-r' option is not given. Many of the predefined implicit rules are implemented in `make' as suffix rules, so which ones will be defined depends on the "suffix list" (the list of prerequisites of the special target `.SUFFIXES'). The default suffix list is: `.out', `.a', `.ln', `.o', `.c', `.cc', `.C', `.p', `.f', `.F', `.r', `.y', `.l', `.s', `.S', `.mod', `.sym', `.def', `.h', `.info', `.dvi', `.tex', `.texinfo', `.texi', `.txinfo', `.w', `.ch' `.web', `.sh', `.elc', `.el'. All of the implicit rules described below whose prerequisites have one of these suffixes are actually suffix rules. If you modify the suffix list, the only predefined suffix rules in effect will be those named by one or two of the suffixes that are on the list you specify; rules whose suffixes fail to be on the list are disabled. *Note Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules: Suffix Rules, for full details on suffix rules. Compiling C programs `N.o' is made automatically from `N.c' with a command of the form `$(CC) -c $(CPPFLAGS) $(CFLAGS)'. Compiling C++ programs `N.o' is made automatically from `N.cc' or `N.C' with a command of the form `$(CXX) -c $(CPPFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS)'. We encourage you to use the suffix `.cc' for C++ source files instead of `.C'. Compiling Pascal programs `N.o' is made automatically from `N.p' with the command `$(PC) -c $(PFLAGS)'. Compiling Fortran and Ratfor programs `N.o' is made automatically from `N.r', `N.F' or `N.f' by running the Fortran compiler. The precise command used is as follows: `.f' `$(FC) -c $(FFLAGS)'. `.F' `$(FC) -c $(FFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS)'. `.r' `$(FC) -c $(FFLAGS) $(RFLAGS)'. Preprocessing Fortran and Ratfor programs `N.f' is made automatically from `N.r' or `N.F'. This rule runs just the preprocessor to convert a Ratfor or preprocessable Fortran program into a strict Fortran program. The precise command used is as follows: `.F' `$(FC) -F $(CPPFLAGS) $(FFLAGS)'. `.r' `$(FC) -F $(FFLAGS) $(RFLAGS)'. Compiling Modula-2 programs `N.sym' is made from `N.def' with a command of the form `$(M2C) $(M2FLAGS) $(DEFFLAGS)'. `N.o' is made from `N.mod'; the form is: `$(M2C) $(M2FLAGS) $(MODFLAGS)'. Assembling and preprocessing assembler programs `N.o' is made automatically from `N.s' by running the assembler, `as'. The precise command is `$(AS) $(ASFLAGS)'. `N.s' is made automatically from `N.S' by running the C preprocessor, `cpp'. The precise command is `$(CPP) $(CPPFLAGS)'. Linking a single object file `N' is made automatically from `N.o' by running the linker (usually called `ld') via the C compiler. The precise command used is `$(CC) $(LDFLAGS) N.o $(LOADLIBES) $(LDLIBS)'. This rule does the right thing for a simple program with only one source file. It will also do the right thing if there are multiple object files (presumably coming from various other source files), one of which has a name matching that of the executable file. Thus, x: y.o z.o when `x.c', `y.c' and `z.c' all exist will execute: cc -c x.c -o x.o cc -c y.c -o y.o cc -c z.c -o z.o cc x.o y.o z.o -o x rm -f x.o rm -f y.o rm -f z.o In more complicated cases, such as when there is no object file whose name derives from the executable file name, you must write an explicit command for linking. Each kind of file automatically made into `.o' object files will be automatically linked by using the compiler (`$(CC)', `$(FC)' or `$(PC)'; the C compiler `$(CC)' is used to assemble `.s' files) without the `-c' option. This could be done by using the `.o' object files as intermediates, but it is faster to do the compiling and linking in one step, so that's how it's done. Yacc for C programs `N.c' is made automatically from `N.y' by running Yacc with the command `$(YACC) $(YFLAGS)'. Lex for C programs `N.c' is made automatically from `N.l' by by running Lex. The actual command is `$(LEX) $(LFLAGS)'. Lex for Ratfor programs `N.r' is made automatically from `N.l' by by running Lex. The actual command is `$(LEX) $(LFLAGS)'. The convention of using the same suffix `.l' for all Lex files regardless of whether they produce C code or Ratfor code makes it impossible for `make' to determine automatically which of the two languages you are using in any particular case. If `make' is called upon to remake an object file from a `.l' file, it must guess which compiler to use. It will guess the C compiler, because that is more common. If you are using Ratfor, make sure `make' knows this by mentioning `N.r' in the makefile. Or, if you are using Ratfor exclusively, with no C files, remove `.c' from the list of implicit rule suffixes with: .SUFFIXES: .SUFFIXES: .o .r .f .l ... Making Lint Libraries from C, Yacc, or Lex programs `N.ln' is made from `N.c' by running `lint'. The precise command is `$(LINT) $(LINTFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -i'. The same command is used on the C code produced from `N.y' or `N.l'. TeX and Web `N.dvi' is made from `N.tex' with the command `$(TEX)'. `N.tex' is made from `N.web' with `$(WEAVE)', or from `N.w' (and from `N.ch' if it exists or can be made) with `$(CWEAVE)'. `N.p' is made from `N.web' with `$(TANGLE)' and `N.c' is made from `N.w' (and from `N.ch' if it exists or can be made) with `$(CTANGLE)'. Texinfo and Info `N.dvi' is made from `N.texinfo', `N.texi', or `N.txinfo', with the command `$(TEXI2DVI) $(TEXI2DVI_FLAGS)'. `N.info' is made from `N.texinfo', `N.texi', or `N.txinfo', with the command `$(MAKEINFO) $(MAKEINFO_FLAGS)'. RCS Any file `N' is extracted if necessary from an RCS file named either `N,v' or `RCS/N,v'. The precise command used is `$(CO) $(COFLAGS)'. `N' will not be extracted from RCS if it already exists, even if the RCS file is newer. The rules for RCS are terminal (*note Match-Anything Pattern Rules: Match-Anything Rules.), so RCS files cannot be generated from another source; they must actually exist. SCCS Any file `N' is extracted if necessary from an SCCS file named either `s.N' or `SCCS/s.N'. The precise command used is `$(GET) $(GFLAGS)'. The rules for SCCS are terminal (*note Match-Anything Pattern Rules: Match-Anything Rules.), so SCCS files cannot be generated from another source; they must actually exist. For the benefit of SCCS, a file `N' is copied from `N.sh' and made executable (by everyone). This is for shell scripts that are checked into SCCS. Since RCS preserves the execution permission of a file, you do not need to use this feature with RCS. We recommend that you avoid using of SCCS. RCS is widely held to be superior, and is also free. By choosing free software in place of comparable (or inferior) proprietary software, you support the free software movement. Usually, you want to change only the variables listed in the table above, which are documented in the following section. However, the commands in built-in implicit rules actually use variables such as `COMPILE.c', `LINK.p', and `PREPROCESS.S', whose values contain the commands listed above. `make' follows the convention that the rule to compile a `.X' source file uses the variable `COMPILE.X'. Similarly, the rule to produce an executable from a `.X' file uses `LINK.X'; and the rule to preprocess a `.X' file uses `PREPROCESS.X'. Every rule that produces an object file uses the variable `OUTPUT_OPTION'. `make' defines this variable either to contain `-o $@', or to be empty, depending on a compile-time option. You need the `-o' option to ensure that the output goes into the right file when the source file is in a different directory, as when using `VPATH' (*note Directory Search::.). However, compilers on some systems do not accept a `-o' switch for object files. If you use such a system, and use `VPATH', some compilations will put their output in the wrong place. A possible workaround for this problem is to give `OUTPUT_OPTION' the value `; mv $*.o $@'. Variables Used by Implicit Rules ================================ The commands in built-in implicit rules make liberal use of certain predefined variables. You can alter these variables in the makefile, with arguments to `make', or in the environment to alter how the implicit rules work without redefining the rules themselves. You can cancel all variables used by implicit rules with the `-R' or `--no-builtin-variables' option. For example, the command used to compile a C source file actually says `$(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS)'. The default values of the variables used are `cc' and nothing, resulting in the command `cc -c'. By redefining `CC' to `ncc', you could cause `ncc' to be used for all C compilations performed by the implicit rule. By redefining `CFLAGS' to be `-g', you could pass the `-g' option to each compilation. *All* implicit rules that do C compilation use `$(CC)' to get the program name for the compiler and *all* include `$(CFLAGS)' among the arguments given to the compiler. The variables used in implicit rules fall into two classes: those that are names of programs (like `CC') and those that contain arguments for the programs (like `CFLAGS'). (The "name of a program" may also contain some command arguments, but it must start with an actual executable program name.) If a variable value contains more than one argument, separate them with spaces. Here is a table of variables used as names of programs in built-in rules: `AR' Archive-maintaining program; default `ar'. `AS' Program for doing assembly; default `as'. `CC' Program for compiling C programs; default `cc'. `CXX' Program for compiling C++ programs; default `g++'. `CO' Program for extracting a file from RCS; default `co'. `CPP' Program for running the C preprocessor, with results to standard output; default `$(CC) -E'. `FC' Program for compiling or preprocessing Fortran and Ratfor programs; default `f77'. `GET' Program for extracting a file from SCCS; default `get'. `LEX' Program to use to turn Lex grammars into C programs or Ratfor programs; default `lex'. `PC' Program for compiling Pascal programs; default `pc'. `YACC' Program to use to turn Yacc grammars into C programs; default `yacc'. `YACCR' Program to use to turn Yacc grammars into Ratfor programs; default `yacc -r'. `MAKEINFO' Program to convert a Texinfo source file into an Info file; default `makeinfo'. `TEX' Program to make TeX DVI files from TeX source; default `tex'. `TEXI2DVI' Program to make TeX DVI files from Texinfo source; default `texi2dvi'. `WEAVE' Program to translate Web into TeX; default `weave'. `CWEAVE' Program to translate C Web into TeX; default `cweave'. `TANGLE' Program to translate Web into Pascal; default `tangle'. `CTANGLE' Program to translate C Web into C; default `ctangle'. `RM' Command to remove a file; default `rm -f'. Here is a table of variables whose values are additional arguments for the programs above. The default values for all of these is the empty string, unless otherwise noted. `ARFLAGS' Flags to give the archive-maintaining program; default `rv'. `ASFLAGS' Extra flags to give to the assembler (when explicitly invoked on a `.s' or `.S' file). `CFLAGS' Extra flags to give to the C compiler. `CXXFLAGS' Extra flags to give to the C++ compiler. `COFLAGS' Extra flags to give to the RCS `co' program. `CPPFLAGS' Extra flags to give to the C preprocessor and programs that use it (the C and Fortran compilers). `FFLAGS' Extra flags to give to the Fortran compiler. `GFLAGS' Extra flags to give to the SCCS `get' program. `LDFLAGS' Extra flags to give to compilers when they are supposed to invoke the linker, `ld'. `LFLAGS' Extra flags to give to Lex. `PFLAGS' Extra flags to give to the Pascal compiler. `RFLAGS' Extra flags to give to the Fortran compiler for Ratfor programs. `YFLAGS' Extra flags to give to Yacc. Chains of Implicit Rules ======================== Sometimes a file can be made by a sequence of implicit rules. For example, a file `N.o' could be made from `N.y' by running first Yacc and then `cc'. Such a sequence is called a "chain". If the file `N.c' exists, or is mentioned in the makefile, no special searching is required: `make' finds that the object file can be made by C compilation from `N.c'; later on, when considering how to make `N.c', the rule for running Yacc is used. Ultimately both `N.c' and `N.o' are updated. However, even if `N.c' does not exist and is not mentioned, `make' knows how to envision it as the missing link between `N.o' and `N.y'! In this case, `N.c' is called an "intermediate file". Once `make' has decided to use the intermediate file, it is entered in the data base as if it had been mentioned in the makefile, along with the implicit rule that says how to create it. Intermediate files are remade using their rules just like all other files. But intermediate files are treated differently in two ways. The first difference is what happens if the intermediate file does not exist. If an ordinary file B does not exist, and `make' considers a target that depends on B, it invariably creates B and then updates the target from B. But if B is an intermediate file, then `make' can leave well enough alone. It won't bother updating B, or the ultimate target, unless some prerequisite of B is newer than that target or there is some other reason to update that target. The second difference is that if `make' *does* create B in order to update something else, it deletes B later on after it is no longer needed. Therefore, an intermediate file which did not exist before `make' also does not exist after `make'. `make' reports the deletion to you by printing a `rm -f' command showing which file it is deleting. Ordinarily, a file cannot be intermediate if it is mentioned in the makefile as a target or prerequisite. However, you can explicitly mark a file as intermediate by listing it as a prerequisite of the special target `.INTERMEDIATE'. This takes effect even if the file is mentioned explicitly in some other way. You can prevent automatic deletion of an intermediate file by marking it as a "secondary" file. To do this, list it as a prerequisite of the special target `.SECONDARY'. When a file is secondary, `make' will not create the file merely because it does not already exist, but `make' does not automatically delete the file. Marking a file as secondary also marks it as intermediate. You can list the target pattern of an implicit rule (such as `%.o') as a prerequisite of the special target `.PRECIOUS' to preserve intermediate files made by implicit rules whose target patterns match that file's name; see *Note Interrupts::. A chain can involve more than two implicit rules. For example, it is possible to make a file `foo' from `RCS/foo.y,v' by running RCS, Yacc and `cc'. Then both `foo.y' and `foo.c' are intermediate files that are deleted at the end. No single implicit rule can appear more than once in a chain. This means that `make' will not even consider such a ridiculous thing as making `foo' from `foo.o.o' by running the linker twice. This constraint has the added benefit of preventing any infinite loop in the search for an implicit rule chain. There are some special implicit rules to optimize certain cases that would otherwise be handled by rule chains. For example, making `foo' from `foo.c' could be handled by compiling and linking with separate chained rules, using `foo.o' as an intermediate file. But what actually happens is that a special rule for this case does the compilation and linking with a single `cc' command. The optimized rule is used in preference to the step-by-step chain because it comes earlier in the ordering of rules. Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules ===================================== You define an implicit rule by writing a "pattern rule". A pattern rule looks like an ordinary rule, except that its target contains the character `%' (exactly one of them). The target is considered a pattern for matching file names; the `%' can match any nonempty substring, while other characters match only themselves. The prerequisites likewise use `%' to show how their names relate to the target name. Thus, a pattern rule `%.o : %.c' says how to make any file `STEM.o' from another file `STEM.c'. Note that expansion using `%' in pattern rules occurs *after* any variable or function expansions, which take place when the makefile is read. *Note How to Use Variables: Using Variables, and *Note Functions for Transforming Text: Functions. Introduction to Pattern Rules ----------------------------- A pattern rule contains the character `%' (exactly one of them) in the target; otherwise, it looks exactly like an ordinary rule. The target is a pattern for matching file names; the `%' matches any nonempty substring, while other characters match only themselves. For example, `%.c' as a pattern matches any file name that ends in `.c'. `s.%.c' as a pattern matches any file name that starts with `s.', ends in `.c' and is at least five characters long. (There must be at least one character to match the `%'.) The substring that the `%' matches is called the "stem". `%' in a prerequisite of a pattern rule stands for the same stem that was matched by the `%' in the target. In order for the pattern rule to apply, its target pattern must match the file name under consideration, and its prerequisite patterns must name files that exist or can be made. These files become prerequisites of the target. Thus, a rule of the form %.o : %.c ; COMMAND... specifies how to make a file `N.o', with another file `N.c' as its prerequisite, provided that `N.c' exists or can be made. There may also be prerequisites that do not use `%'; such a prerequisite attaches to every file made by this pattern rule. These unvarying prerequisites are useful occasionally. A pattern rule need not have any prerequisites that contain `%', or in fact any prerequisites at all. Such a rule is effectively a general wildcard. It provides a way to make any file that matches the target pattern. *Note Last Resort::. Pattern rules may have more than one target. Unlike normal rules, this does not act as many different rules with the same prerequisites and commands. If a pattern rule has multiple targets, `make' knows that the rule's commands are responsible for making all of the targets. The commands are executed only once to make all the targets. When searching for a pattern rule to match a target, the target patterns of a rule other than the one that matches the target in need of a rule are incidental: `make' worries only about giving commands and prerequisites to the file presently in question. However, when this file's commands are run, the other targets are marked as having been updated themselves. The order in which pattern rules appear in the makefile is important since this is the order in which they are considered. Of equally applicable rules, only the first one found is used. The rules you write take precedence over those that are built in. Note however, that a rule whose prerequisites actually exist or are mentioned always takes priority over a rule with prerequisites that must be made by chaining other implicit rules. Pattern Rule Examples --------------------- Here are some examples of pattern rules actually predefined in `make'. First, the rule that compiles `.c' files into `.o' files: %.o : %.c $(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $< -o $@ defines a rule that can make any file `X.o' from `X.c'. The command uses the automatic variables `$@' and `$<' to substitute the names of the target file and the source file in each case where the rule applies (*note Automatic Variables: Automatic.). Here is a second built-in rule: % :: RCS/%,v $(CO) $(COFLAGS) $< defines a rule that can make any file `X' whatsoever from a corresponding file `X,v' in the subdirectory `RCS'. Since the target is `%', this rule will apply to any file whatever, provided the appropriate prerequisite file exists. The double colon makes the rule "terminal", which means that its prerequisite may not be an intermediate file (*note Match-Anything Pattern Rules: Match-Anything Rules.). This pattern rule has two targets: %.tab.c %.tab.h: %.y bison -d $< This tells `make' that the command `bison -d X.y' will make both `X.tab.c' and `X.tab.h'. If the file `foo' depends on the files `parse.tab.o' and `scan.o' and the file `scan.o' depends on the file `parse.tab.h', when `parse.y' is changed, the command `bison -d parse.y' will be executed only once, and the prerequisites of both `parse.tab.o' and `scan.o' will be satisfied. (Presumably the file `parse.tab.o' will be recompiled from `parse.tab.c' and the file `scan.o' from `scan.c', while `foo' is linked from `parse.tab.o', `scan.o', and its other prerequisites, and it will execute happily ever after.) Automatic Variables ------------------- Suppose you are writing a pattern rule to compile a `.c' file into a `.o' file: how do you write the `cc' command so that it operates on the right source file name? You cannot write the name in the command, because the name is different each time the implicit rule is applied. What you do is use a special feature of `make', the "automatic variables". These variables have values computed afresh for each rule that is executed, based on the target and prerequisites of the rule. In this example, you would use `$@' for the object file name and `$<' for the source file name. Here is a table of automatic variables: `$@' The file name of the target of the rule. If the target is an archive member, then `$@' is the name of the archive file. In a pattern rule that has multiple targets (*note Introduction to Pattern Rules: Pattern Intro.), `$@' is the name of whichever target caused the rule's commands to be run. `$%' The target member name, when the target is an archive member. *Note Archives::. For example, if the target is `foo.a(bar.o)' then `$%' is `bar.o' and `$@' is `foo.a'. `$%' is empty when the target is not an archive member. `$<' The name of the first prerequisite. If the target got its commands from an implicit rule, this will be the first prerequisite added by the implicit rule (*note Implicit Rules::.). `$?' The names of all the prerequisites that are newer than the target, with spaces between them. For prerequisites which are archive members, only the member named is used (*note Archives::.). `$^' The names of all the prerequisites, with spaces between them. For prerequisites which are archive members, only the member named is used (*note Archives::.). A target has only one prerequisite on each other file it depends on, no matter how many times each file is listed as a prerequisite. So if you list a prerequisite more than once for a target, the value of `$^' contains just one copy of the name. `$+' This is like `$^', but prerequisites listed more than once are duplicated in the order they were listed in the makefile. This is primarily useful for use in linking commands where it is meaningful to repeat library file names in a particular order. `$*' The stem with which an implicit rule matches (*note How Patterns Match: Pattern Match.). If the target is `dir/a.foo.b' and the target pattern is `a.%.b' then the stem is `dir/foo'. The stem is useful for constructing names of related files. In a static pattern rule, the stem is part of the file name that matched the `%' in the target pattern. In an explicit rule, there is no stem; so `$*' cannot be determined in that way. Instead, if the target name ends with a recognized suffix (*note Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules: Suffix Rules.), `$*' is set to the target name minus the suffix. For example, if the target name is `foo.c', then `$*' is set to `foo', since `.c' is a suffix. GNU `make' does this bizarre thing only for compatibility with other implementations of `make'. You should generally avoid using `$*' except in implicit rules or static pattern rules. If the target name in an explicit rule does not end with a recognized suffix, `$*' is set to the empty string for that rule. `$?' is useful even in explicit rules when you wish to operate on only the prerequisites that have changed. For example, suppose that an archive named `lib' is supposed to contain copies of several object files. This rule copies just the changed object files into the archive: lib: foo.o bar.o lose.o win.o ar r lib $? Of the variables listed above, four have values that are single file names, and three have values that are lists of file names. These seven have variants that get just the file's directory name or just the file name within the directory. The variant variables' names are formed by appending `D' or `F', respectively. These variants are semi-obsolete in GNU `make' since the functions `dir' and `notdir' can be used to get a similar effect (*note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions.). Note, however, that the `F' variants all omit the trailing slash which always appears in the output of the `dir' function. Here is a table of the variants: `$(@D)' The directory part of the file name of the target, with the trailing slash removed. If the value of `$@' is `dir/foo.o' then `$(@D)' is `dir'. This value is `.' if `$@' does not contain a slash. `$(@F)' The file-within-directory part of the file name of the target. If the value of `$@' is `dir/foo.o' then `$(@F)' is `foo.o'. `$(@F)' is equivalent to `$(notdir $@)'. `$(*D)' `$(*F)' The directory part and the file-within-directory part of the stem; `dir' and `foo' in this example. `$(%D)' `$(%F)' The directory part and the file-within-directory part of the target archive member name. This makes sense only for archive member targets of the form `ARCHIVE(MEMBER)' and is useful only when MEMBER may contain a directory name. (*Note Archive Members as Targets: Archive Members.) `$( foo.1 will fail when the build directory is not the source directory, because `foo.man' and `sedscript' are in the the source directory. When using GNU `make', relying on `VPATH' to find the source file will work in the case where there is a single dependency file, since the `make' automatic variable `$<' will represent the source file wherever it is. (Many versions of `make' set `$<' only in implicit rules.) A Makefile target like foo.o : bar.c $(CC) -I. -I$(srcdir) $(CFLAGS) -c bar.c -o foo.o should instead be written as foo.o : bar.c $(CC) -I. -I$(srcdir) $(CFLAGS) -c $< -o $@ in order to allow `VPATH' to work correctly. When the target has multiple dependencies, using an explicit `$(srcdir)' is the easiest way to make the rule work well. For example, the target above for `foo.1' is best written as: foo.1 : foo.man sedscript sed -e $(srcdir)/sedscript $(srcdir)/foo.man > $@ GNU distributions usually contain some files which are not source files--for example, Info files, and the output from Autoconf, Automake, Bison or Flex. Since these files normally appear in the source directory, they should always appear in the source directory, not in the build directory. So Makefile rules to update them should put the updated files in the source directory. However, if a file does not appear in the distribution, then the Makefile should not put it in the source directory, because building a program in ordinary circumstances should not modify the source directory in any way. Try to make the build and installation targets, at least (and all their subtargets) work correctly with a parallel `make'. Utilities in Makefiles ====================== Write the Makefile commands (and any shell scripts, such as `configure') to run in `sh', not in `csh'. Don't use any special features of `ksh' or `bash'. The `configure' script and the Makefile rules for building and installation should not use any utilities directly except these: cat cmp cp diff echo egrep expr false grep install-info ln ls mkdir mv pwd rm rmdir sed sleep sort tar test touch true The compression program `gzip' can be used in the `dist' rule. Stick to the generally supported options for these programs. For example, don't use `mkdir -p', convenient as it may be, because most systems don't support it. It is a good idea to avoid creating symbolic links in makefiles, since a few systems don't support them. The Makefile rules for building and installation can also use compilers and related programs, but should do so via `make' variables so that the user can substitute alternatives. Here are some of the programs we mean: ar bison cc flex install ld ldconfig lex make makeinfo ranlib texi2dvi yacc Use the following `make' variables to run those programs: $(AR) $(BISON) $(CC) $(FLEX) $(INSTALL) $(LD) $(LDCONFIG) $(LEX) $(MAKE) $(MAKEINFO) $(RANLIB) $(TEXI2DVI) $(YACC) When you use `ranlib' or `ldconfig', you should make sure nothing bad happens if the system does not have the program in question. Arrange to ignore an error from that command, and print a message before the command to tell the user that failure of this command does not mean a problem. (The Autoconf `AC_PROG_RANLIB' macro can help with this.) If you use symbolic links, you should implement a fallback for systems that don't have symbolic links. Additional utilities that can be used via Make variables are: chgrp chmod chown mknod It is ok to use other utilities in Makefile portions (or scripts) intended only for particular systems where you know those utilities exist. Variables for Specifying Commands ================================= Makefiles should provide variables for overriding certain commands, options, and so on. In particular, you should run most utility programs via variables. Thus, if you use Bison, have a variable named `BISON' whose default value is set with `BISON = bison', and refer to it with `$(BISON)' whenever you need to use Bison. File management utilities such as `ln', `rm', `mv', and so on, need not be referred to through variables in this way, since users don't need to replace them with other programs. Each program-name variable should come with an options variable that is used to supply options to the program. Append `FLAGS' to the program-name variable name to get the options variable name--for example, `BISONFLAGS'. (The names `CFLAGS' for the C compiler, `YFLAGS' for yacc, and `LFLAGS' for lex, are exceptions to this rule, but we keep them because they are standard.) Use `CPPFLAGS' in any compilation command that runs the preprocessor, and use `LDFLAGS' in any compilation command that does linking as well as in any direct use of `ld'. If there are C compiler options that *must* be used for proper compilation of certain files, do not include them in `CFLAGS'. Users expect to be able to specify `CFLAGS' freely themselves. Instead, arrange to pass the necessary options to the C compiler independently of `CFLAGS', by writing them explicitly in the compilation commands or by defining an implicit rule, like this: CFLAGS = -g ALL_CFLAGS = -I. $(CFLAGS) .c.o: $(CC) -c $(CPPFLAGS) $(ALL_CFLAGS) $< Do include the `-g' option in `CFLAGS', because that is not *required* for proper compilation. You can consider it a default that is only recommended. If the package is set up so that it is compiled with GCC by default, then you might as well include `-O' in the default value of `CFLAGS' as well. Put `CFLAGS' last in the compilation command, after other variables containing compiler options, so the user can use `CFLAGS' to override the others. `CFLAGS' should be used in every invocation of the C compiler, both those which do compilation and those which do linking. Every Makefile should define the variable `INSTALL', which is the basic command for installing a file into the system. Every Makefile should also define the variables `INSTALL_PROGRAM' and `INSTALL_DATA'. (The default for each of these should be `$(INSTALL)'.) Then it should use those variables as the commands for actual installation, for executables and nonexecutables respectively. Use these variables as follows: $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) foo $(bindir)/foo $(INSTALL_DATA) libfoo.a $(libdir)/libfoo.a Optionally, you may prepend the value of `DESTDIR' to the target filename. Doing this allows the installer to create a snapshot of the installation to be copied onto the real target filesystem later. Do not set the value of `DESTDIR' in your Makefile, and do not include it in any installed files. With support for `DESTDIR', the above examples become: $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) foo $(DESTDIR)$(bindir)/foo $(INSTALL_DATA) libfoo.a $(DESTDIR)$(libdir)/libfoo.a Always use a file name, not a directory name, as the second argument of the installation commands. Use a separate command for each file to be installed. Variables for Installation Directories ====================================== Installation directories should always be named by variables, so it is easy to install in a nonstandard place. The standard names for these variables are described below. They are based on a standard filesystem layout; variants of it are used in SVR4, 4.4BSD, Linux, Ultrix v4, and other modern operating systems. These two variables set the root for the installation. All the other installation directories should be subdirectories of one of these two, and nothing should be directly installed into these two directories. `prefix' A prefix used in constructing the default values of the variables listed below. The default value of `prefix' should be `/usr/local'. When building the complete GNU system, the prefix will be empty and `/usr' will be a symbolic link to `/'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@prefix@'.) Running `make install' with a different value of `prefix' from the one used to build the program should NOT recompile the program. `exec_prefix' A prefix used in constructing the default values of some of the variables listed below. The default value of `exec_prefix' should be `$(prefix)'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@exec_prefix@'.) Generally, `$(exec_prefix)' is used for directories that contain machine-specific files (such as executables and subroutine libraries), while `$(prefix)' is used directly for other directories. Running `make install' with a different value of `exec_prefix' from the one used to build the program should NOT recompile the program. Executable programs are installed in one of the following directories. `bindir' The directory for installing executable programs that users can run. This should normally be `/usr/local/bin', but write it as `$(exec_prefix)/bin'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@bindir@'.) `sbindir' The directory for installing executable programs that can be run from the shell, but are only generally useful to system administrators. This should normally be `/usr/local/sbin', but write it as `$(exec_prefix)/sbin'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@sbindir@'.) `libexecdir' The directory for installing executable programs to be run by other programs rather than by users. This directory should normally be `/usr/local/libexec', but write it as `$(exec_prefix)/libexec'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@libexecdir@'.) Data files used by the program during its execution are divided into categories in two ways. * Some files are normally modified by programs; others are never normally modified (though users may edit some of these). * Some files are architecture-independent and can be shared by all machines at a site; some are architecture-dependent and can be shared only by machines of the same kind and operating system; others may never be shared between two machines. This makes for six different possibilities. However, we want to discourage the use of architecture-dependent files, aside from object files and libraries. It is much cleaner to make other data files architecture-independent, and it is generally not hard. Therefore, here are the variables Makefiles should use to specify directories: `datadir' The directory for installing read-only architecture independent data files. This should normally be `/usr/local/share', but write it as `$(prefix)/share'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@datadir@'.) As a special exception, see `$(infodir)' and `$(includedir)' below. `sysconfdir' The directory for installing read-only data files that pertain to a single machine-that is to say, files for configuring a host. Mailer and network configuration files, `/etc/passwd', and so forth belong here. All the files in this directory should be ordinary ASCII text files. This directory should normally be `/usr/local/etc', but write it as `$(prefix)/etc'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@sysconfdir@'.) Do not install executables here in this directory (they probably belong in `$(libexecdir)' or `$(sbindir)'). Also do not install files that are modified in the normal course of their use (programs whose purpose is to change the configuration of the system excluded). Those probably belong in `$(localstatedir)'. `sharedstatedir' The directory for installing architecture-independent data files which the programs modify while they run. This should normally be `/usr/local/com', but write it as `$(prefix)/com'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@sharedstatedir@'.) `localstatedir' The directory for installing data files which the programs modify while they run, and that pertain to one specific machine. Users should never need to modify files in this directory to configure the package's operation; put such configuration information in separate files that go in `$(datadir)' or `$(sysconfdir)'. `$(localstatedir)' should normally be `/usr/local/var', but write it as `$(prefix)/var'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@localstatedir@'.) `libdir' The directory for object files and libraries of object code. Do not install executables here, they probably ought to go in `$(libexecdir)' instead. The value of `libdir' should normally be `/usr/local/lib', but write it as `$(exec_prefix)/lib'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@libdir@'.) `infodir' The directory for installing the Info files for this package. By default, it should be `/usr/local/info', but it should be written as `$(prefix)/info'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@infodir@'.) `lispdir' The directory for installing any Emacs Lisp files in this package. By default, it should be `/usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp', but it should be written as `$(prefix)/share/emacs/site-lisp'. If you are using Autoconf, write the default as `@lispdir@'. In order to make `@lispdir@' work, you need the following lines in your `configure.in' file: lispdir='${datadir}/emacs/site-lisp' AC_SUBST(lispdir) `includedir' The directory for installing header files to be included by user programs with the C `#include' preprocessor directive. This should normally be `/usr/local/include', but write it as `$(prefix)/include'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@includedir@'.) Most compilers other than GCC do not look for header files in directory `/usr/local/include'. So installing the header files this way is only useful with GCC. Sometimes this is not a problem because some libraries are only really intended to work with GCC. But some libraries are intended to work with other compilers. They should install their header files in two places, one specified by `includedir' and one specified by `oldincludedir'. `oldincludedir' The directory for installing `#include' header files for use with compilers other than GCC. This should normally be `/usr/include'. (If you are using Autoconf, you can write it as `@oldincludedir@'.) The Makefile commands should check whether the value of `oldincludedir' is empty. If it is, they should not try to use it; they should cancel the second installation of the header files. A package should not replace an existing header in this directory unless the header came from the same package. Thus, if your Foo package provides a header file `foo.h', then it should install the header file in the `oldincludedir' directory if either (1) there is no `foo.h' there or (2) the `foo.h' that exists came from the Foo package. To tell whether `foo.h' came from the Foo package, put a magic string in the file--part of a comment--and `grep' for that string. Unix-style man pages are installed in one of the following: `mandir' The top-level directory for installing the man pages (if any) for this package. It will normally be `/usr/local/man', but you should write it as `$(prefix)/man'. (If you are using Autoconf, write it as `@mandir@'.) `man1dir' The directory for installing section 1 man pages. Write it as `$(mandir)/man1'. `man2dir' The directory for installing section 2 man pages. Write it as `$(mandir)/man2' `...' *Don't make the primary documentation for any GNU software be a man page. Write a manual in Texinfo instead. Man pages are just for the sake of people running GNU software on Unix, which is a secondary application only.* `manext' The file name extension for the installed man page. This should contain a period followed by the appropriate digit; it should normally be `.1'. `man1ext' The file name extension for installed section 1 man pages. `man2ext' The file name extension for installed section 2 man pages. `...' Use these names instead of `manext' if the package needs to install man pages in more than one section of the manual. And finally, you should set the following variable: `srcdir' The directory for the sources being compiled. The value of this variable is normally inserted by the `configure' shell script. (If you are using Autconf, use `srcdir = @srcdir@'.) For example: # Common prefix for installation directories. # NOTE: This directory must exist when you start the install. prefix = /usr/local exec_prefix = $(prefix) # Where to put the executable for the command `gcc'. bindir = $(exec_prefix)/bin # Where to put the directories used by the compiler. libexecdir = $(exec_prefix)/libexec # Where to put the Info files. infodir = $(prefix)/info If your program installs a large number of files into one of the standard user-specified directories, it might be useful to group them into a subdirectory particular to that program. If you do this, you should write the `install' rule to create these subdirectories. Do not expect the user to include the subdirectory name in the value of any of the variables listed above. The idea of having a uniform set of variable names for installation directories is to enable the user to specify the exact same values for several different GNU packages. In order for this to be useful, all the packages must be designed so that they will work sensibly when the user does so. Standard Targets for Users ========================== All GNU programs should have the following targets in their Makefiles: `all' Compile the entire program. This should be the default target. This target need not rebuild any documentation files; Info files should normally be included in the distribution, and DVI files should be made only when explicitly asked for. By default, the Make rules should compile and link with `-g', so that executable programs have debugging symbols. Users who don't mind being helpless can strip the executables later if they wish. `install' Compile the program and copy the executables, libraries, and so on to the file names where they should reside for actual use. If there is a simple test to verify that a program is properly installed, this target should run that test. Do not strip executables when installing them. Devil-may-care users can use the `install-strip' target to do that. If possible, write the `install' target rule so that it does not modify anything in the directory where the program was built, provided `make all' has just been done. This is convenient for building the program under one user name and installing it under another. The commands should create all the directories in which files are to be installed, if they don't already exist. This includes the directories specified as the values of the variables `prefix' and `exec_prefix', as well as all subdirectories that are needed. One way to do this is by means of an `installdirs' target as described below. Use `-' before any command for installing a man page, so that `make' will ignore any errors. This is in case there are systems that don't have the Unix man page documentation system installed. The way to install Info files is to copy them into `$(infodir)' with `$(INSTALL_DATA)' (*note Command Variables::.), and then run the `install-info' program if it is present. `install-info' is a program that edits the Info `dir' file to add or update the menu entry for the given Info file; it is part of the Texinfo package. Here is a sample rule to install an Info file: $(DESTDIR)$(infodir)/foo.info: foo.info $(POST_INSTALL) # There may be a newer info file in . than in srcdir. -if test -f foo.info; then d=.; \ else d=$(srcdir); fi; \ $(INSTALL_DATA) $$d/foo.info $(DESTDIR)$@; \ # Run install-info only if it exists. # Use `if' instead of just prepending `-' to the # line so we notice real errors from install-info. # We use `$(SHELL) -c' because some shells do not # fail gracefully when there is an unknown command. if $(SHELL) -c 'install-info --version' \ >/dev/null 2>&1; then \ install-info --dir-file=$(DESTDIR)$(infodir)/dir \ $(DESTDIR)$(infodir)/foo.info; \ else true; fi When writing the `install' target, you must classify all the commands into three categories: normal ones, "pre-installation" commands and "post-installation" commands. *Note Install Command Categories::. `uninstall' Delete all the installed files--the copies that the `install' target creates. This rule should not modify the directories where compilation is done, only the directories where files are installed. The uninstallation commands are divided into three categories, just like the installation commands. *Note Install Command Categories::. `install-strip' Like `install', but strip the executable files while installing them. In many cases, the definition of this target can be very simple: install-strip: $(MAKE) INSTALL_PROGRAM='$(INSTALL_PROGRAM) -s' \ install Normally we do not recommend stripping an executable unless you are sure the program has no bugs. However, it can be reasonable to install a stripped executable for actual execution while saving the unstripped executable elsewhere in case there is a bug. `clean' Delete all files from the current directory that are normally created by building the program. Don't delete the files that record the configuration. Also preserve files that could be made by building, but normally aren't because the distribution comes with them. Delete `.dvi' files here if they are not part of the distribution. `distclean' Delete all files from the current directory that are created by configuring or building the program. If you have unpacked the source and built the program without creating any other files, `make distclean' should leave only the files that were in the distribution. `mostlyclean' Like `clean', but may refrain from deleting a few files that people normally don't want to recompile. For example, the `mostlyclean' target for GCC does not delete `libgcc.a', because recompiling it is rarely necessary and takes a lot of time. `maintainer-clean' Delete almost everything from the current directory that can be reconstructed with this Makefile. This typically includes everything deleted by `distclean', plus more: C source files produced by Bison, tags tables, Info files, and so on. The reason we say "almost everything" is that running the command `make maintainer-clean' should not delete `configure' even if `configure' can be remade using a rule in the Makefile. More generally, `make maintainer-clean' should not delete anything that needs to exist in order to run `configure' and then begin to build the program. This is the only exception; `maintainer-clean' should delete everything else that can be rebuilt. The `maintainer-clean' target is intended to be used by a maintainer of the package, not by ordinary users. You may need special tools to reconstruct some of the files that `make maintainer-clean' deletes. Since these files are normally included in the distribution, we don't take care to make them easy to reconstruct. If you find you need to unpack the full distribution again, don't blame us. To help make users aware of this, the commands for the special `maintainer-clean' target should start with these two: @echo 'This command is intended for maintainers to use; it' @echo 'deletes files that may need special tools to rebuild.' `TAGS' Update a tags table for this program. `info' Generate any Info files needed. The best way to write the rules is as follows: info: foo.info foo.info: foo.texi chap1.texi chap2.texi $(MAKEINFO) $(srcdir)/foo.texi You must define the variable `MAKEINFO' in the Makefile. It should run the `makeinfo' program, which is part of the Texinfo distribution. Normally a GNU distribution comes with Info files, and that means the Info files are present in the source directory. Therefore, the Make rule for an info file should update it in the source directory. When users build the package, ordinarily Make will not update the Info files because they will already be up to date. `dvi' Generate DVI files for all Texinfo documentation. For example: dvi: foo.dvi foo.dvi: foo.texi chap1.texi chap2.texi $(TEXI2DVI) $(srcdir)/foo.texi You must define the variable `TEXI2DVI' in the Makefile. It should run the program `texi2dvi', which is part of the Texinfo distribution.(1) Alternatively, write just the dependencies, and allow GNU `make' to provide the command. `dist' Create a distribution tar file for this program. The tar file should be set up so that the file names in the tar file start with a subdirectory name which is the name of the package it is a distribution for. This name can include the version number. For example, the distribution tar file of GCC version 1.40 unpacks into a subdirectory named `gcc-1.40'. The easiest way to do this is to create a subdirectory appropriately named, use `ln' or `cp' to install the proper files in it, and then `tar' that subdirectory. Compress the tar file file with `gzip'. For example, the actual distribution file for GCC version 1.40 is called `gcc-1.40.tar.gz'. The `dist' target should explicitly depend on all non-source files that are in the distribution, to make sure they are up to date in the distribution. *Note Making Releases: (standards)Releases. `check' Perform self-tests (if any). The user must build the program before running the tests, but need not install the program; you should write the self-tests so that they work when the program is built but not installed. The following targets are suggested as conventional names, for programs in which they are useful. `installcheck' Perform installation tests (if any). The user must build and install the program before running the tests. You should not assume that `$(bindir)' is in the search path. `installdirs' It's useful to add a target named `installdirs' to create the directories where files are installed, and their parent directories. There is a script called `mkinstalldirs' which is convenient for this; you can find it in the Texinfo package. You can use a rule like this: # Make sure all installation directories (e.g. $(bindir)) # actually exist by making them if necessary. installdirs: mkinstalldirs $(srcdir)/mkinstalldirs $(bindir) $(datadir) \ $(libdir) $(infodir) \ $(mandir) This rule should not modify the directories where compilation is done. It should do nothing but create installation directories. ---------- Footnotes ---------- (1) `texi2dvi' uses TeX to do the real work of formatting. TeX is not distributed with Texinfo. Install Command Categories ========================== When writing the `install' target, you must classify all the commands into three categories: normal ones, "pre-installation" commands and "post-installation" commands. Normal commands move files into their proper places, and set their modes. They may not alter any files except the ones that come entirely from the package they belong to. Pre-installation and post-installation commands may alter other files; in particular, they can edit global configuration files or data bases. Pre-installation commands are typically executed before the normal commands, and post-installation commands are typically run after the normal commands. The most common use for a post-installation command is to run `install-info'. This cannot be done with a normal command, since it alters a file (the Info directory) which does not come entirely and solely from the package being installed. It is a post-installation command because it needs to be done after the normal command which installs the package's Info files. Most programs don't need any pre-installation commands, but we have the feature just in case it is needed. To classify the commands in the `install' rule into these three categories, insert "category lines" among them. A category line specifies the category for the commands that follow. A category line consists of a tab and a reference to a special Make variable, plus an optional comment at the end. There are three variables you can use, one for each category; the variable name specifies the category. Category lines are no-ops in ordinary execution because these three Make variables are normally undefined (and you *should not* define them in the makefile). Here are the three possible category lines, each with a comment that explains what it means: $(PRE_INSTALL) # Pre-install commands follow. $(POST_INSTALL) # Post-install commands follow. $(NORMAL_INSTALL) # Normal commands follow. If you don't use a category line at the beginning of the `install' rule, all the commands are classified as normal until the first category line. If you don't use any category lines, all the commands are classified as normal. These are the category lines for `uninstall': $(PRE_UNINSTALL) # Pre-uninstall commands follow. $(POST_UNINSTALL) # Post-uninstall commands follow. $(NORMAL_UNINSTALL) # Normal commands follow. Typically, a pre-uninstall command would be used for deleting entries from the Info directory. If the `install' or `uninstall' target has any dependencies which act as subroutines of installation, then you should start *each* dependency's commands with a category line, and start the main target's commands with a category line also. This way, you can ensure that each command is placed in the right category regardless of which of the dependencies actually run. Pre-installation and post-installation commands should not run any programs except for these: [ basename bash cat chgrp chmod chown cmp cp dd diff echo egrep expand expr false fgrep find getopt grep gunzip gzip hostname install install-info kill ldconfig ln ls md5sum mkdir mkfifo mknod mv printenv pwd rm rmdir sed sort tee test touch true uname xargs yes The reason for distinguishing the commands in this way is for the sake of making binary packages. Typically a binary package contains all the executables and other files that need to be installed, and has its own method of installing them--so it does not need to run the normal installation commands. But installing the binary package does need to execute the pre-installation and post-installation commands. Programs to build binary packages work by extracting the pre-installation and post-installation commands. Here is one way of extracting the pre-installation commands: make -n install -o all \ PRE_INSTALL=pre-install \ POST_INSTALL=post-install \ NORMAL_INSTALL=normal-install \ | gawk -f pre-install.awk where the file `pre-install.awk' could contain this: $0 ~ /^\t[ \t]*(normal_install|post_install)[ \t]*$/ {on = 0} on {print $0} $0 ~ /^\t[ \t]*pre_install[ \t]*$/ {on = 1} The resulting file of pre-installation commands is executed as a shell script as part of installing the binary package. Quick Reference *************** This appendix summarizes the directives, text manipulation functions, and special variables which GNU `make' understands. *Note Special Targets::, *Note Catalogue of Implicit Rules: Catalogue of Rules, and *Note Summary of Options: Options Summary, for other summaries. Here is a summary of the directives GNU `make' recognizes: `define VARIABLE' `endef' Define a multi-line, recursively-expanded variable. *Note Sequences::. `ifdef VARIABLE' `ifndef VARIABLE' `ifeq (A,B)' `ifeq "A" "B"' `ifeq 'A' 'B'' `ifneq (A,B)' `ifneq "A" "B"' `ifneq 'A' 'B'' `else' `endif' Conditionally evaluate part of the makefile. *Note Conditionals::. `include FILE' `-include FILE' `sinclude FILE' Include another makefile. *Note Including Other Makefiles: Include. `override VARIABLE = VALUE' `override VARIABLE := VALUE' `override VARIABLE += VALUE' `override VARIABLE ?= VALUE' `override define VARIABLE' `endef' Define a variable, overriding any previous definition, even one from the command line. *Note The `override' Directive: Override Directive. `export' Tell `make' to export all variables to child processes by default. *Note Communicating Variables to a Sub-`make': Variables/Recursion. `export VARIABLE' `export VARIABLE = VALUE' `export VARIABLE := VALUE' `export VARIABLE += VALUE' `export VARIABLE ?= VALUE' `unexport VARIABLE' Tell `make' whether or not to export a particular variable to child processes. *Note Communicating Variables to a Sub-`make': Variables/Recursion. `vpath PATTERN PATH' Specify a search path for files matching a `%' pattern. *Note The `vpath' Directive: Selective Search. `vpath PATTERN' Remove all search paths previously specified for PATTERN. `vpath' Remove all search paths previously specified in any `vpath' directive. Here is a summary of the text manipulation functions (*note Functions::.): `$(subst FROM,TO,TEXT)' Replace FROM with TO in TEXT. *Note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions. `$(patsubst PATTERN,REPLACEMENT,TEXT)' Replace words matching PATTERN with REPLACEMENT in TEXT. *Note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions. `$(strip STRING)' Remove excess whitespace characters from STRING. *Note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions. `$(findstring FIND,TEXT)' Locate FIND in TEXT. *Note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions. `$(filter PATTERN...,TEXT)' Select words in TEXT that match one of the PATTERN words. *Note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions. `$(filter-out PATTERN...,TEXT)' Select words in TEXT that *do not* match any of the PATTERN words. *Note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions. `$(sort LIST)' Sort the words in LIST lexicographically, removing duplicates. *Note Functions for String Substitution and Analysis: Text Functions. `$(dir NAMES...)' Extract the directory part of each file name. *Note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions. `$(notdir NAMES...)' Extract the non-directory part of each file name. *Note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions. `$(suffix NAMES...)' Extract the suffix (the last `.' and following characters) of each file name. *Note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions. `$(basename NAMES...)' Extract the base name (name without suffix) of each file name. *Note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions. `$(addsuffix SUFFIX,NAMES...)' Append SUFFIX to each word in NAMES. *Note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions. `$(addprefix PREFIX,NAMES...)' Prepend PREFIX to each word in NAMES. *Note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions. `$(join LIST1,LIST2)' Join two parallel lists of words. *Note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions. `$(word N,TEXT)' Extract the Nth word (one-origin) of TEXT. *Note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions. `$(words TEXT)' Count the number of words in TEXT. *Note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions. `$(wordlist S,E,TEXT)' Returns the list of words in TEXT from S to E. *Note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions. `$(firstword NAMES...)' Extract the first word of NAMES. *Note Functions for File Names: File Name Functions. `$(wildcard PATTERN...)' Find file names matching a shell file name pattern (*not* a `%' pattern). *Note The Function `wildcard': Wildcard Function. `$(error TEXT...)' When this function is evaluated, `make' generates a fatal error with the message TEXT. *Note Functions That Control Make: Make Control Functions. `$(warning TEXT...)' When this function is evaluated, `make' generates a warning with the message TEXT. *Note Functions That Control Make: Make Control Functions. `$(shell COMMAND)' Execute a shell command and return its output. *Note The `shell' Function: Shell Function. `$(origin VARIABLE)' Return a string describing how the `make' variable VARIABLE was defined. *Note The `origin' Function: Origin Function. `$(foreach VAR,WORDS,TEXT)' Evaluate TEXT with VAR bound to each word in WORDS, and concatenate the results. *Note The `foreach' Function: Foreach Function. `$(call VAR,PARAM,...)' Evaluate the variable VAR replacing any references to `$(1)', `$(2)' with the first, second, etc. PARAM values. *Note The `call' Function: Call Function. Here is a summary of the automatic variables. *Note Automatic Variables: Automatic, for full information. `$@' The file name of the target. `$%' The target member name, when the target is an archive member. `$<' The name of the first prerequisite. `$?' The names of all the prerequisites that are newer than the target, with spaces between them. For prerequisites which are archive members, only the member named is used (*note Archives::.). `$^' `$+' The names of all the prerequisites, with spaces between them. For prerequisites which are archive members, only the member named is used (*note Archives::.). The value of `$^' omits duplicate prerequisites, while `$+' retains them and preserves their order. `$*' The stem with which an implicit rule matches (*note How Patterns Match: Pattern Match.). `$(@D)' `$(@F)' The directory part and the file-within-directory part of `$@'. `$(*D)' `$(*F)' The directory part and the file-within-directory part of `$*'. `$(%D)' `$(%F)' The directory part and the file-within-directory part of `$%'. `$( tar-`sed -e '/version_string/!d' \ -e 's/[^0-9.]*\([0-9.]*\).*/\1/' \ -e q version.c`.shar.Z dist: $(SRCS) $(AUX) echo tar-`sed \ -e '/version_string/!d' \ -e 's/[^0-9.]*\([0-9.]*\).*/\1/' \ -e q version.c` > .fname -rm -rf `cat .fname` mkdir `cat .fname` ln $(SRCS) $(AUX) `cat .fname` tar chZf `cat .fname`.tar.Z `cat .fname` -rm -rf `cat .fname` .fname tar.zoo: $(SRCS) $(AUX) -rm -rf tmp.dir -mkdir tmp.dir -rm tar.zoo for X in $(SRCS) $(AUX) ; do \ echo $$X ; \ sed 's/$$/^M/' $$X \ > tmp.dir/$$X ; done cd tmp.dir ; zoo aM ../tar.zoo * -rm -rf tmp.dir Index of Concepts ***************** * Menu: * # (comments), in commands: Commands. * # (comments), in makefile: Makefile Contents. * #include: Automatic Prerequisites. * $, in function call: Syntax of Functions. * $, in rules: Rule Syntax. * $, in variable name: Computed Names. * $, in variable reference: Reference. * %, in pattern rules: Pattern Intro. * %, quoting in patsubst: Text Functions. * %, quoting in static pattern: Static Usage. * %, quoting in vpath: Selective Search. * %, quoting with \ (backslash) <1>: Text Functions. * %, quoting with \ (backslash) <2>: Static Usage. * %, quoting with \ (backslash): Selective Search. * * (wildcard character): Wildcards. * +, and define: Sequences. * +=: Appending. * +=, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * ,v (RCS file extension): Catalogue of Rules. * - (in commands): Errors. * -, and define: Sequences. * --assume-new <1>: Options Summary. * --assume-new: Instead of Execution. * --assume-new, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * --assume-old <1>: Options Summary. * --assume-old: Avoiding Compilation. * --assume-old, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * --debug: Options Summary. * --directory <1>: Options Summary. * --directory: Recursion. * --directory, and --print-directory: -w Option. * --directory, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * --dry-run <1>: Options Summary. * --dry-run <2>: Instead of Execution. * --dry-run: Echoing. * --environment-overrides: Options Summary. * --file <1>: Options Summary. * --file <2>: Makefile Arguments. * --file: Makefile Names. * --file, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * --help: Options Summary. * --ignore-errors <1>: Options Summary. * --ignore-errors: Errors. * --include-dir <1>: Options Summary. * --include-dir: Include. * --jobs <1>: Options Summary. * --jobs: Parallel. * --jobs, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * --just-print <1>: Options Summary. * --just-print <2>: Instead of Execution. * --just-print: Echoing. * --keep-going <1>: Options Summary. * --keep-going <2>: Testing. * --keep-going: Errors. * --load-average <1>: Options Summary. * --load-average: Parallel. * --makefile <1>: Options Summary. * --makefile <2>: Makefile Arguments. * --makefile: Makefile Names. * --max-load <1>: Options Summary. * --max-load: Parallel. * --new-file <1>: Options Summary. * --new-file: Instead of Execution. * --new-file, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * --no-builtin-rules: Options Summary. * --no-builtin-variables: Options Summary. * --no-keep-going: Options Summary. * --no-print-directory <1>: Options Summary. * --no-print-directory: -w Option. * --old-file <1>: Options Summary. * --old-file: Avoiding Compilation. * --old-file, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * --print-data-base: Options Summary. * --print-directory: Options Summary. * --print-directory, and --directory: -w Option. * --print-directory, and recursion: -w Option. * --print-directory, disabling: -w Option. * --question <1>: Options Summary. * --question: Instead of Execution. * --quiet <1>: Options Summary. * --quiet: Echoing. * --recon <1>: Options Summary. * --recon <2>: Instead of Execution. * --recon: Echoing. * --silent <1>: Options Summary. * --silent: Echoing. * --stop: Options Summary. * --touch <1>: Options Summary. * --touch: Instead of Execution. * --touch, and recursion: MAKE Variable. * --version: Options Summary. * --warn-undefined-variables: Options Summary. * --what-if <1>: Options Summary. * --what-if: Instead of Execution. * -b: Options Summary. * -C <1>: Options Summary. * -C: Recursion. * -C, and -w: -w Option. * -C, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * -d: Options Summary. * -e: Options Summary. * -e (shell flag): Automatic Prerequisites. * -f <1>: Options Summary. * -f <2>: Makefile Arguments. * -f: Makefile Names. * -f, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * -h: Options Summary. * -I: Options Summary. * -i <1>: Options Summary. * -i: Errors. * -I: Include. * -j <1>: Options Summary. * -j: Parallel. * -j, and archive update: Archive Pitfalls. * -j, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * -k <1>: Options Summary. * -k <2>: Testing. * -k: Errors. * -l: Options Summary. * -l (library search): Libraries/Search. * -l (load average): Parallel. * -m: Options Summary. * -M (to compiler): Automatic Prerequisites. * -MM (to GNU compiler): Automatic Prerequisites. * -n <1>: Options Summary. * -n <2>: Instead of Execution. * -n: Echoing. * -o <1>: Options Summary. * -o: Avoiding Compilation. * -o, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * -p: Options Summary. * -q <1>: Options Summary. * -q: Instead of Execution. * -R: Options Summary. * -r: Options Summary. * -S: Options Summary. * -s <1>: Options Summary. * -s: Echoing. * -t <1>: Options Summary. * -t: Instead of Execution. * -t, and recursion: MAKE Variable. * -v: Options Summary. * -W: Options Summary. * -w: Options Summary. * -W: Instead of Execution. * -w, and -C: -w Option. * -w, and recursion: -w Option. * -W, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * -w, disabling: -w Option. * .a (archives): Archive Suffix Rules. * .C: Catalogue of Rules. * .c: Catalogue of Rules. * .cc: Catalogue of Rules. * .ch: Catalogue of Rules. * .d: Automatic Prerequisites. * .def: Catalogue of Rules. * .dvi: Catalogue of Rules. * .F: Catalogue of Rules. * .f: Catalogue of Rules. * .info: Catalogue of Rules. * .l: Catalogue of Rules. * .LIBPATTERNS, and link libraries: Libraries/Search. * .ln: Catalogue of Rules. * .mod: Catalogue of Rules. * .o: Catalogue of Rules. * .p: Catalogue of Rules. * .PRECIOUS intermediate files: Chained Rules. * .r: Catalogue of Rules. * .S: Catalogue of Rules. * .s: Catalogue of Rules. * .sh: Catalogue of Rules. * .sym: Catalogue of Rules. * .tex: Catalogue of Rules. * .texi: Catalogue of Rules. * .texinfo: Catalogue of Rules. * .txinfo: Catalogue of Rules. * .w: Catalogue of Rules. * .web: Catalogue of Rules. * .y: Catalogue of Rules. * :: rules (double-colon): Double-Colon. * := <1>: Setting. * :=: Flavors. * = <1>: Setting. * =: Flavors. * =, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * ? (wildcard character): Wildcards. * ?= <1>: Setting. * ?=: Flavors. * ?=, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * @ (in commands): Echoing. * @, and define: Sequences. * [...] (wildcard characters): Wildcards. * \ (backslash), for continuation lines: Simple Makefile. * \ (backslash), in commands: Execution. * \ (backslash), to quote % <1>: Text Functions. * \ (backslash), to quote % <2>: Static Usage. * \ (backslash), to quote %: Selective Search. * __.SYMDEF: Archive Symbols. * algorithm for directory search: Search Algorithm. * all (standard target): Goals. * appending to variables: Appending. * ar: Implicit Variables. * archive: Archives. * archive member targets: Archive Members. * archive symbol directory updating: Archive Symbols. * archive, and -j: Archive Pitfalls. * archive, and parallel execution: Archive Pitfalls. * archive, suffix rule for: Archive Suffix Rules. * Arg list too long: Options/Recursion. * arguments of functions: Syntax of Functions. * as <1>: Implicit Variables. * as: Catalogue of Rules. * assembly, rule to compile: Catalogue of Rules. * automatic generation of prerequisites <1>: Automatic Prerequisites. * automatic generation of prerequisites: Include. * automatic variables: Automatic. * backquotes: Shell Function. * backslash (\), for continuation lines: Simple Makefile. * backslash (\), in commands: Execution. * backslash (\), to quote % <1>: Text Functions. * backslash (\), to quote % <2>: Static Usage. * backslash (\), to quote %: Selective Search. * backslashes in pathnames and wildcard expansion: Wildcard Pitfall. * basename: File Name Functions. * binary packages: Install Command Categories. * broken pipe: Parallel. * bugs, reporting: Bugs. * built-in special targets: Special Targets. * C++, rule to compile: Catalogue of Rules. * C, rule to compile: Catalogue of Rules. * cc <1>: Implicit Variables. * cc: Catalogue of Rules. * cd (shell command) <1>: MAKE Variable. * cd (shell command): Execution. * chains of rules: Chained Rules. * check (standard target): Goals. * clean (standard target): Goals. * clean target <1>: Cleanup. * clean target: Simple Makefile. * cleaning up: Cleanup. * clobber (standard target): Goals. * co <1>: Implicit Variables. * co: Catalogue of Rules. * combining rules by prerequisite: Combine By Prerequisite. * command line variable definitions, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * command line variables: Overriding. * commands: Rule Syntax. * commands, backslash (\) in: Execution. * commands, comments in: Commands. * commands, echoing: Echoing. * commands, empty: Empty Commands. * commands, errors in: Errors. * commands, execution: Execution. * commands, execution in parallel: Parallel. * commands, expansion: Shell Function. * commands, how to write: Commands. * commands, instead of executing: Instead of Execution. * commands, introduction to: Rule Introduction. * commands, quoting newlines in: Execution. * commands, sequences of: Sequences. * comments, in commands: Commands. * comments, in makefile: Makefile Contents. * compatibility: Features. * compatibility in exporting: Variables/Recursion. * compilation, testing: Testing. * computed variable name: Computed Names. * conditional expansion: If Function. * conditional variable assignment: Flavors. * conditionals: Conditionals. * continuation lines: Simple Makefile. * controlling make: Make Control Functions. * conventions for makefiles: Makefile Conventions. * ctangle <1>: Implicit Variables. * ctangle: Catalogue of Rules. * cweave <1>: Implicit Variables. * cweave: Catalogue of Rules. * data base of make rules: Options Summary. * deducing commands (implicit rules): make Deduces. * default directries for included makefiles: Include. * default goal <1>: Rules. * default goal: How Make Works. * default makefile name: Makefile Names. * default rules, last-resort: Last Resort. * define, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * defining variables verbatim: Defining. * deletion of target files <1>: Interrupts. * deletion of target files: Errors. * directive: Makefile Contents. * directories, printing them: -w Option. * directories, updating archive symbol: Archive Symbols. * directory part: File Name Functions. * directory search (VPATH): Directory Search. * directory search (VPATH), and implicit rules: Implicit/Search. * directory search (VPATH), and link libraries: Libraries/Search. * directory search (VPATH), and shell commands: Commands/Search. * directory search algorithm: Search Algorithm. * directory search, traditional: Search Algorithm. * dist (standard target): Goals. * distclean (standard target): Goals. * dollar sign ($), in function call: Syntax of Functions. * dollar sign ($), in rules: Rule Syntax. * dollar sign ($), in variable name: Computed Names. * dollar sign ($), in variable reference: Reference. * double-colon rules: Double-Colon. * duplicate words, removing: Text Functions. * E2BIG: Options/Recursion. * echoing of commands: Echoing. * editor: Introduction. * Emacs (M-x compile): Errors. * empty commands: Empty Commands. * empty targets: Empty Targets. * environment: Environment. * environment, and recursion: Variables/Recursion. * environment, SHELL in: Execution. * error, stopping on: Make Control Functions. * errors (in commands): Errors. * errors with wildcards: Wildcard Pitfall. * execution, in parallel: Parallel. * execution, instead of: Instead of Execution. * execution, of commands: Execution. * exit status (errors): Errors. * explicit rule, definition of: Makefile Contents. * explicit rule, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * exporting variables: Variables/Recursion. * f77 <1>: Implicit Variables. * f77: Catalogue of Rules. * features of GNU make: Features. * features, missing: Missing. * file name functions: File Name Functions. * file name of makefile: Makefile Names. * file name of makefile, how to specify: Makefile Names. * file name prefix, adding: File Name Functions. * file name suffix: File Name Functions. * file name suffix, adding: File Name Functions. * file name with wildcards: Wildcards. * file name, basename of: File Name Functions. * file name, directory part: File Name Functions. * file name, nondirectory part: File Name Functions. * files, assuming new: Instead of Execution. * files, assuming old: Avoiding Compilation. * files, avoiding recompilation of: Avoiding Compilation. * files, intermediate: Chained Rules. * filtering out words: Text Functions. * filtering words: Text Functions. * finding strings: Text Functions. * flags: Options Summary. * flags for compilers: Implicit Variables. * flavors of variables: Flavors. * FORCE: Force Targets. * force targets: Force Targets. * Fortran, rule to compile: Catalogue of Rules. * functions: Functions. * functions, for controlling make: Make Control Functions. * functions, for file names: File Name Functions. * functions, for text: Text Functions. * functions, syntax of: Syntax of Functions. * functions, user defined: Call Function. * g++ <1>: Implicit Variables. * g++: Catalogue of Rules. * gcc: Catalogue of Rules. * generating prerequisites automatically <1>: Automatic Prerequisites. * generating prerequisites automatically: Include. * get <1>: Implicit Variables. * get: Catalogue of Rules. * globbing (wildcards): Wildcards. * goal: How Make Works. * goal, default <1>: Rules. * goal, default: How Make Works. * goal, how to specify: Goals. * home directory: Wildcards. * IEEE Standard 1003.2: Overview. * ifdef, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * ifeq, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * ifndef, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * ifneq, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * implicit rule: Implicit Rules. * implicit rule, and directory search: Implicit/Search. * implicit rule, and VPATH: Implicit/Search. * implicit rule, definition of: Makefile Contents. * implicit rule, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * implicit rule, how to use: Using Implicit. * implicit rule, introduction to: make Deduces. * implicit rule, predefined: Catalogue of Rules. * implicit rule, search algorithm: Implicit Rule Search. * included makefiles, default directries: Include. * including (MAKEFILES variable): MAKEFILES Variable. * including other makefiles: Include. * incompatibilities: Missing. * Info, rule to format: Catalogue of Rules. * install (standard target): Goals. * intermediate files: Chained Rules. * intermediate files, preserving: Chained Rules. * intermediate targets, explicit: Special Targets. * interrupt: Interrupts. * job slots: Parallel. * job slots, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * jobs, limiting based on load: Parallel. * joining lists of words: File Name Functions. * killing (interruption): Interrupts. * last-resort default rules: Last Resort. * ld: Catalogue of Rules. * lex <1>: Implicit Variables. * lex: Catalogue of Rules. * Lex, rule to run: Catalogue of Rules. * libraries for linking, directory search: Libraries/Search. * library archive, suffix rule for: Archive Suffix Rules. * limiting jobs based on load: Parallel. * link libraries, and directory search: Libraries/Search. * link libraries, patterns matching: Libraries/Search. * linking, predefined rule for: Catalogue of Rules. * lint: Catalogue of Rules. * lint, rule to run: Catalogue of Rules. * list of all prerequisites: Automatic. * list of changed prerequisites: Automatic. * load average: Parallel. * loops in variable expansion: Flavors. * lpr (shell command) <1>: Empty Targets. * lpr (shell command): Wildcard Examples. * m2c: Catalogue of Rules. * macro: Using Variables. * make depend: Automatic Prerequisites. * MAKECMDGOALS: Goals. * makefile: Introduction. * makefile name: Makefile Names. * makefile name, how to specify: Makefile Names. * makefile rule parts: Rule Introduction. * makefile, and MAKEFILES variable: MAKEFILES Variable. * makefile, conventions for: Makefile Conventions. * makefile, how make processes: How Make Works. * makefile, how to write: Makefiles. * makefile, including: Include. * makefile, overriding: Overriding Makefiles. * makefile, parsing: Reading Makefiles. * makefile, remaking of: Remaking Makefiles. * makefile, simple: Simple Makefile. * makeinfo <1>: Implicit Variables. * makeinfo: Catalogue of Rules. * match-anything rule: Match-Anything Rules. * match-anything rule, used to override: Overriding Makefiles. * missing features: Missing. * mistakes with wildcards: Wildcard Pitfall. * modified variable reference: Substitution Refs. * Modula-2, rule to compile: Catalogue of Rules. * mostlyclean (standard target): Goals. * multiple rules for one target: Multiple Rules. * multiple rules for one target (::): Double-Colon. * multiple targets: Multiple Targets. * multiple targets, in pattern rule: Pattern Intro. * name of makefile: Makefile Names. * name of makefile, how to specify: Makefile Names. * nested variable reference: Computed Names. * newline, quoting, in commands: Execution. * newline, quoting, in makefile: Simple Makefile. * nondirectory part: File Name Functions. * OBJ: Variables Simplify. * obj: Variables Simplify. * OBJECTS: Variables Simplify. * objects: Variables Simplify. * OBJS: Variables Simplify. * objs: Variables Simplify. * old-fashioned suffix rules: Suffix Rules. * options: Options Summary. * options, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * options, setting from environment: Options/Recursion. * options, setting in makefiles: Options/Recursion. * order of pattern rules: Pattern Intro. * origin of variable: Origin Function. * overriding makefiles: Overriding Makefiles. * overriding variables with arguments: Overriding. * overriding with override: Override Directive. * parallel execution: Parallel. * parallel execution, and archive update: Archive Pitfalls. * parallel execution, overriding: Special Targets. * parts of makefile rule: Rule Introduction. * Pascal, rule to compile: Catalogue of Rules. * pattern rule: Pattern Intro. * pattern rule, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * pattern rules, order of: Pattern Intro. * pattern rules, static (not implicit): Static Pattern. * pattern rules, static, syntax of: Static Usage. * pattern-specific variables: Pattern-specific. * pc <1>: Implicit Variables. * pc: Catalogue of Rules. * phony targets: Phony Targets. * pitfalls of wildcards: Wildcard Pitfall. * portability: Features. * POSIX: Overview. * POSIX.2: Options/Recursion. * post-installation commands: Install Command Categories. * pre-installation commands: Install Command Categories. * precious targets: Special Targets. * predefined rules and variables, printing: Options Summary. * prefix, adding: File Name Functions. * prerequisite: Rules. * prerequisite pattern, implicit: Pattern Intro. * prerequisite pattern, static (not implicit): Static Usage. * prerequisite, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * prerequisites: Rule Syntax. * prerequisites, automatic generation <1>: Automatic Prerequisites. * prerequisites, automatic generation: Include. * prerequisites, introduction to: Rule Introduction. * prerequisites, list of all: Automatic. * prerequisites, list of changed: Automatic. * prerequisites, varying (static pattern): Static Pattern. * preserving intermediate files: Chained Rules. * preserving with .PRECIOUS <1>: Chained Rules. * preserving with .PRECIOUS: Special Targets. * preserving with .SECONDARY: Special Targets. * print (standard target): Goals. * print target <1>: Empty Targets. * print target: Wildcard Examples. * printing directories: -w Option. * printing of commands: Echoing. * printing user warnings: Make Control Functions. * problems and bugs, reporting: Bugs. * problems with wildcards: Wildcard Pitfall. * processing a makefile: How Make Works. * question mode: Instead of Execution. * quoting %, in patsubst: Text Functions. * quoting %, in static pattern: Static Usage. * quoting %, in vpath: Selective Search. * quoting newline, in commands: Execution. * quoting newline, in makefile: Simple Makefile. * Ratfor, rule to compile: Catalogue of Rules. * RCS, rule to extract from: Catalogue of Rules. * reading makefiles: Reading Makefiles. * README: Makefile Names. * realclean (standard target): Goals. * recompilation: Introduction. * recompilation, avoiding: Avoiding Compilation. * recording events with empty targets: Empty Targets. * recursion: Recursion. * recursion, and -C: Options/Recursion. * recursion, and -f: Options/Recursion. * recursion, and -j: Options/Recursion. * recursion, and -o: Options/Recursion. * recursion, and -t: MAKE Variable. * recursion, and -w: -w Option. * recursion, and -W: Options/Recursion. * recursion, and command line variable definitions: Options/Recursion. * recursion, and environment: Variables/Recursion. * recursion, and MAKE variable: MAKE Variable. * recursion, and MAKEFILES variable: MAKEFILES Variable. * recursion, and options: Options/Recursion. * recursion, and printing directories: -w Option. * recursion, and variables: Variables/Recursion. * recursion, level of: Variables/Recursion. * recursive variable expansion <1>: Flavors. * recursive variable expansion: Using Variables. * recursively expanded variables: Flavors. * reference to variables <1>: Advanced. * reference to variables: Reference. * relinking: How Make Works. * remaking makefiles: Remaking Makefiles. * removal of target files <1>: Interrupts. * removal of target files: Errors. * removing duplicate words: Text Functions. * removing targets on failure: Special Targets. * removing, to clean up: Cleanup. * reporting bugs: Bugs. * rm: Implicit Variables. * rm (shell command) <1>: Errors. * rm (shell command) <2>: Phony Targets. * rm (shell command) <3>: Wildcard Examples. * rm (shell command): Simple Makefile. * rule commands: Commands. * rule prerequisites: Rule Syntax. * rule syntax: Rule Syntax. * rule targets: Rule Syntax. * rule, and $: Rule Syntax. * rule, double-colon (::): Double-Colon. * rule, explicit, definition of: Makefile Contents. * rule, how to write: Rules. * rule, implicit: Implicit Rules. * rule, implicit, and directory search: Implicit/Search. * rule, implicit, and VPATH: Implicit/Search. * rule, implicit, chains of: Chained Rules. * rule, implicit, definition of: Makefile Contents. * rule, implicit, how to use: Using Implicit. * rule, implicit, introduction to: make Deduces. * rule, implicit, predefined: Catalogue of Rules. * rule, introduction to: Rule Introduction. * rule, multiple for one target: Multiple Rules. * rule, no commands or prerequisites: Force Targets. * rule, pattern: Pattern Intro. * rule, static pattern: Static Pattern. * rule, static pattern versus implicit: Static versus Implicit. * rule, with multiple targets: Multiple Targets. * s. (SCCS file prefix): Catalogue of Rules. * SCCS, rule to extract from: Catalogue of Rules. * search algorithm, implicit rule: Implicit Rule Search. * search path for prerequisites (VPATH): Directory Search. * search path for prerequisites (VPATH), and implicit rules: Implicit/Search. * search path for prerequisites (VPATH), and link libraries: Libraries/Search. * searching for strings: Text Functions. * secondary files: Chained Rules. * secondary targets: Special Targets. * sed (shell command): Automatic Prerequisites. * selecting a word: File Name Functions. * selecting word lists: File Name Functions. * sequences of commands: Sequences. * setting options from environment: Options/Recursion. * setting options in makefiles: Options/Recursion. * setting variables: Setting. * several rules for one target: Multiple Rules. * several targets in a rule: Multiple Targets. * shar (standard target): Goals. * shell command: Simple Makefile. * shell command, and directory search: Commands/Search. * shell command, execution: Execution. * shell command, function for: Shell Function. * shell file name pattern (in include): Include. * shell wildcards (in include): Include. * SHELL, MS-DOS specifics: Execution. * signal: Interrupts. * silent operation: Echoing. * simple makefile: Simple Makefile. * simple variable expansion: Using Variables. * simplifying with variables: Variables Simplify. * simply expanded variables: Flavors. * sorting words: Text Functions. * spaces, in variable values: Flavors. * spaces, stripping: Text Functions. * special targets: Special Targets. * specifying makefile name: Makefile Names. * standard input: Parallel. * standards conformance: Overview. * standards for makefiles: Makefile Conventions. * static pattern rule: Static Pattern. * static pattern rule, syntax of: Static Usage. * static pattern rule, versus implicit: Static versus Implicit. * stem <1>: Pattern Match. * stem: Static Usage. * stem, variable for: Automatic. * stopping make: Make Control Functions. * strings, searching for: Text Functions. * stripping whitespace: Text Functions. * sub-make: Variables/Recursion. * subdirectories, recursion for: Recursion. * substitution variable reference: Substitution Refs. * suffix rule: Suffix Rules. * suffix rule, for archive: Archive Suffix Rules. * suffix, adding: File Name Functions. * suffix, function to find: File Name Functions. * suffix, substituting in variables: Substitution Refs. * switches: Options Summary. * symbol directories, updating archive: Archive Symbols. * syntax of rules: Rule Syntax. * tab character (in commands): Rule Syntax. * tabs in rules: Rule Introduction. * TAGS (standard target): Goals. * tangle <1>: Implicit Variables. * tangle: Catalogue of Rules. * tar (standard target): Goals. * target: Rules. * target pattern, implicit: Pattern Intro. * target pattern, static (not implicit): Static Usage. * target, deleting on error: Errors. * target, deleting on interrupt: Interrupts. * target, expansion: Reading Makefiles. * target, multiple in pattern rule: Pattern Intro. * target, multiple rules for one: Multiple Rules. * target, touching: Instead of Execution. * target-specific variables: Target-specific. * targets: Rule Syntax. * targets without a file: Phony Targets. * targets, built-in special: Special Targets. * targets, empty: Empty Targets. * targets, force: Force Targets. * targets, introduction to: Rule Introduction. * targets, multiple: Multiple Targets. * targets, phony: Phony Targets. * terminal rule: Match-Anything Rules. * test (standard target): Goals. * testing compilation: Testing. * tex <1>: Implicit Variables. * tex: Catalogue of Rules. * TeX, rule to run: Catalogue of Rules. * texi2dvi <1>: Implicit Variables. * texi2dvi: Catalogue of Rules. * Texinfo, rule to format: Catalogue of Rules. * tilde (~): Wildcards. * touch (shell command) <1>: Empty Targets. * touch (shell command): Wildcard Examples. * touching files: Instead of Execution. * traditional directory search: Search Algorithm. * undefined variables, warning message: Options Summary. * updating archive symbol directories: Archive Symbols. * updating makefiles: Remaking Makefiles. * user defined functions: Call Function. * value: Using Variables. * value, how a variable gets it: Values. * variable: Using Variables. * variable definition: Makefile Contents. * variables: Variables Simplify. * variables, $ in name: Computed Names. * variables, and implicit rule: Automatic. * variables, appending to: Appending. * variables, automatic: Automatic. * variables, command line: Overriding. * variables, command line, and recursion: Options/Recursion. * variables, computed names: Computed Names. * variables, conditional assignment: Flavors. * variables, defining verbatim: Defining. * variables, environment <1>: Environment. * variables, environment: Variables/Recursion. * variables, exporting: Variables/Recursion. * variables, flavors: Flavors. * variables, how they get their values: Values. * variables, how to reference: Reference. * variables, loops in expansion: Flavors. * variables, modified reference: Substitution Refs. * variables, nested references: Computed Names. * variables, origin of: Origin Function. * variables, overriding: Override Directive. * variables, overriding with arguments: Overriding. * variables, pattern-specific: Pattern-specific. * variables, recursively expanded: Flavors. * variables, setting: Setting. * variables, simply expanded: Flavors. * variables, spaces in values: Flavors. * variables, substituting suffix in: Substitution Refs. * variables, substitution reference: Substitution Refs. * variables, target-specific: Target-specific. * variables, warning for undefined: Options Summary. * varying prerequisites: Static Pattern. * verbatim variable definition: Defining. * vpath: Directory Search. * VPATH, and implicit rules: Implicit/Search. * VPATH, and link libraries: Libraries/Search. * warnings, printing: Make Control Functions. * weave <1>: Implicit Variables. * weave: Catalogue of Rules. * Web, rule to run: Catalogue of Rules. * what if: Instead of Execution. * whitespace, in variable values: Flavors. * whitespace, stripping: Text Functions. * wildcard: Wildcards. * wildcard pitfalls: Wildcard Pitfall. * wildcard, function: File Name Functions. * wildcard, in archive member: Archive Members. * wildcard, in include: Include. * wildcards and MS-DOS/MS-Windows backslashes: Wildcard Pitfall. * word, selecting a: File Name Functions. * words, extracting first: File Name Functions. * words, filtering: Text Functions. * words, filtering out: Text Functions. * words, finding number: File Name Functions. * words, iterating over: Foreach Function. * words, joining lists: File Name Functions. * words, removing duplicates: Text Functions. * words, selecting lists of: File Name Functions. * writing rule commands: Commands. * writing rules: Rules. * yacc <1>: Implicit Variables. * yacc <2>: Catalogue of Rules. * yacc: Sequences. * Yacc, rule to run: Catalogue of Rules. * ~ (tilde): Wildcards. Index of Functions, Variables, & Directives ******************************************* * Menu: * $%: Automatic. * $(%D): Automatic. * $(%F): Automatic. * $(*D): Automatic. * $(*F): Automatic. * $(: Last Resort. * .DEFAULT: Special Targets. * .DEFAULT, and empty commands: Empty Commands. * .DELETE_ON_ERROR <1>: Errors. * .DELETE_ON_ERROR: Special Targets. * .EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES <1>: Variables/Recursion. * .EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES: Special Targets. * .IGNORE <1>: Errors. * .IGNORE: Special Targets. * .INTERMEDIATE: Special Targets. * .LIBPATTERNS: Libraries/Search. * .NOTPARALLEL: Special Targets. * .PHONY <1>: Special Targets. * .PHONY: Phony Targets. * .POSIX: Options/Recursion. * .PRECIOUS <1>: Interrupts. * .PRECIOUS: Special Targets. * .SECONDARY: Special Targets. * .SILENT <1>: Echoing. * .SILENT: Special Targets. * .SUFFIXES <1>: Suffix Rules. * .SUFFIXES: Special Targets. * /usr/gnu/include: Include. * /usr/include: Include. * /usr/local/include: Include. * < (automatic variable): Automatic. * : Flavors. * MAKE: MAKE Variable. * MAKECMDGOALS: Goals. * makefile: Makefile Names. * Makefile: Makefile Names. * MAKEFILES <1>: Variables/Recursion. * MAKEFILES: MAKEFILES Variable. * MAKEFLAGS: Options/Recursion. * MAKEINFO: Implicit Variables. * MAKELEVEL <1>: Flavors. * MAKELEVEL: Variables/Recursion. * MAKEOVERRIDES: Options/Recursion. * MFLAGS: Options/Recursion. * notdir: File Name Functions. * origin: Origin Function. * OUTPUT_OPTION: Catalogue of Rules. * override: Override Directive. * patsubst <1>: Text Functions. * patsubst: Substitution Refs. * PC: Implicit Variables. * PFLAGS: Implicit Variables. * RFLAGS: Implicit Variables. * RM: Implicit Variables. * shell: Shell Function. * SHELL: Execution. * SHELL (command execution): Execution. * sort: Text Functions. * strip: Text Functions. * subst <1>: Text Functions. * subst: Multiple Targets. * suffix: File Name Functions. * SUFFIXES: Suffix Rules. * TANGLE: Implicit Variables. * TEX: Implicit Variables. * TEXI2DVI: Implicit Variables. * unexport: Variables/Recursion. * vpath: Selective Search. * VPATH: General Search. * vpath: Directory Search. * VPATH: Directory Search. * warning: Make Control Functions. * WEAVE: Implicit Variables. * wildcard <1>: File Name Functions. * wildcard: Wildcard Function. * word: File Name Functions. * wordlist: File Name Functions. * words: File Name Functions. * YACC: Implicit Variables. * YACCR: Implicit Variables. * YFLAGS: Implicit Variables.