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Re: $< won't work
From: |
Dave |
Subject: |
Re: $< won't work |
Date: |
Fri, 26 Jul 2002 23:01:24 -0700 (PDT) |
On Sat, 27 Jul 2002, Paul D. Smith wrote:
[snip]
> You're relying (or rather, the Xmame makefiles are relying) on
> non-portable make features.
An ongoing goal of my work with Frotz
(http://www.cs.csubak.edu/~dgriffi/proj/frotz/) is to make is as widely
and easily portable as possible. This is why I want to be able to support
*BSD make and GNU make.
> See the GNU make manual section on "Missing Features and
> Incompatibilities", specifically this section:
>
> * In some Unix `make's, implicit rule search (*note Using Implicit
> Rules: Implicit Rules.) is apparently done for _all_ targets, not
> just those without commands. This means you can do:
>
> foo.o:
> cc -c foo.c
>
> and Unix `make' will intuit that `foo.o' depends on `foo.c'.
>
> We feel that such usage is broken. The prerequisite properties of
> `make' are well-defined (for GNU `make', at least), and doing such
> a thing simply does not fit the model.
>
> In short, the Xmame makefile is expecting make to perform implicit rule
> searches _even if you give it an actual command script_, which is
> bizarre and not portable.
I see. So in what I eventually copied from someone else's Makefile makes
explicit these rules?
> Since you gave it a command script, GNU make does not perform implicit
> rule searches, so it never finds an implicit rule saying that .o is
> built from .c, and thus there is no prerequisites for the .o files
> except those that you explicitly provide, and since you don't provide
> any the value of $< (and $^, etc.) will be empty.
>
> d> Sidenote: How about implementing local variables like .ALLSRC,
> d> .TARGET, and so on? (see *BSD make(1) manpage).
>
> I don't have a copy of this manpage. Is it available on the web?
See http://man.netbsd.org for manpages for manpages for NetBSD 1.3.3,
1.4.4, 1.5.3, 1.6A, and Redhat 7.0.
> d> Someone posted a while ago about pursuading the FreeBSD people to
> d> implement $> (a form which is implemented in NetBSD's make(1) but
> d> not recommended).
>
> This is trivial to work around in GNU make; if your makefiles require it
> just add a:
>
> > = ^
>
> to your makefile, or in some "portability" makefile you include with the
> MAKEFILES environment variable or something.
I've found a solution that satisfies both NetBSD's make and GNU make;
adding the following to the end of the Makefile:
.SUFFIXES:
.SUFFIXES: .c .o .h
.c.o:
$(CC) $(FLAGS) $(CFLAGS) -o $@ -c $<
I borrowed the above from Nitfol's Makefile. I'm not sure if I should
bother trying to satisfy FreeBSD's make at this point right now.
--
David Griffith
address@hidden