NAME
makepp_statements -- Various statements in a makefile
DESCRIPTION
A: autoload, B: build_cache, build_check, D: "define", E: export, G: global, I: ifdef, ifeq, ifmakeperl, ifndef, ifneq, ifnsys, ifntrue, ifperl, ifsys, iftrue, include, L: load_makefile, M: make, makeperl, makesub, N: "no_implicit_load", P: perl, "perl_begin", prebuild, R: register_command_parser, register_input_suffix, register_scanner, repository, runtime, S: "signature", "sub"
A statement is any line beginning with a word which does not have a :
in it. (A colon implies that the line is a rule.) For example, these are statements:
include extra_rules.mk
load_makefile subdir
Makepp has a number of builtin statements which you may occasionally need to use.
Note that wherever you see an underscore, you may also use a dash, because makepp converts dashes to underscores in statement names.
Conditionals
Conditionals are special statements, which control what lines of the Makeppfile are actually seen. The simplest form (where ifxxx
stands for any of the conditional statements documented below) is:
ifxxx ...
lines seen if the statement evaluates as true
endif
or:
ifxxx ...
lines seen if the statement evaluates as true
else
lines seen if the statement evaluates as false
endif
There is also the possibility to do complex combinations like this:
ifxxx ...
and ifxxx ...
and ifxxx ...
or ifxxx ...
and ifxxx ...
lines seen if the combined statements evaluate as true
else ifxxx ...
or ifxxx ...
and ifxxx ...
lines seen if the first combination evaluates as false
and these combined statements evaluate as true
else
lines seen if the statements above evaluate as false
endif
As is suggested by the indentation, and
has higher precedence than or
. In other words an or
elects between two groups of and
`s. There may be any number of and ifxxx
`s, or ifxxx
`s and else ifxxx
`s.
The ifxxx
conditional statements are unique in that they may occur in the middle of rule actions, as in the above example, without disrupting the rule.
- ifeq string1, string2
- ifneq string1, string2
-
ifeq ($(STR1),$(STR2)) makefile lines if true else makefile lines if false endif
If the two strings match exactly (except for leading or trailing whitespace), then the first set of lines is used; otherwise the second is used. The else clause is optional.
There are two other acceptable syntaxes for the
ifeq
andifneq
statements:ifeq string1, string2 ifeq string1 string2
which are equivalent. Of course you can quote the strings as needed.
ifeq
and its friendsifneq
,ifdef
,ifndef
,ifperl
,ifmakeperl
,ifsys
andiftrue
are primarily useful when you have to build a program under several different conditions. For example,BUILD_TYPE := debug # "debug" or "production" ifeq ($(BUILD_TYPE), debug) CFLAGS := -g else CFLAGS := -O2 endif program : *.o $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(inputs) -o $(output) $(LIBS) ifeq ($(BUILD_TYPE), production) strip $(output) endif %.o : %.c $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $(input) -o $(output)
If this is a production build, all files are compiled with the
-O2
option instead of the-g
option. Furthermore, the programstrip
is run on the resulting binary (in case you happened to link with some libraries that were compiled in debug mode).Sometimes it is easier to use the
$(if)
function or$(perl)
function function instead of aifeq
statement.If you just want to see whether a symbol is blank or not, you only need to supply a single argument, like this:
ifneq $(EXE_SUFFIX) # what to do if $(EXE_SUFFIX) is not blank endif
- ifdef VARIABLE ...
- ifndef VARIABLE ...
-
These statements work analogously to the
ifeq
andifneq
statements, except that they test whether any of the variables is defined or not any is (i.e. none is defined). A variable is defined if:It was given a value with an assignment earlier in the makefile. See makepp_variables for details.
It was given a value as a perl variable in a
perl_begin
block.The variable is present in the environment.
The variable is present on the command line, e.g., to invoke your makefile, you typed
makepp CFLAGS=-O2
For example,
ifndef CFLAGS CFLAGS := -g endif
In this case,
CFLAGS
is set to-g
only if it wasn't already defined. Note that this statement could just as easily have been written using the?=
assignment, like this:CFLAGS ?= -g
- ifperl perlcode
- ifmakeperl perlcode
-
These statements work analogously to the
ifeq
andifneq
statements, except that the tests are in Perl. The first variant is plain Perl code, while the second variant first passes the statement through Make-style variable expansion.VERSION := 3.0 # VERSION is automatically also a Perl variable: ifperl $VERSION <= 2 CPPFLAGS := -DNEW endif # quotes necessary for CFLAGS, because Perl sees only the value: ifmakeperl my $$x = '$(CFLAGS)'; $$x =~ /-g/ CFLAGS := -g -O2 endif
- ifsys wildcard ...
- ifnsys wildcard ...
-
Tests if the current system makepp is running on matches any of the wildcards or not any (i.e. none).
ifsys i[3-6]86 and ifsys Linux SunOS ... # An Intel platform with Linux or Solaris else ifnsys sparc power* ... # Nor Sparc or PowerPC endif
There are up to six different strings you can match against. The actual strings are not standardized. Three of them reflect what the Perl instance was built for (not necessarily the same as where it is running), and the others come from the system and all vary wildly in form. You can find all of what the current platform matches by typing the following command at the Shell:
perl -MConfig -e'print "$^O @Config{qw(archname myarchname)} "'; uname -mps
- iftrue expression
- ifntrue expression
-
Tests if the expression evaluates to some value other than zero or the empty string.
Other Multiline Statements
Conditionals may control a whole multiline statement, but they cannot be inside such a statement.
- define
-
define VARIABLE variable value line 1 variable value line 2 endef
Defines $(VARIABLE)'s value to be all the lines between the
define
statement and theendef
statement. See setting variables. - perl_begin
-
This is the same as
perl
, but using GNU make style statement syntax. This statement introduces a block of code which is interpreted verbatim by perl. It can be useful for defining functions, but you can do this more concisely with thesub
statement. A block of perl code in your makefile can be useful to perform actions that are easier in perl than with makepp functions and rules.The remainder of the line following the
perl_begin
statement is ignored. All text up until a line that begins at the left margin withperl_end
is sent verbatim to the perl interpreter. There can be no spaces beforeperl_end
.One example that I use this for is to make directories that might not necessarily exist. It's common in makefiles to put all the .o files in a subdirectory (e.g., a directory with a name i386, or sparc, or something that depends on the machine type). But what if the directory does not exist yet? You can make each .o file depend on the subdirectory, and put a rule in to build the subdirectory. But it's a lot easier just to do this:
OBJDIR := $(ARCH) # Where we put .o files. perl_begin -d $OBJDIR or mkdir $OBJDIR; # Make sure the directory exists. perl_end
This way, every time the makefile is run, the subdirectory will be created if it does not exist.
Some operations are better expressed in terms of regular expressions than makepp's text functions. For example,
perl_begin if ($ARCH =~ /^i[56]86/) { # You could do this with: ifsys i[56]86 $CFLAGS = '-O6 -malign-double'; # On intel machines > 486, there # is a substantial speed penalty # for doubles that aren't quadword # aligned. } else { $CFLAGS = '-O6'; } perl_end %.o: %.c $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $(input) -o $(output)
Any make variable can be accessed directly as a perl scalar. In this case, we've set the value of
CFLAGS
differently based on a regular expression match on the architecture flags.As a final example, some pieces of information are easier to access directly from perl than from makepp. For example, you can access all of the configuration information that perl knows about your system, including how to build shared libraries, etc. (Type
perldoc Config
if you want to see what configuration information perl has available.)perl_begin use Config; $ARCH = $Config{'archname'}; # Use perl's knowledge of the architecture. $CC = $Config{'cc'}; # Use the same C compiler as perl did. $SHARED_OBJ_CFLAGS = $Config{'cccdlflags'}; # Flags needed to compile objects which will # go into a shared library. $SHARED_OBJ_LDFLAGS = $Config{'ccdlflags'} . " " . $Config{'lddlflags'}; # Linker flags to make a shared library. $SHARED_CC_LINK = $Config{'ld'}; # Command to produce shared libraries. $SHARED_EXTENSION = $Config{'dlext'}; # Extension of shared libraries. perl_end %.o: %.c $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(SHARED_OBJ_CFLAGS) -c $(input) -o $(output) libmylib.$(DLEXT): *.o $(SHARED_CC_LINK) $(inputs) -o $(output) $(SHARED_OBJ_LDFLAGS)
Note how we define a bunch of variables in the perl block, and then we use them afterwards in the rest of the makefile. You can use the full power of the perl interpreter to set your variables in arbitrarily complicated ways. You can run shell commands from your perl code, access a database, or whatever you want.
- perl perlcode
- makeperl perlcode
-
This is the same as
perl_begin
, but using Perl-style braces. The first variant is plain Perl code, while the second variant first passes the statement through Make-style variable expansion. Note that the difficulty of parsing Perl's braces has lead to the following simple heuristic:If a double opening brace is found on the same or next line, a double closing brace will terminate the block. It must be at the beginning of a line, but may be preceded by whitespace.
Else, if the closing brace is at the very end of the
perl
line this is a one liner.Otherwise the closing brace must be at the very beginning of a following line, i.e. no leading whitespace.
For an efficient way to call Perl scripts, see
run
. Unlike the$(perl)
function, the return value of this block is ignored.perl { print "passed this point in the makefile\n" } perl { print "and this one too\n"; } ifdef NOISY perl {{ print "as well as this one\n" }} endif
You can use the Perl debugger for your embedded code, by running makepp itself in the debugger, where ... are the arguments, if any, you normally pass:
perl -d -S mpp ...
It is hard to set breakpoints in Perl code that has not been loaded. You can work around this by putting this line into your embedded Perl, just before where you want to break:
$DB::single = 1;
Then you can type
c
at the debugger's prompt, to continue till that point. - sub
- makesub
-
This statement provides a way to define a perl subroutine inside your makefile. The first variant is plain Perl code, while the second variant first passes the statement through Make-style variable expansion. The syntax is identical to that of the perl sub statement, except that prototypes are meaningless.
For the three possibilities of putting the braces of the body, see the explanation at the
perl
statement.A perl subroutine is invoked whenever a statement is seen, or when an expression like
$(name words)
is seen. For example, suppose that for some reason you need to load the contents of a file into a make variable. (You could do this by saying$(shell cat filename)
but it's possible to do it without ever invoking the shell.) This can be done by placing the following into your makefile:sub f_file_contents { my ($file) = @_; # Name the argument. open my $fh, $file or die "$file: $!\n"; local $/ = undef; # Slurp file in one read. <$fh>; } ifdef NEWSUB makesub f_VAR2 {{ $(VAR) * 2; }} endif makesub f_VAR1 { $(VAR) + 1 }
Now, with this function defined, you can write
X = $(file_contents filename) # equivalent to builtin $(&cat filename)
and the variable
$(X)
will fetch the contents of the given file every time it gets expanded. Use:=
to do this exactly once, or;=
to do this at most once.See makepp_extending for more details and examples.
Simple Statements
- autoload filename ...
-
Specifies one or more makefiles to load should an attempt to find a rule for a file in this directory otherwise fail. This is useful when the makefile has rules whose definitions depend (possibly indirectly) on a file in another directory that depends (possibly indirectly) on other files in this directory (built by rules that do not depend on the file in the other directory).
For example, your Makeppfile might look like this:
rules-to-build-files-that-otherdir/x-depends-on more_rules.makeppfile: otherdir/x action-to-build-more_rules.makeppfile autoload more_rules.makeppfile
Note that we cannot reliably replace
autoload
withinclude
here, because if something other than the rule for more_rules.makeppfile tries to build otherdir/x first, then more_rules.makeppfile will probably fail because otherdir/x won't exist yet, because there is already an attempt to build it underway when Makeppfile is implicitly loaded on its behalf.WARNING: Be very careful about doing things in an autoloaded makefile that change the behavior of rules in the directory's other makefile(s), as this will cause that behavior to depend on whether or not some previously built target caused makefiles to be autoloaded.
- build_cache /path/to/build/cache
-
Specifies a path to a build cache. See makepp_build_cache for details. The build cache must already exist; see "How to manage a build cache" in makepp_build_cache for how to make it in the first place. A
build_cache
statement in a makefile overrides the--build-cache
command line option for rules in the makefile, but it may be overridden by the:build_cache
rule modifier on a per-rule basis.Specify
none
instead of a path to a directory if you want to disable the build cache for all rules in this makefile. - build_check build_check_method
-
Specifies the default build check method for all rules in this makefile. See makepp_build_check for details. The
build_check
statement overrides the--build-check-method
command line option for all rules in the makefile, but may be overridden by the:build_check
modifier on a per-rule basis. - export VAR ...
- export assignment
-
export PATH := $(PWD):$(PATH)
Marks the given variables for export to subprocesses. See setting variables.
- global VAR ...
- global assignment
-
global MYPROJECT.INFO = info to be seen in all makefiles
Marks the given variables as global to all makefiles. See setting variables.
- include makefile
-
This inserts the contents of another makefile into the current makefile. It can be useful if you have boilerplate files with a number of rules or variables, and each directory only needs to make a few modifications. The
include
statement also used to be commonly used in traditional makes in conjunction with automatic include file scanners, but this is no longer necessary with makepp.include
first considers the current directory, then the parent of the current directory, then its parent, etc. It stops considering directories when it reaches the root of the file system or when the file system device ID changes. (This means that it will not find files located in other NFS mounts. This is to prevent problems with network file systems or automounters and dead servers.) If it does not find a file of the given name by the time its search is stopped, then it looks in the makepp data directory (/usr/local/share/makepp if you installed makepp in /usr/local) for one of the include files that comes with makepp.If you want to include a template file in every makefile in a whole directory hierarchy, you can place your makefile template at the top directory. The makefiles do not have to know exactly where they are in the hierarchy; each makefile can contain a line like this:
include standard_definitions.mk
instead of something more complicated, like this:
include ../../../standard_definitions.mk # Is this the right number of ..?
You can specify as many files as you want, and variables are allowed:
include file1 file2 file3 $(other_include_files)
If you're working on a build that needs to work with both GNU make and makepp, sometimes it's convenient to have exactly identical makefiles but a different include file. For example, all of your makefiles may contain a line like this:
include $(TOPDIR)/standard_rules.mk
and you want standard_rules.mk to be different for GNU make and makepp. To facilitate this, the
include
statement first looks for a file with the suffix of .makepp before looking for the file you asked for. In this case, it would first look for a file called standard_rules.mk.makepp, and if that exists, it would load it instead of standard_rules.mk. This way, when you run the makefile with GNU make, it loads standard_rules.mk, but with makepp, it loads standard_rules.mk.makepp. - _include makefile
-
A minor variant on
include
, the_include
statement includes the file if it exists but doesn't generate a fatal error if it does not. The_include
statement used to be important for include file scanning with GNU make, but is seldom useful for makepp. - load_makefile /some/directory/somewhere/Makefile
- load_makefile subdir
- load_makefile VAR1=value1 VAR2=value2 subdir
-
This statement causes makepp to cd to the directory containing the makefile and load its rules into makepp's internal database. If you specify just a directory instead of a makefile,
load_makefile
looks forMakeppfile
,makefile
, orMakefile
in that directory.Any variables you specify with the syntax
VAR=value
(orVAR="value1 value2"
) are passed to the loaded makefiles. They override any settings in those makefiles, just as if you had typed them on the command line.Using
load_makefile
is different from the commandinclude dir/makefile
in two ways. First,
load_makefile
does not transfer any variables from the top-level makefile into the subordinate makefile; each makefile exists in its own namespace. The subordinate makefile cannot influence the variables in the top-level makefile in any way.Second, each build command is tagged with the directory of the makefile that it came from. When makepp executes a rule from a different makefile, it first cd's to the directory containing that makefile before executing the command. Makefiles which are seen with the
include
statement are actually treated as part of the makefile that included them, and therefore their rules are not tagged with a different directory.You usually do not have to load a makefile explicitly, unless it has an unusual name, or it has targets which are not contained in the same directory as the makefile itself, or you have disabled implicit makefile loading. By default, if makepp is trying to build a file and doesn't have a rule to build it, or if it is evaluating a wildcarded filename in a directory, it will automatically attempt to load a makefile from that directory. See "Tips for multiple directories" in makepp_cookbook for info on building with multiple directories.
You cannot use
load_makefile
to load several makefiles that apply to the same directory. Useinclude
for several pieces of the makefile that apply to the same directory, andload_makefile
for makefiles that apply to different directories. - no_implicit_load
-
This statement turns off implicit loading of makefiles from a set of directories. This can be useful if you want to load makefiles automatically from most directories, but there are some directories which for various reasons you do not want makepp to attempt to update. (E.g., maybe the directory has a makefile for some other version of make which makepp does not understand.) For example,
no_implicit_load dir1 dir2/*
The above statement will turn off implicit loading for makefiles in
dir1
and all of its subdirectories. It will also turn of implicit makefile loading for all subdirectories ofdir2
(and all of their subdirectories), but not fordir2
itself.You may use wildcards in the statement. Non-directory files that match the wildcard are ignored. You can also use functions to further specify the directories that you are interested in, e.g.,
no_implicit_load $(filter-out dir1 dir2, *)
will turn off implicit loading for all subdirectories except dir1 and dir2 and their subdirectories.
- prebuild target
- make target
-
The arguments (which undergo Make-style variable expansion) are built immediately. This is useful when the list of targets that the Makefile can build depends on a generated file in another directory.
Currently, it will quietly fail to build targets if there is a dependency loop among the prebuilt targets and the Makefiles that must be loaded to build them, but that ought to be treated as an error.
- register_scanner command_word scanner_name
-
Registers the
scanner_name
(which usually begins with prefix "scanner_" that can be omitted here) as the command parser for commands whose base name iscommand_word
. In the name you can use-
interchangeably with_
. The predefined scanners are documented in makepp_scanning. - register_command_parser command_word class_name
-
Register an anonymous subroutine that constructs and returns an object of exact type Mpp::CommandParser::
class_name
as the command parser for commands whose base name iscommand_word
. - register_input_suffix command_word suffix ...
-
Add
suffix
... to the list of input file suffixes recognized when an action beginning withcommand_word
is scanned. The scanner would normally pick this up via Mpp::CommandParser::input_filename_regexp, but it might instead ignore this entirely.Mpp::Scanners don't normally pick up all the arguments that aren't recognized as options, because they might be arguments of unrecognized options. (For example, i386v is not an input file of the command
gcc -b i386v foo.c
.) Instead, they pick up only positional arguments that look like input filenames.It is not unusual to use standard tools with site-specific nonstandard suffixes in order to signify that those files require special handling, such as different command options and/or postprocessing steps. For example:
register_input_suffix cpp .vpp %.v: %.vpp cpp $< > $@
- repository directory
- repository destdir=srcdir
-
Specifies one or more repository directories. The first repository specified has precedence over the others if the same file exists in multiple repositories and there is no build command for it. See makepp_repositories for more details about repositories.
If you specify just a directory after
repository
, its contents are linked into the current directory. You can link its contents into any arbitrary place in the file system by specifying the location before an equals sign, e.g,repository subdir1/subdir2=/users/joe/joes_nifty_library
You should put the repository statement near the top of your makefile, before any rules that may need to use it.
- runtime program,library
-
Store
library
as a runtime dependency ofprogram
. Bothprogram
andlibrary
may contain multiple words, in which case each word inlibrary
is stored as a runtime dependency of each word inprogram
. Whenprogram
is added automatically as the executable dependency of a command by theMpp::CommandParser
base class, its runtime dependencies (if any) are added as well. In order for this to happen,program
must be specified in the rule with a directory component, and without any shell meta characters. The purpose of this statement is to capture dependencies on libraries and other executables that are often loaded by the program, without having to specify them explicitly as dependencies of each rule that invokesprogram
, or to scanprogram
to determine those dependencies (which could be prohibitively difficult.)Runtime dependencies are traversed recursively, so if
a
has a runtime dependency onb
andb
has a runtime dependency onc
, then any rule that uses./a
will have implicit dependencies on bothb
andc
(unless it uses a specialMpp::CommandParser
class that overrides this behavior).Note that missing dependencies won't necessarily be added after you add this statement to a makefile, unless the rule is re-scanned. Use the
--force-rescan
command line option to ensure that this happens. - signature
-
signature md5 signature c_compilation_md5 signature default
Overrides the default signature method for all rules following the
signature
statement. This overrides the signature method specified on the command line with-m
or--signature-method
, but does not override signature methods specified with the:signature
rule modifier.Specify
signature default
to return to makepp's default, either the builtin default or the default specified on the command line.For more information about signature methods, see makepp_signatures.
Commands
All builtin and self defined commands (see builtin commands and extending makepp), as well as external cleanly programmed perl scripts can be used like statements. In this case they differ from rule actions in that they run in the same process as makepp and any input or output files are not noted as dependencies or as having been built by makepp.
As with all statements, they are considered as such, if they are indented less than the actions of the previous rule, if any.
This can be used for messages to be output while reading the makefile:
&echo The value of $$(VAR) is $(VAR)
Or instead of making many rules each depend on a directory creation rule, you can simply create it on the fly. Note that commands which create files are processed again every time the makefile is read., That's why we protect this one with a test -- though in this special case that would not be necessary, as this command would do no harm when repeated:
ifperl !-d 'include'
&mkdir -p include # Create only if not present
endif
AUTHOR
Gary Holt (holt-makepp@gholt.net)