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PROGRAM:

NAME


make — maintain program dependencies

SYNOPSIS


make [-ABPSXeiknpqrstv] [-C directory] [-D variable] [-d flags] [-E variable] [-f makefile]
[-I directory] [-j max_jobs] [-m directory] [-V variable] [-x warning_options]
[variable=value] [target ...]

DESCRIPTION


The make utility is a program designed to simplify the maintenance of other programs. Its
input is a list of specifications describing dependency relationships between the generation
of files and programs.

First of all, the initial list of specifications will be read from the system makefile,
sys.mk, unless inhibited with the -r option. The standard sys.mk as shipped with FreeBSD
also handles make.conf(5), the default path to which can be altered via the make variable
__MAKE_CONF.

Then the first of BSDmakefile, makefile, and Makefile that can be found in the current
directory, object directory (see .OBJDIR), or search path (see the -I option) will be read
for the main list of dependency specifications. A different makefile or list of them can be
supplied via the -f option(s). Finally, if the file .depend can be found in any of the
aforesaid locations, it will also be read (see mkdep(1)).

When make searches for a makefile, its name takes precedence over its location. For
instance, BSDmakefile in the object directory will be favored over Makefile in the current
directory.

The options are as follows:

-A Make archive errors non-fatal, causing make to just skip the remainder or all of the
archive and continue after printing a message.

-B Try to be backwards compatible by executing a single shell per command and by
executing the commands to make the sources of a dependency line in sequence. This
is turned on by default unless -j is used.

-C directory
Change to directory before reading the makefiles or doing anything else. If
multiple -C options are specified, each is interpreted relative to the previous one:
-C / -C etc is equivalent to -C /etc.

-D variable
Define variable to be 1, in the global context.

-d flags
Turn on debugging, and specify which portions of make are to print debugging
information. Argument flags is one or more of the following:

A Print all possible debugging information; equivalent to specifying all of
the debugging flags.

a Print debugging information about archive searching and caching.

c Print debugging information about conditional evaluation.

d Print debugging information about directory searching and caching.

f Print debugging information about the execution of for loops.

g1 Print the input graph before making anything.

g2 Print the input graph after making everything, or before exiting on error.

j Print debugging information about running multiple shells.

l Print commands in Makefiles regardless of whether or not they are prefixed
by @ or other "quiet" flags. Also known as "loud" behavior.

m Print debugging information about making targets, including modification
dates.

s Print debugging information about suffix-transformation rules.

t Print debugging information about target list maintenance.

v Print debugging information about variable assignment.

-E variable
Specify a variable whose environment value (if any) will override macro assignments
within makefiles.

-e Specify that environment values override macro assignments within makefiles for all
variables.

-f makefile
Specify a makefile to read instead of the default one. If makefile is not an
absolute pathname, make will search for it as described above. In case makefile is
-’, standard input is read. Multiple -f options can be supplied, and the makefiles
will be read in that order. Unlike the other command-line options, -f is neither
stored in .MAKEFLAGS nor pushed down to sub-makes via MAKEFLAGS. See below for more
details on these variables.

-I directory
Specify a directory in which to search for makefiles and included makefiles.
Multiple -I options can be specified to form a search path. The system makefile
directory (or directories, see the -m option) is automatically appended at the tail
of this path.

-i Ignore non-zero exit of shell commands in the makefile. Equivalent to specifying
-’ before each command line in the makefile.

-j max_jobs
Specify the maximum number of jobs that make may have running at any one time.
Turns compatibility mode off, unless the -B flag is also specified.

-k Continue processing after errors are encountered, but only on those targets that do
not depend on the target whose creation caused the error.

-m directory
Specify a directory in which to search for the system makefile and makefiles
included via the <...> style. Multiple -m options can be specified to form a search
path. This path will override the default system include path,
/usr/share/mk-freebsd. The system include path will always be appended to the
search path used for "..."-style inclusions and makefile searches (see the -I
option).

If a file or directory name in the -m argument (or the MAKESYSPATH environment
variable) starts with the string ".../" then make will search for the specified file
or directory named in the remaining part of the argument string. The search starts
with the current directory of the Makefile and then works upward towards the root of
the filesystem. If the search is successful, then the resulting directory replaces
the ".../" specification in the -m argument. If used, this feature allows make to
easily search in the current source tree for customized sys.mk files (e.g. by using
".../mk/sys.mk" as an argument). Note that a -C that are earlier on the command
line affect where -m ".../" searches.

-n Display the commands that would have been executed, but do not actually execute
them.

-P Collate the output of a given job and display it only when the job finishes, instead
of mixing the output of parallel jobs together. This option has no effect unless -j
is used too.

-p Only print the input graph, not executing any commands. The output is the same as
-d g1. When combined with -f /dev/null, only the builtin rules of make are
displayed.

-Q Be extra quiet. For multi-job makes, this will cause file banners not to be
generated.

-q Do not execute any commands, but exit 0 if the specified targets are up-to-date and
1, otherwise.

-r Do not process the system makefile.

-S Stop processing when an error is encountered. Default behaviour. This is needed to
negate the -k option during recursive builds.

-s Do not echo any commands as they are executed. Equivalent to specifying ‘@’ before
each command line in the makefile.

-t Rather than re-building a target as specified in the makefile, create it or update
its modification time to make it appear up-to-date.

-V variable
Print make's idea of the value of variable, in the global context. Do not build any
targets. Multiple instances of this option may be specified; the variables will be
printed one per line, with a blank line for each null or undefined variable. If
variable contains a ‘$’ then the value will be expanded before printing.

-v Be extra verbose. Print any extra information.

-X When using the -V option to print the values of variables, do not recursively expand
the values.

variable=value
Set the value of the variable variable to value.

-x warning_options
Specify extended warning options. This option may be specified several times. A
warning_option can be prefixed with “no” in which case the warning is switched off.
The currently available options are:

dirsyntax
Warn if anything except blanks and comments follows an .endif or .else
directive.

See also the .WARN special target.

There are seven different types of lines in a makefile: file dependency specifications,
shell commands, variable assignments, include statements, conditional directives, for loops,
and comments.

In general, lines may be continued from one line to the next by ending them with a backslash
(‘\’). The trailing newline character and initial whitespace on the following line are
compressed into a single space.

FILE DEPENDENCY SPECIFICATIONS


Dependency lines consist of one or more targets, an operator, and zero or more sources.
This creates a relationship where the targets “depend” on the sources and are usually
created from them. The exact relationship between the target and the source is determined
by the operator that separates them. The three operators are as follows:

: A target is considered out-of-date if its modification time is less than those of any
of its sources. Sources for a target accumulate over dependency lines when this
operator is used. The target is removed if make is interrupted.

! Targets are always re-created, but not until all sources have been examined and re-
created as necessary. Sources for a target accumulate over dependency lines when this
operator is used. The target is removed if make is interrupted.

:: If no sources are specified, the target is always re-created. Otherwise, a target is
considered out-of-date if any of its sources has been modified more recently than the
target. Sources for a target do not accumulate over dependency lines when this
operator is used. The target will not be removed if make is interrupted.

Targets and sources may contain the shell wildcard expressions ‘?’, ‘*’, ‘[]’ and ‘{}’. The
expressions ‘?’, ‘*’ and ‘[]’ may only be used as part of the final component of the target
or source, and must be used to describe existing files. The expression ‘{}’ need not
necessarily be used to describe existing files. Expansion is in directory order, not
alphabetically as done in the shell.

SHELL COMMANDS


Each target may have associated with it a series of shell commands, normally used to create
the target. Each of the commands in this script must be preceded by a tab. While any
target may appear on a dependency line, only one of these dependencies may be followed by a
creation script, unless the ‘::’ operator is used.

If the first characters of the command line are ‘@’, ‘-’, and/or ‘+’, the command is treated
specially. A ‘@’ causes the command not to be echoed before it is executed. A ‘-’ causes
any non-zero exit status of the command line to be ignored. A ‘+’ causes the command to be
executed even if -n is specified on the command line.

VARIABLE ASSIGNMENTS


Variables in make are much like variables in the shell, and, by tradition, consist of all
upper-case letters. The five operators that can be used to assign values to variables are
as follows:

= Assign the value to the variable. Any previous value is overridden.

+= Append the value to the current value of the variable.

?= Assign the value to the variable if it is not already defined.

:= Assign with expansion, i.e., expand the value before assigning it to the variable.
Normally, expansion is not done until the variable is referenced.

!= Expand the value and pass it to the shell for execution and assign the result to the
variable. Any newlines in the result are replaced with spaces.

Any whitespace before the assigned value is removed; if the value is being appended, a
single space is inserted between the previous contents of the variable and the appended
value.

Variables are expanded by surrounding the variable name with either curly braces (‘{}’) or
parentheses (‘()’) and preceding it with a dollar sign (‘$’). If the variable name contains
only a single letter, the surrounding braces or parentheses are not required. This shorter
form is not recommended.

Variable substitution occurs at two distinct times, depending on where the variable is being
used. Variables in dependency lines are expanded as the line is read. Variables in shell
commands are expanded when the shell command is executed.

The four different classes of variables (in order of increasing precedence) are:

Environment variables
Variables defined as part of make's environment.

Global variables
Variables defined in the makefile or in included makefiles.

Command line variables
Variables defined as part of the command line and variables obtained from the
MAKEFLAGS environment variable or the .MAKEFLAGS target.

Local variables
Variables that are defined specific to a certain target.

If the name of an environment variable appears in a makefile on the left-hand side of an
assignment, a global variable with the same name is created, and the latter shadows the
former as per their relative precedences. The environment is not changed in this case, and
the change is not exported to programs executed by make. However, a command-line variable
actually replaces the environment variable of the same name if the latter exists, which is
visible to child programs.

There are seven local variables in make:

.ALLSRC The list of all sources for this target; also known as ‘>’.

.ARCHIVE The name of the archive file; also known as ‘!’.

.IMPSRC The name/path of the source from which the target is to be transformed (the
“implied” source); also known as ‘<’.

.MEMBER The name of the archive member; also known as ‘%’.

.OODATE The list of sources for this target that were deemed out-of-date; also known as
?’.

.PREFIX The file prefix of the file, containing only the file portion, no suffix or
preceding directory components; also known as ‘*’.

.TARGET The name of the target; also known as ‘@’.

The shorter forms ‘@’, ‘!’, ‘<’, ‘%’, ‘?’, ‘>’, and ‘*’ are permitted for backward
compatibility and are not recommended. The six variables ‘@F’, ‘@D’, ‘<F’, ‘<D’, ‘*F’, and
*D’ are permitted for compatibility with AT&T System V UNIX makefiles and are not
recommended.

Four of the local variables may be used in sources on dependency lines because they expand
to the proper value for each target on the line. These variables are .TARGET, .PREFIX,
.ARCHIVE, and .MEMBER.

In addition, make sets or knows about the following internal variables or environment
variables:

$ A single dollar sign ‘$’, i.e. ‘$$’ expands to a single dollar sign.

MAKE The name that make was executed with (argv[0]).

.CURDIR A path to the directory where make was executed. The make utility sets
.CURDIR to the canonical path given by getcwd(3).

.OBJDIR A path to the directory where the targets are built. At startup, make
searches for an alternate directory to place target files. It will attempt
to change into this special directory and will search this directory for
makefiles not found in the current directory. The following directories are
tried in order:

1. ${MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX}/`pwd -P`
2. ${MAKEOBJDIR}
3. obj.${MACHINE}
4. obj
5. /usr/obj/`pwd -P`

The first directory that make successfully changes into is used. If either
MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX or MAKEOBJDIR is set in the environment but make is unable
to change into the corresponding directory, then the current directory is
used without checking the remainder of the list. If they are undefined and
make is unable to change into any of the remaining three directories, then
the current directory is used. Note, that MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX and MAKEOBJDIR
must be environment variables and should not be set on make's command line.

The make utility sets .OBJDIR to the canonical path given by getcwd(3).

.MAKEFILE_LIST As make reads various makefiles, including the default files and any
obtained from the command line and .include and .sinclude directives, their
names will be automatically appended to the .MAKEFILE_LIST variable. They
are added right before make begins to parse them, so that the name of the
current makefile is the last word in this variable.

MAKEFLAGS The environment variable MAKEFLAGS may initially contain anything that may
be specified on make's command line, including -f option(s). After
processing, its contents are stored in the .MAKEFLAGS global variable,
although any -f options are omitted. Then all options and variable
assignments specified on make's command line, except for -f, are appended to
the .MAKEFLAGS variable.

Whenever make executes a program, it sets MAKEFLAGS in the program's
environment to the current value of the .MAKEFLAGS global variable. Thus,
if MAKEFLAGS in make's environment contains any -f options, they will not be
pushed down to child programs automatically. The make utility effectively
filters out -f options from the environment and command line although it
passes the rest of its options down to sub-makes via MAKEFLAGS by default.

When passing macro definitions and flag arguments in the MAKEFLAGS
environment variable, space and tab characters are quoted by preceding them
with a backslash. When reading the MAKEFLAGS variable from the environment,
all sequences of a backslash and one of space or tab are replaced just with
their second character without causing a word break. Any other occurrences
of a backslash are retained. Groups of unquoted space, tab and newline
characters cause word breaking.

.MAKEFLAGS Initially, this global variable contains make's current run-time options
from the environment and command line as described above, under MAKEFLAGS.
By modifying the contents of the .MAKEFLAGS global variable, the makefile
can alter the contents of the MAKEFLAGS environment variable made available
for all programs which make executes. This includes adding -f option(s).
The current value of .MAKEFLAGS is just copied verbatim to MAKEFLAGS in the
environment of child programs.

Note that any options entered to .MAKEFLAGS neither affect the current
instance of make nor show up in its own copy of MAKEFLAGS instantly.
However, they do show up in the MAKEFLAGS environment variable of programs
executed by make. On the other hand, a direct assignment to MAKEFLAGS
neither affects the current instance of make nor is passed down to make's
children. Compare with the .MAKEFLAGS special target below.

MFLAGS This variable is provided for backward compatibility and contains all the
options from the MAKEFLAGS environment variable plus any options specified
on make's command line.

.MAKE.PID The process-id of make.

.MAKE.PPID The parent process-id of make.

.MAKE.JOB.PREFIX
If make is run with -j -v then output for each target is prefixed with a
token ‘--- target ---’ the first part of which can be controlled via
.MAKE.JOB.PREFIX.
For example: .MAKE.JOB.PREFIX=${.newline}---${MAKE:T}[${.MAKE.PID}] would
produce tokens like ‘---make[1234] target ---’ or
.MAKE.JOB.PREFIX=---pid[${.MAKE.PID}],ppid[${.MAKE.PPID}] would produce
tokens like ‘---pid[56789],ppid[1234] target ---’ making it easier to track
the degree of parallelism being achieved.

.TARGETS List of targets make is currently building.

.INCLUDES See .INCLUDES special target.

.LIBS See .LIBS special target.

MACHINE Name of the machine architecture make is running on, obtained from the
MACHINE environment variable, or through uname(3) if not defined.

MACHINE_ARCH Name of the machine architecture make was compiled for, defined at
compilation time.

VPATH Makefiles may assign a colon-delimited list of directories to VPATH. These
directories will be searched for source files by make after it has finished
parsing all input makefiles.

Variable Modifiers
Variable expansion may be modified to select or modify each word of the variable (where a
“word” is whitespace-delimited sequence of characters). The general format of a variable
expansion is as follows:

{variable[:modifier[:...]]}

Each modifier begins with a colon and one of the following special characters. The colon
may be escaped with a backslash (‘\’).

:C/pattern/replacement/[1g]
Modify each word of the value, substituting every match of the extended regular
expression pattern (see re_format(7)) with the ed(1)-style replacement string.
Normally, the first occurrence of the pattern in each word of the value is
changed. The ‘1’ modifier causes the substitution to apply to at most one word;
the ‘g’ modifier causes the substitution to apply to as many instances of the
search pattern as occur in the word or words it is found in. Note that ‘1’ and
‘g’ are orthogonal; the former specifies whether multiple words are potentially
affected, the latter whether multiple substitutions can potentially occur within
each affected word.

:E Replaces each word in the variable with its suffix.

:H Replaces each word in the variable with everything but the last component.

:L Converts variable to lower-case letters. (deprecated)

:Mpattern Select only those words that match the rest of the modifier. The standard shell
wildcard characters (‘*’, ‘?’, and ‘[]’) may be used. The wildcard characters
may be escaped with a backslash (‘\’).

:Npattern This is identical to :M, but selects all words which do not match the rest of
the modifier.

:O Order every word in the variable alphabetically.

:Q Quotes every shell meta-character in the variable, so that it can be passed
safely through recursive invocations of make.

:R Replaces each word in the variable with everything but its suffix.

:S/old_string/new_string/[g]
Modify the first occurrence of old_string in each word of the variable's value,
replacing it with new_string. If a ‘g’ is appended to the last slash of the
pattern, all occurrences in each word are replaced. If old_string begins with a
caret (‘^’), old_string is anchored at the beginning of each word. If
old_string ends with a dollar sign (‘$’), it is anchored at the end of each
word. Inside new_string, an ampersand (‘&’) is replaced by old_string. Any
character may be used as a delimiter for the parts of the modifier string. The
anchoring, ampersand, and delimiter characters may be escaped with a backslash
(‘\’).

Variable expansion occurs in the normal fashion inside both old_string and
new_string with the single exception that a backslash is used to prevent the
expansion of a dollar sign (‘$’), not a preceding dollar sign as is usual.

:old_string=new_string
This is the AT&T System V UNIX style variable substitution. It must be the last
modifier specified. If old_string or new_string do not contain the pattern
matching character % then it is assumed that they are anchored at the end of
each word, so only suffixes or entire words may be replaced. Otherwise % is the
substring of old_string to be replaced in new_string.

:T Replaces each word in the variable with its last component.

:tl Converts variable to lower-case letters.

:tu Converts variable to upper-case letters.

:U Converts variable to upper-case letters. (deprecated)

:u Remove adjacent duplicate words (like uniq(1)).

DIRECTIVES, CONDITIONALS, AND FOR LOOPS


Directives, conditionals, and for loops reminiscent of the C programming language are
provided in make. All such structures are identified by a line beginning with a single dot
(‘.’) character. The following directives are supported:

.include <file>

.include "file"
Include the specified makefile. Variables between the angle brackets or double
quotes are expanded to form the file name. If angle brackets are used, the included
makefile is expected to be in the system makefile directory. If double quotes are
used, the including makefile's directory and any directories specified using the -I
option are searched before the system makefile directory.

.sinclude <file>

.sinclude "file"
Like .include, but silently ignored if the file cannot be found and opened.

.undef variable
Un-define the specified global variable. Only global variables may be un-defined.

.error message
Terminate processing of the makefile immediately. The filename of the makefile, the
line on which the error was encountered and the specified message are printed to the
standard error output and make terminates with exit code 1. Variables in the
message are expanded.

.warning message
Emit a warning message. The filename of the makefile, the line on which the warning
was encountered, and the specified message are printed to the standard error output.
Variables in the message are expanded.

Conditionals are used to determine which parts of the Makefile to process. They are used
similarly to the conditionals supported by the C pre-processor. The following conditionals
are supported:

.if [!]expression [operator expression ...]
Test the value of an expression.

.ifdef [!]variable [operator variable ...]
Test the value of a variable.

.ifndef [!]variable [operator variable ...]
Test the value of a variable.

.ifmake [!]target [operator target ...]
Test the target being built.

.ifnmake [!]target [operator target ...]
Test the target being built.

.else Reverse the sense of the last conditional.

.elif [!]expression [operator expression ...]
A combination of .else followed by .if.

.elifdef [!]variable [operator variable ...]
A combination of .else followed by .ifdef.

.elifndef [!]variable [operator variable ...]
A combination of .else followed by .ifndef.

.elifmake [!]target [operator target ...]
A combination of .else followed by .ifmake.

.elifnmake [!]target [operator target ...]
A combination of .else followed by .ifnmake.

.endif End the body of the conditional.

The operator may be any one of the following:

|| Logical OR

&& Logical AND; of higher precedence than ‘||’.

As in C, make will only evaluate a conditional as far as is necessary to determine its
value. Parentheses may be used to change the order of evaluation. The boolean operator ‘!
may be used to logically negate an entire conditional. It is of higher precedence than
&&’.

The value of expression may be any of the following:

defined Takes a variable name as an argument and evaluates to true if the variable has
been defined.

make Takes a target name as an argument and evaluates to true if the target was
specified as part of make's command line or was declared the default target
(either implicitly or explicitly, see .MAIN) before the line containing the
conditional.

empty Takes a variable, with possible modifiers, and evaluates to true if the
expansion of the variable would result in an empty string.

exists Takes a file name as an argument and evaluates to true if the file exists. The
file is searched for on the system search path (see .PATH).

target Takes a target name as an argument and evaluates to true if the target has been
defined.

An expression may also be a numeric or string comparison: in this case, the left-hand side
must be a variable expansion, whereas the right-hand side can be a constant or a variable
expansion. Variable expansion is performed on both sides, after which the resulting values
are compared. A value is interpreted as hexadecimal if it is preceded by 0x, otherwise it
is decimal; octal numbers are not supported.

String comparison can only use the ‘==’ or ‘!=’ operators, whereas numeric values (both
integer and floating point) can also be compared using the ‘>’, ‘>=’, ‘<’ and ‘<=
operators.

If no relational operator (and right-hand value) are given, an implicit ‘!= 0’ is used.
However be very careful in using this feature especially when the left-hand side variable
expansion returns a string.

When make is evaluating one of these conditional expressions, and it encounters a word it
does not recognize, either the “make” or “defined” expression is applied to it, depending on
the form of the conditional. If the form is .if, .ifdef or .ifndef, the “defined”
expression is applied. Similarly, if the form is .ifmake or .ifnmake, the “make” expression
is applied.

If the conditional evaluates to true the parsing of the makefile continues as before. If it
evaluates to false, the following lines are skipped. In both cases this continues until a
.else or .endif is found.

For loops are typically used to apply a set of rules to a list of files. The syntax of a
for loop is:

.for variable in expression
<make-rules>
.endfor

After the for expression is evaluated, it is split into words. The iteration variable is
successively set to each word, and substituted in the make-rules inside the body of the for
loop.

COMMENTS


Comments begin with a hash (‘#’) character, anywhere but in a shell command line, and
continue to the end of the line.

SPECIAL SOURCES


.IGNORE Ignore any errors from the commands associated with this target, exactly as if
they all were preceded by a dash (‘-’).

.MAKE Execute the commands associated with this target even if the -n or -t options
were specified. Normally used to mark recursive make's.

.NOTMAIN Normally make selects the first target it encounters as the default target to be
built if no target was specified. This source prevents this target from being
selected.

.OPTIONAL If a target is marked with this attribute and make cannot figure out how to
create it, it will ignore this fact and assume the file is not needed or already
exists.

.PRECIOUS When make is interrupted, it removes any partially made targets. This source
prevents the target from being removed.

.SILENT Do not echo any of the commands associated with this target, exactly as if they
all were preceded by an at sign (‘@’).

.USE Turn the target into make's version of a macro. When the target is used as a
source for another target, the other target acquires the commands, sources, and
attributes (except for .USE) of the source. If the target already has commands,
the .USE target's commands are appended to them.

.WAIT If special .WAIT source appears in a dependency line, the sources that precede
it are made before the sources that succeed it in the line. Loops are not being
detected and targets that form loops will be silently ignored.

SPECIAL TARGETS


Special targets may not be included with other targets, i.e., they must be the only target
specified.

.BEGIN Any command lines attached to this target are executed before anything else is
done.

.DEFAULT This is sort of a .USE rule for any target (that was used only as a source) that
make cannot figure out any other way to create. Only the shell script is used.
The .IMPSRC variable of a target that inherits .DEFAULT's commands is set to the
target's own name.

.END Any command lines attached to this target are executed after everything else is
done.

.IGNORE Mark each of the sources with the .IGNORE attribute. If no sources are
specified, this is the equivalent of specifying the -i option.

.INCLUDES A list of suffixes that indicate files that can be included in a source file.
The suffix must have already been declared with .SUFFIXES; any suffix so
declared will have the directories on its search path (see .PATH) placed in the
.INCLUDES special variable, each preceded by a -I flag.

.INTERRUPT If make is interrupted, the commands for this target will be executed.

.LIBS This does for libraries what .INCLUDES does for include files, except that the
flag used is -L.

.MAIN If no target is specified when make is invoked, this target will be built. This
is always set, either explicitly, or implicitly when make selects the default
target, to give the user a way to refer to the default target on the command
line.

.MAKEFILEDEPS
Enable the “Remaking Makefiles” functionality, as explained in the REMAKING
MAKEFILES section below.

.MAKEFLAGS This target provides a way to specify flags for make when the makefile is used.
The flags are as if typed to the shell, though the -f option will have no
effect. Flags (except for -f) and variable assignments specified as the source
for this target are also appended to the .MAKEFLAGS internal variable. Please
note the difference between this target and the .MAKEFLAGS internal variable:
specifying an option or variable assignment as the source for this target will
affect both the current makefile and all processes that make executes.

.MFLAGS Same as above, for backward compatibility.

.NOTPARALLEL
Disable parallel mode.

.NO_PARALLEL
Same as above, for compatibility with other pmake variants.

.ORDER The named targets are made in sequence.

.PATH The sources are directories which are to be searched for files not found in the
current directory. If no sources are specified, any previously specified
directories are deleted. Where possible, use of .PATH is preferred over use of
the VPATH variable.

.PATHsuffix
The sources are directories which are to be searched for suffixed files not
found in the current directory. The make utility first searches the suffixed
search path, before reverting to the default path if the file is not found
there. This form is required for .LIBS and .INCLUDES to work.

.PHONY Apply the .PHONY attribute to any specified sources. Targets with this
attribute are always considered to be out of date.

.POSIX Adjust make's behavior to match the applicable POSIX specifications. (Note this
disables the “Remaking Makefiles” feature.)

.PRECIOUS Apply the .PRECIOUS attribute to any specified sources. If no sources are
specified, the .PRECIOUS attribute is applied to every target in the file.

.SHELL Select another shell. The sources of this target have the format key=value.
The key is one of:

path Specify the path to the new shell.

name Specify the name of the new shell. This may be either one of the
three builtin shells (see below) or any other name.

quiet Specify the shell command to turn echoing off.

echo Specify the shell command to turn echoing on.

filter Usually shells print the echo off command before turning echoing off.
This is the exact string that will be printed by the shell and is
used to filter the shell output to remove the echo off command.

echoFlag The shell option that turns echoing on.

errFlag The shell option to turn on error checking. If error checking is on,
the shell should exit if a command returns a non-zero status.

hasErrCtl True if the shell has error control.

check If hasErrCtl is true then this is the shell command to turn error
checking on. If hasErrCtl is false then this is a command template
to echo commands for which error checking is disabled. The template
must contain a ‘%s’.

ignore If hasErrCtl is true, this is the shell command to turn error
checking off. If hasErrCtl is false, this is a command template to
execute a command so that errors are ignored. The template must
contain a ‘%s’.

meta This is a string of meta characters of the shell.

builtins This is a string holding all the shell's builtin commands separated
by blanks. The meta and builtins strings are used in compat mode.
When a command line contains neither a meta character nor starts with
a shell builtin, it is executed directly without invoking a shell.
When one of these strings (or both) is empty all commands are
executed through a shell.

unsetenv If true, remove the ENV environment variable before executing any
command. This is useful for the Korn-shell (ksh).

Values that are strings must be surrounded by double quotes. Boolean values are
specified as ‘T’ or ‘Y’ (in either case) to mean true. Any other value is taken
to mean false.

There are several uses of the .SHELL target:

· Selecting one of the builtin shells. This is done by just specifying the
name of the shell with the name keyword. It is also possible to modify the
parameters of the builtin shell by just specifying other keywords (except
for path).

· Using another executable for one of the builtin shells. This is done by
specifying the path to the executable with the path keyword. If the last
component is the same as the name of the builtin shell, no name needs to be
specified; if it is different, the name must be given:

.SHELL: path="/usr/local/bin/sh"

selects the builtin shell “sh” but will execute it from /usr/local/bin/sh.
Like in the previous case, it is possible to modify parameters of the
builtin shell by just specifying them.

· Using an entirely different shell. This is done by specifying all keywords.

The builtin shells are “sh”, “csh” and “ksh”. Because FreeBSD has no ksh in
/bin, it is unwise to specify name="ksh" without also specifying a path.

.SILENT Apply the .SILENT attribute to any specified sources. If no sources are
specified, the .SILENT attribute is applied to every command in the file.

.SUFFIXES Each source specifies a suffix to make. If no sources are specified, any
previous specified suffixes are deleted.

.WARN Each source specifies a warning flag as previously described for the -x command
line option. Warning flags specified on the command line take precedence over
flags specified in the makefile. Also, command line warning flags are pushed to
sub-makes through the MAKEFLAGS environment variables so that a warning flag
specified on the command line will influence all sub-makes. Several flags can
be specified on a single .WARN target by separating them with blanks.

REMAKING MAKEFILES


If the special target .MAKEFILEDEPS exists in the Makefile, make enables the “Remaking
Makefiles” feature. After reading Makefile and all the files that are included using
.include or .sinclude directives (source Makefiles) make considers each source Makefile as a
target and tries to rebuild it. Both explicit and implicit rules are checked and all source
Makefiles are updated if necessary. If any of the source Makefiles were rebuilt, make
restarts from clean state.

To prevent infinite loops the following source Makefile targets are ignored:

· :: targets that have no prerequisites

· ! targets

· targets that have .PHONY or .EXEC attributes

· targets without prerequisites and without commands

When remaking a source Makefile options -t (touch target), -q (query mode), and -n (no exec)
do not take effect, unless source Makefile is specified explicitly as a target in make
command line.

Additionally, system makefiles and .depend are not considered as Makefiles that can be
rebuilt.

ENVIRONMENT


The make utility uses the following environment variables, if they exist: MACHINE, MAKE,
MAKEFLAGS, MAKEOBJDIR, MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX, and MAKESYSPATH.

Use fmake online using onworks.net services


Free Servers & Workstations

Download Windows & Linux apps

  • 1
    Phaser
    Phaser
    Phaser is a fast, free, and fun open
    source HTML5 game framework that offers
    WebGL and Canvas rendering across
    desktop and mobile web browsers. Games
    can be co...
    Download Phaser
  • 2
    VASSAL Engine
    VASSAL Engine
    VASSAL is a game engine for creating
    electronic versions of traditional board
    and card games. It provides support for
    game piece rendering and interaction,
    and...
    Download VASSAL Engine
  • 3
    OpenPDF - Fork of iText
    OpenPDF - Fork of iText
    OpenPDF is a Java library for creating
    and editing PDF files with a LGPL and
    MPL open source license. OpenPDF is the
    LGPL/MPL open source successor of iText,
    a...
    Download OpenPDF - Fork of iText
  • 4
    SAGA GIS
    SAGA GIS
    SAGA - System for Automated
    Geoscientific Analyses - is a Geographic
    Information System (GIS) software with
    immense capabilities for geodata
    processing and ana...
    Download SAGA GIS
  • 5
    Toolbox for Java/JTOpen
    Toolbox for Java/JTOpen
    The IBM Toolbox for Java / JTOpen is a
    library of Java classes supporting the
    client/server and internet programming
    models to a system running OS/400,
    i5/OS, o...
    Download Toolbox for Java/JTOpen
  • 6
    D3.js
    D3.js
    D3.js (or D3 for Data-Driven Documents)
    is a JavaScript library that allows you
    to produce dynamic, interactive data
    visualizations in web browsers. With D3
    you...
    Download D3.js
  • More »

Linux commands

  • 1
    abidiff
    abidiff
    abidiff - compare ABIs of ELF files
    abidiff compares the Application Binary
    Interfaces (ABI) of two shared libraries
    in ELF format. It emits a meaningful
    repor...
    Run abidiff
  • 2
    abidw
    abidw
    abidw - serialize the ABI of an ELF
    file abidw reads a shared library in ELF
    format and emits an XML representation
    of its ABI to standard output. The
    emitted ...
    Run abidw
  • 3
    copac2xml
    copac2xml
    bibutils - bibliography conversion
    utilities ...
    Run copac2xml
  • 4
    copt
    copt
    copt - peephole optimizer SYSNOPIS:
    copt file.. DESCRIPTION: copt is a
    general-purpose peephole optimizer. It
    reads code from its standard input and
    writes an ...
    Run copt
  • 5
    gather_stx_titles
    gather_stx_titles
    gather_stx_titles - gather title
    declarations from Stx documents ...
    Run gather_stx_titles
  • 6
    gatling-bench
    gatling-bench
    bench - http benchmark ...
    Run gatling-bench
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