NAME make - maintain, update, and regenerate related programs and files SYNOPSIS /usr/ccs/bin/make [ -d ] [ -dd ] [ -D ] [ -DD ] [ -e ] [ -i ] [ -k ] [ -n ] [ -p ] [ -P ] [ -q ] [ -r ] [ -s ] [ -S ] [ -t ] [ -V ] [ -f makefile ] ... [ -K statefile ] ... [ target ] [ macro=value ] /usr/xpg4/bin/make [ -d ] [ -dd ] [ -D ] [ -DD ] [ -e ] [ -i ] [ -k ] [ -n ] [ -p ] [ -P ] [ -q ] [ -r ] [ -s ] [ -S ] [ -t ] [ -V ] [ -f makefile ] ... [ target ] [ macro=value ] AVAILABILITY /usr/ccs/bin/make SUNWsprot /usr/xpg4/bin/make SUNWxcu4t DESCRIPTION make executes a list of shell commands associated with each target, typically to create or update a file of the same name. makefile contains entries that describe how to bring a target up to date with respect to those on which it depends, which are called dependencies. Since each depen- dency is a target, it may have dependencies of its own. Targets, dependencies, and sub-dependencies comprise a tree structure that make traces when deciding whether or not to rebuild a target. make recursively checks each target against its dependen- cies, beginning with the first target entry in makefile if no target argument is supplied on the command line. If, after processing all of its dependencies, a target file is found either to be missing, or to be older than any of its dependencies, make rebuilds it. Optionally with this ver- sion of make, a target can be treated as out-of-date when the commands used to generate it have changed since the last time the target was built. To build a given target, make executes the list of commands, called a rule. This rule may be listed explicitly in the target's makefile entry, or it may be supplied implicitly by make. If no target is specified on the command line, make uses the first target defined in makefile. If a target has no makefile entry, or if its entry has no rule, make attempts to derive a rule by each of the follow- ing methods, in turn, until a suitable rule is found. (Each method is described under USAGE below.) o Pattern matching rules. o Implicit rules, read in from a user-supplied makefile. o Standard implicit rules (also known as suffix rules), typically read in from the file /usr/share/lib/make/make.rules. o SCCS retrieval. make retrieves the most recent version from the SCCS history file (if any). See the description of the .SCCS_GET: special-function target for details. o The rule from the .DEFAULT: target entry, if there is such an entry in the makefile. If there is no makefile entry for a target, if no rule can be derived for building it, and if no file by that name is present, make issues an error message and halts. OPTIONS The following options are supported: -d Display the reasons why make chooses to rebuild a target; make displays any and all dependencies that are newer. In addition, make displays options read in from the MAKEFLAGS environment variable. -dd Display the dependency check and processing in vast detail. -D Display the text of the makefiles read in. -DD Display the text of the makefiles, make.rules file, the state file, and all hidden- dependency reports. -e Environment variables override assignments within makefiles. -f makefile Use the description file makefile. A `-' as the makefile argument denotes the standard input. The contents of makefile, when present, override the standard set of impli- cit rules and predefined macros. When more than one ` - f makefile' argument pair appears, make uses the concatenation of those files, in order of appearance. Except when in POSIX mode, when no makefile is specified: o If there is a file named makefile in the working directory, make uses that file. If, however, there is an SCCS history file (SCCS/s.makefile) which is newer, make attempts to retrieve and use the most recent version. o In the absence of the above file(s), if a file named Makefile is present in the working directory, make attempts to use it. If there is an SCCS history file (SCCS/s.Makefile) that is newer, make attempts to retrieve and use the most recent version. /usr/xpg4/bin/sccs In POSIX mode, when no makefile is specified, make tries the following files in sequence: o ./makefile, ./Makefile o s.makefile, SCCS/s.makefile o s.Makefile, SCCS/s.Makefile -i Ignore error codes returned by commands. Equivalent to the special-function target `.IGNORE:'. -k When a nonzero error status is returned by a rule, or when make cannot find a rule, aban- don work on the current target, but continue with other dependency branches that do not depend on it. -K statefile Use the state file statefile. A `-' as the statefile argument denotes the standard input. The contents of statefile, when present, override the standard set of impli- cit rules and predefined macros. When more than one ` - K statefile' argument pair appears, make uses the concatenation of those files, in order of appearance. (See also .KEEP_STATE and .KEEP_STATE_FILE in the Special- Functions Targets section). -n No execution mode. Print commands, but do not execute them. Even lines beginning with an @ are printed. However, if a command line contains a reference to the $(MAKE) macro, that line is always executed (see the discus- sion of MAKEFLAGS in Reading Makefiles and the Environment). When .POSIX is in effect, lines beginning with a "+" are executed. -p Print out the complete set of macro defini- tions and target descriptions. -P Merely report dependencies, rather than building them. -q Question mode. make returns a zero or nonzero status code depending on whether or not the target file is up to date. When .POSIX is in effect, lines beginning with a " +" are executed. -r Do not read in the default makefile /usr/share/lib/make/make.rules. -s Silent mode. Do not print command lines before executing them. Equivalent to the special-function target .SILENT:. -S Undo the effect of the -k option. Stop pro- cessing when a non-zero exit status is returned by a command. -t Touch the target files (bringing them up to date) rather than performing their rules. This can be dangerous when files are main- tained by more than one person. When the .KEEP_STATE: target appears in the makefile, this option updates the state file just as if the rules had been performed. When .POSIX is in effect, lines beginning with a "+" are executed. -V Puts make into SysV mode. Refer to sysV- make(1) for respective details. OPERANDS The following operands are supported: target Target names, as defined in USAGE. macro=value Macro definition. This definition overrides any regular definition for the specified macro within the makefile itself, or in the environment. How- ever, this definition can still be overridden by conditional macro assignments. USAGE Refer to make in Programming Utilities Guide for tutorial information. Reading Makefiles and the Environment When make first starts, it reads the MAKEFLAGS environment variable to obtain any the following options specified present in its value: -d, -D, -e, -i, -k, -n, -p, -q, -r, - s, - S, or -t. Due to the implementation of POSIX.2 stan- dardization, the MAKEFLAGS values will contain a leading `-' character. make then reads the command line for additional options, which also take effect. Next, make reads in a default makefile that typically con- tains predefined macro definitions, target entries for implicit rules, and additional rules, such as the rule for retrieving SCCS files. If present, make uses the file make.rules in the current directory; otherwise it reads the file /usr/share/lib/make/make.rules, which contains the standard definitions and rules. Use the directive: include /usr/share/lib/make/make.rules in your local make.rules file to include them. Next, make imports variables from the environment (unless the -e option is in effect), and treats them as defined mac- ros. Because make uses the most recent definition it encounters, a macro definition in the makefile normally overrides an environment variable of the same name. When -e is in effect, however, environment variables are read in after all makefiles have been read. In that case, the environment variables take precedence over definitions in the makefile. Next, make reads any makefiles you specify with -f, or one of makefile or Makefile as described above and then the state file, in the local directory if it exists. If the makefile contains a .KEEP_STATE_FILE target, then it reads the state file that follows the target. Refer to special target .KEEP_STATE_FILE for details. Next, (after reading the environment if -e is in effect), make reads in any macro definitions supplied as command line arguments. These override macro definitions in the makefile and the environment both, but only for the make command itself. make exports environment variables, using the most recently defined value. Macro definitions supplied on the command line are not normally exported, unless the macro is also an environment variable. make does not export macros defined in the makefile. If an environment variable is set, and a macro with the same name is defined on the command line, make exports its value as defined on the command line. Unless -e is in effect, macro definitions within the makefile take precedence over those imported from the environment. The macros MAKEFLAGS, MAKE, SHELL, HOST_ARCH, HOST_MACH, and TARGET_MACH are special cases. See Special-Purpose Macros, below for details. Makefile Target Entries A target entry has the following format: target... [:|::] [dependency] ... [; command] ... [command] The first line contains the name of a target, or a space- separated list of target names, terminated with a colon or double colon. If a list of targets is given, this is equivalent to having a separate entry of the same form for each target. The colon(s) may be followed by a dependency, or a dependency list. make checks this list before building the target. The dependency list may be terminated with a semicolon (;), which in turn can be followed by a single Bourne shell command. Subsequent lines in the target entry begin with a TAB, and contain Bourne shell commands. These commands comprise the rule for building the target. Shell commands may be continued across input lines by escap- ing the NEWLINE with a backslash (\). The continuing line must also start with a TAB. To rebuild a target, make expands macros, strips off initial TAB characters and either executes the command directly (if it contains no shell metacharacters), or passes each command line to a Bourne shell for execution. The first line that does not begin with a TAB or '#' begins another target or macro definition. Special Characters Global # Start a comment. The comment ends at the next NEWLINE. If the `#' follows the TAB in a command line, that line is passed to the shell (which also treats `#' as the start of a comment). include filename If the word include appears as the first seven letters of a line and is followed by a SPACE or TAB, the string that follows is taken as a filename to interpolate at that line. include files can be nested to a depth of no more than about 16. If filename is a macro reference, it is expanded. Targets and Dependencies : Target list terminator. Words following the colon are added to the dependency list for the target or targets. If a target is named in more than one colon-terminated target entry, the dependencies for all its entries are added to form that target's complete dependency list. :: Target terminator for alternate dependencies. When used in place of a `:' the double-colon allows a target to be checked and updated with respect to alternate dependency lists. When the target is out-of-date with respect to dependencies listed in the first alter- nate, it is built according to the rule for that entry. When out-of-date with respect to dependencies in another alternate, it is built according the rule in that other entry. Implicit rules do not apply to double-colon targets; you must supply a rule for each entry. If no dependencies are specified, the rule is always performed. target [+ target...] : Target group. The rule in the target entry builds all the indicated targets as a group. It is normally performed only once per make run, but is checked for command dependencies every time a target in the group is encoun- tered in the dependency scan. % Pattern matching wild card metacharacter. Like the `*' shell wild card, `%' matches any string of zero or more characters in a target name or dependency, in the target portion of a conditional macro definition, or within a pattern replacement macro reference. Note that only one `%' can appear in a target, dependency-name, or pattern-replacement macro reference. ./pathname make ignores the leading `./' characters from targets with names given as pathnames rela- tive to "dot," the working directory. Macros = Macro definition. The word to the left of this character is the macro name; words to the right comprise its value. Leading and trailing white space characters are stripped from the value. A word break following the = is implied. $ Macro reference. The following character, or the parenthesized or bracketed string, is interpreted as a macro reference: make expands the reference (including the $) by replacing it with the macro's value. ( ) { } Macro-reference name delimiters. A parenthesized or bracketed word appended to a $ is taken as the name of the macro being referred to. Without the delimiters, make recognizes only the first character as the macro name. $$ A reference to the dollar-sign macro, the value of which is the character `$'. Used to pass variable expressions beginning with $ to the shell, to refer to environment variables which are expanded by the shell, or to delay processing of dynamic macros within the dependency list of a target, until that tar- get is actually processed. \$ Escaped dollar-sign character. Interpreted as a literal dollar sign within a rule. += When used in place of `=', appends a string to a macro definition (must be surrounded by white space, unlike `='). := Conditional macro assignment. When preceded by a list of targets with explicit target entries, the macro definition that follows takes effect when processing only those tar- gets, and their dependencies. :sh = Define the value of a macro to be the output of a command (see Command Substitutions, below). :sh In a macro reference, execute the command stored in the macro, and replace the refer- ence with the output of that command (see Command Substitutions). Rules + make will always execute the commands pre- ceded by a "+", even when -n is specified. - make ignores any nonzero error code returned by a command line for which the first non-TAB character is a `-'. This character is not passed to the shell as part of the command line. make normally terminates when a com- mand returns nonzero status, unless the -i or -k options, or the .IGNORE: special-function target is in effect. @ If the first non-TAB character is a @, make does not print the command line before exe- cuting it. This character is not passed to the shell. ? Escape command-dependency checking. Command lines starting with this character are not subject to command dependency checking. ! Force command-dependency checking. Command- dependency checking is applied to command lines for which it would otherwise be suppressed. This checking is normally suppressed for lines that contain references to the `?' dynamic macro (for example, `$?'). When any combination of `+', `-', `@', `?', or `!' appear as the first characters after the TAB, all that are present apply. None are passed to the shell. Special-Function Targets When incorporated in a makefile, the following target names perform special-functions: .DEFAULT: If it has an entry in the makefile, the rule for this target is used to process a target when there is no other entry for it, no rule for building it, and no SCCS history file from which to retrieve a current version. make ignores any dependencies for this tar- get. .DONE: If defined in the makefile, make processes this target and its dependencies after all other targets are built. This target is also performed when make halts with an error, unless the .FAILED target is defined. .FAILED: This target, along with its dependencies, is performed instead of .DONE when defined in the makefile and make halts with an error. .GET_POSIX: This target contains the rule for retrieving the current version of an SCCS file from its history file in the current working direc- tory. make uses this rule when it is running in POSIX mode. .IGNORE: Ignore errors. When this target appears in the makefile, make ignores non-zero error codes returned from commands. When used under POSIX mode, .IGNORE could be followed by target names only, for which the errors will be ignored. .INIT: If defined in the makefile, this target and its dependencies are built before any other targets are processed. .KEEP_STATE: If this target is in effect, make updates the state file, .make.state, in the current directory. This target also activates com- mand dependencies, and hidden dependency checks. If either the .KEEP_STATE: target appears in the makefile, or the environment variable KEEP_STATE is set ("setenv KEEP_STATE"), make will rebuild everything in order to collect dependency information, even if all the targets were up to date due to previous make runs. (See also the ENVIRON- MENT section.) This target has no effect if used under POSIX mode. .KEEP_STATE_FILE: This target has no effect if used under POSIX mode. This target implies .KEEP_STATE. If the target is followed by a filename, make uses it as the state file. If the target is followed by a directory name, make looks for a .make.state in that directory. If the tar- get is not followed by any name, make looks for .make.state file in the current working directory. .MAKE_VERSION: A target-entry of the form: .MAKE_VERSION: VERSION-number enables version checking. If the version of make differs from the version indicated, make issues a warning message. .NO_PARALLEL: Currently, this target has no effect, it is, however, reserved for future use. .PARALLEL: Currently of no effect, but reserved for future use. .POSIX: This target enables the POSIX compliant mode. .PRECIOUS: List of files not to delete. make does not remove any of the files listed as dependen- cies for this target when interrupted. make normally removes the current target when it receives an interrupt. When used under POSIX mode, if the target is not followed by a list of files, all the file are assumed precious. .SCCS_GET: This target contains the rule for retrieving the current version of an SCCS file from its history file. To suppress automatic retrieval, add an entry for this target with an empty rule to your makefile. .SCCS_GET_POSIX: This target contains the rule for retrieving the current version of an SCCS file from its history file. make uses this rule when it is running in POSIX mode. .SILENT: Run silently. When this target appears in the makefile, make does not echo commands before executing them. When used in POSIX mode, it could be followed by target names, and only those will be executed silently. .SUFFIXES: The suffixes list for selecting implicit rules (see The Suffixes List). .WAIT: Currently of no effect, but reserved for future use. Clearing Special Targets In this version of make, you can clear the definition of the following special targets by supplying entries for them with no dependencies and no rule: .DEFAULT, .SCCS_GET, and .SUFFIXES Command Dependencies When the .KEEP_STATE: target is effective, make checks the command for building a target against the state file. If the command has changed since the last make run, make rebuilds the target. Hidden Dependencies When the .KEEP_STATE: target is effective, make reads reports from cpp(1) and other compilation processors for any "hidden" files, such as #include files. If the target is out of date with respect to any of these files, make rebuilds it. Macros Entries of the form macro=value define macros. macro is the name of the macro, and value, which consists of all characters up to a comment character or unescaped NEWLINE, is the value. make strips both lead- ing and trailing white space in accepting the value. Subsequent references to the macro, of the forms: $(name) or ${name} are replaced by value. The parentheses or brack- ets can be omitted in a reference to a macro with a single- character name. Macro references can contain references to other macros, in which case nested references are expanded first. Suffix Replacement Macro References Substitutions within macros can be made as follows: $(name:string1=string2) where string1 is either a suffix, or a word to be replaced in the macro definition, and string2 is the replacement suf- fix or word. Words in a macro value are separated by SPACE, TAB, and escaped NEWLINE characters. Pattern Replacement Macro References Pattern matching replacements can also be applied to macros, with a reference of the form: $(name: op%os= np%ns) where op is the existing (old) prefix and os is the existing (old) suffix, np and ns are the new prefix and new suffix, respectively, and the pattern matched by % (a string of zero or more characters), is carried forward from the value being replaced. For example: PROGRAM=fabricate DEBUG= $(PROGRAM:%=tmp/%-g) sets the value of DEBUG to tmp/fabricate-g. Note that pattern replacement macro references cannot be used in the dependency list of a pattern matching rule; the % characters are not evaluated independently. Also, any number of % metacharacters can appear after the equal-sign. Appending to a Macro Words can be appended to macro values as follows: macro += word ... Special-Purpose Macros When the MAKEFLAGS variable is present in the environment, make takes options from it, in combination with options entered on the command line. make retains this combined value as the MAKEFLAGS macro, and exports it automatically to each command or shell it invokes. Note that flags passed by way of MAKEFLAGS are only displayed when the -d, or -dd options are in effect. The MAKE macro is another special case. It has the value make by default, and temporarily overrides the -n option for any line in which it is referred to. This allows nested invocations of make written as: $(MAKE) ... to run recursively, with the -n flag in effect for all com- mands but make. This lets you use `make -n' to test an entire hierarchy of makefiles. For compatibility with the 4.2 BSD make, the MFLAGS macro is set from the MAKEFLAGS variable by prepending a `-'. MFLAGS is not exported automatically. The SHELL macro, when set to a single-word value such as /usr/bin/csh, indicates the name of an alternate shell to use. The default is /bin/sh. Note that make executes com- mands that contain no shell metacharacters itself. Built-in commands, such as dirs in the C shell, are not recognized unless the command line includes a metacharacter (for instance, a semicolon). This macro is neither imported from, nor exported to the environment, regardless of -e. To be sure it is set properly, you must define this macro within every makefile that requires it. The following macros are provided for use with cross- compilation: HOST_ARCH The machine architecture of the host system. By default, this is the output of the arch(1) command prepended with ` - '. Under normal circumstances, this value should never be altered by the user. HOST_MACH The machine architecture of the host system. By default, this is the output of the mach(1), prepended with `- '. Under normal circumstances, this value should never be altered by the user. TARGET_ARCH The machine architecture of the target sys- tem. By default, the output of mach, prepended with `-'. Dynamic Macros There are several dynamically maintained macros that are useful as abbreviations within rules. They are shown here as references; if you were to define them, make would simply override the definition. $* The basename of the current target, derived as if selected for use with an implicit rule. $< The name of a dependency file, derived as if selected for use with an implicit rule. $@ The name of the current target. This is the only dynamic macro whose value is strictly determined when used in a dependency list. (In which case it takes the form `$$@'.) $? The list of dependencies that are newer than the target. Command-dependency checking is automatically suppressed for lines that con- tain this macro, just as if the command had been prefixed with a `?'. See the description of `?', under Makefile Special Tokens, above. You can force this check with the ! command-line prefix. $% The name of the library member being pro- cessed. (See Library Maintenance, below.) To refer to the $@ dynamic macro within a dependency list, precede the reference with an additional `$' character (as in, `$$@'). Because make assigns $< and $* as it would for implicit rules (according to the suffixes list and the directory contents), they may be unreliable when used within explicit target entries. These macros can be modified to apply either to the filename part, or the directory part of the strings they stand for, by adding an upper case F or D, respectively (and enclosing the resulting name in parentheses or braces). Thus, `$(@D)' refers to the directory part of the string `$@'; if there is no directory part, `.' is assigned. $(@F) refers to the filename part. Conditional Macro Definitions A macro definition of the form: target-list := macro = value indicates that when processing any of the targets listed and their dependencies, macro is to be set to the value sup- plied. Note that if a conditional macro is referred to in a dependency list, the $ must be delayed (use $$ instead). Also, target-list may contain a % pattern, in which case the macro will be conditionally defined for all targets encoun- tered that match the pattern. A pattern replacement refer- ence can be used within the value. You can temporarily append to a macro's value with a condi- tional definition of the form: target-list := macro += value Predefined Macros make supplies the macros shown in the table that follows for compilers and their options, host architectures, and other commands. Unless these macros are read in as environment variables, their values are not exported by make. If you run make with any of these set in the environment, it is a good idea to add commentary to the makefile to indicate what value each is expected to take. If -r is in effect, make does not read the default makefile (./make.rules or /usr/share/lib/make/make.rules) in which these macro defini- tions are supplied. ______________________________________________________________________ ______ Table of Predefined Macros ______________________________________________________________________ ______ Use Macro Default Value ______________________________________________________________________ ______ Library AR ar Archives ARFLAGS rv ______________________________________________________________________ ______ Assembler AS as Commands ASFLAGS COMPILE.s $(AS) $(ASFLAGS) COMPILE.S $(CC) $(ASFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -c ______________________________________________________________________ ______ C Compiler CC cc Commands CFLAGS CPPFLAGS COMPILE.c $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -c LINK.c $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) ______________________________________________________________________ ______ C++ CCC CC Compiler CCFLAGS CFLAGS Commands CPPFLAGS COMPILE.cc $(CCC) $(CCFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -c LINK.cc $(CCC) $(CCFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) COMPILE.C $(CCC) $(CCFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -c LINK.C $(CCC) $(CCFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) ______________________________________________________________________ ______ FORTRAN 77 FC f77 Compiler FFLAGS Commands COMPILE.f $(FC) $(FFLAGS) -c LINK.f $(FC) $(FFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) COMPILE.F $(FC) $(FFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -c LINK.F $(FC) $(FFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) ______________________________________________________________________ ______ FORTRAN 90 FC f90 Compiler F90FLAGS Commands COMPILE.f90 $(F90C) $(F90FLAGS) -c LINK.f90 $(F90C) COMPILE.ftn $(F90C) $(F90FLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -c LINK.ftn $(F90C) $(F90FLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) ______________________________________________________________________ ______ Link Editor LD ld Command LDFLAGS ______________________________________________________________________ ______ lex LEX lex Command LFLAGS LEX.l $(LEX) $(LFLAGS) -t ______________________________________________________________________ ______ lint LINT lint Command LINTFLAGS LINT.c $(LINT) $(LINTFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) ______________________________________________________________________ ______ Modula 2 M2C m2c | Commands M2FLAGS | | | MODFLAGS | | | | DEFFLAGS | | | | COMPILE.def | $(M2C) $(M2FLAGS) $(DEFFLAGS) | | | COMPILE.mod | $(M2C) $(M2FLAGS) $(MODFLAGS) | |_______________|______________|______________________________________ ______| | Pascal | PC | pc | | Compiler | PFLAGS | | | Commands | COMPILE.p | $(PC) $(PFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) -c | | | LINK.p | $(PC) $(PFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) | |_______________|______________|______________________________________ ______| | Ratfor | RFLAGS | | | Compilation | COMPILE.r | $(FC) $(FFLAGS) $(RFLAGS) -c | | Commands | LINK.r | $(FC) $(FFLAGS) $(RFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) | |_______________|______________|______________________________________ ______| | rm | RM | rm -f | | Command | | | |_______________|______________|______________________________________ ______| | sccs | SCCSFLAGS | | | Command | SCCSGETFLAGS| -s | |_______________|______________|______________________________________ ______| | yacc | YACC | yacc | | Command | YFLAGS | | | | YACC.y | $(YACC) $(YFLAGS) | |_______________|______________|______________________________________ ______| | Suffixes | SUFFIXES | .o .c .c~ .cc .cc~ .y .y~ .l .l~ | | | | .s .s~ .sh .sh~ .S .S~ .ln .h .h~ | | | | ..f .f~ .F .F~ .mod .mod~ .sym | | | | .def .def~ .p .p~ .r .r~ | | | | .cps .cps~ .C .C~ .Y .Y~ | | | | .L .L .f90 .f90~ .ftn .ftn~ | | List | | | |_______________|______________|______________________________________ ______| Implicit Rules When a target has no entry in the makefile, make attempts to determine its class (if any) and apply the rule for that class. An implicit rule describes how to build any target of a given class, from an associated dependency file. The class of a target can be determined either by a pattern, or by a suffix; the corresponding dependency file (with the same basename) from which such a target might be built. In addition to a predefined set of implicit rules, make allows you to define your own, either by pattern, or by suffix. Pattern Matching Rules A target entry of the form: tp%ts: dp%ds rule is a pattern matching rule, in which tp is a target prefix, ts is a target suffix, dp is a dependency prefix, and ds is a dependency suffix (any of which may be null). The `%' stands for a basename of zero or more characters that is matched in the target, and is used to construct the name of a dependency. When make encounters a match in its search for an implicit rule, it uses the rule in that target entry to build the target from the dependency file. Pattern- matching implicit rules typically make use of the $@ and $< dynamic macros as placeholders for the target and dependency names. Other, regular dependencies may occur in the depen- dency list; however, none of the regular dependencies may contain `%'. An entry of the form: tp%ts: [dependency ...] dp%ds [dependency ...] rule is a valid pattern matching rule. Suffix Rules When no pattern matching rule applies, make checks the tar- get name to see if it ends with a suffix in the known suf- fixes list. If so, make checks for any suffix rules, as well as a dependency file with same root and another recog- nized suffix, from which to build it. The target entry for a suffix rule takes the form: DsTs: rule where Ts is the suffix of the target, Ds is the suffix of the dependency file, and rule is the rule for building a target in the class. Both Ds and Ts must appear in the suf- fixes list. (A suffix need not begin with a `.' to be recognized.) A suffix rule with only one suffix describes how to build a target having a null (or no) suffix from a dependency file with the indicated suffix. For instance, the .c rule could be used to build an executable program named file from a C source file named `file.c'. If a target with a null suffix has an explicit dependency, make omits the search for a suf- fix rule. ______________________________________________________________________ ____ Table of Standard Implicit (Suffix) Rules ______________________________________________________________________ ____ Use Implicit Rule Name Command Line ______________________________________________________________________ ____ Assembly .s.o $(COMPILE.s) -o $@ $< _____________________________________________________________ Files .s.a $(COMPILE.s) -o $% $< $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .s~.o $(-s1GET) $(-s1GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.s $(-s1COMPILE.s) -o $@ $*.s _____________________________________________________________ .S.o $(COMPILE.S) -o $@ $< _____________________________________________________________ .S.a $(COMPILE.S) -o $% $< $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .S~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.S $(COMPILE.S) -o $@ $*.S _____________________________________________________________ .S~.a $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.S $(COMPILE.S) -o $% $*.S $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% ______________________________________________________________________ ____ C .c $(LINK.c) -o $@ $< $(LDLIBS) _____________________________________________________________ Files .c.ln $(LINT.c) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) -i $< _____________________________________________________________ .c.o $(COMPILE.c) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $< _____________________________________________________________ .c.a $(COMPILE.c) -o $% $< $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ ..c~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.c $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $*.c _____________________________________________________________ ..c~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.c $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $*.c _____________________________________________________________ ..c~.ln $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.c $(LINT.c) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) -c $*.c _____________________________________________________________ ..c~.a $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.c $(COMPILE.c) -o $% $*.c $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% ______________________________________________________________________ ____ C++ .cc $(LINK.cc) -o $@ $< $(LDLIBS) _____________________________________________________________ Files .cc.o $(COMPILE.cc) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $< _____________________________________________________________ .cc.a $(COMPILE.cc) -o $% $< $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .cc~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.cc $(LINK.cc) -o $@ $*.cc $(LDLIBS) _____________________________________________________________ .cc.o $(COMPILE.cc) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $< _____________________________________________________________ .cc~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.cc $(COMPILE.cc) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $*.cc _____________________________________________________________ .cc.a $(COMPILE.cc) -o $% $< $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .cc~.a $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.cc $(COMPILE.cc) -o $% $*.cc $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .C $(LINK.C) -o $@ $< $(LDLIBS) _____________________________________________________________ .C~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.C $(LINK.C) -o $@ $*.C $(LDLIBS) _____________________________________________________________ .C.o $(COMPILE.C) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $< _____________________________________________________________ .C~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.C $(COMPILE.C) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $*.C _____________________________________________________________ .C.a $(COMPILE.C) -o $% $< $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .C~.a $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.C $(COMPILE.C) -o $% $*.C $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% ______________________________________________________________________ ____ FORTRAN 77 .f $(LINK.f) -o $@ $< $(LDLIBS) _____________________________________________________________ Files .f.o $(COMPILE.f) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $< _____________________________________________________________ .f.a $(COMPILE.f) -o $% $< $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .f $(LINK.f) -o $@ $< $(LDLIBS) ____________________ .f~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.f $(FC) $(FFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $*.f _____________________________________________________________ .f~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.f $(FC) $(FFLAGS) -c $*.f _____________________________________________________________ .f~.a $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.f $(COMPILE.f) -o $% $*.f $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .F $(LINK.F) -o $@ $< $(LDLIBS) _____________________________________________________________ .F.o $(COMPILE.F) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $< _____________________________________________________________ .F.a $(COMPILE.F) -o $% $< $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .F~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.F $(FC) $(FFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $*.F _____________________________________________________________ .F~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.F $(FC) $(FFLAGS) -c $*.F _____________________________________________________________ .F~.a $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.F $(COMPILE.F) -o $% $*.F $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% ______________________________________________________________________ ____ FORTRAN 90 .f90 $(LINK.f90) -o $@ $< $(LDLIBS) _____________________________________________________________ Files .f90~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.f90 $(LINK.f90) -o $@ $*.f90 $(LDLIBS) _____________________________________________________________ .f90.o $(COMPILE.f90) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $< _____________________________________________________________ .f90~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.f90 $(COMPILE.f90) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $*.f90 _____________________________________________________________ .f90.a $(COMPILE.f90) -o $% $< $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .f90~.a $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.f90 $(COMPILE.f90) -o $% $*.f90 $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .ftn $(LINK.ftn) -o $@ $< $(LDLIBS) _____________________________________________________________ .ftn~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.ftn $(LINK.ftn) -o $@ $*.ftn $(LDLIBS) _____________________________________________________________ .ftn.o $(COMPILE.ftn) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $< _____________________________________________________________ .ftn~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.ftn $(COMPILE.ftn) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $*.ftn _____________________________________________________________ .ftn.a $(COMPILE.ftn) -o $% $< $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% _____________________________________________________________ .ftn~.a $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.ftn $(COMPILE.ftn) -o $% $*.ftn $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% ______________________________________________________________________ ____ lex .l $(RM) $*.c Files $(LEX.l) $< > $*.c $(LINK.c) -o $@ $*.c $(LDLIBS) $(RM) $*.c _____________________________________________________________ .l.c $(RM) $@ $(LEX.l) $< > $@ _____________________________________________________________ .l.ln $(RM) $*.c $(LEX.l) $< > $*.c $(LINT.c) -o $@ -i $*.c $(RM) $*.c _____________________________________________________________ .l.o $(RM) $*.c $(LEX.l) $< > $*.c $(COMPILE.c) -o $@ $*.c $(RM) $*.c _____________________________________________________________ .l~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.l $(LEX) $(LFLAGS) $*.l $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c lex.yy.c rm -f lex.yy.c mv lex.yy.c $@ _____________________________________________________________ .l~.c $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.l $(LEX) $(LFLAGS) $*.l mv lex.yy.c $@ .l~.ln $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.l $(RM) $*.c $(LEX.l) $*.l > $*.c $(LINT.c) -o $@ -i $*.c $(RM) $*.c .l~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.l $(LEX) $(LFLAGS) $*.l $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c lex.yy.c rm -f lex.yy.c mv lex.yy.c $@ ______________________________________________________________________ ____ Modula 2 .mod $(COMPILE.mod) -o $@ -e $@ $< Files .mod.o $(COMPILE.mod) -o $@ $< .def.sym $(COMPILE.def) -o $@ $< .def~.sym $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.def $(COMPILE.def) -o $@ $*.def .mod~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.mod $(COMPILE.mod) -o $@ -e $@ $*.mod .mod~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.mod $(COMPILE.mod) -o $@ $*.mod .mod~.a $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.mod $(COMPILE.mod) -o $% $*.mod $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% ______________________________________________________________________ ____ NeWS .cps.h cps $*.cps .cps~.h $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.cps $(CPS) $(CPSFLAGS) $*.cps ______________________________________________________________________ ____ Pascal .p $(LINK.p) -o $@ $< $(LDLIBS) Files .p.o $(COMPILE.p) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $< .p~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.p $(LINK.p) -o $@ $*.p $(LDLIBS) .p~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.p $(COMPILE.p) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $*.p .p~.a $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.p $(COMPILE.p) -o $% $*.p $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% ______________________________________________________________________ ____ Ratfor .r $(LINK.r) -o $@ $< $(LDLIBS) Files .r.o $(COMPILE.r) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $< .r.a $(COMPILE.r) -o $% $< $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% .r~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.r $(LINK.r) -o $@ $*.r $(LDLIBS) .r~.o $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.r $(COMPILE.r) $(OUTPUT_OPTION) $*.r .r~.a $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.r $(COMPILE.r) -o $% $*.r $(AR) $(ARFLAGS) $@ $% $(RM) $% ______________________________________________________________________ ____ SCCS .SCCS_GET sccs $(SCCSFLAGS) get $(SCCSGETFLAGS) $@ -G$@ Files .SCCS_GET_POSIX sccs $(SCCSFLAGS) get $(SCCSGETFLAGS) $@ .GET_POSIX $(GET) $(GFLAGS) s.$@ ______________________________________________________________________ ____ Shell .sh cat $< >$@ Scripts chmod +x $@ .sh~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.sh cp $*.sh $@ chmod a+x $@ ______________________________________________________________________ ____ yacc .y $(YACC.y) $< Files $(LINK.c) -o $@ y.tab.c $(LDLIBS) $(RM) y.tab.c .y.c $(YACC.y) $< mv y.tab.c $@ .y.ln $(YACC.y) $< .y.ln $(YACC.y) $< $(LINT.c) -o $@ -i y.tab.c $(RM) y.tab.c .y.o $(YACC.y) $< $(COMPILE.c) -o $@ y.tab.c $(RM) y.tab.c .y~ $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.y $(YACC) $(YFLAGS) $*.y $(COMPILE.c) -o $@ y.tab.c $(RM) y.tab.c .y~.c $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.y $(YACC) $(YFLAGS) $*.y mv y.tab.c $@ .y~.ln $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.y $(YACC.y) $*.y $(LINT.c) -o $@ -i y.tab.c | | $(RM) y.tab.c | | | .y~.o | $(GET) $(GFLAGS) -p $< > $*.y | | $(YACC) $(YFLAGS) $*.y | | $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c y.tab.c | | rm -f y.tab.c | | | mv y.tab.o $@ | |___________|____________________|____________________________________ ____| make reads in the standard set of implicit rules from the file /usr/share/lib/make/make.rules, unless -r is in effect, or there is a make.rules file in the local directory that does not include that file. The Suffixes List The suffixes list is given as the list of dependencies for the `.SUFFIXES:' special-function target. The default list is contained in the SUFFIXES macro (See Table of Predefined Macros for the standard list of suffixes). You can define additional .SUFFIXES: targets; a .SUFFIXES target with no dependencies clears the list of suffixes. Order is signifi- cant within the list; make selects a rule that corresponds to the target's suffix and the first dependency-file suffix found in the list. To place suffixes at the head of the list, clear the list and replace it with the new suffixes, followed by the default list: .SUFFIXES: .SUFFIXES: suffixes $(SUFFIXES) A tilde (~) indicates that if a dependency file with the indicated suffix (minus the ~) is under SCCS its most recent version should be retrieved, if necessary, before the target is processed. Library Maintenance A target name of the form: lib(member ...) refers to a member, or a space-separated list of members, in an ar(1) library. The dependency of the library member on the corresponding file must be given as an explicit entry in the makefile. This can be handled by a pattern matching rule of the form: lib(%.s): %.s where .s is the suffix of the member; this suffix is typi- cally .o for object libraries. A target name of the form lib((symbol)) refers to the member of a randomized object library that defines the entry point named symbol. Command Execution Command lines are executed one at a time, each by its own process or shell. Shell commands, notably cd, are ineffec- tual across an unescaped NEWLINE in the makefile. A line is printed (after macro expansion) just before being executed. This is suppressed if it starts with a `@', if there is a `.SILENT:' entry in the makefile, or if make is run with the -s option. Although the -n option specifies printing without execution, lines containing the macro $(MAKE) are executed regardless, and lines containing the @ special character are printed. The -t (touch) option updates the modification date of a file without executing any rules. This can be dangerous when sources are maintained by more than one person. make invokes the shell with the -e (exit-on-errors) argu- ment. Thus, with semicolon-separated command sequences, execution of the later commands depends on the success of the former. This behavior can be overridden by starting the command line with a `-', or by writing a shell script that returns a non-zero status only as it finds appropriate. Bourne Shell Constructs To use the Bourne shell if control structure for branching, use a command line of the form: if expression ; \ then command ; \ ... ; \ else command ; \ ... ; \ fi Although composed of several input lines, the escaped NEW- LINE characters insure that make treats them all as one (shell) command line. To use the Bourne shell for control structure for loops, use a command line of the form: for var in list ; \ do command; \ ... ; \ done To refer to a shell variable, use a double-dollar-sign ($$). This prevents expansion of the dollar-sign by make. Command Substitutions To incorporate the standard output of a shell command in a macro, use a definition of the form: MACRO:sh =command The command is executed only once, standard error output is discarded, and NEWLINE characters are replaced with SPACEs. If the command has a non-zero exit status, make halts with an error. To capture the output of a shell command in a macro refer- ence, use a reference of the form: $(MACRO:sh) where MACRO is the name of a macro containing a valid Bourne shell command line. In this case, the command is executed whenever the reference is evaluated. As with shell command substitutions, the reference is replaced with the standard output of the command. If the command has a non-zero exit status, make halts with an error. In contrast to commands in rules, the command is not subject for macro substitution; therefore, a dollar sign ($) need not be replaced with a double dollar sign ($$). Signals INT, SIGTERM, and QUIT signals received from the keyboard halt make and remove the target file being processed unless that target is in the dependency list for .PRECIOUS:. EXAMPLES This makefile says that pgm depends on two files a.o and b.o, and that they in turn depend on their corresponding source files (a.c and b.c) along with a common file incl.h: pgm: a.o b.o $(LINK.c) -o $@ a.o b.o a.o: incl.h a.c cc -c a.c b.o: incl.h b.c cc -c b.c The following makefile uses implicit rules to express the same dependencies: pgm: a.o b.o cc a.o b.o -o pgm a.o b.o: incl.h ENVIRONMENT See environ(5) for descriptions of the following environment variables that affect the execution of make: LC_CTYPE, LC_MESSAGES, and NLSPATH. KEEP_STATE This environment variable has the same effect as the .KEEP_STATE: special-function target. It enables command dependencies, hidden dependencies and writing of the state file. USE_SVR4_MAKE This environment variable causes make to invoke the generic System V version of make (/usr/ccs/lib/svr4.make). See sysV-make(1). MAKEFLAGS This variable is interpreted as a character string representing a series of option characters to be used as the default options. The implementation will accept both of the following formats (but need not accept them when intermixed): 1. The characters are option letters without the leading hyphens or blank character separation used on a command line. 2. The characters are formatted in a manner similar to a portion of the make command line: options are preceded by hyphens and blank-character-separated. The macro=name macro definition operands can also be included. The difference between the con- tents of MAKEFLAGS and the command line is that the contents of the variable will not be subjected to the word expansions (see wordexp(3C)) associated with parsing the com- mand line values. When the command-line options -f or -p are used, they will take effect regardless of whether they also appear in MAKEFLAGS. If they otherwise appear in MAKEFLAGS, the result is undefined. The MAKEFLAGS variable will be accessed from the environment before the makefile is read. At that time, all of the options (except -f and - p) and command-line macros not already included in MAKEFLAGS are added to the MAKEFLAGS macro. The MAKEFLAGS macro will be passed into the environ- ment as an environment variable for all child processes. If the MAKEFLAGS macro is subsequently set by the makefile, it replaces the MAKEFLAGS variable currently found in the environment. EXIT STATUS When the -q option is specified, the make utility will exit with one of the following values: 0 Successful completion. 1 The target was not up-to-date. >1 An error occurred. When the -q option is not specified, the make utility will exit with one of the following values: 0 successful completion >0 an error occurred FILES makefile Makefile current version(s) of make description file s.makefile s.Makefile SCCS history files for the above makefile(s) in the current directory SCCS/s.makefile SCCS/s.Makefile SCCS history files for the above makefile(s) make.rules default file for user-defined targets, macros, and implicit rules /usr/share/lib/make/make.rules makefile for standard implicit rules and macros (not read if make.rules is) .make.state state file in the local directory SEE ALSO ar(1), cd(1), lex(1), sh(1), sccs-get(1), yacc(1), passwd(4) Solaris Advanced User's Guide Programming Utilities Guide DIAGNOSTICS Don't know how to make target 'target' There is no makefile entry for target, and none of make's implicit rules apply (there is no dependency file with a suffix in the suffixes list, or the target's suffix is not in the list). *** target removed. make was interrupted while building target. Rather than leaving a partially-completed version that is newer than its dependencies, make removes the file named target. *** target not removed. make was interrupted while building target and target was not present in the directory. *** target could not be removed, reason make was interrupted while building target, which was not removed for the indicated reason. Read of include file `file' failed The makefile indicated in an include directive was not found, or was inaccessible. Loop detected when expanding macro value `macro' A reference to the macro being defined was found in the definition. Could not write state file `file' You used the .KEEP_STATE: target, but do not have write permission on the state file. *** Error code n The previous shell command returned a nonzero error code. *** signal message The previous shell command was aborted due to a signal. If ` - core dumped' appears after the message, a core file was created. Conditional macro conflict encountered Displayed only when -d is in effect, this message indi- cates that two or more parallel targets currently being processed depend on a target which is built differently for each by virtue of conditional macros. Since the target cannot simultaneously satisfy both dependency relationships, it is conflicted. BUGS Some commands return nonzero status inappropriately; to overcome this difficulty, prefix the offending command line in the rule with a `-'. Filenames with the characters `=', `:', or `@', do not work. You cannot build file.o from lib(file.o). Options supplied by MAKEFLAGS should be reported for nested make commands. Use the -d option to find out what options the nested command picks up from MAKEFLAGS. This version of make is incompatible in certain respects with previous versions: o The -d option output is much briefer in this ver- sion. -dd now produces the equivalent voluminous output. o make attempts to derive values for the dynamic mac- ros `$*', `$<', and `$?', while processing explicit targets. It uses the same method as for implicit rules; in some cases this can lead either to unex- pected values, or to an empty value being assigned. (Actually, this was true for earlier versions as well, even though the documentation stated other- wise.) o make no longer searches for SCCS history "(s.)" files. o Suffix replacement in macro references are now applied after the macro is expanded. There is no guarantee that makefiles created for this ver- sion of make will work with earlier versions. If there is no make.rules file in the current directory, and the file /usr/share/lib/make/make.rules is missing, make stops before processing any targets. To force make to run anyway, create an empty make.rules file in the current directory. Once a dependency is made, make assumes the dependency file is present for the remainder of the run. If a rule subse- quently removes that file and future targets depend on its existence, unexpected errors may result. When hidden dependency checking is in effect, the $? macro's value includes the names of hidden dependencies. This can lead to improper filename arguments to commands when $? is used in a rule. Pattern replacement macro references cannot be used in the dependency list of a pattern matching rule. Unlike previous versions, this version of make strips a leading `./' from the value of the `$@' dynamic macro. With automatic SCCS retrieval, this version of make does not support tilde suffix rules. The only dynamic macro whose value is strictly determined when used in a dependency list is $@ (takes the form `$$@'). make invokes the shell with the -e argument. This cannot be inferred from the syntax of the rule alone.