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make
Here is a summary of the features of GNU make
, for comparison
with and credit to other versions of make
. We consider the
features of make
in 4.2 BSD systems as a baseline. If you are
concerned with writing portable makefiles, you should use only the
features of make
not listed here or in section Incompatibilities and Missing Features.
Many features come from the version of make
in System V.
VPATH
variable and its special meaning.
See section Searching Directories for Dependencies.
This feature exists in System V make
, but is undocumented.
It is documented in 4.3 BSD make
(which says it mimics System V's
VPATH
feature).
MAKEFLAGS
to recursive
invocations of make
.
See section Communicating Options to a Sub-make
.
$%
is set to the member name
in an archive reference. See section Automatic Variables.
$@
, $*
, $<
, $%
,
and $?
have corresponding forms like $(@F)
and
$(@D)
. We have generalized this to $^
as an obvious
extension. See section Automatic Variables.
make
, these options actually do something.
make
via the variable
MAKE
even if `-n', `-q' or `-t' is specified.
See section Recursive Use of make
.
make
, because the
general feature of rule chaining (see section Chains of Implicit Rules) allows one pattern rule for installing members in an
archive (see section Implicit Rule for Archive Member Targets) to be sufficient.
The following features were inspired by various other versions of
make
. In some cases it is unclear exactly which versions inspired
which others.
make
.
We're not sure who invented it first, but it's been spread around a bit.
See section Defining and Redefining Pattern Rules.
make
for AT&T Eighth Edition Research Unix, and later by Andrew Hume of
AT&T Bell Labs in his mk
program (where he terms it
"transitive closure"). We do not really know if
we got this from either of them or thought it up ourselves at the
same time. See section Chains of Implicit Rules.
$^
containing a list of all dependencies
of the current target. We did not invent this, but we have no idea who
did. See section Automatic Variables. The automatic variable
$+
is a simple extension of $^
.
make
) was (as far as we know)
invented by Andrew Hume in mk
.
See section Instead of Executing the Commands.
make
and similar programs, though not in the
System V or BSD implementations. See section Command Execution.
make
by the
patsubst
function before the alternate syntax was implemented
for compatibility with SunOS 4. It is not altogether clear who
inspired whom, since GNU make
had patsubst
before SunOS
4 was released.
make
. See section Appending More Text to Variables.
make
.
See section Archive Members as Targets.
-include
directive to include makefiles with no error for a
nonexistent file comes from SunOS 4 make
. (But note that SunOS 4
make
does not allow multiple makefiles to be specified in one
-include
directive.) The same feature appears with the name
sinclude
in SGI make
and perhaps others.
The remaining features are inventions new in GNU make
:
make
.
MAKE
to recursive make
invocations.
See section Recursive Use of make
.
define
.
See section Defining Variables Verbatim.
.PHONY
.
Andrew Hume of AT&T Bell Labs implemented a similar feature with a
different syntax in his mk
program. This seems to be a case of
parallel discovery. See section Phony Targets.
make
; it seems a natural extension derived from the features
of the C preprocessor and similar macro languages and is not a
revolutionary concept. See section Conditional Parts of Makefiles.
MAKEFILES
.
make
, they must begin with
`.' and not contain any `/' characters.
make
recursion using the
variable MAKELEVEL
. See section Recursive Use of make
.
MAKECMDGOALS
. See section Arguments to Specify the Goals.
vpath
search.
See section Searching Directories for Dependencies.
make
has a very, very limited form of this
functionality in that it will check out SCCS files for makefiles.
make
.
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