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- The Make System
- ~~~ ~~~~ ~~~~~~
- To compile this program you require GNU Make. In fact you probably need
- GNU Make 3.76.1 or newer. The makefiles contained make use of many
- GNU Make specific features and will not run on other makes.
- The make system has a number of interesting properties that are not found
- in other systems such as automake or the GNU makefile standards. In
- general some semblance of expectedness is kept so as not to be too
- surprising. Basically the following will work as expected:
- ./configure
- make
- or
- cd build
- ../configure
- make
- There are a number of other things that are possible that may make software
- development and software packaging simpler. The first of these is the
- environment.mak file. When configure is run it creates an environment.mak
- file in the build directory. This contains -all- configurable parameters
- for all of the make files in all of the subdirectories. Changing one
- of these parameters will have an immediate effect. The use of makefile.in
- and configure substitutions across build makefiles is not used at all.
- Furthermore, the make system runs with a current directory equal to the
- source directory regardless of the destination directory. This means
- #include "" and #include <> work as expected and more importantly
- running 'make' in the source directory will work as expected. The
- environment variable or make parameter 'BUILD' sets the build directory.
- It may be an absolute path or a path relative to the top level directory.
- By default build-arch/ then build/ will be used with a fall back to ./ This
- means you can get all the advantages of a build directory without having to
- cd into it to edit your source code!
- The make system also performs dependency generation on the fly as the
- compiler runs. This is extremely fast and accurate. There is however
- one failure condition that occurs when a header file is erased. In
- this case you should run make clean to purge the .o and .d files to
- rebuild.
- The final significant deviation from normal make practices is
- in how the build directory is managed. It is not nearly a mirror of
- the source directory but is logically divided in the following manner
- bin/
- methods/
- doc/
- examples/
- include/
- apt-pkg/
- obj/
- apt-pkg/
- cmdline/
- [...]
- Only .o and .d files are placed in the obj/ subdirectory. The final compiled
- binaries are placed in bin, published headers for inter-component linking
- are placed in include/ and documentation is generated into doc/. This means
- all runnable programs are within the bin/ directory, a huge benefit for
- debugging inter-program relationships. The .so files are also placed in
- bin/ for simplicity.
- By default make is put into silent mode. During operation there should be
- no shell or compiler messages only status messages from the makefiles,
- if any pop up that indicates there may be a problem with your environment.
- For debugging you can disable this by setting NOISY=1, ala
- make NOISY=1
- Using the makefiles
- ~~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~
- The makefiles for the components are really simple. The complexity is hidden
- within the buildlib/ directory. Each makefile defines a set of make variables
- for the bit it is going to make then includes a makefile fragment from
- the buildlib/. This fragment generates the necessary rules based on the
- originally defined variables. This process can be repeated as many times as
- necessary for as many programs or libraries as are in the directory.
- Many of the make fragments have some useful properties involving sub
- directories and other interesting features. They are more completely
- described in the fragment code in buildlib. Some tips on writing fragments
- are included in buildlib/defaults.mak
- The fragments are NEVER processed by configure, so if you make changes to
- them they will have an immediate effect.
- Autoconf
- ~~~~~~~~
- Straight out of CVS you have to initialize autoconf. This requires
- automake (I really don't know why) and autoconf and requires doing
- aclocal -I buildlib
- autoconf
- [Alternatively you can run make startup in the top level build dir]
- Autoconf is configured to do some basic system probes for optional and
- required functionality and generate an environment.mak and include/config.h
- from it's findings. It will then write a 'makefile' and run make dirs to
- create the output directory tree.
- It is not my belief that autoconf should be used to generate substantial
- source code markup to escape OS problems. If an OS problem does crop up
- it can likely be corrected by installing the correct files into the
- build include/ dir and perhaps writing some replacement code and
- linking it in. To the fullest extent possible the source code should conform
- to standards and not cater to broken systems.
- Autoconf will also write a makefile into the top level of the build dir,
- this simply acts as a wrapper to the main top level make in the source tree.
- There is one big warning, you can't use both this make file and the
- ones in the top level tree. Make is not able to resolve rules that
- go to the same file through different paths and this will confuse the
- depends mechanism. I recommend always using the makefiles in the
- source directory and exporting BUILD.
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