1 #################################################################################
5 # Standard targets for fptools
7 #################################################################################
10 # This file contain three groups of target rules:
16 # 2. GNU standard targets
18 # install* uninstall installcheck installdirs
19 # clean* distclean* mostlyclean* maintainer-clean*
25 # 3. Some of the above targets have a version that
26 # recursively invokes that target in sub-directories.
27 # This relies on the importing Makefile setting SUBDIRS
29 # The recursive targets are marked with a * above
37 ##################################################################
38 # FPtools standard targets
42 # The depend target has to cope with a set of files that may have
43 # different ways of computing their dependencies, i.e., a Haskell
44 # module's dependencies are computed differently from C files.
46 # Note that we don't compute dependencies automatically, i.e., have the
47 # .depend file be a target that is dependent on the Haskell+C sources,
48 # and then have the `depend' target depend on `.depend'. The reason for
49 # this is that when GNU make is processing the `include .depend' statement
50 # it records .depend as being a Makefile. Before doing any other processing,
51 # `make' will try to check to see if the Makefiles are up-to-date. And,
52 # surprisingly enough, .depend has a rule for it, so if any of the source
53 # files change, it will be invoked, *regardless* of what target you're making.
55 # So, for now, the dependencies has to be re-computed manually via `make depend'
56 # whenever a module changes its set of imports. Doing what was outlined above
57 # is only a small optimisation anyway, it would avoid the recomputation of
58 # dependencies if the .depend file was newer than any of the source modules.
62 # Compiler produced files that are targets of the source's imports.
63 MKDEPENDHS_OBJ_SUFFICES=o
65 # HC_OPTS sometimes contains $*, which will expand to nothing in the depend
66 # rule below. So we replace $* with a dummy value for passing to mkdependHS
69 # This crops up with GhcLibHcOpts which ends in '-split_objs -odir $*'
71 MKDEPENDHS_HC_OPTS = $(patsubst $*,dollar_star,$(HC_OPTS))
73 depend :: $(MKDEPENDHS_SRCS) $(MKDEPENDC_SRCS)
76 ifneq "$(DOC_SRCS)" ""
77 $(MKDEPENDLIT) -o .depend $(MKDEPENDLIT_OPTS) $(filter %.lit,$(DOC_SRCS))
79 ifneq "$(MKDEPENDC_SRCS)" ""
80 $(MKDEPENDC) -f .depend $(MKDEPENDC_OPTS) -- $(CC_OPTS) -- $(MKDEPENDC_SRCS)
82 ifneq "$(MKDEPENDHS_SRCS)" ""
83 $(MKDEPENDHS) -M -optdep-f -optdep.depend $(foreach way,$(WAYS),-optdep-s -optdep$(way)) $(foreach obj,$(MKDEPENDHS_OBJ_SUFFICES),-optdep-o -optdep$(obj)) $(MKDEPENDHS_OPTS) $(MKDEPENDHS_HC_OPTS) $(MKDEPENDHS_SRCS)
86 ##################################################################
89 # The boot target, at a minimum generates dependency information
95 ##################################################################
96 # GNU Standard targets
98 # Every Makefile should define the following targets
101 # Compile the entire program. This should be the default target.
102 # This target need not rebuild any documentation files; Info files
103 # should normally be included in the distribution, and DVI files
104 # should be made only when explicitly asked for.
107 # Compile the program and copy the executables, libraries, and so on
108 # to the file names where they should reside for actual use. If
109 # there is a simple test to verify that a program is properly
110 # installed, this target should run that test.
112 # The commands should create all the directories in which files are
113 # to be installed, if they don't already exist. This includes the
114 # directories specified as the values of the variables prefix and
115 # exec_prefix , as well as all subdirectories that are needed. One
116 # way to do this is by means of an installdirs target as described
119 # Use `-' before any command for installing a man page, so that make
120 # will ignore any errors. This is in case there are systems that
121 # don't have the Unix man page documentation system installed.
123 # The way to install Info files is to copy them into `$(infodir)'
124 # with $(INSTALL_DATA) (see Command Variables), and then run the
125 # install-info program if it is present. install-info is a script
126 # that edits the Info `dir' file to add or update the menu entry for
127 # the given Info file; it will be part of the Texinfo package. Here
128 # is a sample rule to install an Info file:
130 # $(infodir)/foo.info: foo.info # There may be a newer info
131 # file in . than in srcdir.
132 # -if test -f foo.info; then d=.; \
133 # else d=$(srcdir); fi; \ $(INSTALL_DATA)
134 # $$d/foo.info $@; \ # Run install-info only if it
135 # exists. # Use `if' instead of just prepending `-' to the
136 # # line so we notice real errors from install-info. # We
137 # use `$(SHELL) -c' because some shells do not # fail
138 # gracefully when there is an unknown command.
139 # if $(SHELL) -c 'install-info --version' \
140 # >/dev/null 2>&1; then \ install-info
141 # --infodir=$(infodir) $$d/foo.info; \ else true;
145 # Delete all the installed files that the `install' target would
146 # create (but not the noninstalled files such as `make all' would
151 # Delete all files from the current directory that are normally
152 # created by building the program. Don't delete the files that
153 # record the configuration. Also preserve files that could be made
154 # by building, but normally aren't because the distribution comes
157 # Delete `.dvi' files here if they are not part of the
161 # Delete all files from the current directory that are created by
162 # configuring or building the program. If you have unpacked the
163 # source and built the program without creating any other files,
164 # `make distclean' should leave only the files that were in the
168 # Like `clean', but may refrain from deleting a few files that
169 # people normally don't want to recompile. For example, the
170 # `mostlyclean' target for GCC does not delete `libgcc.a', because
171 # recompiling it is rarely necessary and takes a lot of time.
174 # Delete everything from the current directory that can be
175 # reconstructed with this Makefile. This typically includes
176 # everything deleted by distclean , plus more: C source files
177 # produced by Bison, tags tables, Info files, and so on.
179 # One exception, however: `make maintainer-clean' should not delete
180 # `configure' even if `configure' can be remade using a rule in the
181 # Makefile. More generally, `make maintainer-clean' should not delete
182 # anything that needs to exist in order to run `configure' and then
183 # begin to build the program.
186 # Update a tags table for this program.
189 # Generate any Info files needed. The best way to write the rules is
194 # foo.info: foo.texi chap1.texi chap2.texi
195 # $(MAKEINFO) $(srcdir)/foo.texi
197 # You must define the variable MAKEINFO in the Makefile. It should
198 # run the makeinfo program, which is part of the Texinfo
202 # Generate DVI files for all TeXinfo documentation. For example:
206 # foo.dvi: foo.texi chap1.texi chap2.texi
207 # $(TEXI2DVI) $(srcdir)/foo.texi
209 # You must define the variable TEXI2DVI in the Makefile. It should
210 # run the program texi2dvi , which is part of the Texinfo
211 # distribution. Alternatively, write just the dependencies, and
212 # allow GNU Make to provide the command.
214 # ps is a FPtools addition for Postscript files
216 # `dist' `binary-dist'
217 # Create a distribution tar file for this program. The tar file
218 # should be set up so that the file names in the tar file start with
219 # a subdirectory name which is the name of the package it is a
220 # distribution for. This name can include the version number.
222 # For example, the distribution tar file of GCC version 1.40 unpacks
223 # into a subdirectory named `gcc-1.40'.
225 # The easiest way to do this is to create a subdirectory
226 # appropriately named, use ln or cp to install the proper files in
227 # it, and then tar that subdirectory.
229 # The dist target should explicitly depend on all non-source files
230 # that are in the distribution, to make sure they are up to date in
231 # the distribution. See Making Releases.
233 # binary-dist is an FPtools addition for binary distributions
236 # Perform self-tests (if any). The user must build the program
237 # before running the tests, but need not install the program; you
238 # should write the self-tests so that they work when the program is
239 # built but not installed.
241 # The following targets are suggested as conventional names, for programs
242 # in which they are useful.
245 # Perform installation tests (if any). The user must build and
246 # install the program before running the tests. You should not
247 # assume that `$(bindir)' is in the search path.
250 # It's useful to add a target named `installdirs' to create the
251 # directories where files are installed, and their parent
252 # directories. There is a script called `mkinstalldirs' which is
253 # convenient for this; find it in the Texinfo package.
254 # (FPTOOLS: we use a close relative of the suggested script, situated
255 # in glafp-utils/mkdirhier -- SOF)
260 ###########################################
264 ###########################################
266 # For each of these variables that is defined
267 # we generate one "all" rule and one rule for the variable itself:
269 # HS_PROG Haskell program
272 # SCRIPT_PROG Script (e.g. Perl script)
274 # For details of exactly what rule is generated, see the
275 # relevant section below
279 #----------------------------------------
282 ifneq "$(HS_PROG)" ""
285 $(HS_PROG) :: $(HS_OBJS)
286 $(HC) -o $@ $(HC_OPTS) $(LD_OPTS) $(HS_OBJS) $(LIBS)
289 #----------------------------------------
295 $(C_PROG) :: $(C_OBJS)
296 $(CC) -o $@ $(CC_OPTS) $(LD_OPTS) $(C_OBJS) $(LIBS)
300 #----------------------------------------
303 ifneq "$(LIBRARY)" ""
309 $(AR) $(AR_OPTS) $@ $(LIBOBJS)
314 # For Haskell object files, we might have chosen to split
315 # up the object files. Test for whether the library being
316 # built is consisting of Haskell files by (hackily) checking
317 # whether HS_SRCS is empty or not.
320 ifneq "$(HS_SRCS)" ""
321 ifneq "$(filter -split-objs,$(HC_OPTS))" ""
324 TMPDIR=$(TMPDIR); export TMPDIR; find $(patsubst %.$(way_)o,%,$(LIBOBJS)) -name '*.$(way_)o' -print | xargs ar q $@
330 $(LIBRARY) :: $(LIBOBJS)
334 #----------------------------------------
337 ifneq "$(SCRIPT_PROG)" ""
339 # To produce a fully functional script, you may
340 # have to add some configuration variables at the top of
341 # the script, i.e., the compiler driver needs to know
342 # the path to various utils in the build tree for instance.
344 # To have the build rule for the script automatically do this
345 # for you, set the variable SCRIPT_SUBST_VARS to the list of
346 # variables you need to put in.
349 # SCRIPT_SUBST creates a string of echo commands that
350 # will when evaluated append the (perl)variable name and its value
351 # to the target it is used for, i.e.,
355 # SCRIPT_SUBST_VARS = A B
356 # SCRIPT_SUBST=echo "$""A=\"foo\";" >> $@; echo "$""B=\"bar\";" >> $@
358 # so if you have a rule like the following
363 # @eval $(SCRIPT_SUBST)
365 # `make foo' would create a file `foo' containing the following
372 # ToDo: make this work for shell scripts (drop the initial $).
374 ifeq "$(INTERP)" "$(SHELL)"
375 SCRIPT_SUBST=$(foreach val,$(SCRIPT_SUBST_VARS),"echo \"$(val)=\\\"$($(val))\\\";\" >> $@;")
377 SCRIPT_SUBST=$(foreach val,$(SCRIPT_SUBST_VARS),"echo \"$$\"\"$(val)=\\\"$($(val))\\\";\" >> $@;")
380 all :: $(SCRIPT_PROG)
383 # #! support under cygwin32 is not quite there yet,
384 # so we rely on the eval `trick' instead. On all other
385 # platforms, we prepend #!$(INTERP) -- SOF 6/97
388 $(SCRIPT_PROG) :: $(SCRIPT_OBJS)
391 ifeq "$(INTERP)" "perl"
392 ifneq "$(BIN_DIST)" "1"
393 echo "#! "$(PERL) > $@
399 @echo "#!"$(INTERP) > $@
404 ifneq "$(SCRIPT_PREFIX_FILES)" ""
405 @cat $(SCRIPT_PREFIX_FILES) >> $@
407 @eval $(SCRIPT_SUBST)
408 @cat $(SCRIPT_OBJS) >> $@
414 ###########################################
416 # Targets: install install-strip uninstall
418 ###########################################
420 # For each of these variables that is defined, you
421 # get one install rule
423 # INSTALL_PROGS executable programs in $(bindir)
424 # INSTALL_SCRIPTS executable scripts in $(bindir)
425 # INSTALL_LIBS platform-dependent libraries in $(libdir) (ranlib'ed)
426 # INSTALL_LIBEXECS platform-dependent execs in $(libdir)
427 # INSTALL_DATAS platform-independent files in $(datadir)
429 # If the installation directory variable is undefined, the install rule simply
430 # emits a suitable error message.
432 # Remember, too, that the installation directory variables ($(bindir) and
433 # friends can be overridden from their original settings in mk/config.mk.in
436 .PHONY: install installdirs install-strip install-dirs uninstall install-docs show-install
439 @echo "bindir = $(bindir)"
440 @echo "libdir = $(libdir)"
441 @echo "libexecdir = $(libexecdir) # by default, same as libdir"
442 @echo "datadir = $(datadir) # unused for ghc project"
445 # Sometimes useful to separate out the creation of install directories
446 # from the installation itself.
449 @$(INSTALL_DIR) $(bindir)
450 @$(INSTALL_DIR) $(libdir)
451 @$(INSTALL_DIR) $(libexecdir)
452 @$(INSTALL_DIR) $(datadir)
454 # Better do this first...
455 # but we won't for the moment, do it on-demand from
456 # within the various install targets instead.
457 #install:: install-dirs
459 ifneq "$(INSTALL_PROGS)" ""
460 install:: $(INSTALL_PROGS)
461 @$(INSTALL_DIR) $(bindir)
462 for i in $(INSTALL_PROGS); do \
463 $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_BIN_OPTS) $$i$(exeext) $(bindir); \
468 # Just like INSTALL_PROGS, but prefix with install sites bin/lib/data and
469 # install without stripping.
471 ifneq "$(INSTALL_SCRIPTS)" ""
472 install:: $(INSTALL_SCRIPTS)
473 @$(INSTALL_DIR) $(bindir)
474 ifeq "$(INTERP)" "perl"
475 ifneq "$(BIN_DIST)" "1"
476 @for i in $(INSTALL_SCRIPTS); do \
478 echo "#! $(PERL)" > $$i.tmp ; \
479 echo '$$'"bindir='$(bindir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
480 echo '$$'"libdir='$(libdir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
481 echo '$$'"libexecdir='$(libexecdir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
482 echo '$$'"datadir='$(datadir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
483 cat $$i >> $$i.tmp ; \
484 echo $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(filter-out -s,$(INSTALL_OPTS)) $$i.tmp $(bindir)/$$i ; \
485 $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(filter-out -s,$(INSTALL_BIN_OPTS)) $$i.tmp $(bindir)/$$i ; \
489 for i in $(INSTALL_SCRIPTS); do \
490 $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i $(bindir); \
494 for i in $(INSTALL_SCRIPTS); do \
495 $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i $(bindir); \
500 ifneq "$(INSTALL_LIB_SCRIPTS)" ""
501 install:: $(INSTALL_LIB_SCRIPTS)
502 @$(INSTALL_DIR) $(libdir)
503 ifeq "$(INTERP)" "perl"
504 ifneq "$(BIN_DIST)" "1"
505 @for i in $(INSTALL_LIB_SCRIPTS); do \
507 echo "#! $(PERL)" > $$i.tmp ; \
508 echo '$$'"bindir='$(bindir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
509 echo '$$'"libdir='$(libdir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
510 echo '$$'"libexecdir='$(libexecdir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
511 echo '$$'"datadir='$(datadir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
512 cat $$i >> $$i.tmp ; \
513 echo $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i $(libdir) ; \
514 $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i.tmp $(libdir)/$$i ; \
518 for i in $(INSTALL_LIB_SCRIPTS); do \
519 $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i $(libdir); \
523 for i in $(INSTALL_LIB_SCRIPTS); do \
524 $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i $(libdir); \
529 ifneq "$(INSTALL_LIBEXEC_SCRIPTS)" ""
530 install:: $(INSTALL_LIBEXEC_SCRIPTS)
531 @$(INSTALL_DIR) $(libexecdir)
532 ifeq "$(INTERP)" "perl"
533 ifneq "$(BIN_DIST)" "1"
534 @for i in $(INSTALL_LIBEXEC_SCRIPTS); do \
536 echo "#! $(PERL)" > $$i.tmp ; \
537 echo '$$'"bindir='$(bindir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
538 echo '$$'"libdir='$(libdir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
539 echo '$$'"libexecdir='$(libexecdir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
540 echo '$$'"datadir='$(datadir)';" >> $$i.tmp ; \
541 cat $$i >> $$i.tmp ; \
542 echo $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i $(libexecdir) ; \
543 $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i.tmp $(libexecdir)/$$i ; \
547 for i in $(INSTALL_LIBEXEC_SCRIPTS); do \
548 $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i $(libexecdir); \
552 for i in $(INSTALL_LIBEXEC_SCRIPTS); do \
553 $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i $(libexecdir); \
558 ifneq "$(INSTALL_LIBS)" ""
559 install:: $(INSTALL_LIBS)
560 @$(INSTALL_DIR) $(libdir)
561 for i in $(INSTALL_LIBS); do \
564 $(INSTALL_DATA) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i $(libdir); \
565 $(RANLIB) $(libdir)/`basename $$i` ;; \
567 $(INSTALL_DATA) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i $(libdir); \
572 ifneq "$(INSTALL_LIBEXECS)" ""
573 install:: $(INSTALL_LIBEXECS)
574 @$(INSTALL_DIR) $(libexecdir)
575 -for i in $(INSTALL_LIBEXECS); do \
576 $(INSTALL_PROGRAM) $(INSTALL_BIN_OPTS) $$i$(exeext) $(libexecdir); \
580 ifneq "$(INSTALL_DATAS)" ""
581 install:: $(INSTALL_DATAS)
582 @$(INSTALL_DIR) $(datadir)
583 for i in $(INSTALL_DATAS); do \
584 $(INSTALL_DATA) $(INSTALL_OPTS) $$i $(datadir); \
592 ifeq ($(INSTALL_PROGS),)
593 @for i in $(INSTALL_PROGS) ; do \
594 echo rm -f $(bindir)/`basename $$i`; \
595 rm -f $(bindir)/`basename $$i`; \
598 ifeq ($(INSTALL_LIBS),)
599 @for i in $(INSTALL_LIBS); do \
600 echo rm -f $(libdir)/`basename $$i`; \
601 rm -f $(libdir)/`basename $$i`; \
604 ifeq ($(INSTALL_LIBEXECS),)
605 @for i in $(INSTALL_LIBEXECS); do \
606 echo rm -f $(libexecdir)/`basename $$i`; \
607 rm -f $(libexecdir)/`basename $$i`; \
610 ifeq ($(INSTALL_DATAS),)
611 @for i in $(INSTALL_DATAS); do \
612 echo rm -f $(datadir)/`basename $$i`; \
613 rm -f $(datadir)/`basename $$i`; \
618 # install-strip is from the GNU Makefile standard.
622 @$(MAKE) EXTRA_INSTALL_OPTS='-s' install
625 ###########################################
627 # Targets: dist binary-dist
629 ###########################################
633 # dist-pre is a canned rule the toplevel of your source tree
634 # would use as follows,
638 # it performs two tasks, first creating the distribution directory
639 # tree and it then decorates the new tree with symbolic links pointing
640 # to the symbolic links in the build tree.
642 # The dist-pre relies on (at least) the `find' in GNU findutils
643 # (only tested with version 4.1). All non-GNU `find's I have
644 # laid on my hands locally, has a restrictive treatment of {} in
645 # -exec commands, i.e.,
647 # find . -print echo a{} \;
649 # does not expand the {}, it has to be a separate argument (i.e. `a {}').
650 # GNU find is (IMHO) more sensible here, expanding any {} it comes across
651 # inside an -exec, whether it is a separate arg or part of a word:
655 # GNU find version 4.1
656 # $ find yes -exec echo oh,{}! \;
659 # Of course, the above is not impossible to achieve with other finds,
660 # just that GNU find does the Patently Right Thing here :)
662 # ====> if you're using these dist rules, get hold of GNU findutils.
666 .PHONY: dist dist-pre dist-post
669 # The dist rules leaves out CVS, SRC (from mkshadowdir) and tests
670 # directories when creating shadow source distrib tree
673 -rm -rf $(SRC_DIST_DIR)
674 -rm -f $(SRC_DIST_NAME).tar.gz
675 (cd $(FPTOOLS_TOP_ABS); find $(SRC_DIST_DIRS) -type d \( -name CVS -prune -o -name SRC -prune -o -name tests -prune -o -exec $(MKDIRHIER) $(SRC_DIST_DIR)/{} \; \) ; )
676 (cd $(FPTOOLS_TOP_ABS); find $(SRC_DIST_DIRS) -name CVS -prune -o -name SRC -prune -o -name tests -prune -o -name "*~" -prune -o -name ".cvsignore" -prune -o -name "\#*" -prune -o -name ".\#*" -prune -o -type l -exec $(LN_S) $(FPTOOLS_TOP_ABS)/{} $(SRC_DIST_DIR)/{} \; )
679 # After having created a shadow distribution tree and copied/linked
680 # all the necessary files to it, `dist-post' makes sure the permissions
681 # are set right and then package up the tree. Empty directories are also removed.
683 # For now, we make the packaging a separate rule, so as to allow
684 # the inspection of the dist tree before eventually packaging it up.
687 @echo Deleting the following empty directories..
688 ( cd $(SRC_DIST_DIR) ; cd .. ; find $(SRC_DIST_NAME) -type d -exec sh -c 'test x`ls $$0 | wc -l | sed -e "s/ //g"` = x0' {} \; -print -exec rm -rf {} \; -prune )
689 ( cd $(SRC_DIST_DIR) ; cd .. ; chmod -R a+rw $(SRC_DIST_NAME) )
692 cd $(SRC_DIST_DIR); cd ..; $(TAR) chzf $(SRC_DIST_NAME).tar.gz $(SRC_DIST_NAME)
697 # The default dist rule:
699 # copy/link the contents of $(SRC_DIST_FILES) into the
700 # shadow distribution tree. SRC_DIST_FILES contain the
701 # build-generated files that you want to include in
702 # a source distribution.
705 ifneq "$(SRC_DIST_FILES)" ""
707 @for i in $(SRC_DIST_FILES); do \
708 if (test -f "$$i"); then \
709 echo $(LN_S) `pwd`/$$i $(SRC_DIST_DIR)/$$i ; \
710 $(LN_S) `pwd`/$$i $(SRC_DIST_DIR)/$$i ; \
716 # binary-dist creates a binary bundle, set BIN_DIST_NAME
717 # to package name and do `make binary-dist' (normally this
718 # just a thing you would do from the toplevel of fptools or)
719 # from the top of a project.
721 .PHONY: binary-dist-pre binary-dist binary-pack
724 -rm -rf $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)
725 -rm -f $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME).tar.gz
726 @for i in $(BIN_DIST_DIRS); do \
727 if test -d "$$i"; then \
728 echo $(MKDIRHIER) $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/bin/$(TARGETPLATFORM)/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion); \
729 $(MKDIRHIER) $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/bin/$(TARGETPLATFORM)/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion); \
730 echo $(MKDIRHIER) $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/lib/$(TARGETPLATFORM)/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion); \
731 $(MKDIRHIER) $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/lib/$(TARGETPLATFORM)/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion); \
732 echo $(MKDIRHIER) $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/share/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion); \
733 $(MKDIRHIER) $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/share/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion); \
734 echo $(MAKE) -C $$i $(MFLAGS) install BIN_DIST=1 BIN_DIST_NAME=$(BIN_DIST_NAME) \
735 prefix=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME) \
736 exec_prefix=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME) \
737 bindir=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/bin/$(TARGETPLATFORM)/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion) \
738 libdir=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/lib/$(TARGETPLATFORM)/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion) \
739 libexecdir=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/lib/$(TARGETPLATFORM)/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion) \
740 datadir=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/share/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion) ; \
741 $(MAKE) -C $$i $(MFLAGS) install BIN_DIST=1 BIN_DIST_NAME=$(BIN_DIST_NAME) \
742 prefix=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME) \
743 exec_prefix=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME) \
744 bindir=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/bin/$(TARGETPLATFORM)/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion) \
745 libdir=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/lib/$(TARGETPLATFORM)/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion) \
746 libexecdir=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/lib/$(TARGETPLATFORM)/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion) \
747 datadir=$(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/$(BIN_DIST_NAME)/share/$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion) ; \
752 # Do this separately for now
755 ( cd $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR); $(TAR) chzf $(BIN_DIST_NAME).tar.gz $(BIN_DIST_NAME); rm -rf $(BIN_DIST_NAME) )
759 ( cd $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR); find $(BIN_DIST_NAME)/ \( -name "*$(_way).a" -o -name "*.$(way_)hi" \) -print | xargs tar cvf $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/ghc-$(ProjectVersion)-$(way)-$(TARGETPLATFORM).tar )
760 gzip $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR)/ghc-$(ProjectVersion)-$(way)-$(TARGETPLATFORM).tar
765 ( cd $(BIN_DIST_TMPDIR); find $(BIN_DIST_NAME)/ \( -name "*$(_way).a" -o -name "*.$(way_)hi" \) -print -exec rm -f {} \; )
768 ###########################################
770 # Targets: check tags show info
772 ###########################################
774 #------------------------------------------------------------
780 @for i in $(filter-out %.lhs .hs, $(TESTS)) ''; do \
781 if (test -f "$$i"); then \
782 echo Running: `basename $$i` ; \
783 cd test; `basename $$i` ; \
787 #------------------------------------------------------------
795 ifneq "$(HS_SRCS)" ""
796 $(HSTAGS) $(HSTAGS_OPTS) -- $(TAGS_HS_SRCS)
799 etags -a $(TAGS_C_SRCS)
801 @( DEREFFED=`ls -l Makefile | sed -e 's/.*-> \(.*\)/\1/g'` && $(RM) `dirname $$DEREFFED`/TAGS && $(CP) TAGS `dirname $$DEREFFED` ) || echo TAGS file generated, perhaps copy over to source tree?
803 #------------------------------------------------------------
805 # to see the effective value used for a Makefile variable, do
806 # make show VALUE=MY_VALUE
810 @echo '$(VALUE)=$($(VALUE))'
812 #------------------------------------------------------------
815 .PHONY: dvi ps html info txt
825 # Building literate root documents requires extra treatment,
826 # as the root files need to be processed different from other
827 # literate files (`compile' them into .itex with the -S (standalone)
828 # option) and then link together a master TeX document with
831 $(filter %.tex,$(patsubst %.lit,%.tex,$(DOC_SRCS))) :
833 $(LIT2LATEX) -S -c $(LIT2LATEX_OPTS) -o $(patsubst %.tex,%.itex,$@) $(addsuffix .lit,$(basename $@))
834 $(LIT2LATEX) -S $(LIT2LATEX_OPTS) -o $@ $(addsuffix .itex,$(basename $@))
837 # Ditto for texi and html
839 $(filter %.texi,$(patsubst %.lit,%.texi,$(DOC_SRCS))) :
841 $(LIT2TEXI) -S -c $(LIT2TEXI_OPTS) -o $(patsubst %.texi,%.itxi,$@) $(addsuffix .lit,$(basename $@))
842 $(LIT2TEXI) -S $(LIT2TEXI_OPTS) -o $@ $(addsuffix .itxi,$(basename $@))
845 # Rather than using lit2html, we opt for the lit-texi-html route,
846 # and use texi2html as our HTML backend.
847 # (Note: we need to change mkdependlit to get this really off the ground)
849 # If the generated html representation is split up into a myriad of files,
850 # put the files in a subdirectory html/, if a monolith is created, park
851 # the generated file in the same dir as the .lit file.
853 $(filter %.html,$(patsubst %.lit,%.html,$(DOC_SRCS))) : $(filter %.lit,$(DOC_SRCS))
854 $(RM) $@ $(patsubst %.html,%.texi,$@) $(patsubst %.html,%.itxi,$@)
855 ifneq "$(filter -monolithic,$(TEXI2HTML_OPTS))" ""
856 $(LIT2TEXI) -S -c $(LIT2TEXI_OPTS) -o $(patsubst %.html,%.itxi,$@) $(addsuffix .lit,$(basename $@))
857 $(LIT2TEXI) -S $(LIT2TEXI_OPTS) -o $(patsubst %.html,%.texi,$@) $(addsuffix .itxi,$(basename $@))
858 $(TEXI2HTML) $(TEXI2HTML_OPTS) $(patsubst %.html,%.texi,$@)
859 cp $(TEXI2HTML_PREFIX)invisible.xbm .
861 $(RM) html/$(basename $@)*
863 $(LIT2TEXI) -S -c $(LIT2TEXI_OPTS) -o $(patsubst %.html,%.itxi,$@) $(addsuffix .lit,$(basename $@))
864 $(LIT2TEXI) -S $(LIT2TEXI_OPTS) -o html/$(patsubst %.html,%.texi,$@) $(addsuffix .itxi,$(basename $@))
865 (cd html; ../$(TEXI2HTML) $(TEXI2HTML_OPTS) $(patsubst %.html,%.texi,$@); cd ..)
866 cp $(TEXI2HTML_PREFIX)invisible.xbm html/
870 #--------------------------------------------------------------------------
873 # This will eventually replace the literate stuff for documentation
875 SGML_SRCS = $(wildcard *.sgml *.vsgml)
876 SGML_DVI = $(addsuffix .dvi, $(basename $(SGML_SRCS)))
877 SGML_PS = $(addsuffix .ps, $(basename $(SGML_SRCS)))
878 SGML_TEXI = $(addsuffix .texi, $(basename $(SGML_SRCS)))
879 SGML_INFO = $(addsuffix .info, $(basename $(SGML_SRCS)))
880 SGML_HTML = $(addsuffix .html, $(basename $(SGML_SRCS)))
881 SGML_TEXT = $(addsuffix .txt, $(basename $(SGML_SRCS)))
889 CLEAN_FILES += $(SGML_TEXT) $(SGML_HTML) $(SGML_TEXI) $(SGML_PS) $(SGML_DVI)
891 # suffix rules should handle the rest (for single-file docs at least).
893 ###########################################
897 ###########################################
899 .PHONY: realclean mostlyclean clean distclean maintainer-clean
901 # realclean is just a synonym for maintainer-clean
902 realclean: maintainer-clean
905 ifneq "$(MOSTLY_CLEAN_FILES)" ""
907 rm -f $(MOSTLY_CLEAN_FILES)
910 ifneq "$(CLEAN_FILES)" ""
916 ifneq "$(DIST_CLEAN_FILES)" ""
917 distclean:: mostlyclean clean
918 rm -f $(DIST_CLEAN_FILES)
922 ifneq "$(MAINTAINER_CLEAN_FILES)" ""
923 maintainer-clean:: mostlyclean clean distclean
924 @echo 'This command is intended for maintainers to use; it'
925 @echo 'deletes files that may need special tools to rebuild.'
926 rm -f $(MAINTAINER_CLEAN_FILES)
930 # If (Haskell) object files are split, cleaning up
931 # consist of descending into the directories where
932 # the myriads of object files have been put.
935 ifneq "$(HS_OBJS)" ""
936 ifneq "$(filter -split-objs,$(HC_OPTS))" ""
938 find $(patsubst %.$(way_)o,%,$(HS_OBJS)) -name '*.$(way_)o' -print | xargs $(RM) __rm_food
939 -rmdir $(patsubst %.$(way_)o,%,$(HS_OBJS))
944 #################################################################################
948 #################################################################################
950 # Here is the ingenious jiggery pokery that allows you to build multiple versions
951 # of a program in a single build tree.
953 # The ways setup requires the following variables to be set:
955 # Expects: $(WAYS) the possible "way" strings to one of
956 # which $(way) will be set
959 # So how does $(way) ever get set to anything? Answer, we recursively
960 # invoke make, setting $(way) on the command line.
961 # When do we do this recursion? Answer: whenever the programmer
962 # asks make to make a target that involves a way suffix.
963 # We must remember *not* to recurse again; but that's easy: we
964 # just see if $(way) is set:
968 # If $(WAYS) = p mc, then WAY_TARGETS expands to
969 # %.p_lhs %.p_hs %.p_o ... %.mc_lhs %.p_hs ...
970 # and OTHER_WAY_TARGETS to
971 # %_p.a %_p %_mc.a %_mc
972 # where the suffixes are from $(SUFFIXES)
974 # We have to treat libraries and "other" targets differently,
975 # because their names are of the form
976 # libHS_p.a and Foo_p
977 # whereas everything else has names of the form
980 FPTOOLS_SUFFIXES := o hi hc
982 WAY_TARGETS = $(foreach way,$(WAYS),$(foreach suffix, $(FPTOOLS_SUFFIXES), %.$(way)_$(suffix)))
983 LIB_WAY_TARGETS = $(foreach way,$(WAYS),%_$(way).a %_$(way))
985 # $@ will be something like Foo.p_o
986 # $(suffix $@) returns .p_o
987 # $(subst .,.p_o) returns p_o
988 # $(subst _,.,p_o) returns p.o (clever)
989 # $(basename p.o) returns p
992 $(MAKE) way=$(basename $(subst _,.,$(subst .,,$(suffix $@)))) $@
994 # $(@F) will be something like libHS_p.a, or Foo_p
995 # $(basename $(@F)) will be libHS_p, or Foo_p
996 # The sed script extracts the "p" part.
999 $(MAKE) $(MFLAGS) $@ way=$(subst .,,$(suffix $(subst _,.,$(basename $@))))
1004 ##################################################################
1008 ##################################################################
1010 # Here are the diabolically clever rules that
1012 # (a) for each "recursive target" <t>
1013 # propagates "make <t>" to directories in SUBDIRS
1015 # (b) when SUBDIRS is empty,
1016 # for each "multi-way-target" <t>
1017 # calls "make -way=w <t>" for each w in $(WAYS)
1019 # This has the effect of making the standard target
1020 # in each of the specified ways (as well as in the normal way
1022 # Controlling variables
1023 # WAYS = extra (beyond the normal way) ways to build things in
1024 # SUBDIRS = subdirectories to recurse into
1026 # No ways, so iterate over the SUBDIRS
1028 # note about recursively invoking make: we'd like make to drop all the
1029 # way back to the top level if it fails in any of the
1030 # sub(sub-...)directories. This is done by setting the -e flag to the
1031 # shell during the loop, which causes an immediate failure if any of
1032 # the shell commands fail.
1034 # One exception: if the user gave the -i or -k flag to make in the
1035 # first place, we'd like to reverse this behaviour. So we check for
1036 # these flags, and set the -e flag appropriately. NOTE: watch out for
1037 # the --no-print-directory flag which is passed to recursive
1038 # invocations of make.
1041 ifneq "$(SUBDIRS)" ""
1043 all docs runtests boot TAGS clean veryclean maintainer-clean install info ::
1044 @echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"
1045 @echo "===fptools== Recursively making \`$@' in $(SUBDIRS) ..."
1046 @echo "PWD = $(shell pwd)"
1047 @echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"
1048 @case '${MFLAGS}' in *-[ik]*) set +e;; *-r*[ik]*) set +e;; *) set -e;; esac; \
1049 for i in $(SUBDIRS) ; do \
1050 echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"; \
1051 echo "==fptools== $(MAKE) $@ $(MFLAGS);"; \
1052 echo " in $(shell pwd)/$$i"; \
1053 echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"; \
1054 $(MAKE) --no-print-directory -C $$i $(MFLAGS) $@; \
1056 @echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"
1057 @echo "===fptools== Finished making \`$@' in $(SUBDIRS) ..."
1058 @echo "PWD = $(shell pwd)"
1059 @echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"
1062 @case '${MFLAGS}' in *-[ik]*) set +e;; *-r*[ik]*) set +e;; *) set -e;; esac; \
1063 for i in $(SUBDIRS) ; do \
1064 $(MKDIRHIER_PREFIX)mkdirhier $(SRC_DIST_DIR)/$$i; \
1065 $(MAKE) -C $$i $(MFLAGS) $@ SRC_DIST_DIR=$(SRC_DIST_DIR)/$$i; \
1071 # Selectively building subdirectories.
1074 ifneq "$(SUBDIRS)" ""
1076 $(MAKE) -C $@ $(MFLAGS)
1082 # NB: the targets exclude
1084 # since these are way-independent
1085 all docs runtests TAGS clean veryclean maintainer-clean install ::
1086 @echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"
1087 @echo "===fptools== Recursively making \`$@' for ways: $(WAYS) ..."
1088 @echo "PWD = $(shell pwd)"
1089 @echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"
1090 @case '${MFLAGS}' in *-[ik]*) set +e;; *-r*[ik]*) set +e;; *) set -e;; esac; \
1091 for i in $(WAYS) ; do \
1092 echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"; \
1093 echo "==fptools== $(MAKE) way=$$i $@;"; \
1094 echo "PWD = $(shell pwd)"; \
1095 echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"; \
1096 $(MAKE) way=$$i --no-print-directory $(MFLAGS) $@ ; \
1098 @echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"
1099 @echo "===fptools== Finished recursively making \`$@' for ways: $(WAYS) ..."
1100 @echo "PWD = $(shell pwd)"
1101 @echo "------------------------------------------------------------------------"