################################################################################# # # paths.mk # # This file defines Make variables for standard directories # and file lists # ################################################################################# #----------------------------------------------------------------- # # Installation setup # #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # install configuration # # The install standard target is guided by the following four variables # # INSTALL_PROGS (installed in $(bindir)) # INSTALL_LIBS (installed in $(libdir)) # INSTALL_LIBEXECS (installed in $(libexecdir)) # INSTALL_DATAS (installed in $(datadir)) # # see target.mk for more information. # # # Setting user/group ownership for the installed entities # # this stuff about "who" does the installing doesn't have make vars # as it is not intended to be run-time changeable. # ifneq "$(OWNER)" "" INSTALL_OWNER = -o $(OWNER) else INSTALL_OWNER = endif ifneq "$(GROUP)" "" INSTALL_GROUP = -g $(GROUP) else INSTALL_GROUP = endif SRC_INSTALL_OPTS += $(INSTALL_OWNER) $(INSTALL_GROUP) # # Invocations of `install' for the three different classes # of targets: # INSTALL_PROGRAM = $(INSTALL) INSTALL_DATA = $(INSTALL) -m 644 INSTALL_DIR = $(FPTOOLS_TOP)/glafp-utils/mkdirhier/mkdirhier # # The install variables does not have any defaults, # what files to install have to be specified in the Makefiles. # #INSTALL_PROGS += $(HS_PROG) $(C_PROG) #INSTALL_LIBS += $(LIBRARY) #INSTALL_DATAS += $(HS_IFACES) #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Man pages & Documentation # # (AFAIK, not currently used) # #man1dir = $(mandir)/man1 #manext = '.1' #man1ext = '.1' #man2dir = $(mandir)/man2 #man2ext = '.2' #man3dir = $(mandir)/man3 #man3ext = '.3' #man4dir = $(mandir)/man4 #man4ext = '.4' #man5dir = $(mandir)/man5 #man5ext = '.5' #man6dir = $(mandir)/man6 #man6ext = '.6' #man7dir = $(mandir)/man7 #man7ext = '.7' #man8dir = $(mandir)/man8 #man8ext = '.8' ## top of manual page tree to install in ## NB: not necessarily the same place as to look for man pages (?) #INSTALL_MAN_ROOT = $(mandir) ## prefix for man page _sources_ (vs .../cat) #INSTALL_MAN_SRCROOT = $(INSTALL_MAN_ROOT)/man ## man pages for commands #INSTALL_COMMAND_DIR = $(INSTALL_MAN_SRCROOT)$(COMMANSUFFIX) ## man pages for library routines #INSTALL_LIB_MANDIR = $(INSTALL_MAN_SRCROOT)$(LIBMANSUFFIX) ## man pages for system commands #INSTALL_SYS_MANDIR = $(INSTALL_MAN_SRCROOT)$(SYSMANSUFFIX) ## suffix for installing commands'/etcs' man pages #COMMANSUFFIX = 1 #LIBMANSUFFIX = 3 #SYSMANSUFFIX = 8 INSTALL_INFO_DIR = $(infodir) INSTALL_FILE_OPTS = INSTALL_STRIP = INSTALL_BIN_OPTS = \ -m 0755 $(INSTALL_OWNER) $(INSTALL_GROUP) $(INSTALL_FILE_FLAGS) $(INSTALL_STRIP) ################################################################################# # # Standard variable names # ################################################################################# # # The fptools mk setup defines a set of standard names which are used by the standard # targets provided by mk. One example of this is the use of standard names # for specifying what files to compile, their intermediate/object code, and # the name of the final executable. Based on the settings of these variables, the # standard targets will generate/expand rules that automatically compile and # link your program. # # The general rules: # # SRCS - sources, might be prefixed to indicate what type of source # they are. # OBJS - object files (possibly prefixed). # # PROG - name of final executable # # # # BOOT_SRCS: list of machine generated Haskell modules. # HS_SRCS: list of Haskell modules you want to compile. # (also use by depend rule). # HS_OBJS: list of corresponding object files # HS_PROG: program that is ultimately linked. # HS_IFACES: list of interface files generated # (caveat: assuming no funny use of -hisuf and that # file name and module name match) SRCS=$(wildcard *.lhs *.hs *.c *.lc *.prl *.lprl *.lit *.verb) HS_SRCS=$(filter %.lhs %.hs %.hc,$(SRCS)) # # Do not include BOOT_SRCS in the HS_SRCS defn above, # since this will make HS_SRCS always be non-empty, # which breaks rules like `depend'. Price is that # you have to define BOOT_SRCS before including # boilerplate.mk # ifneq "$(BOOT_SRCS)" "" HS_SRCS+=$(BOOT_SRCS) endif HS_OBJS=$(addsuffix .$(way_)o,$(basename $(HS_SRCS))) HS_IFACES=$(addsuffix .$(way_)hi,$(basename $(HS_SRCS))) C_SRCS=$(filter %.lc %.c,$(SRCS)) C_OBJS=$(addsuffix .$(way_)o,$(basename $(C_SRCS))) # SCRIPT_SRCS: list of raw script files (in literate form) # SCRIPT_OBJS: de-litted scripts SCRIPT_SRCS=$(filter %.lprl,$(SRCS)) SCRIPT_OBJS=$(addsuffix .prl,$(basename $(SCRIPT_SRCS))) OBJS=$(HS_OBJS) $(C_OBJS) $(SCRIPT_OBJS) # # Note that as long as you use the standard variables for setting # which C & Haskell programs you want to work on, you don't have # to set any of the clean variables - the default should do the Right # Thing. # #------------------------------------------------------------------ # # make depend defaults # # The default set of files for the dependency generators to work on # is just their source equivalents. # MKDEPENDHS_SRCS=$(HS_SRCS) MKDEPENDC_SRCS=$(C_SRCS) #------------------------------------------------------------------ # Clean file make-variables. # # The following three variables are used to control # what gets removed when doing `make clean' # # MOSTLYCLEAN_FILES object code etc., but not stuff # that is slow to recompile and/or stable # # CLEAN_FILES all files that are created by running make. # # MAINTAINER_CLEAN_FILES also clean out machine-generated files # that may require extra tools to create. # # MOSTLY_CLEAN_FILES += $(HS_OBJS) $(C_OBJS) CLEAN_FILES += $(HS_PROG) $(C_PROG) $(SCRIPT_PROG) $(PROG) $(LIBRARY) \ $(HS_IFACES) \ a.out core MAINTAINER_CLEAN_FILES += .depend $(BOOT_SRCS) # # `Standard' set of files to clean out. # MOSTLY_CLEAN_FILES += \ *.CKP *.ln *.BAK *.bak *.o core a.out errs ,* *.a .emacs_* \ tags TAGS *.ind *.ilg *.idx *.idx-prev *.aux *.aux-prev *.dvi *.log \ *.toc *.lot *.lof *.blg *.info *.itxi *.itex *.ihtml *.cb #------------------------------------------------------------------ # Documentation setup. # # Documentation is not normally produced via the default target, but # selectively through a set of standard targets (e.g, dvi, html, etc., see # target.mk). Here we define the variables (and their default settings), # that control the operation of these standard targets. # # Documentation variables: # # DOC_SRCS = list of documents you want to generate various # forms of documentation from. # DOC_DVI = list of DVI files to generate. # DOC_HTML = list of HTML files to generate # DOC_TEXI = list of TexInfo files to generate # DOC_TEXT = list of simple text files to generate # DOC_SRCS=$(wildcard *.tex *.lit) DOC_DVI =$(addsuffix .dvi,$(basename $(DOC_SRCS))) DOC_PS =$(addsuffix .ps,$(basename $(DOC_SRCS))) DOC_TEXI=$(addsuffix .texi,$(basename $(DOC_SRCS))) DOC_HTML=$(addsuffix .html,$(basename $(DOC_SRCS))) DOC_TEXT=$(addsuffix .txt,$(basename $(DOC_SRCS))) CLEAN_FILES += $(DOC_TEXT) $(DOC_HTML) $(DOC_TEXI) $(DOC_PS) $(DOC_DVI) #------------------------------------------------------------------ # # Distribution setup # # Following variables are used for creating source and binary distributions: # # SRC_DIST_NAME && BIN_DIST_NAME -- the package names # # SRC_DIST_FILES = list of extra files to include from a build tree into a source # distribution # # SRC_DIST_DIR = what the current directory in the source/build tree # maps to in the source distrib. tree being created. # SRC_DIST_NAME=$(ProjectNameShort)-$(ProjectVersion) # # Binary distributions proceeds as follows: # # Fromthe top of a build tree, you do `make binary-dist'. The # canned rule for this (in target.mk) will then do a binary # install to a temporary directory before packaging it all up. # The following variables guide the binary-dist: # # BIN_DIST_TMPDIR= the absolute path to where the temporary directory # structure of a binary distribution should be created. # [Default: toplevel from which you issue `make binary-dist'] # BIN_DIST_NAME= what to call the thing. # # BIN_DIST_DIRS= at the toplevel, list of directories to descend into when # building the distribution tree. # # An extra directory variable that is set during bin-dists is $(bindist_top), giving # the abs. path to the root of the binary installation tree. (useful when punting # stuff like README and ANNOUNCE into a distrib, for instance) # # The layout of a binary distribution is described in the # installation documentation. #