I want to compile a simple example C program (one of many). But I don't want to write out the whole command every time I build it (or spam the up arrow). Unfortunately I am not really good with makefile and I can't find anything.
I want this:
make example.c
to run this:
$(CC) $(C_FLAGS) example.c -o example
How can I do this?
If you have the rule:
example: example.c
$(CC) $(C_FLAGS) example.c -o example
and you type make example, it would invoke the recipe listed. Note that the command line takes example (what you want to build) as opposed to example.c (which is what you want to build it from...)
If on the other hand you want a more generic rule, say, if you typed make xxx, and want it to compile xxx.c to xxx (where xxx can be any string) you could use a pattern rule as such:
% : %.c
$(CC) $(C_FLAGS) $< -o $#
You can further restrict the patterns to only match a specific set of targets using a static pattern rule as so:
TARGS := foo bar example
$(TARGS) : % : %.c
$(CC) $(C_FLAGS) $< -o $#
which is cleaner, but requires you to maintain a list of possible targets.
Related
I'm trying to understand how to handle header file dependencies in Make rules. Let me give you a specific example.
I'm building application called myap using GNU Make. It consists of various *.h and *.c files.
Directory inc/ contains defs.h and util.h header files.
Directory src/ contains main.c, cmd.c and win.c files.
Directory obj/ contains all generated object files.
I have multiple applications that need different build options. So I don't want to rely on any implicit rules and would like to specify my own rules for all object files, etc.
I would like to specify the following rules:
Object files depend on specific *.h and *.c files. If any of them change, all object files must be regenerated. However, even though *.h files are part of the prerequisites list, I don't want to pass them to the compiler. I only want to compile *.c files.
Executable myapp depends on specific *.o files. If any of them change, executable file must be regenerated.
So far, the following Makefile with a static pattern rule seems to work correctly:
myapp_inc := inc/defs.h inc/util.h
myapp_src := src/main.c src/cmd.c src/win.c
myapp_obj := $(patsubst src/%.c,obj/%.o,$(myapp_src))
myapp_bin := obj/myapp
.PHONY: all
all:
# Create obj/main.o obj/cmd.o and obj/win.o from various *.c files
# If any *.h files in $(myapp_inc) list change, all objects are regenerated.
# If any *.c files in $(myapp_src) list change, all objects are regenerated.
$(myapp_obj): obj/%.o: src/%.c $(myapp_inc) $(myapp_src)
gcc -c -o $# $<
# Create obj/myapp from various *.o files
# If any *.o files in $(myapp_obj) list change, executable is regenerated.
$(myapp_bin): $(myapp_obj)
gcc -o $# $^
all: $(myapp_bin)
.PHONY: clean
clean:
rm -f obj/*
I don't quite understand how Make rules should be written correctly in order to handle such use case. Is the above static pattern rule, the only way that works correctly?
Specifically, I have tried the following combinations, as given in various simple examples on the Internet, and they all failed for various reasons.
This rule causes $< to always pass the name of the first prerequisite, which doesn't work with multiple *.c files:
$(myapp_obj): $(myapp_src) $(myapp_inc)
gcc -c -o $# $<
$ make
gcc -c -o obj/main.o src/main.c
gcc -c -o obj/cmd.o src/main.c
gcc -c -o obj/win.o src/main.c
gcc -o obj/myapp obj/main.o obj/cmd.o obj/win.o
/bin/ld: obj/cmd.o: in function `main':
main.c:(.text+0x0): multiple definition of `main'; obj/main.o:main.c:(.text+0x0): first defined here
/bin/ld: obj/win.o: in function `main':
main.c:(.text+0x0): multiple definition of `main'; obj/main.o:main.c:(.text+0x0): first defined here
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
make: *** [Makefile:18: obj/myapp] Error 1
This rule causes $^ to always pass the names of all prerequisites, which fails:
$(myapp_obj): $(myapp_src) $(myapp_inc)
gcc -c -o $# $^
$ make
gcc -c -o obj/main.o src/main.c src/cmd.c src/win.c inc/defs.h inc/util.h
gcc: fatal error: cannot specify ‘-o’ with ‘-c’, ‘-S’ or ‘-E’ with multiple files
compilation terminated.
make: *** [Makefile:13: obj/main.o] Error 1
Now I understand the difference between $< and $^ variables, but a lot of documentation is not clear on how they should be used when dealing with a list of multiple *.c and *.h files as prerequisites.
What are the recommended usage pattern for this?
Why is it that when using $< only *.c files get passed to the recipe, but not *.h files? Is Make doing some internal filtering? Is this documented anywhere? Is it possible to modify this behavior for custom suffixes?
Is the above static pattern rule, the only way to make objects depend on *.h and *.c files, but exclude *.h files during compilation?
I don't understand the goal of trying to avoid implicit rules. But in any event, it doesn't matter to the recipe you write whether the rule was implicit or explicit: the same automatic variables are set either way. The $< automatic variable is always the first prerequisite, so if you write your rules such that the first prerequisite is the appropriate .c file then you can always use $< in your recipe to mean the .c file and no other files. All the following will work:
%.o : %.c $(headers)
gcc -c -o $# $<
foo.o: foo.c $(headers)
gcc -c -o $# $<
foo.o : %.o : %.c $(headers)
gcc -c -o $# $<
%.o : %.c
gcc -c -o $# $<
$(srcs) : $(headers)
and others.
Does this mean that all of the prerequisites apply, but only those that match the pattern get passed to the recipe?
I don't understand the question, really. The value of variables and the expansion of the recipe happens only AFTER make has decided to run the rule and is not really related (except for some special automatic variables like $?). Once make has decided that the target is out of date and the recipe needs to be run, it will assign the appropriate automatic variables, expand the recipe, then pass the recipe to the shell to be run.
The automatic variables are assigned as described in the manual: $# is the target, $< is the first prerequisite, $^ is all the prerequisites, etc.
ETA
You still haven't really explained why you don't want to use static pattern rules. They are a perfectly fine and reasonable way to do things.
If you explain what you don't like about static pattern rules, or what you wish you could do differently, then we can probably suggest alternatives that meet those requirements.
Specifically, I have tried the following combinations, as given in various simple examples on the Internet,
$(myapp_obj): $(myapp_src) $(myapp_inc)
Wherever you found this as a recommended example on the Internet, you should immediately delete from any bookmarks as that site doesn't know anything about make.
We see this paradigm at least once a week on SO. I've never really understand why people think it will work: I guess they think make is much more "magical" than it is. Consider, what does the above expand to? Suppose myapp_obj contained foo.o bar.o biz.o and myapp_src contained foo.c bar.c biz.c and myapp_inc contained foo.h bar.h, then make sees:
foo.o bar.o biz.o: foo.c bar.c biz.c foo.h bar.h
I suppose some people think make will intuit that the ".o" files should somehow match up with the ".c" files and will generate a bunch of rules that make that true. That's not what make does. The above line is exactly identical to writing this:
foo.o: foo.c bar.c biz.c foo.h bar.h
bar.o: foo.c bar.c biz.c foo.h bar.h
biz.o: foo.c bar.c biz.c foo.h bar.h
That is, if you have multiple targets make creates one copy of the rule for each target, with the same prerequisites and recipe.
This is obviously not what you want, and that's why none of the examples that try to do things this way can ever work properly.
Why is it that when using $< only *.c files get passed to the recipe, but not *.h files? Is Make doing some internal filtering? Is this documented anywhere? Is it possible to modify this behavior for custom suffixes?
None of that is the case. As I described above, the $< expands to the first prerequisite. That's all. It doesn't matter whether the first prerequisite is a .c file, a .h file, or some other file; whatever it is, $< will be that value. If you write your rule as:
foo.o : foo.c foo.h ; $(CC) -c -o $# $<
then your compiler will be invoked with foo.c. If you write your rule as:
foo.o : foo.h foo.c ; $(CC) -c -o $# $<
then your compiler will be invoked with foo.h. There's no magic here.
CC=g++
CFLAGS=-c -Wall
LDFLAGS=
SOURCES=main.cpp hello.cpp factorial.cpp
OBJECTS=$(SOURCES:.cpp=.o)
EXECUTABLE=hello
all: $(SOURCES) $(EXECUTABLE)
$(EXECUTABLE): $(OBJECTS)
$(CC) $(LDFLAGS) $(OBJECTS) -o $#
.cpp.o:
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $< -o $#
What do the $# and $< do exactly?
$# is the name of the target being generated, and $< the first prerequisite (usually a source file). You can find a list of all these special variables in the GNU Make manual.
For example, consider the following declaration:
all: library.cpp main.cpp
In this case:
$# evaluates to all
$< evaluates to library.cpp
$^ evaluates to library.cpp main.cpp
From Managing Projects with GNU Make, 3rd Edition, p. 16 (it's under GNU Free Documentation License):
Automatic variables are set by make after a rule is matched. They
provide access to elements from the target and prerequisite lists so
you don’t have to explicitly specify any filenames. They are very
useful for avoiding code duplication, but are critical when defining
more general pattern rules.
There are seven “core” automatic variables:
$#: The filename representing the target.
$%: The filename element of an archive member specification.
$<: The filename of the first prerequisite.
$?: The names of all prerequisites that are newer than the target,
separated by spaces.
$^: The filenames of all the prerequisites, separated by spaces. This
list has duplicate filenames removed since for most uses, such as
compiling, copying, etc., duplicates are not wanted.
$+: Similar to $^, this is the names of all the prerequisites separated
by spaces, except that $+ includes duplicates. This variable was
created for specific situations such as arguments to linkers where
duplicate values have meaning.
$*: The stem of the target filename. A stem is typically a filename
without its suffix. Its use outside of pattern rules is
discouraged.
In addition, each of the above variables has two variants for
compatibility with other makes. One variant returns only the directory
portion of the value. This is indicated by appending a “D” to the
symbol, $(#D), $(<D), etc. The other variant returns only the file
portion of the value. This is indicated by appending an “F” to the
symbol, $(#F), $(<F), etc. Note that these variant names are more than
one character long and so must be enclosed in parentheses. GNU make
provides a more readable alternative with the dir and notdir
functions.
The $# and $< are called automatic variables. The variable $# represents the name of the target and $< represents the first prerequisite required to create the output file.
For example:
hello.o: hello.c hello.h
gcc -c $< -o $#
Here, hello.o is the output file. This is what $# expands to. The first dependency is hello.c. That's what $< expands to.
The -c flag generates the .o file; see man gcc for a more detailed explanation. The -o specifies the output file to create.
For further details, you can read this article on linoxide about Linux Makefiles.
Also, you can check the GNU make manuals. It will make it easier to make Makefiles and to debug them.
If you run this command, it will output the makefile database:
make -p
The $# and $< are special macros.
Where:
$# is the file name of the target.
$< is the name of the first dependency.
The Makefile builds the hello executable if any one of main.cpp, hello.cpp, factorial.cpp changed. The smallest possible Makefile to achieve that specification could have been:
hello: main.cpp hello.cpp factorial.cpp
g++ -o hello main.cpp hello.cpp factorial.cpp
pro: very easy to read
con: maintenance nightmare, duplication of the C++ dependencies
con: efficiency problem, we recompile all C++ even if only one was changed
To improve on the above, we only compile those C++ files that were edited. Then, we just link the resultant object files together.
OBJECTS=main.o hello.o factorial.o
hello: $(OBJECTS)
g++ -o hello $(OBJECTS)
main.o: main.cpp
g++ -c main.cpp
hello.o: hello.cpp
g++ -c hello.cpp
factorial.o: factorial.cpp
g++ -c factorial.cpp
pro: fixes efficiency issue
con: new maintenance nightmare, potential typo on object files rules
To improve on this, we can replace all object file rules with a single .cpp.o rule:
OBJECTS=main.o hello.o factorial.o
hello: $(OBJECTS)
g++ -o hello $(OBJECTS)
.cpp.o:
g++ -c $< -o $#
pro: back to having a short makefile, somewhat easy to read
Here the .cpp.o rule defines how to build anyfile.o from anyfile.cpp.
$< matches to first dependency, in this case, anyfile.cpp
$# matches the target, in this case, anyfile.o.
The other changes present in the Makefile are:
Making it easier to changes compilers from g++ to any C++ compiler.
Making it easier to change the compiler options.
Making it easier to change the linker options.
Making it easier to change the C++ source files and output.
Added a default rule 'all' which acts as a quick check to ensure all your source files are present before an attempt to build your application is made.
in exemple if you want to compile sources but have objects in an different directory :
You need to do :
gcc -c -o <obj/1.o> <srcs/1.c> <obj/2.o> <srcs/2.c> ...
but with most of macros the result will be all objects followed by all sources, like :
gcc -c -o <all OBJ path> <all SRC path>
so this will not compile anything ^^ and you will not be able to put your objects files in a different dir :(
the solution is to use these special macros
$# $<
this will generate a .o file (obj/file.o) for each .c file in SRC (src/file.c)
$(OBJ):$(SRC)
gcc -c -o $# $< $(HEADERS) $(FLAGS)
it means :
$# = $(OBJ)
$< = $(SRC)
but lines by lines INSTEAD of all lines of OBJ followed by all lines of SRC
I have a certain problem with my Makefile.
With this command, I can compile all my *.c files to *.o which works well:
$(OBJ) : %.o : %.c $(LDSCRIPT) Makefile
$(CC) $(ARM9_INCLUDES) -c $(CFLAGS) $< -o $#
But now I'm wondering, what if I want to run -O3 optimization on just ONE particular file, and have -O0 on the rest?
Is there any command to add a different rule for a specific file?
What I'm doing right now is compiling each C file with its own rules, which is very annoying because I have around 30 files which makes the Makefile huge, and every time I change something in one file it compiles EVERYTHING again.
particular_file.o : CFLAGS+=-O3
(assuming GNU make) see target-specific variable values in GNU Make manual
(and the immediately following pattern-specific variable values, maybe).
Also note, that commands are used from the most specific rule for given file, so you can have in case target-specific variable value is not sufficient:
particular_file.o : particular_file.c
completely_special_compiler -o $# $<
%.o : %.c
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $# $<
It's possible to make the solution a bit more extensible.
Suppose you need to compile one set of files in one way and the other set of files in another way, rather than having only one exception, and you could identify patterns in those two sets of files, e.g. one set starts with "a", and the other set starts with "b", you can do something like this:
a%.o : a%.c
completely_special_compiler -o $# $<
b%.o : b%.c
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o $# $<
For more explanation, see Static Patterns.
I am trying to 'fire' off the compilation by making all dependencies in a list of items, which are themselves targets.
From the answer (last, posted by Carl..) given in seems to suggest that something like this is possible.
Wildcard targets in a Makefile
all: $(OBJECTS)
OBJECTS = foo.o bar.o
bar.o: bar.c
#echo make $#
foo.o: foo.c
#echo make $#
.PHONY: all
My question is, when I run make I get the following, I cannot seem to get it to compile.
make: Nothing to be done for `all'.
Reverse the order of the first two lines, like so:
OBJECTS = foo.o bar.o
all: $(OBJECTS)
In your example, when Make gets to the all rule, OBJECTS has not yet been defined, so it resolves to this:
all:
Make sees a rule with no commands and no prerequisites-- nothing to be done.
You can do something like
%.o: %.c
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $< -o $#
This means:
To make a .o file, we need a .c file with the same name ( represented by %). The command to make the .o file is the name of the C compiler $(CC), followed by any compiler flags $(CFLAGS), then -c, etc. $< is the name of the first prerequisite ($^ is the names of all prerequisites, if you want that), and $# is the name of the target.
CC=g++
CFLAGS=-c -Wall
LDFLAGS=
SOURCES=main.cpp hello.cpp factorial.cpp
OBJECTS=$(SOURCES:.cpp=.o)
EXECUTABLE=hello
all: $(SOURCES) $(EXECUTABLE)
$(EXECUTABLE): $(OBJECTS)
$(CC) $(LDFLAGS) $(OBJECTS) -o $#
.cpp.o:
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $< -o $#
What do the $# and $< do exactly?
$# is the name of the target being generated, and $< the first prerequisite (usually a source file). You can find a list of all these special variables in the GNU Make manual.
For example, consider the following declaration:
all: library.cpp main.cpp
In this case:
$# evaluates to all
$< evaluates to library.cpp
$^ evaluates to library.cpp main.cpp
From Managing Projects with GNU Make, 3rd Edition, p. 16 (it's under GNU Free Documentation License):
Automatic variables are set by make after a rule is matched. They
provide access to elements from the target and prerequisite lists so
you don’t have to explicitly specify any filenames. They are very
useful for avoiding code duplication, but are critical when defining
more general pattern rules.
There are seven “core” automatic variables:
$#: The filename representing the target.
$%: The filename element of an archive member specification.
$<: The filename of the first prerequisite.
$?: The names of all prerequisites that are newer than the target,
separated by spaces.
$^: The filenames of all the prerequisites, separated by spaces. This
list has duplicate filenames removed since for most uses, such as
compiling, copying, etc., duplicates are not wanted.
$+: Similar to $^, this is the names of all the prerequisites separated
by spaces, except that $+ includes duplicates. This variable was
created for specific situations such as arguments to linkers where
duplicate values have meaning.
$*: The stem of the target filename. A stem is typically a filename
without its suffix. Its use outside of pattern rules is
discouraged.
In addition, each of the above variables has two variants for
compatibility with other makes. One variant returns only the directory
portion of the value. This is indicated by appending a “D” to the
symbol, $(#D), $(<D), etc. The other variant returns only the file
portion of the value. This is indicated by appending an “F” to the
symbol, $(#F), $(<F), etc. Note that these variant names are more than
one character long and so must be enclosed in parentheses. GNU make
provides a more readable alternative with the dir and notdir
functions.
The $# and $< are called automatic variables. The variable $# represents the name of the target and $< represents the first prerequisite required to create the output file.
For example:
hello.o: hello.c hello.h
gcc -c $< -o $#
Here, hello.o is the output file. This is what $# expands to. The first dependency is hello.c. That's what $< expands to.
The -c flag generates the .o file; see man gcc for a more detailed explanation. The -o specifies the output file to create.
For further details, you can read this article on linoxide about Linux Makefiles.
Also, you can check the GNU make manuals. It will make it easier to make Makefiles and to debug them.
If you run this command, it will output the makefile database:
make -p
The $# and $< are special macros.
Where:
$# is the file name of the target.
$< is the name of the first dependency.
The Makefile builds the hello executable if any one of main.cpp, hello.cpp, factorial.cpp changed. The smallest possible Makefile to achieve that specification could have been:
hello: main.cpp hello.cpp factorial.cpp
g++ -o hello main.cpp hello.cpp factorial.cpp
pro: very easy to read
con: maintenance nightmare, duplication of the C++ dependencies
con: efficiency problem, we recompile all C++ even if only one was changed
To improve on the above, we only compile those C++ files that were edited. Then, we just link the resultant object files together.
OBJECTS=main.o hello.o factorial.o
hello: $(OBJECTS)
g++ -o hello $(OBJECTS)
main.o: main.cpp
g++ -c main.cpp
hello.o: hello.cpp
g++ -c hello.cpp
factorial.o: factorial.cpp
g++ -c factorial.cpp
pro: fixes efficiency issue
con: new maintenance nightmare, potential typo on object files rules
To improve on this, we can replace all object file rules with a single .cpp.o rule:
OBJECTS=main.o hello.o factorial.o
hello: $(OBJECTS)
g++ -o hello $(OBJECTS)
.cpp.o:
g++ -c $< -o $#
pro: back to having a short makefile, somewhat easy to read
Here the .cpp.o rule defines how to build anyfile.o from anyfile.cpp.
$< matches to first dependency, in this case, anyfile.cpp
$# matches the target, in this case, anyfile.o.
The other changes present in the Makefile are:
Making it easier to changes compilers from g++ to any C++ compiler.
Making it easier to change the compiler options.
Making it easier to change the linker options.
Making it easier to change the C++ source files and output.
Added a default rule 'all' which acts as a quick check to ensure all your source files are present before an attempt to build your application is made.
in exemple if you want to compile sources but have objects in an different directory :
You need to do :
gcc -c -o <obj/1.o> <srcs/1.c> <obj/2.o> <srcs/2.c> ...
but with most of macros the result will be all objects followed by all sources, like :
gcc -c -o <all OBJ path> <all SRC path>
so this will not compile anything ^^ and you will not be able to put your objects files in a different dir :(
the solution is to use these special macros
$# $<
this will generate a .o file (obj/file.o) for each .c file in SRC (src/file.c)
$(OBJ):$(SRC)
gcc -c -o $# $< $(HEADERS) $(FLAGS)
it means :
$# = $(OBJ)
$< = $(SRC)
but lines by lines INSTEAD of all lines of OBJ followed by all lines of SRC