make/Makefile: CLI option to "disable" a dependency from a target - makefile

I'm exploring a feature of some software that's used in a very mature Makefile to see if that feature can be incorporated into the flow. There is a target like the following:
my_target: dependency_1 dependency_2
echo foo
touch bar
# etc...
In regular use, dependency_2 would always be called before my_target's commands were executed. But for my exploration purposes, I want to selectively call dependency_2 from its own make command. And then make my_target after, possibly several times, without re-doing dependency_2 each time.
For the time being I just copy/pasted my_target into my_target_2 and removed the dependency from my_target_2 (easy enough), but I'm wondering if there's a command-line option to disable a target's dependency without modifying the file.
EDIT: dependency_2 is a PHONY target

But for my exploration purposes, I want to selectively call dependency_2 from its own make command
This is done as easy as make dependency_2
And then make my_target after, possibly several times, without re-doing dependency_2 each time
Normally, dependency_2 should be a file on the disk, so make would skip rebuilding it until its own prerequisites (source files) are changed.
But if dependency_2 is a .PHONY target ("fake file"), it will be rebuilt on each run. In this case you still can fool it like this:
echo "dependency_2:;#:" | make -f Makefile -f -
However, make will issue a warning about overriding a recipe for dependency_2.

There's no way to do this without editing the makefile, that I can think of.
You can put dependency_2 into a variable then use the variable in the prerequisite list of my_target:
dependency_2 = dependency_2
my_target : dependency_1 $(dependency_2)
then when you don't want to rebuild it, run make dependency_2= to reset the variable to empty.

Related

How to trigger the rebuild of a Makefile prerequisite file ONLY when a specific target is called?

I haven't found an answer so far, so I think this is not a repeat question.
I have some Makefile along the lines of:
include prerequisite_2
all: prerequisite_1 prerequisite_2
clean:
rm *.mod
prerequisite_1:
mkdir somedir
prerequisite_2:
re-write existing file
The issue is that I want the prerequisite_2 to rebuild whenever the default goal is called (all) or when prerequisite_2 is called from the command line, and I know I can use touch prerequisite_2, FORCE or .PHONY to achieve this. However, I DO NOT want it to run every time (the written file contains dependency information for the Fortran files involved) as it doesn't make sense to also rebuild this when calling: make clean
Is it possible to emulate the effects of FORCE or .PHONY only when the depending targets are called?
You can see what the goal targets are by looking at the MAKECMDGOALS variable.
So you can do something like:
ifeq (,$(if $(MAKECMDGOALS),$(filter-out all prerequisite-2,$(MAKECMDGOALS))))
include prerequisite-2
endif
The if condition will be true if MAKECMDGOALS is the empty string, or if it contains only all and/or prerequisite-2 but not if it contains any other target.
Usually, this is not what you want though. Usually you want to disable the include only if certain targets (clean is the classic example) are used.
This exact situation is even discussed in the GNU make manual.

Makefile rule only works if file exists before make is invoked

Consider the following (MCVE of a) Makefile:
my_target: prepare test.bin
prepare:
echo >test.dat
%.bin: %.dat
cp $? $#
If you run make in a clean directory, it fails:
echo >test.dat
make: *** No rule to make target 'test.bin', needed by 'my_target'. Stop.
Run it again and it succeeds:
echo >test.dat
cp test.dat test.bin
What seems to happen is that the rule to make *.bin from *.dat only recognises that it knows how to make test.bin if test.dat exists before anything is executed, even though according to the output it has already created test.dat before it tries to create test.bin.
This is inconvenient for me as I have to prepare a few files first (import them from a different, earlier part of the build).
Is there a solution? Perhaps some way to allow the rules to be (re)evaluated in the light of the files which are now present?
There are a number of issues with your makefile. However based on your comments I'm inclined to assume that the MCVE here is just a little too "M" and it's been reduced so much that it has a number of basic problems. So I won't discuss them, unless you want me to.
The issue here is that you're creating important files without indicating to make that that's what you're doing. Make keeps internally a cache of the contents of directories that it's worked with, for performance reasons, and that cache is only updated when make invokes a rule that it understands will modify it.
Here your target is prepare but the recipe actually creates a completely different file, test.dat. So, make doesn't modify its internal cache of the directory contents and when it checks the cache to see if the file test.dat exists, it doesn't.
You need to be sure that your makefile is written such that it doesn't trick make: if a recipe creates a file foo then the target name should be foo, not bar.
This happens for wildcard targets, like %.bin. They get evaluated at the first pass. You could add an explicit target of test.bin. Or, follow the advice of tkausl and have test.dat depend on prepare (a phony target). In this case, you don't need the double dependency anymore:
my_target: test.bin
you have to write
test.dat: prepare
or (when when you want to stay with wildcards)
%.dat: prepare
#:
Usually, you might want to create and use .stamp files instead of a prepare target.

make variables that depend on a target

I have a Variable in make that is dependant on a file that must be built before the variable can be set, is there a way to get this to work?
parsable_file: dependancies
commands to make parsable_file
targets=$(shell parse_cmd parsable_file)
$(targets): parsable_file
command to make targets
.phony: all
all:$(targets)
If I run $ make parsable_file && make all this will work (I get an error that parse_cmd cant find parsable_file but it works), but just make all will not work. Is there a Make idiom for this?
Set the variable in a file that you include in the main makefile and include a rule in the main makefile for how to build it (the one you already have should be fine).
I believe that will do what you want.
See Including Other Makefiles and How Makefiles Are Remade (which is linked from the first section) for more details on this concept.
Also, unless parseable_file has a usage independent from that parse_cmd call, it should be possible to do the creation and the parsing at the same time and just have the resulting makefile contain the correct value for $(targets) in one step.

Makefile: how to find out dependencies are no longer used in other rules

I have a somewhat complicated Makefile which runs perl scripts and other tools and generates some 1000 files. I would like to edit/modify some of those generated files after all files are generated. So I thought I can simply add a new rule to do so like this:
(phony new rule): $LIST_OF_FILES_TO_EDIT
file_modifier ...
however, the point here is some of those generated files which I'd like to edit ($LIST_OF_FILES_TO_EDIT) are used in the same make process to generate a long list of files. So I have to wait to make sure those files are no longer needed in the make process before I can go ahead and edit them. But I don't know how to do that. Not to mention that it is really hard to find out what files are generated by the help of $LIST_OF_FILES_TO_EDIT.
If it was possible to mention in the Makefile that this rule should be only run as the last rule, then my problem would be solved. but as far as I know this is not possible. So anyone has an idea?
Some points:
List of files to edit ($LIST_OF_FILES_TO_EDIT) is determined dynamically (not known before make process)
I am not sure I have picked a good title for this question. :)
1) If you're going to modify the files like that, it might behoove you to give the targets different names, like foo_unmodified and foo_modified, so that the Make's dependency handling will take care of this.
2) If your phony new rule is the one you invoke on the command line ("make phonyNewRule"), then Make will build whatever else it's going to build before executing the file_modifier command. If you want to build targets not on that list, you could do it this way:
(phony new rule): $(LIST_OF_FILES_TO_EDIT) $(OTHER_TARGETS)
file_modifier ...
3) If your dependencies are set up correctly, you can find out which targets depend on $(LIST_OF_FILES_TO_EDIT), but it's not very tidy. You could just touch one of the files, run make, see which targets it built, repeat for all files. You could save a little time by using Make arguments: "make -n -W foo1 -W foo2 -W foo3 ... -W foo99 all". This will print the commands Make would run-- I don't know of any way to get it to tell you which targets it would rebuild.

Makefile: need to do a target before including another makefile

Part of my Makefile:
CPUDEPS=./mydeps.cpu
(...)
deps: $(CPUDEPS)
$(CPUDEPS): $(CCFILES)
#echo [DEPS] CPU
$(CMDECHO)makedepend -Y -s'# CPU sources dependencies generated with "make deps"' \
-w4096 -f- -- $(CFLAGS) -- $^ 2> /dev/null > $(CPUDEPS)
(...)
sinclude $(CPUDEPS)
Problem 1: includes are done during the first phase of processing, targets during the second phase; so, if ./mydeps.cpu doesn't exist and I "make deps", I get first the error
Makefile:335: ./mydeps.cpu: No such file or directory
I hide the error using sinclude instead of include, but the problem is still there: the old file is included, not the just-generated-one. Have to run it twice to include the updated file. This is because make does a two-phase processing; is there any way to tell make to complete the target deps before parsing the includes?
Problem 2: even if the file ./mydeps.cpu doesn't exist and make deps actually creates it, I always get a "make: Nothing to do for deps". This doesn't happen with other targets. I don't understand why and how to avoid it.
Problem 1 is non-existant: before building a target, make automatically rebuilds makefiles (with implicit rules if no explicit rule is provided). So having a rule for the makefile ensures that will always be up to date, there is no need to run deps twice. Additionally, since CPUDEPS is a makefile, it will be updated automatically before any other rule is run, so dependencies will always be updated if necessary and make deps is not needed. You can probably notice this by yourself by observing the [DEPS] line being echoed if any of the CCFILES becomes more recent that the dependency file.
For Problem 2, adding anything to the recipe ensures that make doesn't complain about having nothing to do. If there is nothing else, you can use something like #echo OK to give feedback to the user, or a simple #true if you prefer totally silent makes.
What you are trying to achieve is useless: you can use the dependencies file that was created during the previous build. That's enough.
The main reasoning behind that rule is:
if you haven't changed any of your files, then the dependencies file is up-to-date, and there's nothing to build.
if you have changed anything, even very deep into your #include chain, on an existing file that were used by previous build, then the dependencies file have already caught it. You'll rebuild what is needed.
if you change something in a new file (you add that file!) then it was not used by previous build, and not listed in dependencies. But if you really want to use it, then you have to modify at least one of your other files that was used before, and you're back on the previous case.
The solution is to create the dependencies file during the normal process of the compilation, and to optionally include it (with sinclude) if it is present.

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