xref: /freebsd/contrib/bmake/make.1 (revision 78ae60b447ebf420dd5cebfec30480866fd5cef4)
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3.\" Copyright (c) 1990, 1993
4.\"	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved.
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7.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
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10.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
11.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
12.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
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19.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
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29.\"
30.\"	from: @(#)make.1	8.4 (Berkeley) 3/19/94
31.\"
32.Dd December 24, 2023
33.Dt MAKE 1
34.Os
35.Sh NAME
36.Nm make
37.Nd maintain program dependencies
38.Sh SYNOPSIS
39.Nm
40.Op Fl BeikNnqrSstWwX
41.Op Fl C Ar directory
42.Op Fl D Ar variable
43.Op Fl d Ar flags
44.Op Fl f Ar makefile
45.Op Fl I Ar directory
46.Op Fl J Ar private
47.Op Fl j Ar max_jobs
48.Op Fl m Ar directory
49.Op Fl T Ar file
50.Op Fl V Ar variable
51.Op Fl v Ar variable
52.Op Ar variable\| Ns Cm \&= Ns Ar value
53.Op Ar target No ...
54.Sh DESCRIPTION
55.Nm
56is a program designed to simplify the maintenance of other programs.
57Its input is a list of specifications as to the files upon which programs
58and other files depend.
59If no
60.Fl f Ar makefile
61option is given,
62.Nm
63tries to open
64.Sq Pa makefile
65then
66.Sq Pa Makefile
67in order to find the specifications.
68If the file
69.Sq Pa .depend
70exists, it is read, see
71.Xr mkdep 1 .
72.Pp
73This manual page is intended as a reference document only.
74For a more thorough description of
75.Nm
76and makefiles, please refer to
77.%T "PMake \- A Tutorial"
78(from 1993).
79.Pp
80.Nm
81prepends the contents of the
82.Ev MAKEFLAGS
83environment variable to the command line arguments before parsing them.
84.Pp
85The options are as follows:
86.Bl -tag -width Ds
87.It Fl B
88Try to be backwards compatible by executing a single shell per command and
89by making the sources of a dependency line in sequence.
90.It Fl C Ar directory
91Change to
92.Ar directory
93before reading the makefiles or doing anything else.
94If multiple
95.Fl C
96options are specified, each is interpreted relative to the previous one:
97.Fl C Pa / Fl C Pa etc
98is equivalent to
99.Fl C Pa /etc .
100.It Fl D Ar variable
101Define
102.Ar variable
103to be 1, in the global scope.
104.It Fl d Oo Cm \- Oc Ns Ar flags
105Turn on debugging, and specify which portions of
106.Nm
107are to print debugging information.
108Unless the flags are preceded by
109.Ql \- ,
110they are added to the
111.Ev MAKEFLAGS
112environment variable and are passed on to any child make processes.
113By default, debugging information is printed to standard error,
114but this can be changed using the
115.Cm F
116debugging flag.
117The debugging output is always unbuffered; in addition, if debugging
118is enabled but debugging output is not directed to standard output,
119the standard output is line buffered.
120The available
121.Ar flags
122are:
123.Bl -tag -width Ds
124.It Cm A
125Print all possible debugging information;
126equivalent to specifying all of the debugging flags.
127.It Cm a
128Print debugging information about archive searching and caching.
129.It Cm C
130Print debugging information about the current working directory.
131.It Cm c
132Print debugging information about conditional evaluation.
133.It Cm d
134Print debugging information about directory searching and caching.
135.It Cm e
136Print debugging information about failed commands and targets.
137.It Cm F Ns Oo Cm \&+ Oc Ns Ar filename
138Specify where debugging output is written.
139This must be the last flag, because it consumes the remainder of
140the argument.
141If the character immediately after the
142.Cm F
143flag is
144.Ql \&+ ,
145the file is opened in append mode;
146otherwise the file is overwritten.
147If the file name is
148.Ql stdout
149or
150.Ql stderr ,
151debugging output is written to the standard output or standard error output
152respectively (and the
153.Ql \&+
154option has no effect).
155Otherwise, the output is written to the named file.
156If the file name ends with
157.Ql .%d ,
158the
159.Ql %d
160is replaced by the pid.
161.It Cm f
162Print debugging information about loop evaluation.
163.It Cm g1
164Print the input graph before making anything.
165.It Cm g2
166Print the input graph after making everything, or before exiting
167on error.
168.It Cm g3
169Print the input graph before exiting on error.
170.It Cm h
171Print debugging information about hash table operations.
172.It Cm j
173Print debugging information about running multiple shells.
174.It Cm L
175Turn on lint checks.
176This throws errors for variable assignments that do not parse correctly,
177at the time of assignment, so the file and line number are available.
178.It Cm l
179Print commands in Makefiles regardless of whether or not they are prefixed by
180.Ql @
181or other
182.Dq quiet
183flags.
184Also known as
185.Dq loud
186behavior.
187.It Cm M
188Print debugging information about
189.Dq meta
190mode decisions about targets.
191.It Cm m
192Print debugging information about making targets, including modification
193dates.
194.It Cm n
195Don't delete the temporary command scripts created when running commands.
196These temporary scripts are created in the directory
197referred to by the
198.Ev TMPDIR
199environment variable, or in
200.Pa /tmp
201if
202.Ev TMPDIR
203is unset or set to the empty string.
204The temporary scripts are created by
205.Xr mkstemp 3 ,
206and have names of the form
207.Pa makeXXXXXX .
208.Em NOTE :
209This can create many files in
210.Ev TMPDIR
211or
212.Pa /tmp ,
213so use with care.
214.It Cm p
215Print debugging information about makefile parsing.
216.It Cm s
217Print debugging information about suffix-transformation rules.
218.It Cm t
219Print debugging information about target list maintenance.
220.It Cm V
221Force the
222.Fl V
223option to print raw values of variables,
224overriding the default behavior set via
225.Va .MAKE.EXPAND_VARIABLES .
226.It Cm v
227Print debugging information about variable assignment and expansion.
228.It Cm x
229Run shell commands with
230.Fl x
231so the actual commands are printed as they are executed.
232.El
233.It Fl e
234Let environment variables override global variables within makefiles.
235.It Fl f Ar makefile
236Specify a makefile to read instead of the default
237.Pa makefile
238or
239.Pa Makefile .
240If
241.Ar makefile
242is
243.Ql \&- ,
244standard input is read.
245Multiple makefiles may be specified, and are read in the order specified.
246.It Fl I Ar directory
247Specify a directory in which to search for makefiles and included makefiles.
248The system makefile directory (or directories, see the
249.Fl m
250option) is automatically included as part of this list.
251.It Fl i
252Ignore non-zero exit of shell commands in the makefile.
253Equivalent to specifying
254.Ql \&-
255before each command line in the makefile.
256.It Fl J Ar private
257This option should
258.Em not
259be specified by the user.
260.Pp
261When the
262.Fl j
263option is in use in a recursive build, this option is passed by a make
264to child makes to allow all the make processes in the build to
265cooperate to avoid overloading the system.
266.It Fl j Ar max_jobs
267Specify the maximum number of jobs that
268.Nm
269may have running at any one time.
270If
271.Ar max_jobs
272is a floating point number, or ends with
273.Ql C ,
274then the value is multiplied by the number of CPUs reported online by
275.Xr sysconf 3 .
276The value of
277.Ar max_jobs
278is saved in
279.Va .MAKE.JOBS .
280Turns compatibility mode off, unless the
281.Fl B
282option is also specified.
283When compatibility mode is off, all commands associated with a
284target are executed in a single shell invocation as opposed to the
285traditional one shell invocation per line.
286This can break traditional scripts which change directories on each
287command invocation and then expect to start with a fresh environment
288on the next line.
289It is more efficient to correct the scripts rather than turn backwards
290compatibility on.
291.Pp
292A job token pool with
293.Ar max_jobs
294tokens is used to control the total number of jobs running.
295Each instance of
296.Nm
297will wait for a token from the pool before running a new job.
298.It Fl k
299Continue processing after errors are encountered, but only on those targets
300that do not depend on the target whose creation caused the error.
301.It Fl m Ar directory
302Specify a directory in which to search for
303.Pa sys.mk
304and makefiles included via the
305.Li \&< Ns Ar file Ns Li \&> Ns -style
306include statement.
307The
308.Fl m
309option can be used multiple times to form a search path.
310This path overrides the default system include path
311.Pa /usr/share/mk .
312Furthermore, the system include path is appended to the search path used for
313.Li \*q Ns Ar file Ns Li \*q Ns -style
314include statements (see the
315.Fl I
316option).
317The system include path can be referenced via the read-only variable
318.Va .SYSPATH .
319.Pp
320If a directory name in the
321.Fl m
322argument (or the
323.Ev MAKESYSPATH
324environment variable) starts with the string
325.Ql \&.../ ,
326.Nm
327searches for the specified file or directory named in the remaining part
328of the argument string.
329The search starts with the current directory
330and then works upward towards the root of the file system.
331If the search is successful, the resulting directory replaces the
332.Ql \&.../
333specification in the
334.Fl m
335argument.
336This feature allows
337.Nm
338to easily search in the current source tree for customized
339.Pa sys.mk
340files (e.g., by using
341.Ql \&.../mk/sys.mk
342as an argument).
343.It Fl n
344Display the commands that would have been executed, but do not
345actually execute them unless the target depends on the
346.Va .MAKE
347special source (see below) or the command is prefixed with
348.Sq Cm + .
349.It Fl N
350Display the commands that would have been executed,
351but do not actually execute any of them;
352useful for debugging top-level makefiles
353without descending into subdirectories.
354.It Fl q
355Do not execute any commands,
356instead exit 0 if the specified targets are up to date, and 1 otherwise.
357.It Fl r
358Do not use the built-in rules specified in the system makefile.
359.It Fl S
360Stop processing if an error is encountered.
361This is the default behavior and the opposite of
362.Fl k .
363.It Fl s
364Do not echo any commands as they are executed.
365Equivalent to specifying
366.Sq Ic @
367before each command line in the makefile.
368.It Fl T Ar tracefile
369When used with the
370.Fl j
371flag,
372append a trace record to
373.Ar tracefile
374for each job started and completed.
375.It Fl t
376Rather than re-building a target as specified in the makefile, create it
377or update its modification time to make it appear up-to-date.
378.It Fl V Ar variable
379Print the value of
380.Ar variable .
381Do not build any targets.
382Multiple instances of this option may be specified;
383the variables are printed one per line,
384with a blank line for each null or undefined variable.
385The value printed is extracted from the global scope after all
386makefiles have been read.
387.Pp
388By default, the raw variable contents (which may
389include additional unexpanded variable references) are shown.
390If
391.Ar variable
392contains a
393.Ql \&$ ,
394it is not interpreted as a variable name but rather as an expression.
395Its value is expanded before printing.
396The value is also expanded before printing if
397.Va .MAKE.EXPAND_VARIABLES
398is set to true and the
399.Fl dV
400option has not been used to override it.
401.Pp
402Note that loop-local and target-local variables, as well as values
403taken temporarily by global variables during makefile processing, are
404not accessible via this option.
405The
406.Fl dv
407debug mode can be used to see these at the cost of generating
408substantial extraneous output.
409.It Fl v Ar variable
410Like
411.Fl V ,
412but all printed variables are always expanded to their complete value.
413The last occurrence of
414.Fl V
415or
416.Fl v
417decides whether all variables are expanded or not.
418.It Fl W
419Treat any warnings during makefile parsing as errors.
420.It Fl w
421Print entering and leaving directory messages, pre and post processing.
422.It Fl X
423Don't export variables passed on the command line to the environment
424individually.
425Variables passed on the command line are still exported via the
426.Ev MAKEFLAGS
427environment variable.
428This option may be useful on systems which have a small limit on the
429size of command arguments.
430.It Ar variable\| Ns Cm \&= Ns Ar value
431Set the value of the variable
432.Ar variable
433to
434.Ar value .
435Normally, all values passed on the command line are also exported to
436sub-makes in the environment.
437The
438.Fl X
439flag disables this behavior.
440Variable assignments should follow options for POSIX compatibility
441but no ordering is enforced.
442.El
443.Pp
444There are several different types of lines in a makefile: dependency
445specifications, shell commands, variable assignments, include statements,
446conditional directives, for loops, other directives, and comments.
447.Pp
448Lines may be continued from one line to the next
449by ending them with a backslash
450.Pq Ql \e .
451The trailing newline character and initial whitespace on the following
452line are compressed into a single space.
453.Sh FILE DEPENDENCY SPECIFICATIONS
454Dependency lines consist of one or more targets, an operator, and zero
455or more sources.
456This creates a relationship where the targets
457.Dq depend
458on the sources and are customarily created from them.
459A target is considered out of date if it does not exist,
460or if its modification time is less than that of any of its sources.
461An out-of-date target is re-created, but not until all sources
462have been examined and themselves re-created as needed.
463Three operators may be used:
464.Bl -tag -width flag
465.It Ic \&:
466Many dependency lines may name this target but only one may have
467attached shell commands.
468All sources named in all dependency lines are considered together,
469and if needed the attached shell commands are run to create or
470re-create the target.
471If
472.Nm
473is interrupted, the target is removed.
474.It Ic \&!
475The same, but the target is always re-created whether or not it is out
476of date.
477.It Ic \&::
478Any dependency line may have attached shell commands, but each one
479is handled independently: its sources are considered and the attached
480shell commands are run if the target is out of date with respect to
481(only) those sources.
482Thus, different groups of the attached shell commands may be run
483depending on the circumstances.
484Furthermore, unlike
485.Ic \&: ,
486for dependency lines with no sources, the attached shell
487commands are always run.
488Also unlike
489.Ic \&: ,
490the target is not removed if
491.Nm
492is interrupted.
493.El
494.Pp
495All dependency lines mentioning a particular target must use the same
496operator.
497.Pp
498Targets and sources may contain the shell wildcard values
499.Ql \&? ,
500.Ql * ,
501.Ql [] ,
502and
503.Ql {} .
504The values
505.Ql \&? ,
506.Ql * ,
507and
508.Ql []
509may only be used as part of the final component of the target or source,
510and only match existing files.
511The value
512.Ql {}
513need not necessarily be used to describe existing files.
514Expansion is in directory order, not alphabetically as done in the shell.
515.Sh SHELL COMMANDS
516Each target may have associated with it one or more lines of shell commands,
517normally used to create the target.
518Each of the lines in this script
519.Em must
520be preceded by a tab.
521(For historical reasons, spaces are not accepted.)
522While targets can occur in many dependency lines if desired,
523by default only one of these rules may be followed by a creation script.
524If the
525.Sq Ic \&::
526operator is used, however, all rules may include scripts,
527and the respective scripts are executed in the order found.
528.Pp
529Each line is treated as a separate shell command,
530unless the end of line is escaped with a backslash
531.Ql \e ,
532in which case that line and the next are combined.
533If the first characters of the command are any combination of
534.Sq Ic @ ,
535.Sq Ic + ,
536or
537.Sq Ic \- ,
538the command is treated specially.
539.Bl -tag -offset indent -width indent
540.It Ic @
541causes the command not to be echoed before it is executed.
542.It Ic +
543causes the command to be executed even when
544.Fl n
545is given.
546This is similar to the effect of the
547.Va .MAKE
548special source,
549except that the effect can be limited to a single line of a script.
550.It Ic \-
551in compatibility mode
552causes any non-zero exit status of the command line to be ignored.
553.El
554.Pp
555When
556.Nm
557is run in jobs mode with
558.Fl j Ar max_jobs ,
559the entire script for the target is fed to a single instance of the shell.
560In compatibility (non-jobs) mode, each command is run in a separate process.
561If the command contains any shell meta characters
562.Pq Ql #=|^(){};&<>*?[]:$`\e\en ,
563it is passed to the shell; otherwise
564.Nm
565attempts direct execution.
566If a line starts with
567.Sq Ic \-
568and the shell has ErrCtl enabled,
569failure of the command line is ignored as in compatibility mode.
570Otherwise
571.Sq Ic \-
572affects the entire job;
573the script stops at the first command line that fails,
574but the target is not deemed to have failed.
575.Pp
576Makefiles should be written so that the mode of
577.Nm
578operation does not change their behavior.
579For example, any command which uses
580.Dq cd
581or
582.Dq chdir
583without the intention of changing the directory for subsequent commands
584should be put in parentheses so it executes in a subshell.
585To force the use of a single shell, escape the line breaks so as to make
586the whole script one command.
587For example:
588.Bd -literal -offset indent
589avoid-chdir-side-effects:
590	@echo "Building $@ in $$(pwd)"
591	@(cd ${.CURDIR} && ${MAKE} $@)
592	@echo "Back in $$(pwd)"
593
594ensure-one-shell-regardless-of-mode:
595	@echo "Building $@ in $$(pwd)"; \e
596	(cd ${.CURDIR} && ${MAKE} $@); \e
597	echo "Back in $$(pwd)"
598.Ed
599.Pp
600Since
601.Nm
602changes the current working directory to
603.Sq Va .OBJDIR
604before executing any targets,
605each child process starts with that as its current working directory.
606.Sh VARIABLE ASSIGNMENTS
607Variables in make behave much like macros in the C preprocessor.
608.Pp
609Variable assignments have the form
610.Sq Ar NAME Ar op Ar value ,
611where:
612.Bl -tag -offset Ds -width Ds
613.It Ar NAME
614is a single-word variable name,
615consisting, by tradition, of all upper-case letters,
616.It Ar op
617is one of the variable assignment operators described below, and
618.It Ar value
619is interpreted according to the variable assignment operator.
620.El
621.Pp
622Whitespace around
623.Ar NAME ,
624.Ar op
625and
626.Ar value
627is discarded.
628.Ss Variable assignment operators
629The five operators that assign values to variables are:
630.Bl -tag -width Ds
631.It Ic \&=
632Assign the value to the variable.
633Any previous value is overwritten.
634.It Ic \&+=
635Append the value to the current value of the variable,
636separating them by a single space.
637.It Ic \&?=
638Assign the value to the variable if it is not already defined.
639.It Ic \&:=
640Expand the value, then assign it to the variable.
641.Pp
642.Em NOTE :
643References to undefined variables are
644.Em not
645expanded.
646This can cause problems when variable modifiers are used.
647.\" See var-op-expand.mk, the section with LATER and INDIRECT.
648.It Ic \&!=
649Expand the value and pass it to the shell for execution,
650then assign the output from the child's standard output to the variable.
651Any newlines in the result are replaced with spaces.
652.El
653.Ss Expansion of variables
654In most contexts where variables are expanded,
655.Ql \&$$
656expands to a single dollar sign.
657In other contexts (most variable modifiers, string literals in conditions),
658.Ql \&\e$
659expands to a single dollar sign.
660.Pp
661References to variables have the form
662.Cm \&${ Ns Ar name Ns Oo Ns Cm \&: Ns Ar modifiers Oc Ns Cm \&}
663or
664.Cm \&$( Ns Ar name Ns Oo Ns Cm \&: Ns Ar modifiers Oc Ns Cm \&) .
665If the variable name consists of only a single character
666and the expression contains no modifiers,
667the surrounding curly braces or parentheses are not required.
668This shorter form is not recommended.
669.Pp
670If the variable name contains a dollar, the name itself is expanded first.
671This allows almost arbitrary variable names, however names containing dollar,
672braces, parentheses or whitespace are really best avoided.
673.Pp
674If the result of expanding a nested variable expression contains a dollar sign
675.Pq Ql \&$ ,
676the result is subject to further expansion.
677.Pp
678Variable substitution occurs at four distinct times, depending on where
679the variable is being used.
680.Bl -enum
681.It
682Variables in dependency lines are expanded as the line is read.
683.It
684Variables in conditionals are expanded individually,
685but only as far as necessary to determine the result of the conditional.
686.It
687Variables in shell commands are expanded when the shell command is
688executed.
689.It
690.Ic .for
691loop index variables are expanded on each loop iteration.
692Note that other variables are not expanded when composing the body of a loop,
693so the following example code:
694.Bd -literal -offset indent
695\&.for i in 1 2 3
696a+=     ${i}
697j=      ${i}
698b+=     ${j}
699\&.endfor
700
701all:
702	@echo ${a}
703	@echo ${b}
704.Ed
705.Pp
706prints:
707.Bd -literal -offset indent
7081 2 3
7093 3 3
710.Ed
711.Pp
712After the loop is executed:
713.Bl -tag -offset indent -width indent
714.It Va a
715contains
716.Ql ${:U1} ${:U2} ${:U3} ,
717which expands to
718.Ql 1 2 3 .
719.It Va j
720contains
721.Ql ${:U3} ,
722which expands to
723.Ql 3 .
724.It Va b
725contains
726.Ql ${j} ${j} ${j} ,
727which expands to
728.Ql ${:U3} ${:U3} ${:U3}
729and further to
730.Ql 3 3 3 .
731.El
732.El
733.Ss Variable classes
734The four different classes of variables (in order of increasing precedence)
735are:
736.Bl -tag -width Ds
737.It Environment variables
738Variables defined as part of
739.Nm Ns 's
740environment.
741.It Global variables
742Variables defined in the makefile or in included makefiles.
743.It Command line variables
744Variables defined as part of the command line.
745.It Local variables
746Variables that are defined specific to a certain target.
747.El
748.Pp
749Local variables can be set on a dependency line, unless
750.Va .MAKE.TARGET_LOCAL_VARIABLES
751is set to
752.Ql false .
753The rest of the line
754(which already has had global variables expanded)
755is the variable value.
756For example:
757.Bd -literal -offset indent
758COMPILER_WRAPPERS= ccache distcc icecc
759
760${OBJS}: .MAKE.META.CMP_FILTER=${COMPILER_WRAPPERS:S,^,N,}
761.Ed
762.Pp
763Only the targets
764.Ql ${OBJS}
765are impacted by that filter (in
766.Dq meta
767mode) and
768simply enabling/disabling any of the compiler wrappers does not render all
769of those targets out-of-date.
770.Pp
771.Em NOTE :
772target-local variable assignments behave differently in that;
773.Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent
774.It Ic \&+=
775Only appends to a previous local assignment
776for the same target and variable.
777.It Ic \&:=
778Is redundant with respect to global variables,
779which have already been expanded.
780.El
781.Pp
782The seven built-in local variables are:
783.Bl -tag -width ".Va .ARCHIVE" -offset indent
784.It Va .ALLSRC
785The list of all sources for this target; also known as
786.Sq Va \&> .
787.It Va .ARCHIVE
788The name of the archive file; also known as
789.Sq Va \&! .
790.It Va .IMPSRC
791In suffix-transformation rules, the name/path of the source from which the
792target is to be transformed (the
793.Dq implied
794source); also known as
795.Sq Va \&< .
796It is not defined in explicit rules.
797.It Va .MEMBER
798The name of the archive member; also known as
799.Sq Va % .
800.It Va .OODATE
801The list of sources for this target that were deemed out-of-date; also
802known as
803.Sq Va \&? .
804.It Va .PREFIX
805The name of the target with suffix (if declared in
806.Ic .SUFFIXES )
807removed; also known as
808.Sq Va * .
809.It Va .TARGET
810The name of the target; also known as
811.Sq Va @ .
812For compatibility with other makes this is an alias for
813.Va .ARCHIVE
814in archive member rules.
815.El
816.Pp
817The shorter forms
818.Po
819.Sq Va \&> ,
820.Sq Va \&! ,
821.Sq Va \&< ,
822.Sq Va \&% ,
823.Sq Va \&? ,
824.Sq Va \&* ,
825and
826.Sq Va \&@
827.Pc
828are permitted for backward
829compatibility with historical makefiles and legacy POSIX make and are
830not recommended.
831.Pp
832Variants of these variables with the punctuation followed immediately by
833.Ql D
834or
835.Ql F ,
836e.g.\&
837.Ql $(@D) ,
838are legacy forms equivalent to using the
839.Ql :H
840and
841.Ql :T
842modifiers.
843These forms are accepted for compatibility with
844.At V
845makefiles and POSIX but are not recommended.
846.Pp
847Four of the local variables may be used in sources on dependency lines
848because they expand to the proper value for each target on the line.
849These variables are
850.Sq Va .TARGET ,
851.Sq Va .PREFIX ,
852.Sq Va .ARCHIVE ,
853and
854.Sq Va .MEMBER .
855.Ss Additional built-in variables
856In addition,
857.Nm
858sets or knows about the following variables:
859.Bl -tag
860.\" NB: This list is sorted case-insensitive, ignoring punctuation.
861.\" NB: To find all built-in variables in make's source code,
862.\" NB: search for Var_*, Global_*, SetVarObjdir, GetBooleanExpr,
863.\" NB: and the implementation of Var_SetWithFlags.
864.\" NB: Last synced on 2023-01-01.
865.It Va .ALLTARGETS
866The list of all targets encountered in the makefiles.
867If evaluated during makefile parsing,
868lists only those targets encountered thus far.
869.It Va .CURDIR
870A path to the directory where
871.Nm
872was executed.
873Refer to the description of
874.Sq Va PWD
875for more details.
876.It Va .ERROR_CMD
877Is used in error handling, see
878.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR .
879.It Va .ERROR_CWD
880Is used in error handling, see
881.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR .
882.It Va .ERROR_META_FILE
883Is used in error handling in
884.Dq meta
885mode, see
886.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR .
887.It Va .ERROR_TARGET
888Is used in error handling, see
889.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR .
890.It Va .INCLUDEDFROMDIR
891The directory of the file this makefile was included from.
892.It Va .INCLUDEDFROMFILE
893The filename of the file this makefile was included from.
894.\" .INCLUDES is intentionally undocumented, as it is obsolete.
895.\" .LIBS is intentionally undocumented, as it is obsolete.
896.It Va MACHINE
897The machine hardware name, see
898.Xr uname 1 .
899.It Va MACHINE_ARCH
900The machine processor architecture name, see
901.Xr uname 1 .
902.It Va MAKE
903The name that
904.Nm
905was executed with
906.Pq Va argv[0] .
907.It Va .MAKE
908The same as
909.Va MAKE ,
910for compatibility.
911The preferred variable to use is the environment variable
912.Ev MAKE
913because it is more compatible with other make variants
914and cannot be confused with the special target with the same name.
915.It Va .MAKE.ALWAYS_PASS_JOB_QUEUE
916Tells
917.Nm
918whether to pass the descriptors of the job token queue
919even if the target is not tagged with
920.Ic .MAKE
921The default is
922.Ql Pa yes
923for backwards compatability with
924.Fx 9.0
925and earlier.
926.\" '.MAKE.cmd_filtered' is intentionally undocumented,
927.\" as it is an internal implementation detail.
928.It Va .MAKE.DEPENDFILE
929Names the makefile (default
930.Sq Pa .depend )
931from which generated dependencies are read.
932.It Va .MAKE.DIE_QUIETLY
933If set to
934.Ql true ,
935do not print error information at the end.
936.It Va .MAKE.EXPAND_VARIABLES
937A boolean that controls the default behavior of the
938.Fl V
939option.
940If true, variable values printed with
941.Fl V
942are fully expanded; if false, the raw variable contents (which may
943include additional unexpanded variable references) are shown.
944.It Va .MAKE.EXPORTED
945The list of variables exported by
946.Nm .
947.It Va MAKEFILE
948The top-level makefile that is currently read,
949as given in the command line.
950.It Va .MAKEFLAGS
951The environment variable
952.Sq Ev MAKEFLAGS
953may contain anything that
954may be specified on
955.Nm Ns 's
956command line.
957Anything specified on
958.Nm Ns 's
959command line is appended to the
960.Va .MAKEFLAGS
961variable, which is then added to the environment for all programs that
962.Nm
963executes.
964.It Va .MAKE.GID
965The numeric group ID of the user running
966.Nm .
967It is read-only.
968.It Va .MAKE.JOB.PREFIX
969If
970.Nm
971is run with
972.Fl j ,
973the output for each target is prefixed with a token
974.Dl --- Ar target Li ---
975the first part of which can be controlled via
976.Va .MAKE.JOB.PREFIX .
977If
978.Va .MAKE.JOB.PREFIX
979is empty, no token is printed.
980For example, setting
981.Va .MAKE.JOB.PREFIX
982to
983.Ql ${.newline}---${.MAKE:T}[${.MAKE.PID}]
984would produce tokens like
985.Dl ---make[1234] Ar target Li ---
986making it easier to track the degree of parallelism being achieved.
987.It Va .MAKE.JOBS
988The argument to the
989.Fl j
990option.
991.It Va .MAKE.JOBS.C
992A read-only boolean that indicates whether the
993.Fl j
994option supports use of
995.Ql C .
996.It Va .MAKE.LEVEL
997The recursion depth of
998.Nm .
999The top-level instance of
1000.Nm
1001has level 0, and each child make has its parent level plus 1.
1002This allows tests like:
1003.Li .if ${.MAKE.LEVEL} == 0
1004to protect things which should only be evaluated in the top-level instance of
1005.Nm .
1006.It Va .MAKE.LEVEL.ENV
1007The name of the environment variable that stores the level of nested calls to
1008.Nm .
1009.It Va .MAKE.MAKEFILE_PREFERENCE
1010The ordered list of makefile names
1011(default
1012.Sq Pa makefile ,
1013.Sq Pa Makefile )
1014that
1015.Nm
1016looks for.
1017.It Va .MAKE.MAKEFILES
1018The list of makefiles read by
1019.Nm ,
1020which is useful for tracking dependencies.
1021Each makefile is recorded only once, regardless of the number of times read.
1022.It Va .MAKE.META.BAILIWICK
1023In
1024.Dq meta
1025mode, provides a list of prefixes which
1026match the directories controlled by
1027.Nm .
1028If a file that was generated outside of
1029.Va .OBJDIR
1030but within said bailiwick is missing,
1031the current target is considered out-of-date.
1032.It Va .MAKE.META.CMP_FILTER
1033In
1034.Dq meta
1035mode, it can (very rarely!) be useful to filter command
1036lines before comparison.
1037This variable can be set to a set of modifiers that are applied to
1038each line of the old and new command that differ, if the filtered
1039commands still differ, the target is considered out-of-date.
1040.It Va .MAKE.META.CREATED
1041In
1042.Dq meta
1043mode, this variable contains a list of all the meta files
1044updated.
1045If not empty, it can be used to trigger processing of
1046.Va .MAKE.META.FILES .
1047.It Va .MAKE.META.FILES
1048In
1049.Dq meta
1050mode, this variable contains a list of all the meta files
1051used (updated or not).
1052This list can be used to process the meta files to extract dependency
1053information.
1054.It Va .MAKE.META.IGNORE_FILTER
1055Provides a list of variable modifiers to apply to each pathname.
1056Ignore if the expansion is an empty string.
1057.It Va .MAKE.META.IGNORE_PATHS
1058Provides a list of path prefixes that should be ignored;
1059because the contents are expected to change over time.
1060The default list includes:
1061.Sq Pa /dev /etc /proc /tmp /var/run /var/tmp
1062.It Va .MAKE.META.IGNORE_PATTERNS
1063Provides a list of patterns to match against pathnames.
1064Ignore any that match.
1065.It Va .MAKE.META.PREFIX
1066Defines the message printed for each meta file updated in
1067.Dq meta verbose
1068mode.
1069The default value is:
1070.Dl Building ${.TARGET:H:tA}/${.TARGET:T}
1071.It Va .MAKE.MODE
1072Processed after reading all makefiles.
1073Affects the mode that
1074.Nm
1075runs in.
1076It can contain these keywords:
1077.Bl -tag -width indent
1078.It Cm compat
1079Like
1080.Fl B ,
1081puts
1082.Nm
1083into
1084.Dq compat
1085mode.
1086.It Cm meta
1087Puts
1088.Nm
1089into
1090.Dq meta
1091mode, where meta files are created for each target
1092to capture the command run, the output generated, and if
1093.Xr filemon 4
1094is available, the system calls which are of interest to
1095.Nm .
1096The captured output can be useful when diagnosing errors.
1097.It Cm curdirOk= Ns Ar bf
1098By default,
1099.Nm
1100does not create
1101.Pa .meta
1102files in
1103.Sq Va .CURDIR .
1104This can be overridden by setting
1105.Ar bf
1106to a value which represents true.
1107.It Cm missing-meta= Ns Ar bf
1108If
1109.Ar bf
1110is true, a missing
1111.Pa .meta
1112file makes the target out-of-date.
1113.It Cm missing-filemon= Ns Ar bf
1114If
1115.Ar bf
1116is true, missing filemon data makes the target out-of-date.
1117.It Cm nofilemon
1118Do not use
1119.Xr filemon 4 .
1120.It Cm env
1121For debugging, it can be useful to include the environment
1122in the
1123.Pa .meta
1124file.
1125.It Cm verbose
1126If in
1127.Dq meta
1128mode, print a clue about the target being built.
1129This is useful if the build is otherwise running silently.
1130The message printed is the expanded value of
1131.Va .MAKE.META.PREFIX .
1132.It Cm ignore-cmd
1133Some makefiles have commands which are simply not stable.
1134This keyword causes them to be ignored for
1135determining whether a target is out of date in
1136.Dq meta
1137mode.
1138See also
1139.Ic .NOMETA_CMP .
1140.It Cm silent= Ns Ar bf
1141If
1142.Ar bf
1143is true, when a .meta file is created, mark the target
1144.Ic .SILENT .
1145.It Cm randomize-targets
1146In both compat and parallel mode, do not make the targets in the usual order,
1147but instead randomize their order.
1148This mode can be used to detect undeclared dependencies between files.
1149.El
1150.It Va MAKEOBJDIR
1151Used to create files in a separate directory, see
1152.Va .OBJDIR .
1153.It Va MAKE_OBJDIR_CHECK_WRITABLE
1154Used to force a separate directory for the created files,
1155even if that directory is not writable, see
1156.Va .OBJDIR .
1157.It Va MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX
1158Used to create files in a separate directory, see
1159.Va .OBJDIR .
1160.It Va .MAKE.OS
1161The name of the operating system, see
1162.Xr uname 1 .
1163It is read-only.
1164.It Va .MAKEOVERRIDES
1165This variable is used to record the names of variables assigned to
1166on the command line, so that they may be exported as part of
1167.Sq Ev MAKEFLAGS .
1168This behavior can be disabled by assigning an empty value to
1169.Sq Va .MAKEOVERRIDES
1170within a makefile.
1171Extra variables can be exported from a makefile
1172by appending their names to
1173.Sq Va .MAKEOVERRIDES .
1174.Sq Ev MAKEFLAGS
1175is re-exported whenever
1176.Sq Va .MAKEOVERRIDES
1177is modified.
1178.It Va .MAKE.PATH_FILEMON
1179If
1180.Nm
1181was built with
1182.Xr filemon 4
1183support, this is set to the path of the device node.
1184This allows makefiles to test for this support.
1185.It Va .MAKE.PID
1186The process ID of
1187.Nm .
1188It is read-only.
1189.It Va .MAKE.PPID
1190The parent process ID of
1191.Nm .
1192It is read-only.
1193.It Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR
1194When
1195.Nm
1196stops due to an error, it sets
1197.Sq Va .ERROR_TARGET
1198to the name of the target that failed,
1199.Sq Va .ERROR_CMD
1200to the commands of the failed target,
1201and in
1202.Dq meta
1203mode, it also sets
1204.Sq Va .ERROR_CWD
1205to the
1206.Xr getcwd 3 ,
1207and
1208.Sq Va .ERROR_META_FILE
1209to the path of the meta file (if any) describing the failed target.
1210It then prints its name and the value of
1211.Sq Va .CURDIR
1212as well as the value of any variables named in
1213.Sq Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR .
1214.It Va .MAKE.SAVE_DOLLARS
1215If true,
1216.Ql $$
1217are preserved when doing
1218.Ql :=
1219assignments.
1220The default is false, for backwards compatibility.
1221Set to true for compatability with other makes.
1222If set to false,
1223.Ql $$
1224becomes
1225.Ql $
1226per normal evaluation rules.
1227.It Va .MAKE.TARGET_LOCAL_VARIABLES
1228If set to
1229.Ql false ,
1230apparent variable assignments in dependency lines are
1231treated as normal sources.
1232.It Va .MAKE.UID
1233The numeric ID of the user running
1234.Nm .
1235It is read-only.
1236.\" 'MAKE_VERSION' is intentionally undocumented
1237.\" since it is only defined in the bmake distribution,
1238.\" but not in NetBSD's native make.
1239.\" '.meta.%d.lcwd' is intentionally undocumented
1240.\" since it is an internal implementation detail.
1241.\" '.meta.%d.ldir' is intentionally undocumented
1242.\" since it is an internal implementation detail.
1243.\" 'MFLAGS' is intentionally undocumented
1244.\" since it is obsolete.
1245.It Va .newline
1246This variable is simply assigned a newline character as its value.
1247It is read-only.
1248This allows expansions using the
1249.Cm \&:@
1250modifier to put a newline between
1251iterations of the loop rather than a space.
1252For example, in case of an error,
1253.Nm
1254prints the variable names and their values using:
1255.Dl ${MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR:@v@$v='${$v}'${.newline}@}
1256.It Va .OBJDIR
1257A path to the directory where the targets are built.
1258Its value is determined by trying to
1259.Xr chdir 2
1260to the following directories in order and using the first match:
1261.Bl -enum
1262.It
1263.Cm ${MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX} Ns Cm ${.CURDIR}
1264.Pp
1265(Only if
1266.Sq Ev MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX
1267is set in the environment or on the command line.)
1268.It
1269.Cm ${MAKEOBJDIR}
1270.Pp
1271(Only if
1272.Sq Ev MAKEOBJDIR
1273is set in the environment or on the command line.)
1274.It
1275.Cm ${.CURDIR} Ns Pa /obj. Ns Cm ${MACHINE}
1276.It
1277.Cm ${.CURDIR} Ns Pa /obj
1278.It
1279.Pa /usr/obj/ Ns Cm ${.CURDIR}
1280.It
1281.Cm ${.CURDIR}
1282.El
1283.Pp
1284Variable expansion is performed on the value before it is used,
1285so expressions such as
1286.Cm ${.CURDIR:S,^/usr/src,/var/obj,}
1287may be used.
1288This is especially useful with
1289.Sq Ev MAKEOBJDIR .
1290.Pp
1291.Sq Va .OBJDIR
1292may be modified in the makefile via the special target
1293.Sq Ic .OBJDIR .
1294In all cases,
1295.Nm
1296changes to the specified directory if it exists, and sets
1297.Sq Va .OBJDIR
1298and
1299.Sq Va PWD
1300to that directory before executing any targets.
1301.Pp
1302Except in the case of an explicit
1303.Sq Ic .OBJDIR
1304target,
1305.Nm
1306checks that the specified directory is writable and ignores it if not.
1307This check can be skipped by setting the environment variable
1308.Sq Ev MAKE_OBJDIR_CHECK_WRITABLE
1309to
1310.Dq no .
1311.It Va .PARSEDIR
1312The directory name of the current makefile being parsed.
1313.It Va .PARSEFILE
1314The basename of the current makefile being parsed.
1315This variable and
1316.Sq Va .PARSEDIR
1317are both set only while the makefiles are being parsed.
1318To retain their current values,
1319assign them to a variable using assignment with expansion
1320.Sq Cm \&:= .
1321.It Va .PATH
1322The space-separated list of directories that
1323.Nm
1324searches for files.
1325To update this search list, use the special target
1326.Sq Ic .PATH
1327rather than modifying the variable directly.
1328.It Va %POSIX
1329Is set in POSIX mode, see the special
1330.Ql Va .POSIX
1331target.
1332.\" XXX: There is no make variable named 'PWD',
1333.\" XXX: make only reads and writes the environment variable 'PWD'.
1334.It Va PWD
1335Alternate path to the current directory.
1336.Nm
1337normally sets
1338.Sq Va .CURDIR
1339to the canonical path given by
1340.Xr getcwd 3 .
1341However, if the environment variable
1342.Sq Ev PWD
1343is set and gives a path to the current directory,
1344.Nm
1345sets
1346.Sq Va .CURDIR
1347to the value of
1348.Sq Ev PWD
1349instead.
1350This behavior is disabled if
1351.Sq Ev MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX
1352is set or
1353.Sq Ev MAKEOBJDIR
1354contains a variable transform.
1355.Sq Va PWD
1356is set to the value of
1357.Sq Va .OBJDIR
1358for all programs which
1359.Nm
1360executes.
1361.It Va .SHELL
1362The pathname of the shell used to run target scripts.
1363It is read-only.
1364.It Va .SUFFIXES
1365The list of known suffixes.
1366It is read-only.
1367.It Va .SYSPATH
1368The space-separated list of directories that
1369.Nm
1370searches for makefiles, referred to as the system include path.
1371To update this search list, use the special target
1372.Sq Ic .SYSPATH
1373rather than modifying the variable which is read-only.
1374.It Va .TARGETS
1375The list of targets explicitly specified on the command line, if any.
1376.It Va VPATH
1377The colon-separated
1378.Pq Dq \&:
1379list of directories that
1380.Nm
1381searches for files.
1382This variable is supported for compatibility with old make programs only, use
1383.Sq Va .PATH
1384instead.
1385.El
1386.Ss Variable modifiers
1387The general format of a variable expansion is:
1388.Pp
1389.Sm off
1390.D1 Ic \&${ Ar variable\| Oo Ic \&: Ar modifier\| Oo Ic \&: No ... Oc Oc Ic \&}
1391.Sm on
1392.Pp
1393Each modifier begins with a colon.
1394To escape a colon, precede it with a backslash
1395.Ql \e .
1396.Pp
1397A list of indirect modifiers can be specified via a variable, as follows:
1398.Pp
1399.Bd -literal -offset indent
1400.Ar modifier_variable\^ Li \&= Ar modifier Ns Oo Ic \&: Ns No ... Oc
1401
1402.Sm off
1403.Ic \&${ Ar variable Ic \&:${ Ar modifier_variable Ic \&} Oo Ic \&: No ... Oc Ic \&}
1404.Sm on
1405.Ed
1406.Pp
1407In this case, the first modifier in the
1408.Ar modifier_variable
1409does not start with a colon,
1410since that colon already occurs in the referencing variable.
1411If any of the modifiers in the
1412.Ar modifier_variable
1413contains a dollar sign
1414.Pq Ql $ ,
1415these must be doubled to avoid early expansion.
1416.Pp
1417Some modifiers interpret the expression value as a single string,
1418others treat the expression value as a whitespace-separated list of words.
1419When splitting a string into words,
1420whitespace can be escaped using double quotes, single quotes and backslashes,
1421like in the shell.
1422The quotes and backslashes are retained in the words.
1423.Pp
1424The supported modifiers are:
1425.Bl -tag -width EEE
1426.It Cm \&:E
1427Replaces each word with its suffix.
1428.It Cm \&:H
1429Replaces each word with its dirname.
1430.It Cm \&:M\| Ns Ar pattern
1431Selects only those words that match
1432.Ar pattern .
1433The standard shell wildcard characters
1434.Pf ( Ql * ,
1435.Ql \&? ,
1436and
1437.Ql \&[] )
1438may
1439be used.
1440The wildcard characters may be escaped with a backslash
1441.Pq Ql \e .
1442As a consequence of the way values are split into words, matched,
1443and then joined, the construct
1444.Ql ${VAR:M*}
1445removes all leading and trailing whitespace
1446and normalizes the inter-word spacing to a single space.
1447.It Cm \&:N\| Ns Ar pattern
1448This is the opposite of
1449.Sq Cm \&:M ,
1450selecting all words which do
1451.Em not
1452match
1453.Ar pattern .
1454.It Cm \&:O
1455Orders the words lexicographically.
1456.It Cm \&:On
1457Orders the words numerically.
1458A number followed by one of
1459.Ql k ,
1460.Ql M
1461or
1462.Ql G
1463is multiplied by the appropriate factor, which is 1024 for
1464.Ql k ,
14651048576 for
1466.Ql M ,
1467or 1073741824 for
1468.Ql G .
1469Both upper- and lower-case letters are accepted.
1470.It Cm \&:Or
1471Orders the words in reverse lexicographical order.
1472.It Cm \&:Orn
1473Orders the words in reverse numerical order.
1474.It Cm \&:Ox
1475Shuffles the words.
1476The results are different each time you are referring to the
1477modified variable; use the assignment with expansion
1478.Sq Cm \&:=
1479to prevent such behavior.
1480For example,
1481.Bd -literal -offset indent
1482LIST=			uno due tre quattro
1483RANDOM_LIST=		${LIST:Ox}
1484STATIC_RANDOM_LIST:=	${LIST:Ox}
1485
1486all:
1487	@echo "${RANDOM_LIST}"
1488	@echo "${RANDOM_LIST}"
1489	@echo "${STATIC_RANDOM_LIST}"
1490	@echo "${STATIC_RANDOM_LIST}"
1491.Ed
1492may produce output similar to:
1493.Bd -literal -offset indent
1494quattro due tre uno
1495tre due quattro uno
1496due uno quattro tre
1497due uno quattro tre
1498.Ed
1499.It Cm \&:Q
1500Quotes every shell meta-character in the value, so that it can be passed
1501safely to the shell.
1502.It Cm \&:q
1503Quotes every shell meta-character in the value, and also doubles
1504.Sq $
1505characters so that it can be passed
1506safely through recursive invocations of
1507.Nm .
1508This is equivalent to
1509.Sq Cm \&:S/\e\&$/&&/g:Q .
1510.It Cm \&:R
1511Replaces each word with everything but its suffix.
1512.It Cm \&:range Ns Oo Cm = Ns Ar count Oc
1513The value is an integer sequence representing the words of the original
1514value, or the supplied
1515.Ar count .
1516.It Cm \&:gmtime Ns Oo Cm = Ns Ar timestamp Oc
1517The value is interpreted as a format string for
1518.Xr strftime 3 ,
1519using
1520.Xr gmtime 3 ,
1521producing the formatted timestamp.
1522Note: the
1523.Ql %s
1524format should only be used with
1525.Sq Cm \&:localtime .
1526If a
1527.Ar timestamp
1528value is not provided or is 0, the current time is used.
1529.It Cm \&:hash
1530Computes a 32-bit hash of the value and encodes it as 8 hex digits.
1531.It Cm \&:localtime Ns Oo Cm = Ns Ar timestamp Oc
1532The value is interpreted as a format string for
1533.Xr strftime 3 ,
1534using
1535.Xr localtime 3 ,
1536producing the formatted timestamp.
1537If a
1538.Ar timestamp
1539value is not provided or is 0, the current time is used.
1540.It Cm \&:mtime Ns Oo Cm = Ns Ar timestamp Oc
1541Call
1542.Xr stat 2
1543with each word as pathname;
1544use
1545.Ql st_mtime
1546as the new value.
1547If
1548.Xr stat 2
1549fails; use
1550.Ar timestamp
1551or current time.
1552If
1553.Ar timestamp
1554is set to
1555.Ql error ,
1556then
1557.Xr stat 2
1558failure will cause an error.
1559.It Cm \&:tA
1560Attempts to convert the value to an absolute path using
1561.Xr realpath 3 .
1562If that fails, the value is unchanged.
1563.It Cm \&:tl
1564Converts the value to lower-case letters.
1565.It Cm \&:ts Ns Ar c
1566When joining the words after a modifier that treats the value as words,
1567the words are normally separated by a space.
1568This modifier changes the separator to the character
1569.Ar c .
1570If
1571.Ar c
1572is omitted, no separator is used.
1573The common escapes (including octal numeric codes) work as expected.
1574.It Cm \&:tu
1575Converts the value to upper-case letters.
1576.It Cm \&:tW
1577Causes subsequent modifiers to treat the value as a single word
1578(possibly containing embedded whitespace).
1579See also
1580.Sq Cm \&:[*] .
1581.It Cm \&:tw
1582Causes the value to be treated as a list of words.
1583See also
1584.Sq Cm \&:[@] .
1585.Sm off
1586.It Cm \&:S\| No \&/ Ar old_string\| No \&/ Ar new_string\| No \&/ Op Cm 1gW
1587.Sm on
1588Modifies the first occurrence of
1589.Ar old_string
1590in each word of the value, replacing it with
1591.Ar new_string .
1592If a
1593.Ql g
1594is appended to the last delimiter of the pattern,
1595all occurrences in each word are replaced.
1596If a
1597.Ql 1
1598is appended to the last delimiter of the pattern,
1599only the first occurrence is affected.
1600If a
1601.Ql W
1602is appended to the last delimiter of the pattern,
1603the value is treated as a single word.
1604If
1605.Ar old_string
1606begins with a caret
1607.Pq Ql ^ ,
1608.Ar old_string
1609is anchored at the beginning of each word.
1610If
1611.Ar old_string
1612ends with a dollar sign
1613.Pq Ql \&$ ,
1614it is anchored at the end of each word.
1615Inside
1616.Ar new_string ,
1617an ampersand
1618.Pq Ql &
1619is replaced by
1620.Ar old_string
1621(without the anchoring
1622.Ql ^
1623or
1624.Ql \&$ ) .
1625Any character may be used as the delimiter for the parts of the modifier
1626string.
1627The anchoring, ampersand and delimiter characters can be escaped with a
1628backslash
1629.Pq Ql \e .
1630.Pp
1631Both
1632.Ar old_string
1633and
1634.Ar new_string
1635may contain nested expressions.
1636To prevent a dollar sign from starting a nested expression,
1637escape it with a backslash.
1638.Sm off
1639.It Cm \&:C\| No \&/ Ar pattern\| No \&/ Ar replacement\| No \&/ Op Cm 1gW
1640.Sm on
1641The
1642.Cm \&:C
1643modifier works like the
1644.Cm \&:S
1645modifier except that the old and new strings, instead of being
1646simple strings, are an extended regular expression
1647.Ar pattern
1648(see
1649.Xr regex 3 )
1650and an
1651.Xr ed 1 Ns \-style
1652.Ar replacement .
1653Normally, the first occurrence of the pattern
1654.Ar pattern
1655in each word of the value is substituted with
1656.Ar replacement .
1657The
1658.Ql 1
1659modifier causes the substitution to apply to at most one word; the
1660.Ql g
1661modifier causes the substitution to apply to as many instances of the
1662search pattern
1663.Ar pattern
1664as occur in the word or words it is found in; the
1665.Ql W
1666modifier causes the value to be treated as a single word
1667(possibly containing embedded whitespace).
1668.Pp
1669As for the
1670.Cm \&:S
1671modifier, the
1672.Ar pattern
1673and
1674.Ar replacement
1675are subjected to variable expansion before being parsed as
1676regular expressions.
1677.It Cm \&:T
1678Replaces each word with its last path component (basename).
1679.It Cm \&:u
1680Removes adjacent duplicate words (like
1681.Xr uniq 1 ) .
1682.Sm off
1683.It Cm \&:\&?\| Ar true_string\| Cm \&: Ar false_string
1684.Sm on
1685If the variable name (not its value), when parsed as a
1686.Cm .if
1687conditional expression, evaluates to true, return as its value the
1688.Ar true_string ,
1689otherwise return the
1690.Ar false_string .
1691Since the variable name is used as the expression,
1692\&:\&? must be the first modifier after the variable name
1693.No itself Ns \^\(em\^ Ns
1694which, of course, usually contains variable expansions.
1695A common error is trying to use expressions like
1696.Dl ${NUMBERS:M42:?match:no}
1697which actually tests defined(NUMBERS).
1698To determine if any words match
1699.Dq 42 ,
1700you need to use something like:
1701.Dl ${"${NUMBERS:M42}" != \&"\&":?match:no} .
1702.It Cm :\| Ns Ar old_string\| Ns Cm = Ns Ar new_string
1703This is the
1704.At V
1705style substitution.
1706It can only be the last modifier specified,
1707as a
1708.Ql \&:
1709in either
1710.Ar old_string
1711or
1712.Ar new_string
1713is treated as a regular character, not as the end of the modifier.
1714.Pp
1715If
1716.Ar old_string
1717does not contain the pattern matching character
1718.Ql % ,
1719and the word ends with
1720.Ar old_string
1721or equals it,
1722that suffix is replaced with
1723.Ar new_string .
1724.Pp
1725Otherwise, the first
1726.Ql %
1727in
1728.Ar old_string
1729matches a possibly empty substring of arbitrary characters,
1730and if the whole pattern is found in the word,
1731the matching part is replaced with
1732.Ar new_string ,
1733and the first occurrence of
1734.Ql %
1735in
1736.Ar new_string
1737(if any) is replaced with the substring matched by the
1738.Ql % .
1739.Pp
1740Both
1741.Ar old_string
1742and
1743.Ar new_string
1744may contain nested expressions.
1745To prevent a dollar sign from starting a nested expression,
1746escape it with a backslash.
1747.Sm off
1748.It Cm \&:@ Ar varname\| Cm @ Ar string\| Cm @
1749.Sm on
1750This is the loop expansion mechanism from the OSF Development
1751Environment (ODE) make.
1752Unlike
1753.Cm \&.for
1754loops, expansion occurs at the time of reference.
1755For each word in the value, assign the word to the variable named
1756.Ar varname
1757and evaluate
1758.Ar string .
1759The ODE convention is that
1760.Ar varname
1761should start and end with a period, for example:
1762.Dl ${LINKS:@.LINK.@${LN} ${TARGET} ${.LINK.}@}
1763.Pp
1764However, a single-letter variable is often more readable:
1765.Dl ${MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR:@v@$v='${$v}'${.newline}@}
1766.It Cm \&:_ Ns Oo Cm = Ns Ar var Oc
1767Saves the current variable value in
1768.Ql $_
1769or the named
1770.Ar var
1771for later reference.
1772Example usage:
1773.Bd -literal -offset indent
1774M_cmpv.units = 1 1000 1000000
1775M_cmpv = S,., ,g:_:range:@i@+ $${_:[-$$i]} \&\\
1776\\* $${M_cmpv.units:[$$i]}@:S,^,expr 0 ,1:sh
1777
1778.Dv .if ${VERSION:${M_cmpv}} < ${3.1.12:L:${M_cmpv}}
1779
1780.Ed
1781Here
1782.Ql $_
1783is used to save the result of the
1784.Ql :S
1785modifier which is later referenced using the index values from
1786.Ql :range .
1787.It Cm \&:U\| Ns Ar newval
1788If the variable is undefined,
1789.Ar newval
1790is the value.
1791If the variable is defined, the existing value is returned.
1792This is another ODE make feature.
1793It is handy for setting per-target CFLAGS for instance:
1794.Dl ${_${.TARGET:T}_CFLAGS:U${DEF_CFLAGS}}
1795If a value is only required if the variable is undefined, use:
1796.Dl ${VAR:D:Unewval}
1797.It Cm \&:D\| Ns Ar newval
1798If the variable is defined,
1799.Ar newval
1800is the value.
1801.It Cm \&:L
1802The name of the variable is the value.
1803.It Cm \&:P
1804The path of the node which has the same name as the variable is the value.
1805If no such node exists or its path is null, the name of the variable is used.
1806In order for this modifier to work, the name (node) must at least have
1807appeared on the right-hand side of a dependency.
1808.Sm off
1809.It Cm \&:\&! Ar cmd\| Cm \&!
1810.Sm on
1811The output of running
1812.Ar cmd
1813is the value.
1814.It Cm \&:sh
1815The value is run as a command, and the output becomes the new value.
1816.It Cm \&::= Ns Ar str
1817The variable is assigned the value
1818.Ar str
1819after substitution.
1820This modifier and its variations are useful in obscure situations
1821such as wanting to set a variable
1822at a point where a target's shell commands are being parsed.
1823These assignment modifiers always expand to nothing.
1824.Pp
1825The
1826.Sq Cm \&::
1827helps avoid false matches with the
1828.At V
1829style
1830.Ql \&:=
1831modifier and since substitution always occurs, the
1832.Ql \&::=
1833form is vaguely appropriate.
1834.It Cm \&::?= Ns Ar str
1835As for
1836.Cm \&::=
1837but only if the variable does not already have a value.
1838.It Cm \&::+= Ns Ar str
1839Append
1840.Ar str
1841to the variable.
1842.It Cm \&::!= Ns Ar cmd
1843Assign the output of
1844.Ar cmd
1845to the variable.
1846.It Cm \&:\&[ Ns Ar range Ns Cm \&]
1847Selects one or more words from the value,
1848or performs other operations related to the way in which the
1849value is split into words.
1850.Pp
1851An empty value, or a value that consists entirely of white-space,
1852is treated as a single word.
1853For the purposes of the
1854.Sq Cm \&:[]
1855modifier, the words are indexed both forwards using positive integers
1856(where index 1 represents the first word),
1857and backwards using negative integers
1858(where index \-1 represents the last word).
1859.Pp
1860The
1861.Ar range
1862is subjected to variable expansion, and the expanded result is
1863then interpreted as follows:
1864.Bl -tag -width index
1865.\" :[n]
1866.It Ar index
1867Selects a single word from the value.
1868.\" :[start..end]
1869.It Ar start Ns Cm \&.. Ns Ar end
1870Selects all words from
1871.Ar start
1872to
1873.Ar end ,
1874inclusive.
1875For example,
1876.Sq Cm \&:[2..-1]
1877selects all words from the second word to the last word.
1878If
1879.Ar start
1880is greater than
1881.Ar end ,
1882the words are output in reverse order.
1883For example,
1884.Sq Cm \&:[-1..1]
1885selects all the words from last to first.
1886If the list is already ordered,
1887this effectively reverses the list,
1888but it is more efficient to use
1889.Sq Cm \&:Or
1890instead of
1891.Sq Cm \&:O:[-1..1] .
1892.\" :[*]
1893.It Cm \&*
1894Causes subsequent modifiers to treat the value as a single word
1895(possibly containing embedded whitespace).
1896Analogous to the effect of
1897.Li \&$*
1898in Bourne shell.
1899.\" :[0]
1900.It 0
1901Means the same as
1902.Sq Cm \&:[*] .
1903.\" :[*]
1904.It Cm \&@
1905Causes subsequent modifiers to treat the value as a sequence of words
1906delimited by whitespace.
1907Analogous to the effect of
1908.Li \&$@
1909in Bourne shell.
1910.\" :[#]
1911.It Cm \&#
1912Returns the number of words in the value.
1913.El \" :[range]
1914.El
1915.Sh DIRECTIVES
1916.Nm
1917offers directives for including makefiles, conditionals and for loops.
1918All these directives are identified by a line beginning with a single dot
1919.Pq Ql \&.
1920character, followed by the keyword of the directive, such as
1921.Cm include
1922or
1923.Cm if .
1924.Ss File inclusion
1925Files are included with either
1926.Cm \&.include \&< Ns Ar file Ns Cm \&>
1927or
1928.Cm \&.include \&\*q Ns Ar file Ns Cm \&\*q .
1929Variables between the angle brackets or double quotes are expanded
1930to form the file name.
1931If angle brackets are used, the included makefile is expected to be in
1932the system makefile directory.
1933If double quotes are used, the including makefile's directory and any
1934directories specified using the
1935.Fl I
1936option are searched before the system makefile directory.
1937.Pp
1938For compatibility with other make variants,
1939.Sq Cm include Ar file No ...
1940(without leading dot)
1941is also accepted.
1942.Pp
1943If the include statement is written as
1944.Cm .-include
1945or as
1946.Cm .sinclude ,
1947errors locating and/or opening include files are ignored.
1948.Pp
1949If the include statement is written as
1950.Cm .dinclude ,
1951not only are errors locating and/or opening include files ignored,
1952but stale dependencies within the included file are ignored just like in
1953.Va .MAKE.DEPENDFILE .
1954.Ss Exporting variables
1955The directives for exporting and unexporting variables are:
1956.Bl -tag -width Ds
1957.It Ic .export Ar variable No ...
1958Export the specified global variable.
1959If no variable list is provided, all globals are exported
1960except for internal variables (those that start with
1961.Ql \&. ) .
1962This is not affected by the
1963.Fl X
1964flag, so should be used with caution.
1965For compatibility with other make programs,
1966.Cm export Ar variable\| Ns Cm \&= Ns Ar value
1967(without leading dot) is also accepted.
1968.Pp
1969Appending a variable name to
1970.Va .MAKE.EXPORTED
1971is equivalent to exporting a variable.
1972.It Ic .export-env Ar variable No ...
1973The same as
1974.Ql .export ,
1975except that the variable is not appended to
1976.Va .MAKE.EXPORTED .
1977This allows exporting a value to the environment which is different from that
1978used by
1979.Nm
1980internally.
1981.It Ic .export-literal Ar variable No ...
1982The same as
1983.Ql .export-env ,
1984except that variables in the value are not expanded.
1985.It Ic .unexport Ar variable No ...
1986The opposite of
1987.Ql .export .
1988The specified global
1989.Ar variable
1990is removed from
1991.Va .MAKE.EXPORTED .
1992If no variable list is provided, all globals are unexported,
1993and
1994.Va .MAKE.EXPORTED
1995deleted.
1996.It Ic .unexport-env
1997Unexport all globals previously exported and
1998clear the environment inherited from the parent.
1999This operation causes a memory leak of the original environment,
2000so should be used sparingly.
2001Testing for
2002.Va .MAKE.LEVEL
2003being 0 would make sense.
2004Also note that any variables which originated in the parent environment
2005should be explicitly preserved if desired.
2006For example:
2007.Bd -literal -offset indent
2008.Li .if ${.MAKE.LEVEL} == 0
2009PATH := ${PATH}
2010.Li .unexport-env
2011.Li .export PATH
2012.Li .endif
2013.Pp
2014.Ed
2015Would result in an environment containing only
2016.Sq Ev PATH ,
2017which is the minimal useful environment.
2018.\" TODO: Check the below sentence, environment variables don't start with '.'.
2019Actually
2020.Sq Va .MAKE.LEVEL
2021is also pushed into the new environment.
2022.El
2023.Ss Messages
2024The directives for printing messages to the output are:
2025.Bl -tag -width Ds
2026.It Ic .info Ar message
2027The message is printed along with the name of the makefile and line number.
2028.It Ic .warning Ar message
2029The message prefixed by
2030.Sq Li warning:
2031is printed along with the name of the makefile and line number.
2032.It Ic .error Ar message
2033The message is printed along with the name of the makefile and line number,
2034.Nm
2035exits immediately.
2036.El
2037.Ss Conditionals
2038The directives for conditionals are:
2039.ds maybenot Oo Ic \&! Oc Ns
2040.Bl -tag
2041.It Ic .if \*[maybenot] Ar expression Op Ar operator expression No ...
2042Test the value of an expression.
2043.It Ic .ifdef \*[maybenot] Ar variable Op Ar operator variable No ...
2044Test whether a variable is defined.
2045.It Ic .ifndef \*[maybenot] Ar variable Op Ar operator variable No ...
2046Test whether a variable is not defined.
2047.It Ic .ifmake \*[maybenot] Ar target Op Ar operator target No ...
2048Test the target being requested.
2049.It Ic .ifnmake \*[maybenot] Ar target Op Ar operator target No ...
2050Test the target being requested.
2051.It Ic .else
2052Reverse the sense of the last conditional.
2053.It Ic .elif \*[maybenot] Ar expression Op Ar operator expression No ...
2054A combination of
2055.Sq Ic .else
2056followed by
2057.Sq Ic .if .
2058.It Ic .elifdef \*[maybenot] Ar variable Op Ar operator variable No ...
2059A combination of
2060.Sq Ic .else
2061followed by
2062.Sq Ic .ifdef .
2063.It Ic .elifndef \*[maybenot] Ar variable Op Ar operator variable No ...
2064A combination of
2065.Sq Ic .else
2066followed by
2067.Sq Ic .ifndef .
2068.It Ic .elifmake \*[maybenot] Ar target Op Ar operator target No ...
2069A combination of
2070.Sq Ic .else
2071followed by
2072.Sq Ic .ifmake .
2073.It Ic .elifnmake \*[maybenot] Ar target Op Ar operator target No ...
2074A combination of
2075.Sq Ic .else
2076followed by
2077.Sq Ic .ifnmake .
2078.It Ic .endif
2079End the body of the conditional.
2080.El
2081.Pp
2082The
2083.Ar operator
2084may be any one of the following:
2085.Bl -tag
2086.It Ic \&|\&|
2087Logical OR.
2088.It Ic \&&&
2089Logical AND; of higher precedence than
2090.Sq Ic \&|\&| .
2091.El
2092.Pp
2093.Nm
2094only evaluates a conditional as far as is necessary to determine its value.
2095Parentheses can be used to override the operator precedence.
2096The boolean operator
2097.Sq Ic \&!
2098may be used to logically negate an expression, typically a function call.
2099It is of higher precedence than
2100.Sq Ic \&&& .
2101.Pp
2102The value of
2103.Ar expression
2104may be any of the following function call expressions:
2105.Bl -tag
2106.Sm off
2107.It Ic defined Li \&( Ar varname Li \&)
2108.Sm on
2109Evaluates to true if the variable
2110.Ar varname
2111has been defined.
2112.Sm off
2113.It Ic make Li \&( Ar target Li \&)
2114.Sm on
2115Evaluates to true if the target was specified as part of
2116.Nm Ns 's
2117command line or was declared the default target (either implicitly or
2118explicitly, see
2119.Va .MAIN )
2120before the line containing the conditional.
2121.Sm off
2122.It Ic empty Li \&( Ar varname Oo Li : Ar modifiers Oc Li \&)
2123.Sm on
2124Evaluates to true if the expansion of the variable,
2125after applying the modifiers, results in an empty string.
2126.Sm off
2127.It Ic exists Li \&( Ar pathname Li \&)
2128.Sm on
2129Evaluates to true if the given pathname exists.
2130If relative, the pathname is searched for on the system search path (see
2131.Va .PATH ) .
2132.Sm off
2133.It Ic target Li \&( Ar target Li \&)
2134.Sm on
2135Evaluates to true if the target has been defined.
2136.Sm off
2137.It Ic commands Li \&( Ar target Li \&)
2138.Sm on
2139Evaluates to true if the target has been defined
2140and has commands associated with it.
2141.El
2142.Pp
2143.Ar Expression
2144may also be an arithmetic or string comparison.
2145Variable expansion is performed on both sides of the comparison.
2146If both sides are numeric and neither is enclosed in quotes,
2147the comparison is done numerically, otherwise lexicographically.
2148A string is interpreted as a hexadecimal integer if it is preceded by
2149.Li 0x ,
2150otherwise it is interpreted as a decimal floating-point number;
2151octal numbers are not supported.
2152.Pp
2153All comparisons may use the operators
2154.Sq Ic \&==
2155and
2156.Sq Ic \&!= .
2157Numeric comparisons may also use the operators
2158.Sq Ic \&< ,
2159.Sq Ic \&<= ,
2160.Sq Ic \&>
2161and
2162.Sq Ic \&>= .
2163.Pp
2164If the comparison has neither a comparison operator nor a right side,
2165the expression evaluates to true if it is nonempty
2166and its numeric value (if any) is not zero.
2167.Pp
2168When
2169.Nm
2170is evaluating one of these conditional expressions, and it encounters
2171a (whitespace-separated) word it doesn't recognize, either the
2172.Dq make
2173or
2174.Dq defined
2175function is applied to it, depending on the form of the conditional.
2176If the form is
2177.Sq Ic .ifdef ,
2178.Sq Ic .ifndef
2179or
2180.Sq Ic .if ,
2181the
2182.Dq defined
2183function is applied.
2184Similarly, if the form is
2185.Sq Ic .ifmake
2186or
2187.Sq Ic .ifnmake ,
2188the
2189.Dq make
2190function is applied.
2191.Pp
2192If the conditional evaluates to true,
2193parsing of the makefile continues as before.
2194If it evaluates to false, the following lines until the corresponding
2195.Sq Ic .elif
2196variant,
2197.Sq Ic .else
2198or
2199.Sq Ic .endif
2200are skipped.
2201.Ss For loops
2202For loops are typically used to apply a set of rules to a list of files.
2203The syntax of a for loop is:
2204.Pp
2205.Bl -tag -compact -width Ds
2206.It Ic \&.for Ar variable Oo Ar variable No ... Oc Ic in Ar expression
2207.It Aq Ar make-lines
2208.It Ic \&.endfor
2209.El
2210.Pp
2211The
2212.Ar expression
2213is expanded and then split into words.
2214On each iteration of the loop, one word is taken and assigned to each
2215.Ar variable ,
2216in order, and these
2217.Ar variables
2218are substituted into the
2219.Ar make-lines
2220inside the body of the for loop.
2221The number of words must come out even; that is, if there are three
2222iteration variables, the number of words provided must be a multiple
2223of three.
2224.Pp
2225If
2226.Sq Ic .break
2227is encountered within a
2228.Cm \&.for
2229loop, it causes early termination of the loop, otherwise a parse error.
2230.\" TODO: Describe limitations with defined/empty.
2231.Ss Other directives
2232.Bl -tag -width Ds
2233.It Ic .undef Ar variable No ...
2234Un-define the specified global variables.
2235Only global variables can be un-defined.
2236.El
2237.Sh COMMENTS
2238Comments begin with a hash
2239.Pq Ql \&#
2240character, anywhere but in a shell
2241command line, and continue to the end of an unescaped new line.
2242.Sh SPECIAL SOURCES (ATTRIBUTES)
2243.Bl -tag -width .IGNOREx
2244.It Ic .EXEC
2245Target is never out of date, but always execute commands anyway.
2246.It Ic .IGNORE
2247Ignore any errors from the commands associated with this target, exactly
2248as if they all were preceded by a dash
2249.Pq Ql \- .
2250.\" .It Ic .INVISIBLE
2251.\" XXX
2252.\" .It Ic .JOIN
2253.\" XXX
2254.It Ic .MADE
2255Mark all sources of this target as being up to date.
2256.It Ic .MAKE
2257Execute the commands associated with this target even if the
2258.Fl n
2259or
2260.Fl t
2261options were specified.
2262Normally used to mark recursive
2263.Nm Ns s .
2264.It Ic .META
2265Create a meta file for the target, even if it is flagged as
2266.Ic .PHONY ,
2267.Ic .MAKE ,
2268or
2269.Ic .SPECIAL .
2270Usage in conjunction with
2271.Ic .MAKE
2272is the most likely case.
2273In
2274.Dq meta
2275mode, the target is out-of-date if the meta file is missing.
2276.It Ic .NOMETA
2277Do not create a meta file for the target.
2278Meta files are also not created for
2279.Ic .PHONY ,
2280.Ic .MAKE ,
2281or
2282.Ic .SPECIAL
2283targets.
2284.It Ic .NOMETA_CMP
2285Ignore differences in commands when deciding if target is out of date.
2286This is useful if the command contains a value which always changes.
2287If the number of commands change, though,
2288the target is still considered out of date.
2289The same effect applies to any command line that uses the variable
2290.Va .OODATE ,
2291which can be used for that purpose even when not otherwise needed or desired:
2292.Bd -literal -offset indent
2293
2294skip-compare-for-some:
2295	@echo this is compared
2296	@echo this is not ${.OODATE:M.NOMETA_CMP}
2297	@echo this is also compared
2298
2299.Ed
2300The
2301.Cm \&:M
2302pattern suppresses any expansion of the unwanted variable.
2303.It Ic .NOPATH
2304Do not search for the target in the directories specified by
2305.Va .PATH .
2306.It Ic .NOTMAIN
2307Normally
2308.Nm
2309selects the first target it encounters as the default target to be built
2310if no target was specified.
2311This source prevents this target from being selected.
2312.It Ic .OPTIONAL
2313If a target is marked with this attribute and
2314.Nm
2315can't figure out how to create it, it ignores this fact and assumes
2316the file isn't needed or already exists.
2317.It Ic .PHONY
2318The target does not correspond to an actual file;
2319it is always considered to be out of date,
2320and is not created with the
2321.Fl t
2322option.
2323Suffix-transformation rules are not applied to
2324.Ic .PHONY
2325targets.
2326.It Ic .PRECIOUS
2327When
2328.Nm
2329is interrupted, it normally removes any partially made targets.
2330This source prevents the target from being removed.
2331.It Ic .RECURSIVE
2332Synonym for
2333.Ic .MAKE .
2334.It Ic .SILENT
2335Do not echo any of the commands associated with this target, exactly
2336as if they all were preceded by an at sign
2337.Pq Ql @ .
2338.It Ic .USE
2339Turn the target into
2340.Nm Ns 's
2341version of a macro.
2342When the target is used as a source for another target, the other target
2343acquires the commands, sources, and attributes (except for
2344.Ic .USE )
2345of the
2346source.
2347If the target already has commands, the
2348.Ic .USE
2349target's commands are appended
2350to them.
2351.It Ic .USEBEFORE
2352Like
2353.Ic .USE ,
2354but instead of appending, prepend the
2355.Ic .USEBEFORE
2356target commands to the target.
2357.It Ic .WAIT
2358If
2359.Ic .WAIT
2360appears in a dependency line, the sources that precede it are
2361made before the sources that succeed it in the line.
2362Since the dependents of files are not made until the file itself
2363could be made, this also stops the dependents being built unless they
2364are needed for another branch of the dependency tree.
2365So given:
2366.Bd -literal
2367x: a .WAIT b
2368	echo x
2369a:
2370	echo a
2371b: b1
2372	echo b
2373b1:
2374	echo b1
2375
2376.Ed
2377the output is always
2378.Ql a ,
2379.Ql b1 ,
2380.Ql b ,
2381.Ql x .
2382.Pp
2383The ordering imposed by
2384.Ic .WAIT
2385is only relevant for parallel makes.
2386.El
2387.Sh SPECIAL TARGETS
2388Special targets may not be included with other targets, i.e. they must be
2389the only target specified.
2390.Bl -tag -width .BEGINx
2391.It Ic .BEGIN
2392Any command lines attached to this target are executed before anything
2393else is done.
2394.It Ic .DEFAULT
2395This is sort of a
2396.Ic .USE
2397rule for any target (that was used only as a source) that
2398.Nm
2399can't figure out any other way to create.
2400Only the shell script is used.
2401The
2402.Va .IMPSRC
2403variable of a target that inherits
2404.Ic .DEFAULT Ns 's
2405commands is set to the target's own name.
2406.It Ic .DELETE_ON_ERROR
2407If this target is present in the makefile, it globally causes make to
2408delete targets whose commands fail.
2409(By default, only targets whose commands are interrupted during
2410execution are deleted.
2411This is the historical behavior.)
2412This setting can be used to help prevent half-finished or malformed
2413targets from being left around and corrupting future rebuilds.
2414.It Ic .END
2415Any command lines attached to this target are executed after everything
2416else is done successfully.
2417.It Ic .ERROR
2418Any command lines attached to this target are executed when another target fails.
2419The
2420.Va .ERROR_TARGET
2421variable is set to the target that failed.
2422See also
2423.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR .
2424.It Ic .IGNORE
2425Mark each of the sources with the
2426.Ic .IGNORE
2427attribute.
2428If no sources are specified, this is the equivalent of specifying the
2429.Fl i
2430option.
2431.It Ic .INTERRUPT
2432If
2433.Nm
2434is interrupted, the commands for this target are executed.
2435.It Ic .MAIN
2436If no target is specified when
2437.Nm
2438is invoked, this target is built.
2439.It Ic .MAKEFLAGS
2440This target provides a way to specify flags for
2441.Nm
2442at the time when the makefiles are read.
2443The flags are as if typed to the shell, though the
2444.Fl f
2445option has
2446no effect.
2447.\" XXX: NOT YET!!!!
2448.\" .It Ic .NOTPARALLEL
2449.\" The named targets are executed in non parallel mode.
2450.\" If no targets are
2451.\" specified, all targets are executed in non parallel mode.
2452.It Ic .NOPATH
2453Apply the
2454.Ic .NOPATH
2455attribute to any specified sources.
2456.It Ic .NOTPARALLEL
2457Disable parallel mode.
2458.It Ic .NO_PARALLEL
2459Synonym for
2460.Ic .NOTPARALLEL ,
2461for compatibility with other pmake variants.
2462.It Ic .NOREADONLY
2463clear the read-only attribute from the global variables specified as sources.
2464.It Ic .OBJDIR
2465The source is a new value for
2466.Sq Va .OBJDIR .
2467If it exists,
2468.Nm
2469changes the current working directory to it and updates the value of
2470.Sq Va .OBJDIR .
2471.It Ic .ORDER
2472In parallel mode, the named targets are made in sequence.
2473This ordering does not add targets to the list of targets to be made.
2474.Pp
2475Since the dependents of a target do not get built until the target itself
2476could be built, unless
2477.Ql a
2478is built by another part of the dependency graph,
2479the following is a dependency loop:
2480.Bd -literal
2481\&.ORDER: b a
2482b: a
2483.Ed
2484.Pp
2485.\" XXX: NOT YET!!!!
2486.\" .It Ic .PARALLEL
2487.\" The named targets are executed in parallel mode.
2488.\" If no targets are
2489.\" specified, all targets are executed in parallel mode.
2490.It Ic .PATH
2491The sources are directories which are to be searched for files not
2492found in the current directory.
2493If no sources are specified,
2494any previously specified directories are removed from the search path.
2495If the source is the special
2496.Ic .DOTLAST
2497target, the current working directory is searched last.
2498.It Ic .PATH. Ns Ar suffix
2499Like
2500.Ic .PATH
2501but applies only to files with a particular suffix.
2502The suffix must have been previously declared with
2503.Ic .SUFFIXES .
2504.It Ic .PHONY
2505Apply the
2506.Ic .PHONY
2507attribute to any specified sources.
2508.It Ic .POSIX
2509If this is the first non-comment line in the main makefile,
2510the variable
2511.Va %POSIX
2512is set to the value
2513.Ql 1003.2
2514and the makefile
2515.Ql <posix.mk>
2516is included if it exists,
2517to provide POSIX-compatible default rules.
2518If
2519.Nm
2520is run with the
2521.Fl r
2522flag, only
2523.Ql posix.mk
2524contributes to the default rules.
2525.It Ic .PRECIOUS
2526Apply the
2527.Ic .PRECIOUS
2528attribute to any specified sources.
2529If no sources are specified, the
2530.Ic .PRECIOUS
2531attribute is applied to every target in the file.
2532.It Ic .READONLY
2533set the read-only attribute on the global variables specified as sources.
2534.It Ic .SHELL
2535Sets the shell that
2536.Nm
2537uses to execute commands.
2538The sources are a set of
2539.Ar field\| Ns Cm \&= Ns Ar value
2540pairs.
2541.Bl -tag -width ".Li hasErrCtls"
2542.It Li name
2543This is the minimal specification, used to select one of the built-in
2544shell specs;
2545.Li sh ,
2546.Li ksh ,
2547and
2548.Li csh .
2549.It Li path
2550Specifies the absolute path to the shell.
2551.It Li hasErrCtl
2552Indicates whether the shell supports exit on error.
2553.It Li check
2554The command to turn on error checking.
2555.It Li ignore
2556The command to disable error checking.
2557.It Li echo
2558The command to turn on echoing of commands executed.
2559.It Li quiet
2560The command to turn off echoing of commands executed.
2561.It Li filter
2562The output to filter after issuing the
2563.Li quiet
2564command.
2565It is typically identical to
2566.Li quiet .
2567.It Li errFlag
2568The flag to pass the shell to enable error checking.
2569.It Li echoFlag
2570The flag to pass the shell to enable command echoing.
2571.It Li newline
2572The string literal to pass the shell that results in a single newline
2573character when used outside of any quoting characters.
2574.El
2575Example:
2576.Bd -literal
2577\&.SHELL: name=ksh path=/bin/ksh hasErrCtl=true \e
2578	check="set \-e" ignore="set +e" \e
2579	echo="set \-v" quiet="set +v" filter="set +v" \e
2580	echoFlag=v errFlag=e newline="'\en'"
2581.Ed
2582.It Ic .SILENT
2583Apply the
2584.Ic .SILENT
2585attribute to any specified sources.
2586If no sources are specified, the
2587.Ic .SILENT
2588attribute is applied to every
2589command in the file.
2590.It Ic .STALE
2591This target gets run when a dependency file contains stale entries, having
2592.Va .ALLSRC
2593set to the name of that dependency file.
2594.It Ic .SUFFIXES
2595Each source specifies a suffix to
2596.Nm .
2597If no sources are specified, any previously specified suffixes are deleted.
2598It allows the creation of suffix-transformation rules.
2599.Pp
2600Example:
2601.Bd -literal
2602\&.SUFFIXES: .c .o
2603\&.c.o:
2604	cc \-o ${.TARGET} \-c ${.IMPSRC}
2605.Ed
2606.It Ic .SYSPATH
2607The sources are directories which are to be added to the system
2608include path which
2609.Nm
2610searches for makefiles.
2611If no sources are specified,
2612any previously specified directories are removed from the system
2613include path.
2614.El
2615.Sh ENVIRONMENT
2616.Nm
2617uses the following environment variables, if they exist:
2618.Ev MACHINE ,
2619.Ev MACHINE_ARCH ,
2620.Ev MAKE ,
2621.Ev MAKEFLAGS ,
2622.Ev MAKEOBJDIR ,
2623.Ev MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX ,
2624.Ev MAKESYSPATH ,
2625.Ev PWD ,
2626and
2627.Ev TMPDIR .
2628.Pp
2629.Ev MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX
2630and
2631.Ev MAKEOBJDIR
2632may only be set in the environment or on the command line to
2633.Nm
2634and not as makefile variables;
2635see the description of
2636.Sq Va .OBJDIR
2637for more details.
2638.Sh FILES
2639.Bl -tag -width /usr/share/mk -compact
2640.It .depend
2641list of dependencies
2642.It makefile
2643first default makefile if no makefile is specified on the command line
2644.It Makefile
2645second default makefile if no makefile is specified on the command line
2646.It sys.mk
2647system makefile
2648.It /usr/share/mk
2649system makefile directory
2650.El
2651.Sh COMPATIBILITY
2652The basic make syntax is compatible between different make variants;
2653however the special variables, variable modifiers and conditionals are not.
2654.Ss Older versions
2655An incomplete list of changes in older versions of
2656.Nm :
2657.Pp
2658The way that .for loop variables are substituted changed after
2659.Nx 5.0
2660so that they still appear to be variable expansions.
2661In particular this stops them being treated as syntax, and removes some
2662obscure problems using them in .if statements.
2663.Pp
2664The way that parallel makes are scheduled changed in
2665.Nx 4.0
2666so that .ORDER and .WAIT apply recursively to the dependent nodes.
2667The algorithms used may change again in the future.
2668.Ss Other make dialects
2669Other make dialects (GNU make, SVR4 make, POSIX make, etc.) do not
2670support most of the features of
2671.Nm
2672as described in this manual.
2673Most notably:
2674.Bl -bullet -offset indent
2675.It
2676The
2677.Ic .WAIT
2678and
2679.Ic .ORDER
2680declarations and most functionality pertaining to parallelization.
2681(GNU make supports parallelization but lacks the features needed to
2682control it effectively.)
2683.It
2684Directives, including for loops and conditionals and most of the
2685forms of include files.
2686(GNU make has its own incompatible and less powerful syntax for
2687conditionals.)
2688.\" The "less powerful" above means that GNU make does not have the
2689.\" make(target), target(target) and commands(target) functions.
2690.It
2691All built-in variables that begin with a dot.
2692.It
2693Most of the special sources and targets that begin with a dot,
2694with the notable exception of
2695.Ic .PHONY ,
2696.Ic .PRECIOUS ,
2697and
2698.Ic .SUFFIXES .
2699.It
2700Variable modifiers, except for the
2701.Ql :old=new
2702string substitution, which does not portably support globbing with
2703.Ql %
2704and historically only works on declared suffixes.
2705.It
2706The
2707.Ic $>
2708variable even in its short form; most makes support this functionality
2709but its name varies.
2710.El
2711.Pp
2712Some features are somewhat more portable, such as assignment with
2713.Ic += ,
2714.Ic ?= ,
2715and
2716.Ic != .
2717The
2718.Va .PATH
2719functionality is based on an older feature
2720.Ic VPATH
2721found in GNU make and many versions of SVR4 make; however,
2722historically its behavior is too ill-defined (and too buggy) to rely
2723upon.
2724.Pp
2725The
2726.Ic $@
2727and
2728.Ic $<
2729variables are more or less universally portable, as is the
2730.Ic $(MAKE)
2731variable.
2732Basic use of suffix rules (for files only in the current directory,
2733not trying to chain transformations together, etc.) is also reasonably
2734portable.
2735.Sh SEE ALSO
2736.Xr mkdep 1 ,
2737.Xr style.Makefile 5
2738.Sh HISTORY
2739A
2740.Nm
2741command appeared in
2742.At v7 .
2743This
2744.Nm
2745implementation is based on Adam de Boor's pmake program,
2746which was written for Sprite at Berkeley.
2747It was designed to be a parallel distributed make running jobs on different
2748machines using a daemon called
2749.Dq customs .
2750.Pp
2751Historically the target/dependency
2752.Ic FRC
2753has been used to FoRCe rebuilding (since the target/dependency
2754does not exist ... unless someone creates an
2755.Pa FRC
2756file).
2757.Sh BUGS
2758The
2759.Nm
2760syntax is difficult to parse.
2761For instance, finding the end of a variable's use should involve scanning
2762each of the modifiers, using the correct terminator for each field.
2763In many places
2764.Nm
2765just counts {} and () in order to find the end of a variable expansion.
2766.Pp
2767There is no way of escaping a space character in a filename.
2768.Pp
2769In jobs mode, when a target fails;
2770.Nm
2771will put an error token into the job token pool.
2772This will cause all other instances of
2773.Nm
2774using that token pool to abort the build and exit with error code 6.
2775Sometimes the attempt to suppress a cascade of unnecessary errors,
2776can result in a seemingly unexplained
2777.Ql *** Error code 6
2778