1.\" $NetBSD: make.1,v 1.390 2026/02/08 11:02:03 rillig Exp $ 2.\" 3.\" Copyright (c) 1990, 1993 4.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 5.\" 6.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 7.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 8.\" are met: 9.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 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 13.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 14.\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 15.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 16.\" without specific prior written permission. 17.\" 18.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 19.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 20.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 21.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 22.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 23.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 24.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 25.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 26.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 27.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 28.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 29.\" 30.\" from: @(#)make.1 8.4 (Berkeley) 3/19/94 31.\" 32.Dd February 8, 2026 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 No ... 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 63looks for the makefiles listed in 64.Va .MAKE.MAKEFILE_PREFERENCE 65(default 66.Sq Pa makefile , 67.Sq Pa Makefile ) 68in order to find the specifications. 69If the file 70.Sq Pa .depend 71exists, it is read, see 72.Xr mkdep 1 . 73.Pp 74This manual page is intended as a reference document only. 75For a more thorough description of 76.Nm 77and makefiles, please refer to 78.%T "PMake \- A Tutorial" 79(from 1993). 80.Pp 81.Nm 82prepends the contents of the 83.Ev MAKEFLAGS 84environment variable to the command line arguments before parsing them. 85.Pp 86The options are as follows: 87.Bl -tag -width Ds 88.It Fl B 89Try to be backwards compatible by executing a single shell per command and 90by making the sources of a dependency line in sequence. 91.It Fl C Ar directory 92Change to 93.Ar directory 94before reading the makefiles or doing anything else. 95If multiple 96.Fl C 97options are specified, each is interpreted relative to the previous one: 98.Fl C Pa / Fl C Pa etc 99is equivalent to 100.Fl C Pa /etc . 101.It Fl D Ar variable 102Define 103.Ar variable 104to be 1, in the global scope. 105.It Fl d Oo Cm \- Oc Ns Ar flags 106Turn on debugging, and specify which portions of 107.Nm 108are to print debugging information. 109Unless the flags are preceded by 110.Ql \- , 111they are added to the 112.Ev MAKEFLAGS 113environment variable and are passed on to any child make processes. 114By default, debugging information is printed to standard error, 115but this can be changed using the 116.Cm F 117debugging flag. 118The debugging output is always unbuffered; in addition, if debugging 119is enabled but debugging output is not directed to standard output, 120the standard output is line buffered. 121The available 122.Ar flags 123are: 124.Bl -tag -width Ds 125.It Cm A 126Print all possible debugging information; 127equivalent to specifying all of the debugging flags. 128.It Cm a 129Print debugging information about archive searching and caching. 130.It Cm C 131Print debugging information about the current working directory. 132.It Cm c 133Print debugging information about conditional evaluation. 134.It Cm d 135Print debugging information about directory searching and caching. 136.It Cm e 137Print debugging information about failed commands and targets. 138.It Cm F Ns Oo Cm \&+ Oc Ns Ar filename 139Specify where debugging output is written. 140This must be the last flag, because it consumes the remainder of 141the argument. 142If the character immediately after the 143.Cm F 144flag is 145.Ql \&+ , 146the file is opened in append mode; 147otherwise the file is overwritten. 148If the file name is 149.Ql stdout 150or 151.Ql stderr , 152debugging output is written to the standard output or standard error output 153respectively (and the 154.Ql \&+ 155option has no effect). 156Otherwise, the output is written to the named file. 157If the file name ends with 158.Ql .%d , 159the 160.Ql %d 161is replaced by the pid. 162.It Cm f 163Print debugging information about loop evaluation. 164.It Cm g1 165Print the input graph before making anything. 166.It Cm g2 167Print the input graph after making everything, or before exiting 168on error. 169.It Cm g3 170Print the input graph before exiting on error. 171.It Cm h 172Print debugging information about hash table operations. 173.It Cm j 174Print debugging information about running multiple shells. 175.It Cm L 176Turn on lint checks. 177This throws errors for variable assignments that do not parse correctly, 178at the time of assignment, so the file and line number are available. 179.It Cm l 180Print commands in Makefiles regardless of whether or not they are prefixed by 181.Ql @ 182or other 183.Dq quiet 184flags. 185Also known as 186.Dq loud 187behavior. 188.It Cm M 189Print debugging information about 190.Dq meta 191mode decisions about targets. 192.It Cm m 193Print debugging information about making targets, including modification 194dates. 195.It Cm n 196Don't delete the temporary command scripts created when running commands. 197These temporary scripts are created in the directory 198referred to by the 199.Ev TMPDIR 200environment variable, or in 201.Pa /tmp 202if 203.Ev TMPDIR 204is unset or set to the empty string. 205The temporary scripts are created by 206.Xr mkstemp 3 , 207and have names of the form 208.Pa makeXXXXXX . 209.Em NOTE : 210This can create many files in 211.Ev TMPDIR 212or 213.Pa /tmp , 214so use with care. 215.It Cm p 216Print debugging information about makefile parsing. 217.It Cm s 218Print debugging information about suffix-transformation rules. 219.It Cm t 220Print debugging information about target list maintenance. 221.It Cm V 222Force the 223.Fl V 224option to print raw values of variables, 225overriding the default behavior set via 226.Va .MAKE.EXPAND_VARIABLES . 227.It Cm v 228Print debugging information about variable assignment and expansion. 229.It Cm x 230Run shell commands with 231.Fl x 232so the actual commands are printed as they are executed. 233.El 234.It Fl e 235Let environment variables override global variables within makefiles. 236.It Fl f Ar makefile 237Specify a makefile to read instead of one of the defaults listed in 238.Va .MAKE.MAKEFILE_PREFERENCE . 239If 240.Ar makefile 241is 242.Ql \&- , 243standard input is read. 244If 245.Ar makefile 246starts with the string 247.Ql \&.../ , 248.Nm 249searches for the specified path in the rest of the argument 250in the current directory and its parents. 251Multiple makefiles may be specified, and are read in the order specified. 252.It Fl I Ar directory 253Specify a directory in which to search for makefiles and included makefiles. 254The system makefile directory (or directories, see the 255.Fl m 256option) is automatically included as part of this list. 257.It Fl i 258Ignore non-zero exit of shell commands in the makefile. 259Equivalent to specifying 260.Ql \&- 261before each command line in the makefile. 262.It Fl J Ar private 263This option should 264.Em not 265be specified by the user. 266.Pp 267When the 268.Fl j 269option is in use in a recursive build, this option is passed by a make 270to child makes to allow all the make processes in the build to 271cooperate to avoid overloading the system. 272.It Fl j Ar max_jobs 273Specify the maximum number of jobs that 274.Nm 275may have running at any one time. 276If 277.Ar max_jobs 278is a floating point number, or ends with 279.Ql C , 280then the value is multiplied by the number of CPUs reported online by 281.Xr sysconf 3 . 282The value of 283.Ar max_jobs 284is saved in 285.Va .MAKE.JOBS . 286Turns compatibility mode off, unless the 287.Fl B 288option is also specified. 289When compatibility mode is off, all commands associated with a 290target are executed in a single shell invocation as opposed to the 291traditional one shell invocation per line. 292This can break traditional scripts which change directories on each 293command invocation and then expect to start with a fresh environment 294on the next line. 295It is more efficient to correct the scripts rather than turn backwards 296compatibility on. 297.Pp 298A job token pool with 299.Ar max_jobs 300tokens is used to control the total number of jobs running. 301Each instance of 302.Nm 303will wait for a token from the pool before running a new job. 304.It Fl k 305Continue processing after errors are encountered, but only on those targets 306that do not depend on the target whose creation caused the error. 307.It Fl m Ar directory 308Specify a directory in which to search for 309.Pa sys.mk 310and makefiles included via the 311.Li \&< Ns Ar file Ns Li \&> Ns -style 312include statement. 313The 314.Fl m 315option can be used multiple times to form a search path. 316This path overrides the default system include path 317.Pa /usr/share/mk . 318Furthermore, the system include path is appended to the search path used for 319.Li \*q Ns Ar file Ns Li \*q Ns -style 320include statements (see the 321.Fl I 322option). 323The system include path can be referenced via the read-only variable 324.Va .SYSPATH . 325.Pp 326If a directory name in the 327.Fl m 328argument (or the 329.Ev MAKESYSPATH 330environment variable) starts with the string 331.Ql \&.../ , 332.Nm 333searches for the specified file or directory named in the remaining part 334of the argument string. 335The search starts with the current directory 336and then works upward towards the root of the file system. 337If the search is successful, the resulting directory replaces the 338.Ql \&.../ 339specification in the 340.Fl m 341argument. 342This feature allows 343.Nm 344to easily search in the current source tree for customized 345.Pa sys.mk 346files (e.g., by using 347.Ql \&.../mk/sys.mk 348as an argument). 349.It Fl n 350Display the commands that would have been executed, but do not 351actually execute them unless the target depends on the 352.Va .MAKE 353special source (see below) or the command is prefixed with 354.Sq Cm + . 355.It Fl N 356Display the commands that would have been executed, 357but do not actually execute any of them; 358useful for debugging top-level makefiles 359without descending into subdirectories. 360.It Fl q 361Do not execute any commands, 362instead exit 0 if the specified targets are up to date, and 1 otherwise. 363.It Fl r 364Do not use the built-in rules specified in the system makefile. 365.It Fl S 366Stop processing if an error is encountered. 367This is the default behavior and the opposite of 368.Fl k . 369.It Fl s 370Do not echo any commands as they are executed. 371Equivalent to specifying 372.Sq Ic @ 373before each command line in the makefile. 374.It Fl T Ar tracefile 375When used with the 376.Fl j 377flag, 378append a trace record to 379.Ar tracefile 380for each job started and completed. 381.It Fl t 382Rather than re-building a target as specified in the makefile, create it 383or update its modification time to make it appear up-to-date. 384.It Fl V Ar variable 385Print the value of 386.Ar variable . 387Do not build any targets. 388Multiple instances of this option may be specified; 389the variables are printed one per line, 390with a blank line for each null or undefined variable. 391The value printed is extracted from the global scope after all 392makefiles have been read. 393.Pp 394By default, the raw variable contents (which may 395include additional unexpanded variable references) are shown. 396If 397.Ar variable 398contains a 399.Ql \&$ , 400it is not interpreted as a variable name but rather as an expression. 401Its value is expanded before printing. 402The value is also expanded before printing if 403.Va .MAKE.EXPAND_VARIABLES 404is set to true and the 405.Fl dV 406option has not been used to override it. 407.Pp 408Note that loop-local and target-local variables, as well as values 409taken temporarily by global variables during makefile processing, are 410not accessible via this option. 411The 412.Fl dv 413debug mode can be used to see these at the cost of generating 414substantial extraneous output. 415.It Fl v Ar variable 416Like 417.Fl V , 418but all printed variables are always expanded to their complete value. 419The last occurrence of 420.Fl V 421or 422.Fl v 423decides whether all variables are expanded or not. 424.It Fl W 425Treat any warnings during makefile parsing as errors. 426.It Fl w 427Print entering and leaving directory messages, pre and post processing. 428.It Fl X 429Don't export variables passed on the command line to the environment 430individually. 431Variables passed on the command line are still exported via the 432.Ev MAKEFLAGS 433environment variable. 434This option may be useful on systems which have a small limit on the 435size of command arguments. 436.It Ar variable\| Ns Cm \&= Ns Ar value 437Set the value of the variable 438.Ar variable 439to 440.Ar value . 441Normally, all values passed on the command line are also exported to 442sub-makes in the environment. 443The 444.Fl X 445flag disables this behavior. 446Variable assignments should follow options for POSIX compatibility 447but no ordering is enforced. 448.El 449.Pp 450There are several different types of lines in a makefile: dependency 451specifications, shell commands, variable assignments, include statements, 452conditional directives, for loops, other directives, and comments. 453.Pp 454Lines may be continued from one line to the next 455by ending them with a backslash 456.Pq Ql \e . 457The trailing newline character and initial whitespace on the following 458line are compressed into a single space. 459.Sh FILE DEPENDENCY SPECIFICATIONS 460Dependency lines consist of one or more targets, an operator, and zero 461or more sources. 462This creates a relationship where the targets 463.Dq depend 464on the sources and are customarily created from them. 465A target is considered out of date if it does not exist, 466or if its modification time is less than that of any of its sources. 467An out-of-date target is re-created, but not until all sources 468have been examined and themselves re-created as needed. 469Three operators may be used: 470.Bl -tag -width flag 471.It Ic \&: 472Many dependency lines may name this target but only one may have 473attached shell commands. 474All sources named in all dependency lines are considered together, 475and if needed the attached shell commands are run to create or 476re-create the target. 477If 478.Nm 479is interrupted, the target is removed. 480.It Ic \&! 481The same, but the target is always re-created whether or not it is out 482of date. 483.It Ic \&:: 484Any dependency line may have attached shell commands, but each one 485is handled independently: its sources are considered and the attached 486shell commands are run if the target is out of date with respect to 487(only) those sources. 488Thus, different groups of the attached shell commands may be run 489depending on the circumstances. 490Furthermore, unlike 491.Ic \&: , 492for dependency lines with no sources, the attached shell 493commands are always run. 494Also unlike 495.Ic \&: , 496the target is not removed if 497.Nm 498is interrupted. 499.El 500.Pp 501All dependency lines mentioning a particular target must use the same 502operator. 503.Pp 504Targets and sources may contain the shell wildcard values 505.Ql \&? , 506.Ql * , 507.Ql [] , 508and 509.Ql {} . 510The values 511.Ql \&? , 512.Ql * , 513and 514.Ql [] 515may only be used as part of the final component of the target or source, 516and only match existing files. 517The value 518.Ql {} 519need not necessarily be used to describe existing files. 520Expansion is in directory order, not alphabetically as done in the shell. 521.Sh SHELL COMMANDS 522Each target may have associated with it one or more lines of shell commands, 523normally used to create the target. 524Each of the lines in this script 525.Em must 526be preceded by a tab. 527(For historical reasons, spaces are not accepted.) 528While targets can occur in many dependency lines if desired, 529by default only one of these rules may be followed by a creation script. 530If the 531.Sq Ic \&:: 532operator is used, however, all rules may include scripts, 533and the respective scripts are executed in the order found. 534.Pp 535Each line is treated as a separate shell command, 536unless the end of line is escaped with a backslash 537.Ql \e , 538in which case that line and the next are combined. 539If the first characters of the command are any combination of 540.Sq Ic @ , 541.Sq Ic + , 542or 543.Sq Ic \- , 544the command is treated specially. 545.Bl -tag -offset indent -width indent 546.It Ic @ 547causes the command not to be echoed before it is executed. 548.It Ic + 549causes the command to be executed even when 550.Fl n 551is given. 552This is similar to the effect of the 553.Va .MAKE 554special source, 555except that the effect can be limited to a single line of a script. 556.It Ic \- 557in compatibility mode 558causes any non-zero exit status of the command line to be ignored. 559.El 560.Pp 561When 562.Nm 563is run in jobs mode with 564.Fl j Ar max_jobs , 565the entire script for the target is fed to a single instance of the shell. 566In compatibility (non-jobs) mode, each command is run in a separate process. 567If the command contains any shell meta characters 568.Pq Ql #=|^(){};&<>*?[]:$`\e\en , 569it is passed to the shell; otherwise 570.Nm 571attempts direct execution. 572If a line starts with 573.Sq Ic \- 574and the shell has ErrCtl enabled, 575failure of the command line is ignored as in compatibility mode. 576Otherwise 577.Sq Ic \- 578affects the entire job; 579the script stops at the first command line that fails, 580but the target is not deemed to have failed. 581.Pp 582Makefiles should be written so that the mode of 583.Nm 584operation does not change their behavior. 585For example, any command which uses 586.Dq cd 587or 588.Dq chdir 589without the intention of changing the directory for subsequent commands 590should be put in parentheses so it executes in a subshell. 591To force the use of a single shell, escape the line breaks so as to make 592the whole script one command. 593For example: 594.Bd -literal -offset indent 595avoid-chdir-side-effects: 596 @echo "Building $@ in $$(pwd)" 597 @(cd ${.CURDIR} && ${MAKE} $@) 598 @echo "Back in $$(pwd)" 599 600ensure-one-shell-regardless-of-mode: 601 @echo "Building $@ in $$(pwd)"; \e 602 (cd ${.CURDIR} && ${MAKE} $@); \e 603 echo "Back in $$(pwd)" 604.Ed 605.Pp 606Since 607.Nm 608changes the current working directory to 609.Sq Va .OBJDIR 610before executing any targets, 611each child process starts with that as its current working directory. 612.Sh VARIABLE ASSIGNMENTS 613Variables in make behave much like macros in the C preprocessor. 614.Pp 615Variable assignments have the form 616.Sq Ar NAME Ar op Ar value , 617where: 618.Bl -tag -offset Ds -width Ds 619.It Ar NAME 620is a single-word variable name, 621consisting, by tradition, of all upper-case letters, 622.It Ar op 623is one of the variable assignment operators described below, and 624.It Ar value 625is interpreted according to the variable assignment operator. 626.El 627.Pp 628Whitespace around 629.Ar NAME , 630.Ar op 631and 632.Ar value 633is discarded. 634.Ss Variable assignment operators 635The five operators that assign values to variables are: 636.Bl -tag -width Ds 637.It Ic \&= 638Assign the value to the variable. 639Any previous value is overwritten. 640.It Ic \&+= 641Append the value to the current value of the variable, 642separating them by a single space. 643.It Ic \&?= 644Assign the value to the variable if it is not already defined. 645.It Ic \&:= 646Expand the value, then assign it to the variable. 647.Pp 648.Em NOTE : 649References to undefined variables are 650.Em not 651expanded. 652This can cause problems when variable modifiers are used. 653.\" See var-op-expand.mk, the section with LATER and INDIRECT. 654.It Ic \&!= 655Expand the value and pass it to the shell for execution, 656then assign the output from the child's standard output to the variable. 657Any newlines in the result are replaced with spaces. 658.El 659.Ss Expansion of variables 660In most contexts where variables are expanded, 661.Ql \&$$ 662expands to a single dollar sign. 663In other contexts (most variable modifiers, string literals in conditions), 664.Ql \&\e$ 665expands to a single dollar sign. 666.Pp 667References to variables have the form 668.Cm \&${ Ns Ar name Ns Oo Ns Cm \&: Ns Ar modifiers Oc Ns Cm \&} 669or 670.Cm \&$( Ns Ar name Ns Oo Ns Cm \&: Ns Ar modifiers Oc Ns Cm \&) . 671If the variable name consists of only a single character 672and the expression contains no modifiers, 673the surrounding curly braces or parentheses are not required. 674This shorter form is not recommended. 675.Pp 676If the variable name contains a dollar, the name itself is expanded first. 677This allows almost arbitrary variable names, however names containing dollar, 678braces, parentheses or whitespace are really best avoided. 679.Pp 680If the result of expanding a nested variable expression contains a dollar sign 681.Pq Ql \&$ , 682the result is subject to further expansion. 683.Pp 684Variable substitution occurs at four distinct times, depending on where 685the variable is being used. 686.Bl -enum 687.It 688Variables in dependency lines are expanded as the line is read. 689.It 690Variables in conditionals are expanded individually, 691but only as far as necessary to determine the result of the conditional. 692.It 693Variables in shell commands are expanded when the shell command is 694executed. 695.It 696.Ic .for 697loop index variables are expanded on each loop iteration. 698Note that other variables are not expanded when composing the body of a loop, 699so the following example code: 700.Bd -literal -offset indent 701\&.for i in 1 2 3 702a+= ${i} 703j= ${i} 704b+= ${j} 705\&.endfor 706 707all: 708 @echo ${a} 709 @echo ${b} 710.Ed 711.Pp 712prints: 713.Bd -literal -offset indent 7141 2 3 7153 3 3 716.Ed 717.Pp 718After the loop is executed: 719.Bl -tag -offset indent -width indent 720.It Va a 721contains 722.Ql ${:U1} ${:U2} ${:U3} , 723which expands to 724.Ql 1 2 3 . 725.It Va j 726contains 727.Ql ${:U3} , 728which expands to 729.Ql 3 . 730.It Va b 731contains 732.Ql ${j} ${j} ${j} , 733which expands to 734.Ql ${:U3} ${:U3} ${:U3} 735and further to 736.Ql 3 3 3 . 737.El 738.El 739.Ss Variable classes 740The four different classes of variables (in order of increasing precedence) 741are: 742.Bl -tag -width Ds 743.It Environment variables 744Variables defined as part of 745.Nm Ns 's 746environment. 747.It Global variables 748Variables defined in the makefile or in included makefiles. 749.It Command line variables 750Variables defined as part of the command line. 751.It Local variables 752Variables that are defined specific to a certain target. 753.El 754.Pp 755Local variables can be set on a dependency line, unless 756.Va .MAKE.TARGET_LOCAL_VARIABLES 757is set to 758.Ql false . 759The rest of the line 760(which already has had global variables expanded) 761is the variable value. 762For example: 763.Bd -literal -offset indent 764COMPILER_WRAPPERS= ccache distcc icecc 765 766${OBJS}: .MAKE.META.CMP_FILTER=${COMPILER_WRAPPERS:S,^,N,} 767.Ed 768.Pp 769Only the targets 770.Ql ${OBJS} 771are impacted by that filter (in 772.Dq meta 773mode) and 774simply enabling/disabling any of the compiler wrappers does not render all 775of those targets out-of-date. 776.Pp 777.Em NOTE : 778target-local variable assignments behave differently in that; 779.Bl -tag -width Ds -offset indent 780.It Ic \&+= 781Only appends to a previous local assignment 782for the same target and variable. 783.It Ic \&:= 784Is redundant with respect to global variables, 785which have already been expanded. 786.El 787.Pp 788The built-in local variables are: 789.Bl -tag -width ".Va .ARCHIVE" -offset indent 790.It Va .ALLSRC 791The list of all sources for this target; also known as 792.Sq Va \&> 793or 794.Sq Va \&^ . 795.It Va .ARCHIVE 796The name of the archive file; also known as 797.Sq Va \&! . 798.It Va .IMPSRC 799In suffix-transformation rules, the name/path of the source from which the 800target is to be transformed (the 801.Dq implied 802source); also known as 803.Sq Va \&< . 804It is not defined in explicit rules. 805.It Va .MEMBER 806The name of the archive member; also known as 807.Sq Va % . 808.It Va .OODATE 809The list of sources for this target that were deemed out-of-date; also 810known as 811.Sq Va \&? . 812.It Va .PREFIX 813The name of the target with suffix (if declared in 814.Ic .SUFFIXES ) 815removed; also known as 816.Sq Va * . 817.It Va .TARGET 818The name of the target; also known as 819.Sq Va @ . 820For compatibility with other makes this is an alias for 821.Va .ARCHIVE 822in archive member rules. 823.El 824.Pp 825The shorter forms 826.Po 827.Sq Va \&> , 828.Sq Va \&^ , 829.Sq Va \&! , 830.Sq Va \&< , 831.Sq Va \&% , 832.Sq Va \&? , 833.Sq Va \&* , 834and 835.Sq Va \&@ 836.Pc 837are permitted for backward 838compatibility with historical makefiles and legacy POSIX make and are 839not recommended. 840.Pp 841Variants of these variables with the punctuation followed immediately by 842.Ql D 843or 844.Ql F , 845e.g.\& 846.Ql $(@D) , 847are legacy forms equivalent to using the 848.Ql :H 849and 850.Ql :T 851modifiers. 852These forms are accepted for compatibility with 853.At V 854makefiles and POSIX but are not recommended. 855.Pp 856Four of the local variables may be used in sources on dependency lines 857because they expand to the proper value for each target on the line. 858These variables are 859.Sq Va .TARGET , 860.Sq Va .PREFIX , 861.Sq Va .ARCHIVE , 862and 863.Sq Va .MEMBER . 864.Ss Additional built-in variables 865In addition, 866.Nm 867sets or knows about the following variables: 868.Bl -tag 869.\" NB: This list is sorted case-insensitive, ignoring punctuation. 870.\" NB: To find all built-in variables in make's source code, 871.\" NB: search for Var_*, Global_*, SetVarObjdir, GetBooleanExpr, 872.\" NB: and the implementation of Var_SetWithFlags. 873.\" NB: Last synced on 2023-01-01. 874.It Va .ALLTARGETS 875The list of all targets encountered in the makefiles. 876If evaluated during makefile parsing, 877lists only those targets encountered thus far. 878.It Va .CURDIR 879A path to the directory where 880.Nm 881was executed. 882Refer to the description of 883.Sq Va PWD 884for more details. 885.It Va .ERROR_CMD 886Is used in error handling, see 887.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR . 888.It Va .ERROR_CWD 889Is used in error handling, see 890.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR . 891.It Va .ERROR_EXIT 892Is used in error handling, see 893.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR . 894.It Va .ERROR_META_FILE 895Is used in error handling in 896.Dq meta 897mode, see 898.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR . 899.It Va .ERROR_TARGET 900Is used in error handling, see 901.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR . 902.It Va .INCLUDEDFROMDIR 903The directory of the file this makefile was included from. 904.It Va .INCLUDEDFROMFILE 905The filename of the file this makefile was included from. 906.\" .INCLUDES is intentionally undocumented, as it is obsolete. 907.\" .LIBS is intentionally undocumented, as it is obsolete. 908.It Va MACHINE 909The machine hardware name, see 910.Xr uname 1 . 911.It Va MACHINE_ARCH 912The machine processor architecture name, see 913.Xr uname 1 . 914.It Va MAKE 915The name that 916.Nm 917was executed with 918.Pq Va argv[0] . 919.It Va .MAKE 920The same as 921.Va MAKE , 922for compatibility. 923The preferred variable to use is the environment variable 924.Ev MAKE 925because it is more compatible with other make variants 926and cannot be confused with the special target with the same name. 927.It Va .MAKE.ALWAYS_PASS_JOB_QUEUE 928Tells 929.Nm 930whether to pass the descriptors of the job token queue 931even if the target is not tagged with 932.Ic .MAKE 933The default is 934.Ql Pa yes 935for backwards compatability with 936.Fx 9.0 937and earlier. 938.\" '.MAKE.cmd_filtered' is intentionally undocumented, 939.\" as it is an internal implementation detail. 940.It Va .MAKE.DEPENDFILE 941Names the makefile (default 942.Sq Pa .depend ) 943from which generated dependencies are read. 944.It Va .MAKE.DIE_QUIETLY 945If set to 946.Ql true , 947do not print error information at the end. 948.It Va .MAKE.EXPAND_VARIABLES 949A boolean that controls the default behavior of the 950.Fl V 951option. 952If true, variable values printed with 953.Fl V 954are fully expanded; if false, the raw variable contents (which may 955include additional unexpanded variable references) are shown. 956.It Va .MAKE.EXPORTED 957The list of variables exported by 958.Nm . 959.It Va MAKE_VERSION 960This variable indicates the version of 961.Nm . 962It is typically the date of last import from NetBSD. 963It is useful for checking whether certain features are available. 964.It Va MAKEFILE 965The top-level makefile that is currently read, 966as given in the command line. 967.It Va .MAKEFLAGS 968The environment variable 969.Sq Ev MAKEFLAGS 970may contain anything that 971may be specified on 972.Nm Ns 's 973command line. 974Anything specified on 975.Nm Ns 's 976command line is appended to the 977.Va .MAKEFLAGS 978variable, which is then added to the environment for all programs that 979.Nm 980executes. 981.It Va .MAKE.GID 982The numeric group ID of the user running 983.Nm . 984It is read-only. 985.It Va .MAKE.JOB.PREFIX 986If 987.Nm 988is run with 989.Fl j , 990the output for each target is prefixed with a token 991.Dl --- Ar target Li --- 992the first part of which can be controlled via 993.Va .MAKE.JOB.PREFIX . 994If 995.Va .MAKE.JOB.PREFIX 996is empty, no token is printed. 997For example, setting 998.Va .MAKE.JOB.PREFIX 999to 1000.Ql ${.newline}---${.MAKE:T}[${.MAKE.PID}] 1001would produce tokens like 1002.Dl ---make[1234] Ar target Li --- 1003making it easier to track the degree of parallelism being achieved. 1004.It Va .MAKE.JOBS 1005The argument to the 1006.Fl j 1007option. 1008.It Va .MAKE.JOBS.C 1009A read-only boolean that indicates whether the 1010.Fl j 1011option supports use of 1012.Ql C . 1013.It Va .MAKE.LEVEL 1014The recursion depth of 1015.Nm . 1016The top-level instance of 1017.Nm 1018has level 0, and each child make has its parent level plus 1. 1019This allows tests like: 1020.Li .if ${.MAKE.LEVEL} == 0 1021to protect things which should only be evaluated in the top-level instance of 1022.Nm . 1023.It Va .MAKE.LEVEL.ENV 1024The name of the environment variable that stores the level of nested calls to 1025.Nm . 1026.It Va .MAKE.MAKEFILE_PREFERENCE 1027The ordered list of makefile names 1028(default 1029.Sq Pa makefile , 1030.Sq Pa Makefile ) 1031that 1032.Nm 1033looks for. 1034.It Va .MAKE.MAKEFILES 1035The list of makefiles read by 1036.Nm , 1037which is useful for tracking dependencies. 1038Each makefile is recorded only once, regardless of the number of times read. 1039.It Va .MAKE.META.BAILIWICK 1040In 1041.Dq meta 1042mode, provides a list of prefixes which 1043match the directories controlled by 1044.Nm . 1045If a file that was generated outside of 1046.Va .OBJDIR 1047but within said bailiwick is missing, 1048the current target is considered out-of-date. 1049.It Va .MAKE.META.CMP_FILTER 1050In 1051.Dq meta 1052mode, it can (very rarely!) be useful to filter command 1053lines before comparison. 1054This variable can be set to a set of modifiers that are applied to 1055each line of the old and new command that differ, if the filtered 1056commands still differ, the target is considered out-of-date. 1057.It Va .MAKE.META.CREATED 1058In 1059.Dq meta 1060mode, this variable contains a list of all the meta files 1061updated. 1062If not empty, it can be used to trigger processing of 1063.Va .MAKE.META.FILES . 1064.It Va .MAKE.META.FILES 1065In 1066.Dq meta 1067mode, this variable contains a list of all the meta files 1068used (updated or not). 1069This list can be used to process the meta files to extract dependency 1070information. 1071.It Va .MAKE.META.IGNORE_FILTER 1072Provides a list of variable modifiers to apply to each pathname. 1073Ignore if the expansion is an empty string. 1074.It Va .MAKE.META.IGNORE_PATHS 1075Provides a list of path prefixes that should be ignored; 1076because the contents are expected to change over time. 1077The default list includes: 1078.Sq Pa /dev /etc /proc /tmp /var/run /var/tmp 1079.It Va .MAKE.META.IGNORE_PATTERNS 1080Provides a list of patterns to match against pathnames. 1081Ignore any that match. 1082.It Va .MAKE.META.PREFIX 1083Defines the message printed for each meta file updated in 1084.Dq meta verbose 1085mode. 1086The default value is: 1087.Dl Building ${.TARGET:H:tA}/${.TARGET:T} 1088.It Va .MAKE.MODE 1089Processed after reading all makefiles. 1090Affects the mode that 1091.Nm 1092runs in. 1093It can contain these keywords: 1094.Bl -tag -width indent 1095.It Cm compat 1096Like 1097.Fl B , 1098puts 1099.Nm 1100into 1101.Dq compat 1102mode. 1103.It Cm meta 1104Puts 1105.Nm 1106into 1107.Dq meta 1108mode, where meta files are created for each target 1109to capture the commands run, the output generated, and if 1110.Xr filemon 4 1111is available, the system calls which are of interest to 1112.Nm . 1113The captured output can be useful when diagnosing errors. 1114.Pp 1115.Nm 1116will use the information in the meta file to help determine if 1117a target is out-of-date when the normal dependency rules 1118indicate it is not. 1119.Pp 1120First, 1121the commands to be executed, 1122will be compared to those captured previously, 1123if any differ, 1124the target is out-of-date. 1125.Pp 1126This allows for a huge improvement in the reliability 1127and efficiency of update builds. 1128It is no longer necessary for targets to depend on makefiles 1129just in-case they set a variable that might be relevant. 1130Mechanisms such as 1131.Va .MAKE.META.CMP_FILTER 1132and 1133.Ic .NOMETA_CMP , 1134allow limiting or disabling that comparison on a per target basis. 1135A reference to the variable 1136.Va .OODATE 1137can be leveraged to block comparison of certain commands. 1138For example: 1139.Ql ${.OODATE:M} 1140will expand to nothing and have no impact on the target, 1141its side-effect though, 1142will be to prevent comparison of any command line it appears on. 1143For documentation purposes 1144.Ql ${.OODATE:MNOMETA_CMP} 1145is useful. 1146.Pp 1147If necessary, 1148.Nm 1149will then use the information captured by 1150.Xr filemon 4 , 1151to check the modification time of any file used in generating 1152the target, 1153if any is newer, 1154the target is out-of-date. 1155.Pp 1156Such deep inspection can easily lead to cases where a target is 1157.Em always 1158considered out-of-date, which is why 1159.Va .MAKE.META.IGNORE_FILTER , 1160.Va .MAKE.META.IGNORE_PATHS 1161and 1162.Va .MAKE.META.IGNORE_PATTERNS , 1163are provided to limit that inspection when necessary. 1164.It Cm curdirOk= Ns Ar bf 1165By default, 1166.Nm 1167does not create 1168.Pa .meta 1169files in 1170.Sq Va .CURDIR . 1171This can be overridden by setting 1172.Ar bf 1173to a value which represents true. 1174.It Cm missing-meta= Ns Ar bf 1175If 1176.Ar bf 1177is true, a missing 1178.Pa .meta 1179file makes the target out-of-date. 1180.It Cm missing-filemon= Ns Ar bf 1181If 1182.Ar bf 1183is true, missing filemon data makes the target out-of-date. 1184.It Cm nofilemon 1185Do not use 1186.Xr filemon 4 . 1187.It Cm env 1188For debugging, it can be useful to include the environment 1189in the 1190.Pa .meta 1191file. 1192.It Cm verbose 1193If in 1194.Dq meta 1195mode, print a clue about the target being built. 1196This is useful if the build is otherwise running silently. 1197The message printed is the expanded value of 1198.Va .MAKE.META.PREFIX . 1199.It Cm ignore-cmd 1200Some makefiles have commands which are simply not stable. 1201This keyword causes them to be ignored for 1202determining whether a target is out of date in 1203.Dq meta 1204mode. 1205See also 1206.Ic .NOMETA_CMP . 1207.It Cm silent= Ns Ar bf 1208If 1209.Ar bf 1210is true, when a .meta file is created, mark the target 1211.Ic .SILENT . 1212.It Cm randomize-targets 1213In both compat and parallel mode, do not make the targets in the usual order, 1214but instead randomize their order. 1215This mode can be used to detect undeclared dependencies between files. 1216.El 1217.It Va MAKEOBJDIR 1218Used to create files in a separate directory, see 1219.Va .OBJDIR . 1220.It Va MAKE_OBJDIR_CHECK_WRITABLE 1221When true, 1222.Nm 1223will check that 1224.Va .OBJDIR 1225is writable, and issue a warning if not. 1226.It Va MAKE_DEBUG_OBJDIR_CHECK_WRITABLE 1227When true and 1228.Nm 1229is warning about an unwritable 1230.Va .OBJDIR , 1231report the variables listed in 1232.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR 1233to help debug. 1234.It Va MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX 1235Used to create files in a separate directory, see 1236.Va .OBJDIR . 1237It should be an absolute path. 1238.It Va .MAKE.OS 1239The name of the operating system, see 1240.Xr uname 1 . 1241It is read-only. 1242.It Va .MAKEOVERRIDES 1243This variable is used to record the names of variables assigned to 1244on the command line, so that they may be exported as part of 1245.Sq Ev MAKEFLAGS . 1246This behavior can be disabled by assigning an empty value to 1247.Sq Va .MAKEOVERRIDES 1248within a makefile. 1249Extra variables can be exported from a makefile 1250by appending their names to 1251.Sq Va .MAKEOVERRIDES . 1252.Sq Ev MAKEFLAGS 1253is re-exported whenever 1254.Sq Va .MAKEOVERRIDES 1255is modified. 1256.It Va .MAKE.PATH_FILEMON 1257If 1258.Nm 1259was built with 1260.Xr filemon 4 1261support, this is set to the path of the device node. 1262This allows makefiles to test for this support. 1263.It Va .MAKE.PID 1264The process ID of 1265.Nm . 1266It is read-only. 1267.It Va .MAKE.PPID 1268The parent process ID of 1269.Nm . 1270It is read-only. 1271.It Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR 1272When 1273.Nm 1274stops due to an error, it sets 1275.Sq Va .ERROR_TARGET 1276to the name of the target that failed, 1277.Sq Va .ERROR_EXIT 1278to the exit status of the failed target, 1279.Sq Va .ERROR_CMD 1280to the commands of the failed target, 1281and in 1282.Dq meta 1283mode, it also sets 1284.Sq Va .ERROR_CWD 1285to the 1286.Xr getcwd 3 , 1287and 1288.Sq Va .ERROR_META_FILE 1289to the path of the meta file (if any) describing the failed target. 1290It then prints its name and the value of 1291.Sq Va .CURDIR 1292as well as the value of any variables named in 1293.Sq Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR . 1294.It Va .MAKE.SAVE_DOLLARS 1295If true, 1296.Ql $$ 1297are preserved when doing 1298.Ql := 1299assignments. 1300The default is false, for backwards compatibility. 1301Set to true for compatability with other makes. 1302If set to false, 1303.Ql $$ 1304becomes 1305.Ql $ 1306per normal evaluation rules. 1307.It Va .MAKE.TARGET_LOCAL_VARIABLES 1308If set to 1309.Ql false , 1310apparent variable assignments in dependency lines are 1311treated as normal sources. 1312.It Va .MAKE.UID 1313The numeric ID of the user running 1314.Nm . 1315It is read-only. 1316.\" 'MAKE_VERSION' is intentionally undocumented 1317.\" since it is only defined in the bmake distribution, 1318.\" but not in NetBSD's native make. 1319.\" '.meta.%d.lcwd' is intentionally undocumented 1320.\" since it is an internal implementation detail. 1321.\" '.meta.%d.ldir' is intentionally undocumented 1322.\" since it is an internal implementation detail. 1323.\" 'MFLAGS' is intentionally undocumented 1324.\" since it is obsolete. 1325.It Va .newline 1326This variable is simply assigned a newline character as its value. 1327It is read-only. 1328This allows expansions using the 1329.Cm \&:@ 1330modifier to put a newline between 1331iterations of the loop rather than a space. 1332For example, in case of an error, 1333.Nm 1334prints the variable names and their values using: 1335.Dl ${MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR:@v@$v='${$v}'${.newline}@} 1336.It Va .OBJDIR 1337A path to the directory where the targets are built. 1338Its value is determined by trying to 1339.Xr chdir 2 1340to the following directories in order and using the first match: 1341.Bl -enum 1342.It 1343.Cm ${MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX} Ns Cm ${.CURDIR} 1344.Pp 1345(Only if 1346.Sq Ev MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX 1347is set in the environment or on the command line.) 1348.It 1349.Cm ${MAKEOBJDIR} 1350.Pp 1351(Only if 1352.Sq Ev MAKEOBJDIR 1353is set in the environment or on the command line.) 1354.It 1355.Cm ${.CURDIR} Ns Pa /obj. Ns Cm ${MACHINE} 1356.It 1357.Cm ${.CURDIR} Ns Pa /obj 1358.It 1359.Pa /usr/obj/ Ns Cm ${.CURDIR} 1360.It 1361.Cm ${.CURDIR} 1362.El 1363.Pp 1364Variable expansion is performed on the value before it is used, 1365so expressions such as 1366.Cm ${.CURDIR:S,^/usr/src,/var/obj,} 1367may be used. 1368This is especially useful with 1369.Sq Ev MAKEOBJDIR . 1370.Pp 1371.Sq Va .OBJDIR 1372may be modified in the makefile via the special target 1373.Sq Ic .OBJDIR . 1374In all cases, 1375.Nm 1376changes to the specified directory if it exists, and sets 1377.Sq Va .OBJDIR 1378and 1379.Sq Va PWD 1380to that directory before executing any targets. 1381.Pp 1382Except in the case of an explicit 1383.Sq Ic .OBJDIR 1384target, 1385.Nm 1386checks that the specified directory is writable and ignores it if not. 1387This check can be skipped by setting the environment variable 1388.Sq Ev MAKE_OBJDIR_CHECK_WRITABLE 1389to 1390.Dq no . 1391.It Va .PARSEDIR 1392The directory name of the current makefile being parsed. 1393.It Va .PARSEFILE 1394The basename of the current makefile being parsed. 1395This variable and 1396.Sq Va .PARSEDIR 1397are both set only while the makefiles are being parsed. 1398To retain their current values, 1399assign them to a variable using assignment with expansion 1400.Sq Cm \&:= . 1401.It Va .PATH 1402The space-separated list of directories that 1403.Nm 1404searches for files. 1405To update this search list, use the special target 1406.Sq Ic .PATH 1407rather than modifying the variable directly. 1408.It Va %POSIX 1409Is set in POSIX mode, see the special 1410.Ql Va .POSIX 1411target. 1412.\" XXX: There is no make variable named 'PWD', 1413.\" XXX: make only reads and writes the environment variable 'PWD'. 1414.It Va PWD 1415Alternate path to the current directory. 1416.Nm 1417normally sets 1418.Sq Va .CURDIR 1419to the canonical path given by 1420.Xr getcwd 3 . 1421However, if the environment variable 1422.Sq Ev PWD 1423is set and gives a path to the current directory, 1424.Nm 1425sets 1426.Sq Va .CURDIR 1427to the value of 1428.Sq Ev PWD 1429instead. 1430This behavior is disabled if 1431.Sq Ev MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX 1432is set or 1433.Sq Ev MAKEOBJDIR 1434contains a variable transform. 1435.Sq Va PWD 1436is set to the value of 1437.Sq Va .OBJDIR 1438for all programs which 1439.Nm 1440executes. 1441.It Va .SHELL 1442The pathname of the shell used to run target scripts. 1443It is read-only. 1444.It Va .SUFFIXES 1445The list of known suffixes. 1446It is read-only. 1447.It Va .SYSPATH 1448The space-separated list of directories that 1449.Nm 1450searches for makefiles, referred to as the system include path. 1451To update this search list, use the special target 1452.Sq Ic .SYSPATH 1453rather than modifying the variable which is read-only. 1454.It Va .TARGETS 1455The list of targets explicitly specified on the command line, if any. 1456.It Va VPATH 1457The colon-separated 1458.Pq Dq \&: 1459list of directories that 1460.Nm 1461searches for files. 1462This variable is supported for compatibility with old make programs only, use 1463.Sq Va .PATH 1464instead. 1465.El 1466.Ss Variable modifiers 1467The general format of a variable expansion is: 1468.Pp 1469.Sm off 1470.D1 Ic \&${ Ar variable\| Oo Ic \&: Ar modifier\| Oo Ic \&: No ... Oc Oc Ic \&} 1471.Sm on 1472.Pp 1473Each modifier begins with a colon. 1474To escape a colon, precede it with a backslash 1475.Ql \e . 1476.Pp 1477A list of indirect modifiers can be specified via a variable, as follows: 1478.Pp 1479.Bd -literal -offset indent 1480.Ar modifier_variable\^ Li \&= Ar modifier Ns Oo Ic \&: Ns No ... Oc 1481 1482.Sm off 1483.Ic \&${ Ar variable Ic \&:${ Ar modifier_variable Ic \&} Oo Ic \&: No ... Oc Ic \&} 1484.Sm on 1485.Ed 1486.Pp 1487In this case, the first modifier in the 1488.Ar modifier_variable 1489does not start with a colon, 1490since that colon already occurs in the referencing variable. 1491If any of the modifiers in the 1492.Ar modifier_variable 1493contains a dollar sign 1494.Pq Ql $ , 1495these must be doubled to avoid early expansion. 1496.Pp 1497Some modifiers interpret the expression value as a single string, 1498others treat the expression value as a whitespace-separated list of words. 1499When splitting a string into words, 1500whitespace can be escaped using double quotes, single quotes and backslashes, 1501like in the shell. 1502The quotes and backslashes are retained in the words. 1503.Pp 1504The supported modifiers are: 1505.Bl -tag -width EEE 1506.It Cm \&:E 1507Replaces each word with its suffix. 1508.It Cm \&:H 1509Replaces each word with its dirname. 1510.It Cm \&:M\| Ns Ar pattern 1511Selects only those words that match 1512.Ar pattern . 1513The standard shell wildcard characters 1514.Pf ( Ql * , 1515.Ql \&? , 1516and 1517.Ql \&[] ) 1518may 1519be used. 1520The wildcard characters may be escaped with a backslash 1521.Pq Ql \e . 1522As a consequence of the way values are split into words, matched, 1523and then joined, the construct 1524.Ql ${VAR:M*} 1525removes all leading and trailing whitespace 1526and normalizes the inter-word spacing to a single space. 1527.It Cm \&:N\| Ns Ar pattern 1528This is the opposite of 1529.Sq Cm \&:M , 1530selecting all words which do 1531.Em not 1532match 1533.Ar pattern . 1534.It Cm \&:O 1535Orders the words lexicographically. 1536.It Cm \&:On 1537Orders the words numerically. 1538A number followed by one of 1539.Ql k , 1540.Ql M 1541or 1542.Ql G 1543is multiplied by the appropriate factor, which is 1024 for 1544.Ql k , 15451048576 for 1546.Ql M , 1547or 1073741824 for 1548.Ql G . 1549Both upper- and lower-case letters are accepted. 1550.It Cm \&:Or 1551Orders the words in reverse lexicographical order. 1552.It Cm \&:Orn 1553Orders the words in reverse numerical order. 1554.It Cm \&:Ox 1555Shuffles the words. 1556The results are different each time you are referring to the 1557modified variable; use the assignment with expansion 1558.Sq Cm \&:= 1559to prevent such behavior. 1560For example, 1561.Bd -literal -offset indent 1562LIST= uno due tre quattro 1563RANDOM_LIST= ${LIST:Ox} 1564STATIC_RANDOM_LIST:= ${LIST:Ox} 1565 1566all: 1567 @echo "${RANDOM_LIST}" 1568 @echo "${RANDOM_LIST}" 1569 @echo "${STATIC_RANDOM_LIST}" 1570 @echo "${STATIC_RANDOM_LIST}" 1571.Ed 1572may produce output similar to: 1573.Bd -literal -offset indent 1574quattro due tre uno 1575tre due quattro uno 1576due uno quattro tre 1577due uno quattro tre 1578.Ed 1579.It Cm \&:Q 1580Quotes every shell meta-character in the value, so that it can be passed 1581safely to the shell. 1582.It Cm \&:q 1583Quotes every shell meta-character in the value, and also doubles 1584.Sq $ 1585characters so that it can be passed 1586safely through recursive invocations of 1587.Nm . 1588This is equivalent to 1589.Sq Cm \&:S/\e\&$/&&/g:Q . 1590.It Cm \&:R 1591Replaces each word with everything but its suffix. 1592.It Cm \&:range Ns Oo Cm = Ns Ar count Oc 1593The value is an integer sequence representing the words of the original 1594value, or the supplied 1595.Ar count . 1596.It Cm \&:gmtime Ns Oo Cm = Ns Ar timestamp Oc 1597The value is interpreted as a format string for 1598.Xr strftime 3 , 1599using 1600.Xr gmtime 3 , 1601producing the formatted timestamp. 1602Note: the 1603.Ql %s 1604format should only be used with 1605.Sq Cm \&:localtime . 1606If a 1607.Ar timestamp 1608value is not provided or is 0, the current time is used. 1609.It Cm \&:hash 1610Computes a 32-bit hash of the value and encodes it as 8 hex digits. 1611.It Cm \&:localtime Ns Oo Cm = Ns Ar timestamp Oc 1612The value is interpreted as a format string for 1613.Xr strftime 3 , 1614using 1615.Xr localtime 3 , 1616producing the formatted timestamp. 1617If a 1618.Ar timestamp 1619value is not provided or is 0, the current time is used. 1620.It Cm \&:mtime Ns Oo Cm = Ns Ar timestamp Oc 1621Call 1622.Xr stat 2 1623with each word as pathname; 1624use 1625.Ql st_mtime 1626as the new value. 1627If 1628.Xr stat 2 1629fails; use 1630.Ar timestamp 1631or current time. 1632If 1633.Ar timestamp 1634is set to 1635.Ql error , 1636then 1637.Xr stat 2 1638failure will cause an error. 1639.It Cm \&:tA 1640Attempts to convert the value to an absolute path using 1641.Xr realpath 3 . 1642If that fails, the value is unchanged. 1643.It Cm \&:tl 1644Converts the value to lower-case letters. 1645.It Cm \&:ts Ns Ar c 1646When joining the words after a modifier that treats the value as words, 1647the words are normally separated by a space. 1648This modifier changes the separator to the character 1649.Ar c . 1650If 1651.Ar c 1652is omitted, no separator is used. 1653The common escapes (including octal numeric codes) work as expected. 1654.It Cm \&:tt 1655Converts the first character of each word to upper-case, 1656and the rest to lower-case letters. 1657.It Cm \&:tu 1658Converts the value to upper-case letters. 1659.It Cm \&:tW 1660Causes subsequent modifiers to treat the value as a single word 1661(possibly containing embedded whitespace). 1662See also 1663.Sq Cm \&:[*] . 1664.It Cm \&:tw 1665Causes the value to be treated as a list of words. 1666See also 1667.Sq Cm \&:[@] . 1668.Sm off 1669.It Cm \&:S\| No \&/ Oo Cm \&^ Oc Ar old_string\| No Oo Cm \&$ Oc \&/ Ar new_string\| No \&/ Op Cm 1gW 1670.Sm on 1671Modifies the first occurrence of 1672.Ar old_string 1673in each word of the value, replacing it with 1674.Ar new_string . 1675.Pp 1676If 1677.Ar old_string 1678is preceded by a caret 1679.Pq Ql ^ , 1680.Ar old_string 1681is anchored at the beginning of each word. 1682If 1683.Ar old_string 1684is followed by a dollar sign 1685.Pq Ql \&$ , 1686it is anchored at the end of each word. 1687Inside 1688.Ar new_string , 1689an ampersand 1690.Pq Ql & 1691is replaced by 1692.Ar old_string . 1693Both 1694.Ar old_string 1695and 1696.Ar new_string 1697may contain nested expressions. 1698.Pp 1699Further options: 1700.Bl -tag 1701.It Cm 1 1702Only the word of the first occurrence is affected. 1703.It Cm g 1704All occurrences in each affected word are replaced. 1705.It Cm W 1706The expression value is treated as a single word. 1707.El 1708.Pp 1709Any character may be used as the delimiter for the parts of the modifier 1710string. 1711The anchoring, ampersand, dollar and delimiter characters 1712can be escaped with a backslash 1713.Pq Ql \e . 1714.Sm off 1715.It Cm \&:C\| No \&/ Ar pattern\| No \&/ Ar replacement\| No \&/ Op Cm 1gW 1716.Sm on 1717Modifies the first occurrence of the extended regular expression 1718.Ar pattern 1719(see 1720.Xr regex 3 ) 1721in each word of the value, replacing it with 1722an 1723.Xr ed 1 Ns \-style 1724.Ar replacement . 1725.Pp 1726Both 1727.Ar pattern 1728and 1729.Ar replacement 1730may contain nested expressions. 1731.Pp 1732Further options: 1733.Bl -tag 1734.It Cm 1 1735Only the word of the first occurrence is affected. 1736.It Cm g 1737All occurrences in each affected word are replaced. 1738.It Cm W 1739The expression value is treated as a single word. 1740.El 1741.Pp 1742Any character may be used as the delimiter for the parts of the modifier 1743string. 1744The anchoring, ampersand, dollar and delimiter characters 1745can be escaped with a backslash 1746.Pq Ql \e . 1747.It Cm \&:T 1748Replaces each word with its last path component (basename). 1749.It Cm \&:u 1750Removes adjacent duplicate words (like 1751.Xr uniq 1 ) . 1752.Sm off 1753.It Cm \&:\&?\| Ar true_string\| Cm \&: Ar false_string 1754.Sm on 1755If the variable name (not its value), when parsed as a 1756.Cm .if 1757conditional expression, evaluates to true, return as its value the 1758.Ar true_string , 1759otherwise return the 1760.Ar false_string . 1761Since the variable name is used as the expression, 1762\&:\&? must be the first modifier after the variable name 1763.No itself Ns \^\(em\^ Ns 1764which, of course, usually contains variable expansions. 1765A common error is trying to use expressions like 1766.Dl ${NUMBERS:M42:?match:no} 1767which actually tests defined(NUMBERS). 1768To determine if any words match 1769.Dq 42 , 1770you need to use something like: 1771.Dl ${"${NUMBERS:M42}" != \&"\&":?match:no} . 1772.It Cm :\| Ns Ar old_string\| Ns Cm = Ns Ar new_string 1773This is the 1774.At V 1775style substitution. 1776It can only be the last modifier specified, 1777as a 1778.Ql \&: 1779in either 1780.Ar old_string 1781or 1782.Ar new_string 1783is treated as a regular character, not as the end of the modifier. 1784.Pp 1785If 1786.Ar old_string 1787does not contain the pattern matching character 1788.Ql % , 1789and the word ends with 1790.Ar old_string 1791or equals it, 1792that suffix is replaced with 1793.Ar new_string . 1794.Pp 1795Otherwise, the first 1796.Ql % 1797in 1798.Ar old_string 1799matches a possibly empty substring of arbitrary characters, 1800and if the whole pattern is found in the word, 1801the matching part is replaced with 1802.Ar new_string , 1803and the first occurrence of 1804.Ql % 1805in 1806.Ar new_string 1807(if any) is replaced with the substring matched by the 1808.Ql % . 1809.Pp 1810Both 1811.Ar old_string 1812and 1813.Ar new_string 1814may contain nested expressions. 1815To prevent a dollar sign from starting a nested expression, 1816escape it with a backslash. 1817.Sm off 1818.It Cm \&:@ Ar varname\| Cm @ Ar string\| Cm @ 1819.Sm on 1820This is the loop expansion mechanism from the OSF Development 1821Environment (ODE) make. 1822Unlike 1823.Cm \&.for 1824loops, expansion occurs at the time of reference. 1825For each word in the value, assign the word to the variable named 1826.Ar varname 1827and evaluate 1828.Ar string . 1829The ODE convention is that 1830.Ar varname 1831should start and end with a period, for example: 1832.Dl ${LINKS:@.LINK.@${LN} ${TARGET} ${.LINK.}@} 1833.Pp 1834However, a single-letter variable is often more readable: 1835.Dl ${MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR:@v@$v='${$v}'${.newline}@} 1836.It Cm \&:_ Ns Oo Cm = Ns Ar var Oc 1837Saves the current variable value in 1838.Ql $_ 1839or the named 1840.Ar var 1841for later reference. 1842Example usage: 1843.Bd -literal -offset indent 1844M_cmpv.units = 1 1000 1000000 1845M_cmpv = S,., ,g:_:range:@i@+ $${_:[-$$i]} \&\\ 1846\\* $${M_cmpv.units:[$$i]}@:S,^,expr 0 ,1:sh 1847 1848.Dv .if ${VERSION:${M_cmpv}} < ${3.1.12:L:${M_cmpv}} 1849 1850.Ed 1851Here 1852.Ql $_ 1853is used to save the result of the 1854.Ql :S 1855modifier which is later referenced using the index values from 1856.Ql :range . 1857.It Cm \&:U\| Ns Ar newval 1858If the variable is undefined, 1859the optional 1860.Ar newval 1861(which may be empty) is the value. 1862If the variable is defined, the existing value is returned. 1863This is another ODE make feature. 1864It is handy for setting per-target CFLAGS for instance: 1865.Dl ${_${.TARGET:T}_CFLAGS:U${DEF_CFLAGS}} 1866If a value is only required if the variable is undefined, use: 1867.Dl ${VAR:D:Unewval} 1868.It Cm \&:D\| Ns Ar newval 1869If the variable is defined, 1870.Ar newval 1871(which may be empty) is the value. 1872.It Cm \&:L 1873The name of the variable is the value. 1874.It Cm \&:P 1875The path of the node which has the same name as the variable is the value. 1876If no such node exists or its path is null, the name of the variable is used. 1877In order for this modifier to work, the name (node) must at least have 1878appeared on the right-hand side of a dependency. 1879.Sm off 1880.It Cm \&:\&! Ar cmd\| Cm \&! 1881.Sm on 1882The output of running 1883.Ar cmd 1884is the value. 1885.It Cm \&:sh 1886The value is run as a command, and the output becomes the new value. 1887.It Cm \&:sh1 1888The value is run as a command, for the first reference only, and 1889the output is cached for subsequent references. 1890This modifier is useful when the result is not expected to change. 1891.It Cm \&::= Ns Ar str 1892The variable is assigned the value 1893.Ar str 1894after substitution. 1895This modifier and its variations are useful in obscure situations 1896such as wanting to set a variable 1897at a point where a target's shell commands are being parsed. 1898These assignment modifiers always expand to nothing. 1899.Pp 1900The 1901.Sq Cm \&:: 1902helps avoid false matches with the 1903.At V 1904style 1905.Ql \&:= 1906modifier and since substitution always occurs, the 1907.Ql \&::= 1908form is vaguely appropriate. 1909.It Cm \&::?= Ns Ar str 1910As for 1911.Cm \&::= 1912but only if the variable does not already have a value. 1913.It Cm \&::+= Ns Ar str 1914Append 1915.Ar str 1916to the variable. 1917.It Cm \&::!= Ns Ar cmd 1918Assign the output of 1919.Ar cmd 1920to the variable. 1921.It Cm \&:\&[ Ns Ar range Ns Cm \&] 1922Selects one or more words from the value, 1923or performs other operations related to the way in which the 1924value is split into words. 1925.Pp 1926An empty value, or a value that consists entirely of white-space, 1927is treated as a single word. 1928For the purposes of the 1929.Sq Cm \&:[] 1930modifier, the words are indexed both forwards using positive integers 1931(where index 1 represents the first word), 1932and backwards using negative integers 1933(where index \-1 represents the last word). 1934.Pp 1935The 1936.Ar range 1937is subjected to variable expansion, and the expanded result is 1938then interpreted as follows: 1939.Bl -tag -width index 1940.\" :[n] 1941.It Ar index 1942Selects a single word from the value. 1943.\" :[start..end] 1944.It Ar start Ns Cm \&.. Ns Ar end 1945Selects all words from 1946.Ar start 1947to 1948.Ar end , 1949inclusive. 1950For example, 1951.Sq Cm \&:[2..-1] 1952selects all words from the second word to the last word. 1953If 1954.Ar start 1955is greater than 1956.Ar end , 1957the words are output in reverse order. 1958For example, 1959.Sq Cm \&:[-1..1] 1960selects all the words from last to first. 1961If the list is already ordered, 1962this effectively reverses the list, 1963but it is more efficient to use 1964.Sq Cm \&:Or 1965instead of 1966.Sq Cm \&:O:[-1..1] . 1967.\" :[*] 1968.It Cm \&* 1969Causes subsequent modifiers to treat the value as a single word 1970(possibly containing embedded whitespace). 1971Analogous to the effect of 1972.Li \&$* 1973in Bourne shell. 1974.\" :[0] 1975.It 0 1976Means the same as 1977.Sq Cm \&:[*] . 1978.\" :[*] 1979.It Cm \&@ 1980Causes subsequent modifiers to treat the value as a sequence of words 1981delimited by whitespace. 1982Analogous to the effect of 1983.Li \&$@ 1984in Bourne shell. 1985.\" :[#] 1986.It Cm \&# 1987Returns the number of words in the value. 1988.El \" :[range] 1989.El 1990.Sh DIRECTIVES 1991.Nm 1992offers directives for including makefiles, conditionals and for loops. 1993All these directives are identified by a line beginning with a single dot 1994.Pq Ql \&. 1995character, followed by the keyword of the directive, such as 1996.Cm include 1997or 1998.Cm if . 1999.Ss File inclusion 2000Files are included with either 2001.Cm \&.include \&< Ns Ar file Ns Cm \&> 2002or 2003.Cm \&.include \&\*q Ns Ar file Ns Cm \&\*q . 2004Variables between the angle brackets or double quotes are expanded 2005to form the file name. 2006If angle brackets are used, the included makefile is expected to be in 2007the system makefile directory. 2008If double quotes are used, the including makefile's directory and any 2009directories specified using the 2010.Fl I 2011option are searched before the system makefile directory. 2012.Pp 2013For compatibility with other make variants, 2014.Sq Cm include Ar file No ... 2015(without leading dot) 2016is also accepted. 2017.Pp 2018If the include statement is written as 2019.Cm .-include 2020or as 2021.Cm .sinclude , 2022errors locating and/or opening include files are ignored. 2023.Pp 2024If the include statement is written as 2025.Cm .dinclude , 2026not only are errors locating and/or opening include files ignored, 2027but stale dependencies within the included file are ignored just like in 2028.Va .MAKE.DEPENDFILE . 2029.Ss Exporting variables 2030The directives for exporting and unexporting variables are: 2031.Bl -tag -width Ds 2032.It Ic .export Ar variable No ... 2033Export the specified global variable. 2034.Pp 2035For compatibility with other make programs, 2036.Cm export Ar variable\| Ns Cm \&= Ns Ar value 2037(without leading dot) is also accepted. 2038.Pp 2039Appending a variable name to 2040.Va .MAKE.EXPORTED 2041is equivalent to exporting a variable. 2042.It Ic .export-all 2043Export all globals except for internal variables (those that start with 2044.Ql \&. ) . 2045This is not affected by the 2046.Fl X 2047flag, so should be used with caution. 2048.It Ic .export-env Ar variable No ... 2049The same as 2050.Ql .export , 2051except that the variable is not appended to 2052.Va .MAKE.EXPORTED . 2053This allows exporting a value to the environment which is different from that 2054used by 2055.Nm 2056internally. 2057.It Ic .export-literal Ar variable No ... 2058The same as 2059.Ql .export-env , 2060except that variables in the value are not expanded. 2061.It Ic .unexport Ar variable No ... 2062The opposite of 2063.Ql .export . 2064The specified global 2065.Ar variable 2066is removed from 2067.Va .MAKE.EXPORTED . 2068If no variable list is provided, all globals are unexported, 2069and 2070.Va .MAKE.EXPORTED 2071deleted. 2072.It Ic .unexport-env 2073Unexport all globals previously exported and 2074clear the environment inherited from the parent. 2075This operation causes a memory leak of the original environment, 2076so should be used sparingly. 2077Testing for 2078.Va .MAKE.LEVEL 2079being 0 would make sense. 2080Also note that any variables which originated in the parent environment 2081should be explicitly preserved if desired. 2082For example: 2083.Bd -literal -offset indent 2084.Li .if ${.MAKE.LEVEL} == 0 2085PATH := ${PATH} 2086.Li .unexport-env 2087.Li .export PATH 2088.Li .endif 2089.Pp 2090.Ed 2091Would result in an environment containing only 2092.Sq Ev PATH , 2093which is the minimal useful environment. 2094.\" TODO: Check the below sentence, environment variables don't start with '.'. 2095Actually 2096.Sq Va .MAKE.LEVEL 2097is also pushed into the new environment. 2098.El 2099.Ss Messages 2100The directives for printing messages to the output are: 2101.Bl -tag -width Ds 2102.It Ic .info Ar message 2103The message is printed along with the name of the makefile and line number. 2104.It Ic .warning Ar message 2105The message prefixed by 2106.Sq Li warning: 2107is printed along with the name of the makefile and line number. 2108.It Ic .error Ar message 2109The message is printed along with the name of the makefile and line number, 2110.Nm 2111exits immediately. 2112.El 2113.Ss Conditionals 2114The directives for conditionals are: 2115.ds maybenot Oo Ic \&! Oc Ns 2116.Bl -tag 2117.It Ic .if \*[maybenot] Ar expression Op Ar operator expression No ... 2118Test the value of an expression. 2119.It Ic .ifdef \*[maybenot] Ar variable Op Ar operator variable No ... 2120Test whether a variable is defined. 2121.It Ic .ifndef \*[maybenot] Ar variable Op Ar operator variable No ... 2122Test whether a variable is not defined. 2123.It Ic .ifmake \*[maybenot] Ar target Op Ar operator target No ... 2124Test the target being requested. 2125.It Ic .ifnmake \*[maybenot] Ar target Op Ar operator target No ... 2126Test the target being requested. 2127.It Ic .else 2128Reverse the sense of the last conditional. 2129.It Ic .elif \*[maybenot] Ar expression Op Ar operator expression No ... 2130A combination of 2131.Sq Ic .else 2132followed by 2133.Sq Ic .if . 2134.It Ic .elifdef \*[maybenot] Ar variable Op Ar operator variable No ... 2135A combination of 2136.Sq Ic .else 2137followed by 2138.Sq Ic .ifdef . 2139.It Ic .elifndef \*[maybenot] Ar variable Op Ar operator variable No ... 2140A combination of 2141.Sq Ic .else 2142followed by 2143.Sq Ic .ifndef . 2144.It Ic .elifmake \*[maybenot] Ar target Op Ar operator target No ... 2145A combination of 2146.Sq Ic .else 2147followed by 2148.Sq Ic .ifmake . 2149.It Ic .elifnmake \*[maybenot] Ar target Op Ar operator target No ... 2150A combination of 2151.Sq Ic .else 2152followed by 2153.Sq Ic .ifnmake . 2154.It Ic .endif 2155End the body of the conditional. 2156.El 2157.Pp 2158The 2159.Ar operator 2160may be any one of the following: 2161.Bl -tag 2162.It Ic \&|\&| 2163Logical OR. 2164.It Ic \&&& 2165Logical AND; of higher precedence than 2166.Sq Ic \&|\&| . 2167.El 2168.Pp 2169.Nm 2170only evaluates a conditional as far as is necessary to determine its value. 2171Parentheses can be used to override the operator precedence. 2172The boolean operator 2173.Sq Ic \&! 2174may be used to logically negate an expression, typically a function call. 2175It is of higher precedence than 2176.Sq Ic \&&& . 2177.Pp 2178The value of 2179.Ar expression 2180may be any of the following function call expressions: 2181.Bl -tag 2182.Sm off 2183.It Ic defined Li \&( Ar varname Li \&) 2184.Sm on 2185Evaluates to true if the variable 2186.Ar varname 2187has been defined. 2188.Sm off 2189.It Ic make Li \&( Ar target Li \&) 2190.Sm on 2191Evaluates to true if the target was specified as part of 2192.Nm Ns 's 2193command line or was declared the default target (either implicitly or 2194explicitly, see 2195.Va .MAIN ) 2196before the line containing the conditional. 2197.Sm off 2198.It Ic empty Li \&( Ar varname Oo Li : Ar modifiers Oc Li \&) 2199.Sm on 2200Evaluates to true if the expansion of the variable, 2201after applying the modifiers, results in an empty string. 2202.Sm off 2203.It Ic exists Li \&( Ar pathname Li \&) 2204.Sm on 2205Evaluates to true if the given pathname exists. 2206If relative, the pathname is searched for on the system search path (see 2207.Va .PATH ) . 2208.Sm off 2209.It Ic target Li \&( Ar target Li \&) 2210.Sm on 2211Evaluates to true if the target has been defined. 2212.Sm off 2213.It Ic commands Li \&( Ar target Li \&) 2214.Sm on 2215Evaluates to true if the target has been defined 2216and has commands associated with it. 2217.El 2218.Pp 2219.Ar Expression 2220may also be an arithmetic or string comparison. 2221Variable expansion is performed on both sides of the comparison. 2222If both sides are numeric and neither is enclosed in quotes, 2223the comparison is done numerically, otherwise lexicographically. 2224A string is interpreted as a hexadecimal integer if it is preceded by 2225.Li 0x , 2226otherwise it is interpreted as a decimal floating-point number; 2227octal numbers are not supported. 2228.Pp 2229All comparisons may use the operators 2230.Sq Ic \&== 2231and 2232.Sq Ic \&!= . 2233Numeric comparisons may also use the operators 2234.Sq Ic \&< , 2235.Sq Ic \&<= , 2236.Sq Ic \&> 2237and 2238.Sq Ic \&>= . 2239.Pp 2240If the comparison has neither a comparison operator nor a right side, 2241the expression evaluates to true if it is nonempty 2242and its numeric value (if any) is not zero. 2243.Pp 2244When 2245.Nm 2246is evaluating one of these conditional expressions, and it encounters 2247a (whitespace-separated) word it doesn't recognize, either the 2248.Dq make 2249or 2250.Dq defined 2251function is applied to it, depending on the form of the conditional. 2252If the form is 2253.Sq Ic .ifdef , 2254.Sq Ic .ifndef 2255or 2256.Sq Ic .if , 2257the 2258.Dq defined 2259function is applied. 2260Similarly, if the form is 2261.Sq Ic .ifmake 2262or 2263.Sq Ic .ifnmake , 2264the 2265.Dq make 2266function is applied. 2267.Pp 2268If the conditional evaluates to true, 2269parsing of the makefile continues as before. 2270If it evaluates to false, the following lines until the corresponding 2271.Sq Ic .elif 2272variant, 2273.Sq Ic .else 2274or 2275.Sq Ic .endif 2276are skipped. 2277.Ss For loops 2278For loops are typically used to apply a set of rules to a list of files. 2279The syntax of a for loop is: 2280.Pp 2281.Bl -tag -compact -width Ds 2282.It Ic \&.for Ar variable Oo Ar variable No ... Oc Ic in Ar expression 2283.It Aq Ar make-lines 2284.It Ic \&.endfor 2285.El 2286.Pp 2287The 2288.Ar expression 2289is expanded and then split into words. 2290On each iteration of the loop, one word is taken and assigned to each 2291.Ar variable , 2292in order, and these 2293.Ar variables 2294are substituted into the 2295.Ar make-lines 2296inside the body of the for loop. 2297The number of words must come out even; that is, if there are three 2298iteration variables, the number of words provided must be a multiple 2299of three. 2300.Pp 2301If 2302.Sq Ic .break 2303is encountered within a 2304.Cm \&.for 2305loop, it causes early termination of the loop, otherwise a parse error. 2306.\" TODO: Describe limitations with defined/empty. 2307.Ss Other directives 2308.Bl -tag -width Ds 2309.It Ic .undef Ar variable No ... 2310Un-define the specified global variables. 2311Only global variables can be un-defined. 2312.El 2313.Sh COMMENTS 2314Comments begin with a hash 2315.Pq Ql \&# 2316character, anywhere but in a shell 2317command line, and continue to the end of an unescaped new line. 2318.Sh SPECIAL SOURCES (ATTRIBUTES) 2319.Bl -tag -width .IGNOREx 2320.It Ic .EXEC 2321Target is never out of date, but always execute commands anyway. 2322.It Ic .IGNORE 2323Ignore any errors from the commands associated with this target, exactly 2324as if they all were preceded by a dash 2325.Pq Ql \- . 2326.\" .It Ic .INVISIBLE 2327.\" XXX 2328.\" .It Ic .JOIN 2329.\" XXX 2330.It Ic .MADE 2331Mark all sources of this target as being up to date. 2332.It Ic .MAKE 2333Execute the commands associated with this target even if the 2334.Fl n 2335or 2336.Fl t 2337options were specified. 2338Normally used to mark recursive 2339.Nm Ns s . 2340.It Ic .META 2341Create a meta file for the target, even if it is flagged as 2342.Ic .PHONY , 2343.Ic .MAKE , 2344or 2345.Ic .SPECIAL . 2346Usage in conjunction with 2347.Ic .MAKE 2348is the most likely case. 2349In 2350.Dq meta 2351mode, the target is out-of-date if the meta file is missing. 2352.It Ic .NOMETA 2353Do not create a meta file for the target. 2354Meta files are also not created for 2355.Ic .PHONY , 2356.Ic .MAKE , 2357or 2358.Ic .SPECIAL 2359targets. 2360.It Ic .NOMETA_CMP 2361Ignore differences in commands when deciding if target is out of date. 2362This is useful if the command contains a value which always changes. 2363If the number of commands change, though, 2364the target is still considered out of date. 2365The same effect applies to any command line that uses the variable 2366.Va .OODATE , 2367which can be used for that purpose even when not otherwise needed or desired: 2368.Bd -literal -offset indent 2369 2370skip-compare-for-some: 2371 @echo this is compared 2372 @echo this is not ${.OODATE:M.NOMETA_CMP} 2373 @echo this is also compared 2374 2375.Ed 2376The 2377.Cm \&:M 2378pattern suppresses any expansion of the unwanted variable. 2379.It Ic .NOPATH 2380Do not search for the target in the directories specified by 2381.Va .PATH . 2382.It Ic .NOTMAIN 2383Normally 2384.Nm 2385selects the first target it encounters as the default target to be built 2386if no target was specified. 2387This source prevents this target from being selected. 2388.It Ic .OPTIONAL 2389If a target is marked with this attribute and 2390.Nm 2391can't figure out how to create it, it ignores this fact and assumes 2392the file isn't needed or already exists. 2393.It Ic .PHONY 2394The target does not correspond to an actual file; 2395it is always considered to be out of date, 2396and is not created with the 2397.Fl t 2398option. 2399Suffix-transformation rules are not applied to 2400.Ic .PHONY 2401targets. 2402.It Ic .PRECIOUS 2403When 2404.Nm 2405is interrupted, it normally removes any partially made targets. 2406This source prevents the target from being removed. 2407.It Ic .RECURSIVE 2408Synonym for 2409.Ic .MAKE . 2410.It Ic .SILENT 2411Do not echo any of the commands associated with this target, exactly 2412as if they all were preceded by an at sign 2413.Pq Ql @ . 2414.It Ic .USE 2415Turn the target into 2416.Nm Ns 's 2417version of a macro. 2418When the target is used as a source for another target, the other target 2419acquires the commands, sources, and attributes (except for 2420.Ic .USE ) 2421of the 2422source. 2423If the target already has commands, the 2424.Ic .USE 2425target's commands are appended 2426to them. 2427.It Ic .USEBEFORE 2428Like 2429.Ic .USE , 2430but instead of appending, prepend the 2431.Ic .USEBEFORE 2432target commands to the target. 2433.It Ic .WAIT 2434If 2435.Ic .WAIT 2436appears in a dependency line, the sources that precede it are 2437made before the sources that succeed it in the line. 2438Since the dependents of files are not made until the file itself 2439could be made, this also stops the dependents being built unless they 2440are needed for another branch of the dependency tree. 2441So given: 2442.Bd -literal 2443x: a .WAIT b 2444 echo x 2445a: 2446 echo a 2447b: b1 2448 echo b 2449b1: 2450 echo b1 2451 2452.Ed 2453the output is always 2454.Ql a , 2455.Ql b1 , 2456.Ql b , 2457.Ql x . 2458.Pp 2459The ordering imposed by 2460.Ic .WAIT 2461is only relevant for parallel makes. 2462.El 2463.Sh SPECIAL TARGETS 2464Special targets may not be included with other targets, i.e. they must be 2465the only target specified. 2466.Bl -tag -width .BEGINx 2467.It Ic .BEGIN 2468Any command lines attached to this target are executed before anything 2469else is done. 2470.It Ic .DEFAULT 2471This is sort of a 2472.Ic .USE 2473rule for any target (that was used only as a source) that 2474.Nm 2475can't figure out any other way to create. 2476Only the shell script is used. 2477The 2478.Va .IMPSRC 2479variable of a target that inherits 2480.Ic .DEFAULT Ns 's 2481commands is set to the target's own name. 2482.It Ic .DELETE_ON_ERROR 2483If this target is present in the makefile, it globally causes make to 2484delete targets whose commands fail. 2485(By default, only targets whose commands are interrupted during 2486execution are deleted. 2487This is the historical behavior.) 2488This setting can be used to help prevent half-finished or malformed 2489targets from being left around and corrupting future rebuilds. 2490.It Ic .END 2491Any command lines attached to this target are executed after everything 2492else is done successfully. 2493.It Ic .ERROR 2494Any command lines attached to this target are executed when another target fails. 2495See 2496.Va MAKE_PRINT_VAR_ON_ERROR 2497for the variables that will be set. 2498.It Ic .IGNORE 2499Mark each of the sources with the 2500.Ic .IGNORE 2501attribute. 2502If no sources are specified, this is the equivalent of specifying the 2503.Fl i 2504option. 2505.It Ic .INTERRUPT 2506If 2507.Nm 2508is interrupted, the commands for this target are executed. 2509.It Ic .MAIN 2510If no target is specified when 2511.Nm 2512is invoked, this target is built. 2513.It Ic .MAKEFLAGS 2514This target provides a way to specify flags for 2515.Nm 2516at the time when the makefiles are read. 2517The flags are as if typed to the shell, though the 2518.Fl f 2519option has 2520no effect. 2521.\" XXX: NOT YET!!!! 2522.\" .It Ic .NOTPARALLEL 2523.\" The named targets are executed in non parallel mode. 2524.\" If no targets are 2525.\" specified, all targets are executed in non parallel mode. 2526.It Ic .NOPATH 2527Apply the 2528.Ic .NOPATH 2529attribute to any specified sources. 2530.It Ic .NOTPARALLEL 2531Disable parallel mode. 2532.It Ic .NO_PARALLEL 2533Synonym for 2534.Ic .NOTPARALLEL , 2535for compatibility with other pmake variants. 2536.It Ic .NOREADONLY 2537clear the read-only attribute from the global variables specified as sources. 2538.It Ic .OBJDIR 2539The source is a new value for 2540.Sq Va .OBJDIR . 2541If it exists, 2542.Nm 2543changes the current working directory to it and updates the value of 2544.Sq Va .OBJDIR . 2545.It Ic .ORDER 2546In parallel mode, the named targets are made in sequence. 2547This ordering does not add targets to the list of targets to be made. 2548.Pp 2549Since the dependents of a target do not get built until the target itself 2550could be built, unless 2551.Ql a 2552is built by another part of the dependency graph, 2553the following is a dependency loop: 2554.Bd -literal 2555\&.ORDER: b a 2556b: a 2557.Ed 2558.Pp 2559.\" XXX: NOT YET!!!! 2560.\" .It Ic .PARALLEL 2561.\" The named targets are executed in parallel mode. 2562.\" If no targets are 2563.\" specified, all targets are executed in parallel mode. 2564.It Ic .PATH 2565The sources are directories which are to be searched for files not 2566found in the current directory. 2567If no sources are specified, 2568any previously specified directories are removed from the search path. 2569If the source is the special 2570.Ic .DOTLAST 2571target, the current working directory is searched last. 2572.It Ic .PATH. Ns Ar suffix 2573Like 2574.Ic .PATH 2575but applies only to files with a particular suffix. 2576The suffix must have been previously declared with 2577.Ic .SUFFIXES . 2578.It Ic .PHONY 2579Apply the 2580.Ic .PHONY 2581attribute to any specified sources. 2582.It Ic .POSIX 2583If this is the first non-comment line in the main makefile, 2584the variable 2585.Va %POSIX 2586is set to the value 2587.Ql 1003.2 2588and the makefile 2589.Ql <posix.mk> 2590is included if it exists, 2591to provide POSIX-compatible default rules. 2592If 2593.Nm 2594is run with the 2595.Fl r 2596flag, only 2597.Ql posix.mk 2598contributes to the default rules. 2599In POSIX-compatible mode, the AT&T System V UNIX style substitution 2600modifier is checked first rather than as a fallback. 2601.It Ic .PRECIOUS 2602Apply the 2603.Ic .PRECIOUS 2604attribute to any specified sources. 2605If no sources are specified, the 2606.Ic .PRECIOUS 2607attribute is applied to every target in the file. 2608.It Ic .READONLY 2609set the read-only attribute on the global variables specified as sources. 2610.It Ic .SHELL 2611Sets the shell that 2612.Nm 2613uses to execute commands. 2614The sources are a set of 2615.Ar field\| Ns Cm \&= Ns Ar value 2616pairs. 2617.Bl -tag -width ".Li hasErrCtls" 2618.It Li name 2619This is the minimal specification, used to select one of the built-in 2620shell specs; 2621.Li sh , 2622.Li ksh , 2623and 2624.Li csh . 2625.It Li path 2626Specifies the absolute path to the shell. 2627.It Li hasErrCtl 2628Indicates whether the shell supports exit on error. 2629.It Li check 2630The command to turn on error checking. 2631.It Li ignore 2632The command to disable error checking. 2633.It Li echo 2634The command to turn on echoing of commands executed. 2635.It Li quiet 2636The command to turn off echoing of commands executed. 2637.It Li filter 2638The output to filter after issuing the 2639.Li quiet 2640command. 2641It is typically identical to 2642.Li quiet . 2643.It Li errFlag 2644The flag to pass the shell to enable error checking. 2645.It Li echoFlag 2646The flag to pass the shell to enable command echoing. 2647.It Li newline 2648The string literal to pass the shell that results in a single newline 2649character when used outside of any quoting characters. 2650.El 2651Example: 2652.Bd -literal 2653\&.SHELL: name=ksh path=/bin/ksh hasErrCtl=true \e 2654 check="set \-e" ignore="set +e" \e 2655 echo="set \-v" quiet="set +v" filter="set +v" \e 2656 echoFlag=v errFlag=e newline="'\en'" 2657.Ed 2658.It Ic .SILENT 2659Apply the 2660.Ic .SILENT 2661attribute to any specified sources. 2662If no sources are specified, the 2663.Ic .SILENT 2664attribute is applied to every 2665command in the file. 2666.It Ic .STALE 2667This target gets run when a dependency file contains stale entries, having 2668.Va .ALLSRC 2669set to the name of that dependency file. 2670.It Ic .SUFFIXES 2671Each source specifies a suffix to 2672.Nm . 2673If no sources are specified, any previously specified suffixes are deleted. 2674It allows the creation of suffix-transformation rules. 2675.Pp 2676Example: 2677.Bd -literal 2678\&.SUFFIXES: .c .o 2679\&.c.o: 2680 cc \-o ${.TARGET} \-c ${.IMPSRC} 2681.Ed 2682.It Ic .SYSPATH 2683The sources are directories which are to be added to the system 2684include path which 2685.Nm 2686searches for makefiles. 2687If no sources are specified, 2688any previously specified directories are removed from the system 2689include path. 2690.El 2691.Sh ENVIRONMENT 2692.Nm 2693uses the following environment variables, if they exist: 2694.Ev MACHINE , 2695.Ev MACHINE_ARCH , 2696.Ev MAKE , 2697.Ev MAKEFLAGS , 2698.Ev MAKEOBJDIR , 2699.Ev MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX , 2700.Ev MAKESYSPATH , 2701.Ev MAKE_STACK_TRACE , 2702.Ev PWD , 2703and 2704.Ev TMPDIR . 2705.Pp 2706.Ev MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX 2707and 2708.Ev MAKEOBJDIR 2709should be set in the environment or on the command line to 2710.Nm 2711and not as makefile variables; 2712see the description of 2713.Sq Va .OBJDIR 2714for more details. 2715It is possible to set these via makefile variables but unless done 2716very early and the 2717.Sq Ic .OBJDIR 2718target is used to reset 2719.Sq Va .OBJDIR , 2720there may be unexpected side effects. 2721.Pp 2722If the 2723.Ev MAKE_STACK_TRACE 2724environment variable is set to 2725.Dq yes , 2726any stack traces include the call chain of the parent processes. 2727.\" .Sh EXIT STATUS 2728.\" .Sh ENVIRONMENT 2729.Sh FILES 2730.Bl -tag -width /usr/share/mk -compact 2731.It .depend 2732list of dependencies 2733.It makefile 2734first default makefile if no makefile is specified on the command line 2735.It Makefile 2736second default makefile if no makefile is specified on the command line 2737.It sys.mk 2738system makefile 2739.It /usr/share/mk 2740system makefile directory 2741.El 2742.\" .Sh EXAMPLES 2743.Sh DIAGNOSTICS 2744.Bl -tag 2745.It Dv Invalid internal option \(dq-J\(dq in \(dq Ns Ar directory Ns Dv \(dq 2746The internal 2747.Fl J 2748option coordinates the main 2749.Nm 2750process with the sub-make processes to limit 2751the number of jobs that run in parallel. 2752The option is passed to all child processes via the 2753.Ev MAKEFLAGS 2754environment variable. 2755To become valid, 2756this option requires that the target running the sub-make is marked with the 2757.Dv .MAKE 2758special source, 2759or that one of the target's commands directly contains the word 2760.Dq make 2761or one of the expressions 2762.Dq ${MAKE} , 2763.Dq ${.MAKE} , 2764.Dq $(MAKE) , 2765.Dq $(.MAKE) . 2766If that's not the case, 2767make issues the above warning and falls back to compat mode. 2768.Pp 2769To see the chain of sub-makes that leads to the invalid option, set the 2770.Ev MAKE_STACK_TRACE 2771environment variable to 2772.Dq yes . 2773.Pp 2774To run the sub-make in parallel mode, even in dry-run mode (see the 2775.Fl n 2776option), add the 2777.Dv .MAKE 2778pseudo source to the target. 2779This is appropriate when the sub-make runs the same target in a subdirectory. 2780.Pp 2781To run the sub-make in parallel mode but not in dry-mode, 2782add a 2783.Dq ${:D make} 2784marker to one of the target's commands. 2785This marker expands to an empty string 2786and thus does not affect the executed commands. 2787.\" The marker can even be added before any of the "@+-" modifiers, 2788.\" so no need to mention this explicitly. 2789.Pp 2790To run the sub-make in compat mode, add the 2791.Fl B 2792option to its invocation. 2793This is appropriate when the sub-make is only used to print a variable's 2794value using the 2795.Fl v 2796or 2797.Fl V 2798options. 2799.Pp 2800To make the sub-make independent from the parent make, unset the 2801.Ev MAKEFLAGS 2802environment variable in the target's commands. 2803.El 2804.Sh COMPATIBILITY 2805The basic make syntax is compatible between different make variants; 2806however the special variables, variable modifiers and conditionals are not. 2807.Ss Older versions 2808An incomplete list of changes in older versions of 2809.Nm : 2810.Pp 2811The way that .for loop variables are substituted changed after 2812.Nx 5.0 2813so that they still appear to be variable expansions. 2814In particular this stops them being treated as syntax, and removes some 2815obscure problems using them in .if statements. 2816.Pp 2817The way that parallel makes are scheduled changed in 2818.Nx 4.0 2819so that .ORDER and .WAIT apply recursively to the dependent nodes. 2820The algorithms used may change again in the future. 2821.Ss Other make dialects 2822Other make dialects (GNU make, SVR4 make, POSIX make, etc.) do not 2823support most of the features of 2824.Nm 2825as described in this manual. 2826Most notably: 2827.Bl -bullet -offset indent 2828.It 2829The 2830.Ic .WAIT 2831and 2832.Ic .ORDER 2833declarations and most functionality pertaining to parallelization. 2834(GNU make supports parallelization but lacks the features needed to 2835control it effectively.) 2836.It 2837Directives, including for loops and conditionals and most of the 2838forms of include files. 2839(GNU make has its own incompatible and less powerful syntax for 2840conditionals.) 2841.\" The "less powerful" above means that GNU make does not have the 2842.\" make(target), target(target) and commands(target) functions. 2843.It 2844All built-in variables that begin with a dot. 2845.It 2846Most of the special sources and targets that begin with a dot, 2847with the notable exception of 2848.Ic .PHONY , 2849.Ic .PRECIOUS , 2850and 2851.Ic .SUFFIXES . 2852.It 2853Variable modifiers, except for the 2854.Ql :old=new 2855string substitution, which does not portably support globbing with 2856.Ql % 2857and historically only works on declared suffixes. 2858.It 2859The 2860.Ic $> 2861variable even in its short form; most makes support this functionality 2862but its name varies. 2863.El 2864.Pp 2865Some features are somewhat more portable, such as assignment with 2866.Ic += , 2867.Ic ?= , 2868and 2869.Ic != . 2870The 2871.Va .PATH 2872functionality is based on an older feature 2873.Ic VPATH 2874found in GNU make and many versions of SVR4 make; however, 2875historically its behavior is too ill-defined (and too buggy) to rely 2876upon. 2877.Pp 2878The 2879.Ic $@ 2880and 2881.Ic $< 2882variables are more or less universally portable, as is the 2883.Ic $(MAKE) 2884variable. 2885Basic use of suffix rules (for files only in the current directory, 2886not trying to chain transformations together, etc.) is also reasonably 2887portable. 2888.Sh SEE ALSO 2889.Xr mkdep 1 , 2890.Xr style.Makefile 5 2891.\" .Sh STANDARDS 2892.Sh HISTORY 2893A 2894.Nm 2895command appeared in 2896.At v7 . 2897This 2898.Nm 2899implementation is based on Adam de Boor's pmake program, 2900which was written for Sprite at Berkeley. 2901It was designed to be a parallel distributed make running jobs on different 2902machines using a daemon called 2903.Dq customs . 2904.Pp 2905Historically the target/dependency 2906.Ic FRC 2907has been used to FoRCe rebuilding (since the target/dependency 2908does not exist ... unless someone creates an 2909.Pa FRC 2910file). 2911.\" .Sh AUTHORS 2912.\" .Sh CAVEATS 2913.Sh BUGS 2914The 2915.Nm 2916syntax is difficult to parse. 2917For instance, finding the end of a variable's use should involve scanning 2918each of the modifiers, using the correct terminator for each field. 2919In many places 2920.Nm 2921just counts {} and () in order to find the end of a variable expansion. 2922.Pp 2923There is no way of escaping a space character in a filename. 2924.Pp 2925In jobs mode, when a target fails; 2926.Nm 2927will put an error token into the job token pool. 2928This will cause all other instances of 2929.Nm 2930using that token pool to abort the build and exit with error code 6. 2931Sometimes the attempt to suppress a cascade of unnecessary errors, 2932can result in a seemingly unexplained 2933.Ql *** Error code 6 2934.\" .Sh SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS 2935