This patch allows "grouped targets" using the &: syntax:
tgt1 tgt2 ... tgtn &: pre1 pre2 ...
recipe
When the &: separator is used (in single or double colon forms), all
the targets are understood to be built by a single invocation of the
recipe. This is accomplished by piggy-backing on the already-existing
pattern rule feature, using the file's "also_make" list.
* NEWS: Add information about grouped targets.
* doc/make.texi (Multiple Targets): Add information on grouped targets.
(Pattern Intro): Refer to the new section to discuss multiple patterns.
* src/main.c (main): Add "grouped-targets" to .FEATURES
* src/read.c (make_word_type): Add new types for &: and &::.
(eval): Recognize the &: and &:: separator and remember when used.
(record_files): Accept an indicator of whether the rule is grouped.
If so, update also_make for each file to depend on the other files.
(get_next_mword): Recognize the &: and &:: word types.
* tests/scripts/features/grouped_targets: New test script.
* AUTHORS: Add Kaz Kylheku
* NEWS: Update with a backward-compatibility warning.
* src/rule.c (convert_to_pattern): If a suffix rule has dependencies,
do not create a pattern rule for it. According to the manual suffix
rules with prerequisites are treated as normal targets.
* tests/scrips/features/suffixrules: Create some regression tests for
.SUFFIXES and suffix rules.
Move content from glob/* and config/* into standard GNU directory
locations lib/* and m4/*.
Install the gnulib bootstrap script and its configuration file, and
create a bootstrap.bat file for Windows. Update the README.git file
with new requirements and instructions for building from Git.
At this point we only install the alloca, getloadavg, and FDL modules
from gnulib. We keep our old glob/fnmatch implementation since the
gnulib versions require significant amounts of infrastructure which
doesn't exist on Windows yet. Further work is required here.
Due to a problem with gnulib's version of getloadavg, we need to bump
the minimum required version of automake to 1.16.1 unfortunately.
* README.git: Update instructions
* NEWS: Move developer news to a separate section
* configure.ac: Update for use with gnulib modules
* bootstrap: Bootstrap from Git workspace (import from gnulib)
* bootstrap.conf: Bootstrap configuration for GNU make
* bootstrap.bat: Bootstrap from Git workspace for Windows
* gl/modules/make-glob: Support our local fnmatch/glob implementation
* config/acinclude.m4: Move to m4/
* config/dospaths.m4: Move to m4/
* glob/fnmatch.c: Move to lib/
* glob/fnmatch.h.in: Move to lib/
* glob/glob.c: Move to lib/
* glob/glob.h.in: Move to lib/
* Makefile.am: Update for new directories
* build.template: Update for new directories
* build_w32.bat: Update for new directories
* builddos.bat: Update for new directories
* maintMakefile: Update for new directories
* makefile.com: Update for new directories
* mk/Amiga.mk: Update for new directories
* mk/Posix.mk.in: Update for new directories
* mk/VMS.mk: Update for new directories
* mk/Windows32.mk: Update for new directories
* mk/msdosdjgpp.mk: Update for new directories
* po/LINGUAS: One language per line (needed by gnulib)
* INSTALL: Remove (obtained from gnulib)
* src/alloca.c: Remove (obtained from gnulib)
* src/getloadavg.c: Remove (obtained from gnulib)
* po/Makevars: Remove (created by bootstrap)
* config/*: Remove leftover files
* glob/*: Remove leftover files
Move the source code (other than glob) into the "src" subdirectory.
Update all scripting and recommendations to support this change.
* *.c, *.h, w32/*: Move to src/
* configure.ac, Makefile.am, maintMakefile: Locate new source files.
* Basic.mk.template, mk/*: Update for new source file locations.
* NEWS, README.DOS.template: Update for new locations.
* build.template, build_w32.bat, builddos.bat: Ditto.
* po/POTFILES.in: Ditto
* tests/run_make_tests.pl, tests/scripts/features/load*: Ditto.
* make.1: Move to doc.
* mk/VMS.mk: Add support for building on VMS (hopefully).
* makefile.vms, prepare_w32.bat: Remove.
* SCOPTIONS: Update to define HAVE_CONFIG_H
Over time the non-standard build and install systems (nmake files,
smake files, Visual Studio project files, etc.) have atrophied and
maintaining them is not worth the effort, for such a simple utility
as make. Remove all the non-standard build tool support and unify
OS-specific build rules under a basic set of (GNU make) makefiles.
Preserve the existing bootstrapping scripts (for POSIX, Windows,
and MS-DOS). Also the existing VMS build scripts are left unchanged:
I don't have enough experience with VMS to venture into this area.
Perhaps one of the VMS maintainers might like to determine whether
conversion would be appropriate.
Rather than create libraries for w32 and glob (non-POSIX), simply
link the object files directly to remove the complexity.
* NEWS: Update with user-facing notes.
* Makefile.am: Clean up to use the latest automake best practices.
Build Windows code directly from the root makefile to avoid recursion.
* README.Amiga, README.DOS.template, README.W32.template: Updated.
* INSTALL: Point readers at the README.git file.
* maintMakefile: Remove obsolete files. Create Basic.mk file.
* Basic.mk.template, mk/*.mk: Create basic GNU make-based makefiles.
* build_w32.bat: Copy Basic.mk to Makefile
* configure.ac: We no longer need AM_PROG_AR.
* dosbuild.bat: Rename to builddos.bat. Incorporate configure.bat.
* Makefile.DOS.template: Remove.
* NMakefile.template, w32/subproc/NMakefile: Remove.
* SMakefile.template, glob/SMakefile, glob/SCOPTIONS, make.lnk: Remove.
* configure.bat, glob/configure.bat: Remove.
* w32/Makefile.am: Remove.
* make_msvc_net2003.sln, make_msvc_net2003.vcproj: Remove.
* doc/make.texi (Appending): Document this behavior.
* variable.c (do_variable_definition): Only add a space if the variable
value is not empty.
* tests/scripts/variables/flavors: Test this behavior.
* make.1: Document the -E and --eval options.
* doc/make.texi: Document the -E option.
* tests/scripts/options/eval: Test the -E option and MAKEFILES.
* NEWS: Add information about the new option.
* make.1: Document the new flag.
* doc/make.texi: Document the new flag. Remove suggestions that the
.SILENT special target is deprecated or should not be used.
* tests/scripts/options/dash-s: Test the -s and --no-silent options.
* NEWS: Add information about the new option.
* NEWS: Document the change, as a backward-incompatible change.
* main.c (main): Add 'nocomment' to the .FEATURES variable.
* read.c (remove_comments): Skip variable references during remove.
(find_char_unquote): Fix comments for new STOPMAP support.
* tests/scripts/features/escape: Test new escape syntax.
* tests/scripts/functions/guile: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/functions/shell: Ditto.
While displaying line numbers, show the relevant line number inside
the recipe not just the first line of the entire recipe.
Sample changes suggested by Brian Vandenberg <phantall@gmail.com>
* gnumake.h (gmk_floc): Add an 'offset' to track the recipe offset.
* read.c (eval, eval_makefile, eval_buffer): Initialize 'offset'.
(record_files, install_pattern_rule): Ditto.
* job.c (new_job, job_next_command): Update 'offset' based on the
line of the recipe we're expanding or invoking.
(child_error): Add 'offset' when showing the line number.
* function.c (func_shell_base): Ditto.
* output.c (error, fatal): Ditto.
* NEWS: Mention the new ability.
* tests/scripts/features/errors: Check the line number on errors.
* tests/scripts/functions/warning: Check the line number on warnings.
* tests/scripts/features/output-sync,
tests/scripts/features/parallelism, tests/scripts/functions/shell,
tests/scripts/functions/error: Update line numbers.
Previously if the jobserver was active, MAKEFLAGS would contain only
the -j option but not the number (not -j5 or whatever) so users
could not discover that value. Allow that value to be provided in
MAKEFLAGS without error but still give warnings if -jN is provided
on the command line if the jobserver is already activated.
* NEWS: Discuss the new behavior.
* os.h, posixos.c, w32/w32os.c: Return success/failure from
jobserver_setup() and jobserver_parse_auth().
* main.c (main): Separate the command line storage of job slots (now
in arg_job_slots) from the control storage (in job_slots). Make a
distinction between -jN flags read from MAKEFLAGS and those seen
on the command line: for the latter if the jobserver is enabled then
warn and disable it, as before.
* tests/scripts/features/jobserver: Add new testing.
* NEWS: Mention the change.
* main.c: Rename jobserver_fds variable to jobserver_auth and
--jobserver-fds option to --jobserver-auth.
* os.h, posixos.c, w32/w32os.c: Rename jobserver_parse_arg() and
jobserver_get_arg() to jobserver_parse_auth()/jobserver_get_auth().
* NEWS: Add information about reading files.
* make.texi (File Function): Describe reading files.
* tests/scripts/functions/file: Test new features for $(file ...)
Add a new variable .SHELLSTATUS which holds the exit status of the
last-invoked shell function or != assignment.
* NEWS, doc/make.texi: Document the change.
* function.c (shell_completed, msdos_openpipe, func_shell_base): Add
shell_completed() to handle the completion of the shell, by setting
.SHELLSTATUS. Call it where needed.
* job.c (child_handler): Call shell_completed().
* tests/scripts/functions/shell: Add tests for .SHELLSTATUS.
* configure.ac: Test for isatty() and ttyname()
* makeint.h: provide a substitute for ttyname() if it's not available.
* config.ami.template, config.h-vms.template, config.h.W32.template:
define/undefine HAVE_ISATTY/HAVE_TTYNAME macros.
* NEWS, doc/make.texi: Document these new variables.
Reported by Tim Murphy <tnmurphy@gmail.com>
* function.c (func_file): Only write TEXT if it is not NULL.
* NEWS, doc/make.texi: Document the new feature
* tests/scripts/functions/file: Verify that the no-text version of
$(file ...) works and doesn't add a newline.
Allows deprecated syntax. However we don't guarantee this syntax
will continue to be legal in the future.
Change suggested by David Boyce <david.s.boyce@gmail.com>
Create a new file, output.c, and collect functions that generate output there.
We introduce a new global context specifying where output should go (to stdout
or to a sync file), and the lowest level output generator chooses where to
write output based on that context.
This allows us to set the context globally, and all operations that write
output (including functions like $(info ...) etc.) will use it.
Removed the "--trace=dir" capability. It was too confusing. If you have
directory tracking enabled then output sync will print the enter/leave message
for each synchronized block. If you don't want that, disable directory
tracking.
This allows you to write portable makefiles that set GNU make-specific command
line options in the environment or makefile: add them to GNUMAKEFLAGS instead
of MAKEFLAGS and they will be seen by GNU make but ignored by other
implementations of make.