I have no idea why you have done what you have, now. Why bother rewriting it if you're going to do exactly what you said you were trying to avoid? You've got exactly what you had before, except instead of nicely organized into folders, it's one enormous mess.
You might as well have just let them live in their own folders and used their old makefiles. Then you could do this:
Then you could do 'make all' and it would run make in each of the folders.
I have concatenated 2 makefiles, to produce 1 however it is not running all of the code, producing a fatal error: symbol referencing errors. No output written. Can anybody please help? (4 Replies)
I need to develop a makefile that spans across directories. For example, let's say i have an upper level directory (main) and about 2 subdirectories. I want my .cpp files and .o files to be in one subdirectory. I want my .a files to be in the other subdirectory. The .a files are made up of the... (0 Replies)
for example in my make file im building path from env variables and string but need to see what is did
what is the best way to print the result?
say I have in my Makefile :
exec_prefix = $(RUN_ENV_LOCAL)/apache
and I will like to print the exec_prefix value , how can it be done ? (1 Reply)
Are the programs written on schedulers ,thread library , process management, memory management, et al called systems programs ? How are they different from the programs that implement functions like open() , printf() , scanf() , read() .. they have a prefix sys_open, sys_close, sys_read etc , right... (1 Reply)
I have several programs in several directories and want to use make to build the executables. What I have done is to put the main programs in their own directory together with a makefile to build the program. Then I am thinking of having another makefile residing in the directory above so I can run... (1 Reply)
I have the following part of a makefile and want to simplify it
using rules rather than having to code the same two blocks
when I need ti build another program.
An having difficulty doing it
all: 1dvel2 1dvel 2dvel
... (8 Replies)
I am trying to practice to create Makefiles. The goal is to create a makefile such that if a change is made to any of the source code files, the project can be rebuilt by typing make at the command line.
I have the following files:
ac.cc: has include ac.h and pg.h
fr.cc: has main... (8 Replies)
Hey guys,
Suppose i run passwd via bash shell. It is a suid program, which temporarily runs as root(owner) and modifies the user entries.
However, when i write a C file and give 4755 permission and root ownership to the 'a.out' file , it doesn't run as root in bash shell. I verified this by... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I was going through some makefiles where I saw occurrences of explib_subdirs and expinc_subdirs, which I could not understand.
Exporting libs to subdirs ? Exporting include files to specified subdirs ? When do we need to do that ?
What I could understand is, for a build, I would... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: alltaken
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
tmake
TMAKE(1) General Commands Manual TMAKE(1)NAME
tmake - create and maintain makefiles for software projects
SYNOPSIS
tmake [ options ] project files or project settings
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the tmake command. This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution because the orig-
inal program does not have a manual page. Instead, it has documentation in HTML format; see below.
tmake is an easy-to-use tool from Troll Tech to create and maintain makefiles for software projects. It can be a painful task to manage
makefiles manually, especially if you develop for more than one platform or use more than one compiler. tmake automates and streamlines
this process and lets you spend your valuable time on writing code, not makefiles.
OPTIONS -h, --help
Show summary of options.
-e expr
Evaluate the Perl expression. Ignores the template file.
-nodepend
Don't generate dependency information.
-o file
Write output to file instead of stdout.
-t file
Specify a template file.
-unix Force tmake into Unix mode.
-v Verbose/debugging on.
-win32 Force tmake into Win32 mode.
The -t option overrides any TEMPLATE variable in the project file.
The default project file extension is ".pro". The default template file extension is ".t". If you do not specify these extension tmake will
automatically add them for you.
SEE ALSO
The full documentation for tmake is maintained as an HTML manual, located in /usr/share/doc/tmake/html/, and is available through dhelp(1),
Debian's help system.
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Dwayne C. Litzenberger <dlitz@dlitz.net>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).
January 12, 2000 TMAKE(1)