I am new to creating makefiles.
I have several fortran programs in a folder called as "test" and also have several subroutines in another folder (which is inside this test folder) called as libry
My makefile is in the folder "test"
I want to create a makefile which can access the files in... (2 Replies)
Hi, I'm trying to run the module load command in a Makefile and i'm getting the following error:
make: module: command not found
Why is this? Is there any way to run this command in a Makefile?
NOTE: command - module load msjava/sunjdk/1.5.0 works fine outside of the Makefile (2 Replies)
I have 2 libraries in 2 different directories that I build with Makefiles.
library B depends on library A. If I modify a .cpp file in library A and run lib B's Makefile can I have B's makefile to automatically rebuild library A?
I am now rebuilding A, followed by B... but I'd like B to... (0 Replies)
Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted!
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
Basically, the prompt is make a makefile with various sub makefiles in their respective subdirectories. All code... (1 Reply)
Use and complete the template provided. The entire template must be completed. If you don't, your post may be deleted!
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data:
I have been trying to make the program swap but i have been getting errors with the makefile such as
driver.o:... (1 Reply)
I'm really confused how to use a makefile.
Are you supposed to be make a file from emacs called MakeFile and put code in there to compile?
I am trying to create a makefile to compile two .cpp files in my current directory to produce two .o files and then link them...
What I did was make a... (1 Reply)
Dear all,
I have a quite simple question about how to manipulate "makefile.am". I intend to:
1. "CFLAGS" and "CXXFLAGS" have no value at all. I know that these values get "-g -O2" by default. On the other hand, when I try to set them as "CFLAGS = " in "makefile.am", I get warning messages... (4 Replies)
Hey everybody,
This may be stup*d question for you, but i am new in unix and i wonder how can i make the rules for translating and linking my .c "primjer1.c", "primjer2.c" and "primjer3.c" in makefile.
Thank you. (7 Replies)
Hi All,
We have moved our OS from Sun Solaris to Linux and also some of the compilers.
Our old makefile used to be as below:
CC=cc
FLAGS=-G -KPIC -DLG_SOLARIS_OS
DEFINES=-DSunOS
SYSLIBS=-lc
.SUFFIXES : .c
.c.o : ;$(CC) -c $(FLAGS) $(DEFINES) $*.c -o $*.o
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: shash
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT MOJAVE
parl5.18
PARL(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation PARL(1)NAME
parl - Binary PAR Loader
SYNOPSIS
(Please see pp for convenient ways to make self-contained executables, scripts or PAR archives from perl programs.)
To make a PAR distribution from a CPAN module distribution:
% parl -p # make a PAR dist under the current path
% parl -p Foo-0.01 # assume unpacked CPAN dist in Foo-0.01/
To manipulate a PAR distribution:
% parl -i Foo-0.01-i386-freebsd-5.8.0.par # install
% parl -i http://foo.com/Foo-0.01 # auto-appends archname + perlver
% parl -i cpan://AUTRIJUS/PAR-0.74 # uses CPAN author directory
% parl -u Foo-0.01-i386-freebsd-5.8.0.par # uninstall
% parl -s Foo-0.01-i386-freebsd-5.8.0.par # sign
% parl -v Foo-0.01-i386-freebsd-5.8.0.par # verify
To use Hello.pm from ./foo.par:
% parl -A./foo.par -MHello
% parl -A./foo -MHello # the .par part is optional
Same thing, but search foo.par in the @INC;
% parl -Ifoo.par -MHello
% parl -Ifoo -MHello # ditto
Run test.pl or script/test.pl from foo.par:
% parl foo.par test.pl # looks for 'main.pl' by default,
# otherwise run 'test.pl'
To make a self-containing executable containing a PAR file :
% parl -O./foo foo.par
% ./foo test.pl # same as above
To embed the necessary non-core modules and shared objects for PAR's execution (like "Zlib", "IO", "Cwd", etc), use the -b flag:
% parl -b -O./foo foo.par
% ./foo test.pl # runs anywhere with core modules installed
If you also wish to embed core modules along, use the -B flag instead:
% parl -B -O./foo foo.par
% ./foo test.pl # runs anywhere with the perl interpreter
This is particularly useful when making stand-alone binary executables; see pp for details.
DESCRIPTION
This stand-alone command offers roughly the same feature as "perl -MPAR", except that it takes the pre-loaded .par files via "-Afoo.par"
instead of "-MPAR=foo.par".
Additionally, it lets you convert a CPAN distribution to a PAR distribution, as well as manipulate such distributions. For more
information about PAR distributions, see PAR::Dist.
You can use it to run .par files:
# runs script/run.pl in archive, uses its lib/* as libraries
% parl myapp.par run.pl # runs run.pl or script/run.pl in myapp.par
% parl otherapp.pl # also runs normal perl scripts
However, if the .par archive contains either main.pl or script/main.pl, it is used instead:
% parl myapp.par run.pl # runs main.pl, with 'run.pl' as @ARGV
Finally, the "-O" option makes a stand-alone binary executable from a PAR file:
% parl -B -Omyapp myapp.par
% ./myapp # run it anywhere without perl binaries
With the "--par-options" flag, generated binaries can act as "parl" to pack new binaries:
% ./myapp --par-options -Omyap2 myapp.par # identical to ./myapp
% ./myapp --par-options -Omyap3 myap3.par # now with different PAR
For an explanation of stand-alone executable format, please see par.pl.
SEE ALSO
PAR, PAR::Dist, par.pl, pp
AUTHORS
Audrey Tang <cpan@audreyt.org>
<http://par.perl.org/> is the official PAR website. You can write to the mailing list at <par@perl.org>, or send an empty mail to
<par-subscribe@perl.org> to participate in the discussion.
Please submit bug reports to <bug-par@rt.cpan.org>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2002-2009 by Audrey Tang <cpan@audreyt.org>.
Neither this program nor the associated pp program impose any licensing restrictions on files generated by their execution, in accordance
with the 8th article of the Artistic License:
"Aggregation of this Package with a commercial distribution is
always permitted provided that the use of this Package is embedded;
that is, when no overt attempt is made to make this Package's
interfaces visible to the end user of the commercial distribution.
Such use shall not be construed as a distribution of this Package."
Therefore, you are absolutely free to place any license on the resulting executable, as long as the packed 3rd-party libraries are also
available under the Artistic License.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
See <http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html>
perl v5.18.2 2012-01-06 PARL(1)