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 DEBIAN
freebsd-mkdep
MKDEP(1) BSD General Commands Manual MKDEP(1)NAME
mkdep -- construct Makefile dependency list
SYNOPSIS
mkdep [-ap] [-f file] [flags] file ...
DESCRIPTION
The mkdep utility takes a set of flags for the C compiler and a list of C source files as arguments and constructs a set of include file
dependencies which are written into the file ``.depend''. An example of its use in a Makefile might be:
CFLAGS= -O -I../include
SRCS= file1.c file2.c
depend:
mkdep ${CFLAGS} ${SRCS}
where the macro SRCS is the list of C source files and the macro CFLAGS is the list of flags for the C compiler.
The user has the ability to change the preprocessor and preprocessor options used. For instance, to use gcc as the preprocessor and to
ignore system headers, one would use
depend:
env MKDEP_CPP="gcc -E" MKDEP_CPP_OPTS=-MM mkdep
${CFLAGS} ${SRCS}
The options are as follows:
-a Append to the output file, so that multiple mkdep's may be run from a single Makefile.
-f Write the include file dependencies to file, instead of the default ``.depend''.
-p Cause mkdep to produce dependencies of the form:
program: program.c
so that subsequent makes will produce program directly from its C module rather than using an intermediate .o module. This is useful
for programs whose source is contained in a single module.
ENVIRONMENT
CC Specifies the C compiler to use. The specified compiler is expected to have options consistent with the GNU C compiler.
MKDEP_CPP Specifies the preprocessor to use. The default is "${CC} -E".
MKDEP_CPP_OPTS Specifies the non-CFLAGS options for the preprocessor. The default is "-M".
FILES
.depend File containing list of dependencies.
SEE ALSO cc(1), cpp(1), make(1)HISTORY
The mkdep command appeared in 4.3BSD-Tahoe.
BSD June 6, 1993 BSD