difference between .make and .mak file


 
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Old 07-11-2008
difference between .make and .mak file

Hi All,

In our project i could see .make files and some .mak file.
The build rules and the related commands been written in make file.
All the project directory specific thing been written in .mak file and the project directories and makefiles are present in the subdirectories related to the location of the .mak file. Can somebody explain me the significance of .mak file.

Thanks
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library-combo(7)					       GNUstep System Manual						  library-combo(7)

NAME
library-combo - GNUstep Make support for cross-compilation. DESCRIPTION
This manual page is about cross-compilation and fat binaries. Fat binaries are packages that you can supply which contain more the one binary of your program (e.g. your application). So you can support multiple platforms with a single package. To support this your system has to be built in a non-flattened way. Meaning that during the installation of gnustep-make you should have selected --disable-flattened and the types of library combinations you want to support, through the --with-library-combo option. With library combinations we mean the Objective-C runtime, the Foundation library and the Application library. For more details about this see the LIBRARY-COMBO section. If you installed your GNUstep system in a non-flattened way all system dependend binaries are installed in subdirectories with cpu/os/library-combo information. That means for instance that the gnustep-base library will be installed in Library/Libraries/ix86/linux/gnu-gnu-gnu/ when you are on an Intel x86 system, running linux with the GNU runtime for Objective-C and you installed GNUstep. For each and every library-combo that you want to support you should create the environment through gnustep-make, because it installs a different config.make to support its own CC, OPTFLAGS, etc. flags. LIBRARY-COMBO An important issue is to let to a package the ability to deal with various libraries and configurations available now: Objective-C runtimes In the Objective-C world there are three major runtimes: the NeXT runtime, the Apple runtime and the GNU runtime (both with and without garbage collection enabled). They are different in several respects and a program or library that works at the runtime level should be aware of them. Foundation libraries There are several Foundation libraries an application or tool can be written on top of: NeXT Foundation library which runs on NeXTStep/OPENSTEP systems, gnustep-base, libFoundation and Apple Cocoa system. Graphical interfaces Until now three libraries provide or try to provide OpenStep compliant systems: the AppKit from NeXT, gnustep-gui and Cocoa from Apple. If a program wants to work with all the possible combinations it will have to provide different binaries for each combination because it's not possible to have a tool compiled for NeXT Foundation that runs with gnustep-base or vice-versa. To summarize, a program can be compiled for these combinations: Objective-C runtime nx (for NeXT), gnu (for GNU without garbage collection), gnugc (for GNU with garbage collection), apple (for Apple) Foundation library nx (for NeXT), gnu (for gnustep-base), fd (for libFoundation), apple (for Apple Cocoa) GUI library nx (for NeXT), gnu (for gnustep-gui), apple (for Apple Cocoa) We'll denote the fact that an application was compiled for a certain combination of the above values by using the abbreviations of the dif- ferent subsystems and placing dashes between them. For example an application compiled for NeXT Foundation using NeXT AppKit will have the compile attribute nx-nx-nx. An application compiled for Apple Cocoa with the GNU compiler for Objective-C gnu-apple-apple and another one compiled for gnustep-base using gnustep-gui under Unix will be denoted by gnu-gnu-gnu. Here is a list of some of the possible combinations: Runtime Foundation GUI nx nx nx nx fd gnu gnu gnu gnu gnu fd gnu gnugc gnu gnu gnugc fd gnu apple apple apple apple gnu gnu Note that one can choose his/her own packages to build; it is not required to have all the packages installed on the system. Not having all of them installed limits only the ability to build and distribute binaries for those missing combinations. DIRECTORY STRUCTURE For cross-compilation in a non-flattened directory structure is recommended, so that you can store on the same directory structure binaries for different machines. The standard GNUstep filesystem layout is normally used when a non-flattened directory structure is being used; this is obtained with the --with-layout=gnustep option when configuring gnustep-make. The entire GNUstep installation is then created inside /usr/GNUstep (or another directory if you use the --prefix=... option when configuring gnustep-make). Directories that contain binaries (such as the Libraries directory) inside /usr/GNUstep are then set up to support fat binaries as follows: Libraries/ ix86/ linux-gnu/ gnu-gnu-gnu/ libgnustep-base.so libgnustep-gui.so gnu-fd-gnu/ libFoundation.so libgnustep-gui.so To allow the right libraries to be found, you need to source GNUstep.sh before using GNUstep, and you need to start up your application by using openapp, which will locate the right binary for your library combo. BUILDING FOR A LIBRARY-COMBO The makefile package will allow the user to choose between different library combinations. To specify a combination you want to compile for just type: $ make library_combo=library-combo For instance if you want to choose to compile using the GNUstep's Foundation implementation and use the GNUstep GUI library on a GNU/Linux machine you can do like this: $ make library_combo=gnu-gnu-gnu If your project requires running configure before compiling there are two issues you have to keep in mind. 'configure' is used to determine the existence of particular header files and/or of some specific functionality in the system header files. This thing is usually done by creating a config.h file which contains a couple of defines like HAVE_... which say if the checked functionality is present or not. Another usage of configure is to determine some specific libraries to link against to and/or some specific tools. A typical GNUstep program is not required to check for additional libraries because this step is done by the time the makefile package is installed. If the project still needs to check for additional libraries and/or tools, the recommended way is to output a config.mak file which is included by the main GNUmakefile, instead of using Makefile.in files which are modified by configure. The reason for not doing this is to avoid having the makefiles contain target dependencies like above, this way keeping only one makefile instead of several for each target machine. The makefile package is written for GNU make because it provides some very powerful features that save time both in writing the package but also at runtime, when you compile a project. BUILDING FOR AN ARCHITECTURE In order to build a project for multiple architectures you'll need the development environment for the target machine installed on your machine. This includes a cross-compiler together with all the additional tools like the assembler and linker, the target header files and all the libraries you need. The GNUstep makefile package should be able to compile and link an application for another machine just by typing $ make target=target-triplet where target-triplet is the canonical system name as reported by config.guess. USING A LIBRARY-COMBO When you use library-combos, you must always source GNUstep.sh. That allows you to switch library paths on the fly. If you want to switch to a different library-combo in your shell, and if you are using bash, it's common to first source GNUstep-reset.sh to reset all shell variables, then to source GNUstep.sh again. Let's assume we use gnu-gnu-gnu as our current LIBRARY_COMBO and we want to switch to gnugc-gnu-gnu, then we would use: . /usr/GNUstep/System/Library/Makefiles/GNUstep-reset.sh export LIBRARY_COMBO=gnugc-gnu-gnu . /usr/GNUstep/System/Library/Makefiles/GNUstep.sh SEE ALSO
debugapp(1), GNUstep(7), gnustep-config(1), openapp(1) HISTORY
Work on gnustep-make started in 1997 by Scott Christley <scottc@net-community.com>. Version 2.0.0 of gnustep-make introduced many changes with previous releases, which was mainly the work of Nicola Pero <nicola.pero@meta- innovation.com> AUTHORS
This man-page was written by Dennis Leeuw <dleeuw@made-it.com> based on the DESIGN document from the gnustep-make source tree. CREDITS
The DESIGN document was written by Ovidiu Predescu. This work could only be as is due to the notes and corrects from Nicola Pero <nicola.pero@meta-innovation.com>. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification, are permitted in any medium without royalty provided the copyright notice and this notice are preserved. gnustep-make 20/12/2007 library-combo(7)