diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'build-0.3/m4')
-rw-r--r-- | build-0.3/m4/m4.make | 50 |
1 files changed, 50 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/build-0.3/m4/m4.make b/build-0.3/m4/m4.make new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ef5726b --- /dev/null +++ b/build-0.3/m4/m4.make @@ -0,0 +1,50 @@ +# file : build/m4/m4.make +# copyright : Copyright (c) 2005-2012 Code Synthesis Tools CC +# license : GNU GPL v2; see accompanying LICENSE file + +$(out_base)/%: m4 := m4 +$(out_base)/%: m4_options += + +ifeq ($(out_base),$(src_base)) +$(out_base)/%: $(src_base)/%.m4 +else +$(out_base)/%: $(src_base)/%.m4 | $$(dir $$@). +endif + $(call message,m4 $<,$(m4) $(m4_options) $< >$@) + +ifneq ($(out_base),$(src_base)) + +$(out_base)/%: $(out_base)/%.m4 | $$(dir $$@). + $(call message,m4 $<,$(m4) $(m4_options) $< >$@) + +endif + + +# @@ +# This is where things start breaking. Following standard logic I should +# make a $(out_base)/%.clean rule, i.e., "will clean anything" rule. If +# this rule happened to be before some other, more specialized rule, and +# that rule happened to rm some additional stuff (like %.o tries to rm +# .d file, which is also not quite correct...). In other word there +# doesn't seem to be a way to properly match "build" and "clean" rules. +# One idea is to make the "clean" rule depend on what "build" rule +# depends (%.m4 in our case) hoping that this way the rule won't match. +# +# There are two problems with this approach: +# +# 1. It is if not iff. However, since the rules come in pairs and make +# pick the first implicit rule that matches, it is certain that if +# make picked this "clean" rule it also picked corresponding "build" +# rule. +# +# 2. The prerequisite (%.m4) can be an intermidiate file which itself +# may not exist. We don't want make to build it just to clean it +# or, even worse, to leave it laying around. I guess the only way +# to work around this is to provide special do-nothing rules during +# cleanup. +# +# +.PHONY: $(out_base)/%.m4.clean + +$(out_base)/%.m4.clean: + $(call message,rm $(@:.m4.clean=),rm -f $(@:.m4.clean=)) |