freebsd-dev/share/mk/sys.mk

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# from: @(#)sys.mk 8.2 (Berkeley) 3/21/94
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# $FreeBSD$
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unix ?= We run FreeBSD, not UNIX.
.FreeBSD ?= true
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.if !defined(%POSIX)
#
# MACHINE_CPUARCH defines a collection of MACHINE_ARCH. Machines with
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# the same MACHINE_ARCH can run each other's binaries, so it necessarily
# has word size and endian swizzled in. However, the source files for
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# these machines often are shared amongst all combinations of size
# and/or endian. This is called MACHINE_CPU in NetBSD, but that's used
# for something different in FreeBSD.
#
__TO_CPUARCH=C/mips(n32|64)?(el)?(hf)?/mips/:C/arm(v[67])?(eb)?/arm/:C/powerpc(64|64le|spe)/powerpc/:C/riscv64(sf)?/riscv/
MACHINE_CPUARCH=${MACHINE_ARCH:${__TO_CPUARCH}}
.endif
__DEFAULT_YES_OPTIONS+= \
UNIFIED_OBJDIR
# src.sys.obj.mk enables AUTO_OBJ by default if possible but it is otherwise
# disabled. Ensure src.conf.5 shows it as default on.
.if make(showconfig)
__DEFAULT_YES_OPTIONS+= AUTO_OBJ
.endif
# Some options we need now
__DEFAULT_NO_OPTIONS= \
DIRDEPS_BUILD \
DIRDEPS_CACHE
__DEFAULT_DEPENDENT_OPTIONS= \
AUTO_OBJ/DIRDEPS_BUILD \
META_MODE/DIRDEPS_BUILD \
STAGING/DIRDEPS_BUILD \
SYSROOT/DIRDEPS_BUILD
__ENV_ONLY_OPTIONS:= \
${__DEFAULT_NO_OPTIONS} \
${__DEFAULT_YES_OPTIONS} \
${__DEFAULT_DEPENDENT_OPTIONS:H}
# early include for customization
# see local.sys.mk below
# Not included when building in fmake compatibility mode (still needed
# for older system support)
.if defined(.PARSEDIR)
.sinclude <local.sys.env.mk>
.include <bsd.mkopt.mk>
# Disable MK_META_MODE with make -B
.if ${MK_META_MODE} == "yes" && defined(.MAKEFLAGS) && ${.MAKEFLAGS:M-B}
MK_META_MODE= no
.endif
.if ${MK_DIRDEPS_BUILD} == "yes"
.sinclude <meta.sys.mk>
.elif ${MK_META_MODE} == "yes"
META_MODE+= meta
.if empty(.MAKEFLAGS:M-s)
# verbose will show .MAKE.META.PREFIX for each target.
META_MODE+= verbose
.endif
.if !defined(NO_META_MISSING)
META_MODE+= missing-meta=yes
.endif
# silent will hide command output if a .meta file is created.
.if !defined(NO_SILENT)
META_MODE+= silent=yes
.endif
.if !exists(/dev/filemon) || defined(NO_FILEMON)
META_MODE+= nofilemon
.endif
# Require filemon data with bmake
.if empty(META_MODE:Mnofilemon)
META_MODE+= missing-filemon=yes
.endif
.endif
META_MODE?= normal
.export META_MODE
.MAKE.MODE?= ${META_MODE}
.if !empty(.MAKE.MODE:Mmeta)
.if !defined(NO_META_IGNORE_HOST)
# Ignore host file changes that will otherwise cause
# buildworld -> installworld -> buildworld to rebuild everything.
# Since the build is self-reliant and bootstraps everything it needs,
# this should not be a real problem for incremental builds.
# XXX: This relies on the existing host tools retaining ABI compatibility
# through upgrades since they won't be rebuilt on header/library changes.
# This is mitigated by Makefile.inc1 for known-ABI-breaking revisions.
# Note that these are prefix matching, so /lib matches /libexec.
.MAKE.META.IGNORE_PATHS+= \
${__MAKE_SHELL} \
/bin \
/lib \
/rescue \
/sbin \
/usr/bin \
/usr/lib \
/usr/sbin \
/usr/share \
.else
NO_META_IGNORE_HOST_HEADERS= 1
.endif
.if !defined(NO_META_IGNORE_HOST_HEADERS)
.MAKE.META.IGNORE_PATHS+= /usr/include
.endif
# We do not want everything out-of-date just because
# some unrelated shared lib updated this.
.MAKE.META.IGNORE_PATHS+= /usr/local/etc/libmap.d
.endif # !empty(.MAKE.MODE:Mmeta)
.if ${MK_AUTO_OBJ} == "yes"
# This needs to be done early - before .PATH is computed
# Don't do this for 'make showconfig' as it enables all options where meta mode
# is not expected.
.if !make(showconfig) && !make(print-dir) && !make(test-system-*) && \
empty(.MAKEFLAGS:M-[nN])
.sinclude <auto.obj.mk>
.endif
.endif # ${MK_AUTO_OBJ} == "yes"
.else # bmake
.include <bsd.mkopt.mk>
.endif
# If the special target .POSIX appears (without prerequisites or
# commands) before the first noncomment line in the makefile, make shall
# process the makefile as specified by the Posix 1003.2 specification.
# make(1) sets the special macro %POSIX in this case (to the actual
# value "1003.2", for what it's worth).
#
# The rules below use this macro to distinguish between Posix-compliant
# and default behaviour.
#
# This functionality is currently broken, since make(1) processes sys.mk
# before reading any other files, and consequently has no opportunity to
# set the %POSIX macro before we read this point.
.if defined(%POSIX)
.SUFFIXES: .o .c .y .l .a .sh .f
.else
.SUFFIXES: .out .a .o .bco .llo .c .cc .cpp .cxx .C .m .F .f .e .r .y .l .S .asm .s .cl .p .h .sh
.endif
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AR ?= ar
.if defined(%POSIX)
ARFLAGS ?= -rv
.else
Stop using lorder and ranlib when building libraries Use of ranlib or lorder is no longer necessary with current linkers (probably anything newer than ~1990) and ar's ability to create an object index and symbol table in the archive. Currently the build system uses lorder+tsort to sort the .o files in dependency order so that a single-pass linker can use them. However, we can use the -s flag to ar to add an index to the .a file which makes lorder unnecessary. Running ar -s is equivalent to running ranlib afterwards, so we can also skip the ranlib invocation. Similarly, we don't have to pass the .o files for shared libraries in dependency order since both ld.bfd and ld.lld will correctly resolve references between the .o files. This removes many fork()+execve calls for each library so should speed up builds a bit. Additionally lorder.sh uses a regular expression that is not supported by the macOS libc or glibc and results in many warnings when cross-building (see D25989). There is one functional change: lorder.sh removed duplicated .o files from the linker command line which now no longer happens. I fixed the duplicates in the base system in r364649. I also checked the ports tree for uses of bsd.lib.mk and found one duplicate source file which I fixed in r548168. Most ports use CMake/autotools rather than bsd.lib.mk but if this breaks any ports that I missed in my search please let me know. Avoiding the shell script actually speeds up the linking step noticeably: I measured how long it takes to rebuild the .a and .so files for lib/libc using a basic benchmark: `rm $LIBC_OBJDIR/*.so* $LIBC_OBJDIR/*.a* && /usr/bin/time make -DWITHOUT_TESTS -s > /dev/null` Without this change ~4.5 seconds and afterwards ~3.1 seconds. Looking at truss -cf output we can see that the number fork() system calls goes down from 27 to 12 (and the speedup while tracing is more noticeable: 81 seconds -> 65 seconds). See also https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/manual/html_node/tsort-background.html for some more background: This whole procedure has been obsolete since about 1980, because Unix archives now contain a symbol table (traditionally built by ranlib, now generally built by ar itself), and the Unix linker uses the symbol table to effectively make multiple passes over an archive file. Or alternatively https://www.unix.com/man-page/osf1/1/lorder/: The lorder command is essentially obsolete. Use the following command in its place: % ar -ts file.a Reviewed By: emaste, imp, dim Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D26044
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ARFLAGS ?= -crsD
.endif
RANLIB ?= ranlib
.if !defined(%POSIX)
RANLIBFLAGS ?= -D
.endif
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AS ?= as
AFLAGS ?=
ACFLAGS ?=
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.if defined(%POSIX)
CC ?= c89
CFLAGS ?= -O
.else
CC ?= cc
CFLAGS ?= -O2 -pipe
.if defined(NO_STRICT_ALIASING)
CFLAGS += -fno-strict-aliasing
.endif
.endif
IR_CFLAGS ?= ${STATIC_CFLAGS:N-O*} ${CFLAGS:N-O*}
PO_CFLAGS ?= ${CFLAGS}
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# cp(1) is used to copy source files to ${.OBJDIR}, make sure it can handle
# read-only files as non-root by passing -f.
CP ?= cp -f
CPP ?= cpp
Add support for the Compact C Type (CTF) conversions throughout FreeBSD's system makefiles. Note that the CTF conversion defaults to off. We may choose to change this default later if DTrace proves popular and people are prepared to wear the compilation performance impact of compiling with debug symbols all the time. Setting NO_CTF in the make args or user environment turns off CTF conversion. Even if we choose to default CTF generation to on later, we still need NO_CTF so that the buildworld process can bootstrap the tools without needlessly generating CTF data for temporary tools. Setting WITH_CTF in the make args or user environment (and _NOT_ in /etc/make.conf) is the only way to enable CTF data conversion. Nore that this can't be implemented the same way that the WITH_ and WITHOUT_ stuff is implemented throughout the buildworld because the CTF conversion needs to work when building a simple object without a Makefile, using the default rules in sys.mk. Typing 'make test.o' with no makefile and just a source file test.c should work. Also, typing 'make WITH_CTF=1 test.o without a makefile and just a source file test.c should work and produce an object with a CTF elf section. Typing 'make WITH_CTF=1 CFLAGS=-g test.o' without a makefile and just a source file test.c should produce an object with both a CTF elf section and the debug elf sections. In the FreeBSD build where more .mk files are used than just sys.mk which is included my make by default, the use of DEBUG_FLAGS is the correct way to enable a debug build. The important thing to note here is that it is the DEBUG_FLAGS setting that prevents libraries and programs from being stripped on installation. So, for the addition of CTF data conversion, setting DEBUG_FLAGS to contain -g, without NO_CTF, will cause the ctfconvert and ctfmerge build programs to be executed also with the -g arg so that debug symbols are retained rather than being removed after the CTF data elf section has been added. Add DTrace libraries to the list of libnames.
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# C Type Format data is required for DTrace
CTFFLAGS ?= -L VERSION
CTFCONVERT ?= ctfconvert
CTFMERGE ?= ctfmerge
Add support for the Compact C Type (CTF) conversions throughout FreeBSD's system makefiles. Note that the CTF conversion defaults to off. We may choose to change this default later if DTrace proves popular and people are prepared to wear the compilation performance impact of compiling with debug symbols all the time. Setting NO_CTF in the make args or user environment turns off CTF conversion. Even if we choose to default CTF generation to on later, we still need NO_CTF so that the buildworld process can bootstrap the tools without needlessly generating CTF data for temporary tools. Setting WITH_CTF in the make args or user environment (and _NOT_ in /etc/make.conf) is the only way to enable CTF data conversion. Nore that this can't be implemented the same way that the WITH_ and WITHOUT_ stuff is implemented throughout the buildworld because the CTF conversion needs to work when building a simple object without a Makefile, using the default rules in sys.mk. Typing 'make test.o' with no makefile and just a source file test.c should work. Also, typing 'make WITH_CTF=1 test.o without a makefile and just a source file test.c should work and produce an object with a CTF elf section. Typing 'make WITH_CTF=1 CFLAGS=-g test.o' without a makefile and just a source file test.c should produce an object with both a CTF elf section and the debug elf sections. In the FreeBSD build where more .mk files are used than just sys.mk which is included my make by default, the use of DEBUG_FLAGS is the correct way to enable a debug build. The important thing to note here is that it is the DEBUG_FLAGS setting that prevents libraries and programs from being stripped on installation. So, for the addition of CTF data conversion, setting DEBUG_FLAGS to contain -g, without NO_CTF, will cause the ctfconvert and ctfmerge build programs to be executed also with the -g arg so that debug symbols are retained rather than being removed after the CTF data elf section has been added. Add DTrace libraries to the list of libnames.
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.if defined(CFLAGS) && (${CFLAGS:M-g} != "")
CTFFLAGS += -g
.endif
CXX ?= c++
CXXFLAGS ?= ${CFLAGS:N-std=*:N-Wnested-externs:N-W*-prototypes:N-Wno-pointer-sign:N-Wold-style-definition}
IR_CXXFLAGS ?= ${STATIC_CXXFLAGS:N-O*} ${CXXFLAGS:N-O*}
PO_CXXFLAGS ?= ${CXXFLAGS}
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DTRACE ?= dtrace
DTRACEFLAGS ?= -C -x nolibs
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.if empty(.MAKEFLAGS:M-s)
ECHO ?= echo
ECHODIR ?= echo
.else
ECHO ?= true
.if ${.MAKEFLAGS:M-s} == "-s"
ECHODIR ?= echo
.else
ECHODIR ?= true
.endif
.endif
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.if ${.MAKEFLAGS:M-N}
# bmake -N is supposed to skip executing anything but it does not skip
# exeucting '+' commands. The '+' feature is used where .MAKE
# is not safe for the entire target. -N is intended to skip building sub-makes
# so it executing '+' commands is not right. Work around the bug by not
# setting '+' when -N is used.
_+_ ?=
.else
_+_ ?= +
.endif
.if defined(%POSIX)
FC ?= fort77
FFLAGS ?= -O 1
.else
FC ?= f77
FFLAGS ?= -O
.endif
EFLAGS ?=
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INSTALL ?= ${INSTALL_CMD:Uinstall}
LEX ?= lex
LFLAGS ?=
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# LDFLAGS is for CC, _LDFLAGS is for LD. Generate _LDFLAGS from
# LDFLAGS by stripping -Wl, from pass-through arguments and dropping
# compiler driver flags (e.g. -mabi=*) that conflict with flags to LD.
LD ?= ld
LDFLAGS ?=
_LDFLAGS = ${LDFLAGS:S/-Wl,//g:N-mabi=*:N-fuse-ld=*:N--ld-path=*}
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MAKE ?= make
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.if !defined(%POSIX)
LLVM_LINK ?= llvm-link
LORDER ?= lorder
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NM ?= nm
NMFLAGS ?=
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OBJC ?= cc
OBJCFLAGS ?= ${OBJCINCLUDES} ${CFLAGS} -Wno-import
OBJCOPY ?= objcopy
PC ?= pc
PFLAGS ?=
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RC ?= f77
RFLAGS ?=
TSORT ?= tsort
TSORTFLAGS ?= -q
.endif
SHELL ?= sh
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.if !defined(%POSIX)
SIZE ?= size
STRIPBIN ?= strip
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.endif
YACC ?= yacc
.if defined(%POSIX)
YFLAGS ?=
.else
YFLAGS ?= -d
.endif
.if defined(%POSIX)
.include "bsd.suffixes-posix.mk"
.else
# non-Posix rule set
.include "bsd.suffixes.mk"
# Pull in global settings.
__MAKE_CONF?=/etc/make.conf
.if exists(${__MAKE_CONF})
.include "${__MAKE_CONF}"
.endif
# late include for customization
.sinclude <local.sys.mk>
.if defined(META_MODE)
META_MODE:= ${META_MODE:O:u}
.endif
.if defined(__MAKE_SHELL) && !empty(__MAKE_SHELL)
SHELL= ${__MAKE_SHELL}
.SHELL: path=${__MAKE_SHELL}
.endif
# Tell bmake to expand -V VAR by default
.MAKE.EXPAND_VARIABLES= yes
# Tell bmake the makefile preference
MAKEFILE_PREFERENCE?= BSDmakefile makefile Makefile
.MAKE.MAKEFILE_PREFERENCE= ${MAKEFILE_PREFERENCE}
# Tell bmake to always pass job tokens, regardless of target depending on
# .MAKE or looking like ${MAKE}/${.MAKE}/$(MAKE)/$(.MAKE)/make.
.MAKE.ALWAYS_PASS_JOB_QUEUE= yes
# By default bmake does *not* use set -e
# when running target scripts, this is a problem for many makefiles here.
# So define a shell that will do what FreeBSD expects.
.ifndef WITHOUT_SHELL_ERRCTL
__MAKE_SHELL?=/bin/sh
.SHELL: name=sh \
quiet="set -" echo="set -v" filter="set -" \
hasErrCtl=yes check="set -e" ignore="set +e" \
echoFlag=v errFlag=e \
path=${__MAKE_SHELL}
.endif
# Hack for ports compatibility. Historically, ports makefiles have
# assumed they can examine MACHINE_CPU without including anything
# because this was automatically included in sys.mk. For /usr/src,
# this file has moved to being included from bsd.opts.mk. Until all
# the ports files are modernized, and a reasonable transition
# period has passed, include it while we're in a ports tree here
# to preserve historic behavior.
.if exists(${.CURDIR}/../../Mk/bsd.port.mk)
.include <bsd.cpu.mk>
.endif
.endif # ! Posix