freebsd-nq/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, support files for
# 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.
#
MACHINE_CPUARCH=${MACHINE_ARCH:C/mips(n32|64)?(el)?/mips/:C/arm(v6)?(eb)?/arm/:C/powerpc64/powerpc/}
.endif
# Set any local definitions first. Place this early, but it needs
# MACHINE_CPUARCH to be defined.
.sinclude <local.sys.mk>
# 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.
.if defined(%POSIX)
.SUFFIXES: .o .c .y .l .a .sh .f
.else
.SUFFIXES: .out .a .ln .o .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
ARFLAGS ?= rl
.endif
RANLIB ?= ranlib
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AS ?= as
AFLAGS ?=
ACFLAGS ?=
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.if defined(%POSIX)
CC ?= c89
CFLAGS ?= -O
.else
CC ?= cc
.if ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "arm" || ${MACHINE_CPUARCH} == "mips"
CFLAGS ?= -O -pipe
.else
CFLAGS ?= -O2 -pipe
.endif
.if defined(NO_STRICT_ALIASING)
CFLAGS += -fno-strict-aliasing
.endif
.endif
PO_CFLAGS ?= ${CFLAGS}
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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
DTRACE ?= dtrace
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
.else
# XXX: What to do here? Is removing the CFLAGS part completely ok here?
# For now comment it out to not compile with -g unconditionally.
#CFLAGS += -g
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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.endif
CXX ?= c++
CXXFLAGS ?= ${CFLAGS:N-std=*:N-Wnested-externs:N-W*-prototypes:N-Wno-pointer-sign:N-Wold-style-definition}
PO_CXXFLAGS ?= ${CXXFLAGS}
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CPP ?= cpp
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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 !empty(.MAKEFLAGS:M-n) && ${.MAKEFLAGS:M-n} == "-n"
_+_ ?=
.else
_+_ ?= +
.endif
.if defined(%POSIX)
FC ?= fort77
FFLAGS ?= -O 1
.else
FC ?= f77
FFLAGS ?= -O
.endif
EFLAGS ?=
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INSTALL ?= install
LEX ?= lex
LFLAGS ?=
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LD ?= ld
LDFLAGS ?=
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LINT ?= lint
LINTFLAGS ?= -cghapbx
LINTKERNFLAGS ?= ${LINTFLAGS}
LINTOBJFLAGS ?= -cghapbxu -i
LINTOBJKERNFLAGS?= ${LINTOBJFLAGS}
LINTLIBFLAGS ?= -cghapbxu -C ${LIB}
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MAKE ?= make
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.if !defined(%POSIX)
NM ?= nm
.endif
OBJC ?= cc
OBJCFLAGS ?= ${OBJCINCLUDES} ${CFLAGS} -Wno-import
PC ?= pc
PFLAGS ?=
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RC ?= f77
RFLAGS ?=
SHELL ?= sh
YACC ?= yacc
.if defined(%POSIX)
YFLAGS ?=
.else
YFLAGS ?= -d
.endif
.if defined(%POSIX)
# Posix 1003.2 mandated rules
#
# Quoted directly from the Posix 1003.2 draft, only the macros
# $@, $< and $* have been replaced by ${.TARGET}, ${.IMPSRC}, and
# ${.PREFIX}, resp.
# SINGLE SUFFIX RULES
.c:
${CC} ${CFLAGS} ${LDFLAGS} -o ${.TARGET} ${.IMPSRC}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
.f:
${FC} ${FFLAGS} ${LDFLAGS} -o ${.TARGET} ${.IMPSRC}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
.sh:
cp -f ${.IMPSRC} ${.TARGET}
chmod a+x ${.TARGET}
# DOUBLE SUFFIX RULES
.c.o:
${CC} ${CFLAGS} -c ${.IMPSRC}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
.f.o:
${FC} ${FFLAGS} -c ${.IMPSRC}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
.y.o:
${YACC} ${YFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC}
${CC} ${CFLAGS} -c y.tab.c
rm -f y.tab.c
mv y.tab.o ${.TARGET}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
.l.o:
${LEX} ${LFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC}
${CC} ${CFLAGS} -c lex.yy.c
rm -f lex.yy.c
mv lex.yy.o ${.TARGET}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
.y.c:
${YACC} ${YFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC}
mv y.tab.c ${.TARGET}
.l.c:
${LEX} ${LFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC}
mv lex.yy.c ${.TARGET}
.c.a:
${CC} ${CFLAGS} -c ${.IMPSRC}
${AR} ${ARFLAGS} ${.TARGET} ${.PREFIX}.o
rm -f ${.PREFIX}.o
.f.a:
${FC} ${FFLAGS} -c ${.IMPSRC}
${AR} ${ARFLAGS} ${.TARGET} ${.PREFIX}.o
rm -f ${.PREFIX}.o
.else
# non-Posix rule set
.sh:
cp -fp ${.IMPSRC} ${.TARGET}
chmod a+x ${.TARGET}
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.c.ln:
${LINT} ${LINTOBJFLAGS} ${CFLAGS:M-[DIU]*} ${.IMPSRC} || \
touch ${.TARGET}
.cc.ln .C.ln .cpp.ln .cxx.ln:
${LINT} ${LINTOBJFLAGS} ${CXXFLAGS:M-[DIU]*} ${.IMPSRC} || \
touch ${.TARGET}
.c:
${CC} ${CFLAGS} ${LDFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC} ${LDLIBS} -o ${.TARGET}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
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.c.o:
${CC} ${CFLAGS} -c ${.IMPSRC}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
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.cc .cpp .cxx .C:
${CXX} ${CXXFLAGS} ${LDFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC} ${LDLIBS} -o ${.TARGET}
.cc.o .cpp.o .cxx.o .C.o:
${CXX} ${CXXFLAGS} -c ${.IMPSRC}
.m.o:
${OBJC} ${OBJCFLAGS} -c ${.IMPSRC}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
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.p.o:
${PC} ${PFLAGS} -c ${.IMPSRC}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
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.e .r .F .f:
${FC} ${RFLAGS} ${EFLAGS} ${FFLAGS} ${LDFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC} ${LDLIBS} \
-o ${.TARGET}
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.e.o .r.o .F.o .f.o:
${FC} ${RFLAGS} ${EFLAGS} ${FFLAGS} -c ${.IMPSRC}
.S.o:
${CC} ${CFLAGS} ${ACFLAGS} -c ${.IMPSRC}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
.asm.o:
${CC} -x assembler-with-cpp ${CFLAGS} ${ACFLAGS} -c ${.IMPSRC}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
.s.o:
${AS} ${AFLAGS} -o ${.TARGET} ${.IMPSRC}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
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# XXX not -j safe
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.y.o:
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${YACC} ${YFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC}
${CC} ${CFLAGS} -c y.tab.c -o ${.TARGET}
rm -f y.tab.c
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
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.l.o:
${LEX} -t ${LFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC} > ${.PREFIX}.tmp.c
${CC} ${CFLAGS} -c ${.PREFIX}.tmp.c -o ${.TARGET}
rm -f ${.PREFIX}.tmp.c
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
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# XXX not -j safe
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.y.c:
${YACC} ${YFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC}
mv y.tab.c ${.TARGET}
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.l.c:
${LEX} -t ${LFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC} > ${.TARGET}
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.s.out .c.out .o.out:
${CC} ${CFLAGS} ${LDFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC} ${LDLIBS} -o ${.TARGET}
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
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.f.out .F.out .r.out .e.out:
${FC} ${EFLAGS} ${RFLAGS} ${FFLAGS} ${LDFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC} \
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${LDLIBS} -o ${.TARGET}
rm -f ${.PREFIX}.o
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
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# XXX not -j safe
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.y.out:
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${YACC} ${YFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC}
${CC} ${CFLAGS} ${LDFLAGS} y.tab.c ${LDLIBS} -ly -o ${.TARGET}
rm -f y.tab.c
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
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.l.out:
${LEX} -t ${LFLAGS} ${.IMPSRC} > ${.PREFIX}.tmp.c
${CC} ${CFLAGS} ${LDFLAGS} ${.PREFIX}.tmp.c ${LDLIBS} -ll -o ${.TARGET}
rm -f ${.PREFIX}.tmp.c
${CTFCONVERT_CMD}
# FreeBSD build pollution. Hide it in the non-POSIX part of the ifdef.
__MAKE_CONF?=/etc/make.conf
.if exists(${__MAKE_CONF})
.include "${__MAKE_CONF}"
.endif
.if defined(__MAKE_SHELL) && !empty(__MAKE_SHELL)
SHELL= ${__MAKE_SHELL}
.SHELL: path=${__MAKE_SHELL}
.endif
# Default executable format
# XXX hint for bsd.port.mk
OBJFORMAT?= elf
# Tell bmake to expand -V VAR by default
.MAKE.EXPAND_VARIABLES= yes
.if !defined(.PARSEDIR)
# We are not bmake, which is more aggressive about searching .PATH
# It is sometime necessary to curb its enthusiasm with .NOPATH
# The following allows us to quietly ignore .NOPATH when not using bmake.
.NOTMAIN: .NOPATH
.NOPATH:
# Toggle on warnings
.WARN: dirsyntax
.endif
.endif
.include <bsd.compat.mk>
.include <bsd.cpu.mk>