The make
programs in various other systems support a few features
that are not implemented in GNU make
. The POSIX.2 standard
(IEEE Standard 1003.2-1992) which specifies make
does not
require any of these features.
make
because of the
nonmodularity of putting knowledge into make
of the internal
format of archive file symbol tables.
See section Updating Archive Symbol Directories.
make
;
they refer to the SCCS file that corresponds
to the file one would get without the `~'. For example, the
suffix rule `.c~.o' would make the file `n.o' from
the SCCS file `s.n.c'. For complete coverage, a whole
series of such suffix rules is required.
See section Old-Fashioned Suffix Rules.
In GNU make
, this entire series of cases is handled by two
pattern rules for extraction from SCCS, in combination with the
general feature of rule chaining.
See section Chains of Implicit Rules.
make
, the string `$$@' has the strange meaning
that, in the dependencies of a rule with multiple targets, it stands
for the particular target that is being processed.
This is not defined in GNU make
because `$$' should always
stand for an ordinary `$'.
It is possible to get this functionality through the use of static pattern
rules (see section Static Pattern Rules).
The System V make
rule:
$(targets): $$@.o lib.acan be replaced with the GNU
make
static pattern rule:
$(targets): %: %.o lib.a
make
, files found by VPATH
search
(see section Searching Directories for Dependencies) have their names changed inside command
strings. We feel it is much cleaner to always use automatic variables
and thus make this feature obsolete.
make
s, the automatic variable $*
appearing in
the dependencies of a rule has the amazingly strange "feature" of
expanding to the full name of the target of that rule. We cannot
imagine what went on in the minds of Unix make
developers to do
this; it is utterly inconsistent with the normal definition of $*
.
make
s, implicit rule search
(see section Using Implicit Rules) is apparently done for
all targets, not just those without commands. This means you can
do:
foo.o: cc -c foo.cand Unix
make
will intuit that `foo.o' depends on
`foo.c'.
We feel that such usage is broken. The dependency properties of
make
are well-defined (for GNU make
, at least),
and doing such a thing simply does not fit the model.
make
does not include any built-in implicit rules for
compiling or preprocessing EFL programs. If we hear of anyone who is
using EFL, we will gladly add them.
make
, a suffix rule can be specified with
no commands, and it is treated as if it had empty commands
(see section Using Empty Commands). For example:
.c.a:will override the built-in `.c.a' suffix rule. We feel that it is cleaner for a rule without commands to always simply add to the dependency list for the target. The above example can be easily rewritten to get the desired behavior in GNU
make
:
.c.a: ;
make
invoke the shell with the `-e' flag,
except under `-k' (see section Testing the Compilation of a Program). The `-e' flag tells the shell to exit as soon as any
program it runs returns a nonzero status. We feel it is cleaner to
write each shell command line to stand on its own and not require this
special treatment.
Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.