Mercurial > emacs
view Makefile.in @ 2321:63128ec90cfe
Initial revision
author | Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com> |
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date | Mon, 22 Mar 1993 22:58:27 +0000 |
parents | 17cbbc48a154 |
children | b1c74a8a020b |
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# DIST: This is the distribution Makefile for Emacs. configure can # DIST: make most of the changes to this file you might want, so try # DIST: that first. # make all to compile and build Emacs. # make install to install it. # make install.sysv to install on system V. Note that on system V you # must change mandir to /usr/local/man/man1. # make install.xenix to install on Xenix. # make install.aix to install on AIX. # make TAGS to update tags tables. # # make clean or make mostlyclean # Delete all files from the current directory that are normally # created by building the program. Don't delete the files that # record the configuration. Also preserve files that could be made # by building, but normally aren't because the distribution comes # with them. # # Delete `.dvi' files here if they are not part of the distribution. # # make distclean # Delete all files from the current directory that are created by # configuring or building the program. If you have unpacked the # source and built the program without creating any other files, # `make distclean' should leave only the files that were in the # distribution. # # make realclean # Delete everything from the current directory that can be # reconstructed with this Makefile. This typically includes # everything deleted by distclean, plus more: C source files # produced by Bison, tags tables, info files, and so on. # # make extraclean # Still more severe - delete backup and autosave files, too. SHELL = /bin/sh MAKE = make # BSD doesn't have it as a default. # ==================== Things `configure' Might Edit ==================== CC=cc CONFIG_CFLAGS=-g ### These help us choose version- and architecture-specific directories ### to install files in. ### This should be the number of the Emacs version we're building, ### like `18.59' or `19.0'. version=version-not-set ### This should be the name of the configuration we're building Emacs ### for, like `mips-dec-ultrix' or `sparc-sun-sunos'. configname=configuration-name-not-set # ==================== Where To Install Things ==================== # The default location for installation. Everything is placed in # subdirectories of this directory. The default values for many of # the variables below are expressed in terms of this one, so you may # not need to change them. prefix=/usr/local # Like `prefix', but used for architecture-specific files. exec_prefix=${prefix} # Where to install Emacs and other binaries that people will want to # run directly (like etags). bindir=${exec_prefix}/bin # Where to install architecture-independent data files. ${lispdir} # and ${etcdir} are subdirectories of this. datadir=${prefix}/lib # Where to install and expect the files that Emacs modifies as it # runs. These files are all architecture-independent. Right now, the # only such data is the locking directory; ${lockdir} is a # subdirectory of this. statedir=${prefix}/lib # Where to install and expect executable files to be run by Emacs # rather than directly by users, and other architecture-dependent # data. ${archlibdir} is a subdirectory of this. libdir=${exec_prefix}/lib # Where to install Emacs's man pages, and what extension they should have. mandir=${prefix}/man/man1 manext=.1 # Where to install and expect the info files describing Emacs. In the # past, this defaulted to a subdirectory of ${prefix}/lib/emacs, but # since there are now many packages documented with the texinfo # system, it is inappropriate to imply that it is part of Emacs. infodir=${prefix}/info # Where to find the source code - setting this to anything but # . doesn't work yet. The source code for Emacs's C kernel is # expected to be in ${srcdir}/src, and the source code for Emacs's # utility programs is expected to be in ${srcdir}/lib-src. This is # set by the configure script's `--srcdir' option. srcdir=. # ==================== Emacs-specific directories ==================== # These variables hold the values Emacs will actually use. They are # based on the values of the standard Make variables above. # Where to install the lisp files distributed with Emacs. This # includes the Emacs version, so that the lisp files for different # versions of Emacs will install themselves in separate directories. lispdir=${datadir}/emacs/${version}/lisp # Where to install the lisp files which are distributed with Emacs # but not maintained by the FSF. This includes the Emacs version, so # that the lisp files for different versions of Emacs will install # themselves in separate directories. externallispdir=${datadir}/emacs/${version}/external-lisp # Directories Emacs should search for lisp files specific to this # site (i.e. customizations), before consulting ${lispdir}. This # should be a colon-separated list of directories. locallisppath=${datadir}/emacs/site-lisp # Where Emacs will search to find its lisp files. Before changing # this, check to see if your purpose wouldn't better be served by # changing locallisppath. This should be a colon-separated list of # directories. lisppath=${locallisppath}:${lispdir} # Where Emacs will search for its lisp files while building. This is # only used during the process of compiling Emacs, to help Emacs find # its lisp files before they've been installed in their final # location. It's usually identical to lisppath, except that the entry # for the directory containing the installed lisp files has been # replaced with ../lisp. This should be a colon-separated list of # directories. buildlisppath=../lisp # Where to install the other architecture-independent data files # distributed with Emacs (like the tutorial, the cookie recipes and # the Zippy database). This path usually contains the Emacs version # number, so the data files for multiple versions of Emacs may be # installed at once. etcdir=${datadir}/emacs/${version}/etc # Where to create and expect the locking directory, where the Emacs # locking code keeps track of which files are currently being edited. lockdir=${statedir}/emacs/lock # Where to put executables to be run by Emacs rather than the user. # This path usually includes the Emacs version and configuration name, # so that multiple configurations for multiple versions of Emacs may # be installed at once. archlibdir=${libdir}/emacs/${version}/${configname} # ====================== Developer's configuration ======================= # The following assignments make sense if you're running Emacs on a single # machine, one version at a time, and you want changes to the lisp and etc # directories in the source tree to show up immediately in your working # environment. It saves a great deal of disk space by not duplicating the # lisp and etc directories. # # lispdir=${srcdir}/lisp # externallispdir=${srcdir}/externallisp # locallisppath=${srcdir}/site-lisp # etcdir=${srcdir}/etc # lockdir=${srcdir}/lock # archlibdir=${srcdir}/bin # infodir=${srcdir}/info # ==================== Utility Programs for the Build ==================== # Allow the user to specify the install program. INSTALL = install INSTALLFLAGS = -c INSTALL_PROGRAM = ${INSTALL} INSTALL_DATA = ${INSTALL} # ============================= Targets ============================== # Flags passed down to subdirectory makefiles. MFLAGS = CFLAGS=${CONFIG_CFLAGS} # Subdirectories to make recursively. `lisp' is not included # because the compiled lisp files are part of the distribution # and you cannot remake them without installing Emacs first. SUBDIR = lib-src src # The makefiles of the directories in $SUBDIR. SUBDIR_MAKEFILES = lib-src/Makefile src/Makefile # Subdirectories to install, and where they'll go. # lib-src's makefile knows how to install it, so we don't do that here. # When installing the info files, we need to do special things to # avoid nuking an existing dir file, so we don't do that here; # instead, we have written out explicit code in the `install' targets. COPYDIR = etc ${srcdir}/lisp ${srcdir}/external-lisp COPYDESTS = ${etcdir} ${lispdir} ${externallispdir} all: src/paths.h ${SUBDIR} removenullpaths=sed -e 's/^://' -e 's/:$$//' -e 's/::/:/' # We force the rebuilding of src/paths.h because the user might give # make different values for the various directories. Since we use # move-if-change, src/paths.h only actually changes if the user did # something notable, so the only unnecessary work we do is in building # src/paths.h.tmp, which isn't much. # Note that sed is not in /bin on 386bsd. src/paths.h: Makefile ${srcdir}/src/paths.h.in FRC lisppath=`echo ${lisppath} | ${removenullpaths}` ; \ buildlisppath=`echo ${buildlisppath} | ${removenullpaths}` ; \ sed < ${srcdir}/src/paths.h.in > src/paths.h.tmp \ -e 's;\(#.*PATH_LOADSEARCH\).*$$;\1 "'$${lisppath}'";' \ -e 's;\(#.*PATH_DUMPLOADSEARCH\).*$$;\1 "'$${buildlisppath}'";' \ -e 's;\(#.*PATH_EXEC\).*$$;\1 "${archlibdir}";' \ -e 's;\(#.*PATH_DATA\).*$$;\1 "${etcdir}";' \ -e 's;\(#.*PATH_LOCK\).*$$;\1 "${lockdir}/";' ${srcdir}/move-if-change src/paths.h.tmp src/paths.h src: lib-src .RECURSIVE: ${SUBDIR} ${SUBDIR}: ${SUBDIR_MAKEFILES} FRC cd $@; $(MAKE) all ${MFLAGS} \ CC='${CC}' CONFIG_CFLAGS='${CONFIG_CFLAGS}' \ srcdir='${srcdir}/$@' libdir='${libdir}' ## We build the makefiles for the subdirectories here so that we can ## edit the values for the path variables into them. This means that ## when the user has built them from this makefile once, they will use ## the right default values for the path variables. lib-src/Makefile: ${srcdir}/lib-src/Makefile.in Makefile echo "Producing \`lib-src/Makefile' from \`${srcdir}/lib-src/Makefile.in'." rm -f lib-src/Makefile.tmp (echo "# This file is generated from \`${srcdir}/lib-src/Makefile.in'." ; \ echo "# If you are thinking about editing it, you should seriously consider" ; \ echo "# running \`make lib-src/Makefile' at the top of the" ; \ echo "# Emacs build tree instead, or editing" ; \ echo "# \`${srcdir}/lib-src/Makefile.in' itself." ; \ /bin/sed < ${srcdir}/lib-src/Makefile.in \ -e 's|^\(version *=\).*$$|\1'"${version}"'|' \ -e 's|^\(configname *=\).*$$|\1'"${configname}"'|' \ -e 's|^\(prefix *=\).*$$|\1'"${prefix}"'|' \ -e 's|^\(exec_prefix *=\).*$$|\1'"${exec_prefix}"'|' \ -e 's|^\(libdir *=\).*$$|\1'"${libdir}"'|' \ -e 's|^\(srcdir *=\).*$$|\1'"${srcdir}"'|' \ -e 's|^\(archlibdir *=\).*$$|\1'"${archlibdir}"'|' \ -e 's|^CC *=.*$$|CC='"${CC}"'|' \ -e 's|^CONFIG_CFLAGS *=.*$$|CONFIG_CFLAGS='"${CONFIG_CFLAGS}"'|' \ -e 's|^LOADLIBES *=.*$$|LOADLIBES='"${libsrc_libs}"'|' \ -e '/^# DIST: /d') > lib-src/Makefile.tmp ${srcdir}/move-if-change lib-src/Makefile.tmp lib-src/Makefile chmod -w lib-src/Makefile src/Makefile: ${srcdir}/src/Makefile.in Makefile echo "Producing \`src/Makefile' from \`${srcdir}/src/Makefile.in'." rm -f src/Makefile.tmp (echo "# This file is generated from \`${srcdir}/src/Makefile.in'." ; \ echo "# If you are thinking about editing it, you should seriously consider" ; \ echo "# running \`make src/Makefile' at the top of the" ; \ echo "# Emacs build tree instead, or editing" ; \ echo "# \`${srcdir}/src/Makefile.in' itself." ; \ /bin/sed < ${srcdir}/src/Makefile.in \ -e 's|^\(srcdir *=\).*$$|\1'"${srcdir}"'|' \ -e 's|^CC *=.*$$|CC='"${CC}"'|' \ -e 's|^CONFIG_CFLAGS *=.*$$|CONFIG_CFLAGS='"${CONFIG_CFLAGS}"'|' \ -e '/^# DIST: /d') > src/Makefile.tmp ${srcdir}/move-if-change src/Makefile.tmp src/Makefile chmod -w src/Makefile oldXMenu/Makefile: ${srcdir}/oldXMenu/Makefile Makefile echo "Producing \`src/Makefile' from \`${srcdir}/src/Makefile.in'." rm -f src/Makefile.tmp cp "${srcdir}"/oldXMenu/Makefile oldXMenu/Makefile Makefile: ./config.status # ==================== Installation ==================== ## If we let lib-src do its own installation, that means we ## don't have to duplicate the list of utilities to install in ## this Makefile as well. install: all mkdir (cd lib-src; $(MAKE) install ${MFLAGS} bindir=${bindir} libdir=${libdir}) -set ${COPYDESTS} ; \ for dir in ${COPYDIR} ; do \ dest=$$1 ; shift ; \ if [ `(cd $${dir}; /bin/pwd)` != `(cd $${dest}; /bin/pwd)` ]; then \ (cd $${dir}; tar cf - . ) | (cd $${dest}; umask 0; tar xf - ) ; \ for subdir in `find $${dest} -type d ! -name RCS -print` ; do \ rm -rf $${subdir}/RCS ; \ rm -rf $${subdir}/CVS ; \ rm -f $${subdir}/\#* ; \ rm -f $${subdir}/*~ ; \ done ; \ fi ; \ done -(cd info ; \ if [ ! -f ${infodir}/dir ]; then \ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${INSTALLFLAGS} -m 444 ./dir ${infodir}/dir ; \ fi ; \ if [ "`echo *.info*`" != "*.info*" ]; then \ for f in *.info* ; do \ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${INSTALLFLAGS} -m 444 $$f ${infodir}/$$f ; \ done ; \ fi) for page in emacs etags ctags ; do \ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${INSTALLFLAGS} -m 444 etc/$${page}.1 \ ${mandir}/$${page}${manext} ; \ done ${INSTALL_PROGRAM} ${INSTALLFLAGS} -m 1755 src/emacs \ ${bindir}/emacs-${version} -rm -f ${bindir}/emacs ln ${bindir}/emacs-${version} ${bindir}/emacs ## If we let lib-src do its own installation, that means we ## don't have to duplicate the list of utilities to install in ## this Makefile as well. install.sysv: all mkdir (cd lib-src; $(MAKE) install ${MFLAGS} bindir=${bindir} libdir=${libdir}) -set ${COPYDESTS} ; \ for dir in ${COPYDIR} ; do \ dest=$$1 ; shift ; \ if [ `/bin/pwd`/$${dir} != `(cd $${dest}; /bin/pwd)` ] ; then \ (cd $${dir}; find . -print | cpio -pdum $${dest} ) ; \ for subdir in `find $${dest} -type d ! -name RCS -print` ; do \ rm -rf $${subdir}/RCS ; \ rm -rf $${subdir}/CVS ; \ rm -f $${subdir}/\#* ; \ rm -f $${subdir}/*~ ; \ done ; \ fi ; \ done -(cd info ; \ if [ ! -f ${infodir}/dir ]; then \ cpset ./dir ${infodir} 444 bin bin ; \ fi ; \ if [ "`echo *.info*`" != "*.info*" ]; then \ for f in *.info* ; do \ cpset $$f ${infodir} 444 bin bin ; \ done ; \ fi) -for page in emacs etags ctags ; do \ cpset etc/$${page}.1 ${mandir}/$${page}${manext} 444 bin bin ; \ done -/bin/rm -f ${bindir}/emacs -cpset src/emacs ${bindir}/emacs-${version} 1755 bin bin -ln ${bindir}/emacs-${version} ${bindir}/emacs ## If we let lib-src do its own installation, that means we ## don't have to duplicate the list of utilities to install in ## this Makefile as well. install.xenix: all mkdir (cd lib-src; $(MAKE) install ${MFLAGS} bindir=${bindir} libdir=${libdir}) -set ${COPYDESTS} ; \ for dir in ${COPYDIR} ; do \ dest=$$1 ; shift ; \ if [ `/bin/pwd`/$${dir} != `(cd $${dest}; /bin/pwd)` ] ; then \ (cd $${dir}; tar cf - . ) | (cd $${dest}; umask 0; tar xpf - ) ; \ for subdir in `find $${dest} -type d ! -name RCS -print` ; do \ rm -rf $${subdir}/RCS ; \ rm -rf $${subdir}/CVS ; \ rm -f $${subdir}/\#* ; \ rm -f $${subdir}/*~ ; \ done ; \ fi ; \ done -(cd info ; \ if [ ! -f ${infodir}/dir ]; then \ cp ./dir ${infodir} ; \ chmod 444 ${infodir}/dir ; \ fi ; \ if [ "`echo *.info*`" != "*.info*" ]; then \ for f in *.info* ; do \ cp $$f ${infodir} ; \ chmod 444 ${infodir}/$$f ; \ done ; \ fi) for page in emacs etags ctags ; do \ cp etc/$${page}.1 ${mandir}/$${page}${manext} ; \ chmod 444 ${mandir}/$${page}${manext} ; \ done -mv -f ${bindir}/emacs ${bindir}/emacs.old cp src/emacs ${bindir}/emacs-${version} ln ${bindir}/emacs-${version} ${bindir}/emacs chmod 1755 ${bindir}/emacs -rm -f ${bindir}/emacs.old ## If we let lib-src do its own installation, that means we ## don't have to duplicate the list of utilities to install in ## this Makefile as well. install.aix: all mkdir (cd lib-src; $(MAKE) install ${MFLAGS} bindir=${bindir} libdir=${libdir}) -set ${COPYDESTS} ; \ for dir in ${COPYDIR} ; do \ dest=$$1 ; shift ; \ if [ `/bin/pwd`/$${dir} != `(cd $${dest}; /bin/pwd)` ] ; then \ (cd $${dir}; tar cf - . ) | (cd $${dest}; umask 0; tar xBf - ) ; \ for subdir in `find $${dest} -type d ! -name RCS -print` ; do \ rm -rf $${subdir}/RCS ; \ rm -rf $${subdir}/CVS ; \ rm -f $${subdir}/\#* ; \ rm -f $${subdir}/*~ ; \ done ; \ fi ; \ done -(cd info ; \ if [ ! -f ${infodir}/dir ]; then \ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${INSTALLFLAGS} -M 444 -f ${infodir} ./dir ; \ fi ; \ if [ "`echo *.info*`" != "*.info*" ]; then \ for f in *.info* ; do \ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${INSTALLFLAGS} -M 444 -f ${infodir} $$f ; \ done ; \ fi) ${INSTALL_PROGRAM} ${INSTALLFLAGS} -M 1755 -f ${bindir} src/emacs mv ${bindir}/emacs ${bindir}/emacs-${version} for page in emacs etags ctags ; do \ ${INSTALL_DATA} ${INSTALLFLAGS} -M 444 -f ${mandir} etc/$${page}.1 ;\ done -rm -f ${bindir}/emacs ln ${bindir}/emacs-${version} ${bindir}/emacs ### Build all the directories we're going to install Emacs in. Since ### we may be creating several layers of directories (for example, ### /usr/local/lib/emacs/19.0/mips-dec-ultrix4.2), we use make-path ### instead of mkdir. Not all systems' mkdirs have the `-p' flag. mkdir: FRC ./lib-src/make-path ${COPYDESTS} ${lockdir} chmod 777 ${COPYDESTS} ${lockdir} FRC: # ==================== Cleaning up and miscellanea ==================== ### `clean' ### Delete all files from the current directory that are normally ### created by building the program. Don't delete the files that ### record the configuration. Also preserve files that could be made ### by building, but normally aren't because the distribution comes ### with them. ### `mostlyclean' ### Like `clean', but may refrain from deleting a few files that ### people normally don't want to recompile. For example, the ### `mostlyclean' target for GCC does not delete `libgcc.a', because ### recompiling it is rarely necessary and takes a lot of time. ### clean mostlyclean: cd src; $(MAKE) clean cd lib-src; $(MAKE) clean cd oldXMenu; $(MAKE) clean if [ `(cd ${etcdir} ; /bin/pwd` != `(cd etc; /bin/pwd)` ] ; then \ cd etc; $(MAKE) clean; \ else true; \ fi ### `distclean' ### Delete all files from the current directory that are created by ### configuring or building the program. This should leave only the ### files that would be in the distribution. distclean: for i in ${SUBDIR}; do (cd $$i; $(MAKE) ${MFLAGS} distclean); done -(cd lock; rm *) -rm config.status config-tmp-* ### `realclean' ### Delete everything from the current directory that can be ### reconstructed with this makefile. This typically includes ### everything deleted by distclean, plus more: C source files ### produced by Bison, tags tables, info files, and so on. realclean: for i in ${SUBDIR}; do (cd $$i; $(MAKE) ${MFLAGS} realclean); done (cd lock; rm *) rm config.status ### This doesn't actually appear in the coding standards, but Karl ### says GCC supports it, and that's where the configuration part of ### the coding standards seem to come from. It's like distclean, but ### it deletes backup and autosave files too. extraclean: for i in ${SUBDIR}; do (cd $$i; $(MAKE) ${MFLAGS} extraclean); done -(cd lock; rm *) -rm config.status config-tmp-* -rm -f *~ \#* ### Unlocking and relocking. The idea of these productions is to reduce ### hassles when installing an incremental tar of Emacs. Do `make unlock' ### before unlocking the file to take the write locks off all sources so ### that tar xvof will overwrite them without fuss. Then do `make relock' ### afterward so that VC mode will know which files should be checked in ### if you want to mung them. ### ### Note: it's no disaster if these productions miss a file or two; tar ### and VC will swiftly let you know if this happens, and it is easily ### corrected. SOURCES = ChangeLog GETTING.GNU.SOFTWARE INSTALL Makefile.in PROBLEMS \ README build-install.in configure make-dist move-if-change unlock: chmod u+w $(SOURCES) cpp/* -(cd elisp; chmod u+w Makefile README *.texi) (cd etc; make unlock) (cd lib-src; make unlock) (cd lisp; make unlock) (cd lisp/term; chmod u+w README *.el) (cd man; chmod u+w *texi* ChangeLog split-man) (cd oldXMenu; chmod u+w *.[ch] Makefile README) (cd src; make unlock) relock: chmod u-w $(SOURCES) cpp/* -(cd elisp; chmod u-w Makefile README *.texi) (cd etc; make relock) (cd lib-src; make relock) (cd lisp; make relock) (cd lisp/term; chmod u+w README *.el) (cd man; chmod u+w *texi* ChangeLog split-man) (cd oldXMenu; chmod u+w *.[ch] Makefile README) (cd src; make relock) TAGS tags: lib-src (cd ${srcdir} ; lib-src/etags --output=./src/TAGS \ src/*.[ch] lisp/*.el lisp/term/*.el) check: @echo "We don't have any tests for GNU Emacs yet." dist: cd ${srcdir}; make-dist