make - GNU make utility to maintain groups of programs
make [OPTION]... [TARGET]...
The make utility will determine automatically which pieces
of a large program need to be recompiled, and issue the commands to
recompile them. The manual describes the GNU implementation of make,
which was written by Richard Stallman and Roland McGrath, and is currently
maintained by Paul Smith. Our examples show C programs, since they are very
common, but you can use make with any programming language whose
compiler can be run with a shell command. In fact, make is not
limited to programs. You can use it to describe any task where some files
must be updated automatically from others whenever the others change.
To prepare to use make, you must write a file called the
makefile that describes the relationships among files in your
program, and the states the commands for updating each file. In a program,
typically the executable file is updated from object files, which are in
turn made by compiling source files.
Once a suitable makefile exists, each time you change some source
files, this simple shell command:
make
suffices to perform all necessary recompilations. The make
program uses the makefile description and the last-modification times of the
files to decide which of the files need to be updated. For each of those
files, it issues the commands recorded in the makefile.
make executes commands in the makefile to update one
or more target names, where name is typically a program. If no
-f option is present, make will look for the makefiles
GNUmakefile, makefile, and Makefile, in that order.
Normally you should call your makefile either makefile or
Makefile. (We recommend Makefile because it appears
prominently near the beginning of a directory listing, right near other
important files such as README.) The first name checked,
GNUmakefile, is not recommended for most makefiles. You should use
this name if you have a makefile that is specific to GNU make, and
will not be understood by other versions of make. If makefile
is '-', the standard input is read.
make updates a target if it depends on prerequisite files
that have been modified since the target was last modified, or if the target
does not exist.
- -b, -m
- These options are ignored for compatibility with other versions of
make.
- -B,
--always-make
- Unconditionally make all targets.
- -C dir,
--directory=dir
- Change to directory dir before reading the makefiles or doing
anything else. If multiple -C options are specified, each is
interpreted relative to the previous one: -C / -C etc is
equivalent to -C /etc. This is typically used with recursive
invocations of make.
- -d
- Print debugging information in addition to normal processing. The
debugging information says which files are being considered for remaking,
which file-times are being compared and with what results, which files
actually need to be remade, which implicit rules are considered and which
are applied---everything interesting about how make decides what to
do.
- --debug[=FLAGS]
- Print debugging information in addition to normal processing. If the
FLAGS are omitted, then the behavior is the same as if -d
was specified. FLAGS may be a for all debugging output (same
as using -d), b for basic debugging, v for more
verbose basic debugging, i for showing implicit rules, j for
details on invocation of commands, and m for debugging while
remaking makefiles. Use n to disable all previous debugging
flags.
- -e,
--environment-overrides
- Give variables taken from the environment precedence over variables from
makefiles.
- -f file,
--file=file, --makefile=FILE
- Use file as a makefile.
- -i,
--ignore-errors
- Ignore all errors in commands executed to remake files.
- -I dir,
--include-dir=dir
- Specifies a directory dir to search for included makefiles. If
several -I options are used to specify several directories, the
directories are searched in the order specified. Unlike the arguments to
other flags of make, directories given with -I flags may
come directly after the flag: -Idir is allowed, as well as
-I dir. This syntax is allowed for compatibility with the C
preprocessor's -I flag.
- -j [jobs],
--jobs[=jobs]
- Specifies the number of jobs (commands) to run simultaneously. If
there is more than one -j option, the last one is effective. If the
-j option is given without an argument, make will not limit
the number of jobs that can run simultaneously. When make invokes a
sub-make, all instances of make will coordinate to run the
specified number of jobs at a time; see the section PARALLEL MAKE AND
THE JOBSERVER for details.
- --jobserver-fds
[R,W]
- Internal option make uses to pass the jobserver pipe read and write
file descriptor numbers to sub-makes; see the section PARALLEL
MAKE AND THE JOBSERVER for details
- -k,
--keep-going
- Continue as much as possible after an error. While the target that failed,
and those that depend on it, cannot be remade, the other dependencies of
these targets can be processed all the same.
- -l [load],
--load-average[=load]
- Specifies that no new jobs (commands) should be started if there are
others jobs running and the load average is at least load (a
floating-point number). With no argument, removes a previous load
limit.
- -L,
--check-symlink-times
- Use the latest mtime between symlinks and target.
- -n, --just-print,
--dry-run, --recon
- Print the commands that would be executed, but do not execute them (except
in certain circumstances).
- -o file,
--old-file=file, --assume-old=file
- Do not remake the file file even if it is older than its
dependencies, and do not remake anything on account of changes in
file. Essentially the file is treated as very old and its rules are
ignored.
- -O[type],
--output-sync[=type]
- When running multiple jobs in parallel with -j, ensure the output
of each job is collected together rather than interspersed with output
from other jobs. If type is not specified or is target the
output from the entire recipe for each target is grouped together. If
type is line the output from each command line within a
recipe is grouped together. If type is recurse output from
an entire recursive make is grouped together. If type is
none output synchronization is disabled.
- -p,
--print-data-base
- Print the data base (rules and variable values) that results from reading
the makefiles; then execute as usual or as otherwise specified. This also
prints the version information given by the -v switch (see below).
To print the data base without trying to remake any files, use make -p
-f/dev/null.
- -q,
--question
- ``Question mode''. Do not run any commands, or print anything; just return
an exit status that is zero if the specified targets are already up to
date, nonzero otherwise.
- -r,
--no-builtin-rules
- Eliminate use of the built-in implicit rules. Also clear out the default
list of suffixes for suffix rules.
- -R,
--no-builtin-variables
- Don't define any built-in variables.
- -s, --silent,
--quiet
- Silent operation; do not print the commands as they are executed.
- -S, --no-keep-going,
--stop
- Cancel the effect of the -k option. This is never necessary except
in a recursive make where -k might be inherited from the
top-level make via MAKEFLAGS or if you set -k in MAKEFLAGS
in your environment.
- -t, --touch
- Touch files (mark them up to date without really changing them) instead of
running their commands. This is used to pretend that the commands were
done, in order to fool future invocations of make.
- --trace
- Information about the disposition of each target is printed (why the
target is being rebuilt and what commands are run to rebuild it).
- -v, --version
- Print the version of the make program plus a copyright, a list of
authors and a notice that there is no warranty.
- -w,
--print-directory
- Print a message containing the working directory before and after other
processing. This may be useful for tracking down errors from complicated
nests of recursive make commands.
- --no-print-directory
- Turn off -w, even if it was turned on implicitly.
- -W file,
--what-if=file, --new-file=file,
--assume-new=file
- Pretend that the target file has just been modified. When used with
the -n flag, this shows you what would happen if you were to modify
that file. Without -n, it is almost the same as running a
touch command on the given file before running make, except
that the modification time is changed only in the imagination of
make.
- --warn-undefined-variables
- Warn when an undefined variable is referenced.
GNU make exits with a status of zero if all makefiles were
successfully parsed and no targets that were built failed. A status of one
will be returned if the -q flag was used and make determines
that a target needs to be rebuilt. A status of two will be returned if any
errors were encountered.
The full documentation for make is maintained as a Texinfo
manual. If the info and make programs are properly installed
at your site, the command
- info make
should give you access to the complete manual. Additionally, the
manual is also available online at
https://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/html_node/index.html
Using the -j option, the user can instruct make to
execute tasks in parallel. By specifying a numeric argument to -j the
user may specify an upper limit of the number of parallel tasks to be
run.
When the build environment is such that a top level make
invokes sub-makes (for instance, a style in which each sub-directory
contains its own Makefile ), no individual instance of make
knows how many tasks are running in parallel, so keeping the number of tasks
under the upper limit would be impossible without communication between all
the make instances running. While solutions like having the top level
make serve as a central controller are feasible, or using other
synchronization mechanisms like shared memory or sockets can be created, the
current implementation uses a simple shared pipe.
This pipe is created by the top-level make process, and
passed on to all the sub-makes. The top level
makeprocesswrites N-1 one-byte tokens into the pipe
(The top level make is assumed to reserve one token for itself).
Whenever any of the make processes (including the top-level
make ) needs to run a new task, it reads a byte from the shared pipe.
If there are no tokens left, it must wait for a token to be written back to
the pipe. Once the task is completed, the make process writes a token
back to the pipe (and thus, if the tokens had been exhausted, unblocking the
first make process that was waiting to read a token). Since only
N-1 tokens were written into the pipe, no more than N tasks
can be running at any given time.
If the job to be run is not a sub-make then make
will close the jobserver pipe file descriptors before invoking the commands,
so that the command can not interfere with the jobserver, and the
command does not find any unusual file descriptors.
See the chapter ``Problems and Bugs'' in The GNU Make
Manual.
This manual page contributed by Dennis Morse of Stanford
University. Further updates contributed by Mike Frysinger. It has been
reworked by Roland McGrath. Maintained by Paul Smith.
Copyright © 1992-1993, 1996-2016 Free Software Foundation,
Inc. This file is part of GNU make.
GNU Make is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your
option) any later version.
GNU Make is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY
or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for
more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.