# appropriate links, and then creating and running the main makefile in that
# directory.
-# Copyright (c) University of Cambridge, 1995 - 2007
+# Copyright (c) University of Cambridge, 1995 - 2015
# See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution.
# IRIX make uses the shell that is in the SHELL variable, which often defaults
# provide an override for the OS type and architecture type; they still have
# to be used for the OS-specific files. To override them, you can set the
# shell variables OSTYPE and ARCHTYPE when running make.
+#
+# EXIM_BUILD_SUFFIX should be used to enable parallel builds on a file
+# system shared among different Linux distros (same os-type, same
+# arch-type). The ../test/runtest script is expected to honour the
+# EXIM_BUILD_SUFFIX when searching the Exim binary.
+# NOTE: EXIM_BUILD_SUFFIX is considered *experimental*.
-buildname=$${build:-`$(SHELL) scripts/os-type`-`$(SHELL) scripts/arch-type`}
+buildname=$${build:-`$(SHELL) scripts/os-type`-`$(SHELL) scripts/arch-type`}$${EXIM_BUILD_SUFFIX:+.$$EXIM_BUILD_SUFFIX}
# The default target checks for the existence of Local/Makefile, that the main
# makefile is built and up-to-date, and then it runs it.
all: Local/Makefile configure
@cd build-$(buildname); $(MAKE) SHELL=$(SHELL) $(MFLAGS)
+
+# This pair for the convenience of of the Debian maintainers
+exim: Local/Makefile configure
+ @cd build-$(buildname); $(MAKE) SHELL=$(SHELL) $(MFLAGS) exim
+utils: Local/Makefile configure
+ @cd build-$(buildname); $(MAKE) SHELL=$(SHELL) $(MFLAGS) utils
+
+
Local/Makefile:
@echo ""
@echo "*** Please create Local/Makefile by copying src/EDITME and making"
$(SHELL) -c "test -d $$builddir -a -r $$builddir/version.c || \
(mkdir $$builddir; cd $$builddir; $(SHELL) ../scripts/MakeLinks)";
+checks:
+ $(SHELL) scripts/source_checks
+
# The "configure" target ensures that the build directory exists, then arranges
# to build the main makefile from inside the build directory, by calling the
# Configure-Makefile script. This does its own dependency checking because of
# the optional files.
-configure: build-directory
+configure: checks build-directory
@cd build-$(buildname); \
- build=$(build) $(SHELL) ../scripts/Configure-Makefile; \
- $(SHELL) ../scripts/lookups-Makefile
+ build=$(build) $(SHELL) ../scripts/Configure-Makefile
# The "makefile" target forces a rebuild of the makefile (as opposed to
# "configure", which doesn't force it).
makefile: build-directory
@cd build-$(buildname); $(RM_COMMAND) -f Makefile; \
- build=$(build) $(SHELL) ../scripts/Configure-Makefile; \
- $(SHELL) ../scripts/lookups-Makefile
+ build=$(build) $(SHELL) ../scripts/Configure-Makefile
# The installation commands are kept in a separate script, which expects
# to be run from inside the build directory.
$(RM_COMMAND) -f *.o lookups/*.o lookups/*.a auths/*.o auths/*.a \
routers/*.o routers/*.a transports/*.o transports/*.a lookups/*.so
-distclean:; $(RM_COMMAND) -rf build-*
+distclean:; $(RM_COMMAND) -rf build-* cscope*
+
+cscope.files: FRC
+ echo "-q" > $@
+ echo "-p3" >> $@
+ find src Local OS exim_monitor -name "*.[cshyl]" -print \
+ -o -name "os.h*" -print \
+ -o -name "*akefile*" -print \
+ -o -name config.h.defaults -print \
+ -o -name EDITME -print >> $@
+ ls OS/* >> $@
+
+FRC:
# End of top-level makefile