X-Git-Url: https://git.exim.org/exim.git/blobdiff_plain/58ee1eb660af5f69de403aaf36019f5dcaf9760e..8c226c7c891734a1dc98b6b1e99b7771dff853e1:/src/Makefile diff --git a/src/Makefile b/src/Makefile index a18c3d728..b8d88054d 100644 --- a/src/Makefile +++ b/src/Makefile @@ -2,7 +2,9 @@ # appropriate links, and then creating and running the main makefile in that # directory. -# Copyright (c) University of Cambridge, 1995 - 2007 +# Copyright (c) The Exim Maintainers 2022 +# Copyright (c) University of Cambridge, 1995 - 2018 +# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later # See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. # IRIX make uses the shell that is in the SHELL variable, which often defaults @@ -13,21 +15,35 @@ SHELL=/bin/sh RM_COMMAND=/bin/rm -# If a build name has not been specified by running this make file via a -# command of the form "make build=xxxx", then determine the name of the -# operating system and the machine architecture and use that. This does not -# 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 +# The buildname defaults to "-". It can be +# overridden by the "build" parameter when invoking make (e.g. make +# build=xxx) This does not provide an override for the OS type and +# architecture type used during the build process; 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 gets appended to the buildname. (This enables +# parallel builds on a file system shared among different Linux distros +# (same os-type, same arch-type). The ../test/runtest script honours the +# EXIM_BUILD_SUFFIX when searching the Exim binary.) -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. +# If Local/Makefile- exists, it is read too. all: Local/Makefile configure @cd build-$(buildname); $(MAKE) SHELL=$(SHELL) $(MFLAGS) +# This pair for the convenience of of the Debian maintainers +exim utils: Local/Makefile configure + @cd build-$(buildname); $(MAKE) SHELL=$(SHELL) $(MFLAGS) $@ + +# For testsuite builds +exim_openssl exim_gnutls: Local/Makefile configure + @cd build-$(buildname); $(MAKE) SHELL=$(SHELL) $(MFLAGS) $@ + Local/Makefile: @echo "" @echo "*** Please create Local/Makefile by copying src/EDITME and making" @@ -45,12 +61,15 @@ build-directory: $(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) $(SHELL) ../scripts/Configure-Makefile @@ -82,6 +101,18 @@ clean_exim:; cd build-$(buildname); \ $(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" >> $@ + -bd=build-$(buildname); [ -d $$bd ] && echo -e "$$bd/config.h\n$$bd/Makefile" >> $@ + find src Local OS exim_monitor -name "*.[cshyl]" -print \ + -o -name "os.[ch]*" -print \ + -o -name "*akefile*" -print \ + -o -name config.h.defaults -print \ + -o -name EDITME -print >> $@ + +FRC: # End of top-level makefile