-# $Cambridge: exim/src/OS/Makefile-Base,v 1.14 2008/01/17 13:03:35 tom Exp $
+# $Cambridge: exim/src/OS/Makefile-Base,v 1.16.2.2 2009/02/24 15:57:55 tom Exp $
# This file is the basis of the main makefile for Exim and friends. The
# makefile at the top level arranges to build the main makefile by calling
# therefore always be run, even if the files exist. This shouldn't in fact be a
# problem, but it does no harm. Other make programs will just ignore this.
-.PHONY: all allexim buildauths buildlookups buildrouters \
+.PHONY: all allexim buildauths buildlookups buildpdkim buildrouters \
buildtransports checklocalmake clean
exim_checkaccess \
exim_dbmbuild exim_dumpdb exim_fixdb exim_tidydb exim_lock \
buildlookups buildrouters buildtransports \
- buildauths exim
+ buildauths buildpdkim exim
# Targets for special-purpose configuration header builders
-e "s?EXICYCLOG_MAX?$(EXICYCLOG_MAX)?" \
-e "s?COMPRESS_COMMAND?$(COMPRESS_COMMAND)?" \
-e "s?COMPRESS_SUFFIX?$(COMPRESS_SUFFIX)?" \
- -e "s?CHOWN_COMMAND?$(CHOWN_COMMAND)?" \
-e "s?CHGRP_COMMAND?$(CHGRP_COMMAND)?" \
+ -e "s?CHMOD_COMMAND?$(CHMOD_COMMAND)?" \
+ -e "s?CHOWN_COMMAND?$(CHOWN_COMMAND)?" \
-e "s?MV_COMMAND?$(MV_COMMAND)?" \
-e "s?RM_COMMAND?$(RM_COMMAND)?" \
+ -e "s?TOUCH_COMMAND?$(TOUCH_COMMAND)?" \
../src/exicyclog.src > exicyclog-t
@mv exicyclog-t exicyclog
@chmod a+x exicyclog
OBJ_WITH_CONTENT_SCAN = malware.o mime.o regex.o spam.o spool_mbox.o
OBJ_WITH_OLD_DEMIME = demime.o
-OBJ_EXPERIMENTAL = bmi_spam.o spf.o srs.o dk.o dkim-exim.o dcc.o
+OBJ_EXPERIMENTAL = bmi_spam.o spf.o srs.o dcc.o
# Targets for final binaries; the main one has a build number which is
# updated each time. We don't bother with that for the auxiliaries.
OBJ_EXIM = acl.o child.o crypt16.o daemon.o dbfn.o debug.o deliver.o \
directory.o dns.o drtables.o enq.o exim.o expand.o filter.o \
- filtertest.o globals.o \
+ filtertest.o globals.o dkim.o \
header.o host.o ip.o log.o lss.o match.o moan.o \
os.o parse.o queue.o \
rda.o readconf.o receive.o retry.o rewrite.o rfc2047.o \
local_scan.o $(EXIM_PERL) $(OBJ_WITH_CONTENT_SCAN) \
$(OBJ_WITH_OLD_DEMIME) $(OBJ_EXPERIMENTAL)
-exim: lookups/lookups.a auths/auths.a \
+exim: lookups/lookups.a auths/auths.a pdkim/pdkim.a \
routers/routers.a transports/transports.a \
$(OBJ_EXIM) version.c
@echo " "
@echo "$(LNCC) -o exim"
$(FE)$(PURIFY) $(LNCC) -o exim $(LFLAGS) $(OBJ_EXIM) version.o \
routers/routers.a transports/transports.a lookups/lookups.a \
- auths/auths.a \
+ auths/auths.a pdkim/pdkim.a \
$(LIBRESOLV) $(LIBS) $(LIBS_EXIM) $(IPV6_LIBS) $(EXTRALIBS) \
$(EXTRALIBS_EXIM) $(DBMLIB) $(LOOKUP_LIBS) $(AUTH_LIBS) \
$(PERL_LIBS) $(TLS_LIBS) $(PCRE_LIBS) $(LDFLAGS)
# The local scan module depends only on its own special header, and is compiled
# from a source whose location is set by configuration.
-local_scan.o: Makefile local_scan.h ../$(LOCAL_SCAN_SOURCE)
+local_scan.o: Makefile config.h local_scan.h ../$(LOCAL_SCAN_SOURCE)
@echo "$(CC) local_scan.c"
$(FE)$(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) -I. $(INCLUDE) -o local_scan.o ../$(LOCAL_SCAN_SOURCE)
transport.o: $(HDRS) transport.c
tree.o: $(HDRS) tree.c
verify.o: $(HDRS) verify.c
-
+dkim.o: $(HDRS) dkim.c
# Dependencies for WITH_CONTENT_SCAN modules
bmi_spam.o: $(HDRS) bmi_spam.c
spf.o: $(HDRS) spf.h spf.c
srs.o: $(HDRS) srs.h srs.c
-dk.o: $(HDRS) dk.h dk.c
-dkim-exim.o: $(HDRS) dkim-exim.h dkim-exim.c
dcc.o: $(HDRS) dcc.h dcc.c
# The module containing tables of available lookups, routers, auths, and
../exim_monitor/`echo $@ | sed 's/o$$/c/'`
-# Targets for the various libraries that Exim uses. This coding is tedious,
-# because different versions of "make" behave in different ways with regard
-# to rebuilding. If these target names are of the form pcre/libpcre.a, for
-# example, then a forcing mechanism is required to get them obeyed each time.
-# That's fine on Solaris and other systems; the rebuilding of the exim target
-# happens only if the libraries are actually rebuilt. However, on IRIX, if
-# the target is forced, the exim target gets unnecessarily rebuilt even if
-# the .a file is not. Contrariwise, if we use dummy names, they don't interact
-# with the building of exim (and eximon.bin), but for libpcre Exim doesn't get
-# rebuilt when it should. (For the others it does, because they remove
-# drtables.o when they rebuild.) To get round this, we forcibly remove the
-# binary when it needs to be rebuilt.
+# Targets for the various libraries that Exim uses.
# The lookups library.
-buildlookups:
+buildlookups lookups/lookups.a: config.h
@cd lookups; $(MAKE) SHELL=$(SHELL) AR="$(AR)" $(MFLAGS) CC="$(CC)" CFLAGS="$(CFLAGS)" \
FE="$(FE)" RANLIB="$(RANLIB)" RM_COMMAND="$(RM_COMMAND)" HDRS="$(PHDRS)" \
INCLUDE="$(INCLUDE) $(IPV6_INCLUDE) $(TLS_INCLUDE) $(LOOKUP_INCLUDE)"; \
# The routers library.
-buildrouters:
+buildrouters routers/routers.a: config.h
@cd routers; $(MAKE) SHELL=$(SHELL) AR="$(AR)" $(MFLAGS) CC="$(CC)" CFLAGS="$(CFLAGS)" \
FE="$(FE)" RANLIB="$(RANLIB)" RM_COMMAND="$(RM_COMMAND)" HDRS="$(PHDRS)" \
INCLUDE="$(INCLUDE) $(IPV6_INCLUDE) $(TLS_INCLUDE)"; \
# The transports library.
-buildtransports:
+buildtransports transports/transports.a: config.h
@cd transports; $(MAKE) SHELL=$(SHELL) AR="$(AR)" $(MFLAGS) CC="$(CC)" CFLAGS="$(CFLAGS)" \
FE="$(FE)" RANLIB="$(RANLIB)" RM_COMMAND="$(RM_COMMAND)" HDRS="$(PHDRS)" \
INCLUDE="$(INCLUDE) $(IPV6_INCLUDE) $(TLS_INCLUDE)"; \
# The library of authorization modules
-buildauths:
+buildauths auths/auths.a: config.h
@cd auths; $(MAKE) SHELL=$(SHELL) AR="$(AR)" $(MFLAGS) CC="$(CC)" CFLAGS="$(CFLAGS)" \
FE="$(FE)" RANLIB="$(RANLIB)" RM_COMMAND="$(RM_COMMAND)" HDRS="$(PHDRS)" \
INCLUDE="$(INCLUDE) $(IPV6_INCLUDE) $(TLS_INCLUDE)"; \
echo " "
+# The PDKIM library
+
+buildpdkim pdkim/pdkim.a: config.h
+ @cd pdkim; $(MAKE) SHELL=$(SHELL) AR="$(AR)" $(MFLAGS) CC="$(CC)" CFLAGS="$(CFLAGS)" \
+ FE="$(FE)" RANLIB="$(RANLIB)" RM_COMMAND="$(RM_COMMAND)" HDRS="$(PHDRS)" \
+ INCLUDE="$(INCLUDE) $(IPV6_INCLUDE) $(TLS_INCLUDE)"; \
+ echo " "
+
# The "clean", "install", and "makefile" targets just pass themselves back to
# the main Exim makefile. These targets will be obeyed only if "make" is obeyed
# for them in the build directory.