bsd.README revision 1.112
1# $NetBSD: bsd.README,v 1.112 2003/05/30 18:43:24 thorpej Exp $ 2# @(#)bsd.README 8.2 (Berkeley) 4/2/94 3 4This is the README file for the new make "include" files for the BSD 5source tree. The files are installed in /usr/share/mk, and are, by 6convention, named with the suffix ".mk". 7 8Note, this file is not intended to replace reading through the .mk 9files for anything tricky. 10 11=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 12 13RANDOM THINGS WORTH KNOWING: 14 15The files are simply C-style #include files, and pretty much behave like 16you'd expect. The syntax is slightly different in that a single '.' is 17used instead of the hash mark, i.e. ".include <bsd.prog.mk>". 18 19One difference that will save you lots of debugging time is that inclusion 20of the file is normally done at the *end* of the Makefile. The reason for 21this is because .mk files often modify variables and behavior based on the 22values of variables set in the Makefile. To make this work, remember that 23the FIRST target found is the target that is used, i.e. if the Makefile has: 24 25 a: 26 echo a 27 a: 28 echo a number two 29 30the command "make a" will echo "a". To make things confusing, the SECOND 31variable assignment is the overriding one, i.e. if the Makefile has: 32 33 a= foo 34 a= bar 35 36 b: 37 echo ${a} 38 39the command "make b" will echo "bar". This is for compatibility with the 40way the V7 make behaved. 41 42It's fairly difficult to make the BSD .mk files work when you're building 43multiple programs in a single directory. It's a lot easier to split up the 44programs than to deal with the problem. Most of the agony comes from making 45the "obj" directory stuff work right, not because we switched to a new version 46of make. So, don't get mad at us, figure out a better way to handle multiple 47architectures so we can quit using the symbolic link stuff. (Imake doesn't 48count.) 49 50The file .depend in the source directory is expected to contain dependencies 51for the source files. This file is read automatically by make after reading 52the Makefile. 53 54The variable DESTDIR works as before. It's not set anywhere but will change 55the tree where the file gets installed. 56 57The profiled libraries are no longer built in a different directory than 58the regular libraries. A new suffix, ".po", is used to denote a profiled 59object, and ".so" denotes a shared (position-independent) object. 60 61There are various make variables used during the build. Basic rule for 62the variable naming scheme is as follows: 63 64MKxxx Can be set to `no' by a user to disable functionality. 65 Defaults to `yes' (or usually does) 66 67NOxxx If defined, disables a feature. Not intended for users, 68 it's to allow Makefiles to disable functionality that 69 they don't support (such as missing man pages). 70 NOxxx variables must be defined before <bsd.own.mk> 71 is included. 72 73The following variables that control how things are made/installed that 74are not set by default. These should not be set by Makefiles; they're for 75the user to define in MAKECONF (see bsd.own.mk, below) or on the make(1) 76command line: 77 78BUILD If defined, 'make install' checks that the targets in the 79 source directories are up-to-date and remakes them if they 80 are out of date, instead of blindly trying to install 81 out of date or non-existent targets. 82 83UPDATE If defined, 'make install' only installs targets that are 84 more recently modified in the source directories that their 85 installed counterparts. 86 87UNPRIVED If defined, don't set the owner/group/mode when installing 88 files or directories, and keep a metadata log of what 89 the owner/group/mode should be. This allows a 90 non-root "make install". 91 92MKBFD If "no", don't build libbfd, libiberty, or any of 93 the things that depend on them (binutils/gas/ld, 94 gdb, dbsym, mdsetimage). 95 96MKCATPAGES If "no", don't build or install the catman pages. 97 98MKDOC If "no", don't build or install the documentation. 99 100MKDYNAMICROOT If "no", build programs in /bin and /sbin statically, 101 don't install certain libraries in /lib, and don't 102 install the shared linker into /libexec. 103 104MKGDB If "no", don't build gdb. 105 106MKGCC If "no", don't build gcc or any of the gcc-related 107 libraries (libg2c, libgcc, libobjc, libstdc++). 108 109MKIEEEFP If "no", don't add code for IEEE754/IEC60559 conformance. 110 Has no effect on most platforms. 111 112MKINFO If "no", don't build or install Info documentation from 113 Texinfo source files. 114 115MKLINT If "no", don't build or install the lint libraries. 116 117MKMAN If "no", don't build or install the man or catman pages. 118 Also acts as "MKCATPAGES=no" 119 120MKNLS If "no", don't build or install the NLS files and locale 121 definition files. 122 123MKOBJ If "no", don't enable the rule which creates objdirs. 124 "yes" by default. 125 126MKOBJDIRS If "no", don't create objdirs during a "make build". 127 "no" by default. 128 129MKPIC If "no", don't build or install shared libraries. 130 131MKPICINSTALL If "no", don't install the *_pic.a libraries. 132 133MKPROFILE If "no", don't build or install the profiling libraries. 134 135MKSHARE If "no", act as "MKCATPAGES=no MKDOC=no MKINFO=no MKMAN=no 136 MKNLS=no". I.e, don't build catman pages, documentation, 137 Info documentation, man pages, NLS files, ... 138 139=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 140 141The include file <sys.mk> has the default rules for all makes, in the BSD 142environment or otherwise. You probably don't want to touch this file. 143If you intend to run a cross build, you will need to supply the following 144host tools, and configure the following variables properly: 145 146OBJCOPY objcopy - copy and translate object files 147 148STRIP strip - Discard symbols from object files 149 150CONFIG config - build kernel compilation directories 151 152RPCGEN rpcgen - Remote Procedure Call (RPC) protocol compiler 153 154MKLOCALE mklocale - make LC_CTYPE locale files 155 156MTREE mtree - build directory tree from a spec file 157 158=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 159 160The include file <bsd.man.mk> handles installing manual pages and their 161links. 162 163It has a two targets: 164 165 maninstall: 166 Install the manual page sources and their links. 167 catinstall: 168 Install the preformatted manual pages and their links. 169 170It sets/uses the following variables: 171 172MANDIR Base path for manual installation. 173 174MANGRP Manual group. 175 176MANOWN Manual owner. 177 178MANMODE Manual mode. 179 180MANSUBDIR Subdirectory under the manual page section, i.e. "/vax" 181 or "/tahoe" for machine specific manual pages. 182 183MAN The manual pages to be installed (use a .1 - .9 suffix). 184 185MLINKS List of manual page links (using a .1 - .9 suffix). The 186 linked-to file must come first, the linked file second, 187 and there may be multiple pairs. The files are soft-linked. 188 189The include file <bsd.man.mk> includes a file named "../Makefile.inc" if 190it exists. 191 192=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 193 194The include file <bsd.own.mk> contains source tree configuration parameters, 195such as the owners, groups, etc. for both manual pages and binaries, and 196a few global "feature configuration" parameters. 197 198It has no targets. 199 200To get system-specific configuration parameters, bsd.own.mk will try to 201include the file specified by the "MAKECONF" variable. If MAKECONF is not 202set, or no such file exists, the system make configuration file, /etc/mk.conf 203is included. These files may define any of the variables described below. 204 205bsd.own.mk sets the following variables, if they are not already defined 206(defaults are in brackets): 207 208NETBSDSRCDIR Top of the NetBSD source tree. 209 If _SRC_TOP_ != "", that will be used as the default, 210 otherwise BSDSRCDIR will be used as the default. 211 Various makefiles within the NetBSD source tree will 212 use this to reference the top level of the source tree. 213 214_SRC_TOP_ Top of the system source tree, as determined by <bsd.own.mk> 215 based on the presence of tools/ and build.sh. This variable 216 is "internal" to <bsd.own.mk>, although its value is only 217 determined once and then propagated to all sub-makes. 218 219BSDSRCDIR The real path to the system sources, so that 'make obj' 220 will work correctly. [/usr/src] 221 222BSDOBJDIR The real path to the system 'obj' tree, so that 'make obj' 223 will work correctly. [/usr/obj] 224 225BINGRP Binary group. [wheel] 226 227BINOWN Binary owner. [root] 228 229BINMODE Binary mode. [555] 230 231NONBINMODE Mode for non-executable files. [444] 232 233MANDIR Base path for manual installation. [/usr/share/man/cat] 234 235MANGRP Manual group. [wheel] 236 237MANOWN Manual owner. [root] 238 239MANMODE Manual mode. [${NONBINMODE}] 240 241MANINSTALL Manual installation type: maninstall, catinstall, or both 242 243LDSTATIC Control program linking; if set blank, link everything 244 dynamically. If set to "-static", link everything statically. 245 If not set, programs link according to their makefile. 246 247LIBDIR Base path for library installation. [/usr/lib] 248 249LINTLIBDIR Base path for lint(1) library installation. [/usr/libdata/lint] 250 251LIBGRP Library group. [${BINGRP}] 252 253LIBOWN Library owner. [${BINOWN}] 254 255LIBMODE Library mode. [${NONBINMODE}] 256 257DOCDIR Base path for system documentation (e.g. PSD, USD, etc.) 258 installation. [/usr/share/doc] 259 260HTMLDOCDIR Base path for html system documentation installation. 261 [/usr/share/doc/html] 262 263DOCGRP Documentation group. [wheel] 264 265DOCOWN Documentation owner. [root] 266 267DOCMODE Documentation mode. [${NONBINMODE}] 268 269NLSDIR Base path for Native Language Support files installation. 270 [/usr/share/nls] 271 272NLSGRP Native Language Support files group. [wheel] 273 274NLSOWN Native Language Support files owner. [root] 275 276NLSMODE Native Language Support files mode. [${NONBINMODE}] 277 278STRIPFLAG The flag passed to the install program to cause the binary 279 to be stripped. This is to be used when building your 280 own install script so that the entire system can be made 281 stripped/not-stripped using a single knob. [-s] 282 283COPY The flag passed to the install program to cause the binary 284 to be copied rather than moved. This is to be used when 285 building our own install script so that the entire system 286 can either be installed with copies, or with moves using 287 a single knob. [-c] 288 289Additionally, the following variables may be set by bsd.own.mk or in a 290make configuration file to modify the behaviour of the system build 291process (default values are in brackets along with comments, if set by 292bsd.own.mk): 293 294MKPICLIB bsd.own.mk provides a default for this variable, which is 295 used by bsd.lib.mk. The default value is provided by 296 bsd.own.mk since non-library Makefiles may need to check 297 its value in order to generate proper dependencies against 298 libraries used only during the build process (which would 299 not be installed into the destination directory). 300 301MKCRYPTO If set to "no", no cryptography support will be built 302 into the system. Defaults to "yes". 303 304MKCRYPTO_IDEA If set to "yes", IDEA support will be built into 305 libcrypto_idea.a. Defaults to "no". 306 307MKCRYPTO_MDC2 If set to "yes", MDC2 support will be built into 308 libcrypto_mdc2.a. Defaults to "no". 309 310MKCRYPTO_RC5 If set to "yes", RC5 support will be built into 311 libcrypto_rc5.a. Defaults to "no". 312 313MKHESIOD If set to "no", disables building of Hesiod infrastructure 314 (libraries and support programs). 315 316MKKERBEROS If set to "no", disables building of Kerberos (v4 or v5) 317 infrastructure (libraries and support programs). 318 319MKSKEY If set to "no", disables building of S/key authentication 320 infrastructure (libraries and support programs). 321 322MKYP If set to "no", disables building of YP (NIS) 323 infrastructure (libraries and support programs). 324 325USE_HESIOD If set to "no", disables building Hesiod support into 326 various system utilities/libraries that support it. 327 If MKHESIOD is set to "no", USE_HESIOD will also be 328 forced to "no". 329 330USE_KERBEROS If set to "no", disables building Kerberos (v4 or v5) 331 support into various system utilities/libraries that 332 support it. If MKKERBEROS is set to "no", USE_KERBEROS 333 will also be forced to "no". 334 335USE_SKEY If set to "no", disables building S/key authentication 336 support into various system utilities/libraries that 337 support it. If MKSKEY is set to "no", USE_SKEY will 338 also be forced to "no". 339 340USE_YP If set to "no", disables building YP (NIS) support into 341 various system utilities/libraries that support it. If 342 MKYP is set to "no", USE_YP will also be forced to "no". 343 344MANZ Compress manual pages at installation time. 345 346NOPROFILE Do not build profiled versions of system libraries 347 348NOPIC Do not build PIC versions of system libraries, and 349 do not build shared libraries. [set if ${MACHINE_ARCH} 350 is "sh3" and ${OBJECT_FMT} is "COFF", unset otherwise.] 351 352NOLINT Do not build lint libraries. 353 354OBJECT_FMT Object file format. [set to "ELF" on architectures that 355 use ELF -- currently if ${MACHINE_ARCH} is "alpha", 356 "mipsel", "mipseb", "powerpc", "sparc", "sparc64", 357 "i386" and some m68k machines, or set to "a.out" on 358 other architectures]. 359 360MKSOFTFLOAT If "yes", build with options to enable the compiler to 361 generate output containing library calls for floating 362 point and possibly soft-float library support. Defaults 363 to "no". 364 365TOOLCHAIN_MISSING 366 If "yes", this indicates that the platform being built 367 does not have a working in-tree toolchain. If the 368 MACHINE_ARCH in question falls into this category, the 369 variable is conditionally assigned the value "yes". 370 Otherwise, the variable is unconditionally assigned the 371 value "no". 372 373 If TOOLCHAIN_MISSING is "yes", the variables MKBFD, MKGCC, 374 and MKGDB are unconditionally assigned the value "no". 375 376EXTERNAL_TOOLCHAIN 377 This variable is not directly set by <bsd.own.mk>, but 378 including <bsd.own.mk> is the canonical way to gain 379 access to this variable. The variable should be defined 380 either in the user's environment or in the user's mk.conf 381 file. If defined, this variable indicates the root of 382 an external toolchain which will be used to build the 383 tree. For example, if a platform is a TOOLCHAIN_MISSING 384 platform, EXTERNAL_TOOLCHAIN can be used to re-enable the 385 cross-compile framework. 386 387 If EXTERNAL_TOOLCHAIN is defined, the variable MKGCC is 388 unconditionally assigned the value "no", since the external 389 version of the compiler may not be able to build the library 390 components of the in-tree compiler. 391 392 NOTE: This variable is not yet used in as many places as 393 it should be. Expect the exact semantics of this variable 394 to change in the short term as parts of the cross-compile 395 framework continue to be cleaned up. 396 397bsd.own.mk is generally useful when building your own Makefiles so that 398they use the same default owners etc. as the rest of the tree. 399 400=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 401 402The include file <bsd.shlib.mk> computes parameters for shared library 403installation and use. It defines no targets. <bsd.own.mk> MUST be 404included before bsd.shlib.mk. 405 406bsd.own.mk sets the following variables, if they are not already defined 407(defaults are in brackets): 408 409SHLIBINSTALLDIR If ${USE_SHLIBDIR} is "yes", use ${SHLIBINSTALLDIR} instead of 410 ${LIBDIR} as the base path for shared library installation. 411 [/lib] 412 413SHLIBDIR The path to USE_SHLIBDIR shared libraries to use when building 414 a program. [/lib for programs in /bin and /sbin, /usr/lib 415 for all others.] 416 417_LIBSODIR Set to ${SHLIBINSTALLDIR} if ${USE_SHLIBDIR} is "yes", 418 otherwise set to ${LIBDIR} 419 420SHLINKINSTALLDIR Base path for shared linker. [/libexec] 421 422SHLINKDIR Path to use for shared linker when building a program. 423 [/libexec for programs in /bin and /sbin, /usr/libexec for 424 all others.] 425 426=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 427 428The include file <bsd.prog.mk> handles building programs from one or 429more source files, along with their manual pages. It has a limited number 430of suffixes, consistent with the current needs of the BSD tree. bsd.prog.mk 431includes <bsd.shlib.mk> to get shared library parameters. 432 433It has eight targets: 434 435 all: 436 build the program and its manual page. This also 437 creates a GDB initialization file (.gdbinit) in 438 the objdir. The .gdbinit file sets the shared library 439 prefix to ${DESTDIR} to facilitate cross-debugging. 440 clean: 441 remove the program, any object files and the files a.out, 442 Errs, errs, mklog, and ${PROG}.core. 443 cleandir: 444 remove all of the files removed by the target clean, as 445 well as .depend, tags, and any manual pages. 446 `distclean' is a synonym for `cleandir'. 447 depend: 448 make the dependencies for the source files, and store 449 them in the file .depend. 450 includes: 451 install any header files. 452 install: 453 install the program and its manual pages; if the Makefile 454 does not itself define the target install, the targets 455 beforeinstall and afterinstall may also be used to cause 456 actions immediately before and after the install target 457 is executed. 458 lint: 459 run lint on the source files 460 tags: 461 create a tags file for the source files. 462 463It sets/uses the following variables: 464 465BINGRP Binary group. 466 467BINOWN Binary owner. 468 469BINMODE Binary mode. 470 471CLEANFILES Additional files to remove for the clean and cleandir targets. 472 473COPTS Additional flags to the compiler when creating C objects. 474 475CPUFLAGS Additional flags to the compiler/assembler to select 476 CPU instruction set options, CPU tuning options, etc. 477 478CPPFLAGS Additional flags to the C pre-processor 479 480GDBINIT List of GDB initialization files to add to "source" 481 directives in the .gdbinit file that is created in the 482 objdir. 483 484LDADD Additional loader objects. Usually used for libraries. 485 For example, to load with the compatibility and utility 486 libraries, use: 487 488 LDADD+=-lutil -lcompat 489 490LDFLAGS Additional loader flags. 491 492LINKS The list of binary links; should be full pathnames, the 493 linked-to file coming first, followed by the linked 494 file. The files are hard-linked. For example, to link 495 /bin/test and /bin/[, use: 496 497 LINKS= ${DESTDIR}/bin/test ${DESTDIR}/bin/[ 498 499SYMLINKS The list of symbolic links; should be full pathnames. 500 Syntax is identical to LINKS. Note that DESTDIR is not 501 automatically included in the link. 502 503MAN Manual pages (should end in .1 - .9). If no MAN variable is 504 defined, "MAN=${PROG}.1" is assumed. 505 506PROG The name of the program to build. If not supplied, nothing 507 is built. 508 509PROG_CXX If defined, the name of the program to build. Also 510 causes <bsd.prog.mk> to link the program with the C++ 511 compiler rather than the C compiler. PROG_CXX overrides 512 the value of PROG if PROG is also set. 513 514PROGNAME The name that the above program will be installed as, if 515 different from ${PROG}. 516 517SRCS List of source files to build the program. If SRCS is not 518 defined, it's assumed to be ${PROG}.c. 519 520DPSRCS List of source files which are needed for generating 521 dependencies, but are not needed in ${SRCS}. 522 523DPADD Additional dependencies for the program. Usually used for 524 libraries. For example, to depend on the compatibility and 525 utility libraries use: 526 527 DPADD+=${LIBCOMPAT} ${LIBUTIL} 528 529 The following libraries are predefined for DPADD: 530 531 LIBCRT0?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/crt0.o 532 LIBBZ2?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libbz2.a 533 LIBC?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libc.a 534 LIBC_PIC?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libc_pic.a 535 LIBCDK?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libcdk.a 536 LIBCOM_ERR?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libcom_err.a 537 LIBCOMPAT?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libcompat.a 538 LIBCRYPT?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libcrypt.a 539 LIBCRYPTO?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libcrypto.a 540 LIBCRYPTO_IDEA?=${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libcrypto_idea.a 541 LIBCRYPTO_MDC2?=${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libcrypto_mdc2.a 542 LIBCRYPTO_RC5?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libcrypto_rc5.a 543 LIBCURSES?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libcurses.a 544 LIBDBM?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libdbm.a 545 LIBDES?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libdes.a 546 LIBEDIT?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libedit.a 547 LIBFORM?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libform.a 548 LIBGCC?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libgcc.a 549 LIBGNUMALLOC?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libgnumalloc.a 550 LIBGSSAPI?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libgssapi.a 551 LIBHDB?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libhdb.a 552 LIBINTL?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libintl.a 553 LIBIPSEC?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libipsec.a 554 LIBKADM?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libkadm.a 555 LIBKADM5CLNT?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libkadm5clnt.a 556 LIBKADM5SRV?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libkadm5srv.a 557 LIBKAFS?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libkafs.a 558 LIBKDB?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libkdb.a 559 LIBKRB?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libkrb.a 560 LIBKRB5?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libkrb5.a 561 LIBKSTREAM?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libkstream.a 562 LIBKVM?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libkvm.a 563 LIBL?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libl.a 564 LIBM?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libm.a 565 LIBMENU?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libmenu.a 566 LIBMP?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libmp.a 567 LIBNTP?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libntp.a 568 LIBOBJC?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libobjc.a 569 LIBOSSAUDIO?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libossaudio.a 570 LIBPC?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libpc.a 571 LIBPCAP?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libpcap.a 572 LIBPCI?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libpci.a 573 LIBPLOT?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libplot.a 574 LIBPMC?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libpmc.a 575 LIBPOSIX?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libposix.a 576 LIBPTHREAD?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libpthread.a 577 LIBPTHREAD_DBG?=${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libpthread_dbg.a 578 LIBRESOLV?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libresolv.a 579 LIBRMT?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/librmt.a 580 LIBROKEN?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libroken.a 581 LIBRPCSVC?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/librpcsvc.a 582 LIBRT?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/librt.a 583 LIBSKEY?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libskey.a 584 LIBSS?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libss.a 585 LIBSSL?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libssl.a 586 LIBSKEY?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libskey.a 587 LIBSL?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libsl.a 588 LIBTERMCAP?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libtermcap.a 589 LIBTELNET?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libtelnet.a 590 LIBUSBHID?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libusbhid.a 591 LIBUTIL?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libutil.a 592 LIBWRAP?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libwrap.a 593 LIBY?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/liby.a 594 LIBZ?= ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib/libz.a 595 596SHAREDSTRINGS If defined, a new .c.o rule is used that results in shared 597 strings, using xstr(1). Note that this will not work with 598 parallel makes. 599 600STRIPFLAG The flag passed to the install program to cause the binary 601 to be stripped. 602 603SUBDIR A list of subdirectories that should be built as well. 604 Each of the targets will execute the same target in the 605 subdirectories. 606 607SCRIPTS A list of interpreter scripts [file.{sh,csh,pl,awk,...}]. 608 These are installed exactly like programs. 609 610SCRIPTSNAME The name that the above program will be installed as, if 611 different from ${SCRIPTS}. These can be further specialized 612 by setting SCRIPTSNAME_<script>. 613 614FILES A list of files to install. The installation is controlled 615 by the FILESNAME, FILESOWN, FILESGRP, FILESMODE, FILESDIR 616 variables that can be further specialized by FILES<VAR>_<file> 617 618SHLINKDIR Target directory for shared linker. See description of 619 <bsd.own.mk> for additional information about this variable. 620 621The include file <bsd.prog.mk> includes the file named "../Makefile.inc" 622if it exists, as well as the include file <bsd.man.mk>. 623 624Some simple examples: 625 626To build foo from foo.c with a manual page foo.1, use: 627 628 PROG= foo 629 630 .include <bsd.prog.mk> 631 632To build foo from foo.c with a manual page foo.2, add the line: 633 634 MAN= foo.2 635 636If foo does not have a manual page at all, add the line: 637 638 MKMAN= no 639 640If foo has multiple source files, add the line: 641 642 SRCS= a.c b.c c.c d.c 643 644=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 645 646The include file <bsd.subdir.mk> contains the default targets for building 647subdirectories. It has the same eight targets as <bsd.prog.mk>: all, 648clean, cleandir, depend, includes, install, lint, and tags. For all of 649the directories listed in the variable SUBDIR, the specified directory 650will be visited and the target made. There is also a default target which 651allows the command "make subdir" where subdir is any directory listed in 652the variable SUBDIR. 653 654As a special case, the use of a token .WAIT as an entry in SUBDIR acts 655as a synchronization barrier when multiple make jobs are run; subdirs 656before the .WAIT must complete before any subdirs after .WAIT are 657started. See make(1) for some caveats on use of .WAIT and other 658special sources. 659 660=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 661 662The include file <bsd.links.mk> handles the LINKS and SYMLINKS variables 663and is included from from bsd.lib.mk and bsd.prog.mk. 664 665=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 666 667The include file <bsd.files.mk> handles the FILES variables and is included 668from bsd.lib.mk and bsd.prog.mk. 669 670=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 671 672The include file <bsd.inc.mk> defines the includes target and uses two 673variables: 674 675INCS The list of include files 676 677INCSDIR The location to install the include files. 678 679INCSNAME Target name of the include file, if only one; same as 680 FILESNAME, but for include files. 681 682INCSNAME_<file> The name file <file> should be installed as, if not <file>, 683 same as FILESNAME_<file>, but for include files. 684 685=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 686 687The include file <bsd.kinc.mk> defines the many targets (includes, 688subdirectories, etc.), and is used by kernel makefiles to handle 689include file installation. It is intended to be included alone, by 690kernel Makefiles. Please see bsd.kinc.mk for more details, and keep 691the documentation in that file up to date. 692 693=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 694 695The include file <bsd.info.mk> is used to generate and install GNU Info 696documentation from respective Texinfo source files. It defines three 697implicit targets (.txi.info, .texi.info, and .texinfo.info), and uses the 698following variables: 699 700TEXINFO List of Texinfo source files. Info documentation will 701 consist of single files with the extension replaced by 702 .info. 703 704INFOFLAGS Flags to pass to makeinfo. [] 705 706INSTALL_INFO Name of install-info program. [install-info] 707 708MAKEINFO Name of makeinfo program. [makeinfo] 709 710=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 711 712The include file <bsd.sys.mk> is used by <bsd.prog.mk> and 713<bsd.lib.mk>. It contains overrides that are used when building 714the NetBSD source tree. For instance, if "PARALLEL" is defined by 715the program/library Makefile, it includes a set of rules for lex and 716yacc that allow multiple lex and yacc targets to be built in parallel. 717 718Other variables of note (incomplete list): 719 720WARNS Crank up gcc warning options; the distinct levels are: 721 WARNS=1 722 WARNS=2 723 WARNS=3 724 725FORMAT_AUDIT If FORMAT_AUDIT is set, and WFORMAT is set and > 1, turn on 726WFORMAT -Wnetbsd-format-audit for extra-stringent format checking. 727 WFORMAT belongs in individual makefiles and/or 728 Makefile.inc files. (set WFORMAT=1 in individual 729 makefiles if a program is not security critical and is 730 doing bizarre things with format strings which would 731 be even uglier if rewritten) FORMAT_AUDIT should go in 732 mk.conf if you're doing format-string auditing. 733 FORMAT_AUDIT may go away in time. 734 735=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 736 737The include file <bsd.lib.mk> has support for building libraries. It has 738the same eight targets as <bsd.prog.mk>: all, clean, cleandir, depend, 739includes, install, lint, and tags. Additionally, it has a checkver target 740which checks for installed shared object libraries whose version is greater 741that the version of the source. It has a limited number of suffixes, 742consistent with the current needs of the BSD tree. bsd.lib.mk includes 743<bsd.shlib.mk> to get shared library parameters. 744 745It sets/uses the following variables: 746 747LIB The name of the library to build. 748 749LIBDIR Target directory for libraries. 750 751SHLIBINSTALLDIR Target directory for shared libraries if ${USE_SHLIBDIR} 752 is "yes". 753 754USE_SHLIBDIR If "yes", use ${SHLIBINSTALLDIR} instead of ${LIBDIR} 755 as the path to install shared libraries to. 756 USE_SHLIBDIR must be defined before <bsd.own.mk> is included. 757 758LINTLIBDIR Target directory for lint libraries. 759 760LIBGRP Library group. 761 762LIBOWN Library owner. 763 764LIBMODE Library mode. 765 766LDADD Additional loader objects. 767 768MAN The manual pages to be installed (use a .1 - .9 suffix). 769 770MKLINKLIB If "no", act as "MKPICINSTALL=no MKPROFILE=no". 771 Also: 772 - don't install the .a libraries 773 - don't install _pic.a libraries on PIC systems 774 - don't build .a libraries on PIC systems 775 - don't install the .so symlink on ELF systems 776 I.e, only install the shared library (and the .so.major 777 symlink on ELF). 778 779MKPICLIB If "no", don't build _pic.a libraries, and build the 780 shared object libraries from the .a libraries. A 781 symlink is installed in ${DESTDIR}/usr/lib for the 782 _pic.a library pointing to the .a library. 783 784NOCHECKVER_<library> 785NOCHECKVER If set, disables checking for installed shared object 786 libraries with versions greater than the source. A 787 particular library name, without the "lib" prefix, may 788 be appended to the variable name to disable the check for 789 only that library. 790 791SRCS List of source files to build the library. Suffix types 792 .s, .c, and .f are supported. Note, .s files are preferred 793 to .c files of the same name. (This is not the default for 794 versions of make.) 795 796The include file <bsd.lib.mk> includes the file named "../Makefile.inc" 797if it exists, as well as the include file <bsd.man.mk>. 798 799It has rules for building profiled objects; profiled libraries are 800built by default. 801 802Libraries are ranlib'd when made. 803 804=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 805 806The include file <bsd.obj.mk> defines targets related to the creation 807and use of separated object and source directories. 808 809If an environment variable named MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX is set, make(1) uses 810${MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX}${.CURDIR} as the name of the object directory if 811it exists. Otherwise make(1) looks for the existence of a 812subdirectory (or a symlink to a directory) of the source directory 813into which built targets should be placed. If an environment variable 814named MAKEOBJDIR is set, make(1) uses its value as the name of the 815object directory; failing that, make first looks for a subdirectory 816named "obj.${MACHINE}", and if that doesn't exist, it looks for "obj". 817 818Object directories are not created automatically by make(1) if they 819don't exist; you need to run a separate "make obj". (This will happen 820during a top-level build if "MKOBJDIRS" is set to a value other than 821"no"). When the source directory is a subdirectory of ${BSDSRCDIR} -- 822and this is determined by a simple string prefix comparison -- object 823directories are created in a separate object directory tree, and a 824symlink to the object directory in that tree is created in the source 825directory; otherwise, "make obj" assumes that you're not in the main 826source tree and that it's not safe to use a separate object tree. 827 828Several variables used by <bsd.obj.mk> control exactly what 829directories and links get created during a "make obj": 830 831MAKEOBJDIR If set, this is the component name of the object 832 directory. 833 834OBJMACHINE If this is set but MAKEOBJDIR is not set, creates 835 object directories or links named "obj.${MACHINE}"; 836 otherwise, just creates ones named "obj". 837 838USR_OBJMACHINE If set, and the current directory is a subdirectory of 839 ${BSDSRCDIR}, create object directory in the 840 corresponding subdirectory of ${BSDOBJDIR}.${MACHINE}; 841 otherwise, create it in the corresponding subdirectory 842 of ${BSDOBJDIR} 843 844BUILDID If set, the contents of this variable are appended 845 to the object directory name. If OBJMACHINE is also 846 set, ".${BUILDID}" is added after ".${MACHINE}". 847 848=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 849 850The include file <bsd.kernobj.mk> defines variables related to the 851location of kernel sources and object directories. 852 853KERNSRCDIR Is the location of the top of the kernel src. 854 It defaults to ${_SRC_TOP_}/sys 855 856KERNARCHDIR Is the location of the machine dependent kernel 857 sources. It defaults to arch/${MACHINE} 858 859KERNCONFDIR Is where the configuration files for kernels are 860 found; default is ${KERNSRCDIR}/${KERNARCHDIR}/conf. 861 862KERNOBJDIR Is the kernel build directory. The kernel GENERIC for 863 instance will be compiled in ${KERNOBJDIR}/GENERIC. 864 The default value is 865 ${MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX}${KERNSRCDIR}/${KERNARCHDIR}/compile 866 if it exists or the target 'obj' is being made. 867 Otherwise the default is 868 ${KERNSRCDIR}/${KERNARCHDIR}/compile. 869 870It is important that Makefiles (such as those under src/distrib) that 871wish to find compiled kernels use bsd.kernobj.mk and ${KERNOBJDIR} 872rather than make assumptions about the location of the compiled kernel. 873 874=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 875 876The include file <bsd.rpc.mk> contains a makefile fragment used to 877construct source files built by rpcgen. 878 879The following macros may be defined in makefiles which include 880<bsd.rpc.mk> in order to control which files get built and how they 881are to be built: 882 883RPC_INCS: construct .h file from .x file 884RPC_XDRFILES: construct _xdr.c from .x file 885 (for marshalling/unmarshalling data types) 886RPC_SVCFILES: construct _svc.c from .x file 887 (server-side stubs) 888RPC_SVCFLAGS: Additional flags passed to builds of RPC_SVCFILES. 889 890RPC_XDIR: Directory containing .x/.h files 891 892 893 894=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= 895