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As described in previous sections, make
variables are inherited
by prerequisites. This capability allows you to modify the behavior
of a prerequisite based on which targets caused it to be rebuilt. For
example, you might set a target-specific variable on a debug
target, then running ‘make debug’ will cause that variable to be
inherited by all prerequisites of debug
, while just running
‘make all’ (for example) would not have that assignment.
Sometimes, however, you may not want a variable to be inherited. For
these situations, make
provides the private
modifier.
Although this modifier can be used with any variable assignment, it
makes the most sense with target- and pattern-specific variables. Any
variable marked private
will be visible to its local target but
will not be inherited by prerequisites of that target. A global
variable marked private
will be visible in the global scope but
will not be inherited by any target, and hence will not be visible
in any recipe.
As an example, consider this makefile:
EXTRA_CFLAGS = prog: private EXTRA_CFLAGS = -L/usr/local/lib prog: a.o b.o |
Due to the private
modifier, a.o
and b.o
will not
inherit the EXTRA_CFLAGS
variable assignment from the
progs
target.
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