[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
GNU make
supports some variables that have special properties.
MAKEFILE_LIST
Contains the name of each makefile that is parsed by make
, in
the order in which it was parsed. The name is appended just
before make
begins to parse the makefile. Thus, if the first
thing a makefile does is examine the last word in this variable, it
will be the name of the current makefile. Once the current makefile
has used include
, however, the last word will be the
just-included makefile.
If a makefile named Makefile
has this content:
name1 := $(lastword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) include inc.mk name2 := $(lastword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) all: @echo name1 = $(name1) @echo name2 = $(name2) |
then you would expect to see this output:
name1 = Makefile name2 = inc.mk |
.DEFAULT_GOAL
Sets the default goal to be used if no targets were specified on the
command line (see section Arguments to Specify the Goals). The
.DEFAULT_GOAL
variable allows you to discover the current
default goal, restart the default goal selection algorithm by clearing
its value, or to explicitly set the default goal. The following
example illustrates these cases:
# Query the default goal. ifeq ($(.DEFAULT_GOAL),) $(warning no default goal is set) endif .PHONY: foo foo: ; @echo $@ $(warning default goal is $(.DEFAULT_GOAL)) # Reset the default goal. .DEFAULT_GOAL := .PHONY: bar bar: ; @echo $@ $(warning default goal is $(.DEFAULT_GOAL)) # Set our own. .DEFAULT_GOAL := foo |
This makefile prints:
no default goal is set default goal is foo default goal is bar foo |
Note that assigning more than one target name to .DEFAULT_GOAL
is
illegal and will result in an error.
MAKE_RESTARTS
This variable is set only if this instance of make
has
restarted (see section How Makefiles Are Remade): it
will contain the number of times this instance has restarted. Note
this is not the same as recursion (counted by the MAKELEVEL
variable). You should not set, modify, or export this variable.
.RECIPEPREFIX
The first character of the value of this variable is used as the character make assumes is introducing a recipe line. If the variable is empty (as it is by default) that character is the standard tab character. For example, this is a valid makefile:
.RECIPEPREFIX = > all: > @echo Hello, world |
The value of .RECIPEPREFIX
can be changed multiple times; once set
it stays in effect for all rules parsed until it is modified.
.VARIABLES
Expands to a list of the names of all global variables defined so far. This includes variables which have empty values, as well as built-in variables (see section Variables Used by Implicit Rules), but does not include any variables which are only defined in a target-specific context. Note that any value you assign to this variable will be ignored; it will always return its special value.
.FEATURES
Expands to a list of special features supported by this version of
make
. Possible values include:
Supports ar
(archive) files using special filename syntax.
See section Using make
to Update Archive Files.
Supports the -L
(--check-symlink-times
) flag.
See section Summary of Options.
Supports “else if” non-nested conditionals. See section Syntax of Conditionals.
Supports “job server” enhanced parallel builds. See section Parallel Execution.
Supports secondary expansion of prerequisite lists.
Supports order-only prerequisites. See section Types of Prerequisites.
Supports target-specific and pattern-specific variable assignments. See section Target-specific Variable Values.
.INCLUDE_DIRS
Expands to a list of directories that make
searches for
included makefiles (see section Including Other Makefiles).
[ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] |
This document was generated by Davide Tacchella on November 3, 2010 using texi2html 1.82.