Reputation: 1101
Is there a command line way in make
to find out which of the prerequisites of a target is not updated?
Upvotes: 91
Views: 125354
Reputation: 126
There's also GNU make with a debugger and better trace/error output: Remake
Both of these, while still relevant, are a bit old.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 3500
i am using make gnu make templates to define the make rules per target;
Templates are like macros that write rules, they are explained here https://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/html_node/Eval-Function.html
this feature is useful when you have a make system that includes a core makefile to generate all rules per project type; if it says to do a shared library then it writes the rules to compile a shared library; etc. for other types of targets.
in this example: if you add SHOW_RULES=1 to the make command line it also shows the text of the rules that are generated by the PROGRAM_target_setup_template ; along with generating the rules themselves (with eval).
# this one defines the target for real
$(foreach prog, $(TARGETS), $(eval $(call PROGRAM_target_setup_template,$(prog))))
ifneq "$(SHOW_RULES)" ""
$(foreach prog, $(TARGETS), $(info $(call PROGRAM_target_setup_template,$(prog))))
endif
More about my make files here: http://mosermichael.github.io/cstuff/all/projects/2011/06/17/make-system.html
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 770
What I usually do is not go using -d as previous answerers said.
I either:
Below is some code I'm using for printing out values:
define pv
$(info $(1) [$(origin $(1))] : >|$($(1))|<)
endef
define pva
$(foreach t,$(1),$(call pv,$(t)))
endef
define itemizer
$(foreach t,$($(1)),$(info $(t)))
endef
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 3454
Few times I've also used this (old but still working) interactive make debugger by John Graham-Cumming
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 881113
make -d
should give you more than enough information to debug your makefile.
Be warned: it will take some time and effort to analyze the output but loading the output into your favorite editor and doing searches will assist a lot.
You can greatly reduce the amount of debugging output if you specify the specific target you're interested in. So if you're only interested in the dodgy
target, instead of just make -d
which may make a hundred different things, try:
make clean
make -d dodgy
(assuming you have a clean
target of course).
The make --debug
is identical to make -d
but you can also specify:
make --debug=FLAGS
where flags can be:
a
for all debugging (same as make -d
and make --debug
).b
for basic debugging.v
for slightly more verbose basic debugging.i
for implicit rules.j
for invocation information.m
for information during makefile remakes.It looks like make --debug=b
is the best option for what you need, as shown in the following transcript:
pax@paxbox> cat makefile
c:a b
touch c
pax@paxbox> touch a b ; make
touch c
pax@paxbox> make
make: 'c' is up to date.
pax@paxbox> touch a ; make --debug=b
GNU Make 3.81
Copyright (C) 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Blah, blah, blah.
Reading makefiles...
Updating goal targets....
Prerequisite 'a' is newer than target 'c'.
Must remake target 'c'.
touch c
Successfully remade target file 'c'.
Upvotes: 129
Reputation: 99084
Your question is a little unclear. If you want to see which prerequisite files have not been modified recently, use ls -l to see their modification time. If you want to see what make is doing, try this:
# Make will announce when it is making this target, and why. sometarget: preq1 preq2 preq3 @echo making $@ @echo The following preqs are newer than the target: $? do_things
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 67232
Are you looking for Make's "dry run"? It will print out what make is doing without actually doing so, allowing you to see what happens.
The flag is -n
, use it like make -n
.
Upvotes: 30