Reputation: 22062
I've used rake a bit (a Ruby make program), and it has an option to get a list of all the available targets, eg
> rake --tasks
rake db:charset # retrieve the charset for your data...
rake db:collation # retrieve the collation for your da...
rake db:create # Creates the databases defined in y...
rake db:drop # Drops the database for your curren...
...
but there seems to be no option to do this in GNU make.
Apparently the code is almost there for it, as of 2007 - http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg06434.html.
Anyway, I made little hack to extract the targets from a makefile, which you can include in a makefile.
list:
@grep '^[^#[:space:]].*:' Makefile
It will give you a list of the defined targets. It's just a start - it doesn't filter out the dependencies, for instance.
> make list
list:
copy:
run:
plot:
turnin:
Upvotes: 355
Views: 284564
Reputation: 440412
Preface:
Per this answer, make
versions post-4.4.1 will natively support a new --print-targets
option, which makes the solution below unnecessary.
This other answer here builds on the solution below, and adds support for printing descriptions along with target names, assuming you've embedded @#
-prefixed comments in your targets.
Note: This answer has been updated to still work as of GNU make
v4.3 - let us know if you come across something that breaks.
This is an attempt to improve on Brent Bradburn's great approach as follows:
sh -c
)-f <file>
@
to prevent it from being echoed before executionCuriously, GNU make
has no feature for listing just the names of targets defined in a makefile. While the -p
option produces output that includes all targets, it buries them in a lot of other information and also executes the default target (which could be suppressed with -f/dev/null
).
Place the following rule in a makefile for GNU make
to implement a target named list
that simply lists all target names in alphabetical order - i.e.: invoke as make list
:
.PHONY: list
list:
@LC_ALL=C $(MAKE) -pRrq -f $(firstword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) : 2>/dev/null | awk -v RS= -F: '/(^|\n)# Files(\n|$$)/,/(^|\n)# Finished Make data base/ {if ($$1 !~ "^[#.]") {print $$1}}' | sort | grep -E -v -e '^[^[:alnum:]]' -e '^$@$$'
# IMPORTANT: The line above must be indented by (at least one)
# *actual TAB character* - *spaces* do *not* work.
Important: On pasting this, make sure that the last line is indented by exactly 1 actual tab char. (spaces do not work).
Note that sorting the resulting list of targets is the best option, since not sorting doesn't produce a helpful ordering in that the order in which the targets appear in the makefile is not preserved.
Also, the sub-targets of a rule comprising multiple targets are invariably output separately and will therefore, due to sorting, usually not appear next to one another; e.g., a rule starting with a z:
will not have targets a
and z
listed next to each other in the output, if there are additional targets.
Explanation of the rule:
.PHONY: list
LC_ALL=C
makes sure that make
's output in in English, as parsing of the output relies on that.Tip of the hat to Bastian Bittorf
$(MAKE) -pRrq -f $(firstword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) : 2>/dev/null
make
again in order to print and parse the database derived from the makefile:
-p
prints the database
-Rr
suppresses inclusion of built-in rules and variables
-q
only tests the up-to-date-status of a target (without remaking anything), but that by itself doesn't prevent execution of recipe commands in all cases; hence:
-f $(firstword $(MAKEFILE_LIST))
ensures that the same makefile is targeted as in the original invocation, regardless of whether it was targeted implicitly or explicitly with -f ...
.
(Since MAKEFILE_LIST
also contains the list of include
d Makefiles, firstword
is used to extract only the originally targeted file; the implication is that the targeted file name / path must not contain spaces, but that is unlikely to be the case in practice).
:
is a deliberately invalid target that is meant to ensure that no commands are executed; 2>/dev/null
suppresses the resulting error message. Note: This relies on -p
printing the database nonetheless, which is the case as of GNU make 3.82. Sadly, GNU make offers no direct option to just print the database, without also executing the default (or given) task; if you don't need to target a specific Makefile, you may use make -p -f/dev/null
, as recommended in the man
page.
-v RS=
/(^|\n)# Files(\n|$$)/,/(^|\n)# Finished Make data base/
make
versions 3.x and 4.3, paragraph structuring in make
's output changed, so (^|\n)
/ (\n|$$)
ensures that the lines that identify the start and the end of the cross-paragraph range of lines of interest are detected irrespective of whether they occur at the start or inside / at the end of a paragraph.if ($$1 !~ "^[#.]")
#
... ignores non-targets, whose blocks start with # Not a target:
.
... ignores special targets:
grep -E -v -e '^[^[:alnum:]]' -e '^$@$$'
removes unwanted targets from the output:
'^[^[:alnum:]]'
... excludes hidden targets, which - by convention - are targets that start neither with a letter nor a digit.'^$@$$'
... excludes the list
target itselfRunning make list
then prints all targets, each on its own line; you can pipe to xargs
to create a space-separated list instead.
Upvotes: 255
Reputation: 97058
Update!
As of Jan 8th, 2024, Make has a --print-targets
option that should do this properly without hacky regexes. The current version is Make 4.4.1 so the next release after that will have this feature.
If your Makefile
was created by CMake you might be able to run make help
.
$ make help
The following are some of the valid targets for this Makefile:
... all (the default if no target is provided)
... clean
... depend
... install
etc
If not, I wrote a patch to add proper support for this obviously useful feature to Make. This is way better than all the other answers here which all involve horrible hacks to grep the Makefiles. That obviously doesn't work if you include other Makefiles, use computed target names, etc.
The patch hasn't been merged so you have to build from source. It's not too bad but you do need some crusty old autoconf-related build tools:
git clone https://github.com/Timmmm/make
cd make
./bootstrap
./configure
make -j4
On Linux you can use this binary I built already.
Then you can use the -l
flag to list targets:
./make -C /path/to/your/project -l
Upvotes: 90
Reputation: 8106
Here is a version using cat, grep and cut.
cat Makefile | grep : | grep -v '^\t' | cut -d: -f1
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 912
I was inspired by @jsp's answer to adapt his file parsing technique and this version has the following benefits.
.PHONY
below each section header for all targets within that section and places comments after the target so it's a little cleaner to look at.Given a makefile like this
#=Default Command
.PHONY: help
help: # Shows the available make commands.
@sed -nr \
-e 's|^#=(.*)|\n\1:|p' \
-e 's|^([a-zA-Z-]*):((.*?)# (.*))?| \1 \4|p' \
$(lastword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) \
| expand -t20
#=Project Commands
.PHONY: install build
install: # Installs the thing
@echo install
build: install # Builds the thing
@echo build
#=Other Commands
.PHONY: foo bar
foo:
@echo foo
bar:
@echo bar
You'll get output like this
Default Command:
help Shows the available make commands.
Project Commands:
install Installs the thing
build Builds the thing
Other Commands:
foo
bar
Regex explanations:
's|^#=(.*)|\n\1:|p'
Captures everything in parens after section declaration #=
and prints it \1
with a newline before and colon after it.
's|^([a-zA-Z-]*):((.*?)# (.*))?| \1 \4|p'
Captures target name and includes an optional capture group ()?
for the description. The optional group surrounds two more capture groups, the first one capturing everything between :
and #
and the second capturing the help text (aside: the regex is a bit complicated but it lets us output targets with and without comments. Open to better methods). Finally it outputs the target name \1
and description \4
indented 2 spaces to tuck it under the section header.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 54989
Under Bash (at least), this can be done automatically with tab completion:
make
spacetabtab
If you're using a bare-bones distribution (maybe a container) you might need to install a package.
$ apt-get install bash-completion ## Debian/Ubuntu/etc.
$ . /etc/bash_completion ## or just launch bash again
Upvotes: 303
Reputation: 9508
This is a very simplified version of what the bash-completion
script does.
make -npq : 2> /dev/null | \
awk -v RS= -F: '$1 ~ /^[^#%]+$/ { print $1 }'
make -npq
: Print the database without executing anything-v RS=
: Separate records by whole paragraphs-F:
: Separate fields by :
(so the rule name is $1
)$1 ~ /^[^#%]+$/
: Match rules that don't contain #
or %
(comments or pattern rules){ print $1 }
: Print the rule nameThis is much simpler than mklement0's approach (which I fixed myself), and works better.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 83
Try this one:
make -qp | awk -F':' '/^[^ \t.%][-A-Za-z0-9_]*:/ {split($0,A,/ /);for(i in A)if(match(A[i],/^[^.%][-A-Za-z0-9_]*/))print substr(A[i],1,RLENGTH)}' | sort -u
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 14701
This is a modification to jsp's very helpful answer (https://stackoverflow.com/a/45843594/814145). I like the idea of getting not only a list of targets but also their descriptions. jsp's Makefile puts the description as the comment, which I found often will be repeated in the target's description echo command. So instead, I extract the description from the echo command for each target.
Example Makefile:
.PHONY: all
all: build
: "same as 'make build'"
.PHONY: build
build:
@echo "Build the project"
.PHONY: clean
clean:
@echo "Clean the project"
.PHONY: help
help:
@echo -n "Common make targets"
@echo ":"
@cat Makefile | sed -n '/^\.PHONY: / h; /\(^\t@*echo\|^\t:\)/ {H; x; /PHONY/ s/.PHONY: \(.*\)\n.*"\(.*\)"/ make \1\t\2/p; d; x}'| sort -k2,2 |expand -t 20
Output of make help
:
$ make help
Common make targets:
make all same as 'make build'
make build Build the project
make clean Clean the project
make help Common make targets
Notes:
echo
or :
command as the first command of the recipe. :
means "do nothing". I use it here for those targets that no echo is needed, such as all
target above.help
target to add the ":" in the make help
output.Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 3571
This help
target will only print targets which have ##
followed by a description. This allows for documenting both public and private targets. Using the .DEFAULT_GOAL
makes the help more discoverable.
Only sed
, xargs
and printf
used which are pretty common.
Using the < $(MAKEFILE_LIST)
allows for the makefile to be called something other than Makefile
for instance Makefile.github
You can customize the output to suit your preference in the printf
. This example is set up to match the OP's request for rake
style output
When cutting and pasting the below make file, don't forget to change the 4 spaces indentation to tabs.
# vim:ft=make
# Makefile
.DEFAULT_GOAL := help
.PHONY: test help
help: ## these help instructions
@sed -rn 's/^([a-zA-Z_-]+):.*?## (.*)$$/"\1" "\2"/p' < $(MAKEFILE_LIST) | xargs printf "make %-20s# %s\n"
lint: ## style, bug and quality checker
pylint src test
private: # for internal usage only
@true
test: private ## run pytest with coverage
pytest --cov test
Here is the output from the Makefile
above. Notice the private
target doesn't get output because it only has a single #
for it's comment.
$ make
make help # these help instructions
make lint # style, bug and quality checker
make test # run pytest with coverage
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 4212
I took a few answers mentioned above and compiled this one, which can also generate a nice description for each target and it works for targets with variables too.
Example Makefile:
APPS?=app1 app2
bin: $(APPS:%=%.bin)
@# Help: A composite target that relies only on other targets
$(APPS:%=%.bin): %.bin:
@# Help: A target with variable name, value = $*
test:
@# Help: A normal target without variables
# A target without any help description
clean:
# A hidden target
.hidden:
help:
@printf "%-20s %s\n" "Target" "Description"
@printf "%-20s %s\n" "------" "-----------"
@make -pqR : 2>/dev/null \
| awk -v RS= -F: '/^# File/,/^# Finished Make data base/ {if ($$1 !~ "^[#.]") {print $$1}}' \
| sort \
| egrep -v -e '^[^[:alnum:]]' -e '^$@$$' \
| xargs -I _ sh -c 'printf "%-20s " _; make _ -nB | (grep -i "^# Help:" || echo "") | tail -1 | sed "s/^# Help: //g"'
Example output:
$ make help
Target Description
------ -----------
app1.bin A target with variable name, value = app1
app2.bin A target with variable name, value = app2
bin A composite target that relies only on other targets
clean
test A normal target without variables
How does it work:
The top part of the make help
target works exactly as posted by mklement0 here - How do you get the list of targets in a makefile?.
After getting the list of targets, it runs make <target> -nB
as a dry run for each target and parses the last line that starts with @# Help:
for the description of the target. And that or an empty string is printed in a nicely formatted table.
As you can see, the variables are even expanded within the description as well, which is a huge bonus in my book :).
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 16045
make
doesn't support this by default and other answers have shown how to extract the list of possible targets automatically.
However, in case you want to have more control with the listing without any side-effects (such as using the .PHONY
target to mark the documentation which prevents the logic of using the target names as actual files which Make uses to decide which targets needs to be rebuilt), you can invent your own syntax just for the documentation. I prefer to use ###
like this:
CPUS ?= $(shell nproc)
MAKEFLAGS += -j $(CPUS) -l $(CPUS) -s
# Basic paths
PREFIX ?= usr
BINDIR ?= $(PREFIX)/bin
ETCDIR ?= etc
MANDIR ?= $(PREFIX)/share/man
# ...
### help: Show help message (default target)
# use "help" as the default target (first target in the Makefile)
.PHONY: help
help:
@printf "%s\n\n" "make: List of possible targets:"
@grep '^### .*:' $(lastword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) | sed 's/^### \([^:]*\): \(.*\)/\1:\t\2/' | column -ts "$$(printf '\t')"
### install: Install all files in $PREFIX (used by debian binary package build scripts)
install:
install -D -o root -g root -m 755 ...
...
### release: Increase package version number
release:
debchange --release
(as usual, the indented files must start with exactly one tabulator but stackoverflow cannot reproduce that detail correctly.)
Output will look like this:
$ make
make: List of possible targets:
help: Show help message (default target)
install: Install all files in $PREFIX (used by debian binary package build scripts)
release: Increase package version number
This works because only lines starting with ###
and having a :
character are considered as the documentation to output. Note that this intentionally does not extract the actual target name but fully trusts the documentation lines only. This allows always emitting correct output for very complex Makefile tricks, too. Also note that this avoids needing to put the documentation line on any specific position relative to actual rule. I also intentionally avoid sorting the output because the order of output can be fully controlled from the Makefile itself simply by listing the documentation lines in preferred order.
You could obviously invent any other syntax you like and even do something like
### en: install: Install all files in $PREFIX
### fi: asennus: asenna kaikki tiedostot hakemistoon $PREFIX
and only print lines that match the current locale to support multiple languages and having aliases to localize the target names, too:
.PHONY: asennus
asennus: install
The most important question is why do you want to list the targets? Do you want actual documentation or some kind of debugging information?
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 54989
I combined these two answers: https://stackoverflow.com/a/9524878/86967 and https://stackoverflow.com/a/7390874/86967 and did some escaping so that this could be used from inside a makefile.
.PHONY: no_targets__ list
no_targets__:
list:
sh -c "$(MAKE) -p no_targets__ | awk -F':' '/^[a-zA-Z0-9][^\$$#\/\\t=]*:([^=]|$$)/ {split(\$$1,A,/ /);for(i in A)print A[i]}' | grep -v '__\$$' | sort"
.
$ make -s list
build
clean
default
distclean
doc
fresh
install
list
makefile ## this is kind of extraneous, but whatever...
run
Upvotes: 33
Reputation: 1954
Focusing on an easy syntax for describing a make target, and having a clean output, I chose this approach:
help:
@grep -B1 -E "^[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+\:([^\=]|$$)" Makefile \
| grep -v -- -- \
| sed 'N;s/\n/###/' \
| sed -n 's/^#: \(.*\)###\(.*\):.*/\2###\1/p' \
| column -t -s '###'
#: Starts the container stack
up: a b
command
#: Pulls in new container images
pull: c d
another command
make-target-not-shown:
# this does not count as a description, so leaving
# your implementation comments alone, e.g TODOs
also-not-shown:
So treating the above as a Makefile and running it gives you something like
> make help
up Starts the container stack
pull Pulls in new container images
Explanation for the chain of commands:
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 385
Add this target to your Makefile:
help:
@echo "\nTARGETS:\n"
@make -qpRr | egrep -e '^[a-z].*:$$' | sed -e 's~:~~g' | sort
@echo ""
make -qpRr
= make --question --print-data-base --no-builtin-variables --no-builtin-rules
egrep -e '^[a-z].*:$$'
: searches for lines which start with lowercase and ends with ":"sed -e 's~:~~g'
: deletes the ":"Then just run:
make help
This works for me 😉
PD: more info at...
make --help
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 1283
As mklement0 points out, a feature for listing all Makefile targets is missing from GNU-make, and his answer and others provides ways to do this.
However, the original post also mentions rake, whose tasks switch does something slightly different than just listing all tasks in the rakefile. Rake will only give you a list of tasks that have associated descriptions. Tasks without descriptions will not be listed. This gives the author the ability to both provide customized help descriptions and also omit help for certain targets.
If you want to emulate rake's behavior, where you provide descriptions for each target, there is a simple technique for doing this: embed descriptions in comments for each target you want listed.
You can either put the description next to the target or, as I often do, next to a PHONY specification above the target, like this:
.PHONY: target1 # Target 1 help text
target1: deps
[... target 1 build commands]
.PHONY: target2 # Target 2 help text
target2:
[... target 2 build commands]
...
.PHONY: help # Generate list of targets with descriptions
help:
@grep '^.PHONY: .* #' Makefile | sed 's/\.PHONY: \(.*\) # \(.*\)/\1 \2/' | expand -t20
Which will yield
$ make help
target1 Target 1 help text
target2 Target 2 help text
...
help Generate list of targets with descriptions
You can also find a short code example in this gist and here too.
Again, this does not solve the problem of listing all the targets in a Makefile. For example, if you have a big Makefile that was maybe generated or that someone else wrote, and you want a quick way to list its targets without digging through it, this won't help.
However, if you are writing a Makefile, and you want a way to generate help text in a consistent, self-documenting way, this technique may be useful.
Upvotes: 25
Reputation: 27834
Very simple AWK solution:
all:
@awk -F'[ :]' '!/^all:/ && /^([A-z_-]+):/ {print "make " $$1}' Makefile
(Note: This doesn't cover all the corner-cases as the accepted answer, as explained here.)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 6424
tl;dr I personally copy-paste the same help
target for every Makefile I build.
.SILENT:
.PHONY: help
## This help screen
help:
printf "Available targets\n\n"
awk '/^[a-zA-Z\-\_0-9]+:/ { \
helpMessage = match(lastLine, /^## (.*)/); \
if (helpMessage) { \
helpCommand = substr($$1, 0, index($$1, ":")-1); \
helpMessage = substr(lastLine, RSTART + 3, RLENGTH); \
printf "%-30s %s\n", helpCommand, helpMessage; \
} \
} \
{ lastLine = $$0 }' $(MAKEFILE_LIST)
I also maintain a copy of it in this Github gist: https://gist.github.com/Olshansk/689fc2dee28a44397c6e31a0776ede30
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 9965
To expand on the answer given by @jsp, you can even evaluate variables in your help text with the $(eval)
function.
The proposed version below has these enhanced properties:
# TARGETDOC:
)So to document, use this form:
RANDOM_VARIABLE := this will be expanded in help text
.PHONY: target1 # Target 1 help with $(RANDOM_VARIABLE)
target1: deps
[... target 1 build commands]
# TARGETDOC: $(BUILDDIR)/real-file.txt # real-file.txt help text
$(BUILDDIR)/real-file.txt:
[... $(BUILDDIR)/real-file.txt build commands]
Then, somewhere in your makefile:
.PHONY: help # Generate list of targets with descriptions
help:
@# find all help in targets and .PHONY and evaluate the embedded variables
$(eval doc_expanded := $(shell grep -E -h '^(.PHONY:|# TARGETDOC:) .* #' $(MAKEFILE_LIST) | sed -E -n 's/(\.PHONY|# TARGETDOC): (.*) # (.*)/\2 \3\\n/'p | expand -t40))
@echo
@echo ' TARGET HELP' | expand -t40
@echo ' ------ ----' | expand -t40
@echo -e ' $(doc_expanded)'
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 32394
For AWK haters, and for simplicity, this contraption works for me:
help:
make -qpRr $(lastword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) | egrep -v '(^(\.|:|#|\s|$)|=)' | cut -d: -f1
(for use outside a Makefile, just remove $(lastword ...)
or replace it with the Makefile path).
This solution will not work if you have "interesting" rule names but will work well for most simple setups. The main downside of a make -qp
based solution is (as in other answers here) that if the Makefile defines variable values using functions - they will still be executed regardless of -q
, and if using $(shell ...)
then the shell command will still be called and its side effects will happen. In my setup often the side effects of running shell functions is unwanted output to standard error, so I add 2>/dev/null
after the make command.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1972
Here's a very simple way to do this in bash
-- based on the comment by @cibercitizen1 above:
grep : Makefile | awk -F: '/^[^.]/ {print $1;}'
See also the more authoritative answer by @Marc.2377, too, which says how the Bash completion module for make
does it.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 8764
My favorite answer to this was posted by Chris Down at Unix & Linux Stack Exchange. I'll quote.
This is how the bash completion module for
make
gets its list:make -qp | awk -F':' '/^[a-zA-Z0-9][^$#\/\t=]*:([^=]|$)/ {split($1,A,/ /);for(i in A)print A[i]}'
It prints out a newline-delimited list of targets, without paging.
User Brainstone suggests piping to sort -u
to remove duplicate entries:
make -qp | awk -F':' '/^[a-zA-Z0-9][^$#\/\t=]*:([^=]|$)/ {split($1,A,/ /);for(i in A)print A[i]}' | sort -u
Source: How to list all targets in make? (Unix&Linux SE)
Upvotes: 25
Reputation: 2614
I usually do:
grep install_targets Makefile
It would come back with something like:
install_targets = install-xxx1 install-xxx2 ... etc
I hope this helps
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 3134
Yet another additional answer to above.
tested on MacOSX using only cat and awk on terminal
cat Makefile | awk '!/SHELL/ && /^[A-z]/ {print $1}' | awk '{print substr($0, 1, length($0)-1)}'
will output of the make file like below:
target1
target2
target3
in the Makefile, it should be the same statement, ensure that you escape the variables using $$variable rather than $variable.
Explanation
cat - spits out the contents
| - pipe parses output to next awk
awk - runs regex excluding "shell" and accepting only "A-z" lines then prints out the $1 first column
awk - yet again removes the last character ":" from the list
this is a rough output and you can do more funky stuff with just AWK. Try to avoid sed as its not as consistent in BSDs variants i.e. some works on *nix but fails on BSDs like MacOSX.
More
You should be able add this (with modifications) to a file for make, to the default bash-completion folder /usr/local/etc/bash-completion.d/ meaning when you "make tab tab" .. it will complete the targets based on the one liner script.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 130
Plenty of workable solutions here, but as I like saying, "if it's worth doing once, it's worth doing again." I did upvote the sugestion to use (tab)(tab), but as some have noted, you may not have completion support, or, if you have many include files, you may want an easier way to know where a target is defined.
I have not tested the below with sub-makes...I think it wouldn't work. As we know, recursive makes considered harmful.
.PHONY: list ls
ls list :
@# search all include files for targets.
@# ... excluding special targets, and output dynamic rule definitions unresolved.
@for inc in $(MAKEFILE_LIST); do \
echo ' =' $$inc '= '; \
grep -Eo '^[^\.#[:blank:]]+.*:.*' $$inc | grep -v ':=' | \
cut -f 1 | sort | sed 's/.*/ &/' | sed -n 's/:.*$$//p' | \
tr $$ \\\ | tr $(open_paren) % | tr $(close_paren) % \
; done
# to get around escaping limitations:
open_paren := \(
close_paren := \)
= Makefile =
includes
ls list
= util/kiss/snapshots.mk =
rotate-db-snapshots
rotate-file-snapshots
snap-db
snap-files
snapshot
= util/kiss/main.mk =
dirs
install
%MK_DIR_PREFIX%env-config.php
%MK_DIR_PREFIX%../srdb
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 179
This is far from clean, but did the job, for me.
make -p 2&>/dev/null | grep -A 100000 "# Files" | grep -v "^$" | grep -v "^\(\s\|#\|\.\)" | grep -v "Makefile:" | cut -d ":" -f 1
I use make -p
that dumps the internal database, ditch stderr, use a quick and dirty grep -A 100000
to keep the bottom of the output. Then I clean the output with a couple of grep -v
, and finally use cut
to get what's before the colon, namely, the targets.
This is enough for my helper scripts on most of my Makefiles.
EDIT: added grep -v Makefile
that is an internal rule
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 105
This one was helpful to me because I wanted to see the build targets required (and their dependencies) by the make target. I know that make targets cannot begin with a "." character. I don't know what languages are supported, so I went with egrep's bracket expressions.
cat Makefile | egrep "^[[:alnum:][:punct:]]{0,}:[[:space:]]{0,}[[:alnum:][:punct:][:space:]]{0,}$"
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 440412
@nobar's answer helpfully shows how to use tab completion to list a makefile's targets.
This works great for platforms that provide this functionality by default (e.g., Debian, Fedora).
On other platforms (e.g., Ubuntu) you must explicitly load this functionality, as implied by @hek2mgl's answer:
. /etc/bash_completion
installs several tab-completion functions, including the one for make
make
:
. /usr/share/bash-completion/completions/make
_complete_make() { COMPREPLY=($(compgen -W "$(make -pRrq : 2>/dev/null | awk -v RS= -F: '/^# File/,/^# Finished Make data base/ {if ($1 !~ "^[#.]") {print $1}}' | egrep -v '^[^[:alnum:]]' | sort | xargs)" -- "${COMP_WORDS[$COMP_CWORD]}")); }
complete -F _complete_make make
-f <file>
.Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 1572
not sure why the previous answer was so complicated:
list:
cat Makefile | grep "^[A-z]" | awk '{print $$1}' | sed "s/://g"
Upvotes: -5
Reputation: 158240
If you have bash completion for make
installed, the completion script will define a function _make_target_extract_script
. This function is meant to create a sed
script which can be used to obtain the targets as a list.
Use it like this:
# Make sure bash completion is enabled
source /etc/bash_completion
# List targets from Makefile
sed -nrf <(_make_target_extract_script --) Makefile
Upvotes: 19