Make
Getting Started Why do Makefiles exist?
Makefiles are used to help decide which parts of a large program need to be recompiled. In the vast majority of cases, C or C++ files are compiled. Other languages typically have their own tools that serve a similar purpose as Make. It can be used beyond programs too, when you need a series of instructions to run depending on what files have changed. This tutorial will focus on the C/C++ compilation use case.
Here's an example dependency graph that you might build with Make. If any file's dependencies changes, then the file will get recompiled: What alternatives are there to Make?
Popular C/C++ alternative build systems are SCons, CMake, Bazel, and Ninja. Some code editors like Microsoft Visual Studio have their own built in build tools. For Java, there's Ant, Maven, and Gradle. Other languages like Go and Rust have their own build tools.
Interpreted languages like Python, Ruby, and Javascript don't require an analogue to Makefiles. The goal of Makefiles is to compile whatever files need to be compiled, based on what files have changed. But when files in interpreted languages change, nothing needs to get recompiled. When the program runs, the most recent version of the file is used. Running the Examples
To run these examples, you'll need a terminal and "make" installed. For each example, put the contents in a file called Makefile, and in that directory run the command make. Let's start with the simplest of Makefiles:
hello:
echo "hello world"
Here is the output of running the above example:
$ make echo "hello world" hello world
That's it! If you're a bit confused, here's a video that goes through these steps, along with describing the basic structure of Makefiles. Makefile Syntax
A Makefile consists of a set of rules. A rule generally looks like this:
targets: prerequisites
command command command
The targets are file names, separated by spaces. Typically, there is only one per rule. The commands are a series of steps typically used to make the target(s). These need to start with a tab character, not spaces. The prerequisites are also file names, separated by spaces. These files need to exist before the commands for the target are run. These are also called dependencies
Beginner Examples
The following Makefile has three separate rules. When you run make blah in the terminal, it will build a program called blah in a series of steps:
Make is given blah as the target, so it first searches for this target blah requires blah.o, so make searches for the blah.o target blah.o requires blah.c, so make searches for the blah.c target blah.c has no dependencies, so the echo command is run The cc -c command is then run, because all of the blah.o dependencies are finished The top cc command is run, because all the blah dependencies are finished That's it: blah is a compiled c program
blah: blah.o
cc blah.o -o blah # Runs third
blah.o: blah.c
cc -c blah.c -o blah.o # Runs second
blah.c:
echo "int main() { return 0; }" > blah.c # Runs first
This makefile has a single target, called some_file. The default target is the first target, so in this case some_file will run.
some_file:
echo "This line will always print"
This file will make some_file the first time, and the second time notice it's already made, resulting in make: 'some_file' is up to date.
some_file:
echo "This line will only print once" touch some_file
Here, the target some_file "depends" on other_file. When we run make, the default target (some_file, since it's first) will get called. It will first look at its list of dependencies, and if any of them are older, it will first run the targets for those dependencies, and then run itself. The second time this is run, neither target will run because both targets exist.
some_file: other_file
echo "This will run second, because it depends on other_file" touch some_file
other_file:
echo "This will run first" touch other_file
This will always run both targets, because some_file depends on other_file, which is never created.
some_file: other_file
touch some_file
other_file:
echo "nothing"
clean is often used as a target that removes the output of other targets, but it is not a special word in make.
some_file:
touch some_file
clean:
rm -f some_file
Variables
Variables can only be strings. Here's an example of using them:
files = file1 file2 some_file: $(files)
echo "Look at this variable: " $(files) touch some_file
file1:
touch file1
file2:
touch file2
clean:
rm -f file1 file2 some_file
Reference variables using ${} or $()
x = dude
all:
echo $(x) echo ${x}
# Bad practice, but works echo $x
Targets The all target
Making multiple targets and you want all of them to run? Make an all target.
all: one two three
one:
touch one
two:
touch two
three:
touch three
clean:
rm -f one two three
Multiple targets
When there are multiple targets for a rule, the commands will be run for each target $@ is an automatic variable that contains the target name.
all: f1.o f2.o
f1.o f2.o:
echo $@
- Equivalent to:
- f1.o
- echo $@
- f2.o
- echo $@
Automatic Variables and Wildcards
- Wildcard
Both * and % are called wildcards in Make, but they mean entirely different things. * searches your filesystem for matching filenames. I suggest that you always wrap it in the wildcard function, because otherwise you may fall into a common pitfall described below. It's oddly unhelpful and I find it more confusing than useful.
- Print out file information about every .c file
print: $(wildcard *.c)
ls -la $?
- may be used in the target, prerequisites, or in the wildcard function.
Danger: * may not be directly used in a variable definitions
Danger: When * matches no files, it is left as it is (unless run in the wildcard function)
thing_wrong := *.o # Don't do this! '*' will not get expanded thing_right := $(wildcard *.o)
all: one two three four
- Fails, because $(thing_wrong) is the string "*.o"
one: $(thing_wrong)
- Stays as *.o if there are no files that match this pattern :(
two: *.o
- Works as you would expect! In this case, it does nothing.
three: $(thing_right)
- Same as rule three
four: $(wildcard *.o)
% Wildcard
% is really useful, but is somewhat confusing because of the variety of situations it can be used in.
When used in "matching" mode, it matches one or more characters in a string. This match is called the stem. When used in "replacing" mode, it takes the stem that was matched and replaces that in a string. % is most often used in rule definitions and in some specific functions.
See these sections on examples of it being used:
Static Pattern Rules Pattern Rules String Substitution The vpath Directive
Automatic Variables
There are many automatic variables, but often only a few show up:
hey: one two
# Outputs "hey", since this is the first target echo $@
# Outputs all prerequisites newer than the target echo $?
# Outputs all prerequisites echo $^
touch hey
one:
touch one
two:
touch two
clean:
rm -f hey one two
Fancy Rules Static Pattern Rules
Make loves c compilation. And every time it expresses its love, things get confusing. Here's the syntax for a new type of rule called a static pattern:
targets ...: target-pattern: prereq-patterns ...
commands
The essence is that the given target is matched by the target-pattern (via a % wildcard). Whatever was matched is called the stem. The stem is then substituted into the prereq-pattern, to generate the target's prereqs.
A typical use case is to compile .c files into .o files. Here's the manual way:
objects = foo.o bar.o all.o all: $(objects)
- These files compile via implicit rules
foo.o: foo.c bar.o: bar.c all.o: all.c
all.c:
echo "int main() { return 0; }" > all.c
%.c:
touch $@
clean:
rm -f *.c *.o all
Here's the more efficient way, using a static pattern rule:
objects = foo.o bar.o all.o all: $(objects)
- These files compile via implicit rules
- Syntax - targets ...: target-pattern: prereq-patterns ...
- In the case of the first target, foo.o, the target-pattern matches foo.o and sets the "stem" to be "foo".
- It then replaces the '%' in prereq-patterns with that stem
$(objects): %.o: %.c
all.c:
echo "int main() { return 0; }" > all.c
%.c:
touch $@
clean:
rm -f *.c *.o all
Static Pattern Rules and Filter
While I introduce functions later on, I'll forshadow what you can do with them. The filter function can be used in Static pattern rules to match the correct files. In this example, I made up the .raw and .result extensions.
obj_files = foo.result bar.o lose.o src_files = foo.raw bar.c lose.c
all: $(obj_files)
$(filter %.o,$(obj_files)): %.o: %.c
echo "target: $@ prereq: $<"
$(filter %.result,$(obj_files)): %.result: %.raw
echo "target: $@ prereq: $<"
%.c %.raw:
touch $@
clean:
rm -f $(src_files)
Implicit Rules
Perhaps the most confusing part of make is the magic rules and variables that are made. Here's a list of implicit rules:
Compiling a C program: n.o is made automatically from n.c with a command of the form $(CC) -c $(CPPFLAGS) $(CFLAGS) Compiling a C++ program: n.o is made automatically from n.cc or n.cpp with a command of the form $(CXX) -c $(CPPFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS) Linking a single object file: n is made automatically from n.o by running the command $(CC) $(LDFLAGS) n.o $(LOADLIBES) $(LDLIBS)
As such, the important variables used by implicit rules are:
CC: Program for compiling C programs; default cc CXX: Program for compiling C++ programs; default G++ CFLAGS: Extra flags to give to the C compiler CXXFLAGS: Extra flags to give to the C++ compiler CPPFLAGS: Extra flags to give to the C preprocessor LDFLAGS: Extra flags to give to compilers when they are supposed to invoke the linker
CC = gcc # Flag for implicit rules CFLAGS = -g # Flag for implicit rules. Turn on debug info
- Implicit rule #1: blah is built via the C linker implicit rule
- Implicit rule #2: blah.o is built via the C compilation implicit rule, because blah.c exists
blah: blah.o
blah.c:
echo "int main() { return 0; }" > blah.c
clean:
rm -f blah*
Pattern Rules
Pattern rules are often used but quite confusing. You can look at them as two ways:
A way to define your own implicit rules A simpler form of static pattern rules
Let's start with an example first:
- Define a pattern rule that compiles every .c file into a .o file
%.o : %.c
$(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $< -o $@
Pattern rules contain a '%' in the target. This '%' matches any nonempty string, and the other characters match themselves. ‘%’ in a prerequisite of a pattern rule stands for the same stem that was matched by the ‘%’ in the target.
Here's another example:
- Define a pattern rule that has no pattern in the prerequisites.
- This just creates empty .c files when needed.
%.c:
touch $@
Double-Colon Rules
Double-Colon Rules are rarely used, but allow multiple rules to be defined for the same target. If these were single colons, a warning would be printed and only the second set of commands would run.
all: blah
blah::
echo "hello"
blah::
echo "hello again"
Commands and execution Command Echoing/Silencing
Add an @ before a command to stop it from being printed You can also run make with -s to add an @ before each line
all:
@echo "This make line will not be printed" echo "But this will"
Command Execution
Each command is run in a new shell (or at least the effect is as such)
all:
cd .. # The cd above does not affect this line, because each command is effectively run in a new shell echo `pwd`
# This cd command affects the next because they are on the same line cd ..;echo `pwd`
# Same as above cd ..; \ echo `pwd`
Default Shell
The default shell is /bin/sh. You can change this by changing the variable SHELL:
SHELL=/bin/bash
cool:
echo "Hello from bash"
Error handling with -k, -i, and -
Add -k when running make to continue running even in the face of errors. Helpful if you want to see all the errors of Make at once. Add a - before a command to suppress the error Add -i to make to have this happen for every command.
one:
# This error will be printed but ignored, and make will continue to run -false touch one
Interrupting or killing make
Note only: If you ctrl+c make, it will delete the newer targets it just made. Recursive use of make
To recursively call a makefile, use the special $(MAKE) instead of make because it will pass the make flags for you and won't itself be affected by them.
new_contents = "hello:\n\ttouch inside_file" all:
mkdir -p subdir printf $(new_contents) | sed -e 's/^ //' > subdir/makefile cd subdir && $(MAKE)
clean:
rm -rf subdir
Use export for recursive make
The export directive takes a variable and makes it accessible to sub-make commands. In this example, cooly is exported such that the makefile in subdir can use it.
Note: export has the same syntax as sh, but they aren't related (although similar in function)
new_contents = "hello:\n\\techo \$$(cooly)"
all:
mkdir -p subdir echo $(new_contents) | sed -e 's/^ //' > subdir/makefile @echo "---MAKEFILE CONTENTS---" @cd subdir && cat makefile @echo "---END MAKEFILE CONTENTS---" cd subdir && $(MAKE)
- Note that variables and exports. They are set/affected globally.
cooly = "The subdirectory can see me!" export cooly
- This would nullify the line above: unexport cooly
clean:
rm -rf subdir
You need to export variables to have them run in the shell as well.
one=this will only work locally export two=we can run subcommands with this
all:
@echo $(one) @echo $$one @echo $(two) @echo $$two
.EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES exports all variables for you.
.EXPORT_ALL_VARIABLES: new_contents = "hello:\n\techo \$$(cooly)"
cooly = "The subdirectory can see me!"
- This would nullify the line above: unexport cooly
all:
mkdir -p subdir echo $(new_contents) | sed -e 's/^ //' > subdir/makefile @echo "---MAKEFILE CONTENTS---" @cd subdir && cat makefile @echo "---END MAKEFILE CONTENTS---" cd subdir && $(MAKE)
clean:
rm -rf subdir
Arguments to make
There's a nice list of options that can be run from make. Check out --dry-run, --touch, --old-file.
You can have multiple targets to make, i.e. make clean run test runs the clean goal, then run, and then test. Variables Pt. 2 Flavors and modification
There are two flavors of variables:
recursive (use =) - only looks for the variables when the command is used, not when it's defined. simply expanded (use :=) - like normal imperative programming -- only those defined so far get expanded
- Recursive variable. This will print "later" below
one = one ${later_variable}
- Simply expanded variable. This will not print "later" below
two := two ${later_variable}
later_variable = later
all:
echo $(one) echo $(two)
Simply expanded (using :=) allows you to append to a variable. Recursive definitions will give an infinite loop error.
one = hello
- one gets defined as a simply expanded variable (:=) and thus can handle appending
one := ${one} there
all:
echo $(one)
?= only sets variables if they have not yet been set
one = hello one ?= will not be set two ?= will be set
all:
echo $(one) echo $(two)
Spaces at the end of a line are not stripped, but those at the start are. To make a variable with a single space, use $(nullstring)
with_spaces = hello # with_spaces has many spaces after "hello" after = $(with_spaces)there
nullstring = space = $(nullstring) # Make a variable with a single space.
all:
echo "$(after)" echo start"$(space)"end
An undefined variable is actually an empty string!
all:
# Undefined variables are just empty strings! echo $(nowhere)
Use += to append
foo := start foo += more
all:
echo $(foo)
String Substitution is also a really common and useful way to modify variables. Also check out Text Functions and Filename Functions. Command line arguments and override
You can override variables that come from the command line by using override. Here we ran make with make option_one=hi
- Overrides command line arguments
override option_one = did_override
- Does not override command line arguments
option_two = not_override all:
echo $(option_one) echo $(option_two)
List of commands and define
"define" is actually just a list of commands. It has nothing to do with being a function. Note here that it's a bit different than having a semi-colon between commands, because each is run in a separate shell, as expected.
one = export blah="I was set!"; echo $$blah
define two export blah=set echo $$blah endef
- One and two are different.
all:
@echo "This prints 'I was set'" @$(one) @echo "This does not print 'I was set' because each command runs in a separate shell" @$(two)
Target-specific variables
Variables can be assigned for specific targets
all: one = cool
all:
echo one is defined: $(one)
other:
echo one is nothing: $(one)
Pattern-specific variables
You can assign variables for specific target patterns
%.c: one = cool
blah.c:
echo one is defined: $(one)
other:
echo one is nothing: $(one)
Conditional part of Makefiles Conditional if/else
foo = ok
all: ifeq ($(foo), ok)
echo "foo equals ok"
else
echo "nope"
endif
Check if a variable is empty
nullstring = foo = $(nullstring) # end of line; there is a space here
all: ifeq ($(strip $(foo)),)
echo "foo is empty after being stripped"
endif ifeq ($(nullstring),)
echo "nullstring doesn't even have spaces"
endif
Check if a variable is defined
ifdef does not expand variable references; it just sees if something is defined at all
bar = foo = $(bar)
all: ifdef foo
echo "foo is defined"
endif ifdef bar
echo "but bar is not"
endif
$(makeflags)
This example shows you how to test make flags with findstring and MAKEFLAGS. Run this example with make -i to see it print out the echo statement.
bar = foo = $(bar)
all:
- Search for the "-i" flag. MAKEFLAGS is just a list of single characters, one per flag. So look for "i" in this case.
ifneq (,$(findstring i, $(MAKEFLAGS)))
echo "i was passed to MAKEFLAGS"
endif
Functions First Functions
Functions are mainly just for text processing. Call functions with $(fn, arguments) or ${fn, arguments}. You can make your own using the call builtin function. Make has a decent amount of builtin functions.
bar := ${subst not, totally, "I am not superman"} all:
@echo $(bar)
If you want to replace spaces or commas, use variables
comma := , empty:= space := $(empty) $(empty) foo := a b c bar := $(subst $(space),$(comma),$(foo))
all:
@echo $(bar)
Do NOT include spaces in the arguments after the first. That will be seen as part of the string.
comma := , empty:= space := $(empty) $(empty) foo := a b c bar := $(subst $(space), $(comma) , $(foo))
all:
# Output is ", a , b , c". Notice the spaces introduced @echo $(bar)
String Substitution
$(patsubst pattern,replacement,text) does the following:
"Finds whitespace-separated words in text that match pattern and replaces them with replacement. Here pattern may contain a ‘%’ which acts as a wildcard, matching any number of any characters within a word. If replacement also contains a ‘%’, the ‘%’ is replaced by the text that matched the ‘%’ in pattern. Only the first ‘%’ in the pattern and replacement is treated this way; any subsequent ‘%’ is unchanged." (GNU docs)
The substitution reference $(text:pattern=replacement) is a shorthand for this.
There's another shorthand that that replaces only suffixes: $(text:suffix=replacement). No % wildcard is used here.
Note: don't add extra spaces for this shorthand. It will be seen as a search or replacement term.
foo := a.o b.o l.a c.o one := $(patsubst %.o,%.c,$(foo))
- This is a shorthand for the above
two := $(foo:%.o=%.c)
- This is the suffix-only shorthand, and is also equivalent to the above.
three := $(foo:.o=.c)
all:
echo $(one) echo $(two) echo $(three)
The foreach function
The foreach function looks like this: $(foreach var,list,text). It converts one list of words (separated by spaces) to another. var is set to each word in list, and text is expanded for each word. This appends an exclamation after each word:
foo := who are you
- For each "word" in foo, output that same word with an exclamation after
bar := $(foreach wrd,$(foo),$(wrd)!)
all:
# Output is "who! are! you!" @echo $(bar)
The if function
if checks if the first argument is nonempty. If so runs the second argument, otherwise runs the third.
foo := $(if this-is-not-empty,then!,else!) empty := bar := $(if $(empty),then!,else!)
all:
@echo $(foo) @echo $(bar)
The call function
Make supports creating basic functions. You "define" the function just by creating a variable, but use the parameters $(0), $(1), etc. You then call the function with the special call function. The syntax is $(call variable,param,param). $(0) is the variable, while $(1), $(2), etc. are the params.
sweet_new_fn = Variable Name: $(0) First: $(1) Second: $(2) Empty Variable: $(3)
all:
# Outputs "Variable Name: sweet_new_fn First: go Second: tigers Empty Variable:" @echo $(call sweet_new_fn, go, tigers)
The shell function
shell - This calls the shell, but it replaces newlines with spaces!
all:
@echo $(shell ls -la) # Very ugly because the newlines are gone!
Other Features Include Makefiles
The include directive tells make to read one or more other makefiles. It's a line in the makefile makefile that looks like this:
include filenames...
This is particularly useful when you use compiler flags like -M that create Makefiles based on the source. For example, if some c files includes a header, that header will be added to a Makefile that's written by gcc. I talk about this more in the Makefile Cookbook The vpath Directive
Use vpath to specify where some set of prerequisites exist. The format is vpath <pattern> <directories, space/colon separated> <pattern> can have a %, which matches any zero or more characters. You can also do this globallyish with the variable VPATH
vpath %.h ../headers ../other-directory
some_binary: ../headers blah.h
touch some_binary
../headers:
mkdir ../headers
blah.h:
touch ../headers/blah.h
clean:
rm -rf ../headers rm -f some_binary
Multiline
The backslash ("\") character gives us the ability to use multiple lines when the commands are too long
some_file:
echo This line is too long, so \ it is broken up into multiple lines
.phony
Adding .PHONY to a target will prevent make from confusing the phony target with a file name. In this example, if the file clean is created, make clean will still be run. .PHONY is great to use, but I'll skip it in the rest of the examples for simplicity.
some_file:
touch some_file touch clean
.PHONY: clean clean:
rm -f some_file rm -f clean
.delete_on_error
The make tool will stop running a rule (and will propogate back to prerequisites) if a command returns a nonzero exit status. DELETE_ON_ERROR will delete the target of a rule if the rule fails in this manner. This will happen for all targets, not just the one it is before like PHONY. It's a good idea to always use this, even though make does not for historical reasons.
.DELETE_ON_ERROR: all: one two
one:
touch one false
two:
touch two false
Makefile Cookbook
Let's go through a really juicy Make example that works well for medium sized projects.
The neat thing about this makefile is it automatically determines dependencies for you. All you have to do is put your C/C++ files in the src/ folder.
- Thanks to Job Vranish (https://spin.atomicobject.com/2016/08/26/makefile-c-projects/)
TARGET_EXEC := final_program
BUILD_DIR := ./build SRC_DIRS := ./src
- Find all the C and C++ files we want to compile
SRCS := $(shell find $(SRC_DIRS) -name *.cpp -or -name *.c)
- String substitution for every C/C++ file.
- As an example, hello.cpp turns into ./build/hello.cpp.o
OBJS := $(SRCS:%=$(BUILD_DIR)/%.o)
- String substitution (suffix version without %).
- As an example, ./build/hello.cpp.o turns into ./build/hello.cpp.d
DEPS := $(OBJS:.o=.d)
- Every folder in ./src will need to be passed to GCC so that it can find header files
INC_DIRS := $(shell find $(SRC_DIRS) -type d)
- Add a prefix to INC_DIRS. So moduleA would become -ImoduleA. GCC understands this -I flag
INC_FLAGS := $(addprefix -I,$(INC_DIRS))
- The -MMD and -MP flags together generate Makefiles for us!
- These files will have .d instead of .o as the output.
CPPFLAGS := $(INC_FLAGS) -MMD -MP
- The final build step.
$(BUILD_DIR)/$(TARGET_EXEC): $(OBJS)
$(CC) $(OBJS) -o $@ $(LDFLAGS)
- Build step for C source
$(BUILD_DIR)/%.c.o: %.c
mkdir -p $(dir $@) $(CC) $(CPPFLAGS) $(CFLAGS) -c $< -o $@
- Build step for C++ source
$(BUILD_DIR)/%.cpp.o: %.cpp
mkdir -p $(dir $@) $(CXX) $(CPPFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS) -c $< -o $@
.PHONY: clean
clean:
rm -r $(BUILD_DIR)
- Include the .d makefiles. The - at the front suppresses the errors of missing
- Makefiles. Initially, all the .d files will be missing, and we don't want those
- errors to show up.
-include $(DEPS)