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- .TH MK 1
- .SH NAME
- mk, membername \- maintain (make) related files
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .B mk
- [
- .B -f
- .I mkfile
- ] ...
- [
- .I option ...
- ]
- [
- .I target ...
- ]
- .PP
- .B membername
- .I aggregate ...
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- .I Mk
- uses the dependency rules specified in
- .I mkfile
- to control the update (usually by compilation) of
- .I targets
- (usually files)
- from the source files upon which they depend.
- The
- .I mkfile
- (default
- .LR mkfile )
- contains a
- .I rule
- for each target that identifies the files and other
- targets upon which it depends and an
- .IR rc (1)
- script, a
- .IR recipe ,
- to update the target.
- The script is run if the target does not exist
- or if it is older than any of the files it depends on.
- .I Mkfile
- may also contain
- .I meta-rules
- that define actions for updating implicit targets.
- If no
- .I target
- is specified, the target of the first rule (not meta-rule) in
- .I mkfile
- is updated.
- .PP
- The environment variable
- .B $NPROC
- determines how many targets may be updated simultaneously;
- Plan 9 sets
- .B $NPROC
- automatically to the number of CPUs on the current machine.
- .PP
- Options are:
- .TP \w'\fL-d[egp]\ 'u
- .B -a
- Assume all targets to be out of date.
- Thus, everything is updated.
- .PD 0
- .TP
- .BR -d [ egp ]
- Produce debugging output
- .RB ( p
- is for parsing,
- .B g
- for graph building,
- .B e
- for execution).
- .TP
- .B -e
- Explain why each target is made.
- .TP
- .B -i
- Force any missing intermediate targets to be made.
- .TP
- .B -k
- Do as much work as possible in the face of errors.
- .TP
- .B -n
- Print, but do not execute, the commands
- needed to update the targets.
- .TP
- .B -s
- Make the command line arguments sequentially rather than in parallel.
- .TP
- .B -t
- Touch (update the modified date of) file targets, without
- executing any recipes.
- .TP
- .BI -w target1 , target2,...
- Pretend the modify time for each
- .I target
- is the current time; useful in conjunction with
- .B -n
- to learn what updates would be triggered by
- modifying the
- .IR targets .
- .PD
- .PP
- The
- .IR rc (1)
- script
- .I membername
- extracts member names
- (see `Aggregates' below)
- from its arguments.
- .SS The \fLmkfile\fP
- A
- .I mkfile
- consists of
- .I assignments
- (described under `Environment') and
- .IR rules .
- A rule contains
- .I targets
- and a
- .IR tail .
- A target is a literal string
- and is normally a file name.
- The tail contains zero or more
- .I prerequisites
- and an optional
- .IR recipe ,
- which is an
- .B rc
- script.
- Each line of the recipe must begin with white space.
- A rule takes the form
- .IP
- .EX
- target: prereq1 prereq2
- rc \f2recipe using\fP prereq1, prereq2 \f2to build\fP target
- .EE
- .PP
- When the recipe is executed,
- the first character on every line is elided.
- .PP
- After the colon on the target line, a rule may specify
- .IR attributes ,
- described below.
- .PP
- A
- .I meta-rule
- has a target of the form
- .IB A % B
- where
- .I A
- and
- .I B
- are (possibly empty) strings.
- A meta-rule acts as a rule for any potential target whose
- name matches
- .IB A % B
- with
- .B %
- replaced by an arbitrary string, called the
- .IR stem .
- In interpreting a meta-rule,
- the stem is substituted for all occurrences of
- .B %
- in the prerequisite names.
- In the recipe of a meta-rule, the environment variable
- .B $stem
- contains the string matched by the
- .BR % .
- For example, a meta-rule to compile a C program using
- .IR 2c (1)
- might be:
- .IP
- .EX
- %: %.c
- 2c $stem.c
- 2l -o $stem $stem.2
- .EE
- .PP
- Meta-rules may contain an ampersand
- .B &
- rather than a percent sign
- .BR % .
- A
- .B %
- matches a maximal length string of any characters;
- an
- .B &
- matches a maximal length string of any characters except period
- or slash.
- .PP
- The text of the
- .I mkfile
- is processed as follows.
- Lines beginning with
- .B <
- followed by a file name are replaced by the contents of the named
- file.
- Lines beginning with
- .B "<|"
- followed by a file name are replaced by the output
- of the execution of the named
- file.
- Blank lines and comments, which run from unquoted
- .B #
- characters to the following newline, are deleted.
- The character sequence backslash-newline is deleted,
- so long lines in
- .I mkfile
- may be folded.
- Non-recipe lines are processed by substituting for
- .BI `{ command }
- the output of the
- .I command
- when run by
- .IR rc .
- References to variables are replaced by the variables' values.
- Special characters may be quoted using single quotes
- .BR \&''
- as in
- .IR rc (1).
- .PP
- Assignments and rules are distinguished by
- the first unquoted occurrence of
- .B :
- (rule)
- or
- .B =
- (assignment).
- .PP
- A later rule may modify or override an existing rule under the
- following conditions:
- .TP
- \-
- If the targets of the rules exactly match and one rule
- contains only a prerequisite clause and no recipe, the
- clause is added to the prerequisites of the other rule.
- If either or both targets are virtual, the recipe is
- always executed.
- .TP
- \-
- If the targets of the rules match exactly and the
- prerequisites do not match and both rules
- contain recipes,
- .I mk
- reports an ``ambiguous recipe'' error.
- .TP
- \-
- If the target and prerequisites of both rules match exactly,
- the second rule overrides the first.
- .SS Environment
- Rules may make use of
- .B rc
- environment variables.
- A legal reference of the form
- .B $OBJ
- is expanded as in
- .IR rc (1).
- A reference of the form
- .BI ${name: A % B = C\fL%\fID\fL}\fR,
- where
- .I A, B, C, D
- are (possibly empty) strings,
- has the value formed by expanding
- .B $name
- and substituting
- .I C
- for
- .I A
- and
- .I D
- for
- .I B
- in each word in
- .B $name
- that matches pattern
- .IB A % B\f1.
- .PP
- Variables can be set by
- assignments of the form
- .I
- var\fL=\fR[\fIattr\fL=\fR]\fIvalue\fR
- .br
- Blanks in the
- .I value
- break it into words, as in
- .I rc
- but without the surrounding parentheses.
- Such variables are exported
- to the environment of
- recipes as they are executed, unless
- .BR U ,
- the only legal attribute
- .IR attr ,
- is present.
- The initial value of a variable is
- taken from (in increasing order of precedence)
- the default values below,
- .I mk's
- environment, the
- .IR mkfiles ,
- and any command line assignment as an argument to
- .IR mk .
- A variable assignment argument overrides the first (but not any subsequent)
- assignment to that variable.
- .PP
- The variable
- .B MKFLAGS
- contains all the option arguments (arguments starting with
- .L -
- or containing
- .LR = )
- and
- .B MKARGS
- contains all the targets in the call to
- .IR mk .
- .PP
- It is recommended that mkfiles start with
- .IP
- .EX
- </$objtype/mkfile
- .EE
- .PP
- to set
- .BR CC ,
- .BR LD ,
- .BR AS ,
- .BR O ,
- .BR YACC ,
- and
- .B MK
- to values appropriate to the target architecture (see the examples below).
- .SS Execution
- .PP
- During execution,
- .I mk
- determines which targets must be updated, and in what order,
- to build the
- .I names
- specified on the command line.
- It then runs the associated recipes.
- .PP
- A target is considered up to date if it has no prerequisites or
- if all its prerequisites are up to date and it is newer
- than all its prerequisites.
- Once the recipe for a target has executed, the target is
- considered up to date.
- .PP
- The date stamp
- used to determine if a target is up to date is computed
- differently for different types of targets.
- If a target is
- .I virtual
- (the target of a rule with the
- .B V
- attribute),
- its date stamp is initially zero; when the target is
- updated the date stamp is set to
- the most recent date stamp of its prerequisites.
- Otherwise, if a target does not exist as a file,
- its date stamp is set to the most recent date stamp of its prerequisites,
- or zero if it has no prerequisites.
- Otherwise, the target is the name of a file and
- the target's date stamp is always that file's modification date.
- The date stamp is computed when the target is needed in
- the execution of a rule; it is not a static value.
- .PP
- Nonexistent targets that have prerequisites
- and are themselves prerequisites are treated specially.
- Such a target
- .I t
- is given the date stamp of its most recent prerequisite
- and if this causes all the targets which have
- .I t
- as a prerequisite to be up to date,
- .I t
- is considered up to date.
- Otherwise,
- .I t
- is made in the normal fashion.
- The
- .B -i
- flag overrides this special treatment.
- .PP
- Files may be made in any order that respects
- the preceding restrictions.
- .PP
- A recipe is executed by supplying the recipe as standard input to
- the command
- .B
- /bin/rc -e -I
- .br
- (the
- .B -e
- is omitted if the
- .B E
- attribute is set).
- The environment is augmented by the following variables:
- .TP 14
- .B $alltarget
- all the targets of this rule.
- .TP
- .B $newprereq
- the prerequisites that caused this rule to execute.
- .TP
- .B $newmember
- the prerequisites that are members of an aggregate
- that caused this rule to execute.
- When the prerequisites of a rule are members of an
- aggregate,
- .B $newprereq
- contains the name of the aggregate and out of date
- members, while
- .B $newmember
- contains only the name of the members.
- .TP
- .B $nproc
- the process slot for this recipe.
- It satisfies
- .RB 0≤ $nproc < $NPROC .
- .TP
- .B $pid
- the process id for the
- .I mk
- executing the recipe.
- .TP
- .B $prereq
- all the prerequisites for this rule.
- .TP
- .B $stem
- if this is a meta-rule,
- .B $stem
- is the string that matched
- .B %
- or
- .BR & .
- Otherwise, it is empty.
- For regular expression meta-rules (see below), the variables
- .LR stem0 ", ...,"
- .L stem9
- are set to the corresponding subexpressions.
- .TP
- .B $target
- the targets for this rule that need to be remade.
- .PP
- These variables are available only during the execution of a recipe,
- not while evaluating the
- .IR mkfile .
- .PP
- Unless the rule has the
- .B Q
- attribute,
- the recipe is printed prior to execution
- with recognizable environment variables expanded.
- Commands returning nonempty status (see
- .IR intro (1))
- cause
- .I mk
- to terminate.
- .PP
- Recipes and backquoted
- .B rc
- commands in places such as assignments
- execute in a copy of
- .I mk's
- environment; changes they make to
- environment variables are not visible from
- .IR mk .
- .PP
- Variable substitution in a rule is done when
- the rule is read; variable substitution in the recipe is done
- when the recipe is executed. For example:
- .IP
- .EX
- bar=a.c
- foo: $bar
- $CC -o foo $bar
- bar=b.c
- .EE
- .PP
- will compile
- .B b.c
- into
- .BR foo ,
- if
- .B a.c
- is newer than
- .BR foo .
- .SS Aggregates
- Names of the form
- .IR a ( b )
- refer to member
- .I b
- of the aggregate
- .IR a .
- Currently, the only aggregates supported are
- .IR ar (1)
- archives.
- .SS Attributes
- The colon separating the target from the prerequisites
- may be
- immediately followed by
- .I attributes
- and another colon.
- The attributes are:
- .TP
- .B D
- If the recipe exits with a non-null status, the target is deleted.
- .TP
- .B E
- Continue execution if the recipe draws errors.
- .TP
- .B N
- If there is no recipe, the target has its time updated.
- .TP
- .B n
- The rule is a meta-rule that cannot be a target of a virtual rule.
- Only files match the pattern in the target.
- .TP
- .B P
- The characters after the
- .B P
- until the terminating
- .B :
- are taken as a program name.
- It will be invoked as
- .B "rc -c prog 'arg1' 'arg2'"
- and should return a null exit status
- if and only if arg1 is up to date with respect to arg2.
- Date stamps are still propagated in the normal way.
- .TP
- .B Q
- The recipe is not printed prior to execution.
- .TP
- .B R
- The rule is a meta-rule using regular expressions.
- In the rule,
- .B %
- has no special meaning.
- The target is interpreted as a regular expression as defined in
- .IR regexp (6).
- The prerequisites may contain references
- to subexpressions in form
- .BI \e n\f1,
- as in the substitute command of
- .IR sam (1).
- .TP
- .B U
- The targets are considered to have been updated
- even if the recipe did not do so.
- .TP
- .B V
- The targets of this rule are marked as virtual.
- They are distinct from files of the same name.
- .PD
- .SH EXAMPLES
- A simple mkfile to compile a program:
- .IP
- .EX
- .ta 8n +8n +8n +8n +8n +8n +8n
- </$objtype/mkfile
- prog: a.$O b.$O c.$O
- $LD $LDFLAGS -o $target $prereq
- %.$O: %.c
- $CC $CFLAGS $stem.c
- .EE
- .PP
- Override flag settings in the mkfile:
- .IP
- .EX
- % mk target 'CFLAGS=-S -w'
- .EE
- .PP
- Maintain a library:
- .IP
- .EX
- libc.a(%.$O):N: %.$O
- libc.a: libc.a(abs.$O) libc.a(access.$O) libc.a(alarm.$O) ...
- ar r libc.a $newmember
- .EE
- .PP
- String expression variables to derive names from a master list:
- .IP
- .EX
- NAMES=alloc arc bquote builtins expand main match mk var word
- OBJ=${NAMES:%=%.$O}
- .EE
- .PP
- Regular expression meta-rules:
- .IP
- .EX
- ([^/]*)/(.*)\e.$O:R: \e1/\e2.c
- cd $stem1; $CC $CFLAGS $stem2.c
- .EE
- .PP
- A correct way to deal with
- .IR yacc (1)
- grammars.
- The file
- .B lex.c
- includes the file
- .B x.tab.h
- rather than
- .B y.tab.h
- in order to reflect changes in content, not just modification time.
- .IP
- .EX
- lex.$O: x.tab.h
- x.tab.h: y.tab.h
- cmp -s x.tab.h y.tab.h || cp y.tab.h x.tab.h
- y.tab.c y.tab.h: gram.y
- $YACC -d gram.y
- .EE
- .PP
- The above example could also use the
- .B P
- attribute for the
- .B x.tab.h
- rule:
- .IP
- .EX
- x.tab.h:Pcmp -s: y.tab.h
- cp y.tab.h x.tab.h
- .EE
- .SH SOURCE
- .B /sys/src/cmd/mk
- .SH SEE ALSO
- .IR rc (1),
- .IR regexp (6)
- .PP
- A. Hume,
- ``Mk: a Successor to Make''.
- .PP
- Andrew G. Hume and Bob Flandrena,
- ``Maintaining Files on Plan 9 with Mk''.
- .SH BUGS
- Identical recipes for regular expression meta-rules only have one target.
- .PP
- Seemingly appropriate input like
- .B CFLAGS=-DHZ=60
- is parsed as an erroneous attribute; correct it by inserting
- a space after the first
- .LR = .
- .PP
- The recipes printed by
- .I mk
- before being passed to
- .I rc
- for execution are sometimes erroneously expanded
- for printing. Don't trust what's printed; rely
- on what
- .I rc
- does.
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