NAME¶
imake - C preprocessor interface to the make utility
SYNOPSIS¶
imake [
-Ddefine ] [
-Idir ] [
-Udefine ] [
-Ttemplate ] [
-f
filename ] [
-C filename ] [
-s filename ]
[
-e ] [
-v ]
DESCRIPTION¶
Imake is used to generate
Makefiles from a template, a set of
cpp macro functions, and a per-directory input file called an
Imakefile. This allows machine dependencies (such as compiler options,
alternate command names, and special
make rules) to be kept separate
from the descriptions of the various items to be built.
OPTIONS¶
The following command line options may be passed to
imake:
- -Ddefine
- This option is passed directly to cpp. It is
typically used to set directory-specific variables. For example, the X
Window System used this flag to set TOPDIR to the name of the
directory containing the top of the core distribution and CURDIR to
the name of the current directory, relative to the top.
- -Idirectory
- This option is passed directly to cpp. It is
typically used to indicate the directory in which the imake
template and configuration files may be found.
- -Udefine
- This option is passed directly to cpp. It is
typically used to unset variables when debugging imake
configuration files.
- -Ttemplate
- This option specifies the name of the master template file
(which is usually located in the directory specified with -I) used
by cpp. The default is Imake.tmpl.
- -f filename
- This option specifies the name of the per-directory input
file. The default is Imakefile.
- -C filename
- This option specifies the name of the .c file that is
constructed in the current directory. The default is
Imakefile.c.
- -s filename
- This option specifies the name of the make
description file to be generated but make should not be invoked. If
the filename is a dash (-), the output is written to stdout.
The default is to generate, but not execute, a Makefile.
- -e
- This option indicates the imake should execute the
generated Makefile. The default is to leave this to the user.
- -v
- This option indicates that imake should print the
cpp command line that it is using to generate the
Makefile.
HOW IT WORKS¶
Imake invokes
cpp with any
-I or
-D flags passed on
the command line and passes the name of a file containing the following 3
lines:
#define IMAKE_TEMPLATE "Imake.tmpl"
#define INCLUDE_IMAKEFILE <Imakefile>
#include IMAKE_TEMPLATE
where
Imake.tmpl and
Imakefile may be overridden by the
-T
and
-f command options, respectively.
The IMAKE_TEMPLATE typically reads in a file containing machine-dependent
parameters (specified as
cpp symbols), a site-specific parameters file,
a file defining variables, a file containing
cpp macro functions for
generating
make rules, and finally the
Imakefile (specified by
INCLUDE_IMAKEFILE) in the current directory. The
Imakefile uses the
macro functions to indicate what targets should be built;
imake takes
care of generating the appropriate rules.
Imake configuration files contain two types of variables, imake variables
and make variables. The imake variables are interpreted by cpp when
imake is run. By convention they are mixed case. The make variables are
written into the
Makefile for later interpretation by
make. By
convention make variables are upper case.
The rules file (usually named
Imake.rules in the configuration directory)
contains a variety of
cpp macro functions that are configured according
to the current platform.
Imake replaces any occurrences of the string
``@@'' with a newline to allow macros that generate more than one line of
make rules. For example, the macro
#define program_target(program, objlist) @@\
program: objlist @@\
$(CC) -o $@ objlist $(LDFLAGS)
when called with
program_target(foo, foo1.o foo2.o) will expand to
foo: foo1.o foo2.o
$(CC) -o $@ foo1.o foo2.o $(LDFLAGS)
Imake also replaces any occurrences of the word ``XCOMM'' with the
character ``#'' to permit placing comments in the Makefile without causing
``invalid directive'' errors from the preprocessor.
Some complex
imake macros require generated
make variables local
to each invocation of the macro, often because their value depends on
parameters passed to the macro. Such variables can be created by using an
imake variable of the form
XVARdefn, where
n is a
single digit. A unique
make variable will be substituted. Later
occurrences of the variable
XVARusen will be replaced by the
variable created by the corresponding
XVARdefn.
On systems whose
cpp reduces multiple tabs and spaces to a single space,
imake attempts to put back any necessary tabs (
make is very
picky about the difference between tabs and spaces). For this reason, colons
(:) in command lines must be preceded by a backslash (\).
USE WITH THE X WINDOW SYSTEM¶
The X Window System used
imake extensively up through the X11R6.9
release, for both full builds within the source tree and external software. X
has since moved to GNU autoconf and automake for its build system in X11R7.0
and later releases, but still maintains imake for building existing external
software programs that have not yet converted.
As mentioned above, two special variables,
TOPDIR and
CURDIR, are
set to make referencing files using relative path names easier. For example,
the following command is generated automatically to build the
Makefile
in the directory
lib/X/ (relative to the top of the sources):
% ../.././config/imake -I../.././config \
-DTOPDIR=../../. -DCURDIR=./lib/X
When building X programs outside the source tree, a special symbol
UseInstalled is defined and
TOPDIR and
CURDIR are
omitted. If the configuration files have been properly installed, the script
xmkmf(1) may be used.
Here is a summary of the files read by
imake as used by X. The
indentation shows what files include what other files.
Imake.tmpl generic variables
site.def site-specific, BeforeVendorCF defined
*.cf machine-specific
*Lib.rules shared library rules
site.def site-specific, AfterVendorCF defined
Imake.rules rules
Project.tmpl X-specific variables
*Lib.tmpl shared library variables
Imakefile
Library.tmpl library rules
Server.tmpl server rules
Threads.tmpl multi-threaded rules
Note that
site.def gets included twice, once before the
*.cf file
and once after. Although most site customizations should be specified after
the
*.cf file, some, such as the choice of compiler, need to be
specified before, because other variable settings may depend on them.
The first time
site.def is included, the variable BeforeVendorCF is
defined, and the second time, the variable AfterVendorCF is defined. All code
in
site.def should be inside an #ifdef for one of these symbols.
FILES¶
Imakefile.c temporary input file for cpp
/tmp/Imf.XXXXXX temporary Makefile for -s
/tmp/IIf.XXXXXX temporary Imakefile if specified Imakefile uses # comments
/usr/bin/cpp default C preprocessor
SEE ALSO¶
make(1),
xmkmf(1)
Paul DuBois,
imake-Related Software and Documentation,
http://www.snake.net/software/imake-stuff/
Paul DuBois,
Software Portability with imake, Second Edition, O'Reilly
& Associates, 1996.
S. I. Feldman,
Make — A Program for Maintaining Computer Programs
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES¶
The following environment variables may be set, however their use is not
recommended as they introduce dependencies that are not readily apparent when
imake is run:
- IMAKEINCLUDE
- If defined, this specifies a ``-I'' include argument to
pass to the C preprocessor. E.g., ``-I/usr/X11/config''.
- IMAKECPP
- If defined, this should be a valid path to a preprocessor
program. E.g., ``/usr/local/cpp''. By default, imake will use cc -E
or /usr/bin/cpp, depending on the OS specific configuration.
- IMAKEMAKE
- If defined, this should be a valid path to a make program,
such as ``/usr/local/make''. By default, imake will use whatever
make program is found using execvp(3). This variable is only
used if the ``-e'' option is specified.
AUTHOR¶
Todd Brunhoff, Tektronix and MIT Project Athena; Jim Fulton, MIT X
Consortium