1 Port of GNU Make to 32-bit protected mode on MSDOS and MS-Windows.
3 Builds with DJGPP v2 port of GNU C/C++ compiler and utilities.
6 New (since 3.74) DOS-specific features:
8 1. Supports long filenames when run from DOS box on Windows 9x.
10 2. Supports both stock DOS COMMAND.COM and Unix-style shells
11 (details in ``Notes'' below).
13 3. Supports DOS drive letters in dependencies and pattern rules.
15 4. Better support for DOS-style backslashes in pathnames (but see
18 5. The $(shell) built-in can run arbitrary complex commands,
19 including pipes and redirection, even when COMMAND.COM is your
22 6. Can be built without floating-point code (see below).
24 7. Supports signals in child programs and restores the original
25 directory if the child was interrupted.
27 8. Can be built without (a previous version of) Make.
29 9. The build process requires only standard tools. (Optional
30 targets like "install:" and "clean:" still need additional
31 programs, though, see below.)
33 10. Beginning with v3.78, the test suite works in the DJGPP
34 environment (requires Perl and auxiliary tools; see below).
37 To install a binary distribution:
39 Simply unzip the makNNNb.zip file (where NNN is the version number)
40 preserving the directory structure (-d switch if you use PKUNZIP).
41 If you are installing Make on Windows 9X or Windows 2000, use an
42 unzip program that supports long filenames in zip files. After
43 unzipping, make sure the directory with make.exe is on your PATH,
44 and that's all you need to use Make.
47 To build from sources:
49 1. Unzip the archive, preserving the directory structure (-d switch
50 if you use PKUNZIP). If you build Make on Windows 9X or Windows
51 2000, use an unzip program that supports long filenames in zip
54 If you are unpacking an official GNU source distribution, use
55 either DJTAR (which is part of the DJGPP development
56 environment), or the DJGPP port of GNU Tar.
58 2. Invoke the `configure.bat' batch file.
60 If you are building Make in-place, i.e. in the same directory
61 where its sources are kept, just type "configure.bat" and press
62 [Enter]. Otherwise, you need to supply the path to the source
63 directory as an argument to the batch file, like this:
65 c:\djgpp\gnu\make-3.80\configure.bat c:/djgpp/gnu/make-3.80
67 Note the forward slashes in the source path argument: you MUST
70 3. If configure.bat doesn't find a working Make, it will suggest to
71 use the `dosbuild.bat' batch file to build Make. Either do as it
72 suggests or install another Make program (a pre-compiled binary
73 should be available from the usual DJGPP sites) and rerun
76 4. If you will need to run Make on machines without an FPU, you
77 might consider building a version of Make which doesn't issue
78 floating-point instructions (they don't help much on MSDOS
79 anyway). To this end, edit the Makefile created by
80 configure.bat and add -DNO_FLOAT to the value of CPPFLAGS.
84 If you are building from outside of the source directory, you
85 need to tell Make where the sources are, like this:
87 make srcdir=c:/djgpp/gnu/make-3.80
89 (configure.bat will tell you this when it finishes). You MUST
90 use a full, not relative, name of the source directory here, or
93 6. After Make finishes, if you have a Unix-style shell installed,
94 you can use the `install' target to install the package. You
95 will also need GNU Fileutils and GNU Sed for this (they should
96 be available from the DJGPP sites).
98 By default, GNU make will install into your DJGPP installation
99 area. If you wish to use a different directory, override the
100 DESTDIR variable when invoking "make install", like this:
102 make install DESTDIR=c:/other/dir
104 This causes the make executable to be placed in c:/other/dir/bin,
105 the man pages in c:/other/dir/man, etc.
107 Without a Unix-style shell, you will have to install programs
108 and the docs manually. Copy make.exe to a directory on your
109 PATH, make.i* info files to your Info directory, and update the
110 file `dir' in your Info directory by adding the following item
113 * Make: (make.info). The GNU make utility.
115 If you have the `install-info' program (from the GNU Texinfo
116 package), it will do that for you if you invoke it like this:
118 install-info --info-dir=c:/djgpp/info c:/djgpp/info/make.info
120 (If your Info directory is other than C:\DJGPP\INFO, change this
121 command accordingly.)
123 7. The `clean' targets also require Unix-style shell, and GNU Sed
124 and `rm' programs (the latter from Fileutils).
126 8. To run the test suite, type "make check". This requires a Unix
127 shell (I used the DJGPP port of Bash 2.03), Perl, Sed, Fileutils
136 This is probably the most significant improvement, first
137 introduced in the port of GNU Make 3.75.
139 The original behavior of GNU Make is to invoke commands
140 directly, as long as they don't include characters special to
141 the shell or internal shell commands, because that is faster.
142 When shell features like redirection or filename wildcards are
143 involved, Make calls the shell.
145 This port supports both DOS shells (the stock COMMAND.COM and its
146 4DOS/NDOS replacements), and Unix-style shells (tested with the
147 venerable Stewartson's `ms_sh' 2.3 and the DJGPP port of `bash' by
148 Daisuke Aoyama <jack@st.rim.or.jp>).
150 When the $SHELL variable points to a Unix-style shell, Make
151 works just like you'd expect on Unix, calling the shell for any
152 command that involves characters special to the shell or
153 internal shell commands. The only difference is that, since
154 there is no standard way to pass command lines longer than the
155 infamous DOS 126-character limit, this port of Make writes the
156 command line to a temporary disk file and then invokes the shell
159 If $SHELL points to a DOS-style shell, however, Make will not
160 call it automatically, as it does with Unix shells. Stock
161 COMMAND.COM is too dumb and would unnecessarily limit the
162 functionality of Make. For example, you would not be able to
163 use long command lines in commands that use redirection or
164 pipes. Therefore, when presented with a DOS shell, this port of
165 Make will emulate most of the shell functionality, like
166 redirection and pipes, and shall only call the shell when a
167 batch file or a command internal to the shell is invoked. (Even
168 when a command is an internal shell command, Make will first
169 search the $PATH for it, so that if a Makefile calls `mkdir',
170 you can install, say, a port of GNU `mkdir' and have it called
173 The key to all this is the extended functionality of `spawn' and
174 `system' functions from the DJGPP library; this port just calls
175 `system' where it would invoke the shell on Unix. The most
176 important aspect of these functions is that they use a special
177 mechanism to pass long (up to 16KB) command lines to DJGPP
178 programs. In addition, `system' emulates some internal
179 commands, like `cd' (so that you can now use forward slashes
180 with it, and can also change the drive if the directory is on
181 another drive). Another aspect worth mentioning is that you can
182 call Unix shell scripts directly, provided that the shell whose
183 name is mentioned on the first line of the script is installed
184 anywhere along the $PATH. It is impossible to tell here
185 everything about these functions; refer to the DJGPP library
186 reference for more details.
188 The $(shell) built-in is implemented in this port by calling
189 `popen'. Since `popen' calls `system', the above considerations
190 are valid for $(shell) as well. In particular, you can put
191 arbitrary complex commands, including pipes and redirection,
192 inside $(shell), which is in many cases a valid substitute for
193 the Unix-style command substitution (`command`) feature.
196 2. "SHELL=/bin/sh" -- or is it?
198 Many Unix Makefiles include a line which sets the SHELL, for
199 those versions of Make which don't have this as the default.
200 Since many DOS systems don't have `sh' installed (in fact, most
201 of them don't even have a `/bin' directory), this port takes
202 such directives with a grain of salt. It will only honor such a
203 directive if the basename of the shell name (like `sh' in the
204 above example) can indeed be found in the directory that is
205 mentioned in the SHELL= line (`/bin' in the above example), or
206 in the current working directory, or anywhere on the $PATH (in
207 that order). If the basename doesn't include a filename
208 extension, Make will look for any known extension that indicates
209 an executable file (.exe, .com, .bat, .btm, .sh, and even .sed
210 and .pl). If any such file is found, then $SHELL will be
211 defined to the exact pathname of that file, and that shell will
212 hence be used for the rest of processing. But if the named
213 shell is *not* found, the line which sets it will be effectively
214 ignored, leaving the value of $SHELL as it was before. Since a
215 lot of decisions that this port makes depend on the gender of
216 the shell, I feel it doesn't make any sense to tailor Make's
217 behavior to a shell which is nowhere to be found.
219 Note that the above special handling of "SHELL=" only happens
220 for Makefiles; if you set $SHELL in the environment or on the
221 Make command line, you are expected to give the complete
222 pathname of the shell, including the filename extension.
224 The default value of $SHELL is computed as on Unix (see the Make
225 manual for details), except that if $SHELL is not defined in the
226 environment, $COMSPEC is used. Also, if an environment variable
227 named $MAKESHELL is defined, it takes precedence over both
228 $COMSPEC and $SHELL. Note that, unlike Unix, $SHELL in the
229 environment *is* used to set the shell (since on MSDOS, it's
230 unlikely that the interactive shell will not be suitable for
231 Makefile processing).
233 The bottom line is that you can now write Makefiles where some
234 of the targets require a real (i.e. Unix-like) shell, which will
235 nevertheless work when such shell is not available (provided, of
236 course, that the commands which should always work, don't
237 require such a shell). More important, you can convert Unix
238 Makefiles to MSDOS and leave the line which sets the shell
239 intact, so that people who do have Unixy shell could use it for
240 targets which aren't converted to DOS (like `install' and
241 `uninstall', for example).
244 3. Default directories.
246 GNU Make knows about standard directories where it searches for
247 library and include files mentioned in the Makefile. Since
248 MSDOS machines don't have standard places for these, this port
249 will search ${DJDIR}/lib and ${DJDIR}/include respectively.
250 $DJDIR is defined automatically by the DJGPP startup code as the
251 root of the DJGPP installation tree (unless you've tampered with
252 the DJGPP.ENV file). This should provide reasonable default
253 values, unless you moved parts of DJGPP to other directories.
256 4. Letter-case in filenames.
258 If you run Make on Windows 9x, you should be aware of the
259 letter-case issue. Make is internally case-sensitive, but all
260 file operations are case-insensitive on Windows 9x, so
261 e.g. files `FAQ', `faq' and `Faq' all refer to the same file, as
262 far as Windows is concerned. The underlying DJGPP C library
263 functions honor the letter-case of the filenames they get from
264 the OS, except that by default, they down-case 8+3 DOS filenames
265 which are stored in upper case in the directory and would break
266 many Makefiles otherwise. (The details of which filenames are
267 converted to lower case are explained in the DJGPP libc docs,
268 under the `_preserve_fncase' and `_lfn_gen_short_fname'
269 functions, but as a thumb rule, any filename that is stored in
270 upper case in the directory, is a valid DOS 8+3 filename and
271 doesn't include characters invalid on MSDOS FAT filesystems,
272 will be automatically down-cased.) User reports that I have
273 indicate that this default behavior is generally what you'd
274 expect; however, your input is most welcome.
276 In any case, if you hit a situation where you must force Make to
277 get the 8+3 DOS filenames in upper case, set FNCASE=y in the
278 environment or in the Makefile.
281 5. DOS-style pathnames.
283 There are a lot of places throughout the program sources which
284 make implicit assumptions about the pathname syntax. In
285 particular, the directories are assumed to be separated by `/',
286 and any pathname which doesn't begin with a `/' is assumed to be
287 relative to the current directory. This port attempts to
288 support DOS-style pathnames which might include the drive letter
289 and use backslashes instead of forward slashes. However, this
290 support is not complete; I feel that pursuing this support too
291 far might break some more important features, particularly if
292 you use a Unix-style shell (where a backslash is a quote
293 character). I only consider support of backslashes desirable
294 because some Makefiles invoke non-DJGPP programs which don't
295 understand forward slashes. A notable example of such programs
296 is the standard programs which come with MSDOS. Otherwise, you
297 are advised to stay away from backslashes whenever possible. In
298 particular, filename globbing won't work on pathnames with
299 backslashes, because the GNU `glob' library doesn't support them
300 (backslash is special in filename wildcards, and I didn't want
303 One feature which *does* work with backslashes is the filename-
304 related built-in functions such as $(dir), $(notdir), etc.
305 Drive letters in pathnames are also fully supported.
312 Bugs that are clearly related to the MSDOS/DJGPP port should be
313 reported first on the comp.os.msdos.djgpp news group (if you cannot
314 post to Usenet groups, write to the DJGPP mailing list,
315 <djgpp@delorie.com>, which is an email gateway into the above news
316 group). For other bugs, please follow the procedure explained in
317 the "Bugs" chapter of the Info docs. If you don't have an Info
318 reader, look up that chapter in the `make.i1' file with any text
323 Eli Zaretskii <eliz@is.elta.co.il>