Difference between revisions of "Writing Makefiles"
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Some tips for writing clean Makefile.am's in Apertium: |
Some tips for writing clean Makefile.am's in Apertium: |
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==Use apertium-init== |
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If you're creating a new monolingual module or pair, use [[apertium-init]]. It creates modules that Just Work. If you've got a problem with an old makefile, throw it all away and create a new one using [[apertium-init]]. |
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If you really want to debug your old makefile, read on for some tips. |
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==Modes== |
==Modes== |
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If you have <code>apertium</code> version 3.3 or higher, you can do this to simplify dealing with [[Modes]] files / modes.xml: |
If you have <code>apertium</code> version 3.3 or higher, you can do this to simplify dealing with [[Modes]] files / modes.xml: |
Latest revision as of 13:09, 18 February 2015
Some tips for writing clean Makefile.am's in Apertium:
Use apertium-init[edit]
If you're creating a new monolingual module or pair, use apertium-init. It creates modules that Just Work. If you've got a problem with an old makefile, throw it all away and create a new one using apertium-init.
If you really want to debug your old makefile, read on for some tips.
Modes[edit]
If you have apertium
version 3.3 or higher, you can do this to simplify dealing with Modes files / modes.xml:
In configure.ac
, add this:
AP_MKINCLUDE
In Makefile.am
, add this:
# Only include one mode file here, the rest will be built along with it (listing several leads to problems with parallell make): noinst_DATA=modes/$(PREFIX1).mode @ap_include@ # Most language pairs don't need to specify anything else for install-data-local: install-data-local: install-modes EXTRA_DIST: modes.xml \ # here you'll typically also have other things, like .dix and .t1x # files that are to be included when you make a release
Nowhere else should modes be mentioned in the Makefile.am
.
If you follow this system, the modes with install="yes" in modes.xml will be installed, and you won't end up with root-owned modes files, and make -j4 will work fine.
Use .deps/.d to say that the .deps directory must be created[edit]
Say you have several goals that put temporary files in .deps/, e.g.
.deps/apertium-wat-lol.lol.dix: apertium-wat-lol.lol.dix test -d .deps || mkdir .deps xsltproc lexchoicebil.xsl $< >$@
and so on. The .deps directory has to be created for the file in .deps to be created. If you put mkdir .deps in each such goal, you can get a race condition where two goals try to make .deps at the same time.
The solution is this: if a goal needs the .deps directory to be created, let it depend on the file .deps/.d
. First put this in Makefile.am:
.deps/.d: test -d .deps || mkdir .deps touch $@ .PRECIOUS: .deps/.d
(If using apertium 3.3 or higher, you can just do AP_MKINCLUDE, which includes the above .deps/.d goal.)
And then, instead of creating the dir in each goal, just depend on .deps/.d for those goals:
.deps/apertium-wat-lol.lol.dix: apertium-wat-lol.lol.dix .deps/.d xsltproc lexchoicebil.xsl $< >$@
(The PRECIOUS
line prevents the .d file from being cleaned up and removed automatically.)
Removing directories on make clean[edit]
Say you want to remove .deps and modes on "make clean". Don't do CLEANFILES=-rf .deps modes file1 file2 …
, it doesn't work everywhere.
A more portable solution is this:
CLEANFILES = $(TARGETS_COMMON) clean-local: -rm -rf .deps modes
Where does this $AP_SRC1 stuff come from?[edit]
When you do ./autogen.sh --with-lang1=foo
, the variable AP_SRC1 will be set to "foo" in the Makefile. Your configure.ac should say something like AP_CHECK_LING([1], [apertium-lol])
for that option to work.
- The details
- The autogen.sh script passes its arguments on to the configure script. If configure.ac says e.g.
AP_CHECK_LING([1], [apertium-lol])
, then the configure script will have a --with-lang1 option to set to the location of the package apertium-lol. If you don't pass --with-lang1 to autogen.sh, configure will attempt to find the location of an installed apertium-lol package using pkg-config.
- The gory details
- The actual configure code for all this checking is in apertium.m4, typically in /usr/share/aclocal/apertium.m4 or /usr/local/share/aclocal/apertium.m4 if you're very interested in reading m4sh code.