| #! /bin/sh |
| # Copyright (C) 2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| # |
| # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
| # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) |
| # any later version. |
| # |
| # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
| # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
| # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
| # GNU General Public License for more details. |
| # |
| # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| # along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. |
| |
| # Check whether double colon rules work. The Unix V7 make manual |
| # mentions double-colon rules, but POSIX does not. They seem to be |
| # supported by all Make implementation as we can tell. This test case |
| # is a spy: we want to detect if there exist implementations where |
| # these do not work. We might use these rules to simplify the rebuild |
| # rules (instead of the $? hack). |
| |
| # Tom Tromey write: |
| # | In the distant past we used :: rules extensively. |
| # | Fran?ois convinced me to get rid of them: |
| # | |
| # | Thu Nov 23 18:02:38 1995 Tom Tromey <tromey@cambric> |
| # | [ ... ] |
| # | * subdirs.am: Removed "::" rules |
| # | * header.am, libraries.am, mans.am, texinfos.am, footer.am: |
| # | Removed "::" rules |
| # | * scripts.am, programs.am, libprograms.am: Removed "::" rules |
| # | |
| # | |
| # | I no longer remember the rationale for this. It may have only been a |
| # | belief that they were unportable. |
| |
| # On a related topic, the Autoconf manual has the following text: |
| # | `VPATH' and double-colon rules |
| # | Any assignment to `VPATH' causes Sun `make' to only execute |
| # | the first set of double-colon rules. (This comment has been |
| # | here since 1994 and the context has been lost. It's probably |
| # | about SunOS 4. If you can reproduce this, please send us a |
| # | test case for illustration.) |
| |
| # We already know that overlapping ::-rule like |
| # |
| # a :: b |
| # echo rule1 >> $@ |
| # a :: c |
| # echo rule2 >> $@ |
| # a :: b c |
| # echo rule3 >> $@ |
| # |
| # do not work equally on all platforms. It seems that in all cases |
| # Make attempts to run all matching rules. However at least GNU Make, |
| # NetBSD Make, and FreeBSD Make will detect that $@ was updated by the |
| # first matching rule and skip remaining matches (with the above |
| # example that means that unless `a' was declared PHONY, only "rule1" |
| # will be appended to `a' if both b and c have changed). Other |
| # implementations like OSF1 Make and HP-UX Make do not perform such a |
| # check and execute all matching rules whatever they do ("rule1", |
| # "rule2", abd "rule3" will all be appended to `a' if b and c have |
| # changed). |
| |
| # So it seems only non-overlapping ::-rule may be portable. This is |
| # what we check now. |
| |
| . ./defs || Exit 1 |
| |
| set -e |
| |
| cat >Makefile <<\EOF |
| a :: b |
| echo rule1 >> $@ |
| a :: c |
| echo rule2 >> $@ |
| EOF |
| |
| touch b c |
| $sleep |
| : > a |
| $MAKE |
| test "`cat a`" = '' |
| $sleep |
| touch b |
| $MAKE |
| test "`cat a`" = rule1 |
| : > a |
| $sleep |
| touch c |
| $MAKE |
| test "`cat a`" = rule2 |