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Sometimes it is useful to have a makefile that is mostly just like
another makefile. You can often use the `include' directive to
include one in the other, and add more targets or variable definitions.
However, if the two makefiles give different commands for the same
target, make
will not let you just do this. But there is another way.
In the containing makefile (the one that wants to include the other),
you can use a match-anything pattern rule to say that to remake any
target that cannot be made from the information in the containing
makefile, make
should look in another makefile.
See Pattern Rules, for more information on pattern rules.
For example, if you have a makefile called Makefile that says how to make the target `foo' (and other targets), you can write a makefile called GNUmakefile that contains:
foo: frobnicate > foo %: force @$(MAKE) -f Makefile $@ force: ;
If you say `make foo', make
will find GNUmakefile,
read it, and see that to make foo, it needs to run the command
`frobnicate > foo'. If you say `make bar', make
will
find no way to make bar in GNUmakefile, so it will use the
commands from the pattern rule: `make -f Makefile bar'. If
Makefile provides a rule for updating bar, make
will apply the rule. And likewise for any other target that
GNUmakefile does not say how to make.
The way this works is that the pattern rule has a pattern of just
`%', so it matches any target whatever. The rule specifies a
prerequisite force, to guarantee that the commands will be run even
if the target file already exists. We give force target empty
commands to prevent make
from searching for an implicit rule to
build it—otherwise it would apply the same match-anything rule to
force itself and create a prerequisite loop!