prefix = /usr/local program_transform_name = exec_prefix = $(prefix) bindir = $(exec_prefix)/bin libdir = $(exec_prefix)/lib tooldir = $(libdir)/$(target_alias) datadir = $(prefix)/share mandir = $(prefix)/man man1dir = $(mandir)/man1 man2dir = $(mandir)/man2 man3dir = $(mandir)/man3 man4dir = $(mandir)/man4 man5dir = $(mandir)/man5 man6dir = $(mandir)/man6 man7dir = $(mandir)/man7 man8dir = $(mandir)/man8 man9dir = $(mandir)/man9 infodir = $(prefix)/info includedir = $(prefix)/include ARM_RELEASE='"Berkeley Licence for Cygnus"' SHELL = /bin/sh INSTALL = `cd $(srcdir)/../..;pwd`/install.sh -c INSTALL_PROGRAM = $(INSTALL) INSTALL_DATA = $(INSTALL) INSTALL_XFORM = $(INSTALL) -t='$(program_transform_name)' INSTALL_XFORM1 = $(INSTALL_XFORM) -b=.1 AR = ar AR_FLAGS = qv RANLIB = ranlib LD = ld # If you are compiling with GCC, make sure that either 1) You use the # -traditional flag, or 2) You have the fixed include files where GCC # can reach them. Otherwise the ioctl calls in inflow.c # will be incorrectly compiled. The "fixincludes" script in the gcc # distribution will fix your include files up. #CC=cc #CC=gcc -traditional GCC=gcc # Directory containing source files. Don't clean up the spacing, # this exact string is matched for by the "configure" script. srcdir = . # It is also possible that you will need to add -I/usr/include/sys to the # CFLAGS section if your system doesn't have fcntl.h in /usr/include (which # is where it should be according to Posix). # Set this up with gcc if you have gnu ld and the loader will print out # line numbers for undefinded refs. #CC-LD=gcc -static CC-LD=${CC} # All the includes used for CFLAGS and for lint. # -I. for config files. # -I${srcdir} possibly for regex.h also. # -I${srcdir}/config for more generic config files. INCLUDE_CFLAGS = -I. -I${srcdir} # M{H,T}_CFLAGS, if defined, has host- and target-dependent CFLAGS # from the config/ directory. GLOBAL_CFLAGS = ${MT_CFLAGS} ${MH_CFLAGS} -DRETRANS -DARM_RELEASE=$(ARM_RELEASE) #PROFILE_CFLAGS = -pg # CFLAGS is specifically reserved for setting from the command line # when running make. I.E. "make CFLAGS=-Wmissing-prototypes". CFLAGS = -g # INTERNAL_CFLAGS is the aggregate of all other *CFLAGS macros. INTERNAL_CFLAGS = ${CFLAGS} ${GLOBAL_CFLAGS} ${PROFILE_CFLAGS} \ ${BFD_CFLAGS} ${MMALLOC_CFLAGS} ${INCLUDE_CFLAGS} # LDFLAGS is specifically reserved for setting from the command line # when running make. # Host and target-dependent makefile fragments come in here. #### # End of host and target-dependent makefile fragments # All source files that go into linking GDB remote server. SFILES = $(srcdir)/ DEPFILES = SOURCES = $(SFILES) $(ALLDEPFILES) TAGFILES = $(SOURCES) ${HFILES} ${ALLPARAM} ${POSSLIBS} OBS = hostchan.o drivers.o devsw.o rx.o tx.o params.o hsys.o crc.o \ logging.o msgbuild.o ardi.o serdrv.o serpardr.o etherdrv.o bytesex.o \ unixcomm.o # Prevent Sun make from putting in the machine type. Setting # TARGET_ARCH to nothing works for SunOS 3, 4.0, but not for 4.1. .c.o: ${CC} -c ${INTERNAL_CFLAGS} $< all: libangsd.a libangsd.a: $(OBS) rm -f libangsd.a $(AR) $(AR_FLAGS) libangsd.a $(OBS) $(RANLIB) libangsd.a # Traditionally "install" depends on "all". But it may be useful # not to; for example, if the user has made some trivial change to a # source file and doesn't care about rebuilding or just wants to save the # time it takes for make to check that all is up to date. # install-only is intended to address that need. install: all install-only install-only: uninstall: installcheck: check: info dvi: install-info: clean-info: config.status: @echo "You must configure rdi-share. Look at the README file for details." @false clean: rm -f *.o ${ADD_FILES} *~ rm -f gdbserver core make.log distclean: clean rm -f config.status rm -f Makefile maintainer-clean realclean: clean rm -f config.status rm -f Makefile Makefile: $(srcdir)/Makefile.in $(host_makefile_frag) $(target_makefile_frag) $(SHELL) ./config.status force: # GNU Make has an annoying habit of putting *all* the Makefile variables # into the environment, unless you include this target as a circumvention. # Rumor is that this will be fixed (and this target can be removed) # in GNU Make 4.0. .NOEXPORT: # GNU Make 3.63 has a different problem: it keeps tacking command line # overrides onto the definition of $(MAKE). This variable setting # will remove them. MAKEOVERRIDES= ## This is ugly, but I don't want GNU make to put these variables in ## the environment. Older makes will see this as a set of targets ## with no dependencies and no actions. unexport CHILLFLAGS CHILL_LIB CHILL_FOR_TARGET : # This is the end of "Makefile.in".