Makepp Build Algorithm
How makepp executes a makefile
Makepp's internals differ from the standard Unix make in fundamental ways. This page describes the different philosophy in detail.
Reverse vs. forward inference
Makepp works in the opposite direction from the standard Unix make. Traditional Unix make is given a target to build, and then it finds a rule which matches the characters in the target filename. If the target is older than any of its dependencies of the rule, then it is rebuilt.
For example, consider this pattern rule:
%.o: %.cxx $(CXX) $(CXXFLAGS) -c $(input) -o $(output)
When make realizes it needs to make a file called xyz.o, it searches through its list of pattern rules until it sees that xyz.o matches the pattern %.o, and then it applies this rule.
Makepp works in the opposite direction. It first computes all files that it can possibly build by applying rules that match the characters in the dependency filenames. Then when it needs to build a file, it simply looks to see if it's one of the files that it knows how to build. The list of known files is stored based on the absolute filename.
When makepp encounters the above pattern rule, it searches for all files in the directory matching the pattern %.cxx (i.e., *.cxx). For each of these files, it then remembers that it can produce the corresponding .o file. If subsequently makepp discovers that it can make another .cxx file that doesn't currently exist, this rule will also be applied and the corresponding .o file will be marked.
This might seem somewhat inefficient, but it turns out not to be that slow in most cases, and it is often true that virtually all the files that can be built are in fact built. And knowing the complete list of files that can be built has several advantages:
Wildcards can match files which don't exist yet but can be built.
Header files which have been detected by the automatic dependency scanner don't have to exist; makepp knows where they will be. (Most other solutions to this problem assume that any headers which don't exist yet are in the current directory.)
Repositories are much simpler to implement since makepp knows beforehand what files it can make. (See the makepp_repositories manpage for details.)
It is possible to determine easily which files can be built (see the $(only_targets ) function.
Makepp's $(infer_objects) function is greatly simplified by knowing what objects are available.
Files vs. textual patterns
Makepp associates build commands with a target file, not to a textual pattern for a filename. It is therefore not confused by different names for the same file. Thus, for example, makepp will know that ./xyz and and xyz are the same file, whereas other make utilities may not.
This is particularly important because (unlike the standard make) makepp loads makefiles from different directories. In order for the makefiles to be relatively independent, with no special position given to a top-level makefile, each makefile refers to all files relative to its own directory. Thus if you load a makefile from the subdirectory other_stuff, and that makefile refers to ../xyz, makepp will again realize that it's the same file referred to above. (It also won't be confused by soft-linked directory names.)
Stored build information
Makepp stores much more information about each file that it builds beyond just the date stamp (which is all that the standard make cares about). This information includes:
The signature of this file on the last build, so we know if the file itself has changed.
The names of each dependency file, including include files and other files inferred automatically. If this list changes, then makepp assumes it needs to rebuild.
The signature of each dependency. This way, makepp knows to rebuild not only when the dependencies are newer than the target, but when they change at all. This also makes it possible to use other kinds of signatures, such as cryptographic checksums, rather than the file date.
The entire build command (and its cwd). This way if you change the build command (e.g., change the compiler options), makepp knows to rebuild even if the files themselves haven't changed.
The architecture. If you have compiled your program on Linux and then switch to Solaris, makepp automatically knows to recompile everything.
Makepp makes a subdirectory in every directory that it touches called .makepp. The build information for a file filename in a directory is stored in .makepp/filename. If you delete this subdirectory or alter the files, makepp will rebuild all affected files.
Implicit loading
If makepp is trying to build a target in a directory and doesn't have a rule for it yet, or if it is looking for files matching a wildcard in a directory, it will look in that directory to see if a makefile is present. If so, the makefile will be loaded automatically.
This means that you usually don't have to tell makepp explicitly where to find makefiles--all you have to do is to reference a file in another directory, and makepp will automatically figure out how to build it.
Implicit loading will occur only if the directory is writable to you. Thus if you want to prevent makepp from trying to build a bunch of things that never change, simply make the directory read-only.
Implicit loading will not occur if you are in a tree under a RootMakeppfile(.mk) and the other makefile is outside that tree. If you do want this once, you can give a --do-build=/ option to makepp, to make everything outside the tree buildable. If you always want this, you can put a load_makefile statement somewhere within the tree to explicitly connect it to the tree.
If implicit loading gets in your way (i.e., makepp loads too many makefiles and it wastes time, or else you really don't want it to try to rebuild all the stuff described in the makefiles), you can turn it off for all directories using the --noimplicit_load command line option, or you can turn it off for selected directories using the no_implicit_load statement in your makefile.
Last modified: 2012-02-07