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building a recursive make structure using external sources
From: |
Robert P. J. Day |
Subject: |
building a recursive make structure using external sources |
Date: |
Wed, 26 May 2004 08:33:30 -0400 (EDT) |
as i work my way thru the make manual, i figured i'd ask this as others
may very well have gone through this.
is there a standard way to put together a make-based build structure in
which the source itself is not contained within the build directory
structure itself, but is incorporated from external sources, *but* the
build is done locally. that is, i don't just want to "make -C <over
there> <target>". i want to include the stuff from "over there" as if it
were local, and have all the intermediate results (executables, object
files, whatever) generated within my current directory.
i've seen software that allows you to do this thru the "configure"
option, identifying a "source" directory or something like that, but of
course that would work only for software that supports a configuration
option for that, and a lot of it doesn't.
the idea is that i want to have a source repository of common pieces
that multiple projects can take advantage of (a single common linux kernel
source tree, shared among similar projects). as i see it, i have a couple
of general choices:
1) just plain copy the source for all the required components into my
local build tree each time. simple. straightforward. kind of wasteful,
but guaranteed to work.
2) recursively set up symlinks to "fake" the inclusion of the entire
source component locally. clever. cool. probably overkill.
any other thoughts? surely others have played with this.
rday
p.s. of course, one of the implied rules is that my build structure would
never, ever, *ever* change the included source, which could be set
read-only to force that restriction. (it would also keep developers from
doing underhanded things like changing the source quietly to get around
problems. :-)
- building a recursive make structure using external sources,
Robert P. J. Day <=