Just a note, as I got confused - let this be file testmake
:
$(eval $(info A: CFLAGS here is $(CFLAGS)))
override CFLAGS += -B
$(eval $(info B: CFLAGS here is $(CFLAGS)))
CFLAGS += -C
$(eval $(info C: CFLAGS here is $(CFLAGS)))
override CFLAGS += -D
$(eval $(info D: CFLAGS here is $(CFLAGS)))
CFLAGS += -E
$(eval $(info E: CFLAGS here is $(CFLAGS)))
Then:
$ make -f testmake
A: CFLAGS here is
B: CFLAGS here is -B
C: CFLAGS here is -B
D: CFLAGS here is -B -D
E: CFLAGS here is -B -D
make: *** No targets. Stop.
$ make -f testmake CFLAGS+=-g
A: CFLAGS here is -g
B: CFLAGS here is -g -B
C: CFLAGS here is -g -B
D: CFLAGS here is -g -B -D
E: CFLAGS here is -g -B -D
make: *** No targets. Stop.
With the override
directives deleted from the testmake
file:
$ make -f testmake
A: CFLAGS here is
B: CFLAGS here is -B
C: CFLAGS here is -B -C
D: CFLAGS here is -B -C -D
E: CFLAGS here is -B -C -D -E
make: *** No targets. Stop.
$ make -f testmake CFLAGS+=-g
A: CFLAGS here is -g
B: CFLAGS here is -g
C: CFLAGS here is -g
D: CFLAGS here is -g
E: CFLAGS here is -g
make: *** No targets. Stop.
So,
- if a variable used
override
once, it can only be appended with another statement with override
(the normal assignments will be ignored);
- when there's been no
override
at all; trying to append (as in +=
) from the command line overwrites every instance of that variable.