15

I'm trying to write a Makefile which should download some sources if and only if they are missing.

Something like:

hello: hello.c
    gcc -o hello hello.c

hello.c:
    wget -O hello.c http://example.org/hello.c

But of course this causes hello.c to be downloaded every time make command is run. I would like hello.c to be downloaded by this Makefile only if it is missing. Is this possible with GNU make and how to do this if it is?

4 Answers 4

16

My guess is that wget doesn't update the timestamp on hello.c, but retains the remote timestamp. This causes make to believe that hello.c is old and attempts to download it again. Try

hello.c:
        wget ...
        touch $@

EDIT: The -N option to wget will prevent wget from downloading anything unless the remote file is newer (but it'll still check the timestamp of the remote file, of course.)

4
  • Sorry for being blunt, but a vague question like that is going to get a bunch of guesses.
    – JesperE
    Oct 19, 2009 at 11:32
  • 5
    The answer is wrong because, target hello.c: is not remade (and the file's not downloaded) if file named "hello.c" already exists--regardless of its timestamp. The second reason is that with -O option the file's timestamp always coincides with download time.
    – P Shved
    Oct 19, 2009 at 19:59
  • But since the question was wrong, I'm not surprised that the wrong answer occurred to be correct one. >_<
    – P Shved
    Oct 19, 2009 at 20:02
  • 1
    Pavel, wget 1.15 would preserve the timestamp even with the -O option. You are still correct that make would not look at the timestamp (there is no other timestamp for make to compare).
    – proski
    Feb 20, 2015 at 17:52
7

Since the Makefile should be working as you want, you need to check a few unlikely cases:

1) Check that you don't have any .PHONY rules mentioning the source file.

2) Check that the source target name matches the file path you are downloading.

You could also try running make -d to see why make thinks it needs to 're-build' the source file.

1
  • 1
    Also make sure that wget doesn't fail and that the name after -O matches the target. Better yet, use $@ instead of hello.c in the wget command.
    – proski
    Feb 20, 2015 at 17:57
7

The Makefile you wrote downloads hello.c only if it's missing. Perhaps you are doing something else wrong? See for example:

hello: hello.c
        gcc -o hello hello.c

hello.c:
        echo 'int main() {}' > hello.c

And:

% make
echo 'int main() {}' > hello.c
gcc -o hello hello.c
% rm hello
% make
gcc -o hello hello.c
% rm hello*
% make
echo 'int main() {}' > hello.c
gcc -o hello hello.c

(the echo command was not executed the second time)

2
  • Silly me, forgot to run this simple test. It appeared that wget was messing with file dates... Thanks!
    – abbot
    Oct 19, 2009 at 13:13
  • That doesn't break the functionality. Oct 19, 2009 at 13:15
2

If the prerequisite for hello.c has changed or is empty and Make continues to download the file when it exists, then one option to prevent Make from re-downloading the file is to use a flag in the body of the target to detect if the file exists:

hello.c:
    test -f $@ || wget -O hello.c http://example.org/hello.c

The test command will return true if the hello.c file exists, otherwise it will return false and the wget command will run.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.