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I have source in a bunch of subdirectories like:

src/widgets/apple.cpp
src/widgets/knob.cpp
src/tests/blend.cpp
src/ui/flash.cpp

In the root of the project I want to generate a single Makefile using a rule like:

%.o: %.cpp
   $(CC) -c $<

build/test.exe: build/widgets/apple.o build/widgets/knob.o build/tests/blend.o src/ui/flash.o
   $(LD) build/widgets/apple.o .... build/ui/flash.o -o build/test.exe

When I try this it does not find a rule for build/widgets/apple.o. Can I change something so that the %.o: %.cpp is used when it needs to make build/widgets/apple.o ?

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4 Answers

vote up 7 vote down check

The reason is that your rule

%.o: %.cpp
       ...

expects the .cpp file to reside in the same directory as the .o your building. Since test.exe in your case depends on build/widgets/apple.o (etc), make is expecting apple.cpp to be build/widgets/apple.cpp.

You can use VPATH to resolve this:

VPATH = src/widgets

BUILDDIR = build/widgets

$(BUILDDIR)/%.o: %.cpp
      ...

When attempting to build "build/widgets/apple.o", make will search for apple.cpp in VPATH. Note that the build rule has to use special variables in order to access the actual filename make finds:

$(BUILDDIR)/%.o: %.cpp
        $(CC) $< -o $@

Where "$<" expands to the path where make located the first dependency.

Also note that this will build all the .o files in build/widgets. If you want to build the binaries in different directories, you can do something like

build/widgets/%.o: %.cpp
        ....

build/ui/%.o: %.cpp
        ....

build/tests/%.o: %.cpp
        ....

I would recommend that you use "canned command sequences" in order to avoid repeating the actual compiler build rule:

define cc-command
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $< -o $@
endef

You can then have multiple rules like this:

build1/foo.o build1/bar.o: %.o: %.cpp
    $(cc-command)

build2/frotz.o build2/fie.o: %.o: %.cpp
    $(cc-command)
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vote up 1 vote down

Thing is $@ will include the entire (relative) path to the source file which is in turn used to construct the object name (and thus its relative path)

We use:

#####################
# rules to build the object files
$(OBJDIR_1)/%.o: %.c
    @$(ECHO) "$< -> $@"
    @test -d $(OBJDIR_1) || mkdir -pm 775 $(OBJDIR_1)
    @test -d $(@D) || mkdir -pm 775 $(@D)
    @-$(RM) $@
    $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(CFLAGS_1) $(ALL_FLAGS) $(ALL_DEFINES) $(ALL_INCLUDEDIRS:%=-I%) -c $< -o $@

This creates an object directory with name specified in $(OBJDIR_1) and subdirectories according to subdirectories in source.

For example (assume objs as toplevel object directory), in Makefile:

widget/apple.cpp
tests/blend.cpp

results in following object directory:

objs/widget/apple.o
objs/tests/blend.o
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vote up 1 vote down

This will do it without painful manipulation or multiple command sequences:

build/%.o: src/%.cpp
src/%.o: src/%.cpp
%.o:
    $(CC) -c $< -o $@

build/test.exe: build/widgets/apple.o build/widgets/knob.o build/tests/blend.o src/ui/flash.o
    $(LD) $^ -o $@

JasperE has explained why "%.o: %.cpp" won't work; this version has one pattern rule (%.o:) with commands and no prereqs, and two pattern rules (build/%.o: and src/%.o:) with prereqs and no commands. (Note that I put in the src/%.o rule to deal with src/ui/flash.o, assuming that wasn't a typo for build/ui/flash.o, so if you don't need it you can leave it out.)

build/test.exe needs build/widgets/apple.o,
build/widgets/apple.o looks like build/%.o, so it needs src/%.cpp (in this case src/widgets/apple.cpp),
build/widgets/apple.o also looks like %.o, so it executes the CC command and uses the prereqs it just found (namely src/widgets/apple.cpp) to build the target (build/widgets/apple.o)

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vote up 0 vote down

Usually, you create a Makefile in each subdirectory, and write in the top-level Makefile to call make in the subdirectories.

This page may help: http://www.gnu.org/software/make/

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This is commonly done, but is full of problems. The main one is that no one make process knows about all of the dependencies, so things like -j2 on multicore systems won't work. See aegis.sourceforge.net/auug97.pdf – KeithB Oct 23 '08 at 21:11
Keith's reference is to an excellent paper called 'Recursive Make Considered Harmful'. This is a contribution to the series of articles starting with Dijkstra's 'Go To Considered Harmful' letter, and culminating in "'Considered Harmful' Considered Harmful". – Jonathan Leffler Oct 23 '08 at 21:28
It's done usually because people don't understand how to write Makefiles. One Makefile per directory sucks. – Max Howell Oct 7 at 17:29

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