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I would like to swap two files using a function / macro when running the uninstall target in my Makefile.

Here is what I have which is only leaving one of the files and removing the other two:

swap = mv $(1) $(3); mv $(2) $(1); mv $(3) $(2)

uninstall:
    @$(call swap,`printf "%s\n" $(FILE).* | sort -r | sed -n 1p`,\
      $(FILE),$(shell mktemp $(FILE).XXX))
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  • You aren't running that mktemp command anywhere. Try @set -x;$(call ....) to see what is actually being run. That should help you. Nov 4, 2015 at 17:21
  • Local mistake when copy pasting from my editor. I was trying using ticks and $(shell ...). I have updated the example.
    – j--
    Nov 4, 2015 at 17:25
  • The above function actually works, if I simply $(call 1,2,3), the problem is in the mktemp somewhere.
    – j--
    Nov 4, 2015 at 17:28
  • $(shell) is the wrong time for that location but that's not related to the problem (it happens at recipe expansion time not at run time for that recipe line). Nov 4, 2015 at 17:30
  • 1
    The other thing you could do is stop playing this game and just use a symlink which you can atomically swap out. Nov 4, 2015 at 17:45

1 Answer 1

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If you know what files to swap you could try something like the following. I assume the pairs to swap are fooXXX, barXXX.

define SWAP_files
swap_$(1):
    @temp=$$(shell mktemp temp.XXXXXX); \
    to_swap_with=$$(patsubst foo%,bar%,$(1)); \
    mv $(1) $$$$temp; \
    mv $$$$to_swap_with $(1); \
    mv $$$$temp $$$$to_swap_with

uninstall: swap_$(1)
endef

$(foreach foo,$(FOOS),$(eval $(call SWAP_files,$(foo))))

Foreach fooXXX file it instantiates a rule:

swap_fooXXX:
    @temp=$(shell mktemp temp.XXXXXX); \
    to_swap_with=$(patsubst foo%,bar%,fooXXX); \
    mv fooXXX $$temp; \
    mv $$to_swap_with fooXXX; \
    mv $$temp $$to_swap_with

and a rule:

uninstall: swap_fooXXX

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