106

I'm writing a Makefile that does string matching at one place, the code is like:

if test ...; \
    then \
    shell scripts... \
fi

ifeq ($(DIST_TYPE),nightly)
    shell scripts ...
endif

Here the first if is shell script, the second ifeq is GNU Make's conditional. However the following error generates:

ifeq (nightly,nightly)

/bin/sh: -c: line 0: syntax error near unexpected token `nightly,nightly'

/bin/sh: -c: line 0: `ifeq (nightly,nightly)'

What's happening here? It seems that Make is trying to call the shell.

1
  • You are confusing conditional statements in sh (such as the first) with conditional statements in make (such as the second). Jun 11, 2012 at 8:11

2 Answers 2

343

I played around the code and found that the conditional statements should be written without indentation, and this solved my problem.

If there is no indentation, Make will treat it as a directive for itself; otherwise, it's regarded as a shell script.

Example code

Wrong:

target:
    ifeq (foo, bar)
        ...
    endif

Correct:

target:
ifeq (foo, bar)
    ...
endif
0
14

In addition, if the conditional statements is used in define functions, like:

define myFunc
ifeq (foo, bar)
    ...
endif
endef

In this case, Make will also treat it as a shell script.

This problem can be solved by using if-function instead:

define myFunc
    $(if condition,then-part[,else-part])
endef
1
  • saved me lot of time :)
    – anoop
    Aug 3, 2017 at 18:06

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