I am working on a make-script for a hobby OS project. When playing with the script I noticed that two different variable expansions of (almost) the same variable yields different results (even though they are placed 'directly' after each other). I'll provide the important part of the makefile and the result when ran.
Makefile:
####################
# KERNEL #
####################
.PHONY: kernel
KERNEL_OBJS = $(patsubst %.c,%.o,$(wildcard kernel/*.c))
KERNEL_OBJS += $(patsubst %.asm,%.o,$(wildcard kernel/*.asm))
KERNEL_OBJS += $(DRIVER_OBJS)
KERNEL_NAME = kernel32.elf
kernel: $(KERNEL_OBJS)
@echo $^
@echo $(KERNEL_OBJS)
####################
# DRIVERS #
####################
.PHONY: drivers
DRIVER_OBJS := $(patsubst %.c,%.o,$(wildcard drivers/*/*.c))
Makefile executed via terminal in the following manner (GNU Make 4.2.1):
make kernel
And this yields the following result:
kernel/kmain.o kernel/boot.o
kernel/kmain.o kernel/boot.o drivers/vga/vga.o
The output lines are of-course from the two 'echo lines' in the kernel recipe. It is worth mentioning that all variables used in this code-snippet are used here and only here in the otherwise larger make-script. Two regular suffix rules are used to build the KERNEL_OBJS but they should not alter the output here in anyway. Apart from the suffix rules, this snippet and it's variables is completely seperated from the rest of the script.
Any ideas why the two variable expansions differ? Yours, Mikael.