I'm using gmake and gcc -MM
to track header dependencies, following the manual. The mechanism relies on a makefile include
directive to import the computed dependencies.
Because the .d
files are included by the makefile, they must exist for any target to be made, including clean
. So before clean
can do the right thing, the dependencies must be generated, and if one fails to build then clean
just made more mess.
Besides clean
, it wants to make all the dependencies before building any target.
Furthermore, if any file is changed to include a nonexistent file, then the dependency resolution breaks and nothing at all will build.
If a header is deleted, then the existing dependency files contain still name it as a target, and nothing will build until the offending dependency files are removed… which can't be done with clean
.
Replacing the substitution pattern of the include
with a wildcard to include all preexisting dependency files solves some of the issues, but it still can't clean out a broken dependency, and stale dependency files are never removed. Is there a better solution? Is the manual's example really intended for real use?