I have three files: program.c
, program.h
and headers.h
.
program.c
includes program.h
and headers.h
.
I need to compile this on Linux using gcc compiler. I'm not sure how to do this. Netbeans created one for me, but it's empty.
I have three files: program.c
, program.h
and headers.h
.
program.c
includes program.h
and headers.h
.
I need to compile this on Linux using gcc compiler. I'm not sure how to do this. Netbeans created one for me, but it's empty.
Interesting, I didn't know make would default to using the C compiler given rules regarding source files.
Anyway, a simple solution that demonstrates simple Makefile concepts would be:
HEADERS = program.h headers.h
default: program
program.o: program.c $(HEADERS)
gcc -c program.c -o program.o
program: program.o
gcc program.o -o program
clean:
-rm -f program.o
-rm -f program
(bear in mind that make requires tab instead of space indentation, so be sure to fix that when copying)
However, to support more C files, you'd have to make new rules for each of them. Thus, to improve:
HEADERS = program.h headers.h
OBJECTS = program.o
default: program
%.o: %.c $(HEADERS)
gcc -c $< -o $@
program: $(OBJECTS)
gcc $(OBJECTS) -o $@
clean:
-rm -f $(OBJECTS)
-rm -f program
I tried to make this as simple as possible by omitting variables like $(CC) and $(CFLAGS) that are usually seen in makefiles. If you're interested in figuring that out, I hope I've given you a good start on that.
Here's the Makefile I like to use for C source. Feel free to use it:
TARGET = prog
LIBS = -lm
CC = gcc
CFLAGS = -g -Wall
.PHONY: default all clean
default: $(TARGET)
all: default
OBJECTS = $(patsubst %.c, %.o, $(wildcard *.c))
HEADERS = $(wildcard *.h)
%.o: %.c $(HEADERS)
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $< -o $@
.PRECIOUS: $(TARGET) $(OBJECTS)
$(TARGET): $(OBJECTS)
$(CC) $(OBJECTS) -Wall $(LIBS) -o $@
clean:
-rm -f *.o
-rm -f $(TARGET)
It uses the wildcard and patsubst features of the make utility to automatically include .c and .h files in the current directory, meaning when you add new code files to your directory, you won't have to update the Makefile. However, if you want to change the name of the generated executable, libraries, or compiler flags, you can just modify the variables.
In either case, don't use autoconf, please. I'm begging you! :)
.PHONY: clean all default
for those targets that are meant to be used from the command line. Also, Autoconf/Automake aren't that bad. Sure, they feel awful, and getting used to them is about as fun as forcing your head through a brick wall, but they do work, and they're well developed, and they'll cover most of your bases as far as portability, and will make your life a lot easier in the end once you get used to their awful design.
Sep 28, 2009 at 0:25
rm
: stackoverflow.com/questions/2989465/rm-rf-versus-rm-rf
May 22, 2017 at 14:00
:=
instead of =
. With :=
the wildcard
function just runs once and one can append/extend variables later OBJS := $(OBJS) other.o
. With =
this is not possible, it will cause an infinite loop in the variable expansion! See: The Two Flavors of Variables.
For example this simple Makefile should be sufficient:
CC=gcc CFLAGS=-Wall all: program program: program.o program.o: program.c program.h headers.h clean: rm -f program program.o run: program ./program
Note there must be <tab>
on the next line after clean and run, not spaces.
UPDATE Comments below applied
make
with no arguments usually only build your software. To run it, either use make run
(available in this answer, but not necessarily in all Makefile
s), or run it directly: ./program
Jan 22, 2015 at 6:23
all: program
program.o: program.h headers.h
is enough. the rest is implicit
.c
file, only program:
is necessary. Sweet :)
Jan 22, 2015 at 6:14
system()
from stdlib.h
... No cons of this approach, are there ?
Makefile
and simply directly invoke gcc *.c *.h -o program
, possibly adding options like -Wall -O2
, etc.
Sep 4, 2020 at 19:20
The simplest make file can be
all : test
test : test.o
gcc -o test test.o
test.o : test.c
gcc -c test.c
clean :
rm test *.o
Depending on the number of headers and your development habits, you may want to investigate gccmakedep. This program examines your current directory and adds to the end of the makefile the header dependencies for each .c/cpp file. This is overkill when you have 2 headers and one program file. However, if you have 5+ little test programs and you are editing one of 10 headers, you can then trust make to rebuild exactly those programs which were changed by your modifications.