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I'm desperately looking for a way to make a makefile for Progress OpenEdge ABL, and let it compile only a subset of the application, based on what source file has changed.

Has anyone set up anything like this? I've used makefiles before in C applications, but never under Windows with an environment where not all files follow a set naming convention (e.g. abc/xxx may be a program, or an include).

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  • Is your codebase that big that you can't compile the whole thing regardless?
    – Tim Kuehn
    Mar 13, 2013 at 21:32
  • It takes about an hour on character, and 2 hours on GUI. I blame virtual machines... I'm looking for a simple way to automate compiles where 1 include changes, without having to manually trace through code to see where that include is used.
    – RonaldB
    Mar 14, 2013 at 12:39
  • Are you using Roundtable for version control? If so, I believe they have deployment options. What we did is write a program that creates a install script from the roundtable records, since Roundtable keeps track of dependencies.
    – TerryB
    Mar 14, 2013 at 15:40
  • No, we're using Subversion, and looking into Git. The dependencies that are stored in Roundtable, are they based on the XREF information of the compilation?
    – RonaldB
    Mar 15, 2013 at 13:18

1 Answer 1

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PCT could be the answer, is a JAR that you can use in an ANT script and manages Progress compilations with many several options, including multithreading or just recompiling what is required.

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  • I didn't realize Ant/PCT could be used for partial compiles, I thought it was more a deployment of the whole system. But now I see the options in PCTCompile include a forceCompile, which leads me to believe it looks at dependencies. Is that correct?
    – RonaldB
    Mar 15, 2013 at 13:22
  • Yes, when I have tried, it only recompiles whatever needs to be recompiled, but better to double check it for complicated dependencies.
    – pedromarce
    Mar 15, 2013 at 13:39

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