I would like to change this Makefile:
SHELL := /bin/bash
PATH := node_modules/.bin:$(PATH)
boot:
@supervisor \
--harmony \
--watch etc,lib \
--extensions js,json \
--no-restart-on error \
lib
test:
NODE_ENV=test mocha \
--harmony \
--reporter spec \
test
clean:
@rm -rf node_modules
.PHONY: test clean
to:
SHELL := /bin/bash
PATH := node_modules/.bin:$(PATH)
boot:
@supervisor \
--harmony \
--watch etc,lib \
--extensions js,json \
--no-restart-on error \
lib
test: NODE_ENV=test
test:
mocha \
--harmony \
--reporter spec \
test
clean:
@rm -rf node_modules
.PHONY: test clean
Unfortunately the second one does not work (the node process still runs with the default NODE_ENV.
What did I miss?
Unfortunatelycomment stems from a misunderstanding between an environment variable versus aMakefilevariable. The best way to prove that an environment variable has been set, is to query this environment variable inside another program thatmakewil call. Only doingecho $(BLAH)is merely evaluating Makefile's key/value mechanism inside the Makefile. In python, you canprint(os.getenv("MURDOC"))to truly query the environment variable.