Large complex make files can be daunting to read and examine. What tools are good for visualizing or otherwise examining a gnu make file?
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For what it's worth, I just use the Mk. I eyeball plus editor combo...most people write pretty similar makefiles and you get used to it. That is not true of machine generated makefiles, but for those you should probably start with the input to the generator.– dmckee --- ex-moderator kittenMar 5, 2010 at 3:18
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3You can use make -d (and optionally -n) to have it print out what's going on, which is often helpful.– i_am_jorfMar 5, 2010 at 3:25
4 Answers
I tried to use CPAN's visualizer and failed. So, I've written my own quick-n-dirty Makefile visualizer.
You may want to try it: http://github.com/vak/makefile2dot
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2If I could have given you +10 I would have. Your solution works better than either of the Perl solutions posted. Jun 20, 2011 at 22:41
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There is a Perl library for building GraphViz figures from Makefiles:
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1I found this similarly named one and it's also good for producing png files search.cpan.org/~agent/Makefile-GraphViz-0.18/lib/Makefile/…– JohnnyApr 14, 2010 at 4:55
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1It would be helpful to include some info on getting this to work. For example: 1) install [dependency], 2) install [thisPerlLibrary] via [method], then 3) run [
foo Makefile out.png
] to produce the result.– jvriesemMar 2, 2019 at 17:21
I've had good success with the --print-data-base (-p) option.
Combined with --just-print (-n, --dry-run) and redirecting stdout to a file creates a new single makefile containing all the rules and variables in a generic format which you may find easier to understand.
With really bad makefiles I've gone as far as parsing this output in Perl to generate a new build system!
I don't know of a tool that can make sense of a set of makefiles. It may indeed be nearly impossible to create one as most large make based build environments are a hodge-podge of random commands, frightening macro substitution, and hugely context dependent control flow.
As an aside, I hear good things about SCons which I'm looking at because I'm involved with a system make environment which has become a maintenance nightmare in its own right.
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SCons is my favorite build system, but make has one huge advantage. You can quickly write a make file to execute any program against a set of files. SCons uses various plugins for different build task, it includes plugins for common compilers, but in some cases you might have to write your own.– mikerobiMar 5, 2010 at 3:39