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I have a large legacy codebase with very complicated makefiles, with lots of variables. Sometimes I need to change them, and I find that it's very difficult to figure out why the change isn't working the way I expect. What I'd like to find is a tool that basically does step-through-debugging of the "make" process, where I would give it a directory, and I would be able to see the value of different variables at different points in the process. None of the debug flags to make seem to show me what I want, although it's possible that I'm missing something. Does anyone know of a way to do this?

6 Answers 6

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Have you been looking at the output from running make -n and make -np, and the biggie make -nd?

Are you using a fairly recent version of gmake?

Have you looked at the free chapter on Debugging Makefiles available on O'Reilly's site for their excellent book "Managing Projects with GNU Make" (Amazon Link).

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40

I'm sure that remake is what you are looking for.

From the homepage:

remake is a patched and modernized version of GNU make utility that adds improved error reporting, the ability to trace execution in a comprehensible way, and a debugger.

It has gdb-like interface and is supported by mdb-mode in (x)emacs which means breakponts, watches etc. And there's DDD if you don't like (x)emacs

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    If I could I would add +100. When using remake ('brew install remake' for installation), the problem that I had to debug simply DISAPPEARED. No idea what the problem is, but who cares? :)
    – ishahak
    Commented Mar 11, 2015 at 14:57
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From the man page on make command-line options:

-n, --just-print, --dry-run, --recon  
Print the commands that would be executed, but do not execute them.  

-d  Print debugging information in addition to normal processing.  
The debugging information says  
which files are being considered for remaking,  
which file-times are being compared and with what results,  
which files actually need  to  be  remade,  
which implicit  rules are considered and which are applied---  
everything interesting about how make decides what to do.  

--debug[=FLAGS] Print debugging information in addition to normal processing.  
If the FLAGS are omitted, then the behaviour is the same as if -d was specified.  
FLAGS may be:  
'a' for all debugging output same as using -d,  
'b' for basic debugging,  
'v' for more verbose basic debugging,  
'i' for showing implicit rules,  
'j' for details on invocation of commands, and  
'm' for debugging while remaking makefiles.  
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I'm not aware of any specific flag that does exactly what you want, but

--print-data-base
sounds like it might be useful.

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remake --debugger all

More info https://vimeo.com/97397484

https://github.com/rocky/remake/wiki/Installing

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There is a GNU make debugger project at http://gmd.sf.net which looks quite useful. The main feature supported by gmd is breakpointing, which may be more useful than stepping. To use this, you download gmd from http://gmd.sf.net and gmsl from http://gmsl.sf.net, and do an 'include gmd' in your makefile.

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