For simple cases one often gets away with globs instead of full regular expressions. gmtt is a GNUmake library which implements them. Your example could look like this:
include gmtt/gmtt.mk
PLATFORM := CYGWIN-NT-3.5
ifneq ($(call glob-match,$(PLATFORM),CYGWIN-*-4.?),)
$(info We are on Cygwin 4.x)
endif
ifneq ($(call glob-match,$(PLATFORM),CYGWIN-*-3.?),)
$(info We are on Cygwin 3.x)
endif
ifneq ($(call glob-match,$(PLATFORM),Ubuntu*),)
$(info We are on Ubuntu)
endif
Output:
$ make
We are on Cygwin 3.x
To streamline and lean down such selections, gmtt
has tabular data and selection functions, which often make it clearer what is happening:
include gmtt/gmtt.mk
PLATFORM := CYGWIN-NT-3.5
define AVAILABLE-PLATFORMS :=
2
CYGWIN-*-4.? toolX
CYGWIN-*-3.? toolY
Ubuntu* toolZ
endef
# select column 2 from the table line(s) which glob-match the current platform:
USED-TOOL := $(call select,2,$(AVAILABLE-PLATFORMS),$$(call glob-match,$(PLATFORM),$$1))
$(info We are using $(USED-TOOL))
Output:
We are using toolY
There is a caveat when using table cells with spaces in them (you must escape the spaces with spc-mask
and convert them back with spc-unmask
when using the value) but most of the time it is rather straightforward programming.