333

I am getting the following error running make:

Makefile:168: *** missing separator.  Stop.

What is causing this?

2
  • 3
    Does this answer your question? makefile:4: *** missing separator. Stop
    – S.S. Anne
    Apr 7, 2020 at 20:45
  • There are lots of comments about "bad error message". But, this message missing separator is just make's version of a generic syntax error, or "I have no idea what the heck you are trying to do here". It's not really feasible to provide a better error because make can't figure out what this line is supposed to be. Make's parser works with "separators": if it finds a = then it's a variable assignment, if it finds a : then it's a rule, if it starts with a TAB (or .RECIPEPREFIX character) it's a recipe. If none of those things then... it has no idea. Jan 10 at 13:50

14 Answers 14

511

As indicated in the online manual, the most common cause for that error is that lines are indented with spaces when make expects tab characters.

Correct

target: 
\tcmd

where \t is TAB (U+0009)

Wrong

target:
....cmd

where each . represents a SPACE (U+0020).

3
  • 9
    You can use .RECIPEPREFIX to change the character make uses. See: gnu.org/software/make/manual/html_node/…
    – aseq
    Dec 1, 2016 at 9:31
  • To confirm, I just ran into this myself. Most editors/IDEs can help spot this. For example, in IDEA, go to the View menu, choose "Active Editor", "Show Whitespaces". I can't believe that spaces vs. tabs is still a thing in (checks notes) 2022.
    – cpurdy
    May 27, 2022 at 15:41
  • I had a string variable that contained newlines - not by choice. Snuck in via execute_process, fixed with OUTPUT_STRIP_TRAILING_WHITESPACE seeing as the output is single-line. Infuriatingly bad error message though Nov 20, 2022 at 1:16
21

Just for grins, and in case somebody else runs into a similar error:

I got the infamous "missing separator" error because I had invoked a rule defining a function as

($eval $(call function,args))

rather than

$(eval $(call function,args))

i.e. ($ rather than $(.

2
  • What? :) I guess you didn't have 0x20 "space" there, is that correct?
    – user35443
    Jun 1, 2016 at 4:21
  • 4
    @user35443 The placement of $
    – smac89
    Oct 13, 2016 at 19:16
9

This is a syntax error in your Makefile. It's quite hard to be more specific than that, without seeing the file itself, or relevant portion(s) thereof.

7

For me, the problem was that I had some end-of-line # ... comments embedded within a define ... endef multi-line variable definition. Removing the comments made the problem go away.

1
  • Thank you. I didn't know comments in define directive are treated literally. Actually the behavior is not explain in the documentation. (For clarity: Embedding a number sign # within the directive isn't itself a syntax error. But it is just not interpreted as a start of a comment, so doing that is admittedly error-prone.)
    – ynn
    Nov 5, 2019 at 10:48
4

My error was on a variable declaration line with a multi-line extension. I have a trailing space after the "\" which made that an invalid line continuation.

MY_VAR = \
   val1 \ <-- 0x20 there caused the error.
   val2
4

In my case, I was actually missing a tab in between ifeq and the command on the next line. No spaces were there to begin with.

ifeq ($(wildcard $DIR_FILE), )
cd $FOLDER; cp -f $DIR_FILE.tpl $DIR_FILE.xs;
endif

Should have been:

ifeq ($(wildcard $DIR_FILE), )
<tab>cd $FOLDER; cp -f $DIR_FILE.tpl $DIR_FILE.xs;
endif

Note the <tab> is an actual tab character

3

In my case error caused next. I've tried to execute commands globally i.e outside of any target.

UPD. To run command globally one must be properly formed. For example command

ln -sf ../../user/curl/$SRC_NAME ./$SRC_NAME

would become:

$(shell ln -sf ../../user/curl/$(SRC_NAME) ./$(SRC_NAME))
3

In my case, this error was caused by the lack of a mere space. I had this if block in my makefile:

if($(METHOD),opt)
CFLAGS=
endif

which should have been:

if ($(METHOD),opt)
CFLAGS=
endif

with a space after if.

1
  • just why, why...
    – phoxd
    Sep 28, 2022 at 23:44
1

In my case, the same error was caused because colon: was missing at end as in staging.deploy:. So note that it can be easy syntax mistake.

1

I had the missing separator file in Makefiles generated by qmake. I was porting Qt code to a different platform. I didn't have QMAKESPEC nor MAKE set. Here's the link I found the answer:

https://forum.qt.io/topic/3783/missing-separator-error-in-makefile/5

1

Just to add yet another reason this can show up:

$(eval VALUE)

is not valid and will produce a "missing separator" error.

$(eval IDENTIFIER=VALUE)

is acceptable. This sort of error showed up for me when I had an macro defined with define and tried to do

define SOME_MACRO
... some expression ...
endef

VAR=$(eval $(call SOME_MACRO,arg))

where the macro did not evaluate to an assignment.

0

I had this because I had no colon after PHONY

Not this,

.PHONY install
install:
    install -m0755 bin/ytdl-clean /usr/local/bin

But this (notice the colon)

.PHONY: install
...
-2

Following Makefile code worked:

obj-m = hello.o

all:
    $(MAKE) -C /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build M=$(PWD) modules 

clean:
    $(MAKE) -C /lib/modules/$(shell uname -r)/build M=$(PWD) clean
1
-3

So apparently, all I needed was the "build-essential" package, then to run autoconf first, which made the Makefile.pre.in, then the ./configure then the make which works perfectly...

1
  • 1
    completely not understandable answer, not applicable to the question in any way Feb 13, 2021 at 22:45

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