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Make (software)

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Make
Paradigmmacro,declarative
Designed byStuart Feldman
First appearedApril 1976;48 years ago(1976-04)
Implementation languageC
OSUnix-like,Inferno
File formatsMakefile
Majorimplementations
BSD, GNU, nmake
Dialects
BSD make, GNU make, Microsoft nmake
Influenced
Ant,Rake,MSBuild,andothers

Insoftware development,Makeis acommand-line interfacesoftware toolthat performs actions ordered by configureddependenciesas defined in aconfiguration filecalled amakefile.It is commonly used forbuild automationtobuildexecutable code(such as aprogramorlibrary) fromsource code.But, not limited to building, Make can perform any operation available via theoperating system shell.

Make is widely used, especially inUnixandUnix-likeoperating systems,even though many competing technologies and tools are available including: similar tools that perform actions based on dependencies, somecompilersand interactively via anintegrated development environment.

In addition to referring to the originalUnixtool, Make is also a technology since multiple tools have beenimplementedwith roughly the same functionality – including similar makefilesyntaxandsemantics.

Origin

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Stuart Feldmancreated Make while atBell Labs.An early version was completed in April 1976.[1][2][3]Feldman received the 2003ACM Software System Awardfor authoring Make.[4]

Feldman describes the inspiration to write Make came from a coworker's frustration with the available tooling of the time:

Make originated with a visit fromSteve Johnson(author of yacc, etc.), storming into my office, cursing the Fates that had caused him to waste a morning debugging a correct program (bug had been fixed, file hadn't been compiled,cc *.owas therefore unaffected). As I had spent a part of the previous evening coping with the same disaster on a project I was working on, the idea of a tool to solve it came up. It began with an elaborate idea of a dependency analyzer, boiled down to something much simpler, and turned into Make that weekend. Use of tools that were still wet was part of the culture. Makefiles were text files, not magically encoded binaries, because that was theUnix ethos:printable, debuggable, understandable stuff.

Before Make, building on Unix mostly consisted ofshell scriptswritten for each program's codebase. Make's dependency ordering and out-of-date checking makes the build process more robust and more efficient. The makefile allowed for better organization of build logic and often fewer build files.

Make is widely used in part due to its early inclusion inUnix,starting withPWB/UNIX1.0, which featured a variety of software development tools.[3]

Variants

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Make has beenimplementednumerous times, generally using the same makefile format and providing the same features, but some providing enhancements from the original. Examples:

  • Sun DevPro Make appeared in 1986 with SunOS-3.2. With SunOS-3.2. It was delivered as an optional program; with SunOS-4.0, SunPro Make was made the default Make program.[5][better source needed]In December 2006, Sun DevPro Make was made open source as part of the efforts to open-sourceSolaris.[6][7]
  • dmake or Distributed Make that came with Sun Solaris Studio as its default Make, but not the default one on the Solaris Operating System (SunOS). It was originally required to build OpenOffice, but in 2009[8]the build system was rewritten to use GNU Make. WhileApache OpenOfficestill contains a mixture of both build systems,[9]the much more actively developedLibreOfficeonly uses the modernized "gbuild" now.[8]
  • BSDMake (pmake,[10]bmake[11]orfmake[12]), which is derived from Adam de Boor's work on a version of Make capable of building targets inparallel,and survives with varying degrees of modification inFreeBSD,[11]NetBSD[13]andOpenBSD.[14]Distinctively, it has conditionals and iterative loops which are applied at the parsing stage and may be used to conditionally and programmatically construct the makefile,[15]including generation of targets at runtime.[citation needed]
  • GNUMake (shortgmake) is the standard implementation of Make for Linux and macOS.[16]It provides several extensions over the original Make, such as conditionals. It also provides many built-in functions which can be used to eliminate the need for shell-scripting in the makefile rules as well as to manipulate the variables set and used in the makefile.[17]For example, theforeachfunction can be used to iterate over a list of values, such as the names of files in a given directory.[18]GNU Make is required for building many software systems, includingGNU Compiler Collection(GCC) (since version 3.4[19]), the Linux kernel,[20][21]Apache OpenOffice,[9]LibreOffice,[8]andMozilla Firefox.[22]
  • Rocky Bernstein's Remake[23]is a fork of GNU Make and provides several extensions over GNU Make, such as better location and error-location reporting, execution tracing, execution profiling, and it contains a debugger.
  • Glenn Fowler'snmake[24](unrelated to the same-named Microsoft variant) is incompatible with the UNIX variant, but provides features which, according to some, reduce the size of makefiles by a factor of 10.
  • Microsoftnmakeis normally installed withVisual Studio.[25]It supports preprocessor directives such as includes and conditional expressions which use variables set on the command-line or within the makefiles.[26][27]Inference rules differ from Make; for example they can include search paths.[28]
  • Embarcaderomake has a command-line option that "Causes MAKE to mimic Microsoft's NMAKE.".[29]
  • Qt Project'sJomtool is a clone of nmake.[30]
  • Mkreplaced Make inResearch Unix,starting from version 9.[31]A redesign of the original tool by Bell Labs programmer Andrew G. Hume, it features a different syntax. Mk became the standard build tool inPlan 9,Bell Labs' intended successor to Unix.[32]
  • Katiis Google's replacement of GNU Make, as of 2020 used inAndroid OSbuilds. It translates the makefile intoninjafor faster incremental builds (similar to the cmake metatool).[33]
  • Snakemake is a Python-driven implementation for compiling and runningbioinformaticsworkflows.[34]

POSIXincludes standardization of the basic features and operation of the Make utility, and is implemented with varying degrees of compatibility with Unix-based versions of Make. In general, simple makefiles may be used between various versions of Make with reasonable success. GNU Make, Makepp and some versions of BSD Make default to looking first for files named "GNUmakefile",[35]"Makeppfile"[36]and "BSDmakefile"[37]respectively, which allows one to put makefiles which use implementation-defined behavior in separate locations.

Use

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In general, based on a makefile, Make updates target files from source files if any source file has a newertimestampthan the target file or the target file does not exist. For example, this could include compilingCfiles (*.c) intoobject files,then linking the object files into an executable program. Or this could include compilingTypeScriptfiles (*.ts) toJavaScriptfor use in a browser. Other examples include: convert a source image file to another format, copy a file to a content management system, and send e-mail about build status.

A makefile defines targets where each is either a file to generate or is a user-defined concept, called aphonytarget.

Make updates the targets passed as arguments:

make[-fmakefile][options][targets]

If no target is specified, Make updates the first target in the makefile which is often a phony target to perform the most commonly used action.

Make skips build actions if the target file timestamp is after that of the source files.[38]Doing so optimizes the build process by skipping actions when the target file is up-to-date, but sometimes updates are skipped erroneously due to file timestamp issues including restoring an older version of a source file, or when anetwork filesystemis a source of files and its clock or time zone is not synchronized with the machine running Make. Also, if a source file's timestamp is in the future, make repeatedly triggers unnecessary actions, causing longer build time.

When Make starts, it uses the makefile specified on the command-line or if not specified, then uses the one found by via specific search rules. Generally, Make defaults to using the file in theworking directorynamedMakefile.GNU Make searches for the first file matching:GNUmakefile,makefile,orMakefile.

Make processes the options of the command-line based on the loaded makefile.

Makefile

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Makefile
Uniform Type Identifier (UTI)public.make-source[39]

Themakefilelanguage is partiallydeclarative programmingwhere end conditions are described but the order in which actions are to be taken is not.[40][41][42][43]This type of programming can be confusing to programmers used toimperative programming.

Makefiles can contain the following constructs:[44]

  • Explicit rule:defines when and how to update a target; listingprerequisites(dependent targets) and commands that define the update action, called therecipe
  • Implicit rule:defines when and how to remake a class of files based on their names; including how a target depends on a file with a name similar to the target and an update recipe
  • Variable definition:associates a text value with a name that can be substituted into later text
  • Directive:instruction to do something special such as include another makefile
  • Comment:line starting with#

Rules

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Each rule begins with adependency linewhich consists of the rule'stargetname followed by a colon (:) and optionally a list of targets on which the rule's target depends, its prerequisites.[45]

target [target...]: [component...]
Tab ↹[command 1]
.
.
.
Tab ↹[command n]

Usually a rule has a single target, rather than multiple.

A dependency line may be followed by a recipe; a series ofTABindented command lines which define how to generate the target from the components (i.e. source files). If any prerequisite has a more recent timestamp than the target file or the target does not exist as a file, the recipe is performed.

The first command may appear on the same line after the prerequisites, separated by a semicolon,

targets:prerequisites;command

for example,

hello:;@echo"hello"

Each command line must begin with a tab character. Even though aspaceis alsowhitespace,Make requires tab. Since this often leads to confusion and mistakes, this aspect of makefile syntax is subject to criticism; described byEric S. Raymondas "one of the worst design botches in the history of Unix"[46]andThe Unix-Haters Handbooksaid "using tabs as part of the syntax is like one of those pungee stick traps inThe Green Berets".Feldman explains the choice as caused by aworkaroundfor an early implementation difficulty preserved by a desire forbackward compatibilitywith the very first users:

Why the tab in column 1?Yaccwas new,Lexwas brand new. I hadn't tried either, so I figured this would be a good excuse to learn. After getting myself snarled up with my first stab at Lex, I just did something simple with the pattern newline-tab. It worked, it stayed. And then a few weeks later I had a user population of about a dozen, most of them friends, and I didn't want to screw up my embedded base. The rest, sadly, is history.

— Stuart Feldman[46]

GNU Make. since version 3.82, allows the choice of any symbol (one character) as the recipe prefix using the.RECIPEPREFIX special variable, for example:

.RECIPEPREFIX:=:
all:
:@echo"recipe prefix symbol is set to '$(.RECIPEPREFIX)'"

Each command is executed in a separateshell.Since operating systems use different shells this can lead to unportable makefiles. For example, GNU Make (all POSIX Makes) executes commands with/bin/shby default, whereUnixcommands likecpare normally used. In contrast to that, Microsoft'snmakeexecutes commands with cmd.exe wherebatchcommands likecopyare available but not necessarily cp.

Since a recipe is optional, the dependency line can consist solely of components that refer to other targets, for example:

realclean:cleandistclean

The following example rule is evaluated when Make updates target file.txt; i.e. viamake file.txt.If file.html is newer than file.txt or file.txt does not exist, then the command is run to generate file.txt from file.html.

file.txt:file.html
lynx-dumpfile.html>file.txt

A command can have one or more of the following prefixes (after the tab):

  • minus(-) specifies to ignore an error from the command
  • at(@) specifies tonotoutput the command before it is executed
  • plus(+) specifies to execute the command even if Make is invoked in "do not execute" mode

Ignoring errors and silencing echo can alternatively be obtained via the special targets.IGNOREand.SILENT.[47]

Microsoft's NMAKE has predefined rules that can be omitted from these makefiles, e.g.c.obj$(CC)$(CFLAGS).

Macros

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A makefile can define and use macros. Macros are usually referred to asvariableswhen they hold simple string definitions, likeCC=clang.Macros in makefiles may be overridden in thecommand-line argumentspassed to the Make utility.Environment variablesare also available as macros.

For example, the macroCCis frequently used in makefiles to refer to the location of aCcompiler. If used consistently throughout the makefile, then the compiler used can be changed by changing the value of the macro rather than changing each rule command that invokes the compiler.

Macros are commonly named inall-caps:

MACRO=definition

A macro value can consist of other macro values. The value of macro is expanded on each use (lazily).

A macro is used by expanding either via $NAMEor $(NAME). The latter is safer since omitting the parentheses leads to Make interpreting the next letter after the$as the entire variable name. An equivalent form uses curly braces rather than parentheses, i.e.${},which is the style used inBSD.

NEW_MACRO=$(MACRO)-$(MACRO2)

Macros can be composed of shell commands by using thecommand substitutionoperator, denoted bybackticks(`).

YYYYMMDD=`date`

The command-line syntax for overriding a macro is:

makeMACRO="value"[MACRO="value"...]TARGET[TARGET...]

Makefiles can access predefinedinternal macros,with?and@being common.

target:component1component2
# echo components YOUNGER than TARGET
echo$?
# echo TARGET name
echo$@

A common syntax when defining macros, which works on BSD and GNU Make, is to use of+=,?=,and!=instead of the equal sign (=).[48]

Suffix rules

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Suffix rules have "targets" with names in the form.FROM.TOand are used to launch actions based on file extension. In the command lines of suffix rules, POSIX specifies[49]that the internal macro$<refers to the first prerequisite and$@refers to the target. In this example, which converts any HTML file into text, the shell redirection token>is part of the command line whereas$<is a macro referring to the HTML file:

.SUFFIXES:.txt.html

# From.html to.txt
.html.txt:
lynx-dump$<>$@

When called from the command line, the example above expands.

$make-nfile.txt
lynx -dump file.html > file.txt

Pattern rules

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Suffix rules cannot have any prerequisites of their own.[50]If they have any, they are treated as normal files with unusual names, not as suffix rules. GNU Make supports suffix rules for compatibility with old makefiles but otherwise encourages usage ofpattern rules.[51]

A pattern rule looks like an ordinary rule, except that its target contains exactly one%character within the string. The target is considered a pattern for matching file names: the%can match any substring of zero or more characters,[52]while other characters match only themselves. The prerequisites likewise use%to show how their names relate to the target name.

The example above of a suffix rule would look like the following pattern rule:

# From %.html to %.txt
%.txt:%.html
lynx-dump$<>$@

Comment

[edit]

Single-linecommentsare started with thehash symbol(#).

Directive

[edit]

A directive specifies special behavior such asincludinganother makefile.

Line continuation

[edit]

Line continuationis indicated with a backslash\character at the end of a line.

target: component \
component
Tab ↹command; \
Tab ↹command | \
Tab ↹piped-command

Examples

[edit]

The following commands are in the context of the makefile that follows.

make# updates first target, 'all'
makehelp# updates target 'help' to list targets
makedist# updates target 'dist' to build for distribution
PACKAGE=package
VERSION=`date"+%Y.%m%d%"`
RELEASE_DIR=..
RELEASE_FILE=$(PACKAGE)-$(VERSION)

# Default target
# note: variable LOGNAME comes from the environment
all:
echo"Hello$(LOGNAME),nothing to do by default "
echo"Try 'make help'"

# Display targets by searching this file
help:
egrep"^# target:"[Mm]akefile

# Make a release
dist:
tar-cf$(RELEASE_DIR)/$(RELEASE_FILE)&&\
gzip-9$(RELEASE_DIR)/$(RELEASE_FILE).tar

Below is a simple makefile that by default (the "all" rule is listed first) compiles a source file called "helloworld.c" using the system's C compiler and also provides a "clean" target to remove the generated files if the user desires to start over. The$@and$<are two of the so-called internal macros (also known as automatic variables) and stand for the target name and "implicit" source, respectively. In the example below,$^expands to a space delimited list of the prerequisites. There are a number of other internal macros.[49][53]

CFLAGS?=-g

all:helloworld

helloworld:helloworld.o
$(CC)$(LDFLAGS)-o$@$^

helloworld.o:helloworld.c
$(CC)$(CFLAGS)-c-o$@$<

clean:
$(RM)helloworldhelloworld.o

Many systems come with predefined Make rules and macros to specify common tasks such as compilation based on file suffix. This lets users omit the actual (often unportable) instructions of how to generate the target from the source(s). On such a system the makefile above could be modified as follows:

all:helloworld

helloworld:helloworld.o
$(CC)$(CFLAGS)$(LDFLAGS)-o$@$^

clean:
$(RM)helloworldhelloworld.o

# suffix rule
.c.o:
$(CC)$(CFLAGS)-c$<

.SUFFIXES:.c


That "helloworld.o" depends on "helloworld.c" is now automatically handled by Make. In such a simple example as the one illustrated here this hardly matters, but the real power of suffix rules becomes evident when the number of source files in a software project starts to grow. One only has to write a rule for the linking step and declare the object files as prerequisites. Make will then implicitly determine how to make all the object files and look for changes in all the source files.

Simple suffix rules work well as long as the source files do not depend on each other and on other files such as header files. Another route to simplify the build process is to use so-called pattern matching rules that can be combined with compiler-assisted dependency generation. As a final example requiring the gcc compiler and GNU Make, here is a generic makefile that compiles all C files in a folder to the corresponding object files and then links them to the final executable. Before compilation takes place, dependencies are gathered in makefile-friendly format into a hidden file ".depend" that is then included to the makefile. Portable programs ought to avoid constructs used below.

# Generic GNUMakefile

# snippet to fail if not GNU
ifneq (,)
ThismakefilerequiresGNUMake.
endif

PROGRAM=foo
C_FILES:=$(wildcard*.c)
OBJS:=$(patsubst%.c,%.o,$(C_FILES))
CC=cc
CFLAGS=-Wall-pedantic
LDFLAGS=
LDLIBS=-lm

all:$(PROGRAM)

$(PROGRAM):.depend$(OBJS)
$(CC)$(CFLAGS)$(OBJS)$(LDFLAGS)-o$(PROGRAM)$(LDLIBS)

depend:.depend

.depend:cmd=gcc-MM-MFdepend$(var);catdepend>>.depend;
.depend:
@echo"Generating dependencies..."
@$(foreachvar,$(C_FILES),$(cmd))
@rm-fdepend

-include.depend

# These are the pattern matching rules. In addition to the automatic
# variables used here, the variable $* that matches whatever % stands for
# can be useful in special cases.
%.o:%.c
$(CC)$(CFLAGS)-c$<-o$@

%:%.o
$(CC)$(CFLAGS)-o$@$<

clean:
rm-f.depend$(OBJS)

.PHONY:cleandepend

Dependency tracking

[edit]

Makefile consist of dependencies and a forgotten or an extra one may not be immediately obvious to the user and may result in subtle bugs in the generated software that are hard to catch. Various approaches may be used to avoid this problem and keep dependencies in source and makefiles in sync. One approach is by using compiler to keep track of dependencies changes.e.g GCC can statically analyze the source code and produce rules for the given file automatically by using-MMswitch. The other approach would be makefiles or third-party tools that would generate makefiles with dependencies (e.g.Automaketoolchain by theGNU Project,can do so automatically).

Another approach is to use meta-build tools likeCMake,Mesonetc.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"V7/usr/src/cmd/make/ident.c".tuhs.org.1 September 2013. Archived fromthe originalon 1 September 2013.Retrieved18 March2018.
  2. ^Feldman, S. I. (April 1979). "Make --- A Program for Maintaining Computer Programs".Software: Practice and Experience.9(4): 255–265.CiteSeerX10.1.1.39.7058.doi:10.1002/spe.4380090402.S2CID33059412.
  3. ^abThompson, T. J. (November 1980). "Designer's Workbench: Providing a Production Environment".Bell System Technical Journal.59(9): 1811–1825.doi:10.1002/j.1538-7305.1980.tb03063.x.S2CID27213583.In the general maintenance of DWB, we have used the Source Code Control System and make utility provided by the PWB/UNIX* interactive operating system.
  4. ^Matthew Doar (2005).Practical Development Environments.O'Reilly Media.p. 94.ISBN978-0-596-00796-6.
  5. ^"Google Groups".arquivo.pt.Archived from the original on 22 January 2011.Retrieved18 March2018.{{cite web}}:CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^"OpenSolaris at Two (Jim Grisanzio)".12 December 2013. Archived fromthe originalon 12 December 2013.Retrieved18 March2018.
  7. ^Grisanzio, Jim.The OpenSolaris Story.
  8. ^abc"Development/Gbuild - The Document Foundation Wiki".wiki.documentfoundation.org.Retrieved18 March2018.
  9. ^ab"Apache OpenOffice Building Guide - Apache OpenOffice Wiki".wiki.openoffice.org.Retrieved18 March2018.
  10. ^FreeBSD 2.0.5 Make Source Code,1993
  11. ^ab"Bmake(1)".
  12. ^"fmake(1) General Commands Manual".
  13. ^"make".NetBSD Manual Pages.Retrieved9 July2020.
  14. ^"make(1) - OpenBSD manual pages".man.openbsd.org.Retrieved18 March2018.
  15. ^"make".FreeBSD.Retrieved9 July2020.Makefile inclusion, conditional structures and for loops reminiscent of the C programming language are provided in make.
  16. ^Arnold Robbins (2005),Unix in a Nutshell, Fourth Edition,O'Reilly
  17. ^"8. Functions for Transforming Text",GNU make,Free Software Foundation, 2013
  18. ^"8.5 The foreach Function",GNU make,Free Software Foundation, 2013
  19. ^"GCC 3.4 Release Series Changes, New Features, and Fixes".Free Software Foundation. 2006.
  20. ^Javier Martinez Canillas (December 26, 2012)."Kbuild: the Linux Kernel Build System".Linux Journal.
  21. ^Greg Kroah-Hartman (2006),Linux Kernel in a Nutshell,O'Reilly
  22. ^"Build Instructions".
  23. ^Rocky Bernstein."Remake – GNU Make with comprehensible tracing and a debugger".
  24. ^Glenn Fowler (January 4, 2012)."nmake Overview".Information and Software Systems Research, AT&T Labs Research. Archived fromthe originalon September 2, 2015.RetrievedMay 26,2014.
  25. ^"NMAKE Reference Visual Studio 2015".Microsoft. 2015.
  26. ^"Makefile Preprocessing Directives".2014.
  27. ^"Makefile Preprocessing Operators".Microsoft. 2014.
  28. ^"Search Paths in Rules".Microsoft. 2014.
  29. ^"MAKE".CodeGear(TM). 2008.
  30. ^"Jom - Qt Wiki".Qt Project. 2021.
  31. ^McIlroy, M. D.(1987).A Research Unix reader: annotated excerpts from the Programmer's Manual, 1971–1986(PDF)(Technical report). Bell Labs. CSTR 139.
  32. ^Hume, Andrew G.; Flandrena, Bob (2002)."Maintaining files on Plan 9 with Mk".Plan 9 Programmer’s Manual.AT&T Bell Laboratories.Archivedfrom the original on July 11, 2015.
  33. ^"google/kati: An experimental GNU make clone".GitHub.30 November 2020.
  34. ^Mölder, Felix; Jablonski, Kim Philipp; Letcher, Brice; Hall, Michael B.; Tomkins-Tinch, Christopher H.; Sochat, Vanessa; Forster, Jan; Lee, Soohyun; Twardziok, Sven O.; Kanitz, Alexander; Wilm, Andreas (2021-04-19)."Sustainable data analysis with Snakemake".F1000Research.10:33.doi:10.12688/f1000research.29032.2.ISSN2046-1402.PMC8114187.PMID34035898.
  35. ^"GNU 'make'".Free Software Foundation.
  36. ^"Makepp".
  37. ^"Free BSD make".
  38. ^How to sort Linux ls command file outputArchivedSeptember 13, 2016, at theWayback Machine
  39. ^"makefile".Apple Developer Documentation: Uniform Type Identifiers.Apple Inc.
  40. ^Adams, P. and Solomon, M., 1993, An overview of the CAPITL software development environment. In International Workshop on Software Configuration Management (pp. 1-34). Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
  41. ^an overview on dslsArchivedOctober 23, 2007, at theWayback Machine,2007/02/27, phoenix wiki
  42. ^Re: Choreography and RESTArchivedSeptember 12, 2016, at theWayback Machine,from Christopher B Ferris on 2002-08-09
  43. ^Target Junior MakefilesArchivedJanuary 7, 2010, at theWayback Machine,Andrew W. Fitzgibbon and William A. Hoffman
  44. ^3.1 What Makefiles Contain,GNU make,Free Software Foundation
  45. ^"Prerequisite Types (GNU make)".GNU.org.GNU Project.Retrieved15 December2020.
  46. ^ab"Chapter 15. Tools: make: Automating Your Recipes",The Art of Unix Programming,Eric S. Raymond2003
  47. ^make– Shell and Utilities Reference,The Single UNIX Specification,Version 4 fromThe Open Group
  48. ^make(1)FreeBSDGeneral CommandsManual
  49. ^ab"make".opengroup.org.Retrieved18 March2018.
  50. ^"GNU make manual: suffix rules".Free Software Foundation.
  51. ^"GNU make manual: pattern rules".Free Software Foundation.
  52. ^See sectionPattern Matching Rulesin the SunPro man pageArchivedMay 29, 2014, at theWayback Machine
  53. ^Automatic VariablesArchivedApril 25, 2016, at theWayback MachineGNU `make'
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