./obj.${MACHINE}
./obj
/usr/obj/${PWD}
The rules for the default .OBJDIR setting are now simplified to
(and documented as) trying the chdir to the following
(if the appropriate variable is defined):
${MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX}${.CURDIR}
${MAKEOBJDIR}
${.CURDIR}
.OBJDIR can be overridden in the makefile.
<bsd.obj.mk> uses this to provide the "culled" .OBJDIR semantics
for NetBSD's /usr/src builds.
MAKEOBJDIRPREFIX & MAKEOBJDIR still can only be provided
in the environment or on make(1)'s command line.
Per discussion on tech-toolchain.
This should reduce a lot of lossage people have experienced over
the years with various .OBJDIR setups.
Instead of adding MAKE_BOOTSTRAP for hosted environments, i.e., when
you want things simple, instead add MAKE_NATIVE to get those hugely
important features like __RCSID().
It's now possible to build make on some hosts with: cc *.c */*.c
* Rename "config.h" to "nbtool_config.h" and
HAVE_CONFIG_H to HAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H.
This makes in more obvious in the source when we're using
tools/compat/config.h versus "standard autoconf" config.h
* Consistently move the inclusion of nbtool_config.h to before
<sys/cdefs.h> so that the former can provide __RCSID() (et al),
and there's no need to protect those macros any more.
These changes should make it easier to "tool-ify" a program by adding:
#if HAVE_NBTOOL_CONFIG_H
#include "nbtool_config.h"
#endif
to the top of the source files (for the general case).