parents would be get remade, even if children were not really updated
by the commands executed for them. It also makes all the children have
the real modification time set if possible, so it should fix some other
timing weirdnesses...
- collapse childMade and make fields into flags and convert them to bits
CHILDMADE and REMAKE
- introduce FORCE flag that gets set in all the parents of a child that
has no sources and does not exist.
- set oodate if the FORCE flag is set, and not if CHILDMADE
- centralize the RECHECK into Make_Recheck() and use this in make.c and compat.c
- use Make_TimeStamp for all child -> parent timestamp propagations
a union mount.
eg.
src: FORCE
FORCE is a fake target that does not have sources. When FORCE is
considered made it gets updated with the current timestamp. If the
directory happens to have the same timestamp too, then it will not
be made because it is considered to be up-to-date with respect to
the child. This can happen because the time resolution is only in
seconds. It is more likely to happen on a union filesystem where
the timestamps take longer to update.
The fix is to consider the parent unmade when children have been
updated.
the previous garbage bytes may be read.
Example: "make n" --- target = n, suffix = .ln
Changing interface of SuffSuffIsSuffix() is required to fix this bug.
This revealed another long standing problem with pmake's port to bsd.
.MAKE was not set as the manual page states. Set it and remove another
typo in my last commit.
Unfortunately this revealed a deeper problem with the brk_string code.
To fix it:
- remove sharing of the buffer between brk_string invocations
- change the semantics of brk_string so that the argument array
starts with 0, and return the buffer where the strings are
stored
Actually there were two bugs:
- Add REG_NOTBOL after the first substitution.
- Handle the rm_so == rm_eo == 0 case, where in a substitution such
as 's/bzzzt/z*/g' the first time z* matches nothing.
directory specified, and add it to sysIncPath only if it exists.
However, afterwards make tested for the presence of a -m option by
checking to see if sysIncPath was an empty list, and assumed that
the -m option was not used if it was empty. This obviously breaks
if -m specified a non-existent directory. So I have added a flag
that is set if the -m option is used, and I test that instead.
Make used to only use the search path for nodes that were pure
sources (not targets of other sources). This has been corrected
and now gnu-autoconf generated Makefiles work in directories other
than the source one.
- Suffix transformation rescanning:
Suffix transformations (.c.o:; cc ...) were only recognized in
the past when both suffixes were members of the suffix list.
Thus a sequence like:
.z.b:
echo ${.TARGET}
.SUFFIXES: .z
would cause .z.b: to be inserted as a regular target (and the main
target in this case). Other make programs always add rules that
start with a period in the transformation list and never consider
them as targets. We cannot do that (consider .depend files) so we
resort to scanning the list of the current targets every time a
suffix gets added, and we mutate existing targets that are now
valid transformation rules into transformation rules. If the
transformed target was also the main target, we set the main target
to be the next target in the targets list.
I.e. if you had a line in your Makefile:
../foo.o: foo.c
`..' would be added in the search path. The addition of such paths has
been now disabled. If a pathname contains a slash, then the directory
where such a file is found is not added to the search path. Of course
this eliminates most (all?) use of this function.
- Fix globbing so that patterns that don't have a matching number of [] or {}
don't get expanded. (before the [ case got expanded to nothing!) This is
disabled.
1. ${.*} variables did not get expanded in dependencies.
2. expanded ${.*} variables in .USE dependencies can cause tree
restructuring; handle it.
3. in compat mode, expand .USE before evaluating the list of targets,
instead of doing .USE expansions on demand, because they can cause
tree restructuring.