From: Jason Hickey <jyh@cs.caltech.edu>
To: caml-list@inria.fr
Cc: Martin Jambon <martin_jambon@emailuser.net>
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Building large and portable projects
Date: Fri, 21 Nov 2003 09:05:22 -0800 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <3FBE45D2.5070309@cs.caltech.edu> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.4.58.0311201830340.3787@localhost>
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Martin Jambon wrote:
> Is there a convenient way to develop OCaml code, and be sure that
> this code will be configurable, compilable, installable and
> executable without changes, on any environment where OCaml is available?
We have been using omake to build several large projects, primarily on
Linux and Windows. omake is written in OCaml, and provides a build
system with syntax similar to make, but project-wide dependency
analysis. Here are some features:
- omake runs on Unix, Windows, MacOS, and presumably
other architectures where OCaml is available.
- dependency analysis is project-wide (like cons),
based on MD5 digests
- automated dependency analysis
- there is builtin support for OCaml and C code,
and it is easy to add support for other kinds
of files (just like make).
- the OMakefile syntax is similar to GNU make, but
- omake has user-defined functions
- OMakefile programs are functional
- the .SUBDIRS target is used to define
the project hierarchy
- different parts of the project can have
different configuration.
omake is available by anonynous CVS from cvs.metaprl.org.
% cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@cvs.metaprl.org:/cvsroot login
The password is anoncvs.
% cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@cvs.metaprl.org:/cvsroot checkout omake
Alternatively, RPMs are available at rpm.nogin.org.
Here is a short description. Every project must have an OMakeroot file
in the project root. It is usually boilerplate; this is typical:
# Include the standard configuration
include $(STDROOT)
# Include the OMakefile
.SUBDIRS: .
The project commands are then placed in an OMakefile. To build a
standalone OCaml program from files a.ml b.ml and c.ml, you just need
one line. The OCamlProgram function is defined in the system OMakeroot.
OCamlProgram(foo, a b c)
You can choose the byte-compiler, native-code compiler, or both.
BYTE_ENABLED = true
NATIVE_ENABLED = true
OCamlProgram(foo, a b c)
Maybe you have some C files you need to include in your compile as well.
Perhaps f.c is a generated file.
f.c: f1.c f2.c
cat $+ > $@
StaticCLibrary(bar, d e f)
LIBS = bar
OCamlProgram(foo, a b c)
Perhaps you use the C-preprocessor on some .mlp files:
%.ml: %.mlp
$(CPP) $*.mlp > $@
The system sources contain more examples, and the MetaPRL system, also
available at cvs.metaprl.org, provides a very large, complex, example.
Jason
--
Jason Hickey http://www.cs.caltech.edu/~jyh
Caltech Computer Science Tel: 626-395-6568 FAX: 626-792-4257
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omake(1) MCC Programmerâs Manual omake(1)
NAME
omake - the omake build system
SYNOPSIS
omake is a replacement for the make(1) build program. The omake system
provides the following additional features.
Recursive builds
Omake(1) is designed for building projects that might have source files
in several directories. In Omake, projects are normally specified
using an OMakefile in each of the project directories, and an OMakeroot
file in the root directory. The OMakeroot file specifies general build
rules, and the OMakefiles specify the build parameters specific to each
of the subdirectories. When Omake runs, it walks the configuration
tree, merging rules from all of the OMakefiles. The project is then
built from the entire collection of build rules.
Automatic dependency analysis.
Dependency analysis has always been problematic with the make(1) pro-
gram. Omake addresses this by adding the .SCANNER target, which speci-
fies a command to produce dependencies. For example, the rule
.SCANNER: %.c
$(CC) $(INCLUDE) -MM $+
is the standard way to generate dependencies for .c files. Omake will
automatically run the scanner when it needs to determine dependencies
for a file.
Content-based dependency analysis.
Dependency analysis in omake uses MD5 digests to determine whether
files have changed. After each run, omake stores the dependency infor-
mation in a file called .omakedb in the project root directory. When a
rule is considered for execution, the command is not executed if the
target, dependencies, and command sequence are unchanged since the last
run of omake. As an optimization, omake does not recompute the digest
for a file that has an unchanged modification time, size, and inode
number.
OMakefile
The OMakefile has a formal similar to Makefile. An OMakefile has three
kinds of syntac objects: variable definitions, function definitions,
and rule definitions.
Variables
Variables are defined with the following syntax. The name is any
sequence of alphanumeric characters, underscore â_â, and hyphen â-â.
<name> = <value>
Values are represented as a sequence of literal characters and variable
expansions. A variable expansion has the form "$(<name>)," which rep-
resents the value of the "<name>" variable in the current environment.
Some examples are shown below.
CC = gcc
CFLAGS = -Wall -g
COMMAND = $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -O2
In this example, the value of the COMMAND variable is the string "gcc
-Wall -g -O2".
Unlike make, variable expansion is eager, and functional. That is,
variable values are expanded immediately and new variable definitions
to not affect old ones. For example, consider the following variable
definitions.
X = $(COMMAND)
COMMAND = $(COMMAND) -O3
Y = $(COMMAND)
In this example, the value of the X variable is the string "gcc -Wall
-g -O2" as before, and the value of the Y variable is "gcc -Wall -g -O2
-O3".
Functions
Functions are defined using the following syntax.
<name>(<params>) = <indented-body>
The parameters are a comma-separated list of identifiers, and the body
must be placed on a separate set of lines that are indented from the
function definition itself. For example, the following text defines a
function that concatenates its arguments.
CONCAT(a, b) =
$(a)$(b)
Functions are called using the GNU-make syntax, "$(<name> <args))",
where "<args>" is a comma-separated list of values.
Built-in functions
addsuffix The addsuffix function adds a suffix to each component of a
white-space separated list of strings. Double-quotes may be used to
delimit components that contain spaces.
$(addsuffix <suffix>, <names))
For example, $(addsuffix .c, a b "c d") expands to a.c b.c "c d".c.
addprefix The addprefix function adds a prefix to each component of a
white-space separated list of strings. Double-quotes may be used to
delimit components that contain spaces.
$(addprefix <prefix>, <names))
For example, $(addprefix foo/, a b "c d") expands to foo/a foo/b foo/"c
d".
replacesuffixes The replacesuffixes function modifies the suffix in
each component of a white-space separated list of strings.
$(replacesuffixes <old-suffixes>, <new-suffixes>, <names))
For example, $(replacesuffixes, .h .c, .o .o, a.c b.h c.z) expands to
a.o b.o c.z.
set The set function sorts a set of string components, eliminating
duplicates. Note that the quote symbol in a string component is
significant.
$(set <names>)
For example, $(set z y z "m n" w a) expands to "m n" a w y z.
not Boolean values in omake are represented by case-insensitive
strings. The false value can be represented by the strings false,
no, nil, undefined or 0, and everything else is true. The not func-
tion negates a Boolean value.
$(not <value>)
For example, $(not false) expands to the string true, and $(not hello
world) expands to false.
equal The equal function tests for equality of two values.
$(equal <value1>, <value2>)
For example $(equal a, b) expands to false, and $(equal hello world,
hello world) expands to true.
if The if function represents a conditional based on a Boolean value.
$(if <test>, <value1> <value2>)
For example $(if $(equal a, b), c, d) expands to d.
filter-out The filter-out function removes a component from a white-
space separated list of strings.
$(filter-out <value>, <names>)$
For example $(filter-out a, c d a "hello world") expands to c d "hello
world".
file The file and dir functions define location-independent references
to files and directories. In omake, the commands to build a target
are executed in the targetâs directory. Since there may be many
directories in an omake project, the build system provdes a way to
construct a reference to a file in one directory, and use it in
another without explicitly modifying the file name. The functions
have the following syntax, where the name should refer to a file or
directory.
$(file <name>) , $(dir <name>)
For example, we can construct a reference to a file "foo" in the cur-
rent directory.
FOO = $(file foo)
.SUBDIRS: bar
If the FOO variable is expanded in the bar subdirectory, it will expand
to ../foo.
These commands are often used in the top-level OMakefile to provide
location-independent references to top-level directories, so that build
commands may refer to these directories as if they were absolute.
ROOT = $(dir .)
LIB = $(dir lib)
BIN = $(dir bin)
Once these variables are defined, they can be used in build commands in
subdirectories as follows, where $(BIN) will expand to the location of
the bin directory relative to the command being executed.
install: hello
cp hello $(BIN)
in The in function is closely related to the dir and file functions.
It takes a directory and a file, and gives the filename expanded
relative to that directory. For example, one common way to install
a file is to define a symbol link, where the value of the link is
relative to the directory where the link is created.
$(in <dir>, <file>)
The following commands create links in the $(LIB) directory.
FOO = $(file foo)
install:
ln -s $(in $(LIB), $(FOO)) $(LIB)/foo
Rules
Rules specify commands to solve a file dependency. At its simplest, a
rule has the following form.
<file>: <files>
<commands>
For example, the following rule specifies how to compile a file
hello.c.
hello.o: hello.c
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c -o hello.o hello.c
This rule states that the hello.o file depends on the hello.c file. If
the hello.c file is newer, the command "$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c -o hello.o
hello.c" is to be executed to update the target file hello.o.
A rule can have an arbitrary number of commands. The individual com-
mand lines are executed independently by the shell sh(1). The commands
do not have to begin with a tab, but they must be indented from the
dependency line.
Rules can also be implicit. That is, the files may be specified by
wildcard patterns. The wildcard character is %. For example, the fol-
lowing rule specifies a generic way to build .o files.
%.o: %.c
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c -o $@ $*.c
This rule is a general rule to build an arbitrry .o file from a .c
file. The variables $@ and $* are special. The following variables
may be used in rules.
$*: the target name, without a suffix.
$@: the target name.
$^: a list of the sources, with duplicates removed.
$+: a list of the sources, dpulicates are not removed.
$<: the first source
Unlike normal values, the variables in a rule body are expanded lazily,
and binding is dynamic. The following function definition illustrates
some of the issues.
CLibrary(name, files) =
OFILES = $(addsuffix .o, $(files))
$(name).a: $(OFILES)
$(AR) cq $@ $,(OFILES)
This function defines a rule to build a program called name from a set
of .o files. The files in the argument are specified without a suffix,
so the first line of the function definition defines a variable OFILES
that adds the .o suffix to each of the file names. The next step
defines a rule to build a target library "$(name).a" from the
"$(OFILES)" files. The variable expansion "$,(OFILES)" specifies that
eager expansion should be used on the OFILES variable.
Special targets
.PHONY The ".PHONY" target specifies that a target name does not actu-
ally correspond to a file. Phony targets are often used to specify
extra dependencies. For example, the "all" target is frequently
used to specify a set of files that should be constructed by
default, but the "all" target does not correspond to a file.
.PHONY: all
all: hello.o
.DEFAULT Omake does not build the target specified by the first rule in
an OMakefile (since there are several OMakefiles). The .DEFAULT
phony target specifies what targets should be built by default.
.DEFAULT: hello.o
.SCANNER The ".SCANNER" target specifies a command to produce depen-
dency information for a file. The command should produce output
that is compatible with omake. For example, the following rule uses
gcc(1) to generate dependencies for .c files.
.SCANNER: %.c
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -MM $^
.SUBDIRS The ".SUBDIRS" target is used to specify subdirectories con-
taining omake projects. Each of the subdirectories should have an
OMakefile. For example, the following line specifies a project with
three sub-projects: foo, bar, and baz.
.SUBDIRS: foo bar baz
The current environment is inherited by the subdirectories. This
can be useful if different options are ot be used in different sub-
directories. For example, the following lines specify that foo
should be built in debug mode, while bar and baz should be opti-
mized.
CFLAGS = -g
.SUBDIRS: foo
CFLAGS = -O2
.SUBDIRS: bar baz
NOTES
Variables in omake are functional, and new variable definitions shadow
old ones. In some cases it is convenient to specify a separate set of
variables for different build targets. A frequent idiom in this case
is to use a trivial conditional to define a separate scope.
if 1
CFLAGS = -g
.SUBDIRS: foo
.SUBDIRS: bar baz
The "CFLAGS = -g" variable is defined in a scope used only by the foo
subdirectory, not by the bar and baz directories.
It is generally suspected that omake contains a special prize ^_^
FLAGS
-k: do no stop when an error is encountered.
-j <jobs>: specify the maximum number of parallel jobs to run.
-n: do not execute the commands to build the target, but print what
would be executed instead.
-s: be silent and do not print commands as they are executed.
-t: "touch" the database to make it seem that all files are up to date.
-U: flush the dependency cache and rebuild all files from scratch.
-u: a weaker version of the above that keeps the dependency cache but
requires that the OMakefile configuration tree be re-read.
FILES
OMakefile, OMakeroot
SEE ALSO
make(1)
LibMojave 2003-04-12 omake(1)
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2003-11-21 17:05 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 37+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2003-11-20 18:47 Martin Jambon
2003-11-20 19:56 ` sylvain.le-gall
2003-11-21 1:45 ` Nicolas Cannasse
2003-11-21 5:25 ` David Brown
2003-11-21 5:48 ` Nicolas Cannasse
2003-11-21 6:45 ` David Brown
2003-11-21 6:49 ` sylvain.le-gall
2003-11-21 16:12 ` skaller
2003-11-21 17:53 ` Eric Dahlman
2003-11-22 14:45 ` skaller
2003-11-21 19:04 ` sylvain.le-gall
2003-11-22 14:34 ` skaller
2003-11-22 18:50 ` sylvain.le-gall
2003-11-22 14:32 ` Martin Berger
2003-11-22 14:55 ` skaller
2003-11-22 17:08 ` David Brown
2003-11-22 16:48 ` skaller
2003-11-23 3:25 ` Nicolas Cannasse
2003-11-23 4:29 ` David Brown
2003-11-23 17:21 ` skaller
2003-11-22 17:13 ` David Brown
2003-11-24 18:02 ` Ken Rose
2003-11-24 19:04 ` Christian Lindig
2003-11-21 16:32 ` Martin Jambon
2003-11-21 18:57 ` sylvain.le-gall
2003-11-21 9:14 ` Christian Lindig
2003-11-21 9:28 ` Richard Jones
2003-11-21 15:35 ` skaller
2003-11-21 17:05 ` Jason Hickey [this message]
2003-11-21 18:55 ` sylvain.le-gall
2003-11-21 19:30 ` [Caml-list] Omake [Was: Building large and portable projects] Aleksey Nogin
2003-11-21 20:39 ` Damien
2003-11-22 3:30 ` Aleksey Nogin
2003-11-21 23:48 ` sylvain.le-gall
2003-11-22 1:32 ` Nicolas Cannasse
2003-11-22 3:51 ` Aleksey Nogin
2003-11-28 16:29 ` [Caml-list] Building large and portable projects David Brown
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