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Occasionally it is useful to know which Makefile variables Automake uses for compilations; for instance, you might need to do your own compilation in some special cases.
Some variables are inherited from Autoconf; these are CC
,
CFLAGS
, CPPFLAGS
, DEFS
, LDFLAGS
, and
LIBS
.
There are some additional variables that Automake defines on its own:
AM_CPPFLAGS
¶The contents of this variable are passed to every compilation that invokes the C preprocessor; it is a list of arguments to the preprocessor. For instance, -I and -D options should be listed here.
Automake already provides some -I options automatically, in a
separate variable that is also passed to every compilation that invokes
the C preprocessor. In particular it generates ‘-I.’,
‘-I$(srcdir)’, and a -I pointing to the directory holding
config.h (if you’ve used AC_CONFIG_HEADERS
or
AM_CONFIG_HEADER
). You can disable the default -I
options using the nostdinc option.
AM_CPPFLAGS
is ignored in preference to a per-executable (or
per-library) _CPPFLAGS
variable if it is defined.
INCLUDES
¶This does the same job as AM_CPPFLAGS
(or any per-target
_CPPFLAGS
variable if it is used). It is an older name for the
same functionality. This variable is deprecated; we suggest using
AM_CPPFLAGS
and per-target _CPPFLAGS
instead.
AM_CFLAGS
¶This is the variable the Makefile.am author can use to pass
in additional C compiler flags. It is more fully documented elsewhere.
In some situations, this is not used, in preference to the
per-executable (or per-library) _CFLAGS
.
COMPILE
¶This is the command used to actually compile a C source file. The file name is appended to form the complete command line.
AM_LDFLAGS
¶This is the variable the Makefile.am author can use to pass
in additional linker flags. In some situations, this is not used, in
preference to the per-executable (or per-library) _LDFLAGS
.
LINK
¶This is the command used to actually link a C program. It already
includes ‘-o $@’ and the usual variable references (for instance,
CFLAGS
); it takes as “arguments” the names of the object files
and libraries to link in.
Next: Yacc and Lex support, Previous: Special handling for LIBOBJS
and ALLOCA
, Up: Building Programs and Libraries [Contents][Index]