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Recording dependencies manually
Usually people are happy enough with BUILT_SOURCES
because they
never build targets such as ‘make foo’ before ‘make all’, as
in the previous example. However if this matters to you, you can
avoid BUILT_SOURCES
and record such dependencies explicitly in
the ‘Makefile.am’.
bin_PROGRAMS = foo foo_SOURCES = foo.c nodist_foo_SOURCES = bindir.h foo.$(OBJEXT): bindir.h CLEANFILES = bindir.h bindir.h: Makefile echo '#define bindir "$(bindir)"' >$@ |
You don't have to list all the dependencies of ‘foo.o’ explicitly, only those that might need to be built. If a dependency already exists, it will not hinder the first compilation and will be recorded by the normal dependency tracking code. (Note that after this first compilation the dependency tracking code will also have recorded the dependency between ‘foo.o’ and ‘bindir.h’; so our explicit dependency is really useful to the first build only.)
Adding explicit dependencies like this can be a bit dangerous if you are not careful enough. This is due to the way Automake tries not to overwrite your rules (it assumes you know better than it). ‘foo.$(OBJEXT): bindir.h’ supersedes any rule Automake may want to output to build ‘foo.$(OBJEXT)’. It happens to work in this case because Automake doesn't have to output any ‘foo.$(OBJEXT):’ target: it relies on a suffix rule instead (i.e., ‘.c.$(OBJEXT):’). Always check the generated ‘Makefile.in’ if you do this.