Provided by: mymake_2.3.6-1_amd64 

NAME
mymake - simple build system for C/C++
SYNOPSIS
mymake [-?] [-f] [-c] [-t] [-e] [-ne] [-p path] [-j processes] [-o output] [-d level] [--default-input
input] [files]... [options]... [-- args...]
mymake --config
mymake --target
mymake --project
DESCRIPTION
The mymake program builds C/C++ programs. It aims to be able to build simple programs (referred to as
targets) with close to zero configuration, yet be powerful enough to handle larger programs as the
initially simple project grows.
Once installed, run
mymake --config
to generate the global configuration file for the current user. This file specifies how to compile C/C++
programs on the current system, and defines the default parameters that can be used in other files as
described below. The default contents are typically sufficient.
After the initial configuration, a simple program can be compiled by navigating to the directory the
source code of the program and typing
mymake myprogram.cpp
This will compile and link the program using the configuration in the global configuration, and if
compilation is successful also execute the program. Command-line parameters may be passed to the program
using the -- or the -a parameter
mymake myprogram.cpp -- param1 param2...
The default behavior also works with programs consisting of multiple files. mymake examines which files
are included in the source file specified on the command-line and compiles those files as well. This is
based on the assumption that if the file utils.h is included, then the file utils.cpp should also be
compiled (if it exists). Of course, different extensions than .cpp are also examined. As is typically the
case with other build systems, only files changed since the last build are rebuilt.
If the program being compiled does not follow the assumption that header files and implementation files
appear pairwise, it is possible to create a file called .mymake in the project directory and add the
following to it
[]
input=*
This instructs mymake to include all implementation files in the compilation, regardless of whether or
not they are considered to be needed by the program or not. It is also possible to add a particular file
to the input statement (e.g. myprogram.cpp). In both cases, it will no longer be necessary to specify a
file on the command line.
As of version 2.3.0, mymake tracks the command-lines used to compile each file, and re-compiles source
files where the command line has changed. This means that mymake is able to re-compile the relevant parts
of the project if the configuration file has changed.
As the project grows, it is also possible to divide the project into separate sub-projects and have
mymake manage dependencies automatically. This is done by creating a .myproject file in the root
directory of the project. This tells mymake to treat all directories as sub-projects, each which may
contain their own .mymake file. See CONFIGURATION for details.
OPTIONS
The usual GNU command line syntax is respected, with long options starting with two dashes (`-'). Long
options are equivalent to short options.
-?, --help
Print a message outlining basic usage and command-line options.
-f, --force
Force re-compilation of all required files, even files that would otherwise be considered to be
up-to-date. This is useful if the configuration files were changed, for example.
-c, --clean
Clean build files by removing the execDir and buildDir indicated by the configuration based on any
options specified.
-t, --time
Output information about the wall-clock time used in each step of compilation.
-e, --execute
Execute the executable after successfully building a target. The default configuration executes
the program, but this behavior may be overridden by project-specific configuration files. The
command-line parameters overrides all configuration files.
-ne, --not --execute
Do not execute the executable after a successful build. The inverse of -f.
-p, --exec-path
Specify the working directory when running the compiled executable. The default value is the path
of the project to which the executable belongs.
-j processes, --threads processes
Spawn up to the specified number of processes in parallel during compilation. This typically means
that compilation may use up to the specified number of hardware threads. This is typically not
needed, as the user's preference is specified in the global configuration file.
-o output, --output output
Specify the name of the output file (note: not the location). This can be used to override the
default behavior, but this is better done in one of the configuration files.
-d level, --debug level
Specify the debug level, either as a number or as the associated label. The following levels are
available:
0: QUIET
No output except for fatal errors.
1: NORMAL
The default value. Outputs progress information.
2: PEDANTIC
Warns about configuration issues that might be errors. Useful as a first step in debugging
configurations.
3: INFO
Prints information about decisions during the build. Good for debugging configurations.
4: VERBOSE
All information you will typically need when debugging configuration issues.
5: DEBUG
Information typically only needed when debugging mymake itself.
--default-input input
Add input as an input file if no other inputs were specified either on the command line or in any
configuration files. This option is intended to be used when integrating mymake in an editor. The
editor may then always supply the name of the current open file as a --default-input to make
mymake do the right thing based on configurations: compiling the current file if nothing else is
specified, otherwise follow the other, more precise instructions in the configuration files.
[options]
Zero or more options may also be specified on the command line. These options may correspond to
sections in one of the configuration files to enable (or disable). See the CONFIGURATION section
below for details.
[files]
Files may also be specified on the command line. Mymake will add all names that correspond to
existing files (possibly first appending known file extensions) to the list of input files to
process.
--config
Create the global configuration in ~/.mymake. This can also be used to revert the global
configuration to the default state. Will ask for the preferred number of threads to use during
compilation.
--target
Creates the file .mymake in the current directory. It fills the file with a template configuration
that contains common options and settings.
--project
Creates the file .myproject in the current directory. The file contains a template suitable for a
project, i.e. a directory consisting of multiple targets.
CONFIGURATION
The configuration in mymake consists of a set of named variables, each of which contain an array of
strings. The value of these variables may originate from one (or more) of four locations: the global
configuration (~/.mymake), the project configuration (.myproject, if present), the target configuration
(.mymake, if present), or the command-line. The project and target configurations may reside in the
current directory, or any parent directories. If a project configuration is found, target configurations
are expected to be located in sub-directories to the project configuration. Options are always applied in
the order specified above. This means that options in the global configuration may be overridden by other
configurations, and that the command-line parameters are always applied last. The exception is when
compiling a project. Then, command line parameters are only applied when resolving the project
configuration, not when resolving the configuration for individual targets.
All configuration files follow the same format. They all consist of a sequence of assignments to
variables, optionally grouped into zero or more sections. Lines starting with `#' are comments.
Assignments have one of the following two forms:
name=value
name+=value
The first form replaces the entire contents of the variable with the string value, while the second adds
value as the last element of the array. As a special case, if the first form is used, and value is empty,
the variable is assigned the empty array. Assignments may be grouped into sections by adding section
headers before them. A section header has the following form:
[option1,option2,...]
The meaning of the section header is: only consider the following assignments if all options that appear
in the header are present in the context in which the configuration is evaluated (e.g. specified on the
command line). Thus, the header [] is always evaluated, [release] is only evaluated if the release option
has been specified, and [release,unix] only if both release and unix have been specified. Additionally,
an option may be prefixed with an `!' to mean that the particular option has to be absent, for example:
[!release,unix].
Each configuration file is then evaluated by mymake in turn to provide the set of variables to use during
compilation. This is done by evaluating each assignment in each file in the order they are specified,
ignoring any sections that should be skipped according to the available options. Typically, each file is
only evaluated once, with a context consisting of the options specified on the command-line. The
exception is .myproject-files, which are covered in the PROJECTS section below.
PRE-DEFINED OPTIONS
The following options are pre-defined by mymake or the default configuration, and can be used by default:
release
Produce a release version of the program. This typically means turning on more aggressive
optimizations.
lib Produces a static library. Typically used in projects when some targets are static libraries used
by other targets in the project.
sharedlibe
Produces a dynamic library. Typically used in projects, like lib.
unix Defined by mymake when compiling for a UNIX-like system.
windows
Defined by mymake when compiling for a Windows-like system.
project
Defined automatically when evaluating the .myproject file in the project context.
build Defined automatically when evaluating the .myproject file to find options for the targets in a
project.
deps Defined automatically when evaluating the .myproject file to find explicit dependencies between
projects.
VARIABLES
The following variables are used by mymake to define what should be done. Some of these variables are
treated specially by mymake itself, others are just defined by the global configuration. It is possible
to define and use other variables in configuration files.
ext Array of the file extensions you want to compile. Whenever mymake realizes you have included x.h,
looks for all extensions in ext and tries them to find the corresponding implementation file.
execExt
File extension of executable files. Added to the output filename automatically.
intermediateExt
File extension of intermediate files. Typically .o on UNIX systems.
buildDir
String containing the directory used to store all temporary files when building your program.
Relative to the root directory of the target (i.e. where the .mymake file is).
execDir
String containing the directory used to store the final output (the executable) of all targets.
Relative to the root directory of the target.
ignore Array of wildcard patterns (like in the shell) that determines if a certain file should be
ignored. Useful when working with templates sometimes, or when parts of the source code should not
be compiled.
noIncludes
Array of wildcard patterns (like in the shell) that determines if a certain path should not be
scanned for headers. Useful when you want to parts of the code that is not C/C++, where it is not
meaningful to look for #include.
input Array of file names to use as roots when looking for files that needs to be compiled. Anything
that is not an option that is specified on the command line is appended to this variable. The
special value * can be used to indicate that all files with an extension in the ext variable
should be compiled. This is usually what you want when you are compiling a library of some kind.
output String specifying the name of the output file. If not specified, the name of the first input file
is used instead.
appendExt
Append the original extension of the original source file to the intermediate file when compiling.
This allows mymake to compile projects where there are multiple files with the same name, e.g.
foo.cpp and foo.c without both trying to create foo.o and thereby causing compilation to fail.
Mymake warns you if you might need to add use this option.
include
Array of paths that should be added to the include path of the compilation.
includeCl
Flag to prepend all elements in include.
includes
Generated automatically by mymake, equivalent to adding the contents of includeCl before each
element in include.
library
Array of system libraries that should be linked to your executable.
libraryCl
Flag to prepend all elements in library.
localLibrary
Array of local libraries that should be linked to your executable (usually used in a project).
localLibraryCl
Flag to prepend all elements in localLibrary.
libs Automatically generated by mymake, equivalent to adding libraryCl before all elements of library,
also including local libraries.
define Preprocessor defines.
defineCl
Preprocessor define flag.
exceute
Yes or no, telling if mymake should execute the program after a successful compilation. This can
be overridden on the command line using -e or -ne.
pch The precompiled header file name that should be used. If you are using the default configuration,
you only need to set this variable to use precompiled headers. If you are using #pragma once in
gcc, you will sadly get a warning that seems impossible to disable (it is not a problem when
precompiling headers).
pchFile
The name of the compiled version of the file in pch.
pchCompile
Command line for compiling the precompiled header file.
pchCompileCombined
If set to yes, pchCompile is expected to generate both the pch-file and compile a .cpp-file.
preBuild
Array of command-lines that should be executed before the build is started. Expands variables.
preBuildCreates
Array of files created by the pre-build step which should also be included in the compilation.
These are expected not to introduce any additional dependencies into the project, as they are not
available at the point where mymake resolves dependencies between files and targets.
postBuild
Array of command-lines that should be executed after the build is completed. Expands variables.
compile
Array of command lines to use when compiling files. Each command line starts with a pattern
(ending in :) that is matched against the file name to be compiled. The command line added last is
checked first, and the first matching command-line is used. Therefore it is useful to first add
the general command-line (starting with *:), and then add more specific ones. Here, you can use
<file> for the input file and <output>.
link Command line used when linking the intermediate files. Use <files> for all input files and
<output> for the output file-name.
linkOutput
Link the output of one target to any target that are dependent on that target. See projects for
more information.
forwardDeps
Forward any of this target's dependencies to any target that is dependent on this target.
env Set environment variables. Each of the elements in env are expected to be of the form:
variable=value or variable<=value or variable=>value. The first form replaces the environment
variable variable with value, the second form prepends value to variable using the system's
separator (: on unix and ; on windows), the third form appends value to variable. The second and
third forms are convenient when working with PATH for example.
explicitTargets
In projects: ignore any potential targets that do not have their own .mymake-file.
parallel
In projects, this indicates if projects that have all dependencies satisfied may be built in
parallel. The default value is yes, so projects not tolerating parallel builds may set it to no.
In targets, this indicates if files in targets may be built in parallel. If so, all input files,
except precompiled headers, are built in parallel using up to maxThreads threads globally. If
specific targets do not tolerate this, set parallel to no, and mymake will build those targets in
serial.
maxThreads
Limits the global number of threads (actually processes) used to build the project/target
globally.
usePrefix
When building in parallel, add a prefix to the output corresponding to different targets. Defaults
to either vc or gnu (depending on your system). If you set it to no, no prefix is added. vc adds
n> before output, gnu adds pn: before output. This is so that Emacs recognizes the error messages
from the vc and the gnu compiler, respectively.
absolutePath
Send absolute paths to the compiler, this helps emacs find proper source files in projects with
multiple targets.
implicitDeps
(defaults to yes), if set, mymake tries to figure out dependencies between targets by looking at
includes. Sometimes, this results in unneeded circular dependencies, causing compilation to fail,
so sometimes it is neccessary to set this to no.
All variables that contain commands to execute can be prefixed with an integer followed by a colon (for
example 1:gcc). If prefixed with the integer N, the first N lines of output from that command are removed
from the output. As such, this can be used to ignore status information from commands during the build,
without ignoring useful information. For example, the C++ compiler on Windows outputs a line containing
the filename being compiled by default. This is unnecessary as mymake already does this. It can thus be
suppressed by issuing the command 1:cl ....
This feature is possible to use in the variables compile, pchCompile, and link.
VARIABLES IN STRINGS
When mymake uses some variables (most notably, the compilation and link command lines) it looks at each
string and recursively replaces any variables that appear there. Note that this is not done when the
configuration is evaluated, only when the variables are actually used.
Any occurrences of <variable> are replaced with the contents of variable. It is also possible to prepend
a string to each element in another variable using the syntax <prefix*variable>, which means that the
string in the variable prefix is prepended to each element in the variable variable.
The special variable <env:X> (where X is any string) can be used to extract the value of environment
variables. This is useful to, for example, inspect the value of CFLAGS during compilation. The benefit
of using this syntax over relying on shell expansion is that it allows mymake to track changes in the
environment variables.
It is also possible to perform an operation on each element in the array using the syntax <op|variable>.
It is also possible to both perform an operation and prepend data using <prefix*op|variable>. Supported
operations are:
title Treat the element as a path and extract the file or directory name (e.g. src/foo.txt gives
foo.txt).
titleNoExt
Same as title, but the file extension is removed as well.
noExt Remove the file extension from a path.
path Format the element as a path for the current operating system. For example src/foo.txt evaluates
to src\foo.txt on Windows.
buildpath
Make the element into a path inside the build path.
execpath
Make the element into a path inside the executable path.
parent Evaluates to the parent directory of the path. If no parent is given (e.g. only a file name), the
element is removed from the array.
if Make all elements empty. This can be used to test if a variable contains a value and then include
some other text. For example <usePch*if|pchFile> to add the flag inside usePch if a file is
specified in pchFile.
PROJECTS
A project is a collection of targets linked together by a .myproject-file. The .myproject file is
evaluated multiple times with different options present to extract information about the project:
build: This option is specified during one evaluation to extract a list of options to apply to each of
the sub-projects. Thus, a project file typically contains a section as follows:
[build]
main+=debug
libfoo+=lib
libfoo+=debug
In this case, we instruct mymake to build the main target with the debug option present, and the target
libfoo with the options debug and lib. There is also a special target, all, which options will apply to
all targets in the project.
deps: This option is specified during one evaluation to extract explicit dependencies between projects.
By default, mymake finds dependences between projects automatically by examining includes across
projects. In certain cases it is, however, useful to introduce extra dependencies to ensure that some
dynamically loaded parts are also built. This section is very similar to the build section. Mymake
expects to find variables corresponding to each target, and that these variables contains names of other
targets.
If one target results in a library, it is convenient to set the variable linkOutput to yes for that
target. Mymake will then add the output of the library target to the library variable of any targets that
depend on it.
After mymake has extracted the necessary project information, the .myproject-file is also evaluated once
for each target. Thus, it is possible to specify additional variables or options that apply to all
targets in the project in the .myproject file.
June 22 2021 MYMAKE(1)