I use Makefiles.
I have a target called run
which runs the build target. Simplified, it looks like the following:
开发者_如何学编程prog: ....
...
run: prog
./prog
Is there any way to pass arguments? So that
make run asdf --> ./prog asdf
make run the dog kicked the cat --> ./prog the dog kicked the cat
I don't know a way to do what you want exactly, but a workaround might be:
run: ./prog
./prog $(ARGS)
Then:
make ARGS="asdf" run
# or
make run ARGS="asdf"
This question is almost three years old, but anyway...
If you're using GNU make, this is easy to do. The only problem is that make
will interpret non-option arguments in the command line as targets. The solution is to turn them into do-nothing targets, so make
won't complain:
# If the first argument is "run"...
ifeq (run,$(firstword $(MAKECMDGOALS)))
# use the rest as arguments for "run"
RUN_ARGS := $(wordlist 2,$(words $(MAKECMDGOALS)),$(MAKECMDGOALS))
# ...and turn them into do-nothing targets
$(eval $(RUN_ARGS):;@:)
endif
prog: # ...
# ...
.PHONY: run
run : prog
@echo prog $(RUN_ARGS)
Running this gives:
$ make run foo bar baz
prog foo bar baz
for standard make you can pass arguments by defining macros like this
make run arg1=asdf
then use them like this
run: ./prog $(arg1)
etc
References for make Microsoft's NMake
TL;DR don't try to do this
$ make run arg
instead create script build_and_run_prog.sh
:
#! /bin/sh
# rebuild prog if necessary
make prog
# run prog with some arguments
./prog "$@"
and do this:
$ ./build_and_run_prog.sh arg
Read on for some explanation of why this is the most reasonable choice and why the other alternatives are best avoided
Answer to the stated question: how to pass arguments to a make target
you can use a variable in the recipe
run: prog
./prog $(var)
then pass a variable assignment as an argument to make
$ make run var=arg
this will execute ./prog arg
.
But beware of pitfalls. I will elaborate about the pitfalls of this method and others further below.
Answer to the assumed intention behind your question: You want to run prog
with some arguments but have it rebuild before running if necessary.
Create a script which rebuilds if necessary then runs prog with args
build_and_run_prog.sh
:
#! /bin/sh
# rebuild prog if necessary
make prog
# run prog with some arguments
./prog "$@"
This script makes the intention very clear. It uses make to do what it is good for: building. It uses a shell script to do what it is good for: batch processing.
Plus you can do whatever else you might need with the full flexibility and expressiveness of a shell script without all the caveats of a makefile.
Also the calling syntax is now practically identical:
$ ./build_and_run_prog.sh foo "bar baz"
compared to:
$ ./prog foo "bar baz"
contrast to
$ make run var="foo bar\ baz"
Background explanation of how make handles arguments:
Make is not designed to pass arguments to a target. All arguments on the command line are interpreted either as a goal (a.k.a. target), as an option, or as a variable assignment.
so if you run this:
$ make run foo --wat var=arg
make will interpret run
and foo
as goals (targets) to update according to their recipes. --wat
as an option for make. And var=arg
as a variable assignment.
for more details see the gnu manual on goals (targets):
and the terminology.
Why I recommend against variable assignment
$ make run var=arg
and the variable in the recipe
run: prog
./prog $(var)
This is the most "correct" and straightforward way to pass arguments to a recipe. but while it can be used to run a program with arguments it is certainly not designed to be used that way. See the gnu manual on overriding
In my opinion this has one big disadvantage: what you want to do is run prog
with argument arg
. but instead of writing:
$ ./prog arg
you are writing:
$ make run var=arg
this gets even more awkward when trying to pass multiple arguments or arguments containing spaces:
$ make run var="foo bar\ baz"
./prog foo bar\ baz
argcount: 2
arg: foo
arg: bar baz
compare to:
$ ./prog foo "bar baz"
argcount: 2
arg: foo
arg: bar baz
for the record this is what my prog
looks like:
#! /bin/sh
echo "argcount: $#"
for arg in "$@"; do
echo "arg: $arg"
done
also note that you should not put $(var)
in quotes in the makefile:
run: prog
./prog "$(var)"
because then prog
will always get just one argument:
$ make run var="foo bar\ baz"
./prog "foo bar\ baz"
argcount: 1
arg: foo bar\ baz
All this is why I recommend against this route.
For completeness here are some other methods to "pass arguments to make run".
Method 1:
run: prog
./prog $(filter-out $@, $(MAKECMDGOALS))
%:
@true
filter out current goal from list of goals. create catch all target (%
) which does nothing to silently ignore the other goals.
Method 2:
ifeq (run, $(firstword $(MAKECMDGOALS)))
runargs := $(wordlist 2, $(words $(MAKECMDGOALS)), $(MAKECMDGOALS))
$(eval $(runargs):;@true)
endif
run:
./prog $(runargs)
if the target is run
then remove the first goal and create do nothing targets for the remaining goals using eval
.
both will allow you to write something like this
$ make run arg1 arg2
I recommend reading the gnu manual on make for further details.
problems of method 1:
Arguments that start with a dash will be interpreted by make and not passed as a goal.
$ make run --foo --bar
workaround
$ make run -- --foo --bar
Arguments with an equal sign will be interpreted by make and not passed
$ make run foo=bar
no workaround
Arguments with spaces is awkward
$ make run foo "bar\ baz"
no workaround
If an argument happens to be
run
(equal to the target) it will also be removed$ make run foo bar run
will run
./prog foo bar
instead of./prog foo bar run
workaround possible with method 2
If an argument is a legitimate target it will also be run.
$ make run foo bar clean
will run
./prog foo bar clean
but also the recipe for the targetclean
(assuming it exists).workaround possible with method 2
When you mistype a legitimate target it will be silently ignored because of the catch all target.
$ make celan
will just silently ignore
celan
.workaround is to make everything verbose. so you see what happens. but that creates a lot of noise for the legitimate output.
problems of method 2:
If an argument has same name as an existing target then make will print a warning that it is being overwritten.
no workaround that I know of
Arguments with an equal sign will still be interpreted by make and not passed
no workaround
Arguments with spaces is still awkward
no workaround
Arguments with space breaks
eval
trying to create do nothing targets.workaround: create the global catch all target doing nothing as above. with the problem as above that it will again silently ignore mistyped legitimate targets.
it uses
eval
to modify the makefile at runtime. how much worse can you go in terms of readability and debugability and the Principle of least astonishment.workaround: don't!
I have only tested using gnu make. other makes may have different behaviour.
You can pass the variable to the Makefile like below:
run:
@echo ./prog $$FOO
Usage:
$ make run FOO="the dog kicked the cat"
./prog the dog kicked the cat
or:
$ FOO="the dog kicked the cat" make run
./prog the dog kicked the cat
Alternatively use the solution provided by Beta:
run:
@echo ./prog $(filter-out $@,$(MAKECMDGOALS))
%:
@:
%:
- rule which match any task name;@:
- empty recipe = do nothing
Usage:
$ make run the dog kicked the cat
./prog the dog kicked the cat
Here's another solution that could help with some of these use cases:
test-%:
$(PYTHON) run-tests.py $@
In other words, pick some prefix (test-
in this case), and then pass the target name directly to the program/runner. I guess this is mostly useful if there is some runner script involved that can unwrap the target name into something useful for the underlying program.
No. Looking at the syntax from the man page for GNU make
make [ -f makefile ] [ options ] ... [ targets ] ...
you can specify multiple targets, hence 'no' (at least no in the exact way you specified).
You can explicitly extract each n-th argument in the command line. To do this, you can use variable MAKECMDGOALS
, it holds the list of command line arguments given to 'make', which it interprets as a list of targets. If you want to extract n-th argument, you can use that variable combined with the "word" function, for instance, if you want the second argument, you can store it in a variable as follows:
second_argument := $(word 2, $(MAKECMDGOALS) )
run: ./prog
looks a bit strange, as right part should be a prerequisite, so run: prog
looks better.
I would suggest simply:
.PHONY: run
run:
prog $(arg1)
and I would like to add, that arguments can be passed:
- as argument:
make arg1="asdf" run
- or be defined as environment:
arg1="asdf" make run
Not too proud of this, but I didn't want to pass in environment variables so I inverted the way to run a canned command:
run:
@echo command-you-want
this will print the command you want to run, so just evaluate it in a subshell:
$(make run) args to my command
Here is my example. Note that I am writing under Windows 7, using mingw32-make.exe that comes with Dev-Cpp. (I have c:\Windows\System32\make.bat, so the command is still called "make".)
clean:
$(RM) $(OBJ) $(BIN)
@echo off
if "${backup}" NEQ "" ( mkdir ${backup} 2> nul && copy * ${backup} )
Usage for regular cleaning:
make clean
Usage for cleaning and creating a backup in mydir/:
make clean backup=mydir
I found a way to get the arguments with an equal sign =
! The answer is especially an addition to @lesmana 's answer (as it is the most complete and explained one here), but it would be too big to write it as a comment. Again, I repeat his message: TL;DR don't try to do this!
I needed a way to treat my argument --xyz-enabled=false
(since the default is true), which we all know by now that this is not a make target and thus not part of $(MAKECMDGOALS)
.
While looking into all variables of make by echoing the $(.VARIABLES)
i got these interesting outputs:
[...] -*-command-variables-*- --xyz-enabled [...]
This allows us to go two ways: either getting all starting with a --
(if that applies to your case), or look into the GNU make specific (probably not intended for us to use) variable -*-command-variables-*-
. ** See footer for additional options ** In my case this variable held:
--xyz-enabled=false
With this variable we can combine it with the already existing solution with $(MAKECMDGOALS)
and thus by defining:
# the other technique to invalidate other targets is still required, see linked post
run:
@echo ./prog $(-*-command-variables-*-) $(filter-out $@,$(MAKECMDGOALS))`
and using it with (explicitly mixing up order of arguments):
make run -- config --xyz-enabled=false over=9000 --foo=bar show isit=alwaysreversed? --help
returned:
./prog isit=alwaysreversed? --foo=bar over=9000 --xyz-enabled=false config show --help
As you can see, we loose the total order of the args. The part with the "assignment"-args seem to have been reversed, the order of the "target"-args are kept. I placed the "assignment"-args in the beginning, hopefully your program doesn't care where the argument is placed.
following make variables looks promising as well:
MAKEFLAGS = -- isit=alwaysreverse? --foo=bar over=9000 --xyz-enabled=false
MAKEOVERRIDES = isit=alwaysreverse? --foo=bar over=9000 --xyz-enabled=false
It's been for a while, but I'll provide mine version which I use in production.
I'll hope that someone will find it useful.
Example:
.PHONY: greeting
greeting:
echo $(if $s,$s,)
Command:
make greeting s="hello world"
Output:
hello world
Building a bit on idelic answer.
You can create a generic "function" to fetch parameters
using the following:
define fetch_parameter
$(eval target_name:= $(firstword $(MAKECMDGOALS)))
$(eval varname := $(target_name)_value)
$(eval $(varname) := $(wordlist 2,$(words $(MAKECMDGOALS)),$(MAKECMDGOALS)))
$(eval $($(varname))::;@:)
endef
You can then user it in your target like so:
my-target: res := $(call fetch_parameter)
my-target: ## Example target. Usage: make my-target <value>
echo The value: $($@_value)
This way you can just use res := $(call fetch_parameter)
on any target you want to retrieve values from.
Note: I've added an extra :
on this bit of code $(eval $($(varname))::;@:)
because if you have more than one target with a call to fetch_parameter
it will also be triggered.
So if you have:
my-target: res := $(call fetch_parameter)
my-target: ## Example target. Usage: make my-target <value>
echo The value: $($@_value)
my-target2: res := $(call fetch_parameter)
my-target2: ## Example target. Usage: make my-target2 <value>
echo The value: $($@_value)
and you call make my-target2 hello
, the way Make works, both $(call fetch_parameter)
will be triggered causing the creation of 2 bogus hello
targets, but with the extra :
(hello::) Make won't complain that you are overriding a target.
Another trick I use is the -n
flag, which tells make
to do a dry run. For example,
$ make install -n
# Outputs the string: helm install stable/airflow --name airflow -f values.yaml
$ eval $(make install -n) --dry-run --debug
# Runs: helm install stable/airflow --name airflow -f values.yaml --dry-run --debug
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