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Recursive wildcards in GNU make?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-23 19:29 出处:网络
It\'s been a while since I\'ve used make, so bear with me... I\'ve got a directory, flac, containing .FLAC files. I\'ve got a corresponding directory, mp3 containing MP3 files. If a FLAC file is newe

It's been a while since I've used make, so bear with me...

I've got a directory, flac, containing .FLAC files. I've got a corresponding directory, mp3 containing MP3 files. If a FLAC file is newer than the corresponding MP3 file (or the corresponding MP3 file doesn't exist), then I want to run a bunch of commands to convert the FLAC file to an MP3 file, and copy the tags across.

The kicker: I need to search the flac directory recursively, and create corresponding subdirectories in the mp3 开发者_StackOverflowdirectory. The directories and files can have spaces in the names, and are named in UTF-8.

And I want to use make to drive this.


I would try something along these lines

FLAC_FILES = $(shell find flac/ -type f -name '*.flac')
MP3_FILES = $(patsubst flac/%.flac, mp3/%.mp3, $(FLAC_FILES))

.PHONY: all
all: $(MP3_FILES)

mp3/%.mp3: flac/%.flac
    @mkdir -p "$(@D)"
    @echo convert "$<" to "$@"

A couple of quick notes for make beginners:

  • The @ in front of the commands prevents make from printing the command before actually running it.
  • $(@D) is the directory part of the target file name ($@)
  • Make sure that the lines with shell commands in them start with a tab, not with spaces.

Even if this should handle all UTF-8 characters and stuff, it will fail at spaces in file or directory names, as make uses spaces to separate stuff in the makefiles and I am not aware of a way to work around that. So that leaves you with just a shell script, I am afraid :-/


You can define your own recursive wildcard function like this:

rwildcard=$(foreach d,$(wildcard $(1:=/*)),$(call rwildcard,$d,$2) $(filter $(subst *,%,$2),$d))

The first parameter ($1) is a list of directories, and the second ($2) is a list of patterns you want to match.

Examples:

To find all the C files in the current directory:

$(call rwildcard,.,*.c)

To find all the .c and .h files in src:

$(call rwildcard,src,*.c *.h)

This function is based on the implementation from this article, with a few improvements.


If you're using Bash 4.x, you can use a new globbing option, for example:

SHELL:=/bin/bash -O globstar
list:
  @echo Flac: $(shell ls flac/**/*.flac)
  @echo MP3: $(shell ls mp3/**/*.mp3)

This kind of recursive wildcard can find all the files of your interest (.flac, .mp3 or whatever). O


FWIW, I've used something like this in a Makefile:

RECURSIVE_MANIFEST = `find . -type f -print`

The example above will search from the current directory ('.') for all "plain files" ('-type f') and set the RECURSIVE_MANIFEST make variable to every file it finds. You can then use pattern substitutions to reduce this list, or alternatively, supply more arguments into find to narrow what it returns. See the man page for find.


My solution is based on the one above, uses sed instead of patsubst to mangle the output of find AND escape the spaces.

Going from flac/ to ogg/

OGGS = $(shell find flac -type f -name "*.flac" | sed 's/ /\\ /g;s/flac\//ogg\//;s/\.flac/\.ogg/' )

Caveats:

  1. Still barfs if there are semi-colons in the filename, but they're pretty rare.
  2. The $(@D) trick won't work (outputs gibberish), but oggenc creates directories for you!


Here's a Python script I quickly hacked together to solve the original problem: keep a compressed copy of a music library. The script will convert .m4a files (assumed to be ALAC) to AAC format, unless the AAC file already exists and is newer than the ALAC file. MP3 files in the library will be linked, since they are already compressed.

Just beware that aborting the script (ctrl-c) will leave behind a half-converted file.

I originally also wanted to write a Makefile to handle this, but since it cannot handle spaces in filenames (see the accepted answer) and because writing a bash script is guaranteed to put in me in a world of pain, Python it is. It's fairly straightforward and short, and thus should be easy to tweak to your needs.

from __future__ import print_function


import glob
import os
import subprocess


UNCOMPRESSED_DIR = 'Music'
COMPRESSED = 'compressed_'

UNCOMPRESSED_EXTS = ('m4a', )   # files to convert to lossy format
LINK_EXTS = ('mp3', )           # files to link instead of convert


for root, dirs, files in os.walk(UNCOMPRESSED_DIR):
    out_root = COMPRESSED + root
    if not os.path.exists(out_root):
        os.mkdir(out_root)
    for file in files:
        file_path = os.path.join(root, file)
        file_root, ext = os.path.splitext(file_path)
        if ext[1:] in LINK_EXTS:
            if not os.path.exists(COMPRESSED + file_path):
                print('Linking {}'.format(file_path))
                link_source = os.path.relpath(file_path, out_root)
                os.symlink(link_source, COMPRESSED + file_path)
            continue
        if ext[1:] not in UNCOMPRESSED_EXTS:
            print('Skipping {}'.format(file_path))
            continue
        out_file_path = COMPRESSED + file_path
        if (os.path.exists(out_file_path)
            and os.path.getctime(out_file_path) > os.path.getctime(file_path)):
            print('Up to date: {}'.format(file_path))
            continue
        print('Converting {}'.format(file_path))
        subprocess.call(['ffmpeg', '-y', '-i', file_path,
                         '-c:a', 'libfdk_aac', '-vbr', '4',
                         out_file_path])

Of course, this can be enhanced to perform the encoding in parallel. That is left as an exercise to the reader ;-)

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