diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'reproduce/analysis/make/prepare.mk')
-rw-r--r-- | reproduce/analysis/make/prepare.mk | 40 |
1 files changed, 25 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/reproduce/analysis/make/prepare.mk b/reproduce/analysis/make/prepare.mk index 92b57b6..ebc2b4d 100644 --- a/reproduce/analysis/make/prepare.mk +++ b/reproduce/analysis/make/prepare.mk @@ -28,24 +28,34 @@ prepare-dep = $(filter-out prepare, $(makesrc)) $(bsdir)/preparation-done.mk: \ $(foreach s, $(prepare-dep), $(mtexdir)/$(s).tex) -# If you need to add preparations define targets above to do the -# preparations, then set the value below to 'yes'. Recall that just -# like './project make', before loading this file, './project -# prepare' loads loads 'initialize.mk' and 'download.mk', so you can -# safely assume everything that is defined there in the preparation -# phase also. +# If you need to add preparations (mainly automatically generated +# configuration files or Makefiles to simplify the './project make' +# phase) take the following step: +# +# 1. Add prerequisites to this target ('preparation-done.mk'). Try +# to avoid any kind of analysis in this (preparation) phase! +# Preparation should ideally only involve automatic creation of +# configuration files or Makefile that will be loaded into the +# analysis phase (from 'top-make.mk'). +# +# 2. Set the value of 'include-prepare-results' (defined below) to +# 'yes'. If it is kept to the default 'no', then your +# prepartion outputs will not be automatically +# generated. Recall that just like 'top-make.mk', +# 'top-prepare.mk' also loads 'initialize.mk' before everything +# else. So you can safely assume everything that is defined in +# 'initialize.mk' to be available in the preparation phase +# also. # # TIP: the targets can actually be automatically generated Makefiles # that are used by './project make'. They can include variables, or # automatically generated rules. Just make sure that those Makefiles -# aren't written in the source directory. Even though they are -# Makefiles, they are automatically built, so they don't belong in -# the source. '$(prepdir)' has been defined for this purpose (see +# aren't written in the source directory (only hand-written files +# should be in your source). Even though they are Makefiles, they are +# automatically built, so they don't belong in the +# source. '$(prepdir)' has been defined for this purpose (see # 'initialize.mk'), we recommend that you put all automatically -# generated Makefiles under this directory. In the 'make' phase, -# 'initialize.mk' will automatically load all the '*.mk' files. If -# you need to load your generated configuration-makefiles before -# automatically generated Makefiles containing rules, you can use -# some naming convension like 'conf-*.mk' and 'rule-*.mk', or you can -# put them in subdirectories. +# generated configuration files or Makefiles under this directory. In +# the 'make' phase, 'initialize.mk' will automatically load all the +# '*.mk' files there. @echo "include-prepare-results = no" > $@ |