# A ONE-LINE DESCRIPTION OF THE WHOLE PIPELINE # # Original author: # Mohammad Akhlaghi # Contributing author(s): # Your name # Copyright (C) 2018, Your Name. # # This Makefile is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it # under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the # Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your # option) any later version. # # This Makefile is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but # WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General # Public License for more details. # # A copy of the GNU General Public License is available at # . # Ultimate target of this pipeline # -------------------------------- # # The final paper (in PDF format) is the main target of this whole # reproduction pipeline. So as defined in the Make paradigm, we are # defining it here. But since we also want easy access to the build # directory during processing (before the PDF is build), that is placed as # the first prerequisite. # # Note that if you don't have LaTeX to build the PDF or generally are just # interested in the processing, you can skip create the final PDF creation # with `pdf-build-final' of `reproduce/config/pipeline/pdf-build.mk'. all: reproduce/build paper.pdf # Include specific Makefiles # -------------------------- # # To keep things clean, managable and readable, each set of operations is # (and must be) classified (modularized) by context into separate # Makefiles: the more the better. They are included in this top-level # Makefile through the command below. # # To further help in readability, it is best to avoid including Makefiles # within any other Makefile. So in short, it is best that the `foreach' # loop below contains all the `reproduce/src/make/*.mk' files. # # IMPORTANT NOTE: order matters in the inclusion of the processing # Makefiles. As the pipeline grows, some Makefiles will probably define # variables/dependencies that others need. Therefore unlike the # `reproduce/config/pipeline/*.mk' Makefiles which only define low-level # variables (not dependent on other variables and contain no rules), the # high-level processing Makefiles are included through the `foreach' loop # below by explicitly requesting them in a specific order here. include reproduce/config/pipeline/*.mk include $(foreach f, initialize \ download \ delete-me \ paper \ , reproduce/src/make/$(f).mk) # LaTeX macros for paper # ---------------------- # # The final report's PDF (final target of this reproduction pipeline) takes # variable strings from the pipeline. Those variables are defined as LaTeX # macros in `tex/pipeline.tex'. This file is thus the interface between the # pipeline scripts and the final PDF. # # Each of the pipeline steps will save their macros into their own `.tex' # file in the `$(mtexdir)' directory. Those individual macros are the # pre-requisite to `tex/pipeline.txt'. `tex/pipeline.tex' is thus a # high-level output and is defined in this top-most Makefile (and not # `reproduce/src/make/paper.mk'). This enables a clear demonstration of the # top-level dependencies clearly. # # Note that if you don't want the final PDF and just want the processing # and file outputs, you can remove the value of the `pdf-build-final' # variable in `reproduce/config/pdf-build.mk'. tex/pipeline.tex: $(foreach f, initialize \ download \ delete-me \ , $(mtexdir)/$(f).tex) # If no PDF is requested, then just exit here. ifeq ($(pdf-build-final),) @echo @echo @echo "-----" @echo "Everything is OK until this point, but not building PDF." @echo "To do so, give a value to the 'pdf-build-final' variable." @echo "It is defined in 'reproduce/config/pipeline/pdf-build.mk'." @echo @exit 1 endif # Merge all the TeX macros that are prepared for building the PDF. @cat $(mtexdir)/*.tex > $@