Question

Just out of curiosity, how does Makefile know that a file changed (and then recompile it)? Is it up to make? Is it up to the compiler? If so, is it language dependent?

Était-ce utile?

La solution

It looks at the file time-stamp - simple as that. If a dependency is newer that the target, the target is rebuilt.

Autres conseils

Make works by inspecting information about files, not their contents.

Make works out dependencies between targets and their dependencies, and then looks to see whether the files exist. If they do, it asks the operating system for the time and date the file was last modified. This is the 'timestamp' for this purpose, although the term can have other meanings.

If a target file either does not exist, or exists and is earlier than its dependent file, then Make rebuilds the target from the dependent by applying a rule.

If the dependent does not exist, Make signals an error.

A consequence of this is that you can force a rebuild by deleting the target, or by 'touching' the dependent to make it later than the target. You can avoid a rebuild by 'touching' the target. Touching simply updates the timestamp to now.

Licencié sous: CC-BY-SA avec attribution
Non affilié à StackOverflow
scroll top