ExtUtils::MakeMaker - Create a Makefile for a Perl Extension
use ExtUtils::MakeMaker; WriteMakefile(ATTRIBUTE=>VALUE, ... ); # which internally is really more like... %att = (ATTRIBUTE=>VALUE, ...); MM->new(\%att)->flush;
When you build an extension to Perl, you need to have an appropriate Makefile[] in the extension's source directory. And while you could conceivably write one by hand, this would be rather tedious. So you'd like a program to write it for you.
[9] If you don't know what a Makefile is, or what the make(1) program does with one, you really shouldn't be reading this section. We will be assuming that you know what happens when you type a command like
make foo.
Originally, this was done using a shell script (actually, one for each extension) called Makefile.SH, much like the one that writes the Makefile for Perl itself. But somewhere along the line, it occurred to the perl5-porters that, by the time you want to compile your extensions, there's already a bare-bones version of the Perl executable called miniperl, if not a fully installed perl. And for some strange reason, Perl developers prefer developing in Perl to developing in shell. So they wrote MakeMaker, just so that you can write Makefile.PL instead of Makefile.SH.
MakeMaker isn't a program; it's a module (or it wouldn't be in this chapter). The module provides the routines you need; you just need to use the module, and then call the routines. As with any developing job, there are many degrees of freedom; but your typical Makefile.PL is pretty simple. For example, here's ext/POSIX/Makefile.PL from the Perl distribution's POSIX extension (which is by no means a trivial extension):
use ExtUtils::MakeMaker; WriteMakefile( NAME => 'POSIX', LIBS => ["-lm -lposix -lcposix"], MAN3PODS => ' ', # Pods will be built by installman. XSPROTOARG => '-noprototypes', # XXX remove later? VERSION_FROM => 'POSIX.pm', );
Several things are apparent from this example, but the most important is that the WriteMakefile() function uses named parameters. This means that you can pass many potential parameters, but you're only required to pass the ones you want to be different from the default values. (And when we say "many", we mean "many" - there are about 75 of them. See the Attributes section later.)
As the synopsis above indicates, the WriteMakefile() function actually constructs an object. This object has attributes that are set from various sources, including the parameters you pass to the function. It's this object that actually writes your Makefile, meshing together the demands of your extension with the demands of the architecture on which the extension is being installed. Like many craftily crafted objects, this MakeMaker object delegates as much of its work as possible to various other subroutines and methods. Many of these may be overridden in your Makefile.PL if you need to do some fine tuning. (Generally you don't.)
But let's not lose track of the goal, which is to write a Makefile that will know how to do anything to your extension that needs doing. Now as you can imagine, the Makefile that MakeMaker writes is quite, er, full-featured. It's easy to get lost in all the details. If you look at the POSIX Makefile generated by the bit of code above, you will find a file containing about 122 macros and 77 targets. You will want to go off into a corner and curl up into a little ball, saying, "Never mind, I didn't really want to know."
Well, the fact of the matter is, you really don't want to know, nor do you have to. Most of these items take care of themselves - that's what MakeMaker is there for, after all. We'll lay out the various attributes and targets for you, but you can just pick and choose, like in a cafeteria. We'll talk about the make targets first, because they're the actions you eventually want to perform, and then work backward to the macros and attributes that feed the targets.
But before we do that, you need to know just a few more architectural features of MakeMaker to make sense of some of the things we'll say. The targets at the end of your Makefile depend on the macro definitions that are interpolated into them. Those macro definitions in turn come from any of several places. Depending on how you count, there are about five sources of information for these attributes. Ordered by increasing precedence and (more or less) decreasing permanence, they are:
- Platform-specific values in Perl's Config module, provided by the Configure program that was run when Perl was installed on this machine.
- The
WriteMakefile()function call arguments in Makefile.Pl, supplied by the extension writer. (You saw some of those above.) - Platform-specific hints in the extension's hints/ directory, also provided by extension writer. We'll talk about those later.
- Overriding values from the command line for Makefile.PL script, supplied by the person who runs the script. These look like
KEY=VALUE. - Overriding values from the command line for make itself, supplied by the person who runs the make. These also look like
KEY=VALUE.
The first four of these turn into attributes of the object we mentioned, and are eventually written out as macro definitions in your Makefile. In most cases, the names of the values are consistent from beginning to end. (Except that the Config database keeps the names in lowercase, as they come from Perl's config.sh file. The names are translated to uppercase when they become attributes of the object.) In any case, we'll tend to use the term attributes to mean both attributes and the Makefile macros derived from them.
The Makefile.PL and the hints may also provide overriding methods for the object, if merely changing an attribute isn't good enough.
The hints files are expected to be named like their counterparts in PERL_SRC/hints, but with a pl filename extension (for example, next_3_2.pl), because the file consists of Perl code to be evaluated. Apart from that, the rules governing which hintsfile is chosen are the same as in Configure. The hintsfile is evaled within a routine that is a method of our MakeMaker object, so if you want to override or create an attribute, you would say something like:
$self->{LIBS} = ['-ldbm -lucb -lc'];
Makefile isn't doing what you want, you just trace back the name of the misbehaving attribute to its source, and either change it there or override it downstream.
Extensions may be built using the contents of either the Perl source directory tree or the installed Perl library. The recommended way is to build extensions after you have run make install on Perl itself. You can then build your extension in any directory on your hard disk that is not below the Perl source tree. The support for extensions below the ext/ directory of the Perl distribution is only good for the standard extensions that come with Perl.
If an extension is being built below the ext/ directory of the Perl source, then MakeMaker will set PERL_SRC automatically (usually to /..). If PERL_SRC is defined and the extension is recognized as a standard extension, then other variables default to the following:
PERL_INC = PERL_SRC PERL_LIB = PERL_SRC/lib PERL_ARCHLIB = PERL_SRC/lib INST_LIB = PERL_LIB INST_ARCHLIB = PERL_ARCHLIB
If an extension is being built away from the Perl source, then MakeMaker will leave PERL_SRC undefined and default to using the installed copy of the Perl library. The other variables default to the following:
PERL_INC = $archlibexp/CORE PERL_LIB = $privlibexp PERL_ARCHLIB = $archlibexp INST_LIB = ./blib/lib INST_ARCHLIB = ./blib/arch
If Perl has not yet been installed, then PERL_SRC can be defined as an override on the command line.
Targets
Far and away the most commonly used make targets are those used by the installer to install the extension. So we aim to make the normal installation very easy:
perl Makefile.PL # generate the Makefile make # compile the extension make test # test the extension make install # install the extension
This assumes that the installer has dynamic linking available. If not, a couple of additional commands are also necessary:
make perl # link a new perl statically with this extension make inst_perl # install that new perl appropriately
Other interesting targets in the generated Makefile are:
make config # check whether the Makefile is up-to-date make clean # delete local temp files (Makefilegets renamed) make realclean # delete derived files (including./blib) make ci # check in all files in the MANIFEST file make dist # see the "Distribution Support" section below
Now we'll talk about some of these commands, and how each of them is related to MakeMaker. So we'll not only be talking about things that happen when you invoke the make target, but also about what MakeMaker has to do to generate that make target. So brace yourself for some temporal whiplash.
Running MakeMaker
This command is the one most closely related to MakeMaker because it's the one in which you actually run MakeMaker. No temporal whiplash here. As we mentioned earlier, some of the default attribute values may be overridden by adding arguments of the form KEY=VALUE. For example:
perl Makefile.PL PREFIX=/tmp/myperl5
To get a more detailed view of what MakeMaker is doing, say:
perl Makefile.PL verbose
Making whatever is needed
A make command without arguments performs any compilation needed and puts any generated files into staging directories that are named by the attributes INST_LIB, INST_ARCHLIB, INST_EXE, INST_MAN1DIR, and INST_MAN3DIR. These directories default to something below /blib if you are not building below the Perl source directory. If you are building below the Perl source, INST_LIB and INST_ARCHLIB default to /../lib, and INST_EXE is not defined.
Running tests
The goal of this command is to run any regression tests supplied with the extension, so MakeMaker checks for the existence of a file named test.pl in the current directory and, if it exists, adds commands to the test target of the Makefile that will execute the script with the proper set of Perl -I options (since the files haven't been installed into their final location yet).
MakeMaker also checks for any files matching glob("t/*.t"). It will add commands to the test target that execute all matching files via the Test::Harness module with the -I switches set correctly. If you pass TEST_VERBOSE=1, the test target will run the tests verbosely.
Installing files
Once the installer has tested the extension, the various generated files need to get put into their final resting places. The install target copies the files found below each of the INST_* directories to their INSTALL* counterparts.
INST_LIB
|
| INSTALLPRIVLIB[]or INSTALLSITELIB[]
|
INST_ARCHLIB
|
| INSTALLARCHLIB[]or INSTALLSITEARCH[]
|
INST_EXE
|
| INSTALLBIN
|
INST_MAN1DIR
|
| INSTALLMAN1DIR
|
INST_MAN3DIR
|
| INSTALLMAN3DIR |
[10] if
INSTALLDIRSset to "perl"[11] if
INSTALLDIRSset to "site"
The INSTALL* attributes in turn default to their %Config counterparts, $Config{installprivlib}, $Config{installarchlib}, and so on.
If you don't set INSTALLARCHLIB or INSTALLSITEARCH, MakeMaker will assume you want them to be subdirectories of INSTALLPRIVLIB and INSTALLSITELIB, respectively. The exact relationship is determined by Configure. But you can usually just go with the defaults for all these attributes.
The PREFIX attribute can be used to redirect all the INSTALL* attributes in one go. Here's the quickest way to install a module in a nonstandard place:
perl Makefile.PL PREFIX=~ \
The value you specify for PREFIX replaces one or more leading pathname components in all INSTALL* attributes. The prefix to be replaced is determined by the value of $Config{prefix}, which typically has a value like /usr. (Note that the tilde expansion above is done by MakeMaker, not by perl or make.)
If the user has superuser privileges and is not working under the Andrew File System (AFS) or relatives, then the defaults for INSTALLPRIVLIB, INSTALLARCHLIB, INSTALLBIN, and so on should be appropriate.
make install writes some documentation of what has been done into the file given by $(INSTALLARCHLIB)/perllocal.pod. This feature can be bypassed by calling make pure_install.
If you are using AFS, you must specify the installation directories, since these most probably have changed since Perl itself was installed. Do this by issuing these commands:
perl Makefile.PL INSTALLSITELIB=/afs/here/today INSTALLBIN=/afs/there/now INSTALLMAN3DIR=/afs/for/manpages make
Be careful to repeat this procedure every time you recompile an extension, unless you are sure the AFS installation directories are still valid.
Static linking of a new Perl binary
The steps above are sufficient on a system supporting dynamic loading. On systems that do not support dynamic loading, however, the extension has to be linked together statically with everything else you might want in your perl executable. MakeMaker supports the linking process by creating appropriate targets in the Makefile. If you say:
make perl
it will produce a new perl binary in the current directory with all extensions linked in that can be found in INST_ARCHLIB, SITELIBEXP, and PERL_ARCHLIB. To do that, MakeMaker writes a new Makefile; on UNIX it is called Makefile.aperl, but the name may be system-dependent. When you want to force the creation of a new perl, we recommend that you delete this Makefile.aperl so the directories are searched for linkable libraries again.
The binary can be installed in the directory where Perl normally resides on your machine with:
make inst_perl
To produce a Perl binary with a different filename than perl, either say:
perl Makefile.PL MAP_TARGET=myperl make myperl make inst_perl
or say:
perl Makefile.PL make myperl MAP_TARGET=myperl make inst_perl MAP_TARGET=myperl
In either case, you will be asked to confirm the invocation of the inst_perl target, since this invocation is likely to overwrite your existing Perl binary in INSTALLBIN.
make inst_perl documents what has been done in the file given by $(INSTALLARCHLIB)/perllocal.pod. This behavior can be bypassed by calling make pure_inst_perl.
Sometimes you might want to build a statically linked Perl even though your system supports dynamic loading. In this case you may explicitly set the linktype:
perl Makefile.PL LINKTYPE=static
Attributes you can set
The following attributes can be specified as arguments to WriteMakefile() or as NAME=VALUE pairs on the command line. We give examples below in the form they would appear in your Makefile.PL, that is, as though passed as a named parameter to WriteMakefile() (including the comma that comes after it).
C- A reference to an array of *c filenames. It's initialized by doing a directory scan and by derivation from the values of the
XSattribute hash. This is not currently used by MakeMaker but may be handy in Makefile.PLs. CONFIG- An array reference containing a list of attributes to fetch from
%Config. For example:CONFIG => [qw(archname manext)],
defines
ARCHNAMEandMANEXTfrom config.sh. MakeMaker will automatically add the following values toCONFIG:ar dlext ldflags ranlib cc dlsrc libc sitelibexp cccdlflags ld lib_ext sitearchexp ccdlflags lddlflags obj_ext so
CONFIGURE- A reference to a subroutine returning a hash reference. The hash may contain further attributes, for example,
{LIBS => ...}, that have to be determined by some evaluation method. Be careful, because any attributes defined this way will override hints andWriteMakefile()parameters (but not command-line arguments). DEFINE- An attribute containing additional defines, such as
-DHAVE_UNISTD_H. DIR- A reference to an array of subdirectories containing Makefile.PLs. For example, SDBM_FILE has:
DIR => ['sdbm'],
MakeMaker will automatically do recursive MakeMaking if subdirectories contain Makefile.PL files. A separate MakeMaker class is generated for each subdirectory, so each MakeMaker object can override methods using the fake
MY::class (see below) without interfering with other MakeMaker objects. You don't even need a Makefile.PL in the top level directory if you pass one in via -M and -e:perl -MExtUtils::MakeMaker -e 'WriteMakefile()'
DISTNAME- Your name for distributing the package (by tar file). This defaults to
NAMEbelow. DL_FUNCS- A reference to a hash of symbol names for routines to be made available as universal symbols. Each key/value pair consists of the package name and an array of routine names in that package. This attribute is used only under AIX (export lists) and VMS (linker options) at present. The routine names supplied will be expanded in the same way as
XSUBnames are expanded by theXSattribute.The default key/value pair looks like this:
"$PKG" => ["boot_$PKG"]
For a pair of packages named RPC and NetconfigPtr, you might, for example, set it to this:
DL_FUNCS => { RPC => [qw(boot_rpcb rpcb_gettime getnetconfigent)], NetconfigPtr => ['DESTROY'], }, DL_VARS- An array of symbol names for variables to be made available as universal symbols. It's used only under AIX (export lists) and VMS (linker options) at present. Defaults to
[]. A typical value might look like this:DL_VARS => [ qw( Foo_version Foo_numstreams Foo_tree ) ],
EXE_FILES- A reference to an array of executable files. The files will be copied to the
INST_EXEdirectory. A make realclean command will delete them from there again. FIRST_MAKEFILE- The name of the Makefile to be produced. Defaults to the contents of
MAKEFILE, but can be overridden. This is used for the second Makefile that will be produced for theMAP_TARGET. FULLPERL- A Perl binary able to run this extension.
H- A reference to an array of *h filenames. Similar to
C. INC- Directories containing include files, in -I form. For example:
INC => "-I/usr/5include -I/path/to/inc",
INSTALLARCHLIB- Used by make install, which copies files from
INST_ARCHLIBto this directory ifINSTALLDIRSis set to "perl". INSTALLBIN- Used by make install, which copies files from
INST_EXEto this directory. INSTALLDIRS- Determines which of the two sets of installation directories to choose: installprivlib and installarchlib versus installsitelib and installsitearch. The first pair is chosen with
INSTALLDIRS=perl, the second withINSTALLDIRS=site. The default is "site". INSTALLMAN1DIR- This directory gets the command manpages at make install time. It defaults to
$Config{installman1dir}. INSTALLMAN3DIR- This directory gets the library manpages at make install time. It defaults to
$Config{installman3dir}. INSTALLPRIVLIB- Used by make install, which copies files from
INST_LIBto this directory ifINSTALLDIRSis set to "perl". INSTALLSITELIB- Used by make install, which copies files from
INST_LIBto this directory ifINSTALLDIRSis set to "site" (default). INSTALLSITEARCH- Used by make install, which copies files from
INST_ARCHLIBto this directory ifINSTALLDIRSis set to "site" (default). INST_ARCHLIB- Same as
INST_LIB, but for architecture-dependent files. INST_EXE- Directory where executable scripts should be staged during running of make. Defaults to
/blib/bin, just to have a dummy location during testing. make install will copy the files inINST_EXEtoINSTALLBIN. INST_LIB- Directory where we put library files of this extension while building it.
INST_MAN1DIR- Directory to hold the command manpages at make time.
INST_MAN3DIR- Directory to hold the library manpages at make time
LDFROM- Defaults to
$(OBJECT)and is used in the ld(1) command to specify what files to link/load from. (Also seedynamic_liblater for how to specify ld flags.) LIBPERL_A- The filename of the Perl library that will be used together with this extension. Defaults to libperl.a.
LIBS- An anonymous array of alternative library specifications to be searched for (in order) until at least one library is found.
For example:
LIBS => ["-lgdbm", "-ldbm -lfoo", "-L/path -ldbm.nfs"],
Note that any element of the array contains a complete set of arguments for the ld command. So do not specify:
LIBS => ["-ltcl", "-ltk", "-lX11"],
See NDBM_File/Makefile.PL for an example where an array is needed. If you specify a scalar as in:
LIBS => "-ltcl -ltk -lX11",
MakeMaker will turn it into an array with one element.
LINKTYPE- "
static" or "dynamic" (the latter is the default unlessusedl=undefin config.sh). Should only be used to force static linking. (Also seelinkext, later in this chapter). MAKEAPERL- Boolean that tells MakeMaker to include the rules for making a Perl binary. This is handled automatically as a switch by MakeMaker. The user normally does not need it.
MAKEFILE- The name of the Makefile to be produced.
MAN1PODS- A reference to a hash of POD-containing files. MakeMaker will default this to all
EXE_FILESfiles that include POD directives. The files listed here will be converted to manpages and installed as requested at Configure time. MAN3PODS- A reference to a hash of pm and pod files. MakeMaker will default this to all pod and any pm files that include POD directives. The files listed here will be converted to manpages and installed as requested at Configure time.
MAP_TARGET- If it is intended that a new Perl binary be produced, this variable holds the name for that binary. Defaults to perl.
MYEXTLIB- If the extension links to a library that it builds, set this to the name of the library (see SDBM_File).
NAME- Perl module name for this extension (for example,
DBD::Oracle). This will default to the directory name, but should really be explicitly defined in the Makefile.PL. NEEDS_LINKING- MakeMaker will figure out whether an extension contains linkable code anywhere down the directory tree, and will set this variable accordingly. But you can speed it up a very little bit if you define this Boolean variable yourself.
NOECHO- Governs make's
@(echoing) feature. By settingNOECHOto an empty string, you can generate a Makefile that echos all commands. Mainly used in debugging MakeMaker itself. NORECURS- A Boolean that inhibits the automatic descent into subdirectories (see
DIRabove). For example:NORECURS => 1,
OBJECT- A string containing a list of object files, defaulting to
$(BASEEXT)$(OBJ_EXT). But it can be a long string containing all object files. For example:OBJECT => "tkpBind.o tkpButton.o tkpCanvas.o",
PERL- Perl binary for tasks that can be done by miniperl.
PERLMAINCC- The command line that is able to compile perlmain.c. Defaults to
$(CC). PERL_ARCHLIB- Same as
PERL_LIBfor architecture-dependent files. PERL_LIB- The directory containing the Perl library to use.
PERL_SRC- The directory containing the Perl source code. Use of this should be avoided, since it may be undefined.
PL_FILES- A reference to hash of files to be processed as Perl programs. By default MakeMaker will turn the names of any *PL files it finds (except Makefile.PL) into keys, and use the basenames of these files as values. For example:
PL_FILES => {'whatever.PL' => 'whatever'},This turns into a Makefile entry resembling:
all :: whatever whatever :: whatever.PL $(PERL) -I$(INST_ARCHLIB) -I$(INST_LIB) \ -I$(PERL_ARCHLIB) -I$(PERL_LIB) whatever.PL
You'll note that there's no I/O redirection into whatever there. The *PL files are expected to produce output to the target files themselves.
PM- A reference to a hash of pm files and pl files to be installed. For example:
PM => {'name_of_file.pm' => '$(INST_LIBDIR)/install_as.pm'},*pm and *pl. If a lib/ subdirectory exists and is not listed in
DIR(above) then any *pm and *pl files it contains will also be included by default. DefiningPMin the Makefile.PL will overridePMLIBDIRS. PMLIBDIRS- A reference to an array of subdirectories that contain library files. Defaults to:
PMLIBDIRS => [ 'lib', '$(BASEEXT)' ],
The directories will be scanned and any files they contain will be installed in the corresponding location in the library. A
libscan()method may be used to alter the behavior. DefiningPMin the Makefile.PL will overridePMLIBDIRS. PREFIX- May be used to set the three
INSTALL*attributes in one go (except for probablyINSTALLMAN1DIRif it is not belowPREFIXaccording to%Config). They will havePREFIXas a common directory node and will branch from that node intolib/,lib/ARCHNAMEor whatever Configure decided at the build time of your Perl (unless you override one of them, of course). PREREQ- A placeholder, not yet implemented. Will eventually be a hash reference: the keys of the hash are names of modules that need to be available to run this extension (for example, Fcntl for SDBM_File); the values of the hash are the desired versions of the modules.
SKIP- An array reference specifying the names of sections of the Makefile not to write. For example:
SKIP => [qw(name1 name2)],
TYPEMAPS- A reference to an array of typemap filenames. (Typemaps are used by the XS preprocessing system.) Use this when the typemaps are in some directory other than the current directory or when they are not named typemap. The last typemap in the list takes precedence. A typemap in the current directory has highest precedence, even if it isn't listed in
TYPEMAPS. The default system typemap has lowest precedence. VERSION- Your version number for distributing the package. This number defaults to 0.1.
VERSION_FROM- Instead of specifying the
VERSIONin the Makefile.PL, you can let MakeMaker parse a file to determine the version number. The parsing routine requires that the file named byVERSION_FROMcontain one single line to compute the version number. The first line in the file that contains the regular expression:/(\$[\w:]*\bVERSION)\b.*=/
will be evaluated with eval and the value of the named variable after the eval will be assigned to the
VERSIONattribute of the MakeMaker object. The following lines will be parsed satisfactorily:$VERSION = '1.00'; ( $VERSION ) = '$Revision: 1.64 $ ' =~ /\$Revision:\s+([^\s]+)/; $FOO::VERSION = '1.10';
but these will fail:
my $VERSION = '1.01'; local $VERSION = '1.02'; local $FOO::VERSION = '1.30';
The file named in
VERSION_FROMis added as a dependency to the Makefile in order to guarantee that the Makefile contains the correctVERSIONattribute after a change of the file. XS- A hash reference of xs files. MakeMaker will default this. For example:
XS => {'name_of_file.xs' => 'name_of_file.c'},The *c files will automatically be included in the list of files deleted by a make clean.
XSOPT- A string of options to pass to xsubpp (the XS preprocessor). This might include
-C++or-extern. Do not include typemaps here; theTYPEMAPparameter exists for that purpose. XSPROTOARG- May be set to an empty string, which is identical to
-prototypes, or-noprototypes. MakeMaker defaults to the empty string. XS_VERSION- Your version number for the xs file of this package. This defaults to the value of the
VERSIONattribute.
Additional lowercase attributes
There are additional lowercase attributes that you can use to pass parameters to the methods that spit out particular portions of the Makefile. These attributes are not normally required.
clean- Extra files to clean.
clean => {FILES => "*.xyz foo"}, depend- Extra dependencies.
depend => {ANY_TARGET=>ANY_DEPENDENCY, ...}, dist- Options for distribution (see "Distribution Support" below).
dist => { TARFLAGS => 'cvfF', COMPRESS => 'gzip', SUFFIX => 'gz', SHAR => 'shar -m', DIST_CP => 'ln', },If you specify
COMPRESS, thenSUFFIXshould also be altered, since it is needed in order to specify for make the target file of the compression. SettingDIST_CPto "ln" can be useful if you need to preserve the timestamps on your files.DIST_CPcan take the values "cp" (copy the file), "ln" (link the file), or "best" (copy symbolic links and link the rest). Default is "best". dynamic_lib- Options for dynamic library support.
dynamic_lib => { ARMAYBE => 'ar', OTHERLDFLAGS => '...', INST_DYNAMIC_DEP => '...', }, installpm- Some installation options having to do with AutoSplit.
{SPLITLIB => '$(INST_LIB)' (default) or '$(INST_ARCHLIB)'} linkext- Linking style.
linkext => {LINKTYPE => 'static', 'dynamic', or ""},Extensions that have nothing but *.pm files used to have to say:
linkext => {LINKTYPE => ""},with Pre-5.0 MakeMakers. With Version 5.00 of MakeMaker such a line can be deleted safely. MakeMaker recognizes when there's nothing to be linked.
macro- Extra macros to define.
macro => {ANY_MACRO => ANY_VALUE, ...}, realclean- Extra files to really clean.
{FILES => '$(INST_ARCHAUTODIR)/*.xyz'}
Useful Makefile macros
Here are some useful macros that you probably shouldn't redefine because they're derivative.
FULLEXT- Pathname for extension directory (for example, DBD/Oracle).
BASEEXT- Basename part of
FULLEXT. May be just equal toFULLEXT. ROOTEXT- Directory part of
FULLEXTwith leading slash (for example, /DBD) INST_LIBDIR$(INST_LIB)$(ROOTEXT)INST_AUTODIR$(INST_LIB)/auto/$(FULLEXT)INST_ARCHAUTODIR$(INST_ARCHLIB)/auto/$(FULLEXT)
Overriding MakeMaker methods
If you cannot achieve the desired Makefile behavior by specifying attributes, you may define private subroutines in the Makefile.PL. Each subroutine returns the text it wishes to have written to the Makefile. To override a section of the Makefile you can use one of two styles. You can just return a new value:
sub MY::c_o {
"new literal text" }
or you can edit the default by saying something like:
sub MY::c_o {
my $self = shift; local *c_o; $_=$self->MM::c_o; s/old text/new text/; $_;
}
Both methods above are available for backward compatibility with older Makefile.PLs.
If you still need a different solution, try to develop another subroutine that better fits your needs and then submit the diffs to either perl5-porters@nicoh.com or comp.lang.perl.modules as appropriate.
Distribution support
For authors of extensions, MakeMaker provides several Makefile targets. Most of the support comes from the ExtUtils::Manifest module, where additional documentation can be found. Note that a MANIFEST file is basically just a list of filenames to be shipped with the kit to build the extension.
- make distcheck
- Reports which files are below the build directory but not in the MANIFEST file and vice versa. (See
ExtUtils::Manifest::fullcheck()for details.) - make skipcheck
- Reports which files are skipped due to the entries in the MANIFEST.SKIP file. (See
ExtUtils::Manifest::skipcheck()for details). - make distclean
- Does a realclean first and then the distcheck. Note that this is not needed to build a new distribution as long as you are sure that the MANIFEST file is OK.
- make manifest
- Rewrites the MANIFEST file, adding all remaining files found. (See
ExtUtils::Manifest::mkmanifest()for details.) - make distdir
- Copies all files that are in the MANIFEST file to a newly created directory with the name
$(DISTNAME)-$(VERSION). If that directory exists, it will be removed first. - make disttest
- Makes distdir first, and runs perl Makefile.PL, make, and make test in that directory.
- make tardist
- First does a command
$(PREOP), which defaults to a null command. Does a make distdir next and runs tar(1) on that directory into a tarfile. Then deletes the distdir. Finishes with a command$(POSTOP), which defaults to a null command. - make dist
- Defaults to
$(DIST_DEFAULT), which in turn defaults to tardist. - make uutardist
- Runs a tardist first and uuencodes the tarfile.
- make shdist
- First does a command
$(PREOP), which defaults to a null command. Does a distdir next and runs shar on that directory into a sharfile. Then deletes the distdir. Finishes with a command$(POSTOP), which defaults to a null command. Note: for shdist to work properly, a shar program that can handle directories is mandatory. - make ci
- Does a
$(CI)and a$(RCS_LABEL)on all files in the MANIFEST file.
Customization of the distribution targets can be done by specifying a hash reference to the dist attribute of the WriteMakefile() call. The following parameters are recognized:
| Parameter | Default |
|---|---|
CI
| ('ci -u')
|
COMPRESS
| ('compress')
|
POSTOP
| ('@ :')
|
PREOP
| ('@ :')
|
RCS_LABEL
| ('rcs -q -Nv$(VERSION_SYM):')
|
SHAR
| ('shar')
|
SUFFIX
| ('Z')
|
TAR
| ('tar')
|
TARFLAGS
| ('cvf') |
An example:
WriteMakefile( 'dist' => {
COMPRESS=>"gzip", SUFFIX=>"gz" })