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makefile

Flexible and simple makefile for c++ projects.

It is basically designed for my personal projects but could be suitable for people who don't want to dive into GNU Make or CMake.

Features

How-to

If somewhere in devdir your c++ projects are as

 devdir
 |
 +--- prja
 |
 +--- prjb

Then clone this project next to your projects

 devdir
 |
 +--- prja
 |
 +--- prjb
 |
 +--- makefile

Put your code into src/projectname

 devdir
 |
 +--- prja
 |    |
 |    +--- Makefile
 |    |
 |    +--- src
 |         |
 |         +--- prja
 |         |    |
 |         |    +--- MyCode.h
 |         |    |
 |         |    +--- MyCode.cpp
 |         |
 |         +--- tests
 |         |    |
 |         |    +--- TestMyCode.cpp
 |         |
 |         +--- gdb
 |              |
 |              +--- printers.py
 |
 +--- prjb
 |
 +--- makefile

In every devdir/projectname create a simple Makefile

PRJ_NAME    := prja
PRJ_BRANCH  := 1.0
PRJ_VERSION := $(PRJ_BRANCH).0
PRJ_TYPE    := lib

include ../makefile/Makefile

Type make to build your binary.

Compilation

The variable PRJ_TYPE in your Makefile must be lib, exe or inc.

Project layout convention

directory project types optional contents
src/$(PRJ_NAME) all no .h and .cpp files to compile
src/tests lib inc yes unit tests
src/gdb lib exe yes pretty printers
build all - build results and temporary files

Build mode

The variable BUILD_MODE controls compilation options. It can be either release or debug and defaults to release.

# release:
$> make
# is the same as
$> make BUILD_MODE=release
# or
$> make release

# debug:
$> make debug
# is the same as
$> make BUILD_MODE=debug

The compilation result and temporary files will all go into the build directory.

For instance, the project prja depicted above, after building the library and unit tests will become as follows:

prja
|
+--- Makefile
|
+--- src                             ### Source code
|    |
|    +--- prja
|    |    |
|    |    +--- PrjInfo.h             ### Generated project meta information
|    |    |
|    |    +--- MyCode.h
|    |    |
|    |    +--- MyCode.cpp
|    |
|    +--- tests
|    |    |
|    |    +--- TestMyCode.cpp
|    |
|    +--- gdb
|         |
|         +--- printers.py
|
+--- build                           ### Build directory
     |
     +--- dep                        ### C++ dependencies
     |    |
     |    +--- debug
     |    |    |
     |    |    +--- prja
     |    |    |    |
     |    |    |    +--- MyCode.mk
     |    |    |
     |    |    +--- tests
     |    |         |
     |    |         +--- TestMyCode.mk
     |    |
     |    +--- release
     |         |
     |         +--- prja
     |         |    |
     |         |    +--- MyCode.mk
     |         |
     |         +--- tests
     |              |
     |              +--- TestMyCode.mk
     |
     +--- obj                        ### Objects
     |    |
     |    +--- debug
     |    |    |
     |    |    +--- prja
     |    |    |    |
     |    |    |    +--- MyCode.o
     |    |    |
     |    |    +--- tests
     |    |         |
     |    |         +--- TestMyCode.o
     |    |
     |    +--- release
     |         |
     |         +--- prja
     |         |    |
     |         |    +--- MyCode.o
     |         |
     |         +--- tests
     |              |
     |              +--- TestMyCode.o
     |
     +--- lib                        ### Target libraries if project types is lib
     |    |
     |    +--- debug
     |    |    |
     |    |    +--- libprja-1.0.so
     |    |    |
     |    |    +--- libprja-1.0.so-gdb.py
     |    |
     |    +--- release
     |         |
     |         +--- libprja-1.0.so
     |         |
     |         +--- libprja-1.0.so-gdb.py
     |
     +--- bin                        ### Unit tests if the project is a lib otherwise
          |                          ### target executables
          +--- debug
          |    |
          |    +--- tests
          |         |
          |         +--- TestMyCode.exe
          |
          +--- release
               |
               +--- tests
                    |
                    +--- TestMyCode.exe

Thus putting build into .gitignore will easily exclude all temporary files.

Makefile will create src/$(PRJ_NAME)/PrjInfo.h file. If you want to disable this feature do this:

PRJ_INFO :=

Source in sub-directories

You can set the variable SRCSUBDIRS if you have to keep some of your code in sub-directories. For example for a project like:

prja
|
+--- src
|    |
|    +--- prja
|    |    |
|    |    +--- impl
|    |    |    |
|    |    |    +--- generated
|    |    |    |    |
|    |    |    |    +--- Stub.h
|    |    |    |    |
|    |    |    |    +--- Stub.cpp
|    |    |    |
|    |    |    +--- ApiImpl.h
|    |    |    |
|    |    |    +--- ApiImpl.cpp
|    |    |
|    |    +--- Api.h
|    |    |
|    |    +--- Api.cpp
|    |

you will need:

SRCSUBDIRS = impl impl/generated

Running

  • make go will launch your executable.
  • make gdb will start GDB with your executable and LD_LIBRARY_PATH set properly.
  • make ldd will launch ldd with your binary and LD_LIBRARY_PATH set properly.

Cleaning

  • make clean will remove ./build
  • make clean-deps will clean dependencies
  • make clean-all will clean dependencies and your project

Library names and version management

For a dynamic library project prja-1.0.0 the binary will be named libprja-1.0.so where 1.0 comes from PRJ_BRANCH. The convention is to keep backward compatible all versions on the same branch. Thus incrementing PRJ_VERSION will not break linking and runtime dependency. If you break ABI better do it in a different branch.

           1.1
            |
            o <1.1.0>
1.0         |
 |          |
 o          |
 |          |
 |          |
 o <1.0.1>  |
 |          |
 |          |
 o----------+
 |
 |
 o <1.0.0>
 |
 |

Other variables

variable default value description
CPPEXT cpp C++ files extension
COMPILER c++ Compiler command
CPP_STD -std=c++17 C++ standard
CPP_OPTIM -O0 or -O3 -DNDEBUG Optimization options
CPP_PLT -fno-plt PLT option
CPP_PIC -fPIC PIC option
CPP_COVERAGE coverage options
CPP_DEFINES passed to the compiler
CPP_INCLUDES passed to the compiler
CPP_EXTRA_FLAGS passed to the compiler
LINK_EXTRA_LIBS passed to the linker
PRJ_POSTBUILD_TARGET any post build target

GDB pretty printers

Write your pretty printers in src/gdb/printers.py and it will be copied next to your binary so that GDB will recognize it. See examples/02-dll-engine/src/gdb/printers.py.

Unit tests

All unit test files src/tests/Test*.cpp are automatically detected. They are considered as separate executables. For instance a TestXXX.cpp will be built as bin/release/tests/TestXXX.exe.

  • make check will build and launch all unit tests. Running it again will not launch the tests already done.
  • make recheck will build if necessary and launch all unit tests.
  • make test-XXX will build and launch only bin/release/tests/TestXXX.exe. Typing make test-[TAB][TAB] will propose all available tests if the bash completion has been activated.
  • make test-XXX BUILD_MODE=debug will build and launch only bin/debug/tests/TestXXX.exe
  • make build-all-tests will only build all unit tests.
  • make gdb-test-XXX [BUILD_MODE=debug] will build and launch your tests in GDB.
  • make lcov run unit tests with coverage on and generate lcov reports.
  • make clean-tests will clean only test related files.
  • make clean-lcov will clean only coverage related files.

Coverage

To build with coverage options one can use

$> make clean
$> make COVERAGE=true check

or ask lcov to generate the coverage reports after running unit tests with make lcov.

Extra source files

If a unit test TestXXX.cpp requires extra files write them as XXX*.cpp and they will be compiled and linked along with TestXXX.cpp. Example examples/02-dll-engine/src/tests/TestAnything.cpp.

Variables

variable applies to test description
TEST_INCLUDES all passed to the compiler
TEST_DEFINES all passed to the compiler
TEST_EXTRA_LINK_LIBS all passed to the linker
TEST_EXTRA_DEPENDENCY all built before all unit tests
TestXXX_EXTRA_LD_PATH XXX injected into LD_LIBRARY_PATH for launching the test XXX
TestXXX_EXTRA_DEPENDENCY XXX built before the test XXX

Disabling specific tests

If for some reasons you have to disable unit tests XXX and YYY do this:

DISABLED_TESTS = XXX YYY

Trivial helper

One can use any unit test framework. Just feed properly the variables TEST_INCLUDES and TEST_EXTRA_LINK_LIBS. If a very simple condition verification is enough, you can use the trivial helper file coming with this makefile.

#include <utests/TrivialHelper.h>
...
CHECK( engine max power, engine.getMaxPower(), >100 )
CHECK( battery charged, battery.getCharge(), >20 )
...

The default behavior is to display all check results independently wether they fail or not. If you want to stop execution on the very first failed condition.

TEST_DEFINES = -DEXIT_ON_ERROR

Bash completion

Sourcing bash-completion-to-source.sh will make bash completion available for make [TAB][TAB]. If you have unit tests make test-[TAB][TAB] will list all available test to build and run.

Example:

examples/02-dll-engine> make test-[TAB][TAB]
test-Anything  test-Engine

Generating vscode workspace

make generate-vscode will create .vscode dir in all dependencies. It will generate .vscode/tasks.json and .vscode/launch.json only within the main project to avoid spamming the pull down menu Ctrl+Shift+b. If you need tasks from a dependency to be available you can go their and invoke make generate-vscode.

Example:

examples/05-exe-peugeot> make generate-vscode

 specs-1.0.0 /path/to/this/makefile/examples/00-inc-specs
 - generating /path/to/this/makefile/examples/00-inc-specs/.vscode/c_cpp_properties.json

 battery-2.0.0 /path/to/this/makefile/examples/01-lib-battery 00-inc-specs
 - generating /path/to/this/makefile/examples/01-lib-battery/.vscode/c_cpp_properties.json

 computer-1.0.0 /path/to/this/makefile/examples/03-dll-computer 01-lib-battery 00-inc-specs
 - generating /path/to/this/makefile/examples/03-dll-computer/.vscode/c_cpp_properties.json

 engine-1.0.0 /path/to/this/makefile/examples/02-dll-engine 01-lib-battery 00-inc-specs
 - generating /path/to/this/makefile/examples/02-dll-engine/.vscode/c_cpp_properties.json

 car-1.0.0 /path/to/this/makefile/examples/04-dll-car 02-dll-engine 03-dll-computer 01-lib-battery 00-inc-specs
 - generating /path/to/this/makefile/examples/04-dll-car/.vscode/c_cpp_properties.json

 peugeot-207.0.0 /path/to/this/makefile/examples/05-exe-peugeot 04-dll-car 02-dll-engine 03-dll-computer 01-lib-battery 00-inc-specs
 - generating /path/to/this/makefile/examples/05-exe-peugeot/.vscode/c_cpp_properties.json
 - generating /path/to/this/makefile/examples/05-exe-peugeot/.vscode/tasks.json
 - generating /path/to/this/makefile/examples/05-exe-peugeot/.vscode/launch.json
 - generating /path/to/this/makefile/examples/05-exe-peugeot/.vscode/peugeot.code-workspace

  You can now open /path/to/this/makefile/examples/05-exe-peugeot/.vscode/peugeot.code-workspace

Examples

In examples you will find primitive but representative projects.

dir dependencies nota
00-inc-specs header only project with a unit test
01-lib-battery specs
02-dll-engine battery has unit tests and pretty printers
03-dll-computer battery
04-dll-car engine computer
05-exe-peugeot car