I want to set a variable if it is empty. I tried in this way:
....
TEST := $(something)
...
TEST ?= $(something else)
The first $(somethi
Folks, I think there's a simpler solution
KDIR ?= "foo"
From: What is ?= in Makefile
Any elegant solution to set the variable if empty?
GNU make is hardly known for elegant solutions. Unless you find trapdoors and minefields to be elegant. I know only of the two ways to accomplish what you want:
The standard ifeq
/endif
solution:
ifeq ($(TEST),)
TEST := $(something else)
endif
Use the $(if)
function:
TEST := $(if $(TEST),$(TEST),$(something else))
One can try to package that construct into a function too, but that is inadvisable. The function would have the hidden pitfall of occasionally breaking the $(something else)
if it contains the ,
(for which there are only wayward workarounds). (The built-in functions like $(if)
are immune to the ,
bug.)
Elegance test is up to you.
Just in case anyone stumbled upon putting the condition in the rule itself. below how I did it, thought it might help others.
In Makefile
, suppose we have the following rule with check
target and we need to check whether var was passed.
check:
@[ "${var}" ] && echo "all good" || ( echo "var is not set"; exit 1 )
To test this out, run the following commands
$ make check
var is not set
make: *** [check] Error 1
$ make check var=test
all good
So, Now we can pass the variable value or a default value in case it was not passed to a bash script that will be responsible to do the logic. something like the following:
@[ "${var}" ] && ./b.sh ${var} || ./b.sh 'ss'
Here's below what b.sh
might look like, though you can add more logic to it.
#!/bin/sh
echo $1
Here's another alternative that I personally find quite elegant, because it's a one-liner and doesn't need the redundant else-branch:
TEST := $(or $(TEST),$(something else))
In case you need to distinguish if a variable is undefined or just has an empty value, use $(origin VARNAME) function:
ifeq ($(origin VARNAME),undefined)
VARNAME := "now it's finally defined"
endif
Note that VARNAME is not surrounded by $()
- you literally give the name of the variable.
From GNU make, chapter 7.2, Syntax of Conditionals:
"Often you want to test if a variable has a non-empty value. When the value results from complex expansions of variables and functions, expansions you would consider empty may actually contain whitespace characters and thus are not seen as empty. However, you can use the strip function to avoid interpreting whitespace as a non-empty value. For example:
ifeq ($(strip $(foo)),)
text-if-empty
endif
will evaluate text-if-empty even if the expansion of $(foo) contains whitespace characters."