macross/Makefile

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Makefile
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# to make for another target CPU, redefine PROC to the name of the target
# processor, e.g., 68000
PROC =6502
MACROSS_OBJECTS = actions_$(PROC).o buildStuff1.o buildStuff2.o \
buildStuff3.o builtInFunctions.o \
builtInFunsSD_$(PROC).o debugPrint.o \
debugPrintSD_$(PROC).o emitBranch_$(PROC).o \
emitStuff.o encode.o errorStuff.o \
expressionSemantics.o fixups.o garbage.o globals.o \
initialize.o lexer.o listing.o lookups.o \
macrossTables_$(PROC).o main.o object.o \
operandStuffSD_$(PROC).o parserMisc.o \
semanticMisc.o statementSemantics.o \
structSemantics.o tokenStrings_$(PROC).o y.tab.o
# Macross is not 64-bit clean and it does a lot of silent downcasting
# to simulate subclasses and uses int and void * interchangably a
# bunch. gcc calls these the int-conversion and
# incompatible-pointer-types warnings.
CFLAGS=-m32 -O2 -ansi -DYYDEBUG -DTARGET_CPU=CPU_$(PROC)
LDFLAGS=-m32
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# If yacc is notionally present on a system, it's usually actually
# bison in a compatibility mode. bison is available by name more often
# than yacc itself is.
YACC=bison -y
#YACC=yacc
CC=gcc
#CC=clang
macross: $(MACROSS_OBJECTS)
$(CC) $(LDFLAGS) -o macross $(MACROSS_OBJECTS)
# This is a switcher program between multiple versions of Macross, not
# really a build product
# driver: driver.c
# cc $(CFLAGS) -o driver driver.c
y.tab.c y.tab.h: macross_$(PROC).y
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$(YACC) -d macross_$(PROC).y
clean:
rm -f *.o y.tab.c y.tab.h macross
love:
@echo "Not war?"
.c.o:
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $<
Makefile.depend:
makedepend -Y -DTARGET_CPU=CPU_$(PROC) -f - *.c > Makefile.depend
depend: Makefile.depend
include Makefile.depend