gno/paths.mk

66 lines
2.2 KiB
Makefile

#
# gno/paths.mk
#
# Top-level configuration for building GNO and making a release. This
# file is used to specify the various path names used by the build/release
# process. It need not be shipped with a binaries-only GNO distribution.
#
# Devin Reade, 1997
#
# $Id: paths.mk,v 1.8 1998/03/08 17:12:34 gdr-ftp Exp $
#
# This one isn't really a path, but it affects the creation of path
# names. If PRODOS_OBJS is set to "true" (minus the quotes), then the
# created object files will follow ProDOS naming conventions.
PRODOS_OBJS = true
# SRC_DIR is the top-level GNO source distribution directory (containing
# $(SRC_DIR)/gno, $(SRC_DIR)/gno/lib, and so forth). It also corresponds
# to the top level of the CVS repository.
# I recommend using /src and defining it in /etc/namespace.
#
# OBJ_DIR can be used to store the resulting object and binary files on
# a separate partition from the source. This is very handy when the
# source is stored on an AppleShare volume. If you don't need this
# feature, just define /obj in /etc/namespace to be the same as /src.
# It is not sufficient to merely change the definition of OBJ_DIR below,
# because various files in the builds assume that the /obj hierarchy
# exists.
SRC_DIR = /src
CWD = $(PWD:s,:,/,g)
OBJ_DIR = /obj$(CWD:s,${SRC_DIR},,)
.SOURCE.a : $(OBJ_DIR)
.SOURCE.o : $(OBJ_DIR)
.SOURCE.r : $(OBJ_DIR)
.SOURCE.root : $(OBJ_DIR)
# RELEASE_DIR is the directory into which we will put the created
# distribution files.
# I recommend using /dist and defining it in /etc/namespace.
RELEASE_DIR = /dist
# ORCA_DIST is the directory containing the standard Orca distribution.
# It shouldn't contain any GNO-isms.
ORCA_DIST = /lang/orca
# ORCA_SRC is the directory containing the sources to the ORCA libraries
# This is (and should only be) used when building libc. We do this kludge
# to avoid backward references during linking.
ORCA_SRC = /src/lib/orcalibs/Source
# These are the directories that will wind up becoming the distributions
# disks. We want to be able to ship on floppy, although the preferred
# method will be via ftp.
DISKS = $(RELEASE_DIR)/disks
DISK1 = $(DISKS)/gno.disk1
DISK2 = $(DISKS)/gno.disk2
DISK3 = $(DISKS)/gno.disk3