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The complete set of builtin .PHONY
targets include the following.
The .BUILD
targets can be used to specify commands to be executed at
the beginning and end of the build. The .BUILD_BEGIN
target is built
at the beginning of a project build, and one of .BUILD_FAILURE
or
.BUILD_SUCCESS
is executed when the build terminates.
For example, the following set of rules simply print additional messages about the status of the build.
.BUILD_BEGIN: echo Build starting .BUILD_SUCCESS: echo The build was successful .BUILD_FAILURE: println($"The build failed: $(length $(find-build-targets Failed)) targets could not be built")
Another common use is to define notifications to be performed when
the build completes. For example, the following rule will create
a new X terminal displaying the summary of the build
(using the BUILD_SUMMARY
variable).
.BUILD_FAILURE: xterm -e vi $(BUILD_SUMMARY)
If you do not wish to add these rules directly to your project (which
is probably a good idea if you work with others), you can
define them in your .omakerc
(see Section A.8).
The find-build-targets
function
is useful for obtaining a firther summary of the build. Note that
when output diversions are in effect (with the --output-*
options — see Chapter A),
any output produced by the commands is copied to a file. The name of the
file is specified by the output-file
field of the Target
object.
You may find this useful in defining custom build summaries.
OMakeFlags(options) options : String
The OMakeFlags
function is used to set omake
options from
within OMakefiles. The options have exactly the same format as
options on the command line.
For example, the following code displays the progress bar unless
the VERBOSE
environment variable is defined.
if $(not $(defined-env VERBOSE)) OMakeFlags(-S --progress) export
OMakeVersion(version1) OMakeVersion(version1, version2) version1, version2 : String
The OMakeVersion
function is used for version checking
in OMakefiles. It takes one or two arguments.
In the one argument form, if the omake version number
is less than <version1>
,
then an exception is raised. In the two argument form,
the version must lie between version1
and version2
.
$(cmp-versions version1, version2) version1, version2 : String
The cmp-versions\
functions can be used to compare arbitrary version strings.
It returns 0 when the two version strings are equal, a negative number when the first
string represents an earlier version, and a positive number otherwise.
DefineCommandVars()
The DefineCommandVars
function redefines the variables passed on
the commandline. Variables definitions are passed on the command line
in the form name=value
. This function is primarily for internal
use by omake to define these variables for the first time.
$(dependencies targets) : File Array $(dependencies-all targets) : File Array $(dependencies-proper targets) : File Array targets : File Array raises RuntimeException
The dependencies
function returns the set of immediate dependencies of
the given targets. This function can only be used within a rule body and
all the arguments to the dependency
function must also be dependencies of
this rule. This restriction ensures that all the dependencies are known when
this function is executed.
The dependencies-all
function is similar, but it expands the dependencies
recursively, returning all of the dependencies of a target, not just the immediate
ones.
The dependencies-proper
function returns all recursive dependencies, except
the dependencies that are leaf targets. A leaf target is a target that has no
dependencies and no build commands; a leaf target corresponds to a source file
in the current project.
In all three functions, files that are not part of the current project are silently discarded. All three functions will return phony and scanner targets along with the “real” ones.
One purpose of the dependencies-proper
function is for “clean” targets.
For example, one way to delete all intermediate files in a build is with a rule
that uses the dependencies-proper
. Note however, that the rule requires
building the project before it can be deleted.
.PHONY: clean APP = ... # the name of the target application clean: $(APP) rm -f $(dependencies-proper $(APP))
Also note that the dependencies-proper
function will return the phony and scanner
targets in addition to real one.
For other (possibly better) alternatives, see Section 10.3.3 and
filter-proper-targets
function.
$(target targets) : Target Array targets : File Sequence raises RuntimeException
The target
function returns the Target object associated with each
of the targets. See the Target
object for more information.
$(find-build-targets tag) : Target Array tag : Succeeded | Failed
The find-build-targets
allow the results
of the build to be examined. The tag
must
specifies which targets are to be returned; the comparison
is case-insensitive.
These are used mainly in conjuction with the
.BUILD_SUCCESS
(Section 13.1) and
.BUILD_FAILURE
(Section 13.1) phony targets.
For example, adding the following to your project OMakefile
will print the number of targets that failed (if the build failed).
.BUILD_FAILURE: echo "Failed target count: $(length $(find-build-targets Failed))"
$(project-directories) : Dir Array
The project-directories
function returns the list of all directories
that are considered to be part of the project.
To get the complete directory list, this function should be called from within a rule body.
The rule
function is called whenever a build rule is defined.
It is unlikely that you will need to redefine this function, except in
very exceptional cases.
rule(multiple, target, pattern, sources, options, body) : Rule multiple : String target : Sequence pattern : Sequence sources : Sequence options : Array body : Body
The rule
function is called when a rule is evaluated.
::
.
Map
object associating each specified option with
a value.
Consider the following rule.
target: pattern: sources :name1: option1 :name2: option2 expr1 expr2
This expression represents the following function call, where
square brackets are used to indicate arrays, and the curly
brackets represent a Map
object.
rule(false, target, pattern, sources, { $|:name1:| = option1; $|:name2:| = option2 } [expr1; expr2])
build(targets : File Array) : bool
Build the given targets. The value is true iff the build was successful.
This function can be used only in osh
.
The standard OMakeroot file defines the functions are rules for building standard projects.
The root directory of the current project.
The current working directory (the directory is set for each OMakefile in the project).
The name of the standard installed OMakeroot file.
If set to true, the construction of a target should be aborted whenever one of the commands to build it fail. This defaults to true, and should normally be left that way.
This variable should be defined as one of four values
(defaults to enabled
).
.SCANNER
rules. Whenever a rule does
not specify a :scanner:
dependency explicitly, try to find a
.SCANNER
with the same target name.
.SCANNER
rules.
.SCANNER
rules, but print a warning
whenever one is selected.
.SCANNER
rules. If a rule
does not specify a :scanner:
dependency, and there is a default
.SCANNER
rule, the build will terminate abnormally.
The command to install a program (install
on Unix
, cp
on Win32
).
The normal path separator (:
on Unix
, ;
on Win32
).
The normal directory separator (/
on Unix
, \
on Win32
).
File suffix for an object file (default is .o
on Unix
, and .obj
on Win32
).
File suffix for a static library (default is .a
on Unix
, and .lib
on Win32
).
File suffix for a shared library (default is .so
on Unix
, and .dll
on Win32
).
File suffix for an assembly file (default is .s
on Unix
, and .asm
on Win32
).
File suffix for executables (default is empty for Unix
, and .exe
on Win32
and Cygwin
).
OMake provides extensive support for building C and C++ programs. In order to use the functions defined in this section, you need to make sure the line
open build/C
is present in your OMakeroot
file.
These variables will get defined based on the “autoconf-style” static.
tests executed
when you run OMake for the first time. You can use them to configure your project accordingly,
and you should not redefine them.
You can use the --configure
command line option (Section A.3.9) to force
re-execution of all the tests.
A different set of autoconfiguration tests is performed depending on the build environment
involved — one set of tests would be performed in a Win32
environment, and another —
in a Unix-like environment (including Linux, OS X and Cygwin).
A boolean flag specifying whether the gcc
binary was found in your path.
A boolean flag specifying whether the g++
binary was found in your path.
A boolean flag specifying whether the cl
binary was found in your path.
A boolean flag specifying whether the lib
binary was found in your path.
The following variables can be redefined in your project.
The name of the C compiler (on Unix
it defaults to gcc
when gcc
is present and
to cc
otherwise; on Win32
defaults to cl /nologo
).
The name of the C++ compiler (on Unix
it defaults to gcc
when gcc
is present
and to c
++ otherwise; on Win32
defaults to cl /nologo
).
The name of the C preprocessor (defaults to cpp
on Unix
, and cl /E
on Win32
).
Compilation flags to pass to the C compiler (default empty on Unix
, and /DWIN32
on Win32
).
Compilation flags to pass to the C++ compiler (default empty on Unix
, and /DWIN32
on Win32
).
Additional directories that specify the search path to the C and C++ compilers (default is .
).
The directories are passed to the C and C++ compilers with the -I
option.
The include path with -I
prefixes is defined in the PREFIXED_INCLUDES
variable.
Additional libraries needed when building a program (default is empty).
The option to use for specifying the output file in C and C++ compilers
(defaults to -o
on Unix
and /Fo
on Win32
).
The name of the assembler (defaults to as
on Unix
, and ml
on Win32
).
Flags to pass to the assembler (default is empty on Unix
, and /c /coff
on Win32
).
The option string that specifies the output file for AS
(defaults to -o
on Unix
and /Fo
on Win32
).
The name of the program to create static libraries (defaults to ar cq
on Unix
,
and lib
on Win32
).
The name of the linker (defaults to ld
on Unix
, and cl
on Win32
).
Options to pass to the linker (default is empty).
Options to pass to the linker when compiling a shared library (defaults to -shared
on Unix
and /DLL
on Win32
).
The option to use for specifying the output file in C and C++ linkers
(defaults to -o
on Unix
and /Fe
on Win32
).
The name of the yacc
parser generator (default is yacc
on Unix
, empty on Win32
).
The name of the lex
lexer generator (default is lex
on Unix
, empty on Win32
).
Because the C scanners do not normally know anything about generated source files (such as generated header files), these files may need to be created before running the scanner.
CGeneratedFiles(files) LocalCGeneratedFiles(files)
The CGeneratedFiles
and LocalCGeneratedFiles
functions specify files
that need to be generated before any C files are scanned for dependencies. For example,
if config.h
and inputs.h
are both generated files, specify:
CGeneratedFiles(config.h inputs.h)
The CGeneratedFiles
function is global — its arguments will be generated
before any C files anywhere in the project are scanned for dependencies. The
LocalCGeneratedFiles
function follows the normal scoping rules of OMake.
The StaticCLibrary
builds a static library and the DynamicCLibrary
function builds a shared library (DLL).
StaticCLibrary(<target>, <files>) DynamicCLibrary(<target>, <files>)
The <target>
does not include the library suffix, and
The <files>
list does not include the object suffix. These
are obtained from the EXT_LIB
(EXT_DLL
)
and EXT_OBJ
variables.
This function returns the library filename.
The following command builds the library libfoo.a
from the
files a.o b.o c.o
on Unix
, or the library
libfoo.lib
from the files a.obj b.obj c.obj
on Win32
.
StaticCLibrary(libfoo, a b c) .DEFAULT: $(StaticCLibrary libbar, a b c d)
If the CDLL_IMPLIES_STATIC
variable is enabled (this is default on Win32
), all the DynamicC
functions
would assume that creating a shared library automatically created a static one.
The StaticCLibraryCopy
and DynamicCLibraryCopy
functions copy a library
to an install location.
StaticCLibraryCopy(<tag>, <dir>, <lib>) DynamicCLibraryCopy(<tag>, <dir>, <lib>)
The <tag>
is the name of a target (typically a .PHONY
target);
the <dir>
is the installation directory, and <lib>
is
the library to be copied (without the library suffix).
This function returns the filename of the library in the target directory.
For example, the following code copies the library
libfoo.a
to the /usr/lib
directory.
.PHONY: install StaticCLibraryCopy(install, /usr/lib, libfoo)
The StaticCLibraryInstall
and DynamicCLibraryInstall
functions build a library, and
set the install location in one step. Return the filename of the library
in the target directory.
StaticCLibraryInstall(<tag>, <dir>, <libname>, <files>) DynamicCLibraryInstall(<tag>, <dir>, <libname>, <files>)
StaticCLibraryInstall(install, /usr/lib, libfoo, a b c)
These functions mirror the StaticCLibrary
, StaticCLibraryCopy
,
and StaticCLibraryInstall
functions, but they build an object
file (a .o
file on Unix
, and a .obj
file on Win32
).
The CProgram
function builds a C program from a set
of object files and libraries.
CProgram(<name>, <files>)
The <name>
argument specifies the name of the program to be built;
the <files>
argument specifies the files to be linked. The function
returns the filename of the executable.
Additional options can be passed through the following variables.
For example, the following code specifies that the program
foo
is to be produced by linking the files bar.o
and baz.o
and libraries libfoo.a
.
section LIBS = libfoo LDFLAGS += -lbar CProgram(foo, bar baz)
The CProgramCopy
function copies a file to an install location.
CProgramCopy(<tag>, <dir>, <program>)
CProgramCopy(install, /usr/bin, foo)
The CProgramInstall
function specifies a program to build,
and a location to install, simultaneously.
CProgramInstall(<tag>, <dir>, <name>, <files>)
section LIBS = libfoo LDFLAGS += -lbar CProgramInstall(install, /usr/bin, foo, bar baz)
The CXXProgram
and CXXProgramInstall
functions are
equivalent to their C counterparts, except that would use $(CXX)
and $(CXXFLAGS)
for linking instead of $(CC)
and $(CFLAGS)
.
Similarly, the six CXXLibrary
functions the C++ equivalents of the corresponding
CLibrary
functions.
OMake provides extensive support for building OCaml code, including support for tools like
ocamlfind
, ocamlyacc
and menhir
. In order to use the functions
defined in this section, you need to make sure the line
open build/OCaml
is present in your OMakeroot
file.
These variables will get defined based on the “autoconf-style” tests executed when you run OMake for the first time. You can use them to configure your project accordingly, and you should not redefine them.
You can use the --configure
command line option (Section A.3.9) to force
re-execution of all the tests.
True when ocamlopt
(or ocamlopt.opt
) is
available on your machine.
True when the ocamlfind is available on your machines.
True when a version of
ocamldep
that understands the -modules
option is available on your machine.
True if "ocamlopt -shared" is supported by the compiler.
True when the Menhir parser-generator is available on your machine.
The location of OCaml library directory (output of ocamlc -where
). Empty when no
ocamlc is found.
The following variables can be redefined in your project.
Whether to use the ocamlfind
utility (default false
)
The OCaml bytecode compiler (default ocamlc.opt
if it exists
and USE_OCAMLFIND
is not set, otherwise ocamlc
).
The OCaml native-code compiler (default ocamlopt.opt
if it
exists and USE_OCAMLFIND
is not set, otherwise ocamlopt
).
The camlp4
preprocessor (default camlp4
).
The OCaml lexer generator (default ocamllex
).
The flags to pass to ocamllex
(default -q
).
The OCaml parser generator (default ocamlyacc
).
Additional options to pass to $(OCAMLYACC)
.
The OCaml dependency analyzer (default ocamldep
).
Instead of using OCAMLDEP
in a traditional make
-style fashion, run $(OCAMLDEP) -modules
and then
postprocess the output internally to discover all the relevant generated .ml
and
.mli
files. See Section 13.6.5 for more information on
interactions between OMake, OCAMLDEP
and generated files. Set to
$(OCAMLDEP_MODULES_AVAILABLE)
by default.
The OCaml toploop compiler (default ocamlmktop
).
The OCaml bytecode linker (default $(OCAMLC)
).
The OCaml native-code linker (default $(OCAMLOPT)
).
Search path to pass to the OCaml compilers (default .
).
The search path with the -I
prefix is defined by the PREFIXED_OCAMLINCLUDES
variable.
Extra path for searching files corresponding to dependencies returned by "ocamldep -modules". This defaults to ".". There is normally no reason to change this value.
The ocamlfind
utility (default ocamlfind
if
USE_OCAMLFIND
is set, otherwise empty).
The flags to pass to ocamlfind
(default empty, USE_OCAMLFIND
must be set).
Package names to pass to ocamlfind
(USE_OCAMLFIND
must be set).
Flag indicating whether to use the bytecode compiler (default true
, when no ocamlopt
found, false
otherwise).
Flag indicating whether to use the native-code compiler (default true
, when ocamlopt is found, false
otherwise).
Both BYTE_ENABLED
and NATIVE_ENABLED
can be set to true;
at least one should be set to true.
Flag indicating whether libraries are
also created as plugins. This defaults to false
for compatibility
with old omake versions. Set it to CMXS_SUPPORTED
to enable this
feature when supported
Define this as true
if you wish to use
menhir
instead of ocamlyacc
(default false
).
Whether to include more information into
rule digests and make it more sensitive to structural changes at the cost
of build speed (true
or false
).
The C compiler used internally by OCaml
The C compiler flags used by OCaml
The following variables specify additional options to be passed to the OCaml tools.
Flags to pass to the byte-code compiler (default -g
).
Flags to pass to the native-code compiler (default empty).
Flags to pass to either compiler (default -warn-error A
).
Flags to pass to the byte-code linker (default empty).
Flags to pass to the native-code linker (default empty).
Flags to pass to either linker.
Additional flags to pass to menhir
.
The following variables are used during linking.
Libraries to pass to the linker. These libraries become dependencies of the link step.
Additional libraries to pass to the linker. These libraries are
not included as dependencies to the link step. Typical use is for the OCaml
standard libraries like unix
or str
.
C libraries to pass to the linker.
Extra flags for the library linker.
OCaml linker requires the OCaml files to be
listed in dependency order. Normally, all the functions presented in this section will automatically sort
the list of OCaml modules passed in as the <files>
argument. However, this variable is
set to true
, the order of the files passed into these function will be left as is, but OMake will
abort with an error message if the order is illegal.
As of OCaml version 3.09.2, the standard ocamldep
scanner is “broken”. The main issue is
that it finds only those dependencies that already exist. If foo.ml
contains a dependency
on Bar
,
foo.ml: open Bar
then the default ocamldep
will only find the dependency if a file bar.ml
or
bar.ml
exists in the include path. It will not find (or print) the dependency if, for
example, only bar.mly
exists at the time ocamldep
is run, even though bar.ml
and bar.mli
can be generated from bar.mly
.
OMake currently provides two methods for addressing this problem — one that requires manually
specifying the generated files, and an experimental method for discovering such “hidden”
dependencies automatically. The
OCAMLDEP_MODULES_ENABLED
variable controls which method is
going to be used. When this variable is false, the manual specifications are expected and when it
is true, the automated discovery will be attempted.
OCamlGeneratedFiles(files) LocalOCamlGeneratedFiles(files)
When the OCAMLDEP_MODULES_ENABLED
variable variable is set
to false
, the OCamlGeneratedFiles
and LocalOCamlGeneratedFiles
functions specify files
that need to be generated before any OCaml files are scanned for dependencies. For example,
if parser.ml
and lexer.ml
are both generated files, specify:
OCamlGeneratedFiles(parser.ml lexer.ml)
The OCamlGeneratedFiles
function is global — its arguments will be generated
before any OCaml files anywhere in the project are scanned for dependencies. The
LocalOCamlGeneratedFiles
function follows the normal scoping rules of OMake.
These functions have no effect when the
OCAMLDEP_MODULES_ENABLED
variable is true.
Having to specify the generated files manualy when OMake could discover them automatically is
obviously suboptimal. To address this, we tell ocamldep
to only
find the free module names in a file and then post-process the results internally.
This automated functionality is enabled when the
OCAMLDEP_MODULES_ENABLED
variable is set to true
.
By default, OCAMLDEP_MODULES_ENABLED
variable will be set to
$(OCAMLDEP_MODULES_AVAILABLE)
.
Note that the ocamldep
functionality this relies upon is only included in
the OCaml version 3.10 and higher. It’s availability will be discovered automatically
and the OCAMLDEP_MODULES_AVAILABLE
variable
will be set accordingly.
Sometimes, MLI files only contain type and exception definitions. In fact, the MLI file could also be parsed as ML file. For convenience, it is possible to declare modules as MLI-only. In this case, an ML file needs not to be written. Do this as follows:
DeclareMLIOnly(<files>)
where the <files>
are without suffixes.
Note that this really only works if the MLI file can be parsed as ML file. Also, it is possible this results in an object to be linked in, so don’t forget to link the modules into the library or executable.
Menhir is a parser generator that is mostly compatible with
ocamlyacc
, but with many improvements. A few of these
are listed here (excerpted from the Menhir home page
http://cristal.inria.fr/~fpottier/menhir/).
--infer
option, Menhir can typecheck the semantic actions
in your grammar at generation time.
What do you need to do to use Menhir instead of ocamlyacc
?
OMakefile
if you want to use Menhir everywhere).MENHIR_ENABLED = true
MENHIR_FLAGS
variable.MENHIR_FLAGS += --infer
With this setup, any file with a .mly
suffix will be compiled with Menhir.
If your grammar is split across several files, you need to specify it explicitly,
using the MenhirMulti
function.
MenhirMulti(target, sources) target : filename, without suffix sources : the files that define the grammar, without suffixes
For example, if you want to generate the parser files parse.ml
and parse.mli
,
from the grammar specified in files a.mly
and b.mly
, you would use
the following.
MenhirMulti(parse, a b)
The OCamlLibrary
function builds an OCaml library.
OCamlLibrary(<libname>, <files>)
The <libname>
and <files>
are listed without suffixes.
This function returns the list of all the targets that it defines the rules
for (including the $(name)$(EXT_LIB)
file when NATIVE_ENABLED
is set).
The following code builds the libfoo.cmxa
library from the files foo.cmx
and bar.cmx
(if NATIVE_ENABLED
is set), and libfoo.cma
from
foo.cmo
and bar.cmo
(if BYTE_ENABLED
is set).
OCamlLibrary(libfoo, foo bar)
If the variable CMXS_ENABLED
is set, additionally the cmxs plugin
is created. Note that CMXS_SUPPORTED
returns whether the compiler
installation supports plugins, so you can simply set
CMXS_ENABLED = CMXS_SUPPORTED \end{verbatime} before calling \verb+OCamlLibrary+. For compatibility with older omake versions, \verb+CMXS_ENABLED+ defaults to \verb+false+. \fun{OCamlPackage} The \verb+OCamlPackage+ function builds an OCaml package. \verb+OCamlPackage(<name>, <files>)+ The \verb+<name>+ and \verb+<files>+ are listed \emph{without} suffixes. The \verb+<files>+ must have been compiled with the \verb+-for-pack <ident>+ flag to the OCaml compiler. This function returns the list of all the targets that it defines the rules for (including the \verb+$(name)$(EXT_LIB)+ file when \verb+NATIVE_ENABLED+ is set). The following code builds the \verb+libfoo.cmx+ package from the files \verb+package.cmx+ and \verb+bar.cmx+ (if \verb+NATIVE_ENABLED+ is set), and \verb+package.cmo+ from \verb+foo.cmo+ and \verb+bar.cmo+ (if \verb+BYTE_ENABLED+ is set). \begin{verbatim} OCamlPackage(package, foo bar)
The OCamlLibraryCopy
function copies a library to an install location.
OCamlLibraryCopy(<tag>, <libdir>, <libname>, <interface-files>)
The <interface-files>
specify additional interface files
to be copied if the INSTALL_INTERFACES
variable is true.
The OCamlLibraryInstall
function builds a library
and copies it to an install location in one step.
OCamlLibraryInstall(<tag>, <libdir>, <libname>, <files>)
The OCamlProgram
function builds an OCaml program. It returns the array with all
the targets for which it has defined the rules ($(name)$(EXE)
and $(name).run
and/or $(name).opt
, depending on the NATIVE_ENABLED
and BYTE_ENABLED
variables).
OCamlProgram(<name>, <files>)
Additional variables used:
OCAML_LIBS
OCAML_OTHER_LIBS
OCAML_CLIBS
OCAML_BYTE_LINK_FLAGS
OCAML_NATIVE_LINK_FLAGS
OCAML_LINK_FLAGS
The OCamlProgramCopy
function copies an OCaml program to an install location.
OCamlProgramCopy(<tag>, <bindir>, <name>)
Additional variables used:
NATIVE_ENABLED
variable is set, the native-code executable
is copied; otherwise the byte-code executable is copied.
The OCamlProgramInstall
function builds a programs and copies it to
an install location in one step.
OCamlProgramInstall(<tag>, <bindir>, <name>, <files>)
OMake provides support for building LATEX documents, including support for automatically running BiBTex and for producing PostScript and PDF files. In order to use the functions defined in this section, you need to make sure the line
open build/LaTeX
is present in your OMakeroot
file.
The following variables can be modified in your project.
The LATEX command (default latex
).
Flag indicating whether to use advanced LATEX options
present in TeTeX v.2 (default value is determined the first time omake reads LaTeX.src
and depends on the version of LATEX you have installed).
The LATEX flags (defaults depend on the TETEX2_ENABLED
variable)
The BibTeX command (default bibtex
).
The command to build an index (default makeindex
).
The .dvi
to PostScript converter (default dvips
).
Flags to pass to dvips
(default -t letter
).
The .dvi
to .pdf
converter (default dvipdfm
).
Flags to pass to dvipdfm
(default -p letter
).
The .latex
to .pdf
converter (default pdflatex
).
Flags to pass to pdflatex (default is $`(LATEXFLAGS)
).
Flag indicating whether to use pdflatex instead of dvipdfm
to generate the .pdf
document (default false
).
The LaTeXDocument
produces a LATEX document.
LaTeXDocument(<name>, <texfiles>)
The document <name>
and <texfiles>
are listed without suffixes. This function
returns the filenames for the generated .ps
(unless USEPDFLATEX
variable is set) and .pdf
files.
Additional variables used:
The LATEX search path (an array of directories, default is
taken from the TEXINPUTS
environment variable).
Additional files this document depends on.
An array of names of the environment variables
that are to be updated based on the value of OMake’s TEXINPUTS
variable.
Defaults to TEXINPUTS
BIBINPUTS
BSTINPUTS
.
TeXGeneratedFiles(files) LocalTeXGeneratedFiles(files)
The TeXGeneratedFiles
and LocalTeXGeneratedFiles
functions specify files
that need to be generated before any LATEXfiles are scanned for dependencies. For example,
if config.tex
and inputs.tex
are both generated files, specify:
TeXGeneratedFiles(config.tex inputs.tex)
The TeXGeneratedFiles
function is global — its arguments will be generated
before any TeX files anywhere in the project are scanned for dependencies. The
LocalTeXGeneratedFiles
function follows the normal scoping rules of OMake.
The LaTeXDocumentCopy
copies the document to an install location.
LaTeXDocumentCopy(<tag>, <libdir>, <installname>, <docname>)
This function copies just the .pdf
and .ps
files.
The LaTeXDocumentInstall
builds a document and copies it to an
install location in one step.
LaTeXDocumentInstall(<tag>, <libdir>, <installname>, <docname>, <files>)
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