1This version of GNU make has been tested on Microsoft Windows 2000/XP/2003.
2It has also been used on Windows 95/98/NT, and on OS/2.
3
4It builds with the MinGW port of GCC (tested with GCC 3.4.2).
5
6It also builds with MSVC 2.x, 4.x, 5.x, 6.x, and 2003 as well as
7with .NET 7.x and .NET 2003.
8
9The Windows 32-bit port of GNU make is maintained jointly by various
10people.  It was originally made by Rob Tulloh.
11
12
13Do this first, regardless of the build method you choose:
14---------------------------------------------------------
15
16 1. At the Windows command prompt run:
17
18      if not exist NMakefile copy NMakefile.template NMakefile
19      if not exist config.h copy config.h.W32 config.h
20
21    Then edit config.h to your liking (especially the few shell-related
22    defines near the end, or HAVE_CASE_INSENSITIVE_FS which corresponds
23    to './configure --enable-case-insensitive-file-system').
24
25
26Using make_msvc_net2003.vcproj
27------------------------------
28
29 2. Open make_msvc_net2003.vcproj in MSVS71 or MSVC71 or any compatible IDE,
30    then build this project as usual.  There's also a solution file for
31    Studio 2003.
32
33
34Building with (MinGW-)GCC using build_w32.bat
35---------------------------------------------
36
37 2. Open a W32 command prompt for your installed (MinGW-)GCC, setup a
38    correct PATH and other environment variables for it, then execute ...
39
40	build_w32.bat gcc
41
42    This produces gnumake.exe in the current directory.
43
44
45Building with (MSVC++-)cl using build_w32.bat or NMakefile
46----------------------------------------------------------
47
48 2. Open a W32 command prompt for your installed (MSVC++-)cl, setup a
49    correct PATH and other environment variables for it (usually via
50    executing vcvars32.bat or vsvars32.bat from the cl-installation,
51    e.g. "%VS71COMNTOOLS%vsvars32.bat"; or using a corresponding start
52    menue entry from the cl-installation), then execute EITHER ...
53
54	build_w32.bat
55
56    (this produces WinDebug/gnumake.exe and WinRel/gnumake.exe)
57
58    ... OR ...
59
60	nmake /f NMakefile
61
62    (this produces WinDebug/make.exe and WinRel/make.exe).
63
64
65-------------------
66-- Notes/Caveats --
67-------------------
68
69GNU make on Windows 32-bit platforms:
70
71	This version of make is ported natively to Windows32 platforms
72	(Windows NT 3.51, Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000, Windows XP,
73	Windows 95, and Windows 98). It does not rely on any 3rd party
74	software or add-on packages for building. The only thing
75	needed is a Windows compiler.  Two compilers supported
76	officially are the MinGW port of GNU GCC, and the various
77	versions of the Microsoft C compiler.
78
79	Do not confuse this port of GNU make with other Windows32 projects
80	which provide a GNU make binary. These are separate projects
81	and are not connected to this port effort.
82
83GNU make and sh.exe:
84
85	This port prefers if you have a working sh.exe somewhere on
86	your system. If you don't have sh.exe, the port falls back to
87	MSDOS mode for launching programs (via a batch file).  The
88	MSDOS mode style execution has not been tested that carefully
89	though (The author uses GNU bash as sh.exe).
90
91	There are very few true ports of Bourne shell for NT right now.
92	There is a version of GNU bash available from Cygnus "Cygwin"
93	porting effort (http://www.cygwin.com/).
94	Other possibilities are the MKS version of sh.exe, or building
95        your own with a package like NutCracker (DataFocus) or Portage
96        (Consensys).  Also MinGW includes sh (http://mingw.org/).
97
98GNU make and brain-dead shells (BATCH_MODE_ONLY_SHELL):
99
100	Some versions of Bourne shell do not behave well when invoked
101	as 'sh -c' from CreateProcess().  The main problem is they seem
102	to have a hard time handling quoted strings correctly. This can
103	be circumvented by writing commands to be executed to a batch
104	file and then executing the command by calling 'sh file'.
105
106	To work around this difficulty, this version of make supports
107	a batch mode.  When BATCH_MODE_ONLY_SHELL is defined at compile
108	time, make forces all command lines to be executed via script
109	files instead of by command line.  In this mode you must have a
110	working sh.exe in order to use parallel builds (-j).
111
112	A native Windows32 system with no Bourne shell will also run
113	in batch mode.  All command lines will be put into batch files
114	and executed via $(COMSPEC) (%COMSPEC%).  However, parallel
115	builds ARE supported with Windows shells (cmd.exe and
116	command.com).  See the next section about some peculiarities
117	of parallel builds on Windows.
118
119Support for parallel builds
120
121	Parallel builds (-jN) are supported in this port, with 2
122	limitations:
123
124	  - The number of concurrent processes has a hard limit of 64,
125            due to the way this port implements waiting for its
126            subprocesses;
127
128	  - The job server method (available when Make runs on Posix
129            platforms) is not supported, which means you must pass an
130            explicit -jN switch to sub-Make's in a recursive Makefile.
131            If a sub-Make does not receive an explicit -jN switch, it
132            will default to -j1, i.e. no parallelism in sub-Make's.
133
134GNU make and Cygnus GNU Windows32 tools:
135
136	Good news! Make now has native support for Cygwin sh. To enable,
137	define the HAVE_CYGWIN_SHELL in config.h and rebuild make
138	from scratch. This version of make tested with B20.1 of Cygwin.
139	Do not define BATCH_MODE_ONLY_SHELL if you use HAVE_CYGWIN_SHELL.
140
141GNU make and the MKS shell:
142
143	There is now semi-official support for the MKS shell. To turn this
144	support on, define HAVE_MKS_SHELL in the config.h.W32 before you
145	build make.  Do not define BATCH_MODE_ONLY_SHELL if you turn
146	on HAVE_MKS_SHELL.
147
148GNU make handling of drive letters in pathnames (PATH, vpath, VPATH):
149
150	There is a caveat that should be noted with respect to handling
151	single character pathnames on Windows systems.	When colon is
152	used in PATH variables, make tries to be smart about knowing when
153	you are using colon as a separator versus colon as a drive
154	letter.	 Unfortunately, something as simple as the string 'x:/'
155	could be interpreted 2 ways: (x and /) or (x:/).
156
157	Make chooses to interpret a letter plus colon (e.g. x:/) as a
158	drive letter pathname.	If it is necessary to use single
159	character directories in paths (VPATH, vpath, Path, PATH), the
160	user must do one of two things:
161
162	 a. Use semicolon as the separator to disambiguate colon. For
163	    example use 'x;/' if you want to say 'x' and '/' are
164	    separate components.
165
166	 b. Qualify the directory name so that there is more than
167	    one character in the path(s) used. For example, none
168	    of these settings are ambiguous:
169
170	      ./x:./y
171	      /some/path/x:/some/path/y
172	      x:/some/path/x:x:/some/path/y
173
174	Please note that you are free to mix colon and semi-colon in the
175	specification of paths.	 Make is able to figure out the intended
176	result and convert the paths internally to the format needed
177	when interacting with the operating system, providing the path
178	is not within quotes, e.g. "x:/test/test.c".
179
180	You are encouraged to use colon as the separator character.
181	This should ease the pain of deciding how to handle various path
182	problems which exist between platforms.	 If colon is used on
183	both Unix and Windows systems, then no ifdef'ing will be
184	necessary in the makefile source.
185
186GNU make test suite:
187
188	I verified all functionality with a slightly modified version
189	of make-test-%VERSION% (modifications to get test suite to run
190	on Windows NT). All tests pass in an environment that includes
191	sh.exe.  Tests were performed on both Windows NT and Windows 95.
192
193Pathnames and white space:
194
195	Unlike Unix, Windows 95/NT systems encourage pathnames which
196	contain white space (e.g. C:\Program Files\). These sorts of
197	pathnames are valid on Unix too, but are never encouraged.
198	There is at least one place in make (VPATH/vpath handling) where
199	paths containing white space will simply not work. There may be
200	others too. I chose to not try and port make in such a way so
201	that these sorts of paths could be handled. I offer these
202	suggestions as workarounds:
203
204		1. Use 8.3 notation. i.e. "x:/long~1/", which is actually
205		   "x:\longpathtest".  Type "dir /x" to view these filenames
206		   within the cmd.exe shell.
207		2. Rename the directory so it does not contain white space.
208
209	If you are unhappy with this choice, this is free software
210	and you are free to take a crack at making this work. The code
211	in w32/pathstuff.c and vpath.c would be the places to start.
212
213Pathnames and Case insensitivity:
214
215	Unlike Unix, Windows 95/NT systems are case insensitive but case
216	preserving.  For example if you tell the file system to create a
217	file named "Target", it will preserve the case.  Subsequent access to
218	the file with other case permutations will succeed (i.e. opening a
219	file named "target" or "TARGET" will open the file "Target").
220
221	By default, GNU make retains its case sensitivity when comparing
222	target names and existing files or directories.  It can be
223	configured, however, into a case preserving and case insensitive
224	mode by adding a define for HAVE_CASE_INSENSITIVE_FS to
225	config.h.W32.
226
227	For example, the following makefile will create a file named
228	Target in the directory subdir which will subsequently be used
229	to satisfy the dependency of SUBDIR/DepTarget on SubDir/TARGET.
230	Without HAVE_CASE_INSENSITIVE_FS configured, the dependency link
231	will not be made:
232
233	subdir/Target:
234		touch $@
235
236	SUBDIR/DepTarget: SubDir/TARGET
237		cp $^ $@
238
239	Reliance on this behavior also eliminates the ability of GNU make
240	to use case in comparison of matching rules.  For example, it is
241	not possible to set up a C++ rule using %.C that is different
242	than a C rule using %.c.  GNU make will consider these to be the
243	same rule and will issue a warning.
244
245SAMBA/NTFS/VFAT:
246
247	I have not had any success building the debug version of this
248	package using SAMBA as my file server. The reason seems to be
249	related to the way VC++ 4.0 changes the case name of the pdb
250	filename it is passed on the command line. It seems to change
251	the name always to to lower case. I contend that the VC++
252	compiler should not change the casename of files that are passed
253	as arguments on the command line. I don't think this was a
254	problem in MSVC 2.x, but I know it is a problem in MSVC 4.x.
255
256	The package builds fine on VFAT and NTFS filesystems.
257
258	Most all of the development I have done to date has been using
259	NTFS and long file names. I have not done any considerable work
260	under VFAT. VFAT users may wish to be aware that this port of
261	make does respect case sensitivity.
262
263FAT:
264
265	Version 3.76 added support for FAT filesystems. Make works
266	around some difficulties with stat'ing of files and caching of
267	filenames and directories internally.
268
269Bug reports:
270
271	Please submit bugs via the normal bug reporting mechanism which
272	is described in the GNU make manual and the base README.
273
274-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
275Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005,
2762006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
277This file is part of GNU Make.
278
279GNU Make is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
280terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
281Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later
282version.
283
284GNU Make is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
285WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
286A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License for more details.
287
288You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
289this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
290