MK(1)                       General Commands Manual                      MK(1)

NAME
       mk - maintain (make) related files

SYNOPSIS
       mk [ -f mkfile ] ...  [ option ...  ] [ target ...  ]

DESCRIPTION
       Mk uses the dependency rules specified in mkfile to control the update
       (usually by compilation) of targets (usually files) from the source
       files upon which they depend.  The mkfile (default contains a rule for
       each target that identifies the files and other targets upon which it
       depends and an script, a recipe, to update the target.  The script is
       run if the target does not exist or if it is older than any of the
       files it depends on.  Mkfile may also contain meta-rules that define
       actions for updating implicit targets.  If no target is specified, the
       target of the first rule (not meta-rule) in mkfile is updated.

       The environment variable $NPROC determines how many targets may be
       updated simultaneously; Some operating systems, e.g., Plan 9, set
       $NPROC automatically to the number of CPUs on the current machine.

       Options are:

       -a      Assume all targets to be out of date.  Thus, everything is
               updated.
       -d[egp] Produce debugging output (p is for parsing, g for graph
               building, e for execution).
       -e      Explain why each target is made.
       -i      Force any missing intermediate targets to be made.
       -k      Do as much work as possible in the face of errors.
       -n      Print, but do not execute, the commands needed to update the
               targets.
       -s      Make the command line arguments sequentially rather than in
               parallel.
       -t      Touch (update the modified date of) file targets, without
               executing any recipes.
       -wtarget1,target2,...
               Pretend the modify time for each target is the current time;
               useful in conjunction with -n to learn what updates would be
               triggered by modifying the targets.

   The mkfile
       A mkfile consists of assignments (described under `Environment') and
       rules.  A rule contains targets and a tail.  A target is a literal
       string and is normally a file name.  The tail contains zero or more
       prerequisites and an optional recipe, which is an shell script.  Each
       line of the recipe must begin with white space.  A rule takes the form

              target: prereq1 prereq2
                      recipe using prereq1, prereq2 to build target

       When the recipe is executed, the first character on every line is
       elided.

       After the colon on the target line, a rule may specify attributes,
       described below.

       A meta-rule has a target of the form A%B where A and B are (possibly
       empty) strings.  A meta-rule acts as a rule for any potential target
       whose name matches A%B with % replaced by an arbitrary string, called
       the stem.  In interpreting a meta-rule, the stem is substituted for all
       occurrences of % in the prerequisite names.  In the recipe of a meta-
       rule, the environment variable $stem contains the string matched by the
       %.  For example, a meta-rule to compile a C program using might be:

              %:    %.c
                      9c -c $stem.c
                      9l -o $stem $stem.o

       Meta-rules may contain an ampersand & rather than a percent sign %.  A
       % matches a maximal length string of any characters; an & matches a
       maximal length string of any characters except period or slash.

       The text of the mkfile is processed as follows.  Lines beginning with <
       followed by a file name are replaced by the contents of the named file.
       Lines beginning with <| followed by a file name are replaced by the
       output of the execution of the named file.  Blank lines and comments,
       which run from unquoted # characters to the following newline, are
       deleted.  The character sequence backslash-newline is deleted, so long
       lines in mkfile may be folded.  Non-recipe lines are processed by
       substituting for `{command} the output of the command when run by sh.
       References to variables are replaced by the variables' values.  Special
       characters may be quoted using single quotes '' as in

       Assignments and rules are distinguished by the first unquoted
       occurrence of : (rule) or = (assignment).

       A later rule may modify or override an existing rule under the
       following conditions:

       -      If the targets of the rules exactly match and one rule contains
              only a prerequisite clause and no recipe, the clause is added to
              the prerequisites of the other rule.  If either or both targets
              are virtual, the recipe is always executed.

       -      If the targets of the rules match exactly and the prerequisites
              do not match and both rules contain recipes, mk reports an
              ``ambiguous recipe'' error.

       -      If the target and prerequisites of both rules match exactly, the
              second rule overrides the first.

   Environment
       Rules may make use of shell environment variables.  A legal reference
       of the form $OBJ or ${name} is expanded as in A reference of the form
       ${name:A%B=C%D}, where A, B, C, D are (possibly empty) strings, has the
       value formed by expanding $name and substituting C for A and D for B in
       each word in $name that matches pattern A%B.

       Variables can be set by assignments of the form
               var=[attr=]value
       Blanks in the value break it into words.  Such variables are exported
       to the environment of recipes as they are executed, unless U, the only
       legal attribute attr, is present.  The initial value of a variable is
       taken from (in increasing order of precedence) the default values
       below, mk's environment, the mkfiles, and any command line assignment
       as an argument to mk.  A variable assignment argument overrides the
       first (but not any subsequent) assignment to that variable.

       The variable MKFLAGS contains all the option arguments (arguments
       starting with or containing and MKARGS contains all the targets in the
       call to mk.

       The variable MKSHELL contains the shell command line mk uses to run
       recipes.  If the first word of the command ends in rc or rcsh, mk uses
       quoting rules; otherwise it uses The MKSHELL variable is consulted when
       the mkfile is read, not when it is executed, so that different shells
       can be used within a single mkfile:

              MKSHELL=$PLAN9/bin/rc
              use-rc:V:
                   for(i in a b c) echo $i

              MKSHELL=sh
              use-sh:V:
                   for i in a b c; do echo $i; done

       Mkfiles included via < or <| (q.v.) see their own private copy of
       MKSHELL, which always starts set to sh .

       Dynamic information may be included in the mkfile by using a line of
       the form

              <|command args

       This runs the command command with the given arguments args and pipes
       its standard output to mk to be included as part of the mkfile. For
       instance, the Inferno kernels use this technique to run a shell command
       with an awk script and a configuration file as arguments in order for
       the awk script to process the file and output a set of variables and
       their values.

   Execution
       During execution, mk determines which targets must be updated, and in
       what order, to build the names specified on the command line.  It then
       runs the associated recipes.

       A target is considered up to date if it has no prerequisites or if all
       its prerequisites are up to date and it is newer than all its
       prerequisites.  Once the recipe for a target has executed, the target
       is considered up to date.

       The date stamp used to determine if a target is up to date is computed
       differently for different types of targets.  If a target is virtual
       (the target of a rule with the V attribute), its date stamp is
       initially zero; when the target is updated the date stamp is set to the
       most recent date stamp of its prerequisites.  Otherwise, if a target
       does not exist as a file, its date stamp is set to the most recent date
       stamp of its prerequisites, or zero if it has no prerequisites.
       Otherwise, the target is the name of a file and the target's date stamp
       is always that file's modification date.  The date stamp is computed
       when the target is needed in the execution of a rule; it is not a
       static value.

       Nonexistent targets that have prerequisites and are themselves
       prerequisites are treated specially.  Such a target t is given the date
       stamp of its most recent prerequisite and if this causes all the
       targets which have t as a prerequisite to be up to date, t is
       considered up to date.  Otherwise, t is made in the normal fashion.
       The -i flag overrides this special treatment.

       Files may be made in any order that respects the preceding
       restrictions.

       A recipe is executed by supplying the recipe as standard input to the
       command /bin/sh.  (Note that unlike make, mk feeds the entire recipe to
       the shell rather than running each line of the recipe separately.)  The
       environment is augmented by the following variables:

       $alltarget    all the targets of this rule.

       $newprereq    the prerequisites that caused this rule to execute.

       $newmember    the prerequisites that are members of an aggregate that
                     caused this rule to execute.  When the prerequisites of a
                     rule are members of an aggregate, $newprereq contains the
                     name of the aggregate and out of date members, while
                     $newmember contains only the name of the members.

       $nproc        the process slot for this recipe.  It satisfies
                     0≤$nproc<$NPROC.

       $pid          the process id for the mk executing the recipe.

       $prereq       all the prerequisites for this rule.

       $stem         if this is a meta-rule, $stem is the string that matched
                     % or &.  Otherwise, it is empty.  For regular expression
                     meta-rules (see below), the variables are set to the
                     corresponding subexpressions.

       $target       the targets for this rule that need to be remade.

       These variables are available only during the execution of a recipe,
       not while evaluating the mkfile.

       Unless the rule has the Q attribute, the recipe is printed prior to
       execution with recognizable environment variables expanded.  Commands
       returning error status cause mk to terminate.

       Recipes and backquoted rc commands in places such as assignments
       execute in a copy of mk's environment; changes they make to environment
       variables are not visible from mk.

       Variable substitution in a rule is done when the rule is read; variable
       substitution in the recipe is done when the recipe is executed.  For
       example:

              bar=a.c
              foo: $bar
                      $CC -o foo $bar
              bar=b.c

       will compile b.c into foo, if a.c is newer than foo.

   Aggregates
       Names of the form a(b) refer to member b of the aggregate a.
       Currently, the only aggregates supported are 9ar (see archives.

   Attributes
       The colon separating the target from the prerequisites may be
       immediately followed by attributes and another colon.  The attributes
       are:

       D      If the recipe exits with a non-null status, the target is
              deleted.

       E      Continue execution if the recipe draws errors.

       N      If there is no recipe, the target has its time updated.

       n      The rule is a meta-rule that cannot be a target of a virtual
              rule.  Only files match the pattern in the target.

       P      The characters after the P until the terminating : are taken as
              a program name.  It will be invoked as sh -c prog 'arg1' 'arg2'
              and should return a zero exit status if and only if arg1 is up
              to date with respect to arg2.  Date stamps are still propagated
              in the normal way.

       Q      The recipe is not printed prior to execution.

       R      The rule is a meta-rule using regular expressions.  In the rule,
              % has no special meaning.  The target is interpreted as a
              regular expression as defined in The prerequisites may contain
              references to subexpressions in form \n, as in the substitute
              command of

       U      The targets are considered to have been updated even if the
              recipe did not do so.

       V      The targets of this rule are marked as virtual.  They are
              distinct from files of the same name.

EXAMPLES
       A simple mkfile to compile a program:

              </$objtype/mkfile

              prog:   a.$O b.$O c.$O
                      $LD $LDFLAGS -o $target $prereq

              %.$O:   %.c
                      $CC $CFLAGS $stem.c

       Override flag settings in the mkfile:

              % mk target 'CFLAGS=-S -w'

       Maintain a library:

              libc.a(%.$O):N: %.$O
              libc.a: libc.a(abs.$O) libc.a(access.$O) libc.a(alarm.$O) ...
                      ar r libc.a $newmember

       String expression variables to derive names from a master list:

              NAMES=alloc arc bquote builtins expand main match mk var word
              OBJ=${NAMES:%=%.$O}

       Regular expression meta-rules:

              ([^/]*)/(.*)\.$O:R:  \1/\2.c
                      cd $stem1; $CC $CFLAGS $stem2.c

       A correct way to deal with grammars.  The file lex.c includes the file
       x.tab.h rather than y.tab.h in order to reflect changes in content, not
       just modification time.

              lex.$O: x.tab.h
              x.tab.h:        y.tab.h
                      cmp -s x.tab.h y.tab.h || cp y.tab.h x.tab.h
              y.tab.c y.tab.h:        gram.y
                      $YACC -d gram.y

       The above example could also use the P attribute for the x.tab.h rule:

              x.tab.h:Pcmp -s:        y.tab.h
                      cp y.tab.h x.tab.h

SOURCE
       /src/cmd/mk

SEE ALSO
       A. Hume, ``Mk: a Successor to Make'' (Tenth Edition Research Unix
       Manuals).

       Andrew G. Hume and Bob Flandrena, ``Maintaining Files on Plan 9 with
       Mk''.  DOCPREFIX/doc/mk.pdf

HISTORY
       Andrew Hume wrote mk for Tenth Edition Research Unix.  It was later
       ported to Plan 9.  This software is a port of the Plan 9 version back
       to Unix.

BUGS
       Identical recipes for regular expression meta-rules only have one
       target.

       Seemingly appropriate input like CFLAGS=-DHZ=60 is parsed as an
       erroneous attribute; correct it by inserting a space after the first

       The recipes printed by mk before being passed to the shell for
       execution are sometimes erroneously expanded for printing.  Don't trust
       what's printed; rely on what the shell does.

                                                                         MK(1)