In article <m1lO7kF-0036urC@more.local>, Greg A. Woods <current-users@netbsd.org> wrote: >-=-=-=-=-=- > >I just noticed that on my recently upgraded -current machines that I >couldn't build simple programs from single source files with a >"portable" Makefile any more. > >Instead the program binaries were being put into foo.o files! > >It looks like rev. 1.144 of sys.mk was a bit too over-zealous. > >I'll send this as a PR also, but perhaps those running -current on >development machines might need a more urgent fix. > >Here are my patches that include the fix, and also clean up the use of >various flags in LINK.* (remove CPPFLAGS and add LDSTATIC) and introduce >COMPILE_LINK.* macros to be used with the direct source to target binary >rules (single-suffix rules) such as ".c:" (and finally also split the >settings for debugger and optimizer flags). > >The key parts are to revert the change to use ${OBJECT_TARGET} in the >single-suffix rules like ".c:" since ctfconvert(1) won't work on >(static?) linked binaries, and because of course we still need the >final output file to be the filename _without_ any suffix!
Thanks, I fixed the shuttle-rule issue, but let's split the LDSTATIC and the OPTIM into separate commits. DBG has side effects too (other Makefiles set it) so it should be done very carefully. christos