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Automake supports an include
directive that can be used to
include other Makefile fragments when automake
is run.
Note that these fragments are read and interpreted by automake
,
not by make
. As with conditionals, make
has no idea that
include
is in use.
There are two forms of include
:
include $(srcdir)/file
Include a fragment that is found relative to the current source directory.
include $(top_srcdir)/file
Include a fragment that is found relative to the top source directory.
Note that if a fragment is included inside a conditional, then the condition applies to the entire contents of that fragment.
Makefile fragments included this way are always distributed because they are needed to rebuild Makefile.in.
Inside a fragment, the construct %reldir%
is replaced with the
directory of the fragment relative to the base Makefile.am.
Similarly, %canon_reldir%
is replaced with the canonicalized
(see How derived variables are named) form of %reldir%
. As a convenience,
%D%
is a synonym for %reldir%
, and %C%
is a synonym for %canon_reldir%
.
A special feature is that if the fragment is in the same directory as
the base Makefile.am (i.e., %reldir%
is .
), then
%reldir%
and %canon_reldir%
will expand to the empty
string as well as eat, if present, a following slash or underscore
respectively.
Thus, a makefile fragment might look like this:
bin_PROGRAMS += %reldir%/mumble %canon_reldir%_mumble_SOURCES = %reldir%/one.c