Remove make execution wrapper

This commit is contained in:
Roland Kaufmann 2013-03-05 12:11:27 +01:00
parent f5e19e9b87
commit 7e3a81f1a6

View File

@ -1,43 +0,0 @@
# GNUmakefile is processed before Makefile, which is why we arrive here
# first; when we call the other makefile, then we must specify its real
# name with the -f parameter
# figure out the number of processors from the system, add one and round
# to nearest integer. this is the maximum number of processes we want running
# at the same time (one for each core and one stuck on I/O)
# if we are running this is a VM, then /proc won't be mounted and we revert
# to single CPU processing
CPUINFO:=/proc/cpuinfo
NUM_CPUS:=$(shell test -r $(CPUINFO) && grep -P -c '^processor\t:' $(CPUINFO) || echo 0)
PROCS:=$(shell echo "("$(NUM_CPUS)+1")"/1 | bc)
# use these utilities if they are available
IONICE:=$(shell test -x "$$(which ionice)" && echo ionice -c2 -n7)
NICE:=$(shell test -x "$$(which nice)" && echo nice)
# we do dependency management the right way; don't attempt to cache
export CCACHE_DISABLE:=1
# ignore that there may be files with these names, we are going to call
# the other make regardless
.PHONY: __everything $(MAKECMDGOALS)
# outsource the processing to the real makefile, running in parallel and
# in a nice environment so that it doesn't hog our workstation. if there
# is nothing else happening on the box, then it will run just as fast
# the leading plus makes us run this regardless of options, see
# http://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/make.html#Instead-of-Execution
__everything:
# only put on a parallel flag if there isn't already one; otherwise we
# get the warning "-jN forced in submake: disabling jobserver mode".
# this have to happen inside the rule, because -j option is removed from
# MAKEFLAGS outside
+@$(IONICE) $(NICE) $(MAKE) --no-print-directory -f Makefile $(if $(findstring -j,$(MAKEFLAGS)),,-j $(PROCS)) $(MAKECMDGOALS)
# automatically generate all the goals we are asked to make and delegate
# processing of them to the real makefile through the dependency (since
# everything depends on the same thing, then we only call the other make
# once). the dummy command is just there to make sure that make doesn't
# show the "Nothing to do for `foo'" message after processing
$(MAKECMDGOALS): __everything
@true