How do I write the 'cd' command in a makefile?

Davit Siradeghyan picture Davit Siradeghyan · Nov 24, 2009 · Viewed 219.4k times · Source

For example, I have something like this in my makefile:

all:
     cd some_directory

But when I typed make I saw only 'cd some_directory', like in the echo command.

Answer

falstro picture falstro · Nov 24, 2009

It is actually executing the command, changing the directory to some_directory, however, this is performed in a sub-process shell, and affects neither make nor the shell you're working from.

If you're looking to perform more tasks within some_directory, you need to add a semi-colon and append the other commands as well. Note that you cannot use newlines as they are interpreted by make as the end of the rule, so any newlines you use for clarity needs to be escaped by a backslash.

For example:

all:
        cd some_dir; echo "I'm in some_dir"; \
          gcc -Wall -o myTest myTest.c

Note also that the semicolon is necessary between every command even though you add a backslash and a newline. This is due to the fact that the entire string is parsed as a single line by the shell. As noted in the comments, you should use '&&' to join commands, which mean they only get executed if the preceding command was successful.

all:
        cd some_dir && echo "I'm in some_dir" && \
          gcc -Wall -o myTest myTest.c

This is especially crucial when doing destructive work, such as clean-up, as you'll otherwise destroy the wrong stuff, should the cd fail for whatever reason.

A common usage though is to call make in the sub directory, which you might want to look into. There's a command line option for this so you don't have to call cd yourself, so your rule would look like this

all:
        $(MAKE) -C some_dir all

which will change into some_dir and execute the Makefile in there with the target "all". As a best practice, use $(MAKE) instead of calling make directly, as it'll take care to call the right make instance (if you, for example, use a special make version for your build environment), as well as provide slightly different behavior when running using certain switches, such as -t.

For the record, make always echos the command it executes (unless explicitly suppressed), even if it has no output, which is what you're seeing.