Define make variable at rule execution time
In your example, the TMP
variable is set (and the temporary directory created) whenever the rules for out.tar
are evaluated. In order to create the directory only when out.tar
is actually fired, you need to move the directory creation down into the steps:
out.tar :
$(eval TMP := $(shell mktemp -d))
@echo hi $(TMP)/hi.txt
tar -C $(TMP) cf $@ .
rm -rf $(TMP)
The eval function evaluates a string as if it had been typed into the makefile manually. In this case, it sets the TMP
variable to the result of the shell
function call.
edit (in response to comments):
To create a unique variable, you could do the following:
out.tar :
$(eval $@_TMP := $(shell mktemp -d))
@echo hi $($@_TMP)/hi.txt
tar -C $($@_TMP) cf $@ .
rm -rf $($@_TMP)
This would prepend the name of the target (out.tar, in this case) to the variable, producing a variable with the name out.tar_TMP
. Hopefully, that is enough to prevent conflicts.
A relatively easy way of doing this is to write the entire sequence as a shell script.
out.tar:
set -e ;\
TMP=$$(mktemp -d) ;\
echo hi $$TMP/hi.txt ;\
tar -C $$TMP cf $@ . ;\
rm -rf $$TMP ;\
I have consolidated some related tips here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/29085684/86967
Another possibility is to use separate lines to set up Make variables when a rule fires.
For example, here is a makefile with two rules. If a rule fires, it creates a temp dir and sets TMP to the temp dir name.
PHONY = ruleA ruleB display
all: ruleA
ruleA: TMP = $(shell mktemp -d testruleA_XXXX)
ruleA: display
ruleB: TMP = $(shell mktemp -d testruleB_XXXX)
ruleB: display
display:
echo ${TMP}
Running the code produces the expected result:
$ ls
Makefile
$ make ruleB
echo testruleB_Y4Ow
testruleB_Y4Ow
$ ls
Makefile testruleB_Y4Ow