Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Sun, 15 May 2022 22:28:12 -0700
From:      "Pat Maddox" <pat@patmaddox.com>
To:        Chris <portmaster@bsdforge.com>
Cc:        freebsd-ports@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: How to override port Makefile to point to local directory?
Message-ID:  <CA48E37F-67F0-40AD-9AE1-C8908E69E309@patmaddox.com>
In-Reply-To: <24d0482cd89dd98aa75fc9c89aa00201@bsdforge.com>
References:  <C4E1018F-B37F-48E1-BDCB-FD9150DBDB6E@patmaddox.com> <24d0482cd89dd98aa75fc9c89aa00201@bsdforge.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On 15 May 2022, at 20:49, Chris wrote:

> On 2022-05-15 20:29, Pat Maddox wrote:
>> I am writing software that I would eventually like to install on 
>> FreeBSD. I'm
>> currently stuck trying to write a Makefile that will point to my 
>> local git dir, so
>> I can build and install it while I'm developing. All of the finished 
>> Makefiles
>> reference tar packages, which makes sense. But when I'm actively 
>> developing, I
>> don't want to commit the code, push it, have it built, update the 
>> makefile with
>> the commit, and make.
>>
>> Does anyone know of a way to override options to a port's Makefile to 
>> point to a
>> local directory on disk? I want to run "sudo make install" and "make 
>> package" from
>> my development directory, using the same Makefile that would be in 
>> the ports tree.
> You can perform make out of tree build/installs w/o issue. The ports 
> infrastructure
> will post a couple of warnings. But nothing to stop you from 
> development. I do it out
> of ~/DEV/<category>/port-im-developing all the time.
>
> HTH
>
> Chris
>>
>> Pat

Cool, how do I do that?

Here’s the Makefile in my project directory: 
https://gist.github.com/patmaddox/d5d8a0e0df656072749bf18f7f634ae9

When I run `make install`, it downloads the zip from GitHub. That makes 
sense, because that’s what it’s configured to do, and I haven’t 
passed in any options to find the source elsewhere.

I don’t know how to tell make not to fetch & extract, because I 
already have the source locally.

Pat



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?CA48E37F-67F0-40AD-9AE1-C8908E69E309>