wireshark/epan/Makefile.nmake

135 lines
3.7 KiB
Makefile

## Makefile for building ethereal.exe with Microsoft C and nmake
## Use: $(MAKE) /$(MAKEFLAGS) -f makefile.nmake
#
# $Id: Makefile.nmake,v 1.38 2004/03/22 20:35:07 gerald Exp $
include ..\config.nmake
include Makefile.common
############### no need to modify below this line #########
CFLAGS=-DHAVE_CONFIG_H /I. /I.. /I../wiretap $(GLIB_CFLAGS) \
$(ADNS_CFLAGS) $(PCRE_CFLAGS) /I$(PCAP_DIR)\include \
-D_U_="" $(LOCAL_CFLAGS)
CVARSDLL=-DWIN32 -DNULL=0 -D_MT -D_DLL
# For use when making ethereal.dll
libethereal_LIBS = \
wsock32.lib user32.lib \
$(GLIB_LIBS)
.c.obj::
$(CC) $(CVARSDLL) $(CFLAGS) -Fd.\ -c $<
OBJECTS=addr_and_mask.obj \
atalk-utils.obj \
bitswap.obj \
circuit.obj \
column-utils.obj \
conversation.obj \
epan.obj \
except.obj \
filesystem.obj \
frame_data.obj \
inet_aton.obj \
inet_pton.obj \
inet_ntop.obj \
ipv4.obj \
int-64bit.obj \
osi-utils.obj \
packet.obj \
plugins.obj \
proto.obj \
register.obj \
resolv.obj \
sna-utils.obj \
strutil.obj \
timestamp.obj \
to_str.obj \
tvbuff.obj \
value_string.obj
all: ftypes dfilter ethereal.lib
# For use when making ethereal.dll
#ethereal.dll ethereal.lib : config.h $(OBJECTS)
# link /DLL /out:ethereal.dll $(OBJECTS) $(libethereal_LIBS)
ethereal.lib : config.h $(OBJECTS)
lib /out:ethereal.lib $(OBJECTS)
config.h : config.h.win32 ..\config.nmake
sed -e s/@VERSION@/$(VERSION)/ \
-e "s/@HAVE_GNU_ADNS@/$(ADNS_CONFIG)/" \
-e "s/@HAVE_PCRE@/$(PCRE_CONFIG)/" \
< config.h.win32 > $@
clean:
rm -f $(OBJECTS) ethereal.lib $(PDB_FILE)
cd ftypes
$(MAKE) /$(MAKEFLAGS) -f Makefile.nmake clean
cd ../dfilter
$(MAKE) /$(MAKEFLAGS) -f Makefile.nmake clean
cd ..
distclean: clean
rm -f config.h register.c
cd ftypes
$(MAKE) /$(MAKEFLAGS) -f Makefile.nmake distclean
cd ../dfilter
$(MAKE) /$(MAKEFLAGS) -f Makefile.nmake distclean
cd ..
ftypes:: config.h
cd ftypes
$(MAKE) /$(MAKEFLAGS) -f Makefile.nmake
cd ..
dfilter:: config.h
cd dfilter
$(MAKE) /$(MAKEFLAGS) -f Makefile.nmake
cd ..
#
# Build "register.c", which contains a function "register_all_protocols()"
# that calls the register routines for all protocols.
#
# We do this by grepping through sources. If that turns out to be too slow,
# maybe we could just require every .o file to have an register routine
# of a given name (packet-aarp.o -> proto_register_aarp, etc.).
#
# Formatting conventions: The name of the proto_register_* routines must
# start in column zero, or must be preceded only by "void " starting in
# column zero, and must not be inside #if.
#
# We assume that all dissector routines are in "packet-XXX.c" files.
#
# For some unknown reason, having a big "for" loop in the Makefile
# to scan all the "packet-XXX.c" files doesn't work with some "make"s;
# they seem to pass only the first few names in the list to the shell,
# for some reason.
#
# Therefore, we have a script to generate the "register.c" file.
#
# The first argument is the name of the file to write.
# The second argument is the directory in which the source files live.
# All subsequent arguments are the files to scan.
#
# On Windows, however, that script runs slowly, as multiple greps
# and seds are run for each input file, so, if Python is present
# (as indicated by PYTHON being defined), we run a faster Python
# script to do that work instead. That script doesn't take the name
# of the file to write as an argument; it always writes to
# "register.c".
#
register.c: $(DISSECTOR_SRC)
!IFDEF PYTHON
@echo Making register.c (using python)
@$(PYTHON) ..\make-reg-dotc.py . $(DISSECTOR_SRC)
!ELSE
@echo Making register.c (using sh)
@$(SH) ../make-reg-dotc register.c . $(DISSECTOR_SRC)
!ENDIF