wireshark/plugins/opsi/Makefile.nmake

80 lines
2.6 KiB
Makefile

# Makefile.nmake
# nmake file for OPSI plugin
#
# $Id$
#
include ..\..\config.nmake
############### no need to modify below this line #########
include Makefile.common
CFLAGS=/DHAVE_CONFIG_H /I../.. /I../../wiretap $(GLIB_CFLAGS) \
/I$(PCAP_DIR)\include -D_U_="" $(LOCAL_CFLAGS)
LDFLAGS = /NOLOGO /INCREMENTAL:no /MACHINE:I386 $(LOCAL_LDFLAGS)
!IFDEF ENABLE_LIBWIRESHARK
LINK_PLUGIN_WITH=..\..\epan\libwireshark.lib
CFLAGS=/DHAVE_WIN32_LIBWIRESHARK_LIB /D_NEED_VAR_IMPORT_ $(CFLAGS)
DISSECTOR_OBJECTS = $(DISSECTOR_SRC:.c=.obj)
OBJECTS=$(DISSECTOR_OBJECTS) plugin.obj
opsi.dll opsi.exp opsi.lib : $(OBJECTS) $(LINK_PLUGIN_WITH)
link -dll /out:opsi.dll $(LDFLAGS) $(OBJECTS) $(LINK_PLUGIN_WITH) \
$(GLIB_LIBS)
#
# Build plugin.c, which contains the plugin version[] string, a
# function plugin_register() that calls the register routines for all
# protocols, and a function plugin_reg_handoff() that calls the handoff
# registration routines for all protocols.
#
# We do this by scanning 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 an
# proto_reg_handoff_* routines must start in column zero, or must be
# preceded only by "void " starting in column zero, and must not be
# inside #if.
#
# DISSECTOR_SRC is assumed to have all the files that need to be scanned.
#
# For some unknown reason, having a big "for" loop in the Makefile
# to scan all the 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 plugin.c file.
# The shell script runs slowly, as multiple greps and seds are run
# for each input file; this is especially slow on Windows. Therefore,
# if Python is present (as indicated by PYTHON being defined), we run
# a faster Python script to do that work instead.
#
# The first argument is the directory in which the source files live.
# The second argument is "plugin", to indicate that we should build
# a plugin.c file for a plugin.
# All subsequent arguments are the files to scan.
#
plugin.c: $(DISSECTOR_SRC)
!IFDEF PYTHON
@echo Making plugin.c (using python)
@$(PYTHON) ../../tools/make-dissector-reg.py . plugin $(DISSECTOR_SRC)
!ELSE
@echo Making plugin.c (using sh)
@$(SH) ../../tools/make-dissector-reg . plugin $(DISSECTOR_SRC)
!ENDIF
!ENDIF
clean:
rm -f $(OBJECTS) opsi.dll opsi.exp opsi.lib *.pdb
distclean: clean
maintainer-clean: distclean