On Tue, 13 Feb 2007, Oleg Verych wrote: > > I mean, all by-hand modifications must be in the $(srctree) (let's get > this term), $(objtree) is output *only*.
No. Especially for things like localversion, the object tree (if it is different) is very much where you'd put that marker. You might have several object trees for the same source tree, with different configurations. Exactly to remember which one is which, you'd have a "localversion" file in each object tree. > I know it maybe another my "change it all" proposition, but i can't find > nothing against `GNU $(wildcard ..)' and `unnecessarily complex "find"'. It's the regexp in both cases. $(wildcard ) doesn't do regexp's (only the normal path rules), and traditional 'find' doesn't either. The fact that GNU find does is another matter. I don't think we require GNU find normally. And I don't even much like the "backup" thing. Some programs will use other things than "~" as a backup marker. Patch more often uses ".orig", for example. So both methods are fairly complex, but at the same time not quite complex enough. It would probably have been a better idea had we made the rule be that the file is called "*localversion" rather than "localversion*", exactly because that way it's unambiguous (people normally use _suffixes_ for filetypes, not prefixes). That would have avoided the whole complexity in wildcarding, but it's too late now.. $(sort $(wildcard $(srctree)/*localversion $(objtree)/*localversion) should have worked. Linus - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/