Is it possible to set Environment variables in Makefile - to be used after

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一整个雨季
一整个雨季 2021-01-06 10:43

I am trying to set an Environment variable in a Makefile, so it can be used in another program running in the sam shell as make, but after make ha

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  •  死守一世寂寞
    2021-01-06 11:15

    If you want the environment variables to be exported to the shell from which you invoked make things are a bit difficult because, as explained by ネロク, you cannot directly export environment variables from a child process (make) to its parent process (the shell from which you invoke make). But if you accept to invoke make like this:

    eval "$(make)"
    

    then it is indeed possible: just echo export VARIABLE1=VALUE1; export VARIABLE2=VALUE2; ... in your recipe. Warning: you will also have to guarantee that nothing else gets echoed by make on the standard input. But you can use the standard error, instead. Example:

    $ cat Makefile
    export TEST_ENV_ONE := OneString
    
    all:
        @printf 'make variable TEST_ENV_ONE = %s\n' "$(TEST_ENV_ONE)" 1>&2
        @printf 'in-recipe shell variable TEST_ENV_ONE = %s\n' "$$TEST_ENV_ONE" 1>&2
        @printf 'export TEST_ENV_ONE="%s"\n' '$(TEST_ENV_ONE)'
    
    $ unset TEST_ENV_ONE
    $ printenv TEST_ENV_ONE
    $ eval "$(make)"
    make variable TEST_ENV_ONE = OneString
    in-recipe shell variable TEST_ENV_ONE = OneString
    $ printenv TEST_ENV_ONE
    OneString
    

    Note that make more or less considers environment variables as make variables. From GNU make manual:

    Variables in make can come from the environment in which make is run. Every environment variable that make sees when it starts up is transformed into a make variable with the same name and value. However, an explicit assignment in the makefile, or with a command argument, overrides the environment. (If the ‘-e’ flag is specified, then values from the environment override assignments in the makefile. See Summary of Options. But this is not recommended practice.)

    So, unless the value of your variable is the result of complex computations by make itself, a much more natural way to obtain the same result would be to define the environment variable in the parent shell and to use it as is in the Makefile:

    $ cat Makefile
    all:
        @printf 'make variable TEST_ENV_ONE = %s\n' "$(TEST_ENV_ONE)"
        @printf 'in-recipe shell variable TEST_ENV_ONE = %s\n' "$$TEST_ENV_ONE"
    
    $ export TEST_ENV_ONE=OneString
    $ make
    make variable TEST_ENV_ONE = OneString
    in-recipe shell variable TEST_ENV_ONE = OneString
    $ printenv TEST_ENV_ONE
    OneString
    

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