echo //entering make-target-1.sh
-# the GNU dialect of "make" -- easier to find or port it than to
-# try to figure out how to port to the local dialect...
-if [ "$GNUMAKE" != "" ] ; then
- # The user is evidently trying to tell us something.
- gnumake="$GNUMAKE"
-elif [ -x "`which gmake`" ] ; then
- # "gmake" is the preferred name in *BSD.
- gnumake=gmake
-else
- # All the world's a Linux, and all its users weary of cautious
- # BSDish worries that "make" might not be GNU make; and at this
- # point we've already spent quite a while in make-host-1.sh, so
- # they're naturally unamused when we bail out complaining we don't
- # know where GNU make is. So since it's not really any worse to guess
- # wrong here than to fail by not trying, just guess that "make" is
- # GNU make and hope for the best.
- gnumake=make
-fi
-
# Build the runtime system and symbol table (.nm) file.
#
# (This C build has to come after the first genesis in order to get
# doesn't matter.)
echo //building runtime system and symbol table file
cd src/runtime
-$gnumake clean || exit 1
-$gnumake depend || exit 1
-$gnumake all || exit 1
+$GNUMAKE clean || exit 1
+$GNUMAKE depend || exit 1
+$GNUMAKE all || exit 1
cd ../..
# Use a little C program to grab stuff from the C header files and
# smash it into Lisp source code.
cd tools-for-build
-$gnumake grovel_headers || exit 1
+$GNUMAKE -I../src/runtime grovel_headers || exit 1
cd ..
tools-for-build/grovel_headers > output/stuff-groveled-from-headers.lisp