nasm/Mkfiles/Makefile.vc
H. Peter Anvin 1cd0e2d5bf NASM 0.98.08
2002-04-30 21:00:33 +00:00

80 lines
3 KiB
Makefile

# Makefile for the Netwide Assembler under Win32
#
# The Netwide Assembler is copyright (C) 1996 Simon Tatham and
# Julian Hall. All rights reserved. The software is
# redistributable under the licence given in the file "Licence"
# distributed in the NASM archive.
#
# This Makefile is designed to build NASM as a Win32 command-
# line executable. It's been tested with Visual C++ 1.10.
CC = cl /c /O
QCL = cl /c
LINK = cl
LINKFLAGS =
LIBRARIES =
EXE = .exe#
OBJ = obj#
SUFFIX = w# # by default, this makefile produces nasmw.exe and ndisasmw.exe
.c.$(OBJ):
$(CC) $*.c
NASMOBJS = nasm.$(OBJ) nasmlib.$(OBJ) float.$(OBJ) insnsa.$(OBJ) \
assemble.$(OBJ) labels.$(OBJ) parser.$(OBJ) outform.$(OBJ) \
outbin.$(OBJ) outaout.$(OBJ) outcoff.$(OBJ) outelf.$(OBJ) \
outobj.$(OBJ) outas86.$(OBJ) outrdf.$(OBJ) outdbg.$(OBJ) \
preproc.$(OBJ) listing.$(OBJ) eval.$(OBJ) outrdf2.$(OBJ) \
zoutieee.$(OBJ)
NDISASMOBJS = ndisasm.$(OBJ) disasm.$(OBJ) sync.$(OBJ) nasmlib.$(OBJ) \
insnsd.$(OBJ)
all : nasm$(SUFFIX)$(EXE) ndisasm$(SUFFIX)$(EXE)
# We have to have a horrible kludge here to get round the 128 character
# limit, as usual...
LINKOBJS = a*.obj e*.obj f*.obj insnsa.obj l*.obj na*.obj o*.obj p*.obj z*.obj
nasm$(SUFFIX)$(EXE): $(NASMOBJS)
cl /Fenasm$(SUFFIX).exe $(LINKOBJS)
ndisasm$(SUFFIX)$(EXE): $(NDISASMOBJS)
cl /Fendisasm$(SUFFIX).exe $(NDISASMOBJS)
assemble.$(OBJ): assemble.c nasm.h insnsi.h assemble.h insns.h
disasm.$(OBJ): disasm.c nasm.h insnsi.h disasm.h sync.h insns.h names.c insnsn.c
eval.$(OBJ): eval.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h eval.h
float.$(OBJ): float.c nasm.h insnsi.h
labels.$(OBJ): labels.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
listing.$(OBJ): listing.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h listing.h
nasm.$(OBJ): nasm.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h parser.h assemble.h labels.h \
listing.h outform.h
nasmlib.$(OBJ): nasmlib.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h names.c insnsn.c
ndisasm.$(OBJ): ndisasm.c nasm.h insnsi.h sync.h disasm.h
outas86.$(OBJ): outas86.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
outaout.$(OBJ): outaout.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
outbin.$(OBJ): outbin.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
outcoff.$(OBJ): outcoff.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
outdbg.$(OBJ): outdbg.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
outelf.$(OBJ): outelf.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
outobj.$(OBJ): outobj.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
outrdf.$(OBJ): outrdf.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
outrdf2.$(OBJ): outrdf2.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
zoutieee.$(OBJ): zoutieee.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
outform.$(OBJ): outform.c outform.h nasm.h insnsi.h
parser.$(OBJ): parser.c nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h parser.h float.h names.c insnsn.c
preproc.$(OBJ): preproc.c macros.c preproc.h nasm.h insnsi.h nasmlib.h
sync.$(OBJ): sync.c sync.h
# Another grotty hack: QC is less likely to run out of memory than
# CL proper; and we don't need any optimisation in these modules
# since they're just data.
insnsa.$(OBJ): insnsa.c nasm.h insnsi.h insns.h
$(QCL) insnsa.c
insnsd.$(OBJ): insnsd.c nasm.h insnsi.h insns.h
$(QCL) insnsd.c
clean :
del *.obj
del nasm$(SUFFIX)$(EXE)
del ndisasm$(SUFFIX)$(EXE)