Commit graph

7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
O. El Hosami
2d46def90d feat: Add make install support and nix build
- Add install/uninstall targets to Makefile with configurable paths
- Update flake.nix to use make install in derivation
- Configure proper installation directories in nix build
- Use stdenvNoCC for LaTeX-only package
- Add meta information for nix package

The changes allow installing the package both via make and nix build,
while maintaining consistent paths and permissions.
2025-05-29 16:20:01 +02:00
O. El Hosami
450a9b30f1 build: close stdin to avoid user input requests 2025-05-29 01:08:33 +02:00
O. El Hosami
fbedc10159 build: Add makefile dep 2025-05-04 16:47:57 +02:00
O. El Hosami
4e7e9a290f build: Add support for out-of-source builds 2025-05-04 16:39:50 +02:00
Posquit0.BJ
effa60f205 Rewrite Makefile commands 2016-11-23 21:40:02 +09:00
Matan Nassau
c5ce7130c7 make: fix dirty check, support concurrent build
if we hardwire the build script in the target commands, then what we
want to do remains opaque to make. it is better to speak make's
language, so it understands us, so we can rip the benefits from that.

we don't have 1 test target, but 3: the 3 pdf examples. when we extract
3 rules from the 1 we have right now, make gets to understand what we
want to do:

 * understand there are 3 steps to the build, not 1
 * understand what are the products that will yield (pdfs)
 * understand products' dependencies (texs)
 * understand the products are independent of each other

when make gets to know what the products and their dependencies are, it
can tell when there is no work to do. for example, if a pdf is already
there, and its tex dependency hasn't changed, there is no need to
re-compile the pdf.

when make knows the products are independent of each other, and we
compile with make -j, then it can build faster by compiling the pdfs
concurrently, rather than serially one after the other.

and, there is an additional benefit here: we can compile a particular
pdf, and not the others: make examples/cv.pdf.

finally, note that because now make can tell when there's nothing to do,
you might be surprised if, for example, on a pristine checkout of the
repository, you run make, and make responds

    make: Nothing to be done for `examples'.

this is because the pdfs are checked in, and make sees the texs haven't
changed since they were last compiled. to force a build as was the case
before, run make -B. alternatively, you can touch any of the tex files,
and make will recompile the touched texs.
2016-08-09 12:07:45 -04:00
ebadf
7e67b01813 Added stackoverflow, makefile for testing changes. 2015-12-05 15:05:24 -06:00