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Home/ Questions/Q 867177
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T09:55:55+00:00 2026-05-15T09:55:55+00:00

Could you explain me, why Makefile rule: clean: rm -f foo.{bar1,bar2,bar3} does not result

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Could you explain me, why Makefile rule:

clean:
    rm -f foo.{bar1,bar2,bar3}

does not result in removing files: foo.bar1 foo.bar2 and foo.bar3?
I believe I saw pattern like that many times in various Makefiles, but I’m currently writing my own Makefile and can’t make that rule work correctly (no files are removed).

I’m using:

  • gnu make 3.81
  • gnu bash 4.1.5

Bash evals that pattern as I suspect:

$ echo test.{a,b,c}
test.a test.b test.c

Thanks!

UPDATE

Thank to David’s hint I found solution for the problem described above.
The gnu make uses the /bin/sh by default and that is why a.{1,2,3} isn’t evaluated to a.1 a.2 a.3.

To make ‘make’ use bash instead of sh add following line to your Makefile:

SHELL=/bin/bash

from now a.{1,2,3} will be considered as a.1 a.2 a.3

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T09:55:55+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 9:55 am

    Is there a file named clean in the directory? If so, make will consider that target up to date and won’t run the corresponding command. To fix that, add this line to your makefile:

    .PHONY: clean
    

    If when you run make clean you get the output

    make: `clean' is up to date.
    

    then that’s probably your problem.

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