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Home/ Questions/Q 1071477
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T20:43:10+00:00 2026-05-16T20:43:10+00:00

This is my current makefile. CXX = g++ CXXFLAGS = -Wall -O3 LDFLAGS =

  • 0

This is my current makefile.

CXX      = g++
CXXFLAGS = -Wall -O3
LDFLAGS  =

TARGET = testcpp
SRCS   = main.cpp object.cpp foo.cpp
OBJS   = $(SRCS:.cpp=.o)
DEPS   = $(SRCS:.cpp=.d)


.PHONY: clean all

all: $(TARGET)

$(TARGET): $(OBJS)
    $(CXX) $(CXXFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) $(OBJS) -o $(TARGET)

.cpp.o:
    $(CXX) $(CXXFLAGS) -c $< -o $@

%.d: %.cpp
    $(CXX) -M $(CXXFLAGS) $< > $@

clean:
    rm -f $(OBJS) $(DEPS) $(TARGET)

-include $(DEPS)

It works perfectly with one exception. If the directory is already clean (no *.d, *.o) and I run ‘make clean’, it re-creates the dependencies, then immediately deletes them:

[user@server proj]$ make
g++ -M -Wall -O3 foo.cpp > foo.d
g++ -M -Wall -O3 object.cpp > object.d
g++ -M -Wall -O3 main.cpp > main.d
g++ -Wall -O3 -c main.cpp -o main.o
g++ -Wall -O3 -c object.cpp -o object.o
g++ -Wall -O3 -c foo.cpp -o foo.o
g++ -Wall -O3  main.o object.o foo.o -o testcpp
[user@server proj]$ make clean
rm -f main.o object.o foo.o main.d object.d foo.d testcpp
[user@server proj]$ make clean
g++ -M -Wall -O3 foo.cpp > foo.d
g++ -M -Wall -O3 object.cpp > object.d
g++ -M -Wall -O3 main.cpp > main.d
rm -f main.o object.o foo.o main.d object.d foo.d testcpp
[user@server proj]$

I don’t understand why the second ‘make clean’ would re-generate the dependency files. How can I avoid this? This isn’t a big deal for this contrived example, but for a large project, it can be quite time-consuming.

Thanks.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T20:43:11+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 8:43 pm

    It’s because the .d files are being -included unconditionally. As far as make knows, they could add dependencies or commands to the clean target. All included files are built first for this reason, otherwise you might get an incorrect or failed build. To disable this, you want to conditionally include the dependency files:

    ifneq ($(MAKECMDGOALS),clean)
    -include $(DEPS)
    endif
    

    An alternative solution is to generate the dependency files using touch and have them replaced by actual data as a side-effect of compilation. This is how automake does its dependency tracking, as it makes one-time builds faster. Look into the -MD and -MMD options to gcc if you want to go this route. Use a pattern rule like:

    %.d:
        @touch $@
    

    To initially create the dependency files.

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