The Build Script
The first step in compiling sendmail is to establish an object directory and a Makefile that is appropriate to your machine architecture and operating system. You do this by running the Build script in the sendmail source directory:[32]
%cd sendmail
%./Build -n
Configuration: pfx=, os=SunOS, rel=4.1.4, rbase=4, rroot=4.1, arch=sun4, sfx= Using M4=/usr/5bin/m4 Creating ../obj.SunOS.4.1.4.sun4/sendmail using ../devtools/OS/SunOS ← many more lines here %
Here, Build found that our
machine was a sun4
, running the SunOS 4.1.4 release
of Unix. Build then created the
working directory
../obj.SunOS.4.1.4.sun4, set
up symbolic links to all the source files in that
directory, and finally generated a
Makefile there.
The Build program understands
several command-line switches that can be used to
modify its behavior (see Table 2-3). Any
switch or other command-line argument that is not in
that table is carried through and passed as is to
the make(1) program. For
example, specifying the -n
switch to Build
(in the earlier example) caused
Build to pass that switch to
make(1), thereby preventing
make(1) from actually
building sendmail.
Table 2-3. Build command-line switches
Get sendmail, 4th Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.