This collection of BSD Make directives aims at providing a highly portable build system targetting modern UNIX systems and supporting common or less command languages. This is a build system, which means that it can be used to organise fairly complex projects.
BSD Owl Scripts assists developers in the production, installation and distribution of projects comprising the following types of products:
- C programs, compiled for several targets
- C libraries, static and shared, compiled for several targets
- Shell scripts
- Python scripts
- OCaml programs
- OCaml libraries, with ocamldoc documentation
- OCaml plugins
- TeX documents, prepared for several printing devices
- METAPOST figures, with output as PDF, PS, SVG or PNG, either as part of a TeX document or as standalone documents
Each item is linked to a project example found in our extensive testsuite.
BSD Owl Scripts offers developers a rich set of features easing project management:
- Support of compilation profiles
- Support of the parallel mode (at the directory level)
- Support of separate trees for sources and objects
- Support of architecture-dependant compilation options
- Support GNU autoconf
- Production of GPG-signed tarballs
- Developer subshell, empowered with project-specific scripts
- Literate programming using noweb
- Preprocessing with m4
It is well tested under:
- Mac OS X, version 10.6.8 and above;
- FreeBSD, version 9.0 and above;
- Debian Jessie and newer.
We also want to support NetBSD and OpenBSD, as soon as they will provide a modern version of BSD Make.
This means that projects managed with BSD Owl Scripts are easy to develop and deploy in heterogeneous environment.
If you are not at all familiar with makefiles you can quickly learn the basics with de Boor's classical tutorial. It is also nice to feel confident while interacting with the shell, if this is not the case UNIX Power Tools could help you. The documentation index provides an overview of the files available in the doc directory.
BSD Owl Scripts is free software: copying it and redistributing it is very much welcome under conditions of the BSD licence agreement, found in the LICENSE file of the distribution.
This project started around 2002, it was hosted on a private CVS server. In 2006 it was reorganised, history was lost and it moved to a private Subversion server. In 2008 it was published for the first time on GNA (gna.org). One year later the history was converted to git and subversion was only marginally used. In 2013, publication on the GNA server was abandoned and the project was published on GitHub and BitBucket, then on GitHub only.
Pallàs Athéné is a Greek goddess of wisdom, mother of sciences and arts. This software is gently dedicated to her.
Michael Grünewald in Bonn, on January 20, 2014