#!smake include ${ROOT}/usr/include/make/commondefs CFILES=bloatview.c draw.c inode.c print.c process.c # Needed for Redwood builds of bloatview LCOPTS=-fullwarn -woff 1209,1506,1185 TARGETS=gmemusage pfdat_check LLDLIBS=-lXext -lX11 LLDOPTS=-Wl,-T,7FC00000,-D,7FC40000 default: ${TARGETS} include ${COMMONRULES} install: ${TARGETS} ${INSTALL} -F /usr/sbin -m 4755 gmemusage ${INSTALL} -F /usr/lib/images -m 444 gmemusage.icon # XXX fix this! # The dependency on bloatview.z is a hack to avoid a race condition # here; the make of bloatview.z create a file named bloatview and then # deletes it, so we'd better rebuild bloatview itself. gmemusage : do_pfd_check ${OBJECTS} rm -f $@ ${CCF} ${OBJECTS} ${LDFLAGS} -o $@ ${TAG} 0x00001043 $@ # # HACK: # # In order to make bloatview work on both 64-bit and 32-bit kernels regardless # of whether bloatview is compiled 64-bit or 32-bit, we need to know the # size of pfd_t in the kernel. Unfortunately, there is no kernel call # returns that value, and it isn't worth adding just for this binary. # Currently, we have a pfd32_t and a pfd64_t defined in a local .h # file, and we use the appropriate one based on the kernel type. Again, # we don't want to add pfd32_t and pfd64_t to solely # for this binary, so we have the following binary for checking to # see if pfd_t has not changed. # do_pfd_check: pfdat_check ./pfdat_check pfdat_check: pfdat_check.c ${CCF} pfdat_check.c -o $@