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[[ports]]
== NIFs and port drivers
Erlang.mk can not only build Erlang projects, but also the C code
that some projects come with, like NIFs and port drivers.
There are two ways to build the C code: using a custom Makefile,
or making Erlang.mk do it directly. The C code will be built
as needed when you run `make`.
// @todo something for easier bootstrapping
=== C source code location and Erlang environment
The C source code should be located in the '$(C_SRC_DIR)' directory.
It defaults to 'c_src/'. Should you need to modify it, all you
need to do is to set the variable in your Makefile before including
Erlang.mk:
[source,make]
C_SRC_DIR = $(CURDIR)/my_nif_source
When this directory exists, Erlang.mk will automatically create a
file named '$(C_SRC_ENV)'. This file defaults to '$(C_SRC_DIR)/env.mk'.
This can also be changed:
[source,make]
C_SRC_ENV = $(C_SRC_DIR)/erlang_env.mk
It contains a few variable definitions for the environment used for the build:
`ERTS_INCLUDE_DIR`::
Path to the ERTS include files ('erl_driver.h', 'erl_nif.h' and more).
`ERL_INTERFACE_INCLUDE_DIR`::
Path to the Erl_Interface include files ('ei.h' and related).
`ERL_INTERFACE_LIB_DIR`::
Path to the Erl_Interface static libraries.
=== Using a custom Makefile
Erlang.mk will automatically run `make` if it detects a Makefile
in '$(C_SRC_DIR)/Makefile'.
The Makefile should have at least two targets: a default target
(which can be anything, for example `all`) which is invoked when
building the C code, and a `clean` target invoked when cleaning
it.
You can include the 'env.mk' file to benefit from the Erlang
environment detection:
[source,make]
include env.mk
=== Using Erlang.mk directly
You don't need to write a Makefile to build C source code, however.
Erlang.mk comes with rules to build both shared libraries and
executables, using the source files it finds in '$(C_SRC_DIR)'.
By default, Erlang.mk will create a shared library. To change
this and create an executable instead, put this in your Makefile
before including Erlang.mk:
[source,make]
C_SRC_TYPE = executable
The generated file name varies depending on the type of project
you have (shared library or executable) and on the platform you
build the project on.
For shared libraries, the generated file name will be
'$(C_SRC_OUTPUT)$(C_SRC_SHARED_EXTENSION)', with the default
being '$(CURDIR)/priv/$(PROJECT)' followed by the extension:
`.dll` on Windows, `.so` everywhere else.
For executables, the generated file name is
'$(C_SRC_OUTPUT)$(C_SRC_EXECUTABLE_EXTENSION)', with the same
default except for the extension: `.exe` on Windows, and otherwise
nothing.
Erlang.mk sets appropriate compile and linker flags by default.
These flags vary depending on the platform, and can of course
be overriden.
`CC`::
The compiler to be used.
`CFLAGS`::
C compiler flags.
`CXXFLAGS`::
C++ compiler flags.
`LDFLAGS`::
Linker flags.
`LDLIBS`::
Libraries to link against.
The source files are automatically gathered from the contents
of '$(C_SRC_DIR)'. Erlang.mk looks for '.c', '.C', '.cc' and '.cpp'
source files. You can define the variable `SOURCES` to manually
list the files to compile.
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