Fedja,
I guess I understand the
root of the problem now. Could you check whether the Autobuild is enabled in
your workspace (“Project”->”Build Automatically”
menu selected)? I guess the “make all” build is an autobuild that
somehow gets initiated as a result of the make target build. I’ll
investigate why this is happening and will fix the problem.
I guess that the https://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=177454
(Make Target build fails to build subcomponents) has the same nature as the
problem you report here.
Please try disabling the
autobuild an let me know if this fixes the top level “make all”
being invoked when invoking the custom target.
Thanks,
Mikhail
From:
cdt-dev-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:cdt-dev-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Fedja Jeleskovic
Sent: Friday, March 16, 2007 6:07
AM
To: cdt-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [cdt-dev] Build problem -
no errors presented!
Hi there,
I was just trying the latest builds with hope that some of my problems might go
away, but instead I found another show stopper from the latest build. This time
I am using M5eh SDK build with CDT 0315 on x86 Linux OS running through the
XMing emulation on MS Windows XP Pro.
When I have created a Make Targets (a typical pair of make all and make clean)
and executed one that should run make only with no arguments, my build failed.
It was a legitimate error, but there was no markings on any of the files under
the C++ Project where you would usually see a RED triangle pointing to the
problem file(s).
Then I realized that Console window doesn't show the latest error text but
rather a different content:
make all
make: *** No rule to make target `all'. Stop.
For some reason text that was showing the error got replaced with the above
text which made things even worse. Now I had no way to know what exactly failed
and where it was. On the top of that it was showing that it attempted to run
"make all" command which I have never specified in my make target.
Am I doing something wrong here or this is just a bug?
Thanks
Fedja