netcdf-c/nc_test/Makefile.am
2012-02-03 21:30:43 +00:00

70 lines
2.0 KiB
Makefile

## This is a automake file, part of Unidata's netCDF package.
# Copyright 2005, see the COPYRIGHT file for more information.
# This file builds and runs the nc_test program, which tests the
# netCDF-3 API for all formats.
# Put together AM_CPPFLAGS and AM_LDFLAGS.
include $(top_srcdir)/lib_flags.am
# These files are created by the tests.
CLEANFILES = nc_test_classic.nc nc_test_64bit.nc nc_test_netcdf4.nc \
tst_*.nc t_nc.nc large_files.nc quick_large_files.nc
# These are the tests which are always run.
TESTPROGRAMS = t_nc tst_small nc_test tst_misc tst_norm tst_names \
tst_nofill tst_nofill2 tst_nofill3
if USE_NETCDF4
TESTPROGRAMS += tst_atts
endif
# These are the source files for the main workhorse test program,
# nc_test. If you pass nc_test, you are doing well.
nc_test_SOURCES = nc_test.c error.c test_get.c test_put.c \
test_read.c test_write.c util.c error.h tests.h
LDADD = ${top_builddir}/liblib/libnetcdf.la
AM_CPPFLAGS += -I$(top_builddir)/liblib
# If the user asked for large file tests, then add them.
if LARGE_FILE_TESTS
TESTPROGRAMS += quick_large_files tst_big_var6 tst_big_var2 \
tst_big_rvar tst_big_var tst_large large_files
endif # LARGE_FILE_TESTS
if BUILD_BENCHMARKS
TESTPROGRAMS += testnc3perf
testnc3perf_SOURCES = testnc3perf.c
CLEANFILES += benchmark.nc
endif
# Set up the tests.
check_PROGRAMS = $(TESTPROGRAMS)
TESTS = $(TESTPROGRAMS)
# This will run a bunch of the test programs with valgrind, the memory
# checking tool. (Valgrind must be present for this to work.)
if USE_VALGRIND_TESTS
if USE_NETCDF4
TESTS_ENVIRONMENT=USE_NETCDF4=1
else
TESTS_ENVIRONMENT=USE_NETCDF4=0
endif
TESTS += run_valgrind_tests.sh
endif # USE_VALGRIND_TESTS
# Distribute the .c files so that m4 isn't required on the users
# machine.
EXTRA_DIST = test_get.m4 test_put.m4 run_valgrind_tests.sh
# Only clean these on mainatiner-clean, because they require m4 to
# regenerate.
MAINTAINERCLEANFILES = test_get.c test_put.c
# This rule tells make how to turn our .m4 files into .c files.
.m4.c:
m4 $(AM_M4FLAGS) $(M4FLAGS) $< >$@