How do you get the list of targets in a makefile?

I've used rake a bit (a Ruby make program), and it has an option to get a list of all the available targets, eg

> rake --tasks
rake db:charset      # retrieve the charset for your data...
rake db:collation    # retrieve the collation for your da...
rake db:create       # Creates the databases defined in y...
rake db:drop         # Drops the database for your curren...
...

but there seems to be no option to do this in GNU make.

Apparently the code is almost there for it, as of 2007 - http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg06434.html.

Anyway, I made little hack to extract the targets from a makefile, which you can include in a makefile.

list:
    @grep '^[^#[:space:]].*:' Makefile

It will give you a list of the defined targets. It's just a start - it doesn't filter out the dependencies, for instance.

> make list
list:
copy:
run:
plot:
turnin:

Under Bash (at least), this can be done automatically with tab completion:

make spacetabtab


This is an attempt to improve on Brent Bradburn's great approach as follows:

  • uses a more robust command to extract the target names, which hopefully prevents any false positives (and also does away with the unnecessary sh -c)
  • does not invariably target the makefile in the current directory; respects makefiles explicitly specified with -f <file>
  • excludes hidden targets - by convention, these are targets whose name starts neither with a letter nor a digit
  • makes do with a single phony target
  • prefixes the command with @ to prevent it from being echoed before execution

Curiously, GNU make has no feature for listing just the names of targets defined in a makefile. While the -p option produces output that includes all targets, it buries them in a lot of other information and also executes the default target (which could be suppressed with -f/dev/null).

Place the following rule in a makefile for GNU make to implement a target named list that simply lists all target names in alphabetical order - i.e.: invoke as make list:

.PHONY: list
list:
    @LC_ALL=C $(MAKE) -pRrq -f $(lastword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) : 2>/dev/null | awk -v RS= -F: '/^# File/,/^# Finished Make data base/ {if ($$1 !~ "^[#.]") {print $$1}}' | sort | egrep -v -e '^[^[:alnum:]]' -e '^$@$$'

Important: On pasting this, make sure that the last line is indented by exactly 1 actual tab char. (spaces do not work).

Note that sorting the resulting list of targets is the best option, since not sorting doesn't produce a helpful ordering in that the order in which the targets appear in the makefile is not preserved.
Also, the sub-targets of a rule comprising multiple targets are invariably output separately and will therefore, due to sorting, usually not appear next to one another; e.g., a rule starting with a z: will not have targets a and z listed next to each other in the output, if there are additional targets.

Explanation of the rule:

  • .PHONY: list

    • declares target list a phony target, i.e., one not referring to a file, which should therefore have its recipe invoked unconditionally
  • LC_ALL=C makes sure that make's output in in English, as parsing of the output relies on that.Tip of the hat to Bastian Bittorf

  • $(MAKE) -pRrq -f $(lastword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) : 2>/dev/null

    • Invokes make again in order to print and parse the database derived from the makefile:
      • -p prints the database
      • -Rr suppresses inclusion of built-in rules and variables
      • -q only tests the up-to-date-status of a target (without remaking anything), but that by itself doesn't prevent execution of recipe commands in all cases; hence:
      • -f $(lastword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) ensures that the same makefile is targeted as in the original invocation, regardless of whether it was targeted implicitly or explicitly with -f ....
        Caveat: This will break if your makefile contains include directives; to address this, define variable THIS_FILE := $(lastword $(MAKEFILE_LIST)) before any include directives and use -f $(THIS_FILE) instead.
      • : is a deliberately invalid target that is meant to ensure that no commands are executed; 2>/dev/null suppresses the resulting error message. Note: This relies on -p printing the database nonetheless, which is the case as of GNU make 3.82. Sadly, GNU make offers no direct option to just print the database, without also executing the default (or given) task; if you don't need to target a specific Makefile, you may use make -p -f/dev/null, as recommended in the man page.
  • -v RS=

    • This is an awk idiom that breaks the input into blocks of contiguous non-empty lines.
  • /^# File/,/^# Finished Make data base/

    • Matches the range of lines in the output that contains all targets (true as of GNU make 3.82) - by limiting parsing to this range, there is no need to deal with false positives from other output sections.
  • if ($$1 !~ "^[#.]")

    • Selectively ignores blocks:
      • # ... ignores non-targets, whose blocks start with # Not a target:
      • . ... ignores special targets
    • All other blocks should each start with a line containing only the name of an explicitly defined target followed by :
  • egrep -v -e '^[^[:alnum:]]' -e '^$@$$' removes unwanted targets from the output:

    • '^[^[:alnum:]]' ... excludes hidden targets, which - by convention - are targets that start neither with a letter nor a digit.
    • '^$@$$' ... excludes the list target itself

Running make list then prints all targets, each on its own line; you can pipe to xargs to create a space-separated list instead.


This obviously won't work in many cases, but if your Makefile was created by CMake you might be able to run make help.

$ make help
The following are some of the valid targets for this Makefile:
... all (the default if no target is provided)
... clean
... depend
... install
etc