Fellow hackers,

suppose you have a long list of files in a make variable V, exceeding
kern.argmax. This means there is no way you can write a rule where $(V)
is a command argument in any way shape or form. There is also no way to
pass the value of V to xargs that I know of. For example with this
Makefile:

        # Make V exceed kern.argmax (64K).
        V != jot 12440
        all:
                @ echo $(V)

This fails with

        echo:Argument list too long
        *** Error code 1

Furthermore the workaround of creating a process for each file in V with

        V != jot 12440
        all:
        .for v in $(V)
                @ echo $(v)
        .endfor

is not acceptable because it creates too much overhead for process
creation (think of echo being an expensive command.) Question: is there
any other way (short of increasing kern.argmax) to maybe divide and
conquer the V contents by use of substitution magic? I'm thinking of
something along repeatedly cramming N items in some variable and then
calling echo less often.

The original problem can be found in
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/query-pr.cgi?pr=ports/52765

Regards,

        Jens
-- 
Jens Schweikhardt http://www.schweikhardt.net/
SIGSIG -- signature too long (core dumped)
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