As found on the mailing list archive,
one can use the filter
function.
For example
ifeq ($(GCC_MINOR),$(filter $(GCC_MINOR),4 5))
filter X, A B
will return those of A,B that are equal to X.
Note, while this is not relevant in the above example, this is a XOR operation. I.e. if you instead have something like:
ifeq (4, $(filter 4, $(VAR1) $(VAR2)))
And then do e.g. make VAR1=4 VAR2=4
, the filter will return 4 4
, which is not equal to 4
.
A variation that performs an OR operation instead is:
ifneq (,$(filter $(GCC_MINOR),4 5))
where a negative comparison against an empty string is used instead (filter
will return en empty string if GCC_MINOR
doesn't match the arguments). Using the VAR1
/VAR2
example it would look like this:
ifneq (, $(filter 4, $(VAR1) $(VAR2)))
The downside to those methods is that you have to be sure that these arguments will always be single words. For example, if VAR1
is 4 foo
, the filter result is still 4
, and the ifneq
expression is still true. If VAR1
is 4 5
, the filter result is 4 5
and the ifneq
expression is true.
One easy alternative is to just put the same operation in both the ifeq
and else ifeq
branch, e.g. like this:
ifeq ($(GCC_MINOR),4)
@echo Supported version
else ifeq ($(GCC_MINOR),5)
@echo Supported version
else
@echo Unsupported version
endif