| 1 | .TH MAKE 1L "22 August 1989" "GNU" "LOCAL USER COMMANDS"
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| 2 | .SH NAME
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| 3 | make \- GNU make utility to maintain groups of programs
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| 4 | .SH SYNOPSIS
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| 5 | .B "make "
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| 6 | [
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| 7 | .B \-f
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| 8 | .I makefile
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| 9 | ] [ option ] ...
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| 10 | target ...
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| 11 | .SH WARNING
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| 12 | This man page is an extract of the documentation of
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| 13 | .I GNU make .
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| 14 | It is updated only occasionally, because the GNU project does not use nroff.
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| 15 | For complete, current documentation, refer to the Info file
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| 16 | .B make.info
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| 17 | which is made from the Texinfo source file
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| 18 | .BR make.texinfo .
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| 19 | .SH DESCRIPTION
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| 20 | .LP
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| 21 | The purpose of the
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| 22 | .I make
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| 23 | utility is to determine automatically which
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| 24 | pieces of a large program need to be recompiled, and issue the commands to
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| 25 | recompile them.
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| 26 | The manual describes the GNU implementation of
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| 27 | .IR make ,
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| 28 | which was written by Richard Stallman and Roland McGrath.
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| 29 | Our examples show C programs, since they are most common, but you can use
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| 30 | .I make
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| 31 | with any programming language whose compiler can be run with a
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| 32 | shell command.
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| 33 | In fact,
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| 34 | .I make
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| 35 | is not limited to programs.
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| 36 | You can use it to describe any task where some files must be
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| 37 | updated automatically from others whenever the others change.
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| 38 | .LP
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| 39 | To prepare to use
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| 40 | .IR make ,
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| 41 | you must write a file called the
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| 42 | .I makefile
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| 43 | that describes the relationships among files in your program, and the
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| 44 | states the commands for updating each file.
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| 45 | In a program, typically the executable file is updated from object
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| 46 | files, which are in turn made by compiling source files.
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| 47 | .LP
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| 48 | Once a suitable makefile exists, each time you change some source files,
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| 49 | this simple shell command:
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| 50 | .sp 1
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| 51 | .RS
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| 52 | .B make
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| 53 | .RE
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| 54 | .sp 1
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| 55 | suffices to perform all necessary recompilations.
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| 56 | The
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| 57 | .I make
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| 58 | program uses the makefile data base and the last-modification times
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| 59 | of the files to decide which of the files need to be updated.
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| 60 | For each of those files, it issues the commands recorded in the data base.
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| 61 | .LP
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| 62 | .I make
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| 63 | executes commands in the
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| 64 | .I makefile
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| 65 | to update
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| 66 | one or more target
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| 67 | .IR names ,
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| 68 | where
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| 69 | .I name
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| 70 | is typically a program.
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| 71 | If no
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| 72 | .B \-f
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| 73 | option is present,
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| 74 | .I make
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| 75 | will look for the makefiles
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| 76 | .IR GNUmakefile ,
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| 77 | .IR makefile ,
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| 78 | and
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| 79 | .IR Makefile ,
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| 80 | in that order.
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| 81 | .LP
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| 82 | Normally you should call your makefile either
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| 83 | .I makefile
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| 84 | or
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| 85 | .IR Makefile .
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| 86 | (We recommend
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| 87 | .I Makefile
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| 88 | because it appears prominently near the beginning of a directory
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| 89 | listing, right near other important files such as
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| 90 | .IR README .)
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| 91 | The first name checked,
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| 92 | .IR GNUmakefile ,
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| 93 | is not recommended for most makefiles.
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| 94 | You should use this name if you have a makefile that is specific to GNU
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| 95 | .IR make ,
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| 96 | and will not be understood by other versions of
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| 97 | .IR make .
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| 98 | If
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| 99 | .I makefile
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| 100 | is `\-', the standard input is read.
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| 101 | .LP
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| 102 | .I make
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| 103 | updates a target if it depends on prerequisite files
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| 104 | that have been modified since the target was last modified,
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| 105 | or if the target does not exist.
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| 106 | .SH OPTIONS
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| 107 | .sp 1
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| 108 | .TP 0.5i
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| 109 | .B \-b
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| 110 | .TP 0.5i
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| 111 | .B \-m
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| 112 | These options are ignored for compatibility with other versions of
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| 113 | .IR make .
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| 114 | .TP 0.5i
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| 115 | .BI "\-C " dir
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| 116 | Change to directory
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| 117 | .I dir
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| 118 | before reading the makefiles or doing anything else.
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| 119 | If multiple
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| 120 | .B \-C
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| 121 | options are specified, each is interpreted relative to the
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| 122 | previous one:
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| 123 | .BR "\-C " /
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| 124 | .BR "\-C " etc
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| 125 | is equivalent to
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| 126 | .BR "\-C " /etc.
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| 127 | This is typically used with recursive invocations of
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| 128 | .IR make .
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| 129 | .TP 0.5i
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| 130 | .B \-d
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| 131 | Print debugging information in addition to normal processing.
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| 132 | The debugging information says which files are being considered for
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| 133 | remaking, which file-times are being compared and with what results,
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| 134 | which files actually need to be remade, which implicit rules are
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| 135 | considered and which are applied---everything interesting about how
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| 136 | .I make
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| 137 | decides what to do.
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| 138 | .TP 0.5i
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| 139 | .B \-e
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| 140 | Give variables taken from the environment precedence
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| 141 | over variables from makefiles.
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| 142 | .TP 0.5i
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| 143 | .BI "\-f " file
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| 144 | Use
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| 145 | .I file
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| 146 | as a makefile.
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| 147 | .TP 0.5i
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| 148 | .B \-i
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| 149 | Ignore all errors in commands executed to remake files.
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| 150 | .TP 0.5i
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| 151 | .BI "\-I " dir
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| 152 | Specifies a directory
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| 153 | .I dir
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| 154 | to search for included makefiles.
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| 155 | If several
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| 156 | .B \-I
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| 157 | options are used to specify several directories, the directories are
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| 158 | searched in the order specified.
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| 159 | Unlike the arguments to other flags of
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| 160 | .IR make ,
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| 161 | directories given with
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| 162 | .B \-I
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| 163 | flags may come directly after the flag:
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| 164 | .BI \-I dir
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| 165 | is allowed, as well as
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| 166 | .BI "\-I " dir.
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| 167 | This syntax is allowed for compatibility with the C
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| 168 | preprocessor's
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| 169 | .B \-I
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| 170 | flag.
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| 171 | .TP 0.5i
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| 172 | .BI "\-j " jobs
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| 173 | Specifies the number of jobs (commands) to run simultaneously.
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| 174 | If there is more than one
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| 175 | .B \-j
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| 176 | option, the last one is effective.
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| 177 | If the
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| 178 | .B \-j
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| 179 | option is given without an argument,
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| 180 | .IR make
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| 181 | will not limit the number of jobs that can run simultaneously.
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| 182 | .TP 0.5i
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| 183 | .B \-k
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| 184 | Continue as much as possible after an error.
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| 185 | While the target that failed, and those that depend on it, cannot
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| 186 | be remade, the other dependencies of these targets can be processed
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| 187 | all the same.
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| 188 | .TP 0.5i
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| 189 | .B \-l
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| 190 | .TP 0.5i
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| 191 | .BI "\-l " load
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| 192 | Specifies that no new jobs (commands) should be started if there are
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| 193 | others jobs running and the load average is at least
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| 194 | .I load
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| 195 | (a floating-point number).
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| 196 | With no argument, removes a previous load limit.
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| 197 | .TP 0.5i
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| 198 | .B \-n
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| 199 | Print the commands that would be executed, but do not execute them.
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| 200 | .TP 0.5i
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| 201 | .BI "\-o " file
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| 202 | Do not remake the file
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| 203 | .I file
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| 204 | even if it is older than its dependencies, and do not remake anything
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| 205 | on account of changes in
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| 206 | .IR file .
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| 207 | Essentially the file is treated as very old and its rules are ignored.
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| 208 | .TP 0.5i
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| 209 | .B \-p
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| 210 | Print the data base (rules and variable values) that results from
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| 211 | reading the makefiles; then execute as usual or as otherwise
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| 212 | specified.
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| 213 | This also prints the version information given by the
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| 214 | .B \-v
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| 215 | switch (see below).
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| 216 | To print the data base without trying to remake any files, use
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| 217 | .B make
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| 218 | .B \-p
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| 219 | .BI \-f /dev/null.
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| 220 | .TP 0.5i
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| 221 | .B \-q
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| 222 | ``Question mode''.
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| 223 | Do not run any commands, or print anything; just return an exit status
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| 224 | that is zero if the specified targets are already up to date, nonzero
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| 225 | otherwise.
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| 226 | .TP 0.5i
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| 227 | .B \-r
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| 228 | Eliminate use of the built-in implicit rules.
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| 229 | Also clear out the default list of suffixes for suffix rules.
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| 230 | .TP 0.5i
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| 231 | .B \-s
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| 232 | Silent operation; do not print the commands as they are executed.
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| 233 | .TP 0.5i
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| 234 | .B \-S
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| 235 | Cancel the effect of the
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| 236 | .B \-k
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| 237 | option.
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| 238 | This is never necessary except in a recursive
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| 239 | .I make
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| 240 | where
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| 241 | .B \-k
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| 242 | might be inherited from the top-level
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| 243 | .I make
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| 244 | via MAKEFLAGS or if you set
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| 245 | .B \-k
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| 246 | in MAKEFLAGS in your environment.
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| 247 | .TP 0.5i
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| 248 | .B \-t
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| 249 | Touch files (mark them up to date without really changing them)
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| 250 | instead of running their commands.
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| 251 | This is used to pretend that the commands were done, in order to fool
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| 252 | future invocations of
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| 253 | .IR make .
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| 254 | .TP 0.5i
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| 255 | .B \-v
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| 256 | Print the version of the
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| 257 | .I make
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| 258 | program plus a copyright, a list of authors and a notice that there
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| 259 | is no warranty.
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| 260 | .TP 0.5i
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| 261 | .B \-w
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| 262 | Print a message containing the working directory
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| 263 | before and after other processing.
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| 264 | This may be useful for tracking down errors from complicated nests of
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| 265 | recursive
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| 266 | .I make
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| 267 | commands.
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| 268 | .TP 0.5i
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| 269 | .BI "\-W " file
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| 270 | Pretend that the target
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| 271 | .I file
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| 272 | has just been modified.
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| 273 | When used with the
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| 274 | .B \-n
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| 275 | flag, this shows you what would happen if you were to modify that file.
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| 276 | Without
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| 277 | .BR \-n ,
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| 278 | it is almost the same as running a
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| 279 | .I touch
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| 280 | command on the given file before running
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| 281 | .IR make ,
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| 282 | except that the modification time is changed only in the imagination of
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| 283 | .IR make .
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| 284 | .SH "SEE ALSO"
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| 285 | .I "The GNU Make Manual"
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| 286 | .SH BUGS
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| 287 | See the chapter `Problems and Bugs' in
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| 288 | .I "The GNU Make Manual" .
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| 289 | .SH AUTHOR
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| 290 | This manual page contributed by Dennis Morse of Stanford University.
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| 291 | It has been reworked by Roland McGrath.
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