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MAKE(1)				 User Commands			       MAKE(1)

NAME
       make - GNU Make utility to maintain groups of programs

SYNOPSIS
       make [OPTION]...	[TARGET]...

DESCRIPTION
       The  make  utility will determine automatically which pieces of a large
       program need to be recompiled, and  issue  the  commands	 to  recompile
       them.   The  manual describes the GNU implementation of make, which was
       written by Richard Stallman and Roland McGrath, and is currently	 main-
       tained  by  Paul	 Smith.	  Our examples show C programs,	since they are
       very common, but	you can	use make with any programming  language	 whose
       compiler	can be run with	a shell	command.  In fact, make	is not limited
       to programs.  You can use it to describe	any task where some files must
       be updated automatically	from others whenever the others	change.

       To  prepare to use make,	you must write a file called the makefile that
       describes the relationships among files in your program,	 and  provides
       commands	 for  updating	each  file.   In a program, typically the exe-
       cutable file is updated from object files, which	are in	turn  made  by
       compiling source	files.

       Once  a	suitable  makefile  exists,  each  time	you change some	source
       files, this simple shell	command:

	      make

       suffices	to perform all necessary  recompilations.   The	 make  program
       uses  the  makefile  description	and the	last-modification times	of the
       files to	decide which of	the files need to be  updated.	 For  each  of
       those files, it issues the commands recorded in the makefile.

       make  executes  commands	in the makefile	to update one or more targets,
       where target is typically a program.  If	no -f option is	present,  make
       will  look  for	the  makefiles GNUmakefile, makefile, and Makefile, in
       that order.

       Normally	you should call	your makefile  either  makefile	 or  Makefile.
       (We  recommend  Makefile	because	it appears prominently near the	begin-
       ning of a directory listing, right near other important files  such  as
       README.)	  The  first name checked, GNUmakefile,	is not recommended for
       most makefiles.	You should use this name if you	have a	makefile  that
       is  specific  to	GNU Make, and will not be understood by	other versions
       of make.	 If makefile is	'-', the standard input	is read.

       make updates a target if	it depends on  prerequisite  files  that  have
       been modified since the target was last modified, or if the target does
       not exist.

OPTIONS
       -b, -m
	    These options are ignored for compatibility	with other versions of
	    make.

       -B, --always-make
	    Unconditionally make all targets.

       -C dir, --directory=dir
	    Change to directory	dir before reading the makefiles or doing any-
	    thing  else.  If multiple -C options are specified,	each is	inter-
	    preted relative to the previous one: -C / -C etc is	equivalent  to
	    -C	/etc.	This  is  typically used with recursive	invocations of
	    make.

       -d   Print debugging information	in addition to normal processing.  The
	    debugging information says which files are	being  considered  for
	    remaking,  which  file-times  are being compared and with what re-
	    sults, which files actually	need  to  be  remade,  which  implicit
	    rules  are considered and which are	applied---everything interest-
	    ing	about how make decides what to do.

       --debug[=FLAGS]
	    Print debugging information	in addition to normal processing.   If
	    the	 FLAGS are omitted, then the behavior is the same as if	-d was
	    specified.	FLAGS may be any or all	of the following names,	comma-
	    or space-separated.	 Only the first	character is significant:  the
	    rest  may  be omitted: all for all debugging output	(same as using
	    -d), basic for basic debugging, verbose for	more verbose basic de-
	    bugging, implicit for showing  implicit  rule  search  operations,
	    jobs for details on	invocation of commands,	makefile for debugging
	    while  remaking  makefiles,	 print	shows all recipes that are run
	    even if they are silent, and why shows the reason make decided  to
	    rebuild  each  target.  Use	none to	disable	all previous debugging
	    flags.

       -e, --environment-overrides
	    Give variables taken from the environment  precedence  over	 vari-
	    ables from makefiles.

       -E string, --eval string
	    Interpret string using the eval function, before parsing any make-
	    files.

       -f file,	--file=file, --makefile=FILE
	    Use	file as	a makefile.

       -i, --ignore-errors
	    Ignore all errors in commands executed to remake files.

       -I dir, --include-dir=dir
	    Specifies  a  directory  dir to search for included	makefiles.  If
	    several -I options are used	to specify  several  directories,  the
	    directories	are searched in	the order specified.  Unlike the argu-
	    ments  to other flags of make, directories given with -I flags may
	    come directly after	the flag: -Idir	is allowed, as well as -I dir.
	    This syntax	is allowed for compatibility with the C	preprocessor's
	    -I flag.

       -j [jobs], --jobs[=jobs]
	    Specifies the number of jobs (commands) to run simultaneously.  If
	    there is more than one -j option, the last one is  effective.   If
	    the	 -j  option  is	given without an argument, make	will not limit
	    the	number of jobs that can	run simultaneously.

       --jobserver-style=style
	    The	style of jobserver to use.  The	style  may  be	one  of	 fifo,
	    pipe, or sem (Windows only).

       -k, --keep-going
	    Continue  as  much	as  possible after an error.  While the	target
	    that failed, and those that	depend on it, cannot  be  remade,  the
	    other dependencies of these	targets	can be processed all the same.

       -l [load], --load-average[=load]
	    Specifies  that  no	new jobs (commands) should be started if there
	    are	others jobs running and	the load average is at least  load  (a
	    floating-point number).  With no argument, removes a previous load
	    limit.

       -L, --check-symlink-times
	    Use	the latest mtime between symlinks and target.

       -n, --just-print, --dry-run, --recon
	    Print the commands that would be executed, but do not execute them
	    (except in certain circumstances).

       -o file,	--old-file=file, --assume-old=file
	    Do not remake the file file	even if	it is older than its dependen-
	    cies,  and	do  not	remake anything	on account of changes in file.
	    Essentially	the file is treated as very old	and its	rules are  ig-
	    nored.

       -O[type], --output-sync[=type]
	    When  running multiple jobs	in parallel with -j, ensure the	output
	    of each job	is collected together rather  than  interspersed  with
	    output from	other jobs.  If	type is	not specified or is target the
	    output from	the entire recipe for each target is grouped together.
	    If	type is	line the output	from each command line within a	recipe
	    is grouped together.  If type is recurse output from an entire re-
	    cursive make is grouped together.  If type is none output synchro-
	    nization is	disabled.

       -p, --print-data-base
	    Print the data base	(rules and variable values) that results  from
	    reading the	makefiles; then	execute	as usual or as otherwise spec-
	    ified.   This  also	prints the version information given by	the -v
	    switch (see	below).	 To print the data base	without	trying to  re-
	    make any files, use	make -p	-f/dev/null.

       -q, --question
	    ``Question	mode''.	  Do  not run any commands, or print anything;
	    just return	an exit	status that is zero if the  specified  targets
	    are	already	up to date, nonzero otherwise.

       -r, --no-builtin-rules
	    Eliminate  use of the built-in implicit rules.  Also clear out the
	    default list of suffixes for suffix	rules.

       -R, --no-builtin-variables
	    Don't define any built-in variables.

       -s, --silent, --quiet
	    Silent operation; do not print the commands	as they	are executed.

       --no-silent
	    Cancel the effect of the -s	option.

       -S, --no-keep-going, --stop
	    Cancel the effect of the -k	option.

       -t, --touch
	    Touch files	(mark them up to date without  really  changing	 them)
	    instead  of	 running their commands.  This is used to pretend that
	    the	commands were done, in order to	 fool  future  invocations  of
	    make.

       --trace
	    Information	 about	the disposition	of each	target is printed (why
	    the	target is being	rebuilt	and what commands are run  to  rebuild
	    it).

       -v, --version
	    Print  the version of the make program plus	a copyright, a list of
	    authors and	a notice that there is no warranty.

       -w, --print-directory
	    Print a message containing the working directory before and	 after
	    other  processing.	 This  may  be useful for tracking down	errors
	    from complicated nests of recursive	make commands.

       --no-print-directory
	    Turn off -w, even if it was	turned on implicitly.

       --shuffle[=MODE]
	    Enable shuffling of	goal and prerequisite ordering.	 MODE  is  one
	    of	none  to disable shuffle mode, random to shuffle prerequisites
	    in random order, reverse to	consider prerequisites in reverse  or-
	    der,  or  an  integer <seed> which enables random mode with	a spe-
	    cific seed value.  If MODE is omitted the default is random.

       -W file,	--what-if=file,	--new-file=file, --assume-new=file
	    Pretend that the target file has just been	modified.   When  used
	    with  the -n flag, this shows you what would happen	if you were to
	    modify that	file.  Without -n, it is almost	the same as running  a
	    touch  command  on the given file before running make, except that
	    the	modification time is changed only in the imagination of	make.

       --warn-undefined-variables
	    Warn when an undefined variable is referenced.

EXIT STATUS
       GNU Make	exits with a status of zero if all makefiles were successfully
       parsed and no targets that were built failed.  A	status of one will  be
       returned	 if  the  -q  flag  was	used and make determines that a	target
       needs to	be rebuilt.  A status of two will be returned  if  any	errors
       were encountered.

SEE ALSO
       The  full documentation for make	is maintained as a Texinfo manual.  If
       the info	and make programs are properly installed  at  your  site,  the
       command

	      info make

       should give you access to the complete manual.

BUGS
       See the chapter ``Problems and Bugs'' in	The GNU	Make Manual.

AUTHOR
       This  manual  page  contributed by Dennis Morse of Stanford University.
       Further updates contributed by Mike Frysinger.  It has been reworked by
       Roland McGrath.	Maintained by Paul Smith.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 1992-1993,	1996-2023 Free Software	Foundation, Inc.  This
       file is part of GNU Make.

       GNU Make	is free	software; you can redistribute it and/or modify	it un-
       der the terms of	the GNU	General	Public License	as  published  by  the
       Free  Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your
       option) any later version.

       GNU Make	is distributed in the hope that	it will	be useful, but WITHOUT
       ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of  MERCHANTABILITY  or
       FITNESS	FOR  A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See	the GNU	General	Public License
       for more	details.

       You should have received	a copy of the GNU General Public License along
       with this program.  If not, see https://www.gnu.org/licenses/.

GNU				  26 May 2023			       MAKE(1)

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