xenial (1) makepp_command.1.gz

Provided by: makepp_2.0.98.5-1_all bug

NAME

       makepp -- Command line syntax for makepp

DESCRIPTION

       ?: -?,  A: -A,
         --args-file,
         --arguments-file,
         --assume-new,
         --assume-old,  B: -b,
         --build-cache,
         --build-check,
         --build-check-method,  C: -C,
         -c,  D: --defer-include,
         --directory,
         --do-build,
         --dont-build,
         --dont-read,
         --do-read,
         --dry-run,
         --dump-makefile,
         --dump-makeppfile,  E: -e,
         --environment-overrides,
         --env-overrides,  F: -F,
         -f,
         --file,
         --final-rules-only,
         --force-copy-from-bc,
         --force-rescan,  G: --gullible,  H: -h,
         --help,
         --hybrid,
         --hybrid-recursion,
         --hybrid-recursive-make,  I: -I,
         --implicit-load-makeppfile-only,
         --include,
         --include-dir,
         --in-sandbox,
         --inside-sandbox,  J: -j,
         --jobs,
         --just-print,  K: -k,
         --keep-going,  L: --last-chance-rules,
         --load-makefile,
         --load-makeppfile,
         --log,
         --log-file,
         --loop,  M: -m,
         --makefile,
         $MAKEFLAGS,
         $MAKEPP_CASE_SENSITIVE_FILENAMES,
         --makeppfile,
         $MAKEPPFLAGS,
         --md5-bc,
         --md5-check-bc,  N: -n,
         --new-file,
         --no-builtin-rules,
         --no-cache-scaninfos,
         --no-implicit-load,
         --no-log,
         --no-path-executable-dependencies,
         --no-path-exe-dep,
         --no-populate-bc,
         --no-print-directory,
         --no-remake-makefiles,
         --no-warn,  O: -o,
         --old-file,
         --out-of-sandbox,
         --override-signature,
         --override-signature-method,  P: --populate-bc-only,
         --profile,  Q: --quiet,  R: -R,
         -r,
         --recon,
         --remove-stale,
         --remove-stale-files,
         --repository,
         --rm-stale,
         --root-dir,
         --root-directory,  S: -s,
         --sandbox,
         --sandbox-warn,
         --sandbox-warning,
         --signature,
         --signature-method,
         --silent,
         --stop,
         --stop-after-loading,
         --stop-before-building,
         --stop-on-race,
         --stop-race,
         --symlink-in-rep-as-file,
         --symlink-in-repository-as-file,  T: --traditional,
         --traditional-recursion,
         --traditional-recursive-make,  V: -V,
         -v,
         --verbose,
         --version,
         --virtual-sandbox,  W: -W,
         --what-if

       makepp [ option ... ] [ VAR=value ] [ target ... ]

       mpp [ option ... ] [ VAR=value ] [ target ... ]

       Makepp supports most of the command line options and syntax that other makes support.  The hyphens
       between the words are always optional, and can also be replaced by an underscore.  You specify a list of
       targets to build on the command line.  If you do not specify any targets, the first explicit target in
       the makefile is built.

       You can assign variables on the command line which will override any assignment or environment variable
       in every Makefile loaded, e.g.,

           makepp CFLAGS=-O2

       Valid options are most of the standard make options, plus a few new ones:

       -A filename
       --args-file=filename
       --arguments-file=filename
           Read the file and parse it as possibly quoted whitespace- and/or newline-separated options.

       -b directory
       --build-cache=directory
           Specifies the path to a build cache.  See makepp_build_cache for details.  The build cache must
           already exist; see "How to manage a build cache" in makepp_build_cache for how to make it in the
           first place.  Build caches defined on the command line may be overridden by a build_cache statement
           in a makefile or a :build_cache rule modifier .  If you work with several different builds, it may be
           useful to set the environment variable "MAKEPPFLAGS" to contain
           "--buil""d-cache=/path/to/build/cache" so that all of your builds will take advantage of the build
           cache by default.

       --build-check=method
       --build-check-method=method
           The name of a build check method to use to decide whether files need to be rebuilt.  Possible values
           are "target_newer", "exact_match",   See makepp_build_check for information on build check methods.

       -C directory
       --directory=directory
           Cd to the given directory before loading the makefile and trying to build the targets.  This is
           similar to specifying a directory with "-F", except that subsequent "-C", "-f", "-F", "-I" and "-R"
           options are interpreted relative to the new directory, rather than the old one.

       -c
       --root-dir
       --root-directory
           Cd up to the directory containing a RootMakeppfile.

       --defer-include
           Workaround for include statement before the rule that builds the include file.  This happens by
           pretending the include statements come last in the makefile.  That way the include statement is
           performable, but variable overrides or modifications may still fail, in which case you should set the
           problematic ones on the command line (whereas gmake ignores any variable setting from the include
           file that might influence how that file itself gets built).

       --dont-build=filename
       --do-build=filename
           Do not build the specified file, or, if it is a directory, everything thereunder, even though makepp
           thinks it should -- or do build, overriding the opposite specification from a higher directory.  This
           is useful if you built a specific file by hand using different compilation options.  Without this
           option, if you compile a module by hand and then run makepp to compile the rest of the program,
           makepp will also recompile the module you compiled by hand, because makepp cannot guarantee that the
           build is correct if any of the files were not built under its control.  With this option, you tell
           makepp that you really know what you are doing in the case of this particular file and you promise
           that it's ok not to rebuild it.

           For example,

               % cc -g -DSPECIAL_DEBUG -c x.c -o x.o  # Special compilation by hand
               % makepp
               cc -g -O2 -c x.c -o x.o   # Makepp just overrode your compilation here!
               cc x.o y.o -o my_program  # Relinks.
               % cc -g -DSPECIAL_DEBUG -c x.c -o x.o  # Do it again.
               % makepp --dont-build x.o # Tell makepp not to rebuild x.o even if it wants to.
               cc x.o y.o -o my_program  # Now it relinks without recompiling.

           If you want special compilation options for just one module, it's often easier to edit the makefile
           than to compile by hand as in this example; see "Target-specific assignments" in makepp_variables for
           an easy way of doing this.

           If you put a RootMakeppfile(.mk) at the root of your build system, that directory and everything
           under it defaults to "--do-build", while the overall root of your file system defaults to
           "--dont-build".  That way, everything inside your build system is built (if necessary) but nothing
           outside is attempted.  If, in this scenario, you want external parts to always be built as needed,
           you must explicitly pick them up with "load_makefile" statements in one of the makefiles within your
           tree.

           You may have one RootMakeppfile(.mk) each, in separate build trees, and they will be loaded if one
           tree has dependencies in another one.  But you are not allowed to have RootMakeppfile(.mk) in nested
           directories, avoiding funny effects that tend to arise when you accidentally call "makepp
           --repository" again in a subdirectory.  These effects include duplicate rules through duplicate
           sources, or eternal build cache reimports because cached files have the right signatures but the
           wrong relative pathes.

           Override "--dont-build" for the specified file or directory.  If you have a RootMakeppfile(.mk) at
           the root of your build system, but you want makepp to build something outside of your build system
           just this once, you must explicitly mark it as "--do-build".  If you specify "--do-build" for a file
           or directory under a RootMakeppfile(.mk), without "--dont-build" for a higher directory, then the
           root (and all else under it) of your build system defaults to "--dont-build".

           To resolve conflicts between "--dont-build" and "--do-build", the one with the most specific path
           takes precedence regardless of order.  If the same path is specified with both "--dont-build" and
           "--do-build", then the rightmost one wins.

           The options "--dont-build" and "--do-build" can be dangerous if you give the wrong hints to makepp,
           since you are asking makepp not to do checks it needs, to guarantee a correct build.  But since they
           allow greatly reducing the number of checks, they can speed up your builds dramatically, as explained
           in potentially unsafe speedup methods.

       --dont-read=filename
       --do-read=filename
           Do not read the specified file, or, if it is a directory, everything thereunder -- or do read,
           overriding the opposite specification from a higher directory.  Generate an error rather than read
           files marked for "--dont-read".  See --sandbox.  The filesystem root always defaults to readable.

       --dump-makefile=filename
       --dump-makeppfile=filename
           Dump the raw contents of the makefile(s) for the current directory (as determined by the position of
           this option relative to any "-C" options) to filename.  Include files are interpolated, comments are
           stripped out and "ifdef"'s are resolved.  "# line "file"" markers are inserted as necessary.  The
           final value of any non-reference scalars in the makefile's package are printed following the
           makefile.

           This is useful for debugging, but (currently) you won't necessarily be able use the dump file as an
           equivalent makefile, for example because it contains both the include statement and the interpolated
           file.

       -e
       --env-overrides
       --environment-overrides
           Causes variables from the environment to override definitions in the makefile.  By default,
           assignments within the makefile override variable values which are imported from the environment.

       -F Makeppfile
       --makeppfile=Makeppfile
           Loads the specified Makefile or, if you specify a directory, the Makefile therein, instead of the one
           in the current directory -- any target specified to the right of this option is interpreted relative
           to the directory containing the Makefile.  For the details of the directory case and RootMakeppfile
           see the explanation at the next option.

           This option can be useful if you execute makepp from unpredictable directories.  For example, if you
           compile from within emacs and you have sources scattered all over your directory tree, the current
           working directory for the compilation command will be the directory the last source file you edited
           was in, which may or may not be the top level directory for your compilation.  However, you can
           specify your compilation command as

               makepp -F /your/source/dir/top

           and this will work no matter what your current directory is.

           Because this option doesn't affect the directory relative to which subsequent "-C", "-f", "-F", "-I"
           and "-R" options are specified, you can make targets relative to the current directory like this:

               makepp -F /foo/bar -C . mytarget

       -f Makefile
       --file=Makefile
       --makefile=Makefile
           Loads the specified Makefile or, if you specify a directory, the Makefile therein, instead of the one
           in the current directory.  If you do not specify the "-f" option or the "-F" option, makepp looks
           first for a file in the current directory (or the directory specified by the rightmost "-C" option,
           if any) called, then RootMakeppfile.mk, Makeppfile, then Makeppfile.mk, then makefile, then Makefile.
           Multiple "-F" and "-f" options may be specified.

           The first two (RootMakeppfile) are special (whether given explicitly or found implicitly).  There
           must be at most one of those two in any given build tree on which makepp is to operate.  But there
           may be several if you build several disjoint trees in one go.  Those two are looked for not only in
           the aforementioned directory, but also upwards from there.  If one is found, it is loaded before any
           other.

       --final-rules-only
           Ignore the dependencies and implicit targets of the rule unless the target is phony.

       --force-copy-from-bc
           When using build caches, always copy files in and out of the cache, even if the source and target are
           on the same filesystem.  This is mainly useful for testing (emulating) the case in which they are
           not.

       --force-rescan
           Don't use cached scanner results from previous runs.

       --gullible
           Believe that the rules create what they declare, rather than checking.  This is faster, but doesn't
           catch bugs in rules.

       -?
       -h
       --help
           Print out a brief summary of the options.

       --hybrid
       --hybrid-recursion
       --hybrid-recursive-make
           This option is present to allow makepp to work with old makefiles that use recursive make
           extensively, especially multiply into the same dir.  By default, recursive make is implemented by a
           subprocess that communicates with the parent process; the build is actually done by the parent
           process.  This allows some of makepp's nice features like repositories to work with recursive make
           invocations.  However, this technique will not work if you load more than one makefile from the same
           directory.  In that case this option says to fall back to starting another independent instance of
           makepp.  If this fails, try "--traditional-recursive-make".

           If you do use this option, you will get log files in the each directory the fall back occurred in.
           To get rid of only them use "makeppclean --logs --recurse" or "mppc -lr".

       -I directory
       --include=directory
       --include-dir=directory
           Search the given directory for included makefiles.

       --implicit-load-makeppfile-only
           If implicit loading of makefiles is enabled, then automatically load only a file called
           RootMakeppfile, RootMakeppfile.mk, Makeppfile, or Makeppfile.mk, and not makefile or Makefile.  This
           is useful if makepp has dependencies that are generated by some other flavor of make, and makepp
           can't read that flavor's makefiles in general.  (You want to avoid this situation if possible, but it
           tends to arise while you're in the process of porting a legacy build system to makepp.)  This has no
           effect if implicit loading is disabled.

       -j n
       --jobs=n
           Interprets the argument n as the number of shell commands that can be executed in parallel.  By
           default, makepp does not execute commands in parallel.

           Unlike some other versions of make, when jobs are executed in parallel, makepp directs their output
           to a file and only displays the output when the commands have finished.  This prevents output from
           several different commands from being mixed together on the display, but it does mean that you might
           have to wait a little longer to see the output, and stderr messages will usually appear before stdout
           stuff, differing from terminal output.

           Native Windows Perls (i.e. Strawberry and ActiveState), because they do not support the Unix
           fork/exec paradigm, do not allow this option (Cygwin works fine!).  As a partial replacement, you can
           use the --sandbox option there, though this is far less comfortable.

       -k
       --keep-going
           Build as many files as safely possible, even if some commands have errors.  By default, makepp stops
           when it encounters the first error, even if there are other files that need to be built that don't
           depend on the erroneous file.

       --last-chance-rules
           Activate limited special handling for pattern rules with '%' only on the target side.  This is needed
           because normally, unlike traditional makes, makepp instantiates all rules with all available files
           from the bottom up, allowing it to find all creatable dependencies.

       --load-makefile=Makefile
       --load-makeppfile=Makefile
           Loads the specified makefile before any other makefiles, except for RootMakeppfile, or
           RootMakeppfile.mk above it, but do not consider this option for the purposes of determining the
           default target.  If no other makefile is specified, then one is sought using the usual rules.  If the
           specified makefile is the same makefile that is found using the usual rules, then this option has no
           effect.

       --log=logfilename
       --log-file=logfilename
           Changes the name of the log file to the indicated name.  By default, the log file is called
           .makepp/log.  This file is readable with makepplog, mppl.

       --loop
       --stop
       --stop-before-building
       --stop-after-loading
           Makepp will repeatedly stop itself (go to sleep), before it analyzes and builds anything, for you to
           wake it up when you are ready.  It will tell you some commands to choose from for waking it up again.
           If you do it in a Shell, you get the prompt and can then fore- or background it.  If you do it within
           an IDE, it'll just sleep, and you can awaken it from another Shell.  Depending on where you start it,
           closing that window may or may not terminate makepp, so check how to cope with this in your
           environment.

           The intention is that you can start makepp this way before you're finished editing some files.
           Depending on your project structure and size, this can allow makepp to get a headstart of many
           seconds worth of work by the time you're done.  Then every time you can edit more and awaken it
           again, unless you change something in your Makefile, which will go unnoticed until you start a new
           instance of makepp.  The same applies to repositories, which must never change while makepp is
           running.

           If you use "prebuild" or "$(make)", on the first round it will stop when it gets to that point.

       -m method
       --signature=method
       --signature-method=method
           Specifies the default signature method to use for rules which do not have the ":signature" modifier
           in makefiles which do not have a "signature" statement.  Does not override the choice made by command
           parsers, e.g. C/C++ compilers.  Possible values are "md5", "C" or "c_compilation_md5", "xml" and
           "xml-space".  For more details, see makepp_signatures.

       --md5-bc
       --md5-check-bc
           When importing from a build cache, reject cached targets unless the MD5_SUM is present and matches
           the imported target.  When populating a build cache, calculate and store the MD5_SUM in the build
           info if it isn't there already.  This is slower and leads to more rebuilds, but it guarantees that
           imported targets and build info files correspond exactly.

       -n
       --dry-run
       --just-print
       --recon
           Print out commands without actually executing them -- unreliably where commands depend on previous
           results.  This allows you to see what makepp will do, without actually changing any files.

           More precisely, makepp executes all recursive make commands as normal (but hopefully you're not using
           recursive make anywhere!).  Other commands are simply printed without being executed.  Even commands
           which are prefixed with "@" or "noecho" are printed after the "@" or "noecho" is stripped off.
           However commands prefixed with "+" should be executed, but currently are not.

           Warning: The commands that makepp executes with "-n" are not necessarily the same thing it will do
           without "-n".  File signatures do not change at all with "-n", which means that makepp cannot perform
           exactly the same build tests that it does when the signatures are changing.  This will occasionally
           make a difference if you are using MD5 signatures (which is the default for compilation commands) or
           if you have shell commands that might or might not change the date.

           For example, suppose that you generate a .h file via some sort of preprocessor.  This can happen in a
           lot of different ways.  For concreteness, suppose you automatically generate a list of prototypes for
           functions defined in each C module (see <http://cproto.sourceforge.net/> for how the "cproto"
           application works or <http://www.lemoda.net/c/cfunctions/> for the similar cfunctions).

               prototypes.h : *.c
                   cproto $(CPPFLAGS) $(inputs) > $(output)

           Then each .c file will include prototypes.h.  The purpose of this is to maintain the forward
           declarations for all functions automatically, so if you change a function's signature or add a new
           function, you don't ever have to put in forward or extern declarations anywhere.  You don't even have
           to declare the dependency of your .o files on this one -- makepp will see the include statement and
           automatically see if it needs to (re)run cproto.

           Now suppose you change just one .c file.  What happens when you run makepp with "-n" in this case is
           that it realizes that prototypes.h needs to be remade.  In all probability, remaking prototypes.h
           won't affect its signature--the file contents will probably be identical because no function
           arguments have been changed--so most of the time, nothing that depends on prototypes.h actually has
           to be recompiled.  But makepp doesn't know that unless it's actually allowed to execute the commands.
           So it assumes that anything that depends on prototypes.h will also have to be recompiled.  Thus in
           this example, changing one .c file will cause "makepp -n" to think that every single .c file needs to
           be recompiled, even though most likely the regular makepp command will actually not run all those
           commands.

           This situation isn't all that common, and can only occur if (a) you use a signature method that
           depends on file contents rather than date, as the default compilation signature method does, or (b)
           if you have shell commands that don't always change the date.  E.g., with a traditional
           implementation of make that only looks at dates instead of file signatures, sometimes people will
           write commands like this:

               prototypes.h : $(wildcard *.c)  # Hacked technique not necessary for makepp
                   cproto $(CPPFLAGS) $(inputs) > junk.h
                   if cmp -s junk.h prototypes.h; then \
                      rm junk.h; \
                   else \
                      mv junk.h prototypes.h; \
                   fi

           Thus if rerunning cproto on all the files produces exactly the same file contents, the file date is
           not updated.  This will have exactly the same problem as the above example with "makepp -n": it is
           not known whether the date on prototypes.h changes unless the command is actually run, so "makepp -n"
           cannot possibly be 100% accurate.  (Note that using the traditional "make -n" will also have exactly
           the same problem on this example.)

           "makepp -n" should always print out more commands than a regular invocation of makepp, not fewer.  If
           it prints out fewer commands, it means that makepp does not know about some dependency; some file is
           changing that it is not expecting to change on the basis of what it knows about what files each rule
           affects.  This means that your makefile has a bug.

       --no-cache-scaninfos
           Do not record the results of scanning, forcing it to be reperformed next time makepp runs.

       --no-implicit-load
           Don't automatically load makefiles from directories referenced (see "Implicit loading" in
           makepp_build_algorithm).  By default, makepp automatically loads a makefile from any directory that
           contains a dependency of some target it needs to build, and from any directory that is scanned by a
           wildcard.  Sometimes, however, this causes a problem, since makefiles need to be loaded with
           different command line variables or options, and if they are implicitly loaded before they are
           explicitly loaded by a recursive make invocation or the "load_makefile" statement, makepp aborts with
           an error.  You can also turn off makefile loading on a directory-by-directory basis by using the
           "no_implicit_load" statement in one of your makefiles.

       --no-log
           Don't bother writing a detailed description of what was done to the log file.  By default, makepp
           writes out an explanation of every file that it tried to build, and why it built it or did not build
           it, to a file called .makepp/log, readable with makepplog, mppl.  This can be extremely valuable for
           debugging a makefile--makepp tells you what it thought all of the dependencies were, and which one(s)
           it thought changed.  However, it does take some extra CPU time, and you might not want to bother.

       --no-path-exe-dep
       --no-path-executable-dependencies
           Do not add implicit dependencies on executables picked up from the command search path.  If this
           option is specified, then makepp assumes that any executable whose behavior might change with a new
           version will be specified with a name containing a slash.

           This is useful for programs such as grep and diff, which always do basically the same thing even if
           their implementation changes, though you're better off using the builtin commands for grep.  You may
           also need this for repositories on NFS clusters, where the same commands might not have the same
           timestamp everywhere, causing unnecessary rebuilds depending what machine somebody works on.

       --no-populate-bc
           Don't populate the build cache, but still import from it when possible.  This is useful when the
           environment might cause targets to be generated differently, but makepp doesn't know about such
           dependencies.  It's also useful to avoid thrashing the build cache with a huge number of concurrent
           writers that might interfere with one another.

       --no-print-directory
           Turn off the entering or leaving directory messages.

       --no-remake-makefiles
           Ordinarily, makepp loads each makefile in, then looks to see whether there is a rule that specifies
           how to update the makefile.  If there is, and the makefile needs to be rebuilt, the command is
           executed, and the makefile is reread.  This often causes problems with makefiles produced for the
           standard Unix make utility, because (in my experience) often the make rules for updating makefiles
           are inaccurate--they frequently omit targets which are modified.  This can cause makepp to remake a
           lot of files unnecessarily.  You can often solve this problem by simply preventing makepp from
           updating the makefile automatically (but you have to remember to update it by hand).

       --no-warn
           Don't print any warning messages to stderr, only to log file.  Most warning messages are about
           constructs that you might see in legacy makefiles that makepp considers dangerous, but a few of them
           concern possible errors in your makefile.

       -o filename
       --assume-old=filename
       --old-file=filename
           Pretends that the specified file has not changed, even if it has.  Any targets that depend on this
           file will not be rebuilt because of this file, though they might be rebuilt if some other dependency
           has also changed.  The file itself might or might not be rebuilt, depending on whether it is out of
           date with respect to its dependencies.  (To prevent that, use "--dont-build".)

       --override-signature=method
       --override-signature-method=method
           Same as "--signature-method", but even overrides the choice made by command parsers.

       --out-of-sandbox=filename
           Generate an error rather than write files outside the "sandbox".  Like --dont-build, more specific
           paths override less specific paths.  The filesystem root defaults to out-of-sandbox if there are any
           "--sandbox" options.

           The purpose of the sandbox is to enable multiple concurrent makepp processes to safely operate on
           disjoint parts of the filesystem.  In order for this to work reliably, concurrent sandboxes must not
           overlap, and each process must mark the sandbox of every other concurrent makepp process for
           --dont-read.  See partitioning into sandboxes.

       --populate-bc-only
           Don't import from the build cache.  This is useful when you want to donate targets to the cache, but
           you don't want to rely on the contents of the cache (e.g. for mission-critical builds).

       --profile
           Output raw timestamps before and after each action.

       -R directory
       --repository=directory
           Specify the given directory as a repository (see makepp_repositories for details).  Repositories are
           added in the order specified on the command line, so the first one you specify has precedence.  All
           files in the directory (and all its subdirectories) are automatically linked to the current directory
           (and subdirectories) if they are needed.

           If you just specify a directory after "-R", its contents are linked into the current directory.  You
           can link its contents into any arbitrary place in the file system by specifying the location before
           an equals sign, e.g, "-R subdir1/subdir2=/users/joe/joes_nifty_library".

       -r
       --no-builtin-rules
           Don't load the default rule sets.  If this option is not specified, and the variable
           "makepp_no_builtin" is not defined in the makefile, then a set of rules for compiling C, C++, and
           Fortran code is loaded for each directory.

       --rm-stale
       --remove-stale
       --remove-stale-files
           Ignore stale files rather then treating them as new source files, removing them if necessary in order
           to prevent them from being read by a build command.  This is not the default because it deletes
           things, but it is often required in order for incremental building to work properly.

           For example, assume that there is an x.c file that looks like this:

               #include "x.h"
               int main() { return X; }

           Consider this makefile:

               $(phony default): x
               x.h:
                   &echo "#define X 1" -o $@

           At some point, you change the makefile to look like this:

               CFLAGS := -Idir
               $(phony default): x
               dir/x.h:
                   &mkdir -p $(dir $@)
                   &echo "#define X 2" -o $@

           Now if you build from clean, x exits with status 2, but if you build while the old ./x.h file still
           exists and you don't specify "--rm-stale", then x exits with status 1, because the include directive
           picks up the stale generated header file.

           If you build with "--rm-stale", then ./x.h is removed, and the result is the same as that of a clean
           build, which is almost always a good thing.

           Note that if you build in a repository, you have to give this option there first, because the
           importing makepp doesn't know what might be stale in the repository.

           Legacy makefiles sometimes put the rule to generate an include file after the include statement.  Mpp
           works around that like gmake, by reloading at the end of the makefile if needed.  But this means on a
           rebuild it looks stale at the point where it is needed, and will be deleted.  Therefore this option
           turns off this kind of reloading.

       -s
       --quiet
       --silent
           Don't echo commands and don't print informational messages like "Scanning" or "Loading makefile".

       --sandbox=directory
       --in-sandbox=directory
       --inside-sandbox=directory
           Restrain this instance of makepp to a subtree of a normally bigger build tree.  See partitioning into
           sandboxes.

       --sandbox-warn
       --sandbox-warning
           Downgrade violations of "in-sandbox" and "dont-read" to warnings instead of errors.  See partitioning
           into sandboxes.

       --stop-race
       --stop-on-race
           Exit in error rather than only warning about a build cache access collision that could be fixed.

       --symlink-in-rep-as-file
       --symlink-in-repository-as-file
           If a repository contains a symbolic link, then by default that symbolic link is imported as a link,
           which is to say that the target of the imported link need not be identical to the target of the
           symbolic link in the repository.  If the "--symlink-in-repository-as-file" option is specified, then
           the symbolic link is imported as its target file, which is to say that the imported link points to
           the same target file as the symbolic link in the repository.  This is useful if the symbolic link in
           the repository was intended to have the build-time semantics of a copy.

       --traditional
       --traditional-recursion
       --traditional-recursive-make
           This option is present to allow makepp to work with old makefiles that use recursive make
           extensively, especially with varying options.  By default, recursive make is implemented by a
           subprocess that communicates with the parent process; the build is actually done by the parent
           process.  This allows some of makepp's nice features like repositories to work with recursive make
           invocations.  However, this technique will not work if you use different command line options on
           different invocations of recursive make.  Before you use this, try "--hybrid-recursive-make".

           "--traditional-recursive-make" option makes makepp do recursive makes the same way as the traditional
           make, allowing more makefiles to work, but then repositories and parallel builds do not work
           properly.  This option is rarely needed any more, and makepp will tell you if it runs into a
           construct that requires it.

           If you do use this option, you will get log files piling up in the various directories this changes
           to.  To get rid of only them use "makeppclean --logs --recurse" or "mppc -lr".

       -v
       --verbose
           Verbose mode.  Explains what it is trying to build, and why each file is being built.  This can be
           useful if you think a file is being rebuilt too often.

           This option actually takes what would be written to the log file and displays it on the screen.  It's
           usually easier to run makepp and then look at the output of makepplog, which allows various
           selections and some rewriting.

       -V
       --version
           Print out the version number.

       --virtual-sandbox
           Don't rewrite build infos of files that were not created by this makepp process.  See partitioning
           into sandboxes.

       -W filename
       --assume-new=filename
       --new-file=filename
       --what-if=filename
           Pretends the specified file has changed, so that any targets that depend on that file will be
           rebuilt.  The file itself is not necessarily changed (it might or might not be rebuilt, depending on
           whether it is up to date with respect to its dependencies), but everything that depends on it thinks
           that it has changed.  This can be useful for debugging a makefile.

ENVIRONMENT

       Makepp searches upwards for a file called .makepprc when starting and again after every "-C" or "-c"
       option.  Each time it finds such a file, but only once per file, it will read the file and parse it as
       possibly quoted options on one or several lines.  Unlike the option "-A", the options will be parsed
       relative to the directory where the file resides.

       Makepp looks at the following environment variables:

       $MAKEFLAGS
           Any flags in this environment variable are interpreted as command line options before any explicit
           options.  All command line arguments are put into this variable

           Note that the traditional make also uses this variable, so if you have to use both make and makepp,
           you might want to consider using "MAKEPPFLAGS".

       $MAKEPPFLAGS
           Same as "MAKEFLAGS" as far as makepp is concerned.  If this variable is not blank, then "MAKEFLAGS"
           is ignored.  Sometimes this is useful instead of "MAKEFLAGS" if you have to use both make and makepp,
           and you need to keep the options separate.

       $MAKEPP_CASE_SENSITIVE_FILENAMES
           Makepp will attempt to determine whether its default directory is case sensitive by creating a file
           and then accessing it with a different case.  Usually this works fine, as long as all the files
           you're accessing are on the same file system as your default directory, so you should rarely need to
           use this option.

           If this variable is present in the environment, its value (0 or empty string for false, anything else
           for true) will override makepp's choice.  This variable is mostly useful on Windows, if you want to
           override makepp's default setting.  If you don't treat filenames as case sensitive, then makepp
           converts all filenames to lowercase, which causes occasional difficulties.  (E.g., emacs may will
           open several buffers to the same file.)

           Makepp does not currently support a build across several file systems well, if one is case sensitive
           and the other case insensitive.