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author | Mike Buland <eichlan@xagasoft.com> | 2012-11-08 21:43:43 +0000 |
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committer | Mike Buland <eichlan@xagasoft.com> | 2012-11-08 21:43:43 +0000 |
commit | 0fff468e562ffedc4b671b62edba14ef94e1fbfc (patch) | |
tree | 2a4049b090e0d97f8ce5d4777bdcbeb2cb6d06b2 /docs | |
parent | c5d1304f04273b579e00f967ec564a8de3ea0e69 (diff) | |
download | build-0fff468e562ffedc4b671b62edba14ef94e1fbfc.tar.gz build-0fff468e562ffedc4b671b62edba14ef94e1fbfc.tar.bz2 build-0fff468e562ffedc4b671b62edba14ef94e1fbfc.tar.xz build-0fff468e562ffedc4b671b62edba14ef94e1fbfc.zip |
More documentation.
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/build-manual.tex | 73 |
1 files changed, 72 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/docs/build-manual.tex b/docs/build-manual.tex index a85c20e..49be977 100644 --- a/docs/build-manual.tex +++ b/docs/build-manual.tex | |||
@@ -100,12 +100,81 @@ Targets can contain the following special keywords: | |||
100 | specified then the list of inputs will be used to generate implicit targets | 100 | specified then the list of inputs will be used to generate implicit targets |
101 | to satisfy dependancies. | 101 | to satisfy dependancies. |
102 | \item[requires] \hfill \\ | 102 | \item[requires] \hfill \\ |
103 | \item[profile] \hfill \\ | 103 | Requires works just like input, except that the items here will not be added |
104 | to the list of inputs. They will be added as dependancies to figure out | ||
105 | when this target needs to be rebuilt, but will not be listed as inputs. | ||
106 | This is handy for things like libraries, datafiles, et cetera. | ||
104 | \item[rule] \hfill \\ | 107 | \item[rule] \hfill \\ |
108 | You can optionally specify a single rule name by string. This rule will be | ||
109 | applied to this target before processing and used to provide the display, | ||
110 | profiles, and potentially additionally inputs and requirements. Rules can | ||
111 | also add additional tags. | ||
105 | \item[tag] \hfill \\ | 112 | \item[tag] \hfill \\ |
113 | You can specify any number of tags. These can be used to group targets | ||
114 | together to find them easily for use in actions and other places. You can | ||
115 | use the handy targets() function to find all targets that match a given tag. | ||
106 | \item[display] \hfill \\ | 116 | \item[display] \hfill \\ |
117 | You can optionally specify a string that will be displayed while this | ||
118 | action is being processed. If this action has a rule set or was implicitly | ||
119 | generated then the display name is set from the rule name. If a target is | ||
120 | explicit and does not have a rule then the default is an empty string. | ||
121 | \item[profile] \hfill \\ | ||
122 | Profiles are in actuality scripts that handle the real work of processing | ||
123 | a target. Each target can have multiple profiles, and they can have any | ||
124 | name but the names "build" and "clean" have special meaning and life is | ||
125 | much easier if you use them. You can specify any number of profiles with | ||
126 | any name, another common name is "install". | ||
107 | \end{description} | 127 | \end{description} |
108 | 128 | ||
129 | \subsection{Explicit Target Example With Rule} | ||
130 | \begin{lstlisting} | ||
131 | target "program" | ||
132 | { | ||
133 | input ["input1.cpp", "input2.cpp", "input3.cpp"]; | ||
134 | rule "exe"; | ||
135 | tag "programs"; | ||
136 | display "awesome exe"; | ||
137 | requires "library.a"; | ||
138 | } | ||
139 | \end{lstlisting} | ||
140 | This example shows every option listed above except for profile. | ||
141 | |||
142 | \subsection{Profiles} | ||
143 | Each profile is basically just a script that is run when the target is | ||
144 | processed. Unlike other build systems this is not a shell script, but build | ||
145 | script. You can use any variables, functions, or constructs that you can use | ||
146 | anywhere else. Very often these will use the execute() function to run | ||
147 | commands. | ||
148 | |||
149 | There is an extra property that can be set in any profile, and that's condition. | ||
150 | Specifying a condition will allow you to change how build decides when it's | ||
151 | appropriate to process that target in that profile. There are four builtin | ||
152 | conditions: always, never, filetime, and fileexists. In the future it may also | ||
153 | be possible to use a user-defined function as a condition. | ||
154 | |||
155 | |||
156 | \subsection{Explicit Target Example Without Rule} | ||
157 | \begin{lstlisting} | ||
158 | target "datafile.zip" | ||
159 | { | ||
160 | input files("data/*"); | ||
161 | tag "datafile"; | ||
162 | display "zip"; | ||
163 | profile "build" | ||
164 | { | ||
165 | condition filetime; | ||
166 | execute("zip -u ${OUTPUT} ${INPUT}"); | ||
167 | } | ||
168 | profile "clean" | ||
169 | { | ||
170 | condition fileexists; | ||
171 | unlink( OUTPUT ); | ||
172 | } | ||
173 | } | ||
174 | \end{lstlisting} | ||
175 | |||
176 | This example shows you how to build and clean a target that is a zipfile from | ||
177 | it's component pieces. | ||
109 | 178 | ||
110 | \section{Actions} | 179 | \section{Actions} |
111 | Actions are the primary interface to build scripts from the command line, when | 180 | Actions are the primary interface to build scripts from the command line, when |
@@ -131,4 +200,6 @@ action "default" | |||
131 | This is as basic as it gets, this example will cause build to process the | 200 | This is as basic as it gets, this example will cause build to process the |
132 | target "myprogram" using the profile "build". | 201 | target "myprogram" using the profile "build". |
133 | 202 | ||
203 | |||
204 | |||
134 | \end{document} | 205 | \end{document} |