83 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
83 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
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# NAME
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redo-log - display log messages from previous builds
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# SYNOPSIS
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redo-log [options...] [targets...]
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# DESCRIPTION
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When redo runs, it captures the standard error (stderr) output from the
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build activity for each target, and saves it for later. When a target is
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rebuilt, the new logs replace the old logs for that target. redo-log
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prints the log output for any set of targets.
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# OPTIONS
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-r, --recursive
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: if the requested targets cause any dependencies to be built, recursively
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show the logs from those dependencies as well. (And if those
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dependencies build further dependencies, also show those logs, and so on.)
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-u, --unchanged
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: show messages even for dependencies that were unchanged (did not need to be
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rebuilt). To do this, we show the logs for the *most recent* build of
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each affected dependency. Usually this is used with `-r`.
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-f, --follow
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: if a build is currently running for any of the requested targets or
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their dependencies, follow the logs (like `tail -f`) until the build
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finishes.
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--no-details
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: display *only* the messages from redo itself, not the other messages
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produced by build scripts. Generally this gives you a list of which
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targets were built, but not detailed logs, warnings, or errors.
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--no-status
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: don't display the running build status at the bottom of the screen.
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(Unless this option is specified, the status line will be enabled
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if using --follow, if stderr is a terminal.) If stderr is *not* a
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terminal, you can force enable the status line using --status.
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--no-pretty
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: display "raw" redo log lines (@@REDO events) rather than using a
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human-readable format. The default is --pretty.
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--no-color
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: when using --pretty and writing to a terminal, colorize the output to
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make results stand out more clearly. If not writing to a terminal, you
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can use --color to force colorized output.
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--debug-locks
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: print messages about acquiring, releasing, and waiting
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on locks. Because redo can be highly parallelized,
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one instance may end up waiting for a target to be
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built by some other instance before it can continue.
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If you suspect this is causing troubles, use this
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option to see which instance is waiting and when.
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--debug-pids
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: add the process id of the particular redo instance to each
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output message. This makes it easier to figure out
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which sub-instance of redo is doing what.
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# REDO
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Part of the `redo`(1) suite.
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# CREDITS
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The original concept for `redo` was created by D. J.
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Bernstein and documented on his web site
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(http://cr.yp.to/redo.html). This independent implementation
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was created by Avery Pennarun and you can find its source
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code at http://github.com/apenwarr/redo.
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# SEE ALSO
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`redo`(1)
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