Make apenwarr/redo installable on windows and work with uv tool install
This accidentally made output look different with --no-log vs with normal redo-log output, because redo-log has a -u option while plain redo does not. (This is on purpose. When running redo, you only want to see the things that actually happened, so it never passes -u to the auto-launched redo-log instance. But when reviewing logs later, you might want to look at the past logs from building a component that was unchanged in the most recent run.) |
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|---|---|---|
| bin | ||
| contrib/bash_completion.d | ||
| docs | ||
| minimal | ||
| redo | ||
| redoconf | ||
| t | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .pylintrc | ||
| all.do | ||
| clean.do | ||
| do | ||
| install.do | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| Makefile | ||
| MANIFEST.in | ||
| mkdocs.yml | ||
| README.md | ||
| setup.py | ||
| test.do | ||
redo - a recursive build system
Smaller, easier, more powerful, and more reliable than make.
This is an implementation of Daniel J. Bernstein's redo build system. He never released his version, so other people have implemented different variants based on his published specification.
This version, sometimes called apenwarr/redo, is probably the most advanced one, including parallel builds, improved logging, extensive automated tests, and helpful debugging features.
To build and test redo, run ./do -j10 test. To install it, run
DESTDIR=/tmp/testinstall PREFIX=/usr/local ./do -j10 install.
- View the documentation via readthedocs.org
- Visit the source code on github
- Discussions and support via the
mailing list (archives).
You can subscribe by sending any email message to
redo-list+subscribe@googlegroups.com(note the plus sign).