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GNU Make
From dankwiki
.DELETE_ON_ERROR
- Generally, if make fails to build a target, and the target corresponds to a file, you want that file removed.
- Why might this happen? Ctrl-c being pressed during a build. Multiple statements in a build recipe. Memory allocation failure during build. Any number of things.
- By adding .DELETE_ON_ERROR to the Makefile, this becomes the default behavior.
- kill -9'ing make will prevent this from happening! :/
- gcc and some other tools will clean up on error, for some cases. Use .DELETE_ON_ERROR to be safe.
Make and subversion
- After running make in a pristine tree, the output of svn status ought be empty. Use svn:ignore properties to ignore your generated files.
- Most importantly, svn status should not show any entries in the 'M'odified state. This indicates either generated files being checked into source control, or the build process modifying source in-place (the same thing, really)
- If svn:ignore is properly used, the following rule suffices as a project-independent clean target, assuming the presence of xmlstarlet:
svn --xml --no-ignore status | xmlstarlet sel -t -m //entry -i "wc-status[@item='ignored']" -v @path -n | xargs rm -rf