make -b does what?
Ray Ward
ray at ctbilbo.UUCP
Fri Feb 23 11:25:27 AEST 1990
In article <1990Feb22.042021.4936 at phri.nyu.edu> roy at phri.nyu.edu (Roy Smith) writes:
>lois at hpfcdc.HP.COM (Lois Gerber) writes:
>> This question is directed at OLD (and I mean OLD) Unix gurus :
>> Can anyone explain to me clearly what the -b option is for in make?
> Beats the hell out of me. I can't even find make in my (6th
>edition) Unix manual at all. Did I get a defective manual?
I would suspect the -b came in somewhere around System III. Steve Talbott's
_Managing Projects with Make_ ( O'Reilly and Assoc. 1-800-338-NUTS )
describes the option:
The -b option is, in most implementations, on by default. It
assures backward compatibility with earlier versions of _make_,
so that old description files continue to work.
I have no idea what the old description file format differences were.
--
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=-=-=-=- There _are_ simple answers, just no _easy_ ones. -- R.R. -=-=-=-=
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