NAME
cook - a file construction tool
SYNOPSIS
cook [ option... ][
filename... ]
cook -Help
cook -VERSion
DESCRIPTION
The cook program is a tool for
constructing files. It is given a set of files to create, and
instructions detailing how to construct them. In any non-trivial
program there will be prerequisites to performing the actions
necessary to creating any file, such as extraction from a
source-control system. The cook program provides a mechanism
to define these.
When a program is being developed or maintained, the programmer
will typically change one file of several which comprise the
program. The cook program examines the last-modified times
of the files to see when the prerequisites of a file have changed,
implying that the file needs to be recreated as it is logically out
of date.
The cook program also provides a facility for implicit
recipes, allowing users to specify how to form a file with a given
suffix from a file with a different suffix. For example, to create
filename.o from filename.c
Options and filenames may be arbitrarily mixed on the command
line; no processing is done until all options and filenames on the
command line have been scanned.
The cook program will attempt to create the named files
from the recipes given to it. The recipes are contained in a file
called Howto.cook in the currect directory. This file may,
in turn, include other files containing additional recipes.
If no filenames are given on the command line the targets
of the first recipe defined are cooked.
OPTIONS
The valid options for cook are listed below.
Any other options (words on the command line beginning with
`-') will cause a diagnostic message to be issued.
- -Action
-
Execute the commands given in the recipes. This is the default.
- -No_Action
-
Do not execute the commands given in the recipes.
- -Book filename
-
Tells cook to used the named cookbook, rather than the default
``Howto.cook'' file.
- -CAScade
-
This option may be used to enable the use of cascaded ingredients.
This is the default.
- -No_CAScade
-
This option may be used to disable the use of cascaded ingredients.
- -Continue
-
If cooking a target should fail, continue with other recipes for
which the failed target is not an ingredient, directly or
indirectly.
- -No_Continue
-
If cooking a target should fail, cook will exit. This is the
default.
- -Errok
-
When a command is executed, the exit code will be ignored.
- -No_Errok
-
When a command is executed, if the exit code is positive it will be
deemed to fail, and thus the recipe containing it to have failed.
This is the default.
- -FingerPrint
-
When cook examines a file to determine if it has changed, it
uses the last-modified time information available in the file
system. There are times when this is altered, but the file contents
do not actually change. The fingerprinting facility examines the
file contents when it appears to have changed, and compares the old
fingerprint against the present file contents. (See cookfp(1)
for a description of the fingerprinting algorithm.) If the
fingerprint did not change, the last-modified time in the file
system is ignored. Note that this has implications if you are in
the habit of using the touch(1)
command - cook will do nothing until you actually change the
file.
- -No_FingerPrint
-
Do not use fingerprints to supplement the last-modified time file
information. This is the default.
- -FingerPrint_Update
- This option may be used to scan the directory tree below the
current directory and update the file fingerprints. This helps when
you use another tool (such as RCS or ClearCase) which alters the
file but preserves the file's modification time.
- -Force
-
Always perform the actions of recipes, irrespective of the
last-modified times of any of the ingredients. This option is
useful if something beyond the scope of the cookbook has been
modified; for example, a bug fix in a compiler.
- -No_Force
-
Perform the actions of the recipes if any of the ingredients are
logically out of date. This is the default.
- -Help
-
Provide information about how to execute cook on
stdout, and perform no other function.
- -Include filename
-
Search the named directory before the standard places for included
cookbooks. Each directory so named will be scanned in the order
given. The standard places are $HOME/.cook then
/usr/share/cook.
- -Include_Cooked
- This option may be used to require the cooking of files named
on #include-cooked and #include-cooked-nowarn include
lines in cookbooks. The files named will be included, if present.
If the files named need to be updated or created, this will be
done, and then the cookbook re-read. This is the default.
- -No_Include_Cooked
- This option may be used to inhibit the implicit cooking of
files named on #include-cooked and
#include-cooked-nowarn include lines in cookbooks. The files
will be included, if present, but they will not be updated or
created, even if required.
- -Include_Cooked_Warning
- This option enables the warnings about derived dependencies in
derived cookbooks. This is usually the default.
- -No_Include_Cooked_Warning
- This option disables the warnings about derived dependencies in
derived cookbooks.
- -List
-
Causes cook to automatically redirect the stdout and
stderr of the session. Output will continue to come to the
terminal, unless cook is executing in the background. The
name of the file will be the name of the cookbook with any suffix
removed and ".list" appended; this will usually be
Howto.list. This is the default.
- -List filename
-
Causes cook to automatically redirect the stdout and
stderr of the session into the named file. Output will
continue to come to the terminal, unless cook is executing
in the background.
- -No_List
-
No automatic redirection of the output of the session will be made.
- -No_List filename
-
No automatic redirection of the output of the session will be made,
however subsequent -List options will default to listing to
the named file.
- -Meter
-
After each command is executed, print a summary of the command's
CPU usage.
- -No_Meter
-
Do not print a CPU usage summary after each command. This is the
default.
- -Pairs
-
This option may be used to generate a list of pair-wise file
dependencies, similar to lorder(1)
output. This may be used to draw file dependency diagrams. It can
also be useful when debugging cookbooks.
- -PARallel [ number ]
-
- This option may be used to specify the number of parallel
executions threads. The number defaults to 4 if no specific number
of threads is specified. See also the parallel_jobs
variable.
Use of this option on single-processor machines needs to be done
with great care, as it can bring other processing to a complete
halt. Several users doing so simultaneously on a multi-processor
machine will have a similar effect. It is also to rapidly run out
of virtual memory and temporary disk space if the parallel tasks
are complex.
- -No_PARallel
- This option may be used to specify that a single execution
thread is to be used. This is the default.
- -Precious
-
When commands in the body of a recipe fail, do not delete the
targets of the recipe.
- -No_Precious
-
When commands in the body of a recipe fail, delete the targets of
the recipe. This is the default.
- -Reason
-
Two options are provided for tracing the inferences cook
makes when attempting to cook a target. The -Reason option
will cause cook will emit copious amounts of information
about the inferences it is making when cooking targets. This option
may be used when you think cook is acting strangely, or are
just curious.
- -No_Reason
-
This option may be used to cause cook will not emit
information about the inferences it is making when cooking targets.
This is the default.
- -SCript
-
This option may be used to request a shell script be printed on the
standard output. This shell script may be used to construct the
files; it captures many of the semantics of the cookbook. This can
be useful when a project needs to be distributed, and the
recipients do not have cook(1)
installed. It can also be very useful when debugging cookbooks.
- -Silent
-
Do not echo commands before they are executed.
- -No_Silent
-
Echo commands before they are executed. This is the default.
- -STar
-
Emit progress indicators once a second. These progress indicators
include
| +
| Reading the cookbook
|
| -
| Executing a collect function
|
| *
| Building the dependency graph
|
| #
| Walking the dependency graph
|
| @
| Writing fingerprint files. |
- -No_STar
-
Do not emit progress indicators. This is the default.
- -Strip_Dot
-
Remove leading "./" from filenames before attempting to cook them;
applies to all filenames and all recipes. This is the default.
- -No_Strip_Dot
-
Leave leading "./" on filenames while cooking.
- -Tell_Position
-
This option may be used to cause the position of commands (filename
and line number) to be printed along with the command just before
it is executed (provided the -No_Silent option is in force).
- -No_Tell_Position
-
This option may be used to suppress printing the position of
commands (filename and line number) along with the command just
before it is executed. This is the default.
- -Touch
-
Update the last-modified times of the target files, rather than
execute the actions bound to recipes. This can be useful if you
have made a modification to a file that you know will make a system
of files logically out of date, but has no significance; for
example, adding a comment to a widely used include file.
- -No_Touch
-
Execute the actions bound to recipes, rather than update the
last-modified times of the target files. This is the default.
- -TErminal
-
When listing, also send the output stream to the terminal. This is
the default.
- -No_TErminal
-
When listing, do not send the output to the terminal.
- -Time_Adjust
-
This option causes cook to check the last-modified time of
the targets of recipes, and updates them if necessary, to make sure
they are consistent with (younger than) the last-modified times of
the ingredients. This results in more system calls, and can slow
things down on some systems. This correspondes to the
time-adjust recipe flag.
- -No_Time_Adjust
-
Do not update the file last-modified times after performing the
body of a recipe. This is the default. This correspondes to the
no-time-adjust recipe flag.
- -Web
-
This option may be used to request a HTML web page be printed on
the standard output. This web page may be used to document the file
dependencies; it captures many of the semantics of the cookbook. It
can also be very useful when debugging cookbooks.
- name=value
-
Assign the value to the named variable. The value may
contain spaces if you can convince the shell to pass them
through.
All options may be abbreviated; the abbreviation is documented
as the upper case letters, all lower case letters and underscores
(_) are optional. You must use consecutive sequences of optional
letters.
All options are case insensitive, you may type them in upper
case or lower case or a combination of both, case is not important.
For example: the arguments "-help", "-HEL" and "-h" are all
interpreted to mean the -Help option. The argument "-hlp"
will not be understood, because consecutive optional characters
were not supplied.
Options and other command line arguments may be mixed
arbitrarily on the command line.
The GNU long option names are understood. Since all option names
for cook are long, this means ignoring the extra leading
'-'. The "--option=value" convention is
also understood.
EXIT STATUS
The cook command will exit with a status
of 1 on any error. The cook command will only exit with a
status of 0 if there are no errors.
FILES
The following files are used by cook:
- Howto.cook
- This file contains instructions to cook for how to
construct files.
- /usr/share/cook
- This directory contains "system" cookbooks for various tools
and activities.
- .cook.fp
- This text file is used to remember fingerprints between
invokations.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables
are used by cook:
- COOK
- May be set to contain command-line options, changing the
default behaviour of cook. May be overridden by the command
line.
- PAGER
- Use to paginate the output of the -Help and
-VERSion options. Defaults to more(1) if
not set.
- COOK_AUTOMOUNT_POINTS
-
- A colon-separated list of directories which the automounter may
use to mount file systems. Use with extreme care, as this distorts
Cook's idea of the shape of the filesystem.
This feature assumes that paths below the automounter's mount
directory are echoes of paths without it. E.g. When CW]/home
is the trigger, and CW]/tmp_mnt/home is where the on-demand NFS
mount is performed, with CW]/home appearing to processes to be a
symlink.
This is the behavior of the Sun automounter. The AMD automounter
is capable of being configured in this way, though it is not
typical of the examples in the manual. Nor is it typical of the
out-of-the-box Linux AMD configuration in many distributions.
Defauls to ``/tmp_mnt:/a:/.automount'' if not
set.
COPYRIGHT
cook version 2.26
Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996,
1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 Peter
Miller;
All rights reserved.
The cook program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for
details use the 'cook -VERSion License' command. This is
free software and you are welcome to redistribute it under certain
conditions; for details use the 'cook -VERSion License'
command.
AUTHOR
| Peter Miller
| E-Mail:
| millerp@canb.auug.org.au
|
| /\/\*
| WWW:
| http://www.canb.auug.org.au/~millerp/
|