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+<!--
+
+ Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 The SCons Foundation
+
+ Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
+ a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
+ "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
+ without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
+ distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
+ permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
+ the following conditions:
+
+ The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
+ in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
+
+ THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
+ KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE
+ WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
+ NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
+ LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
+ OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
+ WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
+
+-->
+
+ <para>
+
+ There are two occasions when &SCons; will,
+ by default, remove target files.
+ The first is when &SCons; determines that
+ an target file needs to be rebuilt
+ and removes the existing version of the target
+ before executing
+ The second is when &SCons; is invoked with the
+ <literal>-c</literal> option to "clean"
+ a tree of its built targets.
+
+ These behaviours can be suppressed with the
+ &Precious; and &NoClean; functions, respectively.
+
+ </para>
+
+ <section>
+ <title>Preventing target removal during build: the &Precious; Function</title>
+
+ <para>
+
+ By default, &SCons; removes targets before building them.
+ Sometimes, however, this is not what you want.
+ For example, you may want to update a library incrementally,
+ not by having it deleted and then rebuilt from all
+ of the constituent object files.
+ In such cases, you can use the
+ &Precious; method to prevent
+ &SCons; from removing the target before it is built:
+
+ </para>
+
+ <scons_example name="precious-ex1">
+ <file name="SConstruct" printme="1">
+ env = Environment(RANLIBCOM='')
+ lib = env.Library('foo', ['f1.c', 'f2.c', 'f3.c'])
+ env.Precious(lib)
+ </file>
+ <file name="f1.c">
+ int f1() { }
+ </file>
+ <file name="f2.c">
+ int f2() { }
+ </file>
+ <file name="f3.c">
+ int f3() { }
+ </file>
+ </scons_example>
+
+ <para>
+
+ Although the output doesn't look any different,
+ &SCons; does not, in fact,
+ delete the target library before rebuilding it:
+
+ </para>
+
+ <scons_output example="precious-ex1">
+ <scons_output_command>scons -Q</scons_output_command>
+ </scons_output>
+
+ <para>
+
+ &SCons; will, however, still delete files marked as &Precious;
+ when the <literal>-c</literal> option is used.
+
+ </para>
+
+ </section>
+
+ <section>
+ <title>Preventing target removal during clean: the &NoClean; Function</title>
+
+ <para>
+
+ By default, &SCons; removes all built targets when invoked
+ with the <literal>-c</literal> option to clean a source tree
+ of built targets.
+ Sometimes, however, this is not what you want.
+ For example, you may want to remove only intermediate generated files
+ (such as object files),
+ but leave the final targets
+ (the libraries)
+ untouched.
+
+ In such cases, you can use the &NoClean; method to prevent &SCons;
+ from removing a target during a clean:
+
+ </para>
+
+ <scons_example name="noclean-ex1">
+ <file name="SConstruct" printme="1">
+ env = Environment(RANLIBCOM='')
+ lib = env.Library('foo', ['f1.c', 'f2.c', 'f3.c'])
+ env.NoClean(lib)
+ </file>
+ <file name="f1.c">
+ int f1() { }
+ </file>
+ <file name="f2.c">
+ int f2() { }
+ </file>
+ <file name="f3.c">
+ int f3() { }
+ </file>
+ </scons_example>
+
+ <para>
+
+ Notice that the <filename>libfoo.a</filename>
+ is not listed as a removed file:
+
+ </para>
+
+ <scons_output example="noclean-ex1">
+ <scons_output_command>scons -Q</scons_output_command>
+ <scons_output_command>scons -c</scons_output_command>
+ </scons_output>
+
+ </section>
+
+ <section>
+ <title>Removing additional files during clean: the &Clean; Function</title>
+
+ <para>
+
+ There may be additional files that you want removed
+ when the <literal>-c</literal> option is used,
+ but which &SCons; doesn't know about
+ because they're not normal target files.
+ For example, perhaps a command you invoke
+ creates a log file as
+ part of building the target file you want.
+ You would like the log file cleaned,
+ but you don't want to have to teach
+ SCons that the command
+ "builds" two files.
+
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+
+ You can use the &Clean; function to arrange for additional files
+ to be removed when the <literal>-c</literal> option is used.
+ Notice, however, that the &Clean; function takes two arguments,
+ and the <emphasis>second</emphasis> argument
+ is the name of the additional file you want cleaned
+ (<filename>foo.log</filename> in this example):
+
+ </para>
+
+ <scons_example name="clean-ex1">
+ <file name="S" printme="1">
+ t = Command('foo.out', 'foo.in', 'build -o $TARGET $SOURCE')
+ Clean(t, 'foo.log')
+ </file>
+ <file name="SConstruct">
+ env = DefaultEnvironment()
+ import os
+ env['ENV']['PATH'] = env['ENV']['PATH'] + os.pathsep + os.getcwd()
+ SConscript('S')
+ </file>
+ <file name="foo.in">
+ foo.in
+ </file>
+ <file name="foo.log">
+ foo.log
+ </file>
+ <file name="build" chmod="0755">
+ cat $3 > $2
+ </file>
+ </scons_example>
+
+ <para>
+
+ The first argument is the target with which you want
+ the cleaning of this additional file associated.
+ In the above example,
+ we've used the return value from the
+ &Command; function,
+ which represents the
+ <filename>foo.out</filename>
+ target.
+ Now whenever the
+ <filename>foo.out</filename> target is cleaned
+ by the <literal>-c</literal> option,
+ the <filename>foo.log</filename> file
+ will be removed as well:
+
+ </para>
+
+ <scons_output example="clean-ex1">
+ <scons_output_command>scons -Q</scons_output_command>
+ <scons_output_command>scons -Q -c</scons_output_command>
+ </scons_output>
+
+ </section>