Hello, I'd like to know is there any good way to implement make -s behaivor as a default, 'cos in man make.conf & examplet/etc/make.conf there's no anything about it. In most cases I just don't want to see echo output of make. I've added an alias to .cshrc like this^ alias make make -s \!:1 but I don't know could be there any negativity. Any advices?
On 22.01.2012 07:54, Michael BlackHeart wrote:> Hello, I'd like to know is there any good way to implement make -s > behaivor as a default, 'cos in man make.conf & examplet/etc/make.conf > there's no anything about it. In most cases I just don't want to see > echo output of make. I've added an alias to .cshrc like this^ > > alias make make -s \!:1 > > but I don't know could be there any negativity. Any advices?You can set MAKEFLAGS=-s in your shell environment, or add -s to whatever other value you're using for MAKEFLAGS. IMHO, this would be a fine thing in a universe where everything would always go right; in our own universe, I doubt that this is a good idea because when things do go wrong you won't have any context for it. -- Clifton -- Clifton Royston -- cliftonr@iandicomputing.com / cliftonr@volcano.org Custom programming, network design, systems and network consulting services
On 22.01.2012 03:54, Michael BlackHeart wrote:> Hello, I'd like to know is there any good way to implement make -s > behaivor as a default, 'cos in man make.conf & examplet/etc/make.conf > there's no anything about it. In most cases I just don't want to see > echo output of make. I've added an alias to .cshrc like this^ > > alias make make -s \!:1 > > but I don't know could be there any negativity. Any advices?You can set MAKEFLAGS=-s in your shell environment, or add -s to the current value of MAKEFLAGS if you have one. That should work. IMHO this would be good practice only in a universe where everything would always work right. In our own, this means anytime something goes wrong, you'll have no context for it. If you don't mind having to change flags and rerun whatever make command failed, when something fails, to find out what went wrong where, it's your call. -- Clifton -- Clifton Royston -- cliftonr@iandicomputing.com / cliftonr@volcano.org Custom programming, network design, systems and network consulting services