From bed66820ff6cf2fd7be405be29192e779df76412 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Lo=C3=AFc=20Hoguin?= Date: Wed, 30 Dec 2015 01:24:01 +0100 Subject: Update user guide --- guide/building.html | 2 +- guide/index.html | 2 +- 2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/guide/building.html b/guide/building.html index ee6cf1e..2c9ad09 100644 --- a/guide/building.html +++ b/guide/building.html @@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ building the application itself, unless of course if there’s no application to begin with.

To generate the release, make will generally suffice with a normal Erlang.mk. A separate target is however available, and will take care of building the release, after building -the application and all dependencies:

$ make rel

Consult the Releases chapter for more +the application and all dependencies:

$ make rel

Consult the Releases chapter for more information about what releases are and how they are generated.

6.3. Application resource file

When building your application, Erlang.mk will generate the application resource file. This file is mandatory for all Erlang applications and is diff --git a/guide/index.html b/guide/index.html index 7615dd9..c152616 100644 --- a/guide/index.html +++ b/guide/index.html @@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ div.navfooter{margin-bottom:1em}

-

Erlang.mk User Guide

Loïc Hoguin


Table of Contents

1. Installation
1.1. On Unix
1.2. On Windows
2. Getting started
2.1. Creating a folder for your project
2.2. Downloading Erlang.mk
2.3. Getting started with OTP applications
2.4. Getting started with OTP libraries
2.5. Getting started with OTP releases
2.6. Using spaces instead of tabs
2.7. Using templates
2.8. Getting help
3. Overview
3.1. Building your project
3.2. Exploring the package index
3.3. Generating documentation
3.4. Running tests
3.5. Need more?
4. Updating Erlang.mk
4.1. Initial bootstrap
4.2. Updating
4.3. Customizing the build
5. Limitations
5.1. Erlang must be available
5.2. Spaces in path
5.3. Dependency tracking and modification times
I. Code
6. Building
6.1. How to build
6.2. What to build
6.3. Application resource file
6.4. Automatic application resource file values
6.5. File formats
6.6. Compilation options
6.7. Cold and hot builds
6.8. Dependency tracking
6.9. Generating Erlang source
6.10. Cleaning
7. Packages and dependencies
7.1. Searching packages
7.2. Adding dependencies to your project
7.3. How deps are fetched and built
7.4. Ignoring unwanted dependencies
7.5. Dependencies directory
7.6. Dependencies local to the repository
7.7. Repositories with no application at the root level
7.8. Autopatch
7.9. Skipping deps
8. NIFs and port drivers
8.1. C source code location and Erlang environment
8.2. Using a custom Makefile
8.3. Using Erlang.mk directly
9. Releases
9.1. Setup
9.2. Configuration
9.3. Generating the release
9.4. Running the release
10. Escripts
11. Compatibility with other build tools
11.1. Rebar projects as Erlang.mk dependencies
11.2. Erlang.mk projects as Rebar dependencies
II. Documentation
12. Asciidoc documentation
13. EDoc comments
III. Tests
14. Erlang shell
14.1. Configuration
14.2. Usage
15. EUnit
15.1. Writing tests
15.2. Configuration
15.3. Usage
16. Common Test
16.1. Writing tests
16.2. Configuration
16.3. Usage
17. Property based testing
18. Code coverage
19. Continuous integration
20. Dialyzer
20.1. How it works
20.2. Configuration
20.3. Usage
21. Xref
IV. Third-party plugins
22. External plugins
22.1. Loading all plugins from a dependency
22.2. Loading one plugin from a dependency
22.3. Writing external plugins
V. About Erlang.mk
23. Why Erlang.mk
23.1. Erlang.mk is fast
23.2. Erlang.mk gives you the full power of Unix
23.3. Erlang.mk is a text file
23.4. Erlang.mk can manage Erlang itself
23.5. Erlang.mk can do more than Erlang
23.6. Erlang.mk integrates nicely in Make and Automake projects
24. Short history
24.1. Before Erlang.mk
24.2. Lifetime of the project
25. Contributing
25.1. Priorities
25.2. Bugs
25.3. Code
25.4. Packages
25.5. Documentation
25.6. Feature requests
+

Erlang.mk User Guide

Loïc Hoguin


Table of Contents

1. Installation
1.1. On Unix
1.2. On Windows
2. Getting started
2.1. Creating a folder for your project
2.2. Downloading Erlang.mk
2.3. Getting started with OTP applications
2.4. Getting started with OTP libraries
2.5. Getting started with OTP releases
2.6. Using spaces instead of tabs
2.7. Using templates
2.8. Getting help
3. Overview
3.1. Building your project
3.2. Exploring the package index
3.3. Generating documentation
3.4. Running tests
3.5. Need more?
4. Updating Erlang.mk
4.1. Initial bootstrap
4.2. Updating
4.3. Customizing the build
5. Limitations
5.1. Erlang must be available
5.2. Spaces in path
5.3. Dependency tracking and modification times
I. Code
6. Building
6.1. How to build
6.2. What to build
6.3. Application resource file
6.4. Automatic application resource file values
6.5. File formats
6.6. Compilation options
6.7. Cold and hot builds
6.8. Dependency tracking
6.9. Generating Erlang source
6.10. Cleaning
7. Packages and dependencies
7.1. Searching packages
7.2. Adding dependencies to your project
7.3. How deps are fetched and built
7.4. Ignoring unwanted dependencies
7.5. Dependencies directory
7.6. Dependencies local to the repository
7.7. Repositories with no application at the root level
7.8. Autopatch
7.9. Skipping deps
8. NIFs and port drivers
8.1. C source code location and Erlang environment
8.2. Using a custom Makefile
8.3. Using Erlang.mk directly
9. Releases
9.1. Setup
9.2. Configuration
9.3. Generating the release
9.4. Running the release
10. Escripts
11. Compatibility with other build tools
11.1. Rebar projects as Erlang.mk dependencies
11.2. Erlang.mk projects as Rebar dependencies
II. Documentation
12. Asciidoc documentation
13. EDoc comments
III. Tests
14. Erlang shell
14.1. Configuration
14.2. Usage
15. EUnit
15.1. Writing tests
15.2. Configuration
15.3. Usage
16. Common Test
16.1. Writing tests
16.2. Configuration
16.3. Usage
17. Property based testing
18. Code coverage
19. Continuous integration
20. Dialyzer
20.1. How it works
20.2. Configuration
20.3. Usage
21. Xref
IV. Third-party plugins
22. External plugins
22.1. Loading all plugins from a dependency
22.2. Loading one plugin from a dependency
22.3. Writing external plugins
V. About Erlang.mk
23. Why Erlang.mk
23.1. Erlang.mk is fast
23.2. Erlang.mk gives you the full power of Unix
23.3. Erlang.mk is a text file
23.4. Erlang.mk can manage Erlang itself
23.5. Erlang.mk can do more than Erlang
23.6. Erlang.mk integrates nicely in Make and Automake projects
24. Short history
24.1. Before Erlang.mk
24.2. Lifetime of the project
25. Contributing
25.1. Priorities
25.2. Bugs
25.3. Code
25.4. Packages
25.5. Documentation
25.6. Feature requests
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