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= Rake Command Line Usage

Rake is invoked from the command line using:

    % rake [options ...]  [VAR=VALUE ...]  [targets ...]

Options are:

[<tt><em>name</em>=<em>value</em></tt>]
    Set the environment variable <em>name</em> to <em>value</em>
    during the execution of the <b>rake</b> command.  You can access
    the value by using ENV['<em>name</em>'].

[<tt>--all</tt> (-A)]
    Used in combination with the -T and -D options, will force
    those options to show all the tasks, even the ones without comments.

[<tt>--backtrace</tt>{=_output_} (-n)]
    Enable a full backtrace (i.e. like --trace, but without the task
    tracing details). The _output_ parameter is optional, but if
    specified it controls where the backtrace output is sent. If
    _output_ is <tt>stdout</tt>, then backtrace output is directed to
    standard output. If _output_ is <tt>stderr</tt>, or if it is
    missing, then the backtrace output is sent to standard error.

[<tt>--comments</tt>]
    Used in combination with the -W options to force the output to
    contain commented options only. This is the reverse of
    <tt>--all</tt>.

[<tt>--describe</tt> _pattern_ (-D)]
    Describe the tasks (matching optional PATTERN), then exit.

[<tt>--dry-run</tt> (-n)]
    Do a dry run.  Print the tasks invoked and executed, but do not
    actually execute any of the actions.

[<tt>--execute</tt> _code_ (-e)]
    Execute some Ruby code and exit.

[<tt>--execute-print</tt> _code_ (-p)]
    Execute some Ruby code, print the result, and exit.

[<tt>--execute-continue</tt> _code_ (-E)]
    Execute some Ruby code, then continue with normal task processing.

[<tt>--help</tt>  (-H)]
    Display some help text and exit.

[<tt>--jobs</tt> _number_  (-j)]

    Specifies the maximum number of concurrent threads allowed. Rake
    will allocate threads as needed up to this maximum number.

    If omitted, Rake will attempt to estimate the number of CPUs on
    the system and add 4 to that number.

    The concurrent threads are used to execute the <tt>multitask</tt>
    prerequisites. Also see the <tt>-m</tt> option which turns all
    tasks into multitasks.

    Sample values:
       (no -j)   : Allow up to (# of CPUs + 4) number of threads
       --jobs    : Allow unlimited number of threads
       --jobs=1  : Allow only one thread (the main thread)
       --jobs=16 : Allow up to 16 concurrent threads

[<tt>--job-stats</tt> _level_]

    Display job statistics at the completion of the run. By default,
    this will display the requested number of active threads (from the
    -j options) and the maximum number of threads in play at any given
    time.

    If the optional _level_ is <tt>history</tt>, then a complete trace
    of task history will be displayed on standard output.

[<tt>--libdir</tt> _directory_  (-I)]
    Add _directory_ to the list of directories searched for require.

[<tt>--multitask</tt> (-m)]
    Treat all tasks as multitasks. ('make/drake' semantics)

[<tt>--nosearch</tt>  (-N)]
    Do not search for a Rakefile in parent directories.

[<tt>--prereqs</tt>  (-P)]
    Display a list of all tasks and their immediate prerequisites.

[<tt>--quiet</tt> (-q)]
    Do not echo commands from FileUtils.

[<tt>--rakefile</tt> _filename_ (-f)]
    Use _filename_ as the name of the rakefile. The default rakefile
    names are +rakefile+ and +Rakefile+ (with +rakefile+ taking
    precedence). If the rakefile is not found in the current
    directory, +rake+ will search parent directories for a match. The
    directory where the Rakefile is found will become the current
    directory for the actions executed in the Rakefile.

[<tt>--rakelibdir</tt> _rakelibdir_ (-R)]
    Auto-import any .rake files in RAKELIBDIR. (default is 'rakelib')

[<tt>--require</tt> _name_ (-r)]
    Require _name_ before executing the Rakefile.

[<tt>--rules</tt>]
    Trace the rules resolution.

[<tt>--silent (-s)</tt>]
    Like --quiet, but also suppresses the 'in directory' announcement.

[<tt>--suppress-backtrace _pattern_ </tt>]
    Line matching the regular expression _pattern_ will be removed
    from the backtrace output. Note that the --backtrace option is the
    full backtrace without these lines suppressed.

[<tt>--system</tt> (-g)]
    Use the system wide (global) rakefiles. The project Rakefile is
    ignored. By default, the system wide rakefiles are used only if no
    project Rakefile is found. On Unix-like system, the system wide
    rake files are located in $HOME/.rake. On a windows system they
    are stored in $APPDATA/Rake.

[<tt>--no-system</tt> (-G)]
    Use the project level Rakefile, ignoring the system-wide (global)
    rakefiles.

[<tt>--tasks</tt> <em>pattern</em> (-T)]
    Display a list of the major tasks and their comments.  Comments
    are defined using the "desc" command.  If a pattern is given, then
    only tasks matching the pattern are displayed.

[<tt>--trace</tt>{=_output_} (-t)]
    Turn on invoke/execute tracing. Also enable full backtrace on
    errors. The _output_ parameter is optional, but if specified it
    controls where the trace output is sent. If _output_ is
    <tt>stdout</tt>, then trace output is directed to standard output.
    If _output_ is <tt>stderr</tt>, or if it is missing, then trace
    output is sent to standard error.

[<tt>--verbose</tt> (-v)]
    Echo the Sys commands to standard output.

[<tt>--version</tt> (-V)]
    Display the program version and exit.

[<tt>--where</tt> <em>pattern</em> (-W)]
    Display tasks that match <em>pattern</em> and the file and line
    number where the task is defined. By default this option will
    display all tasks, not just the tasks that have descriptions.

[<tt>--no-deprecation-warnings</tt> (-X)]
    Do not display the deprecation warnings.

In addition, any command line option of the form
<em>VAR</em>=<em>VALUE</em> will be added to the environment hash
<tt>ENV</tt> and may be tested in the Rakefile.

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