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Andre Przywara authored
"-s" is a command line option to the make tool, to suppress normal output, something to the effect of prepending every line with '@' in the Makefile. However with our V={0|1} support, we now print the shortened command line output in any case (even with V=1, in addition to the long line!). Normally -s helps to not miss non-fatal warnings, which tend to scroll out of the window easily. Introduce a new Makefile variable ECHO, to control the shortened output. We only set it in the (current default) V=0 case, and replace every occurence of "@echo" with that variable. When the user specifies "-s", we set ECHO to some magic string which changes the output line into a comment, so the output is suppressed. Beside suppressing every output for "-s", we also avoid the redundant short output when compiling with V=1. This changes the output to: ========== $ make -s PLAT=.... bl31 Built build/.../release/bl31.bin ========== $ make PLAT=.... bl31 ... CC lib/libc/strncmp.c CC lib/libc/strnlen.c ... ========== $ make V=1 PLAT=.... bl31 ... gcc -DDEBUG=0 .... -o build/.../release/libc/strncmp.o gcc -DDEBUG=0 .... -o build/.../release/libc/strnlen.o ... ========== Signed-off-by: Andre Przywara <andre.przywara@arm.com>
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