.. contents:: :local: The Remake Debugger =================== When there problems in running GNU make, most of the time I can figure out what's wrong by switching to ``remake`` and looking at its call stack and extended error information. When that is not sufficient, the ``--trace`` or ``-x`` option many times will fill in the gaps. However there are situations when it is helpful to go deeper. So here and there is a full-fledged debugger built into ``remake``. ``remake`` can do four main kinds of things (plus other things in support of these) to help you catch bugs in the act: * *examine* and query things: See the state of variables, see how they got expanded, where targets are defined, and look a the the state of targets * *stop* at specified places such as targets, or when there is an error. In conjunction with this you can: * *change* the internal state of things as though the Makefile were written differently * *experiment* with Makefile code fragments possibly correcting the effects of one bug and go on to discover another. Although you can use the ``remake`` debugger to debug Makefiles, it can also be used just as a front-end for learning more about Makefiles and how GNU ``make`` or ``remake`` processes a Makefile. .. toctree:: :maxdepth: 2 :caption: Contents: debugger/entry debugger/sessions debugger/syntax debugger/commands