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// file : bpkg/pkg-clean.cli
// license : MIT; see accompanying LICENSE file
include <bpkg/configuration.cli>;
"\section=1"
"\name=bpkg-pkg-clean"
"\summary=clean package"
namespace bpkg
{
{
"<options> <vars> <pkg>",
"\h|SYNOPSIS|
\c{\b{bpkg pkg-clean}|\b{clean} [<options>] [<vars>] <pkg>...\n
\b{bpkg pkg-clean}|\b{clean} [<options>] [<vars>] \b{--all}|\b{-a}}
\h|DESCRIPTION|
The \cb{pkg-clean} command cleans the specified packages (the first form)
or all the held packages (the second form, see \l{bpkg-pkg-status(1)}).
Underneath, this command doesn't do much more than run \cb{b clean}. In
the first form the specified packages must have been previously
configured with \l{bpkg-pkg-build(1)} or \l{bpkg-pkg-configure(1)}.
Additional command line variables (<vars>, normally \cb{config.*}) can be
passed to the build system. Such variables apply to all the specified
packages but can also be specified to only apply to specific packages
using the argument grouping mechanism (see \l{bpkg-argument-grouping(1)}
for details)."
}
class pkg_clean_options: configuration_options
{
"\h|PKG-CLEAN OPTIONS|"
bool --all|-a
{
"Clean all held packages."
}
};
"
\h|DEFAULT OPTIONS FILES|
See \l{bpkg-default-options-files(1)} for an overview of the default
options files. For the \cb{pkg-clean} command the search start directory
is the configuration directory. The following options files are searched
for in each directory and, if found, loaded in the order listed:
\
bpkg.options
bpkg-pkg-clean.options
\
The following \cb{pkg-clean} command options cannot be specified in the
default options files:
\
--directory|-d
\
"
}
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