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MAKE.CONF
Section: Portage (5)Updated: Feb 2016
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NAME
make.conf - custom settings for PortageSYNOPSIS
/etc/make.conf and /etc/portage/make.confDESCRIPTION
This file contains various variables that are used by Portage. The file has a
newline-delimited list of <key>=<value> pairs (see the default file for
examples) which are accessible from the environment of ebuilds. It supports
simple shell-like expansion of the form var="${var}", the source
keyword and variable substitution, but not some of the more advanced BASH
features like arrays and special parameter expansions. For more details, see
the Simple lexical analysis documentation:
https://docs.python.org/3/library/shlex.html. Note that if you source
files, they need to be in the same shlex syntax for portage to read them.
If make.conf is a directory, then all the files in that directory will
be sorted in ascending alphabetical order by file name and summed
together as if it were a single file.
Portage will check the currently-defined environment variables
first for any settings. If no environment settings are found,
Portage then checks the make.conf files. Both /etc/make.conf and
/etc/portage/make.conf are checked (if present), and settings from
/etc/portage/make.conf will override settings from /etc/make.conf.
If no setting is found in the make.conf files, Portage checks
make.globals. If no
setting is found there, the profile's default setting is grabbed
from /etc/portage/make.profile/make.defaults. Please note that all user
settings should be made in the environment or in the make.conf
files, which are intended to be customized by the user.
Exceptions are incremental variables such as USE, CONFIG_PROTECT*,
and ACCEPT_KEYWORDS. Incremental variables are propagated down from
make.defaults to make.globals to make.conf to the environment
settings. Clearing these variables requires a clear-all as in:
export USE="-*"
In order to create per-package environment settings, refer to
package.env in portage(5).
VARIABLES
- ACCEPT_CHOSTS = [space delimited list of CHOST values]
-
Specifies acceptable CHOST values. Regular
expression syntax is supported, so it is necessary to escape
CHOST characters if they have special meaning in regular expressions.
Defaults to the value of $CHOST. - ACCEPT_KEYWORDS = [space delimited list of KEYWORDS]
-
Enable testing of ebuilds that have not yet been deemed 'stable'. Users
of the 'x86' architecture would set this to '~x86' while ppc users would
set this to '~ppc'. This is an incremental variable. Only define a
~arch.
Defaults to the value of $ARCH. - ACCEPT_LICENSE = [space delimited list of licenses or groups]
-
This variable is used to mask packages based on licensing restrictions. It
may contain both license and group names, where group names are prefixed
with the '@' symbol. License groups are defined in the license_groups
file (see portage(5)). In addition to license and group names, the
* and -* wildcard tokens are also supported. Refer to GLEP 23
for further information:
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/GLEP:23.
Defaults to the value of * -@EULA.
Examples:# Only accept licenses in the FREE license group (i.e. Free Software) ACCEPT_LICENSE="-* @FREE" # As before, but exclude the "Artistic" license ACCEPT_LICENSE="-* @FREE -Artistic" # Accept any license except those in the EULA license group (default) ACCEPT_LICENSE="* -@EULA"
- ACCEPT_PROPERTIES = [space delimited list of properties]
-
This variable is used to mask packages based on PROPERTIES restrictions.
In addition to property names, the * and -* wildcard tokens are
also supported. This variable can be temporarily overridden using the
--accept-properties option of emerge(1).
See ebuild(5) for more information about PROPERTIES.
Defaults to the value of *.
Examples:# Accept any properties ACCEPT_PROPERTIES="*" # Accept any properties except the "interactive" property ACCEPT_PROPERTIES="* -interactive"
- ACCEPT_RESTRICT = [space delimited list of RESTRICT tokens]
-
This variable is used to mask packages based on RESTRICT tokens.
In addition to RESTRICT tokens, the * and -* wildcard tokens are
also supported. This variable can be temporarily overridden using the
--accept-restrict option of emerge(1).
See ebuild(5) for more information about RESTRICT.
Defaults to the value of *.
Examples:# Accept any restrict tokens ACCEPT_RESTRICT="*" # Accept any tokens except "bindist" ACCEPT_RESTRICT="* -bindist"
- BINPKG_COMPRESS = "compression"
-
This variable is used to determine the compression used for binary
packages. Supported settings and compression algorithms are: bzip2, gzip,
lz4, lzip, lzop, xz, zstd.
Defaults to "bzip2".
Example:# Set it to use lz4: BINPKG_COMPRESS="lz4"
- BINPKG_COMPRESS_FLAGS = "arguments for compression command"
-
This variable is used to add additional arguments to the compression command
selected by BINPKG_COMPRESS.
Defaults to "".
Example:# Set it to use compression level 9: BINPKG_COMPRESS_FLAGS="-9"
- CBUILD
- This variable is passed by the ebuild scripts to the configure as --build=${CBUILD} only if it is defined. Do not set this yourself unless you know what you are doing.
- CCACHE_DIR = [path]
-
Defines the location of the ccache working directory. See the ccache(1)
man page for more information.
Defaults to /var/tmp/ccache - CCACHE_SIZE = "size"
- This controls the space use limitations for ccache. See the -M flag in the ccache(1) man page for more information.
- CFLAGS CXXFLAGS
-
Use these variables to set the desired optimization/CPU instruction settings
for applications that you compile. These two variables are passed to the C
and C++ compilers, respectively. (CXX is used to refer to the C++ compiler
within many buildsystems.) Nearly all ebuild files will take advantage
of your custom settings, resulting in a Gentoo Linux that is fully customized
to your specifications. Please use sane settings as some packages will fail to
compile/run if the optimizations are too extreme.
For more information, see the Invoking GCC section of the gcc manual:
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/ - CHOST
-
This variable is passed by the ebuild scripts to the configure
step as --host=${CHOST}. This way you can force the build-host.
For more information:
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-6.1.0/gcc/Submodel-Options.html
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-5.4.0/gcc/Submodel-Options.html
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.9.3/gcc/Submodel-Options.html - CLEAN_DELAY = integer
-
Determines how long the countdown delay will be after running
`emerge --unmerge`.
Defaults to 5 seconds. - COLLISION_IGNORE = [space delimited list of fnmatch patterns]
-
This variable allows the user to disable collision-protect and
protect-owned for specific fnmatch(3) patterns. For backward
compatibility, directories that are listed without a fnmatch pattern will
automatically have /* appended to them.
Defaults to "/lib/modules/* *.py[co]". - CONFIG_PROTECT = [space delimited list of files and/or directories]
- All files and/or directories that are defined here will have "config file protection" enabled for them. See the CONFIGURATION FILES section of emerge(1) for more information.
- CONFIG_PROTECT_MASK = [space delimited list of files and/or directories]
- All files and/or directories that are defined here will have "config file protection" disabled for them. See the CONFIGURATION FILES section of emerge(1) for more information.
- CTARGET
- This variable is passed by the ebuild scripts to the configure as --target=${CTARGET} only if it is defined.
- DCO_SIGNED_OFF_BY
- This variable may contain a name and email address which will be used by repoman(1) to add a Signed-off-by line to each commit message.
- DISTDIR = [path]
-
Defines the location of your local source file repository. After packages
are built, it is safe to remove any and all files from this directory since
they will be automatically fetched on demand for a given build. If you would
like to selectively prune obsolete files from this directory, see
eclean(1) from the gentoolkit package.
Use the PORTAGE_RO_DISTDIRS variable to specify one or more read-only directories containing distfiles.
Note that locations under /usr/portage are not necessarily safe for data storage. See the PORTDIR documentation for more information.
Defaults to /usr/portage/distfiles. - DOC_SYMLINKS_DIR
- If this variable contains a directory then symlinks to html documentation will be installed into it.
- EBEEP_IGNORE
- Defines whether or not to ignore audible beeps when displaying important informational messages. This variable is unset by default.
- EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS
- Options to append to the end of the emerge(1) command line on every invocation. These options will not be appended to the command line if --ignore-default-opts is specified.
- EMERGE_LOG_DIR
-
Controls the location of emerge.log and emerge-fetch.log.
Defaults to /var/log. - EMERGE_WARNING_DELAY = integer
-
Determines how long the countdown delay will be after running
`emerge --unmerge` for a system package.
Defaults to 10 seconds. - EPAUSE_IGNORE
- Defines whether or not to ignore short pauses that occur when displaying important informational messages. This variable is unset by default. If it is set to any value pauses are ignored.
- EXTRA_ECONF = [configure options string]
- Contains additional options that econf will append to configure script arguments (see ebuild(5)).
- FEATURES = "sandbox"
-
Defines actions portage takes by default. This is an incremental variable.
Most of these settings are for developer use, but some are available to
non-developers as well. The sandbox feature is very important and
should not be disabled by default.
-
- assume-digests
- When commiting work to cvs with repoman(1), assume that all existing SRC_URI digests are correct. This feature also affects digest generation via ebuild(1) and emerge(1) (emerge generates digests only when the digest feature is enabled). Existing digests for files that do not exist in ${DISTDIR} will be automatically assumed even when assume-digests is not enabled. If a file exists in ${DISTDIR} but its size does not match the existing digest, the digest will be regenerated regardless of whether or not assume-digests is enabled. The ebuild(1) digest command has a --force option that can be used to force regeneration of digests.
- binpkg-logs
- Keep logs from successful binary package merges. This is relevant only when PORT_LOGDIR is set.
- binpkg-multi-instance
-
Enable support for multiple binary package instances per ebuild.
Having multiple instances is useful for a number of purposes, such as
retaining builds that were built with different USE flags or linked
against different versions of libraries. The location of any particular
package within PKGDIR can be expressed as follows:
${PKGDIR}/${CATEGORY}/${PN}/${PF}-${BUILD_ID}.xpak
The build-id starts at 1 for the first build of a particular ebuild, and is incremented by 1 for each new build. It is possible to share a writable PKGDIR over NFS, and locking ensures that each package added to PKGDIR will have a unique build-id. It is not necessary to migrate an existing PKGDIR to the new layout, since portage is capable of working with a mixed PKGDIR layout, where packages using the old layout are allowed to remain in place.
The new PKGDIR layout is backward-compatible with binhost clients running older portage, since the file format is identical, the per-package PATH attribute in the 'Packages' index directs them to download the file from the correct URI, and they automatically use BUILD_TIME metadata to select the latest builds.
There is currently no automated way to prune old builds from PKGDIR, although it is possible to remove packages manually, and then run aqemaint --fix binhost' to update the ${PKGDIR}/Packages index.
- buildpkg
- Binary packages will be created for all packages that are merged. Also see quickpkg(1) and emerge(1) --buildpkg and --buildpkgonly options.
- buildsyspkg
- Build binary packages for just packages in the system set.
- candy
- Enable a special progress indicator when emerge(1) is calculating dependencies.
- case-insensitive-fs
- Use case-insensitive file name comparisions when merging and unmerging files. Most users should not enable this feature, since most filesystems are case-sensitive. You should only enable this feature if you are using portage to install files to a case-insensitive filesystem.
- ccache
-
Enable portage support for the ccache package. If the ccache dir is not
present in the user's environment, then portage will default to
${PORTAGE_TMPDIR}/ccache.
Warning: This feature is known to cause numerous compilation failures. Sometimes ccache will retain stale code objects or corrupted files, which can lead to packages that cannot be emerged. If this happens (if you receive errors like "File not recognized: File truncated"), try recompiling the application with ccache disabled before reporting a bug. Unless you are doing development work, do not enable ccache.
- cgroup
- Use Linux control group to control processes spawned by ebuilds. This allows emerge to safely kill all subprocesses when ebuild phase exits.
- clean-logs
- Enable automatic execution of the command specified by the PORT_LOGDIR_CLEAN variable. The default PORT_LOGDIR_CLEAN setting will remove all files from PORT_LOGDIR that were last modified at least 7 days ago.
- collision-protect
- A QA-feature to ensure that a package doesn't overwrite files it doesn't own. The COLLISION_IGNORE variable can be used to selectively disable this feature. Also see the related protect-owned feature.
- compress-build-logs
- The causes all build logs to be compressed while they are being written. Log file names have an extension that is appropriate for the compression type. Currently, only gzip(1) compression is supported, so build logs will have a '.gz' extension when this feature is enabled.
- compress-index
- If set then a compressed copy of 'Packages' index file will be written. This feature is intended for Gentoo binhosts using certain webservers (such as, but not limited to, Nginx with gzip_static module) to avoid redundant on-the-fly compression. The resulting file will be called [aq]Packages.gz' and its modification time will match that of 'Packages'.
- compressdebug
- Compress the debug sections in the split debug files with zlib to save space. Make sure you have built both binutils and gdb with USE=zlib support for this to work. See splitdebug for general split debug information (upon which this feature depends).
- config-protect-if-modified
- This causes the CONFIG_PROTECT behavior to be skipped for files that have not been modified since they were installed. This feature is enabled by default.
- digest
- Autogenerate digests for packages when running the emerge(1), ebuild(1), or repoman(1) commands. If the assume-digests feature is also enabled then existing SRC_URI digests will be reused whenever they are available.
- distcc
- Enable portage support for the distcc package.
- distcc-pump
- Enable portage support for the distcc package with pump mode.
- distlocks
- Portage uses lockfiles to ensure competing instances don't clobber each other's files. This feature is enabled by default but may cause heartache on less intelligent remote filesystems like NFSv2 and some strangely configured Samba server (oplocks off, NFS re-export). A tool /usr/lib/portage/bin/clean_locks exists to help handle lock issues when a problem arises (normally due to a crash or disconnect).
- downgrade-backup
- When a package is downgraded to a lower version, call quickpkg(1) in order to create a backup of the installed version before it is unmerged (if a binary package of the same version does not already exist). Also see the related unmerge-backup feature.
- ebuild-locks
- Use locks to ensure that unsandboxed ebuild phases never execute concurrently. Also see parallel-install.
- fail-clean
- Clean up temporary files after a build failure. This is particularly useful if you have PORTAGE_TMPDIR on tmpfs. If this feature is enabled, you probably also want to enable PORT_LOGDIR in order to save the build log. Both the ebuild(1) command and the noclean feature cause the fail-clean feature to be automatically disabled.
- fakeroot
- Enable fakeroot for the install and package phases when a non-root user runs the ebuild(1) command.
- fixlafiles
- Modifies .la files to not include other .la files and some other fixes (order of flags, duplicated entries, ...)
- force-mirror
- Only fetch files from configured mirrors, ignoring SRC_URI, except when mirror is in the ebuild(5) RESTRICT variable.
- force-prefix
- Enable prefix support for all ebuilds, regardless of EAPI, since older EAPIs would otherwise be useless with prefix configurations. This brings compatibility with the prefix branch of portage, which also supports EPREFIX for all EAPIs (for obvious reasons).
- getbinpkg
- Force emerges to always try to fetch files from the PORTAGE_BINHOST. See make.conf(5) for more information.
- icecream
- Enable portage support for the icecream package.
- installsources
- Install source code into /usr/src/debug/${CATEGORY}/${PF} (also see splitdebug). This feature works only if debugedit is installed and CFLAGS is set to include debug information (such as with the -ggdb flag).
- ipc-sandbox
- Isolate the ebuild phase functions from host IPC namespace. Supported only on Linux. Requires IPC namespace support in kernel.
- keeptemp
- Do not delete the ${T} directory after the merge process.
- keepwork
- Do not delete the ${WORKDIR} directory after the merge process. ${WORKDIR} can then be reused since this feature disables most of the clean phase that runs prior to each build. Due to lack of proper cleanup, this feature can interfere with normal emerge operation and therefore it should not be left enabled for more than a short period of time.
- lmirror
- When mirror is enabled in FEATURES, fetch files even when mirror is also in the ebuild(5) RESTRICT variable. Do NOT use lmirror for clients that need to override RESTRICT when fetching from a local mirror, but instead use a "local" mirror setting in /etc/portage/mirrors, as described in portage(5).
- merge-sync
- After a package is merged or unmerged, sync relevant files to disk in order to avoid data-loss in the event of a power failure. This feature is enabled by default.
- metadata-transfer
- Automatically perform a metadata transfer when `emerge --sync` is run. In versions of portage >=2.1.5, this feature is disabled by default. When metadata-transfer is disabled, metadata cache from the ${repository_location}/metadata/md5-cache/ directory will be used directly (if available).
- mirror
- Fetch everything in SRC_URI regardless of USE settings, except do not fetch anything when mirror is in RESTRICT.
- multilib-strict
- Many Makefiles assume that their libraries should go to /usr/lib, or $(prefix)/lib. This assumption can cause a serious mess if /usr/lib isn't a symlink to /usr/lib64. To find the bad packages, we have a portage feature called multilib-strict. It will prevent emerge from putting 64bit libraries into anything other than (/usr)/lib64.
- network-sandbox
- Isolate the ebuild phase functions from host network interfaces. Supported only on Linux. Requires network namespace support in kernel.
- network-sandbox-proxy
-
Enable escaping network-sandbox through SOCKSv5 proxy. Enabling distcc
feature also enables the proxy.
If asyncio Python module is available (requires Python 3.3, built-in since Python 3.4) Portage will additionally spawn an isolated SOCKSv5 proxy on UNIX socket. The socket address will be exported as PORTAGE_SOCKS5_PROXY and the processes running inside the sandbox can use it to access host's network when desired. Portage automatically configures new enough distcc to use the proxy.
- news
- Enable GLEP 42 news support. See https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/GLEP:42.
- noauto
- When utilizing ebuild(1), only run the function requested. Also, forces the corresponding ebuild and eclasses to be sourced again for each phase, in order to account for modifications.
- noclean
- Do not delete the the source and temporary files after the merge process.
- nodoc
- Do not install doc files (/usr/share/doc).
- noinfo
- Do not install info pages.
- noman
- Do not install manpages.
- nostrip
- Prevents the stripping of binaries that are merged to the live filesystem.
- notitles
- Disables xterm titlebar updates (which contains status info).
- parallel-fetch
- Fetch in the background while compiling. Run `tail -f /var/log/emerge-fetch.log` in a terminal to view parallel-fetch progress.
- parallel-install
- Use finer-grained locks when installing packages, allowing for greater parallelization. For additional parallelization, disable ebuild-locks.
- prelink-checksums
-
If prelink(8) is installed then use it to undo any prelinks on files
before computing checksums for merge and unmerge. This feature is
useful only if prelink(8) is installed and accurate checksums (despite
prelinking) are needed for some reason such as for checking the integrity of
installed files or because the unmerge-orphans feature is disabled.
Note that normal emerging of packages from source computes the checksums before things will be prelinked, so in such cases, this feature isn't required either. Undoing prelinking while merging is only required when using tools like quickpkg(1) which can cause already prelinked files to be merged.
- preserve-libs
- Preserve libraries when the sonames change during upgrade or downgrade. Libraries are preserved only if consumers of those libraries are detected. Preserved libraries are automatically removed when there are no remaining consumers. Run `emerge @preserved-rebuild` in order to rebuild all consumers of preserved libraries.
- protect-owned
- This is identical to the collision-protect feature except that files may be overwritten if they are not explicitly listed in the contents of a currently installed package. This is particularly useful on systems that have lots of orphan files that have been left behind by older versions of portage that did not support the unmerge-orphans feature. Like collision-protect, the COLLISION_IGNORE variable can be used to selectively disable this feature. It is recommended to leave either protect-owned or collision-protect enabled at all times, since otherwise file collisions between packages may result in files being overwritten or uninstalled at inappropriate times. If collision-protect is enabled then it takes precedence over protect-owned.
- python-trace
- Output a verbose trace of python execution to stderr when a command's --debug option is enabled.
- sandbox
- Enable sandbox-ing when running emerge(1) and ebuild(1).
- sesandbox
- Enable SELinux sandbox-ing. Do not toggle this FEATURE yourself.
- sfperms
- Stands for Smart Filesystem Permissions. Before merging packages to the live filesystem, automatically search for and set permissions on setuid and setgid files. Files that are setuid have the group and other read bits removed while files that are setgid have the other read bit removed. See also suidctl below.
- sign
- When commiting work to cvs with repoman(1), sign the Manifest with a GPG key. Read about the PORTAGE_GPG_KEY variable in make.conf(5).
- skiprocheck
- Skip write access checks on DISTDIR when fetching files. This is useful when FETCHCOMMAND and RESUMECOMMAND are used to forward fetch requests to a server that exposes DISTDIR as a read-only NFS share. A read-only DISTDIR is not compatible with the distlocks, so it is recommended to also add "-distlocks" to FEATURES in order to avoid warning messages that are triggered by this incompatibility.
- split-elog
- Store logs created by PORTAGE_ELOG_SYSTEM="save" in category subdirectories of PORT_LOGDIR/elog, instead of using PORT_LOGDIR/elog directly.
- split-log
- Store build logs in category subdirectories of PORT_LOGDIR/build, instead of using PORT_LOGDIR directly.
- splitdebug
- Prior to stripping ELF etdyn and etexec files, the debugging info is stored for later use by various debuggers. This feature is disabled by nostrip. You should also consider setting compressdebug so the files don't suck up a lot of space. For installation of source code, see installsources.
- strict
- Have portage react strongly to conditions that have the potential to be dangerous (like missing or incorrect digests for ebuilds).
- stricter
- Have portage react strongly to conditions that may conflict with system security provisions (for example textrels, executable stack). Read about the QA_STRICT_* variables in make.conf(5).
- suidctl
- Before merging packages to the live filesystem, automatically strip setuid bits from any file that is not listed in /etc/portage/suidctl.conf.
- test
- Run package-specific tests during each merge to help make sure the package compiled properly. See test in ebuild(1) and src_test() in ebuild(5). This feature implies the "test" USE flag if it is a member of IUSE, either explicitly or implicitly (see ebuild(5) for more information about IUSE). The "test" USE flag is also automatically disabled when the "test" feature is disabled.
- test-fail-continue
- If "test" is enabled FEATURES and the test phase of an ebuild fails, continue to execute the remaining phases as if the failure had not occurred. Note that the test phase for a specific package may be disabled by masking the "test" USE flag in package.use.mask (see portage(5)).
- unknown-features-filter
- Filter out any unknown values that the FEATURES variable contains.
- unknown-features-warn
- Warn if FEATURES contains one or more unknown values.
- unmerge-backup
- Call quickpkg(1) to create a backup of each package before it is unmerged (if a binary package of the same version does not already exist). Also see the related downgrade-backup feature.
- unmerge-logs
- Keep logs from successful unmerge phases. This is relevant only when PORT_LOGDIR is set.
- unmerge-orphans
- If a file is not claimed by another package in the same slot and it is not protected by CONFIG_PROTECT, unmerge it even if the modification time or checksum differs from the file that was originally installed.
- userfetch
- When portage is run as root, drop privileges to portage:portage during the fetching of package sources.
- userpriv
- Allow portage to drop root privileges and compile packages as portage:portage without a sandbox (unless usersandbox is also used).
- usersandbox
- Enable the sandbox in the compile phase, when running without root privs (userpriv).
- usersync
- Drop privileges to the owner of ${repository_location} for emerge(1) --sync operations. Note that this feature assumes that all subdirectories of ${repository_location} have the same ownership as ${repository_location} itself. It is the user's responsibility to ensure correct ownership, since otherwise Portage would have to waste time validating ownership for each and every sync operation.
- webrsync-gpg
- Enable GPG verification when using emerge-webrsync.
- xattr
- Preserve extended attributes (filesystem-stored metadata) when installing files (see attr(1)). The PORTAGE_XATTR_EXCLUDE variable may be used to exclude specific attributes from being preserved.
-
- FETCHCOMMAND
- This variable contains the command used for fetching package sources from the internet. It must contain the full path to the executable as well as the place-holders \${DISTDIR}, \${FILE} and \${URI}. The command should be written to place the fetched file at \${DISTDIR}/\${FILE}. Also see RESUMECOMMAND.
- FFLAGS FCFLAGS
-
Use these variables to set the desired optimization/CPU instruction settings
for applications that you compile with a FORTRAN compiler. FFLAGS is usually
passed to the FORTRAN 77 compiler, and FCFLAGS to any FORTRAN compiler in
more modern build systems.
For more information, see the Invoking GCC section of the gcc manual:
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/ - GENTOO_MIRRORS = [URIs]
- Insert your space-separated list of local mirrors here. These locations are used to download files before the ones listed in the ebuild scripts. Merging 'mirrorselect' can help. Entries in this variable that have no protocol and simply start with a '/' path separator may be used to specify mounted filesystem mirrors.
- http_proxy ftp_proxy RSYNC_PROXY = [protocol://host:port]
- These variables are used by network clients such as wget(1) and rsync(1). They are only required if you use a proxy server for internet access.
- INSTALL_MASK = [space delimited list of filename patterns (globs)]
-
Use this variable if you want to selectively prevent certain files
from being copied into your file system tree. This does not work on
symlinks, but only on actual files (including directories). Useful if
you wish to filter out files like HACKING.gz and TODO.gz.
Patterns are matched against both the absolute path and the bare filename of each file (or directory) to be installed.
The INSTALL_MASK is processed just before a package is merged. Also supported is a PKG_INSTALL_MASK variable that behaves exactly like INSTALL_MASK except that it is processed just before creation of a binary package.
***warning***
This does not place nice with filenames containing spaces. If you supply a pattern with a space in it, that single pattern will be interpreted as two separate patterns.Examples:
# Prevent individual files from being installed. INSTALL_MASK="/usr/bin/zless /usr/bin/zzxorcat" # Prevent all PDF files from being installed. INSTALL_MASK="*.pdf" # Block PDF files one level beneath /usr/share/doc. INSTALL_MASK="/usr/share/doc/*/*.pdf" # Watch out! This will be interpreted as two patterns, and # prevent both "README" AND all PDF files from being installed. INSTALL_MASK="README\ *.pdf"
- LDFLAGS
-
A list of flags to pass to the compiler when the linker will be called. See
ld(1) for linker flags, but don't forget that these flags will be passed
directly to the compiler. Thus, you must use '-Wl' to escape the flags
which only the linker understands (see gcc(1)).
***warning***
Setting this and other *FLAGS variables arbitrarily may cause compile or runtime failures. Bug reports submitted when nonstandard values are enabled for these flags may be closed as INVALID. - MAKEOPTS
- Use this variable if you want to use parallel make. For example, if you have a dual-processor system, set this variable to "-j2" or "-j3" for enhanced build performance with many packages. Suggested settings are between CPUs+1 and 2*CPUs+1. In order to avoid excess load, the --load-average option is recommended. For more information, see make(1). Also see emerge(1) for information about analogous --jobs and --load-average options.
- NOCOLOR = ["true" | "false"]
-
Defines if color should be disabled by default.
Defaults to false. - PKGDIR = [path]
-
Defines the location where created .tbz2 binary packages will be
stored when the emerge(1) --buildpkg option is enabled.
By default, a given package is stored in a subdirectory corresponding
to it's category. However, for backward compatibility with the layout
used by older versions of portage, if the ${PKGDIR}/All directory
exists then all packages will be stored inside of it and symlinks to
the packages will be created in the category subdirectories. Note
that locations under /usr/portage are not necessarily safe for data storage.
See the PORTDIR documentation for more information.
Defaults to /usr/portage/packages. - PORT_LOGDIR
- This variable defines the directory in which per-ebuild logs are kept. Logs are created only when this is set. They are stored as ${CATEGORY}:${PF}:YYYYMMDD-HHMMSS.log in the directory specified. If the directory does not exist, it will be created automatically and group permissions will be applied to it. If the directory already exists, portage will not modify it's permissions.
- PORT_LOGDIR_CLEAN
- This variable should contain a command for portage to call in order to clean PORT_LOGDIR. The command string should contain a \${PORT_LOGDIR} place-holder that will be substituted with the value of that variable. This variable will have no effect unless clean-logs is enabled in FEATURES.
- PORTAGE_BINHOST = [space delimited URI list]
- This is a list of hosts from which portage will grab prebuilt-binary packages. Each entry in the list must specify the full address of a directory serving tbz2's for your system (this directory must contain a 'Packages' index file). This is only used when running with the get binary pkg options are given to emerge. Review emerge(1) for more information.
- PORTAGE_BINHOST_HEADER_URI = "ftp://login:pass@grp.mirror.site/pub/grp/i686/athlon-xp/"
- This variable only makes sense on a system that will serve as a binhost and build packages for clients. It defines the URI header field for the package index file which is located at ${PKGDIR}/Packages. Clients that have PORTAGE_BINHOST properly configured will be able to fetch the index and use the URI header field as a base URI for fetching binary packages. If the URI header field is not defined then the client will use it's ${PORTAGE_BINHOST} setting as the base URI.
- PORTAGE_BINPKG_FORMAT
- This variable sets default format used for binary packages. Possible values are tar and rpm or both.
- PORTAGE_BINPKG_TAR_OPTS
- This variable contains options to be passed to the tar command for creation of binary packages.
- PORTAGE_BUNZIP2_COMMAND = [bunzip2 command string]
- This variable should contain a command that is suitable for portage to call for bunzip2 extraction operations.
- PORTAGE_BZIP2_COMMAND = [bzip2 command string]
- This variable should contain a command that is suitable for portage to call for bzip2 compression operations. PORTAGE_BZIP2_COMMAND will also be called for extraction operation, with -d appended, unless the PORTAGE_BUNZIP2_COMMAND variable is set.
- PORTAGE_CHECKSUM_FILTER = [space delimited list of hash names]
-
This variable may be used to filter the hash functions that are used to
verify integrity of files. Hash function names are case-insensitive, and
the * and -* wildcard tokens are supported.
Defaults to the value of *.
Examples:# Use all available hash functions PORTAGE_CHECKSUM_FILTER="*" # Use any function except whirlpool PORTAGE_CHECKSUM_FILTER="* -whirlpool" # Only use sha256 PORTAGE_CHECKSUM_FILTER="-* sha256"
- PORTAGE_COMPRESS = "bzip2"
- This variable contains the command used to compress documentation during the install phase.
- PORTAGE_COMPRESS_EXCLUDE_SUFFIXES = "gif htm[l]? jp[e]?g pdf png"
- This variable contains a space delimited list of file suffixes for which matching files are excluded when the PORTAGE_COMPRESS command is called. Regular expressions are supported and the match is performed only against the portion of the file name which follows the last period character.
- PORTAGE_COMPRESS_FLAGS = "-9"
- This variable contains flags for the PORTAGE_COMPRESS command.
- PORTAGE_ELOG_CLASSES
- PORTAGE_ELOG_COMMAND
- PORTAGE_ELOG_MAILFROM
- PORTAGE_ELOG_MAILSUBJECT
- PORTAGE_ELOG_MAILURI
- PORTAGE_ELOG_SYSTEM
- Please see /usr/share/portage/config/make.conf.example for elog documentation.
- PORTAGE_FETCH_CHECKSUM_TRY_MIRRORS = 5
- Number of mirrors to try when a downloaded file has an incorrect checksum.
- PORTAGE_FETCH_RESUME_MIN_SIZE = 350K
- Minimum size of existing file for RESUMECOMMAND to be called. Files smaller than this size will be removed and FETCHCOMMAND will be called to download the file from the beginning. This is useful for helping to ensure that small garbage files such as html 404 pages are properly discarded. The variable should contain an integer number of bytes and may have a suffix such as K, M, or G.
- PORTAGE_GPG_DIR
-
The gpg(1) home directory that is used by repoman(1)
when sign is in FEATURES.
Defaults to $HOME/.gnupg. - PORTAGE_GPG_KEY
- The gpg(1) key used by repoman(1) to sign manifests when sign is in FEATURES. In order to sign commits with git(1), you will need Git >=1.7.9 and your commit key will have to be configured by `git config user.signingkey key_id`.
- PORTAGE_GPG_SIGNING_COMMAND
- The command used by repoman(1) to sign manifests when sign is in FEATURES.
- PORTAGE_GRPNAME = [group]
-
Defines the groupname to use when executing in userpriv/etc... modes (i.e.
non-root).
Defaults to portage. - PORTAGE_INST_GID = [gid]
-
Defines the group id when installing files via dobin/dosbin. Useful when
running ebuild as yourself.
Defaults to 0. - PORTAGE_INST_UID = [uid]
-
Defines the user id when installing files via dobin/dosbin. Useful when
running ebuild as yourself.
Defaults to 0. - PORTAGE_IONICE_COMMAND = [ionice command string]
- This variable should contain a command for portage to call in order to adjust the io priority of portage and it's subprocesses. The command string should contain a \${PID} place-holder that will be substituted with an integer pid. For example, a value of "ionice -c 3 -p \${PID}" will set idle io priority. For more information about ionice, see ionice(1). This variable is unset by default.
- PORTAGE_NICENESS = [number]
- The value of this variable will be added to the current nice level that emerge is running at. In other words, this will not set the nice level, it will increment it. For more information about nice levels and what are acceptable ranges, see nice(1).
- PORTAGE_RO_DISTDIRS = [space delimited list of directories]
- When a given file does not exist in DISTDIR, search for the file in this list of directories. Search order is from left to right. Note that the current implementation works by creating a symlink inside DISTDIR, but that may change in the future.
- PORTAGE_RSYNC_EXTRA_OPTS = [rsync options string]
-
Additional rsync options to be used by emerge --sync.
Defaults to no value. - PORTAGE_RSYNC_INITIAL_TIMEOUT = integer
-
Used by emerge --sync as a timeout for the initial connection to an
rsync server.
Defaults to 15 seconds. - PORTAGE_RSYNC_OPTS = [rsync options string]
-
Default rsync options to be used by emerge --sync.
Don't change this unless you know exactly what you're doing!
Defaults to "--recursive --links --safe-links --perms --times --compress --force --whole-file --delete --stats --timeout=180 --exclude='/distfiles' --exclude='/local' --exclude='/packages'" - PORTAGE_RSYNC_RETRIES = [NUMBER]
-
The number of times rsync should retry on failed connections before
giving up. If set to a negative number, then retry until all possible
addresses are exhausted.
Defaults to -1. - PORTAGE_SSH_OPTS = [list of ssh options]
-
Additional ssh options to be used when portage executes ssh or sftp.
This variable supports use of embedded quote characters to quote
whitespace or special shell characters within arguments (embedded
quotes must be escaped in make.conf settings).
Defaults to no value. - PORTAGE_SYNC_STALE = [NUMBER]
-
Defines the number of days after the last `emerge --sync` that a warning
message should be produced. A value of 0 will disable warnings.
Defaults to 30. - PORTAGE_TMPDIR = [path]
-
Defines the location of the temporary build directories.
Defaults to /var/tmp.This should not be set to point anywhere under location of any repository.
- PORTAGE_USERNAME = [user]
-
Defines the username to use when executing in userpriv/etc... modes (i.e.
non-root).
Defaults to portage. - PORTAGE_WORKDIR_MODE = "0700"
- This variable controls permissions for WORKDIR (see ebuild(5)).
- PORTAGE_XATTR_EXCLUDE = [space delimited list of fnmatch patterns]
-
This variable may be used to exclude specific attributes from being preserved
when xattr is in FEATURES.
Defaults to "security.*" (security labels are special, see bug #461868). - PORTDIR = [path]
-
Defines the location of main repository. This variable is deprecated in favor of
settings in repos.conf. If you change this, you must update
your /etc/portage/make.profile symlink accordingly.
Defaults to /usr/portage.
***Warning***
Data stored inside PORTDIR is in peril of being overwritten or deleted by the emerge --sync command. The default value of PORTAGE_RSYNC_OPTS will protect the default locations of DISTDIR and PKGDIR, but users are warned that any other locations inside PORTDIR are not necessarily safe for data storage. You should not put other data (such as overlays) in your PORTDIR. Portage will walk directory structures and may arbitrarily add invalid categories as packages.- PORTDIR_OVERLAY
= "[path] [different-path] [etc...]"- Defines the locations of other repositories. This variable is deprecated in favor of settings in repos.conf. This variable is a space-delimited list of directories.
Defaults to no value. - QA_STRICT_EXECSTACK = "set"
- Set this to cause portage to ignore any QA_EXECSTACK override settings from ebuilds. See also ebuild(5).
- QA_STRICT_FLAGS_IGNORED = "set"
- Set this to cause portage to ignore any QA_FLAGS_IGNORED override settings from ebuilds. See also ebuild(5).
- QA_STRICT_MULTILIB_PATHS = "set"
- Set this to cause portage to ignore any QA_MULTILIB_PATHS override settings from ebuilds. See also ebuild(5).
- QA_STRICT_PRESTRIPPED = "set"
- Set this to cause portage to ignore any QA_PRESTRIPPED override settings from ebuilds. See also ebuild(5).
- QA_STRICT_TEXTRELS = "set"
- Set this to cause portage to ignore any QA_TEXTREL override settings from ebuilds. See also ebuild(5).
- QA_STRICT_WX_LOAD = "set"
- Set this to cause portage to ignore any QA_WX_LOAD override settings from ebuilds. See also ebuild(5).
- RESUMECOMMAND
- This variable contains the command used for resuming package sources that have been partially downloaded. It should be defined using the same format as FETCHCOMMAND, and must include any additional option(s) that may be necessary in order to continue a partially downloaded file located at \${DISTDIR}/\${FILE}.
- ROOT = [path]
-
Use ROOT to specify the target root filesystem to be used for merging
packages or ebuilds.
Typically, you should set this setting in the environment rather than in
make.conf itself. It's commonly used for creating new build
images. Make sure you use an absolute path. Refer to the
Cross-compilation section of ebuild(5) for information about
how dependencies are handled for ROOT.
Defaults to /. - RPMDIR = [path]
-
Defines the location where created RPM packages will be stored.
Defaults to /usr/portage/rpm. - SYNC = [RSYNC]
-
Insert your preferred rsync mirror here. This rsync server
is used to sync the local portage tree when `emerge --sync` is run.
Note that the SYNC variable is now deprecated, and instead the sync-type and sync-uri attributes in repos.conf should be used. See portage(5) for more information.
Defaults to rsync://rsync.gentoo.org/gentoo-portage
-
- Usage:
- (rsync|ssh)://[username@]hostname[:port]/(module|path)
- Examples:
-
rsync://private-mirror.com/portage-module
rsync://rsync-user@private-mirror.com:873/gentoo-portage
ssh://ssh-user@192.168.0.1:22/usr/portage
ssh://ssh-user@192.168.0.1:22/\${HOME}/portage-storage - Note: For the ssh:// scheme, key-based authentication might be of interest.
-
- UNINSTALL_IGNORE = [space delimited list of fnmatch patterns]
-
This variable prevents uninstallation of files that match
specific fnmatch(3) patterns. In order to ignore file
collisions with these files at install time, the same patterns
can be added to the COLLISION_IGNORE variable.
Defaults to "/lib/modules/*". - USE = [space delimited list of USE items]
- This variable contains options that control the build behavior of several packages. More information in ebuild(5). Possible USE values can be found in /usr/portage/profiles/use.desc.
- USE_ORDER = "env:pkg:conf:defaults:pkginternal:repo:env.d"
-
Determines the precedence of layers in the incremental stacking of the USE
variable. Precedence decreases from left to right such that env overrides
pkg, pkg overrides conf, and so forth.
***warning***
Do not modify this value unless you're a developer and you know what you're doing. If you change this and something breaks, we will not help you fix it.
-
- env
- USE from the current environment variables (USE and those listed in USE_EXPAND)
- pkg
- Per-package USE from /etc/portage/package.use (see portage(5))
- conf
- USE from make.conf
- defaults
- USE from make.defaults and package.use in the profile (e.g. /etc/portage/make.profile/package.use) (see portage(5))
- pkginternal
- USE from ebuild(5) IUSE defaults
- repo
- USE from make.defaults and package.use in the repo's profiles/ top dir (e.g. /usr/portage/profiles/package.use) (see portage(5))
- env.d
- USE from the environment variables, such as LINGUAS, defined by files in /etc/env.d/
-
REPORTING BUGS
Please report bugs via https://bugs.gentoo.org/AUTHORS
Daniel Robbins <drobbins@gentoo.org> Nicholas Jones <carpaski@gentoo.org> Mike Frysinger <vapier@gentoo.org> Saleem Abdulrasool <compnerd@gentoo.org> Arfrever Frehtes Taifersar Arahesis <arfrever@apache.org>
FILES
- /etc/make.conf and /etc/portage/make.conf
- Contains variables for the build-process and overwrites those in make.defaults.
- /usr/share/portage/config/make.globals
- Contains the default variables for the build-process, you should edit /etc/portage/make.conf instead.
- /etc/portage/color.map
- Contains variables customizing colors.
- /usr/portage/profiles/use.desc
- Contains a list of all global USE flags.
- /usr/portage/profiles/use.local.desc
- Contains a list of all local USE variables.
SEE ALSO
emerge(1), portage(5), ebuild(1), ebuild(5)- The /usr/lib/portage/bin/ebuild.sh script.
- The helper apps in /usr/lib/portage/bin.
-