[sdk/kdesrc-build/docbook_historied_per_file] doc: Remove docbook files (will recreate with history)
Andrew Shark
null at kde.org
Fri May 10 10:14:25 BST 2024
Git commit d028669e982c7f44738a3577c149847d8737a0a9 by Andrew Shark.
Committed on 10/05/2024 at 09:03.
Pushed by ashark into branch 'docbook_historied_per_file'.
Remove docbook files (will recreate with history)
D +0 -420 doc/advanced-features.docbook
D +0 -131 doc/appendix-modules.docbook
D +0 -167 doc/appendix-profile.docbook
D +0 -204 doc/basic-features.docbook
D +0 -139 doc/building-and-troubleshooting.docbook
D +0 -62 doc/building-specific-modules.docbook
D +0 -105 doc/cmdline.docbook
D +0 -1482 doc/conf-options-table.docbook
D +0 -110 doc/configure-data.docbook
D +0 -7 doc/credits-and-license.docbook
D +0 -33 doc/developer-features.docbook
D +0 -127 doc/environment.docbook
D +0 -185 doc/features.docbook
D +0 -223 doc/getting-started.docbook
D +0 -173 doc/index.docbook
D +0 -22 doc/intro-toc.docbook
D +0 -67 doc/introduction.docbook
D +0 -29 doc/kde-cmake.docbook
D +0 -353 doc/kde-modules-and-selection.docbook
D +0 -78 doc/kdesrc-build-logging.docbook
D +0 -101 doc/kdesrc-build.desktop
D +0 -261 doc/kdesrc-buildrc.docbook
D +0 -175 doc/other-features.docbook
D +0 -17 doc/quick-start-conclusion.docbook
D +0 -668 doc/supported-cmdline-params.docbook
D +0 -10 doc/supported-envvars.docbook
D +0 -30 doc/using-kdesrc-build.docbook
https://invent.kde.org/sdk/kdesrc-build/-/commit/d028669e982c7f44738a3577c149847d8737a0a9
diff --git a/doc/advanced-features.docbook b/doc/advanced-features.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index edb19da7..00000000
--- a/doc/advanced-features.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,420 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="advanced-features">
-<title>Advanced features</title>
-
-<sect2 id="partial-builds">
-<title>Partially building a module</title>
-<para>It is possible to build only pieces from a single &kde; module. For
-example, you may want to compile only one program from a module. &kdesrc-build;
-has features to make this easy. There are several complementing ways to
-do this.
-</para>
-
-<sect3 id="not-compiling">
-<title>Removing directories from a build</title>
-<para>It is possible to download an entire repository
-but have the build system leave out a few directories when it does
-the build. This requires that the module uses &cmake; and that the
-module's build system allows the directory to remove to be
-optional.
-</para>
-
-<para>This is controlled with the &do-not-compile; option.</para>
-
-<important><para>
-This option requires at least that the
-build system for the module is reconfigured after changing
-it. This is done using the <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command>
-<option>&cmd-reconfigure;</option>
-<option><replaceable>module</replaceable></option></userinput> command.
-</para></important>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>To remove the <filename class="directory">python</filename> directory
-from the kdebindings build process:</para>
-
-<screen>
-module <replaceable>kdebindings</replaceable>
- &do-not-compile; <replaceable>python</replaceable>
-end module
-</screen>
-
-</informalexample>
-
-<note><para>This function depends on some standard conventions used in most
-&kde; modules. Therefore it may not work for all programs.</para></note>
-
-</sect3>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="using-branches">
-<title>Branching and tagging support for &kdesrc-build;</title>
-
-<sect3 id="branches-and-tags">
-<title>What are branches and tags?</title>
-
-<para>&git; supports managing the history of the &kde; source code. &kde;
-uses this support to create branches for development, and to tag the repository
-every so often with a new version release.
-</para>
-
-<para>For example, the &kmail; developers may be working on a new feature in
-a different branch in order to avoid breaking the version being used by most
-developers. This branch has development ongoing inside it, even while the
-main branch (called master) may have development going on inside of it.
-</para>
-
-<para>A tag, on the other hand, is a specified point in the source code repository
-at a position in time. This is used by the &kde; administration team to mark
-off a version of code suitable for release and still allow the developers to
-work on the code.
-</para>
-
-</sect3>
-
-<sect3 id="branch-support">
-<title>How to use branches and tags</title>
-
-<para>Support for branches and tags is handled by a set of options, which
-range from a generic request for a version, to a specific &url; to download
-for advanced users.
-</para>
-
-<para>The easiest method is to use the &branch; and &tag; options. You simply
-use the option along with the name of the desired branch or tag for a module,
-and &kdesrc-build; will try to determine the appropriate location within the
-&kde; repository to download from. For most &kde; modules this works very
-well.</para>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>To download kdelibs from &kde; 4.6 (which is simply known as the 4.6 branch):
-</para>
-
-<screen>
-module kdelibs
- branch <replaceable>4.6</replaceable>
- # other options...
-end module
-</screen>
-
-<para>Or, to download kdemultimedia as it was released with &kde; 4.6.1:</para>
-
-<screen>
-module kdemultimedia
- tag <replaceable>4.6.1</replaceable>
- # other options...
-end module
-</screen>
-
-</informalexample>
-
-<tip><para>You can specify a global branch value. But if you do so, do not forget
-to specify a different branch for modules that should not use the global branch!
-</para></tip>
-</sect3>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="stopping-the-build-early">
-<title>Stopping the build early</title>
-
-<sect3 id="the-build-continues">
-<title>The build normally continues even if failures occur</title>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; normally will update, build and install all modules
-in the specified list of modules to build, even if a module fails to build.
-This is usually a convenience to allow you to update software packages even
-if a simple mistake is made in one of the source repositories during
-development that causes the build to break.
-</para>
-
-<para>
-However you may wish for &kdesrc-build; to stop what it is doing once a
-module fails to build and install. This can help save you time that will be
-wasted trying to make progress when modules remaining in the build list will
-not be able to successfully build either, especially if you have not ever
-successfully built the modules in the list.
-</para>
-
-</sect3>
-
-<sect3 id="stop-on-failure-stops-early">
-<title>Not stopping early with --no-stop-on-failure</title>
-
-<para>
-The primary method to do this is to use the
-<link linkend="cmdline-stop-on-failure">--no-stop-on-failure</link>
-command line option when you run &kdesrc-build;.
-</para>
-
-<para>This option can also be set in the
-<link linkend="conf-stop-on-failure">configuration file</link> to make
-it the normal mode of operation.
-</para>
-
-<para>It is also possible to tell &kdesrc-build; at runtime to stop building
-<emphasis>after</emphasis> completing the current module it is working on.
-This is as opposed to interrupting &kdesrc-build; using a command like
-<keycombo action="simul">&Ctrl;<keycap>C</keycap></keycombo>, which interrupts
-&kdesrc-build; immediately, losing the progress of the current module.
-</para>
-
-<important><para>Interrupting &kdesrc-build; during a module install when
-the <link linkend="conf-use-clean-install">use-clean-install</link> option
-is enabled will mean that the interrupted module will be unavailable until
-&kdesrc-build; is able to successfully build the module!</para>
-
-<para>If you need to interrupt &kdesrc-build; without permitting a graceful shutdown
-in this situation, at least try to avoid doing this while &kdesrc-build; is
-installing a module.</para>
-</important>
-
-</sect3>
-
-<sect3 id="stopping-early-without-stop-on-failure">
-<title>Stopping &kdesrc-build; gracefully when stop-on-failure is false</title>
-
-<para>As mentioned above, it is possible to cause &kdesrc-build; to gracefully
-shutdown early once it has completed the module it is currently working on.
-To do this, you need to send the POSIX <literal>HUP</literal> signal to &kdesrc-build;
-</para>
-
-<para>You can do this with a command such as <command>pkill</command> (on &Linux; systems) as follows:</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput><command>pkill <option>-HUP</option> kdesrc-build</command></userinput>
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>If done successfully, you will see a message in the &kdesrc-build; output similar
-to:</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-[ build ] recv SIGHUP, will end after this module
-</programlisting>
-
-<note>
-<para>&kdesrc-build; may show this message multiple times depending on the
-number of individual &kdesrc-build; processes that are active. This is
-normal and not an indication of an error.</para>
-</note>
-
-<para>
-Once &kdesrc-build; has acknowledged the signal, it will stop processing
-after the current module is built and installed. If &kdesrc-build; is still
-updating source code when the request is received, &kdesrc-build; will stop
-after the module source code update is complete. Once both the update and build
-processes have stopped early, &kdesrc-build; will print its partial results
-and exit.
-</para>
-
-</sect3>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="building-successfully">
-<title>How &kdesrc-build; tries to ensure a successful build</title>
-
-<sect3 id="automatic-rebuilds">
-<title>Automatic rebuilds</title>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; used to include features to automatically attempt to
-rebuild the module after a failure (as sometimes this re-attempt would work,
-due to bugs in the build system at that time). Thanks to switching to &cmake;
-the build system no longer suffers from these bugs, and so &kdesrc-build; will
-not try to build a module more than once. There are situations where
-&kdesrc-build; will automatically take action though:</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-
-<listitem><para>If you change <link linkend="conf-configure-flags">configure-flags</link>
-or <link linkend="conf-cmake-options">cmake-options</link> for a module, then
-&kdesrc-build; will detect that and automatically re-run configure or cmake
-for that module.</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>If the buildsystem does not exist (even if &kdesrc-build; did
-not delete it) then &kdesrc-build; will automatically re-create it. This is
-useful to allow for performing a full <link
-linkend="cmdline-refresh-build">--refresh-build</link> for a specific module
-without having that performed on other modules.</para></listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-
-</sect3>
-
-<sect3 id="manual-rebuilds">
-<title>Manually rebuilding a module</title>
-<para>If you make a change to a module's option settings, or the module's
-source code changes in a way &kdesrc-build; does not recognize, you may need to
-manually rebuild the module.</para>
-
-<para>You can do this by simply running <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command>
- <option>--refresh-build</option> <option><replaceable>module</replaceable></option></userinput>.
-</para>
-
-<para>If you would like to have &kdesrc-build; automatically rebuild the module
-during the next normal build update instead, you can create a special file.
-Every module has a build directory. If you create a file called <filename>.refresh-me</filename>
-in the build directory for a module, &kdesrc-build; will rebuild the module
-next time the build process occurs, even if it would normally perform the
-faster incremental build.</para>
-
-<tip>
-<para>By default, the build directory is <filename class="directory">~/kde/build/<replaceable>module</replaceable>/</filename>.
-If you change the setting of the &build-dir; option, then use that instead of
-<filename class="directory">~/kde/build</filename>.</para>
-</tip>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>Rebuild using <filename>.refresh-me</filename> for module <replaceable>kdelibs</replaceable>:</para>
-<screen>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>touch</command> <filename>~/kdesrc/build/<replaceable>kdelibs</replaceable>/.refresh-me</filename></userinput>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command></userinput>
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-</sect3>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="changing-environment">
-<title>Changing environment variable settings</title>
-<para>Normally &kdesrc-build; uses the environment that is present when
-starting up when running programs to perform updates and builds. This is useful
-for when you are running &kdesrc-build; from the command line.</para>
-
-<para>However, you may want to change the setting for environment variables
-that &kdesrc-build; does not provide an option for directly. (For instance,
-to setup any required environment variables when running &kdesrc-build; on
-a timer such as &cron;) This is possible with the &set-env; option.</para>
-
-<para>Unlike most options, it can be set more than once, and it accepts two
-entries, separated by a space. The first one is the name of the environment
-variable to set, and the remainder of the line is the value.</para>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>Set <userinput><envar>DISTRO</envar>=<replaceable>BSD</replaceable></userinput>
-for all modules:</para>
-<screen>
-global
- set-env <replaceable>DISTRO</replaceable> <replaceable>BSD</replaceable>
-end global
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="resuming">
-<title>Resuming builds</title>
-
-<sect3 id="resuming-failed">
-<title>Resuming a failed or canceled build</title>
-
-<para>You can tell &kdesrc-build; to start building from a different module
-than it normally would. This can be useful when a set of modules failed, or
-if you canceled a build run in the middle. You can control this using the
-&cmd-resume-from; option and the &cmd-resume-after; option.</para>
-
-<note><para>Older versions of &kdesrc-build; would skip the source update when
-resuming a build. This is no longer done by default, but you can always use
-the <option>--no-src</option> command line option
-to skip the source update.</para></note>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>Resuming the build starting from kdebase:</para>
-
-<screen>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command> <option>--resume-from=<replaceable>kdebase</replaceable></option></userinput>
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>Resuming the build starting after kdebase (in case you manually fixed
-the issue and installed the module yourself):</para>
-
-<screen>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command> <option>--resume-after=<replaceable>kdebase</replaceable></option></userinput>
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-
-<para>If the last &kdesrc-build; build ended with a build failure, you can also
-use the <link linkend="cmdline-resume">--resume</link> command line option,
-which resumes the last build starting at the module that failed. The source and
-metadata updates are skipped as well (but if you need these, it's generally
-better to use <link linkend="cmdline-resume-from">--resume-from</link>
-instead).</para>
-
-
-</sect3>
-
-<sect3 id="ignoring-modules">
-<title>Ignoring modules in a build</title>
-
-<para>Similar to the way you can <link linkend="resuming-failed">resume the
-build from a module</link>, you can instead choose to update and build everything
-normally, but ignore a set of modules.</para>
-
-<para>You can do this using the &cmd-ignore-modules; option. This option tells
-&kdesrc-build; to ignore all the modules on the command line when
-performing the update and build.</para>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>Ignoring extragear/multimedia and kdereview during a full run:</para>
-<screen>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command> <option>--ignore-modules</option> <replaceable>extragear/multimedia kdereview</replaceable></userinput>
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-
-</sect3>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="changing-env-from-cmd-line">
-<title>Changing options from the command line</title>
-
-<sect3 id="changing-global-opts">
-<title>Changing global options</title>
-<para>You can change the setting of options read from the <link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link> directly
-from the command line. This change will override the configuration file
-setting, but is only temporary. It only takes effect as long as it is still
-present on the command line.</para>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; allows you to change options named like <replaceable>option-name</replaceable>
-by passing an argument on the command line in the form <userinput><option>--<replaceable>option-name</replaceable>=value</option></userinput>.
-&kdesrc-build; will recognize whether it does not know what the option is, and search
-for the name in its list of option names. If it does not recognize the name, it
-will warn you, otherwise it will remember the value you set it to and override
-any setting from the configuration file.</para>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>Setting the &source-dir; option to <filename>/dev/null</filename> for
-testing:</para>
-
-<screen>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command> <option>--pretend</option> <option>--<replaceable>source-dir</replaceable>=<replaceable>/dev/null</replaceable></option></userinput>
-</screen>
-
-</informalexample>
-
-</sect3>
-
-<sect3 id="changing-module-opts">
-<title>Changing module options</title>
-<para>It is also possible to change options only for a specific module. The
-syntax is similar: --<replaceable>module</replaceable>,<replaceable>option-name</replaceable>=<replaceable>value</replaceable>.
-</para>
-
-<para>This change overrides any duplicate setting for the module found in the
-<link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link>, and applies only while the option is passed on the command line.</para>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>Using a different build directory for the kdeedu module:</para>
-
-<screen>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command> <option>--<replaceable>kdeedu</replaceable>,<replaceable>build-dir</replaceable>=<replaceable>temp-build</replaceable></option></userinput>
-</screen>
-
-</informalexample>
-
-</sect3>
-
-</sect2>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/appendix-modules.docbook b/doc/appendix-modules.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index 109f2daf..00000000
--- a/doc/appendix-modules.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,131 +0,0 @@
-<appendix id="appendix-modules">
-<title>&kde; modules and source code organization</title>
-<sect1 id="module-concept">
-<title>The <quote>Module</quote></title>
-
-<para>&kde; groups its software into <quote>modules</quote> of various size.
-This was initially a loose grouping of a few large modules, but with the
-introduction of the <ulink url="https://git-scm.com/">Git</ulink>-based <ulink
-url="https://commits.kde.org/">source code repositories</ulink>, these large
-modules were further split into many smaller modules.
-</para>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; uses this module concept as well. In essence, a
-<quote>module</quote> is a grouping of code that can be downloaded, built,
-tested, and installed.
-</para>
-
-<sect2 id="single-modules">
-<title>Individual modules</title>
-
-<para>It is easy to set &kdesrc-build; to build a single module. The following
-listing is an example of what a declaration for a Git-based module would
-look like in <link linkend="kdesrc-buildrc">the configuration
-file</link>.</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-module <replaceable>kdefoo</replaceable>
- <option><replaceable>cmake-options -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug</replaceable></option>
-end module
-</programlisting>
-
-<tip><para>This is a Git-based module since it doesn't use a <link
-linkend="conf-repository">repository</link> option. Also, the
-<option>cmake-options</option> option is listed as an example only, it is not
-required.</para></tip>
-
-</sect2>
-<sect2 id="module-groups">
-<title>Groups of related modules</title>
-
-<para>Now most &kde; source modules are Git-based &kde;, and are normally
-combined into groups of modules.</para>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; therefore supports groups of modules as well, using
-<link linkend="module-sets">module sets</link>. An example:</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-module-set <replaceable>base-modules</replaceable>
- <option>repository</option> kde-projects
- <option>use-modules</option> <replaceable>kde-runtime kde-workspace kde-baseapps</replaceable>
-end module-set
-</programlisting>
-
-<tip><para>You can leave the module set name (<replaceable>base-modules</replaceable>
-in this case) empty if you like. This <option>repository</option> setting tells
-&kdesrc-build; where to download the source from, but you can also use a
-<symbol>git://</symbol> URL.</para></tip>
-
-<para>One special feature of the <quote><option>repository</option>
-<literal>kde-projects</literal></quote> is that &kdesrc-build; will
-automatically include any Git modules that are grouped under the modules you
-list (in the KDE Project database).</para>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="module-branch-groups">
-<title>Module <quote>branch groups</quote></title>
-
-<para>Taking the concept of a <link linkend="module-groups">group of
-modules</link> further, the &kde; developers eventually found that
-synchronizing the names of the Git branches across a large number of
-repositories was getting difficult, especially during the development push for
-the new &kde; Frameworks for &Qt; 5.
-</para>
-
-<para>So the concept of <quote>branch groups</quote> was developed, to allow
-users and developers to select one of only a few groups, and allow the script
-to automatically select the appropriate Git branch.
-</para>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; supports this feature as of version 1.16-pre2, via the
-<link linkend="conf-branch-group">branch-group</link> option.
-</para>
-
-<example id="ex-branch-group">
-<title>Example of using branch-group</title>
-
-<para>branch-group can be used in the configuration file as follows:
-</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-global
- # Select KDE Frameworks 5 and other Qt5-based apps
- <option>branch-group</option> <replaceable>kf5-qt5</replaceable>
-
- # Other global options here ...
-end global
-
-module-set
- # branch-group only works for kde-projects
- <option>repository</option> kde-projects
-
- # branch-group is inherited from the one set globally, but could
- # specified here.
-
- <option>use-modules</option> <replaceable>kdelibs kde-workspace</replaceable>
-end module-set
-
-# kdelibs's branch will be "frameworks"
-# kde-workspace's branch will be "master" (as of August 2013)
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>In this case the same <literal>branch-group</literal> gives different
-branch names for each Git module.
-</para>
-</example>
-
-<para>This feature requires some data maintained by the &kde; developers in a Git
-repository named <literal>kde-build-metadata</literal>, however this module
-will be included automatically by &kdesrc-build; (though you may see it appear
-in the script output).
-</para>
-
-<tip><para>&kde; modules that do not have a set branch name for the branch
-group you choose will default to an appropriate branch name, as if you had not
-specified <literal>branch-group</literal> at all.
-</para></tip>
-
-</sect2>
-
-</sect1>
-</appendix>
diff --git a/doc/appendix-profile.docbook b/doc/appendix-profile.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index 517465fc..00000000
--- a/doc/appendix-profile.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,167 +0,0 @@
-<appendix id="appendix-profile">
-<title>Superseded profile setup procedures</title>
-
-<sect1 id="old-profile-setup">
-<title>Setting up a &kde; login profile</title>
-
-<para>These instructions cover how to setup the profile required to ensure your
-computer can login to your newly-built &kde; &plasma; desktop. &kdesrc-build;
-will normally try to do this automatically (see <xref
-linkend="session-driver"/>). This appendix section can be useful for those who
-cannot use &kdesrc-build;'s support for login profile setup. However the
-instructions may not always be up-to-date, it can also be useful to consult the
-<filename>kde-env-master.sh.in</filename> file included with the &kdesrc-build;
-source.</para>
-
-<sect2 id="changing-profile">
-<title>Changing your startup profile settings</title>
-
-<important><para>The <filename>.bash_profile</filename> is the login settings
-file for the popular <application>bash</application> shell used by many &Linux;
-distributions. If you use a different shell, then you may need to adjust the
-samples given in this section for your particular shell.</para></important>
-
-<para>
-Open or create the <filename>.bash_profile</filename> file in the home directory with your favorite editor,
-and add to the end of the file:
-
-If you are building the qt module (you are by default), add instead:
-
-<programlisting>
-PATH=${install-dir}/bin:${qt-install-dir}/bin:$PATH
-MANPATH=${qt-install-dir}/doc/man:$MANPATH
-
-# Act appropriately if LD_LIBRARY_PATH is not already set.
-if [ -z $LD_LIBRARY_PATH ]; then
- LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${install-dir}:/lib:${qt-install-dir}/lib
-else
- LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${install-dir}:/lib:${qt-install-dir}/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
-fi
-
-export PATH MANPATH LD_LIBRARY_PATH
-</programlisting>
-
-or, if you are not building qt (and are using your system &Qt; instead), add
-this instead:
-
-<programlisting>
-PATH=${install-dir}/bin:${qt-install-dir}/bin:$PATH
-
-# Act appropriately if LD_LIBRARY_PATH is not already set.
-if [ -z $LD_LIBRARY_PATH ]; then
- LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${install-dir}/lib
-else
- LD_LIBRARY_PATH=${install-dir}/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
-fi
-
-export PATH LD_LIBRARY_PATH
-</programlisting>
-</para>
-
-<para>
-If you are not using a dedicated user, set a different $<envar>KDEHOME</envar>
-for your new environment in your <filename>.bash_profile</filename>:
-
-<programlisting>
-export KDEHOME="${HOME}/.kde-git"
-
-# Create it if needed
-[ ! -e ~/.kde-git ] && mkdir ~/.kde-git
-</programlisting>
-</para>
-
-<note>
-<para>
-If later your K Menu is empty or too crowded with applications from your
-distribution, you may have to set the <acronym>XDG</acronym> environment
-variables in your <filename>.bash_profile</filename>:
-
-<programlisting>
-XDG_CONFIG_DIRS="/etc/xdg"
-XDG_DATA_DIRS="${install-dir}/share:/usr/share"
-export XDG_CONFIG_DIRS XDG_DATA_DIRS
-</programlisting>
-
-</para>
-</note>
-
-</sect2>
-<sect2 id="starting-kde">
-<title>Starting &kde;</title>
-
-<para>
-Now that you have adjusted your environment settings to use the correct &kde;,
-it is important to ensure that the correct <command>startkde</command> script
-is used as well.
-</para>
-
-<para>
-Open the <filename>.xinitrc</filename> text file from the home directory, or
-create it if necessary. Add the line:
-
-<programlisting>
-<command>exec</command> <option>${install-dir}/bin/startkde</option>
-</programlisting>
-</para>
-
-<important><para>On some distributions, it may be necessary to perform the same
-steps with the <filename>.xsession</filename> file, also in the home directory.
-This is especially true when using graphical login managers such as
-sddm, <application>gdm</application>, or <application>xdm</application>.</para>
-</important>
-
-<para>
-Now start your fresh &kde;: in &BSD; and &Linux; systems with virtual terminal support,
-<keycombo action="simul">&Ctrl;&Alt;<keycap>F1</keycap></keycombo> ... <keycombo action="simul">&Ctrl;&Alt;<keycap>F12</keycap></keycombo> keystroke combinations are used to switch to Virtual Console 1 through 12.
-This allows you to run more than one desktop environment at the same time. The fist six are
-text terminals and the following six are graphical displays.
-</para>
-
-<para>
-If when you start your computer you are presented to the graphical display
-manager instead, you can use the new &kde; environment, even if it is not listed
-as an option. Most display managers, including sddm, have an option to use
-a <quote>Custom Session</quote> when you login. With this option, your session settings are
-loaded from the <filename>.xsession</filename> file in your home directory. If
-you have already modified this file as described above, this option should load
-you into your new &kde; installation.
-</para>
-
-<para>If it does not, there is something else you can try that should normally
-work: Press <keycombo action="simul">&Ctrl;&Alt;<keycap>F2</keycap></keycombo>,
-and you will be presented to a text terminal. Log in using the dedicated user
-and type:
-</para>
-
-<screen>
-<command>startx</command> <option>--</option> <option>:1</option>
-</screen>
-
-<tip>
-<para>
-You can run the &kde; from sources and the old &kde; at the same time! Log in
-using your regular user, start the stable &kde; desktop. Press <keycombo
-action="simul">&Ctrl;&Alt;<keycap>F2</keycap></keycombo> (or
-<keycap>F1</keycap>, <keycap>F3</keycap>, etc..), and you will be presented
-with a text terminal. Log in using the dedicated &kde; &git; user and
-type:</para>
-
-<screen>
-<command>startx</command> <option>--</option> <option>:1</option>
-</screen>
-
-<para>You can go back to the &kde; desktop of your regular user by pressing the
-shortcut key for the already running desktop. This is normally
-<keycombo action="simul">&Ctrl;&Alt;<keycap>F7</keycap></keycombo>, you may need
-to use <keycap>F6</keycap> or <keycap>F8</keycap> instead. To return to your
-&kdesrc-build;-compiled &kde;, you would use the same sequence, except with the
-next function key. For example, if you needed to enter <keycombo action="simul">&Ctrl;&Alt;<keycap>F7</keycap></keycombo>
-to switch to your regular &kde;, you would need to enter
-<keycombo action="simul">&Ctrl;&Alt;<keycap>F8</keycap></keycombo> to go back
-to your &kdesrc-build; &kde;.</para>
-</tip>
-
-</sect2>
-</sect1>
-
-</appendix>
diff --git a/doc/basic-features.docbook b/doc/basic-features.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index f9ce58c1..00000000
--- a/doc/basic-features.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,204 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="basic-features">
-<title>Basic &kdesrc-build; features</title>
-
-<sect2 id="using-qt">
-<title>qt support</title>
-<para>&kdesrc-build; supports building the &Qt; toolkit used by &kde; software
-as a convenience to users. This support is handled by a special module named
-qt.</para>
-
-<note><para>&Qt; is developed under a separate repository from &kde; software
-located at <ulink
-url="http://code.qt.io/cgit/qt/">http://code.qt.io/cgit/qt/</ulink>.</para></note>
-
-<para>In order to build &Qt;, you should make sure that the
-<link linkend="conf-qt-install-dir">qt-install-dir</link> option is set to the directory you'd
-like to install &Qt; to, as described in <xref linkend="configure-data"/>.</para>
-
-<para>You should then ensure that the qt module is added to
-your <filename>.kdesrc-buildrc</filename>, before any other modules in the
-file. If you are using the sample configuration file, you can simply
-uncomment the existing qt module entry.</para>
-
-<para>Now you should verify the <link
-linkend="conf-repository">repository</link> option and <link
-linkend="conf-branch">branch</link> options are set appropriately:</para>
-
-<orderedlist>
-<listitem><para>The first option is to build &Qt; using a mirror maintained
-on the &kde; source repositories (no other changes are applied, it is simply
-a clone of the official source). This is highly recommended due to occasional
-issues with cloning the full &Qt; module from its official repository.</para>
-
-<para>You can set the <option>repository</option> option for the qt
-module to <userinput>kde:qt</userinput> to use this option.</para>
-</listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>Otherwise, to build the standard &Qt;, set your
-<option>repository</option> option to
-<userinput>git://gitorious.org/qt/qt.git</userinput>. Note that you may
-experience problems performing the initial clone of &Qt; from this
-repository.</para></listitem>
-</orderedlist>
-
-<para>In both cases, the branch option should be set to <userinput>master</userinput> (unless you'd
-like to build a different branch).</para>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="kdesrc-build-std-flags">
-<title>Standard flags added by &kdesrc-build;</title>
-<para>Nota Bene: this section does not apply to modules for which you have
-configured a custom toolchain, using e.g.
-<link linkend="conf-cmake-toolchain">cmake-toolchain</link>.</para>
-
-<para>To save you time, &kdesrc-build; adds some standard paths to your
-environment for you:
-</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para>
-The path to the &kde; and &Qt; libraries is added to the
-<envar>LD_LIBRARY_PATH</envar> variable automatically. This means that you
-do not need to edit &libpath; to include them.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-The path to the &kde; and &Qt; development support programs are added to the
-<envar>PATH</envar> variable automatically. This means that you do not need to
-edit &binpath; to include them.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-The path to the &kde;-provided <application>pkg-config</application> is added
-automatically to <envar>PKG_CONFIG_PATH</envar>. This means that you do not
-need to use &set-env; to add these.
-</para></listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="build-priority">
-<title>Changing &kdesrc-build;'s build priority</title>
-<para>Programs can run with different priority levels on Operating Systems,
-including &Linux; and &BSD;. This allows the system to allocate time for the
-different programs in accordance with how important they are.
-</para>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; will normally allocate itself a low priority so that the
-rest of the programs on your system are unaffected and can run normally.
-Using this technique, &kdesrc-build; will use extra CPU when it is available.
-</para>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; will still maintain a high enough priority level so that
-it runs before routine batch processes and before CPU donation programs
-such as <ulink url="http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/">Seti at Home</ulink>.
-</para>
-
-<para>To alter &kdesrc-build; so that it uses a higher (or lower) priority
-level permanently, then you need to adjust the &niceness; setting in the <link
-linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link>. The &niceness; setting
-controls how <quote>nice</quote> &kdesrc-build; is to other programs. In other
-words, having a higher &niceness; gives &kdesrc-build; a lower priority. So to
-give &kdesrc-build; a higher priority, reduce the &niceness; (and vice versa).
-The &niceness; can go from 0 (not nice at all, highest priority) to 20 (super
-nice, lowest priority).</para>
-
-<para>You can also temporarily change the priority for &kdesrc-build; by using
-the &cmd-nice; <link linkend="cmdline">command line option</link>. The value to
-the option is used exactly the same as for &niceness;.</para>
-
-<note><para>It is possible for some programs run by the super user to have a
-negative nice value, with a correspondingly even higher priority for such
-programs. Setting a negative (or even 0) &niceness; for &kdesrc-build; is not
-a great idea, as it will not help run time significantly, but will make your
-computer seem very sluggish should you still need to use it.
-</para></note>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>To run &kdesrc-build; with a niceness of 15 (a lower priority than
-normal):</para>
-
-<screen>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command> <option>--nice=<replaceable>15</replaceable></option></userinput>
-</screen>
-
-<para>Or, you can edit the <link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link> to make the change permanent:</para>
-
-<screen>
- &niceness; <replaceable>15</replaceable>
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-
-<tip>
-<para>The <link linkend="conf-niceness">niceness</link> option only affects the
-usage of the computer's processor(s). One other major affect on computer
-performance relates to how much data input or output (<acronym>I/O</acronym>) a
-program uses. In order to control how much <acronym>I/O</acronym> a program can
-use, modern &Linux; operating systems support a similar tool called
-<application>ionice</application>. &kdesrc-build; supports
-<application>ionice</application>, (but only to enable or disable it
-completely) using the <link
-linkend="conf-use-idle-io-priority">use-idle-io-priority</link> option,
-since &kdesrc-build; version 1.12.
-</para>
-</tip>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="root-installation">
-<title>Installation as the superuser</title>
-<para>You may wish to have &kdesrc-build; run the installation with super user
-privileges. This may be for the unrecommended system-wide installation.
-This is also useful when using a recommended single user &kde; build, however.
-This is because some modules (especially kdebase) install programs that will
-briefly need elevated permissions when run. They are not able to achieve these
-permission levels unless they are installed with the elevated permissions.
-</para>
-
-<para>You could simply run &kdesrc-build; as the super user directly, but this
-is not recommended, since the program has not been audited for that kind of use.
-Although it should be safe to run the program in this fashion, it is better to
-avoid running as the super user when possible.</para>
-
-<para>To take care of this, &kdesrc-build; provides the &make-install-prefix;
-option. You can use this option to specify a command to use to perform the
-installation as another user. The recommended way to use this command is with
-the &sudo; program, which will run the install command as the super user.
-</para>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>For example, to install all modules using &sudo;,
-you could do something like this:</para>
-
-<screen>
-global
- &make-install-prefix; <replaceable>sudo</replaceable>
- # Other options
-end global
-</screen>
-
-<para>To use &make-install-prefix; for only a single module, this would work:
-</para>
-
-<screen>
-module <replaceable>some-module-name</replaceable>
- &make-install-prefix; <replaceable>sudo</replaceable>
-end module
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="build-progress">
-<title>Showing the progress of a module build</title>
-<para>This feature is always available, and is automatically enabled when
-possible. What this does is display an estimated build progress while
-building a module; that way you know about how much longer it will take to
-build a module.
-</para>
-
-</sect2>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/building-and-troubleshooting.docbook b/doc/building-and-troubleshooting.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index b9d478eb..00000000
--- a/doc/building-and-troubleshooting.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,139 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="building-and-troubleshooting">
-<title>Using the &kdesrc-build; script</title>
-<para>With the configuration data established, now you are ready to run the
-script. Even if you still have some tweaking or other reading you wish to do,
-it is a good idea to at least load the &kde; project metadata.</para>
-
-<sect2 id="loading-kdesrc-build-metadata">
-<title>Loading project metadata</title>
-
-<para>
-From a terminal window, log in to the user you are using to compile &kde; software and
-execute the script:
-</para>
-<screen>
- <prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command> <option>--metadata-only</option></userinput>
-</screen>
-
-<para>This command will setup the source directory and connect to the KDE &git;
-repositories to download the database of &kde; git repositories, and the
-database of dependency metadata, without making any further changes. It is
-useful to run this separately as this metadata is useful for other
-&kdesrc-build; commands. </para>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="pretend-mode">
-<title>Previewing what will happen when kdesrc-build runs</title>
-
-<para>With the project metadata installed, it is possible to preview what
-&kdesrc-build; will do when launched. This can be done with the <option><link
-linkend="cmdline-pretend">--pretend</link></option> command line option.</para>
-
-<screen>
- <prompt>% </prompt><command>./kdesrc-build</command> <option>--pretend</option>
-</screen>
-
-<para>You should see a message saying that some packages were successfully built (although
- nothing was actually built). If there were no significant problems shown, you can proceed
- to actually running the script.</para>
-
-<screen>
- <prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command></userinput>
-</screen>
-
-<para>This command will download the appropriate source code, build and install each module in order. Afterwards, you should see output similar to that in <xref
-linkend="example-build-sequence"/>:</para>
-
-<example id="example-build-sequence">
-<title>Example output of a kdesrc-build run</title>
-<screen>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command></userinput>
-Updating kde-build-metadata (to branch master)
-Updating sysadmin-repo-metadata (to branch master)
-
-Building libdbusmenu-qt (1/200)
- No changes to libdbusmenu-qt source, proceeding to build.
- Compiling... succeeded (after 0 seconds)
- Installing.. succeeded (after 0 seconds)
-
-Building taglib (2/200)
- Updating taglib (to branch master)
- Source update complete for taglib: 68 files affected.
- Compiling... succeeded (after 0 seconds)
- Installing.. succeeded (after 0 seconds)
-
-Building extra-cmake-modules from <module-set at line 32> (3/200)
- Updating extra-cmake-modules (to branch master)
- Source update complete for extra-cmake-modules: 2 files affected.
- Compiling... succeeded (after 0 seconds)
- Installing.. succeeded (after 0 seconds)
-
- ...
-
-Building kdevelop from kdev (200/200)
- Updating kdevelop (to branch master)
- Source update complete for kdevelop: 29 files affected.
- Compiling... succeeded (after 1 minute, and 34 seconds)
- Installing.. succeeded (after 2 seconds)
-
-<<< PACKAGES SUCCESSFULLY BUILT >>>
-Built 200 modules
-
-Your logs are saved in /home/kde-src/kdesrc/log/2018-01-20-07
-</screen>
-</example>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="fixing-build-failures">
-<title>Resolving build failures</title>
-
-<para>
-Depending on how many modules you are downloading, it is possible that
-&kdesrc-build; will not succeed the first time you compile &kde; software.
-Do not despair!
-</para>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; logs the output of every command it runs. By default,
-the log files are kept in <filename class="directory">~/kdesrc/log</filename>. To see what
-the caused an error for a module in the last &kdesrc-build; command, usually
-it is sufficient to look at <filename class="directory">~/kdesrc/log/latest/<replaceable>module-name</replaceable>/error.log</filename>.</para>
-
-<tip><para>Perhaps the easiest way to find out what error caused a module to
-fail to build is to search backward with a case-insensitive search, starting
-from the end of the file looking for the word <literal>error</literal>. Once
-that is found, scroll up to make sure there are no other error messages nearby.
-The first error message in a group is usually the underlying
-problem.</para></tip>
-
-<para>In that file, you will see the error that caused the build to fail for
-that module. If the file says (at the bottom) that you are missing some
-packages, try installing the package (including any appropriate -dev packages)
-before trying to build that module again. Make sure that when you run
-&kdesrc-build; again to pass the <link
-linkend="cmdline-reconfigure">--reconfigure</link> option so that
-&kdesrc-build; forces the module to check for the missing packages
-again.</para>
-
-<para>Or, if the error appears to be a build error (such as a syntax error,
-<quote>incorrect prototype</quote>, <quote>unknown type</quote>, or similar)
-then it is probably an error with the &kde; source, which will hopefully be
-resolved within a few days. If it is not resolved within that time, feel free
-to mail the <email>kde-devel at kde.org</email> mailing list (subscription may be
-required first) in order to report the build failure.</para>
-
-<para>You can find more common examples of things that can go wrong and their
-solutions, as well as general tips and strategies to build &kde; software in the
-<ulink url="https://community.kde.org/Guidelines_and_HOWTOs/Build_from_source">
-Build from Source</ulink>.
-</para>
-
-<para>On the other hand, assuming everything went well, you should have a new
-&kde; install on your computer, and now it is simply a matter of running
-it, described next in <xref linkend="environment"/>.</para>
-
-<note><para>For more information about &kdesrc-build;'s logging features,
-please see <xref linkend="kdesrc-build-logging"/>.</para></note>
-</sect2>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/building-specific-modules.docbook b/doc/building-specific-modules.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index d0e30a76..00000000
--- a/doc/building-specific-modules.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,62 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="building-specific-modules">
-<title>Building specific modules</title>
-
-<para>Rather than building every module all the time, you may only want to build a single
- module, or other small subset. Rather than editing your configuration file, you can simply
- pass the names of modules or module sets to build to the command line.</para>
-
-<example id="example-subset-build">
-<title>Example output of a kdesrc-build specific module build</title>
-<screen>
- <prompt>%</prompt> <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command> <option>--include-dependencies</option> <replaceable>dolphin</replaceable></userinput>
-Updating kde-build-metadata (to branch master)
-Updating sysadmin-repo-metadata (to branch master)
-
-Building extra-cmake-modules from frameworks-set (1/79)
- Updating extra-cmake-modules (to branch master)
- No changes to extra-cmake-modules source, proceeding to build.
- Running cmake...
- Compiling... succeeded (after 0 seconds)
- Installing.. succeeded (after 0 seconds)
-
-Building phonon from phonon (2/79)
- Updating phonon (to branch master)
- No changes to phonon source, proceeding to build.
- Compiling... succeeded (after 0 seconds)
- Installing.. succeeded (after 0 seconds)
-
-Building attica from frameworks-set (3/79)
- Updating attica (to branch master)
- No changes to attica source, proceeding to build.
- Compiling... succeeded (after 0 seconds)
- Installing.. succeeded (after 0 seconds)
-
- ...
-
-Building dolphin from base-apps (79/79)
- Updating dolphin (to branch master)
- No changes to dolphin source, proceeding to build.
- Compiling... succeeded (after 0 seconds)
- Installing.. succeeded (after 0 seconds)
-
-<<< PACKAGES SUCCESSFULLY BUILT >>>
-Built 79 modules
-
-Your logs are saved in /home/kde-src/kdesrc/log/2018-01-20-07
-</screen>
-</example>
-
-<para>In this case, although only the <replaceable>dolphin</replaceable>
-application was specified, the <option>--include-dependencies</option> flag
-caused &kdesrc-build; to include the dependencies listed for
-<replaceable>dolphin</replaceable> (by setting the <link
-linkend="conf-include-dependencies">include-dependencies</link> option).
-</para>
-
-<note><para>The dependency resolution worked in this case only because
-<replaceable>dolphin</replaceable> happened to be specified in a
-<literal>kde-projects</literal>-based module set (in this example, named
-<literal>base-apps</literal>). See <xref linkend="module-sets-kde"/>.
-</para></note>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/cmdline.docbook b/doc/cmdline.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index a3380279..00000000
--- a/doc/cmdline.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,105 +0,0 @@
-<chapter id="cmdline">
-<title>Command Line Options and Environment Variables</title>
-
-<sect1 id="cmdline-usage">
-<title>Command Line Usage</title>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; is designed to be run as follows:</para>
-
-<cmdsynopsis>
-<command>kdesrc-build</command>
-<arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>--options</replaceable></arg>
-<arg rep="repeat"><replaceable>modules to build</replaceable></arg>
-</cmdsynopsis>
-
-<para>If no modules to build are specified on the command line, then
-kdesrc-build will build all modules defined in its configuration file, in the
-order listed in that file (although this can be modified by various
-configuration file options).</para>
-
-<sect2 id="cmdline-usage-options">
-<title>Commonly used command line options</title>
-
-<para>The full list of command line options is given in <xref
-linkend="supported-cmdline-params"/>. The most-commonly used options
-include:</para>
-
-<variablelist>
- <varlistentry>
- <term><option>--pretend</option> (or <option>-p</option>)</term>
- <listitem><para>This option causes &kdesrc-build; to indicate what actions
- it would take, without actually really implementing them. This can be
- useful to make sure that the modules you think you are building will
- actually get built.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term><option>--refresh-build</option></term>
- <listitem><para>This option forces &kdesrc-build; to build the given
- modules from an absolutely fresh start point. Any existing build directory
- for that module is removed and it is rebuilt. This option is useful if you
- have errors building a module, and sometimes is required when &Qt; or &kde;
- libraries change.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term><option>--no-src</option></term>
- <listitem><para>This option skips the source update process. You might use
- it if you have very recently updated the source code (perhaps you did it
- manually or recently ran &kdesrc-build;) but still want to rebuild some
- modules.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-
- <varlistentry>
- <term><option>--no-build</option></term>
- <listitem><para>This option is similar to <option>--no-src</option> above,
- but this time the build process is skipped.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-</variablelist>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="cmdline-usage-modules">
-<title>Specifying modules to build</title>
-
-<para>In general, specifying modules to build is as simple as passing their
-module name as you defined it in the configuration file. You can also pass
-modules that are part of a module set, either as named on <link
-linkend="conf-use-modules">use-modules</link>, or the name of the entire module
-set itself, if you have given it a name.</para>
-
-<para>In the specific case of module sets based against the <link
-linkend="kde-projects-module-sets">KDE project database</link>, &kdesrc-build;
-will expand module name components to determine the exact module you
-want. For example, &kdesrc-build;'s KDE project entry locates the project in
-<literal>extragear/utils/kdesrc-build</literal>. You could specify any
-of the following to build &kdesrc-build;:</para>
-
-<informalexample>
-<screen>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <command>kdesrc-build</command> <option><replaceable>+extragear/utils/kdesrc-build</replaceable></option>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <command>kdesrc-build</command> <option><replaceable>+utils/kdesrc-build</replaceable></option>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <command>kdesrc-build</command> <option><replaceable>+kdesrc-build</replaceable></option>
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-
-<note><para>The commands in the previous example preceded the module-name with
-a <symbol>+</symbol>. This forces the module name to be interpreted as a module
-from the KDE project database, even if that module hasn't been defined in your
-configuration file.
-</para></note>
-
-<para>Be careful about specifying very generic projects (e.g.
-<literal>extragear/utils</literal> by itself), as this can lead to a large
-amount of modules being built. You should use the <option>--pretend</option>
-option before building a new module set to ensure it is only building the
-modules you want.</para>
-
-</sect2>
-</sect1>
-
-&supported-envvars;
-
-&supported-cmdline-params;
-
-</chapter>
diff --git a/doc/conf-options-table.docbook b/doc/conf-options-table.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index b35d520c..00000000
--- a/doc/conf-options-table.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,1482 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="conf-options-table">
-<title>Table of available configuration options</title>
-
-<para>Here are tables of various options, containing the following
-information:</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-
-<listitem><para>The option name</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>The scope of the option: <emphasis>global</emphasis>, <emphasis>module</emphasis> or <emphasis>module-set</emphasis>.
-Options in <emphasis>module</emphasis> or/and <emphasis>module-set</emphasis> scope can also be defined in <emphasis>options</emphasis> sections.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>Special comments on the purpose and usage of the
-option.</para></listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-
-<table id="options-global-table">
-<title>Global scope only options</title>
-<tgroup cols="2">
-
-<thead>
-<row>
-<entry>Option name</entry>
-<entry>Description</entry>
-</row>
-</thead>
-<tbody>
-
-<row id="conf-async">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-async">async</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>True</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.6</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option enables the asynchronous mode of operation, where the source
-code update and the build process will be performed in parallel, instead of waiting for
-all of the source code updates before starting the build process.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-async"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-colorful-output">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-colorful-output">colorful-output</link></entry>
-<entry><simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>True</member>
-</simplelist><para>Set this option to <userinput>false</userinput> to disable the colorful output of &kdesrc-build;.
-Note that &kdesrc-build; will not output the
-color codes to anything but a terminal (such as xterm, &konsole;, or the normal
-&Linux; console).</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-color"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-disable-agent-check">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-disable-agent-check">disable-agent-check</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>False</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>If you are using &ssh; to download the &git; sources
-(such as if you are using the git+ssh protocol), this option controls if &kdesrc-build; will try and
-make sure that if you are using ssh-agent, it is actually managing some &ssh;
-identities. This is to try and prevent &ssh; from asking for your pass phrase
-for every module.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --disable-agent-check, --no-disable-agent-check</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-git-desired-protocol">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-git-desired-protocol">git-desired-protocol</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>git</member>
-<member>History information</member><member>This option was added in &kdesrc-build; 1.16. Prior to 20.06 this option
-was used to configure the fetch URL instead of the push URL. As of 20.06
-<literal>https</literal> is always used when updating KDE projects.</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option only applies to modules from a <link
-linkend="kde-projects-module-sets">&kde; project</link> repository.</para>
-
-<para>What this option actually does is configure which network protocol to
-prefer when pushing source code for these modules. Normally the very-efficient
-<literal>git</literal> protocol is used, but this may be blocked in some
-networks (e.g. corporate intranets, public Wi-Fi). An alternative protocol
-which is much better supported is the <literal>https</literal> protocol used for
-Internet web sites.</para>
-
-<para>If you are using one of these constrained networks you can set this
-option to <userinput>http</userinput> to prefer <literal>https</literal>
-communications instead.</para>
-
-<tip><para>You may also need the <link
-linkend="conf-http-proxy">http-proxy</link> option if an HTTP proxy is also
-needed for network traffic.</para></tip>
-
-<para>In any other situation you should not set this option as the default
-protocol is most efficient.</para>
-
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-git-repository-base">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-git-repository-base">git-repository-base</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.12.1</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option is used to create a short
-name to reference a specific Git repository base URL in later <link
-linkend="module-sets">module set</link> declarations, which is useful for
-quickly declaring many Git modules to build.</para>
-
-<para>You must specify two things (separated by a space): The name to assign
-to the base URL, and the actual base URL itself. For example:</para>
-
-<para>
-<programlisting>
-global
- # other options
- # This is the common path to all anonymous Git server modules.
- git-repository-base <replaceable>kde-git</replaceable> <replaceable>kde:</replaceable>
-end global
-
-# Module declarations
-
-module-set
- # Now you can use the alias you defined earlier, but <emphasis>only</emphasis> in a module-set.
- repository <replaceable>kde-git</replaceable>
- <link linkend="conf-use-modules">use-modules</link> <replaceable>module1.git</replaceable> <replaceable>module2.git</replaceable>
-end module-set
-</programlisting>
-</para>
-
-<para>The module-set's <literal>use-modules</literal> option created two modules
-internally, with &kdesrc-build; behaving as if it had read:</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-module module1
- repository kde:<replaceable>module1.git</replaceable>
-end module
-
-module module2
- repository kde:<replaceable>module2.git</replaceable>
-end module
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>The <literal>kde:</literal> &git; repository prefix used above is a
-shortcut which will be setup by &kdesrc-build; automatically. See the TechBase
-<ulink
-url="https://techbase.kde.org/Development/Git/Configuration#URL_Renaming">URL
-Renaming</ulink> article for more information. Note that unlike most other
-options, this option can be specified multiple times in order to create as
-many aliases as necessary.</para>
-
-<tip><para>It is not required to use this option to take advantage of module-set,
-this option exists to make it easy to use the same repository across many
-different module sets.</para></tip>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-install-environment-driver">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-install-environment-driver">install-environment-driver</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>True</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>17.08</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Install a shell script that can be
-sourced in a user's profile setup scripts to easily establish needed environment
-variables to run the Plasma desktop built by &kdesrc-build;.</para>
-
-<para>This driver will alter the following files:</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para><filename>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/kde-env-master.sh</filename> (normally found at <filename>~/.config/kde-env-master.sh</filename>).</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para><filename>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/kde-env-user.sh</filename> (normally found at <filename>~/.config/kde-env-user.sh</filename>).</para></listitem>
-</itemizedlist>
-
-<para>The <filename>kde-env-user.sh</filename> is optional. It is
-intended for user customizations (see the <ulink url="https://userbase.kde.org/KDE_System_Administration/Environment_Variables#Troubleshooting_and_Debugging">Troubleshooting and Debugging</ulink>
-section of the &kde; UserBase for examples of customizable settings), but these settings
-can be set elsewhere by the user in their existing profile setup scripts.</para>
-
-<para>You can disable this feature by setting this option to
-<replaceable>false</replaceable>, and ensuring that the <link
-linkend="conf-install-session-driver">install-session-driver</link> option is
-also disabled.</para>
-
-<tip><para>&kdesrc-build; will not overwrite your existing files (if present)
-unless you also pass the <option><link
-linkend="cmdline-delete-my-settings">--delete-my-settings</link></option>
-command-line option.</para></tip>
-<para>Related command-line option: --install-environment-driver, --no-install-environment-driver</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-install-session-driver">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-install-session-driver">install-session-driver</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>True</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.16</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>If enabled, &kdesrc-build; will try to install a driver for the graphical
-login manager that allows you to login to your &kdesrc-build;-built &kde; desktop.</para>
-
-<para>This driver will alter the following files:</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para><filename>~/.xsession</filename></para></listitem>
-<listitem><para><filename>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/kde-env-master.sh</filename> (normally found at <filename>~/.config/kde-env-master.sh</filename>).</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para><filename>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/kde-env-user.sh</filename> (normally found at <filename>~/.config/kde-env-user.sh</filename>).</para></listitem>
-</itemizedlist>
-
-<para>If you maintain your own login driver then you can disable this feature by setting this
-option to <replaceable>false</replaceable>. If enabled, this feature also enables the
-<link linkend="conf-install-environment-driver">install-environment-driver</link> feature.</para>
-
-<tip><para>&kdesrc-build; will not overwrite your existing files (if present)
-unless you also pass the <option><link
-linkend="cmdline-delete-my-settings">--delete-my-settings</link></option>
-command-line option.</para></tip>
-<para>Related command-line option: --install-session-driver, --no-install-session-driver</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-niceness">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-niceness">niceness</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Integer</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>10</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set this option to a number between 20 and 0. The higher the number, the
-lower a priority &kdesrc-build; will set for itself, i.e. the higher the
-number, the "nicer" the program is.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-nice"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-num-cores">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-num-cores">num-cores</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Integer</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>Depends on system</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>20.07</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option is defined by &kdesrc-build; (when using <command>kdesrc-build --generate-config</command>), set to be the number of
-available CPUs (as indicated by the external application
-<application>nproc</application>). If &kdesrc-build; cannot detect the
-number of CPUs, this value is set to 4.</para>
-
-<para>See <xref linkend="make-options-example"/> for an example of this
-option's usage.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --num-cores <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-num-cores-low-mem">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-num-cores-low-mem">num-cores-low-mem</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Integer</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>Depends on system</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>20.07</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option is defined by &kdesrc-build; (when using <command>kdesrc-build --generate-config</command>), set to be the number of
-CPUs that is deemed safe for heavyweight or other highly-intensive modules,
-such as <literal>qtwebengine</literal>, to avoid running out of memory
-during the build.</para>
-
-<para>The typical calculation is one CPU core for every 2
-gigabytes (GiB) of total memory. At least 1 core will be specified,
-and no more than <option><link linkend="conf-num-cores">num-cores</link></option>
-cores will be specified.</para>
-
-<para>Although this option is intended to support &Qt; modules, you can use it for your
-any module in the same way that <option>num-cores</option> is used.</para>
-
-<para>If &kdesrc-build; cannot detect available memory then this value will be
-set to 2.</para>
-
-<para>Related command-line option: --num-cores-low-mem <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-persistent-data-file">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-persistent-data-file">persistent-data-file</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.15</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Use this option to change where &kdesrc-build; stores its
-persistent data. The default is to store this data in a file called
-<filename>.kdesrc-build-data</filename>, placed in the same directory as the
-configuration file in use. If the global configuration file is in use, it will
-be saved to <filename>~/.local/state/kdesrc-build-data</filename>
-(<filename>$XDG_STATE_HOME/kdesrc-build-data</filename>, if
-<envar>$XDG_STATE_HOME</envar> is set). If you have multiple available
-configurations in the same directory, you may want to manually set this option,
-so that different configurations do not end up with conflicting persistent data.
-</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --persistent-data-file <replaceable>file</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-ssh-identity-file">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-ssh-identity-file">ssh-identity-file</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.14.2</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set this option to control which private SSH key file is passed to the
-<command>ssh-add</command> command when &kdesrc-build; is downloading source
-code from repositories that require authentication. See also: <xref
-linkend="ssh-agent-reminder"/>.</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-use-idle-io-priority">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-use-idle-io-priority">use-idle-io-priority</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>False</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.12</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Use lower priority for disk and other I/O, which can significantly improve the
-responsiveness of the rest of the system at the expense of slightly longer
-running times for &kdesrc-build;.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --use-idle-io-priority, --no-use-idle-io-priority</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-use-inactive-modules">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-use-inactive-modules">use-inactive-modules</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>False</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Allow kdesrc-build to also clone and pull from repositories marked as inactive.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --use-inactive-modules, --no-use-inactive-modules</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-</tbody>
-</tgroup>
-</table>
-
-<!-- Between tables -->
-
-<table id="option-table">
-<title>All scopes (module, module-set and global) options</title>
-<tgroup cols="2">
-
-<thead>
-<row>
-<entry>Option name</entry>
-<entry>Description</entry>
-</row>
-</thead>
-
-<tbody>
-
-<row id="conf-binpath">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-binpath">binpath</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set this option to set the environment variable PATH while building.
-You cannot override this setting in a module option. The default value is
-the $<envar>PATH</envar> that is set when the script starts. This environment
-variable should include the colon-separated paths of your development
-toolchain. The paths <filename class="directory">${install-dir}/bin</filename> and
-<filename class="directory">${qt-install-dir}/bin</filename> are automatically added. You
-may use the tilde (~) for any paths you add using this option.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --binpath <replaceable>path</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-branch">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-branch">branch</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>master</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Checkout the specified branch instead of the default branch.</para>
-<note><para>For most &kde; modules you probably wish to use the <link
-linkend="conf-branch-group">branch-group</link> option instead and use this
-option for case-by-case exceptions.</para></note>
-<para>Related command-line option: --branch <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-branch-group">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-branch-group">branch-group</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.16-pre2</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set this option to a general group from which you want modules to be
-chosen.</para>
-
-<para>For supported &git; module types, &kdesrc-build; will determine the
-actual branch to use automatically based on rules encoded by the &kde;
-developers (these rules may be viewed in the
-<literal>kde-build-metadata</literal> source repository in your source
-directory). After a branch is determined that branch is used as if you had
-specified it yourself using the <link linkend="conf-branch">branch</link>
-option.
-</para>
-
-<para>This is useful if you're just trying to maintain up-to-date on some
-normal development track without having to pay attention to all the branch name
-changes.</para>
-
-<para>Note that if you <emphasis>do</emphasis> choose a
-<literal>branch</literal> yourself, that it will override this setting. The
-same is true of other specific branch selection options such as <link
-linkend="conf-tag">tag</link>.</para>
-
-<note><para>This option only applies to <literal>kde-projects</literal> &git;
-modules (the common case). See also <xref
-linkend="kde-projects-module-sets"/>.
-</para></note>
-
-<para>Related command-line option: --branch-group <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-build-dir">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-build-dir">build-dir</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member><filename class="directory">~/kde/build</filename></member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>
-Use this option to change the directory to contain the built sources. There
-are three different ways to use it:</para>
-
-<orderedlist>
-
-<listitem><para>Relative to the &kde; &git; source directory (see <link
-linkend="conf-source-dir">the source-dir option</link>). This is the default,
-and is selected if you type a directory name that does not start with a tilde
-(~) or a slash (/).</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>Absolute path. If you specify a path that begins with a /, then
-that path is used directly. For example, <filename
-class="directory">/tmp/kde-obj-dir/</filename>.</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>Relative to your home directory. If you specify a path that
-begins with a ~, then the path is used relative to your home directory,
-analogous to the shell's tilde-expansion. For example, <filename
-class="directory">~/builddir</filename> would set the build directory to
-<filename
-class="directory">/home/user-name/builddir</filename>.</para></listitem>
-
-</orderedlist>
-
-<para>Perhaps surprisingly, this option can be changed per module.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --build-dir <replaceable>path</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-build-when-unchanged">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-build-when-unchanged">build-when-unchanged</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>True</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Control whether &kdesrc-build; always
-tries to build a module that has not had any source code updates.</para>
-
-<para>If set to <userinput>true</userinput>, &kdesrc-build; always attempts the build phase
-for a module, even if the module did not have any source code updates.
-With this value it will more likely lead to a correct build.</para>
-
-<para>If set to <userinput>false</userinput>, &kdesrc-build; will only attempt to run the
-build phase for a module if the module has a source code update, or in other
-situations where it is likely that a rebuild is actually required. This can save
-time, especially if you run &kdesrc-build; daily, or more frequently.</para>
-
-<important><para>This feature is provided as an optimization only. Like many
-other optimizations, there are trade-offs for the correctness of your
-installation. For instance, changes to the qt or kdelibs modules may cause
-a rebuild of other modules to be necessary, even if the source code doesn't
-change at all.</para></important>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-build-when-unchanged"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-cmake-generator">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-cmake-generator">cmake-generator</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>Unix Makefiles</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Specify which generator to use with &cmake;.
-Currently both <literal>Ninja</literal> and <literal>Unix Makefiles</literal>
-as well as extra generators based on them like <literal>Eclipse CDT4 - Ninja
-</literal> are supported. Invalid (unsupported) values are ignored and treated
-as if unset.
-</para>
-
-<para>Note that if a valid generator is also specified through
-<link linkend="conf-cmake-options">cmake-options</link> it will override the
-value for <literal>cmake-generator</literal>.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --cmake-generator <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-cmake-toolchain">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-cmake-toolchain">cmake-toolchain</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Specify a toolchain file to use with &cmake;.
-</para>
-<para>When a valid toolchain file is configured, &kdesrc-build; will
-<emphasis>no longer set environment variables automatically</emphasis>.
-You can use &set-env;, &binpath; and &libpath; to fix up the environment
-manually if your toolchain file does not work out of the box with
-&kdesrc-build;. Refer to <link linkend="kdesrc-build-std-flags">the overview
-of standard flags added by &kdesrc-build;</link> for more information.
-</para>
-<para>Note that if a valid toolchain is also specified through
-<link linkend="conf-cmake-options">cmake-options</link> it will override the
-value for <literal>cmake-toolchain</literal>.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --cmake-toolchain <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-cmake-options">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-cmake-options">cmake-options</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Appends to global options for the default buildsystem, overrides global
-for other buildsystems.</para>
-<para>Use this option to specify what flags to pass to &cmake; when
-creating the build system for the module. When this is used as a global option,
-it is applied to all modules that this script builds. When used as a module
-option, it is added to the end of the global options. This allows you to
-specify common &cmake; options in the global section.</para>
-
-<para>This option does not apply to qt (which does not use &cmake;). Use
-<link linkend="conf-configure-flags">configure-flags</link> instead.</para>
-
-<para>If a valid generator is specified among the listed options it will
-override the value of
-<link linkend="conf-cmake-generator">cmake-generator</link>. Invalid
-(unsupported) generators are ignored and will not be passed to &cmake;.
-</para>
-
-<para>If a valid toolchain file is specified among the listed options it will
-override the value of
-<link linkend="conf-cmake-toolchain">cmake-toolchain</link>. Invalid
-toolchains are ignored and will not be passed to &cmake;.
-</para>
-
-<para>Since these options are passed directly to the &cmake; command line, they
-should be given as they would be typed into &cmake;. For example:</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-cmake-options -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>Since this is a hassle, &kdesrc-build; takes pains to ensure that as long
-as the rest of the options are set correctly, you should be able to leave this
-option blank. (In other words, <emphasis>required</emphasis> &cmake; parameters
-are set for you automatically)</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --cmake-options <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-compile-commands-export">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-compile-commands-export">compile-commands-export</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>True</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Enables the generation of a <literal>compile_commands.json</literal> via CMake inside the build directory.
-</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --compile-commands-export, --no-compile-commands-export</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-compile-commands-linking">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-compile-commands-linking">compile-commands-linking</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>False</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Enables the creation of symbolic links from <literal>compile_commands.json</literal> generated via CMake
-inside the build directory to the matching source directory.
-</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --compile-commands-linking, --no-compile-commands-linking</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-configure-flags">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-configure-flags">configure-flags</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Appends to global options for the default buildsystem, overrides global
-for other buildsystems.</para>
-<para>Use this option to specify what flags to pass to ./configure when
-creating the build system for the module. When this is used as a global-option,
-it is applied to all modules that this script builds. <emphasis>This option
-only works for qt.</emphasis></para>
-
-<para>To change configuration settings for KDE modules, see
-<link linkend="conf-cmake-options">cmake-options</link>.
-</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --configure-flags <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-custom-build-command">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-custom-build-command">custom-build-command</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
- <para>This option can be set to run a different command (other than
- <command>make</command>, for example) in order to perform the build
- process. &kdesrc-build; should in general do the right thing, so you
- should not need to set this option. However it can be useful to use
- alternate build systems.
- </para>
-
- <para>The value of this option is used as the command line to run, modified
- by the <link linkend="conf-make-options">make-options</link> option as
- normal.
- </para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --custom-build-command <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-cxxflags">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-cxxflags">cxxflags</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Appends to global options for the default buildsystem, overrides global
-for other buildsystems.</para>
-<para>Use this option to specify what flags to use for building the
-module. This option is
-specified here instead of with <link
-linkend="conf-configure-flags">configure-flags</link> or <link
-linkend="conf-cmake-options">cmake-options</link> because this option will also
-set the environment variable <envar>CXXFLAGS</envar> during the build process.</para>
-
-<para>Note that for &kde; 4 and any other modules that use &cmake;, it is
-necessary to set the CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE option to <userinput>none</userinput>
-when configuring the module. This can be done using the <link
-linkend="conf-cmake-options">cmake-options</link> option.
-</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --cxxflags <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-dest-dir">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-dest-dir">dest-dir</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Use this option to change the name a module is given on disk. For
-example, if your module was extragear/network, you could rename it to
-extragear-network using this option. Note that although this changes the
-name of the module on disk, it is not a good idea to include directories
-or directory separators in the name as this will interfere with any
-<link linkend="conf-build-dir">build-dir</link> or
-<link linkend="conf-source-dir">source-dir</link> options.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --dest-dir <replaceable>path</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-do-not-compile">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-do-not-compile">do-not-compile</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Use this option to select a specific set of directories not to be built in a
-module (instead of all of them). The directories not to build should be space-separated.</para>
-
-<para>Note that the sources to the programs will still be downloaded.</para>
-
-<para>For example, to disable building the <literal>codeeditor</literal> and <literal>minimaltest</literal>
-directories of the <literal>syntaxhighlighting</literal> framework, you
-would add <userinput>do-not-compile codeeditor minimaltest</userinput>
-compiling, you would add "do-not-compile juk kscd" to your syntaxhighlighting
-options.</para>
-
-<para>See <xref linkend="not-compiling"/> for an example.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --do-not-compile <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-git-user">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-git-user">git-user</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>15.09</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option is intended for &kde; developers. If set, it will be used to
-automatically setup identity information for the &git; source control software
-for <emphasis>newly downloaded</emphasis> &git; modules (including the vast
-majority of &kde; modules).</para>
-
-<para>Specifically, the user's name and email fields for each new &git; repository are filled
-in to the values set by this option.</para>
-
-<para>The value must be specified in the form <option><replaceable>User
-Name</replaceable> <<replaceable>email at example.com</replaceable>></option>.</para>
-
-<para>For instance, a developer named <quote>Foo Barbaz</quote> with the
-email address <quote>foo at abc.xyz</quote> would use:</para>
-<para>
-<programlisting>
- <symbol>git-user</symbol> <replaceable>Foo Barbaz</replaceable> <<replaceable>foo at abc.xyz</replaceable>>
-</programlisting>
-</para>
-
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-http-proxy">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-http-proxy">http-proxy</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.16</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option, if set, uses the specified URL as a proxy server to use for
-any HTTP network communications (for example, when downloading the <link linkend="kde-projects-module-sets">KDE project
-database</link>).</para>
-
-<para>In addition, &kdesrc-build; will try to ensure that the tools it depends
-on also use that proxy server, if possible, by setting the
-<envar>http_proxy</envar> environment variable to the indicated server,
-<emphasis>if that environment variable is not already set</emphasis>.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --http-proxy <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-directory-layout">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-directory-layout">directory-layout</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Valid values</member><member><userinput>flat</userinput>,
-<userinput>invent</userinput>, <userinput>metadata</userinput></member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>flat</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option is used to configure the layout which &kdesrc-build; should use when
-creating source and build directories.</para>
-<para>The <userinput>flat</userinput> layout will group all modules
-directly underneath the top level source and build directories. For example,
-<literal>source/extragear/network/telepathy/ktp-text-ui</literal> in the <userinput>metadata</userinput>
-layout would be <literal>source/ktp-text-ui</literal> using the <userinput>flat</userinput> layout
-instead.
-</para>
-<para>The <userinput>invent</userinput> layout creates a directory hierarchy mirroring the relative
-paths of repositories on <ulink url="https://invent.kde.org/">invent.kde.org</ulink>. For example
-<literal>source/kde/applications/kate</literal> in the <userinput>metadata</userinput> layout would
-be <literal>source/utilities/kate</literal> using the <userinput>invent</userinput> layout instead.
-This layout only affects KDE projects. It is a good choice for people starting out with
-&kdesrc-build;.
-</para>
-<para>Finally, the <userinput>metadata</userinput> layout is the same as the old default
-behaviour. This layout organises KDE projects according to the project paths specified in the
-project metadata for these modules. This is a good choice if you want a directory layout which
-tracks with certain KDE processes, but note that this path is therefore not always stable. As a
-result, &kdesrc-build; may abandon an old copy of the repository and clone a new one for a project
-due to changes in the project metadata.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --directory-layout <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-generate-vscode-project-config">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-generate-vscode-project-config">generate-vscode-project-config</link></entry>
-
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>False</member>
-</simplelist>
-
-<para>Module setting overrides global</para>
-
-<para>Set this option to <userinput>true</userinput> to make
-&kdesrc-build; create VS Code project files (.vscode directory) in the module
-source directory.</para>
-
-<para>The .vscode folder will be created in the project source directory, only
-if it does not already exist. The configurations will enable the use of LSP,
-building, debugging, and running the project from within VS Code.</para>
-
-<para>The configuration also recommends extensions to install that are useful
-for working on most KDE projects.</para>
-
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-generate-vscode-project-config"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-include-dependencies">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-include-dependencies">include-dependencies</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>True</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Controls if &kdesrc-build; will include known dependencies of this module in its build,
-without requiring you to mention those dependencies (even indirectly).</para>
-
-<note><para>This option only works for <link
-linkend="kde-projects-module-sets"><literal>kde-project</literal>-based
-modules</link>, and requires that the metadata maintained by the &kde;
-developers is accurate for your selected <link
-linkend="conf-branch-group">branch-group</link>.</para></note>
-
-<para>This is to support building applications
-that need versions of &Qt; or &plasma; more recent than supported on
-common operating systems.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-include-dependencies"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-install-after-build">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-install-after-build">install-after-build</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>True</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option is used to install the package after it successfully builds.
-You can also use the <link
-linkend="cmdline-no-install"><option>--no-install</option></link> command line
-flag.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --install-after-build, --no-install-after-build</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-install-dir">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-install-dir">install-dir</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member><filename class="directory">~/kde/usr</filename></member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option controls where to install the module after it
-is built. If you
-change this to a directory needing root access, you may want to read about the
-<link linkend="conf-make-install-prefix">make-install-prefix</link> option as
-well.</para>
-<para>
-Changing this option for specific module allows you to install it to a different directory than
-where the &kde; Platform libraries are installed, such as if you were using
-&kdesrc-build; only to build applications.</para>
-<para>You can use <varname>${MODULE}</varname> or <varname>$MODULE</varname>
-in the path to have them expanded to the module's name.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-install-dir"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-libname">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-libname">libname</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>Auto detected</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set this option to change the default name of the installed library directory
-inside ${install-dir} and ${qt-install-dir}. On many systems this is either
-"lib" or "lib64". Auto-detection is attempted to set the correct name by default,
-but if the guess is wrong then it can be changed with this setting.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --libname <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-libpath">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-libpath">libpath</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set this option to set the environment variable
-<envar>LD_LIBRARY_PATH</envar> while building. You cannot override this setting
-in a module option. The default value is blank, but the paths <filename
-class="directory">${install-dir}/$<envar>LIBNAME</envar></filename> and <filename
-class="directory">${qt-install-dir}/$<envar>LIBNAME</envar></filename> are automatically added.
-You may use the tilde (~) for any paths you add using this option.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --libpath <replaceable>path</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-log-dir">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-log-dir">log-dir</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Use this option to change the directory used to hold the log files
-generated by the script.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --log-dir <replaceable>path</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-make-install-prefix">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-make-install-prefix">make-install-prefix</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set this variable to a space-separated list, which is interpreted as a
-command and its options to precede the <userinput><command>make</command> <option>install</option></userinput> command used to install
-modules. This is useful for installing packages with &sudo; for example, but
-please be careful while dealing with root privileges.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --make-install-prefix <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-make-options">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-make-options">make-options</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set this variable in order to pass command line options to the
-<command>make</command> command. This is useful for programs such as <ulink
-url="https://github.com/distcc/distcc"><application>distcc</application></ulink> or
-systems with more than one processor core.</para>
-<para>Note that not all supported build systems use <command>make</command>. For
-build systems that use <command>ninja</command> for build (such as the
-<link linkend="conf-override-build-system"><application>Meson</application>
-build system</link>), see the <link linkend="conf-ninja-options">ninja-options</link>
-setting.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --make-options <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-manual-build">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-manual-build">manual-build</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>False</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set the option value to <userinput>true</userinput> to keep the
-build process from attempting to build this module. It will still be kept
-up-to-date when updating from &git;. This option is exactly equivalent
-to the
-<link linkend="cmdline-no-build">
-<option>--no-build</option>
-</link>
-command line option.
-</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-manual-update">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-manual-update">manual-update</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>False</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set the option value to <userinput>true</userinput> to keep the
-build process from attempting to update (and by extension, build or install)
-this module. If you set this option for a module, then you have essentially
-commented it out.</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-ninja-options">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-ninja-options">ninja-options</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set this variable in order to pass command line options to the
-
-<command>ninja</command> build command. This can be useful to enable <quote>verbose</quote> output
-or to manually reduce the number of parallel build jobs that <command>ninja</command> would
-use.</para>
-
-<note><para>Note that this setting only controls ninja when used by &kdesrc-build;.
-The &Qt; <quote>webengine</quote> module uses <command>ninja</command> indirectly, but
-only officially supports being built by <command>make</command>.
-In this situation, you can set <literal>NINJAFLAGS</literal> as a way to have
-<command>make</command> pass the appropriate flags when it later calls
-<command>ninja</command>, by using
-<link linkend="conf-make-options">make-options</link>.</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-options <replaceable>qtwebengine</replaceable>
- # Restrict make and ninja to using no more than 6 separate compile jobs even
- # when more CPU is available, to avoid running out of memory
- <option><link linkend="conf-make-options">make-options</link></option> -j<replaceable>6</replaceable> NINJAFLAGS=-j<replaceable>6</replaceable>
-end options
-</programlisting>
-</note>
-<para>Related command-line option: --ninja-options <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-override-build-system">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-override-build-system">override-build-system</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>Auto detected</member>
-<member>Valid values</member><member>KDE, Qt, qmake, generic, autotools, meson</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.16</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Normally &kdesrc-build; will detect the appropriate build system to use
-for a module after it is downloaded. This is done by checking for the existence
-of specific files in the module's source directory.</para>
-
-<para>Some modules may include more than one required set of files, which could confuse
-the auto-detection. In this case you can manually specify the correct build type.</para>
-
-<para>Currently supported build types that can be set are:</para>
-
-<variablelist>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>KDE</term>
- <listitem><para>Used to build &kde; modules. In reality it can be used to build
- almost any module that uses &cmake; but it is best not to rely on this.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>Qt</term>
- <listitem><para>Used to build the &Qt; library itself.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>qmake</term>
- <listitem><para>Used to build &Qt; modules that use
- <application>qmake</application>-style <literal>.pro</literal>
- files.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>generic</term>
- <listitem><para>Used to build modules that use plain Makefiles and that do not
- require any special configuration.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>autotools</term>
- <listitem><para>This is the standard configuration tool used for most Free and
- open-source software not in any of the other categories.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
- <varlistentry>
- <term>meson</term>
- <listitem><para>This is a <ulink url="https://mesonbuild.com">relatively new
- tool</ulink> gaining popularity as a replacement for the autotools and may
- be required for some non-&kde; modules.</para></listitem>
- </varlistentry>
-</variablelist>
-
-<para>Related command-line option: --override-build-system <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-purge-old-logs">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-purge-old-logs">purge-old-logs</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>True</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option controls whether old log directories are automatically
-deleted or not.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --purge-old-logs, --no-purge-old-logs</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-qmake-options">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-qmake-options">qmake-options</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.16</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Any options specified here are passed to the
-<command>qmake</command> command, for modules that use the
-<symbol>qmake</symbol> build system. For instance, you can use the
-<userinput>PREFIX=/path/to/qt</userinput> option to qmake to override where it
-installs the module.
-</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --qmake-options <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-qt-install-dir">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-qt-install-dir">qt-install-dir</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option controls where to install qt modules after build.
-If you do not specify this option, &kdesrc-build; will assume that &Qt; is
-provided by the operating system.
-</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --qt-install-dir <replaceable>path</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-remove-after-install">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-remove-after-install">remove-after-install</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Valid values</member><member>none, builddir, all</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>none</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>If you are low on hard disk space, you may want to use this option
-in order to automatically delete the build directory (or both the source and
-build directories for one-time installs) after the module is successfully
-installed.
-</para>
-<para>Possible values for this option are:
-<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para>none - Do not delete anything.</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para>builddir - Delete the build directory, but not the source.</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para>all - Delete both the source code and build directory.</para></listitem>
-</itemizedlist>
-</para>
-
-<para>Note that using this option can have a significant detrimental impact on
-both your bandwidth usage (if you use <replaceable>all</replaceable>) and the time taken to compile &kde; software,
-since &kdesrc-build; will be unable to perform incremental builds.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --remove-after-install <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-repository">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-repository">repository</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.10</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option is used to
-specify the &git; repository to download the source code for the module.
-&Qt; (and therefore qt) would need this option, as well as various
-&kde; modules that are in the process of conversion to use &git;.</para></entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-revision">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-revision">revision</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.16</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>If this option is set to a value other than 0 (zero), &kdesrc-build;
-will force the source update to bring the module to the exact revision
-given, even if options like <link linkend="conf-branch">branch</link> are in
-effect. If the module is already at the given revision then it will not be
-updated further unless this option is changed or removed from the
-configuration.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-revision"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-run-tests">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-run-tests">run-tests</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>False</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>If set to <userinput>true</userinput>, then the module will be
-built with support for running its test suite, and the test suite will be
-executed as part of the build process. &kdesrc-build; will show a simple
-report of the test results. This is useful for developers or those who want
-to ensure their system is setup correctly.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --run-tests, --no-run-tests</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-set-env">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-set-env">set-env</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option accepts a space-separated set of values, where the first value
-is the environment variable to set, and the rest of the values is what you
-want the variable set to. For example, to set the variable <envar>RONALD</envar> to
-McDonald, you would put in the appropriate section this command:</para>
-<programlisting>
-<command>set-env</command> <envar>RONALD</envar> <userinput>McDonald</userinput>
-</programlisting>
-<para>This option is special in that it can be repeated without overriding
-earlier set-env settings in the same section of the <link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link>. This
-way you can set more than one environment variable per module (or
-globally).</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-source-dir">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-source-dir">source-dir</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member><filename class="directory">~/kde/src</filename></member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option is used to set the directory on your computer to store the &kde;
-&git; sources at. You may use the tilde (~)
-to represent the home directory if using this option.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --source-dir <replaceable>path</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-stop-on-failure">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-stop-on-failure">stop-on-failure</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>True</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Setting this option to <userinput>false</userinput> allows the script to continue execution
-after an error occurs during the build or install process.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-stop-on-failure"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-tag">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-tag">tag</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.16</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Use this option to download a specific release of a module.</para>
-<para><emphasis>Note:</emphasis> The odds are very good that you <emphasis>do not
-want</emphasis> to use this option. &kde; releases are available in tarball form
-from the <ulink
-url="https://download.kde.org/">&kde; download site</ulink>.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --tag <replaceable>value</replaceable></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-use-clean-install">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-use-clean-install">use-clean-install</link></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>Boolean</member>
-<member>Default value</member><member>False</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.12</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Set this option to <userinput>true</userinput> in order to
-have &kdesrc-build; run <command>make uninstall</command> directly before
-running <command>make install</command>.</para>
-
-<para>This can be useful in ensuring that there are not stray old library
-files, &cmake; metadata, etc. that can cause issues in long-lived &kde;
-installations. However this only works on build systems that support
-<command>make uninstall</command>.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --use-clean-install, --no-use-clean-install</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-</tbody>
-
-</tgroup>
-</table>
-
-<para>These options do not require any value (except "filter-out-phases"). They are applied if they are presented in a section.</para>
-<table id="options-phase-selection-table">
-<title>Phase selection options</title>
-<tgroup cols="2">
-
-<thead>
-<row>
-<entry>Option name</entry>
-<entry>Scope</entry>
-<entry>Description</entry>
-</row>
-</thead>
-<tbody>
-
-<row id="conf-no-src">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-no-src">no-src</link></entry>
-<entry><simplelist type='vert'><member>global</member><member>module</member><member>module-set</member></simplelist></entry>
-<entry>
-<para>Remove <emphasis>update</emphasis> phase. The other phases that were presented will still be processed.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-no-src"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-no-install">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-no-install">no-install</link></entry>
-<entry><simplelist type='vert'><member>global</member><member>module</member><member>module-set</member></simplelist></entry>
-<entry>
-<para>Remove <emphasis>install</emphasis> phase. The other phases that were presented will still be processed.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-no-install"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-no-tests">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-no-tests">no-tests</link></entry>
-<entry><simplelist type='vert'><member>global</member><member>module</member><member>module-set</member></simplelist></entry>
-<entry>
-<para>Remove <emphasis>test</emphasis> phase. The other phases that were presented will still be processed.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --no-tests</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-no-build">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-no-build">no-build</link></entry>
-<entry><simplelist type='vert'><member>global</member><member>module</member><member>module-set</member></simplelist></entry>
-<entry>
-<para>Remove <emphasis>build</emphasis> phase. The other phases that were presented will still be processed.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-no-build"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-build-only">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-build-only">build-only</link></entry>
-<entry><simplelist type='vert'><member>global</member><member>module</member><member>module-set</member></simplelist></entry>
-<entry>
-<para>If had <emphasis>build</emphasis> phase, remove any other phases. Otherwise, remove all phases.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-build-only"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-install-only">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-install-only">install-only</link></entry>
-<entry><simplelist type='vert'><member>global</member><member>module</member><member>module-set</member></simplelist></entry>
-<entry>
-<para>If had <emphasis>install</emphasis> phase, remove any other phases. Otherwise, remove all phases.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-install-only"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-uninstall">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-uninstall">uninstall</link></entry>
-<entry><simplelist type='vert'><member>global</member><member>module</member><member>module-set</member></simplelist></entry>
-<entry>
-<para>If had <emphasis>uninstall</emphasis> phase, remove any other phases. Otherwise, remove all phases.</para>
-<para>Related command-line option: --uninstall</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-filter-out-phases">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-filter-out-phases">filter-out-phases</link></entry>
-<entry><simplelist type='vert'><member>global</member><member>module</member><member>module-set</member></simplelist></entry>
-<entry>
-<para>Remove those phases that are listed (space separated) in this option. The other phases that were presented will still be processed.</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-</tbody>
-</tgroup>
-</table>
-
-<table id="options-module-set-table">
-<title>Modules selection options</title>
-<tgroup cols="2">
-
-<thead>
-<row>
-<entry>Option name</entry>
-<entry>Scope</entry>
-<entry>Description</entry>
-</row>
-</thead>
-<tbody>
-
-
-<row id="conf-ignore-modules">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-ignore-modules">ignore-modules</link></entry>
-<entry><simplelist type='vert'><member>global</member><member>module-set</member></simplelist></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.16</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>Note that when specified in global section, &cmd-ignore-modules; cmdline option does not override this, but instead appends.</para>
-<para>Modules named by this option, which would be chosen by &kdesrc-build;
-due to a <link linkend="conf-use-modules">use-modules</link> option, are
-instead skipped entirely. Use this option when you want to build an entire
-<link linkend="kde-projects-module-sets">kde-projects</link> project grouping
-<emphasis>except for</emphasis> some specific modules.</para>
-
-<para>The option value does not necessarily have to name the module directly.
-Any module that has full consecutive parts of its <link
-linkend="kde-projects-module-sets">&kde; projects module path</link> match one
-of the option values will be ignored, so you can ignore multiple modules this
-way.</para>
-
-<para>For example, an option value of <replaceable>libs</replaceable> would
-result in both <symbol>kde/kdegraphics/libs</symbol> and
-<symbol>playground/libs</symbol> being excluded (though not
-<symbol>kde/kdelibs</symbol> since the full part <quote>kdelibs</quote> is what
-is compared).</para>
-
-<tip><para>See also <xref linkend="example-ignoring-a-module"/>.</para></tip>
-<para>Related command-line option: <xref linkend="cmdline-ignore-modules"/></para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-<row id="conf-use-modules">
-<entry><link linkend="conf-use-modules">use-modules</link></entry>
-<entry><simplelist type='vert'><member>module-set</member></simplelist></entry>
-<entry>
-<simplelist type='horiz' columns='2'>
-<member>Type</member><member>String</member>
-<member>Available since</member><member>1.12.1</member>
-</simplelist>
-<para>This option allows you to easily
-specify many different modules to build at the same point in <link
-linkend="kdesrc-buildrc">the configuration file</link>.</para>
-
-<para>Every identifier passed to this option is
-internally converted to a &kdesrc-build; module, with a <link
-linkend="conf-repository"><option>repository</option></link> option set to the
-module-set's repository combined with the identifier name in order to setup the
-final repository to download from. All other options that are assigned in the
-module-set are also copied to the generated modules unaltered.</para>
-
-<para>The order that modules are defined in this option is important, because
-that is also the order that &kdesrc-build; will process the generated modules
-when updating, building, and installing. All modules defined in the given
-module-set will be handled before &kdesrc-build; moves to the next module after
-the module-set.</para>
-
-<para>If you need to change the options for a generated module, simply declare
-the module again after it is defined in the module-set, and set your options
-as needed. Although you will change the options set for the module this way,
-the module will still be updated and built in the order set by the module-set
-(i.e. you can't reorder the build sequence doing this).</para>
-
-<important><para>The name to use for the module if you do this is simply the
-name that you passed to <option>use-modules</option>, with the exception that
-any <literal>.git</literal> is removed.</para></important>
-
-<para>See <xref linkend="module-sets"/> and <link
-linkend="conf-git-repository-base">git-repository-base</link> for a description
-of its use and an example.</para>
-</entry>
-</row>
-
-</tbody>
-</tgroup>
-</table>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/configure-data.docbook b/doc/configure-data.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index a4019619..00000000
--- a/doc/configure-data.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,110 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="configure-data">
-<title>Setting the Configuration Data</title>
-
-<para>
-To use &kdesrc-build;, you should have a file in your <filename>~/.config</filename>
-(or in <envar>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</envar>, if set) directory called
-<filename>kdesrc-buildrc</filename>, which sets the general options and
-specifies the modules you would like to download and build.
-</para>
-
-<note><para>
-It is possible to use different configuration files for &kdesrc-build;, which is
-described in <xref linkend="kdesrc-buildrc" />. If you need to use multiple
-configurations, please see that section. Here, we will assume that the
-configuration is stored in <filename>~/.config/kdesrc-buildrc</filename>.
-</para></note>
-
-<para>
-The easiest way to proceed is to use the
-<filename>kdesrc-buildrc-kf5-sample</filename> file as a template, changing global
-options to match your wants, and also change the list of modules you want to
-build.
-</para>
-
-<para>
-The default settings should be appropriate to perform a
-&kde; build. Some settings that you may wish to alter include:
-</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-install-dir">install-dir</link>, which changes the
-destination directory that your &kde; software is installed to. This defaults to
-<filename class="directory">~/kde/usr</filename>, which is a single-user
-installation.</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-branch-group">branch-group</link>, which can
-be
-used to choose the appropriate branch of development for the &kde; modules as a
-whole. There are many supported build configurations but you will likely want to
-choose <option>kf5-qt5</option> so that &kdesrc-build; downloads the latest code
-based on &Qt; 5 and &kde; Frameworks 5.</para>
-
-<tip><para>&kdesrc-build; will use a default branch group if you do not choose
-one, but this default will change over time, so it's better to choose one so
-that the branch group does not change unexpectedly.</para></tip>
-</listitem>
-
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-source-dir">source-dir</link>, to control the directory
-&kdesrc-build; uses for downloading the source code, running the build process, and saving
-logs.
-This defaults to <filename class="directory">~/kde/src</filename>.</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-cmake-options">cmake-options</link>, which
-sets the options to pass to the &cmake; command when building each module.
-Typically this is used to set between <quote>debug</quote> or
-<quote>release</quote> builds, to enable (or disable) optional features, or to
-pass information to the build process about the location of required libraries.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-make-options">make-options</link>, which
-sets the options used when actually running the <application>make</application>
-command to build each module (once &cmake; has established the build system).
-</para>
-
-<para>The most typical option is <option>-j<replaceable>N</replaceable></option>,
-where <replaceable>N</replaceable> should be replaced with the maximum number of
-compile jobs you wish to allow. A higher number (up to the number of logical CPUs
-your system has available) leads to quicker builds, but requires more system resources.
-</para>
-
-<tip><para>&kdesrc-build; sets the option <option><link linkend="conf-num-cores">num-cores</link></option> to
-the detected number of available processing cores. You can use this value
-in your own configuration file to avoid having to set it manually.
-</para></tip>
-
-<example id="make-options-example">
-<title>Configuring Make to use all available CPUs, with exceptions</title>
-<screen>
-global
- # This environment variable is automatically used by make, including
- # make commands not run by kdesrc-build directly, such as Qt's configure
- set-env MAKEFLAGS -j<literal>${num-cores}</literal>
- …
-end global
-
-…
-
-module-set <replaceable>big-module-set</replaceable>
- repository kde-projects
- use-modules <replaceable>calligra</replaceable>
- make-options -j2 # Reduced number of build jobs for just these modules
-end module-set
-</screen>
-</example>
-
-<note><para>Some very large Git repositories may swamp your system if you try to
-compile with a too many build jobs at one time, especially repositories like the
-&Qt; WebKit and &Qt; WebEngine repositories. To maintain system interactivity
-you may have to reduce the number of build jobs for specific modules.</para>
-<para><xref linkend="make-options-example"/> gives an example of how to do
-this.</para>
-</note>
-
-</listitem>
-</itemizedlist>
-
-<para>You may want to select different modules to build,
-which is described in <xref linkend="selecting-modules"/>.</para>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/credits-and-license.docbook b/doc/credits-and-license.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index c1cde3c6..00000000
--- a/doc/credits-and-license.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
-<chapter id="credits-and-license">
-<title>Credits And License</title>
-
-<!-- TRANS:CREDIT_FOR_TRANSLATORS -->
-&underFDL;
-
-</chapter>
diff --git a/doc/developer-features.docbook b/doc/developer-features.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index 1a5dc69a..00000000
--- a/doc/developer-features.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,33 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="developer-features">
-<title>Features for &kde; developers</title>
-
-<sect2 id="ssh-agent-reminder">
-<title>&ssh; Agent checks</title>
-<para>&kdesrc-build; can ensure that &kde; developers that use &ssh; to
-access the &kde; source repository do not accidentally forget to leave the
-&ssh; Agent tool enabled. This can cause &kdesrc-build; to hang indefinitely
-waiting for the developer to type in their &ssh; password,
-so by default &kdesrc-build; will check if the Agent is running before
-performing source updates.
-</para>
-
-<note><para>This is only done for &kde; developers using &ssh;.
-</para></note>
-
-<para>You may wish to disable the &ssh; Agent check, in case of situations where
-&kdesrc-build; is mis-detecting the presence of an agent. To disable the
-agent check, set the <option>disable-agent-check</option> option to
-<userinput>true</userinput>.</para>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>Disabling the &ssh; agent check:</para>
-<screen>
-global
- disable-agent-check true
-end global
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-
-</sect2>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/environment.docbook b/doc/environment.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index d5929b59..00000000
--- a/doc/environment.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,127 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="environment">
-<title>Setting the Environment to Run Your &kde; &plasma; Desktop</title>
-
-<para>
-Assuming you are using a dedicated user to build &kde; &plasma;, and you already have an
-installed &plasma; version, running your new &plasma; may be a bit tricky, as the new
-&plasma; has to take precedence over the old. You must change the environment
-variables of your login scripts to make sure the newly-built desktop is used.
-</para>
-
-<sect2 id="session-driver">
-<title>Automatically installing a login driver</title>
-
-<para>Starting from version 1.16, &kdesrc-build; will try to install an
-appropriate login driver, that will allow you to login to your
-&kdesrc-build;-built &kde; desktop from your login manager. This can be
-disabled by using the <option><link
-linkend="conf-install-session-driver">install-session-driver</link></option>
-configuration file option.</para>
-
-<note><para>Session setup does not occur while &kdesrc-build; is running
-in pretend mode.</para></note>
-
-<para>This driver works by setting up a custom <quote><literal>xsession</literal></quote>
-session type. This type of session should work by default with the sddm login
-manager (where it appears as a <quote>Custom</quote> session), but other login
-managers (such as <application>LightDM</application> and
-<application>gdm</application>) may require additional files installed to
-enable <literal>xsession</literal> support.</para>
-
-<sect3 id="xsession-distribution-setup">
-<title>Adding xsession support for distributions</title>
-
-<para>The default login managers for some distributions may require additional
-packages to be installed in order to support <literal>xsession</literal> logins.</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para>The <ulink url="https://getfedora.org/">Fedora</ulink>
-&Linux; distribution requires the <literal>xorg-x11-xinit-session</literal>
-package to be installed for custom <literal>xsession</literal> login
-support.</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para><ulink url="https://www.debian.org/">Debian</ulink> and
-Debian-derived &Linux; distributions should support custom
-<literal>xsession</literal> logins, but require the
-<option><userinput>allow-user-xsession</userinput></option> option to be set in
-<filename>/etc/X11/Xsession.options</filename>. See also the Debian <ulink
-url="https://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-reference/ch07.en.html#_customizing_the_x_session_classic_method">documentation
-on customizing the X session.</ulink></para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>For other distributions, go to <xref
-linkend="xsession-manual-setup"/>.</para></listitem>
-</itemizedlist>
-
-</sect3>
-
-<sect3 id="xsession-manual-setup">
-<title>Manually adding support for xsession</title>
-
-<para>If there were no distribution-specific directions for your distribution
-in <xref linkend="xsession-distribution-setup"/>, you can manually add a
-<quote>Custom xsession login</quote> entry to your distribution's list of
-session types as follows:</para>
-
-<procedure id="proc-adding-xsession-type">
-<title>Adding an .xsession login session type.</title>
-
-<note><para>This procedure will likely require administrative privileges to
-complete.
-</para></note>
-
-<step performance="required">
-<para>Create the file
-<filename>/usr/share/xsessions/kdesrc-build.desktop</filename>.</para>
-</step>
-
-<step performance="required">
-<para>Ensure the file just created has the following text:</para>
-<literallayout><userinput>
-Type=XSession
-Exec=<co id="session-homedir"/><replaceable>$HOME</replaceable>/.xsession
-Name=KDE Plasma Desktop (unstable; kdesrc-build)
-</userinput></literallayout>
-
-<calloutlist>
-<callout arearefs="session-homedir"><para>
-The <replaceable>$HOME</replaceable> entry must be replaced by the full path to
-your home directory (example, <filename
-class="directory">/home/<replaceable>user</replaceable></filename>). The
-desktop entry specification does not allow for user-generic files.
-</para></callout>
-
-</calloutlist>
-</step>
-
-<step performance="optional"><para>When the login manager is restarted, it
-should show a new session type, <quote>KDE Plasma Desktop (unstable;
-kdesrc-build)</quote> in its list of sessions, which should try to run the
-<filename>.xsession</filename> file installed by &kdesrc-build; if it is
-selected when you login.</para>
-
-<note><para>It may be easiest to restart the computer to restart the login
-manager, if the login manager does not track updates to the <filename
-class="directory">/usr/share/xsessions</filename> directory.</para></note>
-
-</step>
-
-</procedure>
-
-</sect3>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="old-profile-instructions">
-<title>Setting up the environment manually</title>
-<para>This documentation used to include instruction on which environment
-variables to set in order to load up the newly-built desktop. These
-instructions have been moved to an appendix (<xref
-linkend="old-profile-setup"/>).</para>
-
-<para>If you intend to setup your own login support you can consult that
-appendix or view the <filename>kde-env-master.sh.in</filename> file
-included with the &kdesrc-build; source.</para>
-
-</sect2>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/features.docbook b/doc/features.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index cbc46429..00000000
--- a/doc/features.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,185 +0,0 @@
-<chapter id="features">
-<title>Script Features</title>
-
-<sect1 id="features-overview">
-<title>Feature Overview</title>
-
-<para>
-&kdesrc-build; features include:
-</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-
-<listitem><para>
-You can <quote>pretend</quote> to do the operations. If you pass
-<option>--pretend</option> or <option>-p</option> on the
-command line, the script will give a verbose description of the commands
-it is about to execute, without actually executing it. However if you've never
-run &kdesrc-build;, you would want to run the <command>kdesrc-build
-<option><link
-linkend="cmdline-metadata-only">--metadata-only</link></option></command>
-command first in order for <option>--pretend</option> to work.
-
-<tip><para>For an even more verbose description of what &kdesrc-build; is
-doing, try using the <option>--debug</option> option.
-</para></tip>
-
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-&kdesrc-build; allows you to checkout modules quickly. If the module you are checking out
-has already been checked out previously, then &kdesrc-build; will download only commits
-that are not yet on your computer.
-</para>
-
-<tip><para>There is generally no need for any special preparation to perform
-the initial checkout of a Git module, as the entire Git repository must be
-downloaded anyways, so it is easy for the server to determine what to
-send.</para></tip>
-
-<para>This is faster for you, and helps to ease the load on the kde.org
-anonymous &git; servers.</para>
-</listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Another speedup is provided by starting the build process for a module as soon
-as the source code for that module has been downloaded. (Available since
-version 1.6)
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Excellent support for building the &Qt; library (in case the &kde; software you
-are trying to build depends on a recent &Qt; not available in your
-distribution).
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-&kdesrc-build; does not require a <acronym>GUI</acronym> present to operate. So,
-you can build &kde; software without needing a graphical environment.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Supports setting default options for all modules (such as the compilation
-settings or the configuration options). Such options can normally be changed
-for specific modules as well.</para>
-
-<para>Also, &kdesrc-build; will <link linkend="kdesrc-build-std-flags">add
-standard flags</link> as appropriate to save you the trouble and possible
-errors from typing them yourself. Nota Bene: this does not apply when a (custom)
-toolchain is configured through e.g.:
-<link linkend="conf-cmake-toolchain">cmake-toolchain</link>
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-&kdesrc-build; can checkout a specific <link linkend="using-branches">branch
-or tag</link> of a module. You can also ensure that a specific <link
-linkend="conf-revision">revision</link> is checked out of a module.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-&kdesrc-build; can automatically switch a source directory to checkout from
-a different repository, branch, or tag. This happens automatically when you
-change an option that changes what the repository &url; should be, but you must
-use the <link linkend="cmdline-src-only">--src-only</link> option to let
-&kdesrc-build; know that it is acceptable to perform the switch.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-&kdesrc-build; can <link linkend="partial-builds">checkout only portions of a
-module</link>, for those situations where you only need one program from a
-large module.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-For developers: &kdesrc-build; will <link linkend="ssh-agent-reminder">remind
-you</link> if you use git+ssh:// but <application>ssh-agent</application> is
-not running, as this will lead to repeated password requests from
-&ssh;.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Can <link linkend="deleting-build-dir">delete the build directory</link> of a
-module after its installation to save space at the expense of future compilation
-time.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-The locations for the directories used by &kdesrc-build; are configurable (even
-per module).
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Can use &sudo;, or a different user-specified command
-to <link linkend="root-installation">install modules</link> so that
-&kdesrc-build; does not need to be run as the super user.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-&kdesrc-build; runs <link linkend="build-priority">with reduced priority</link>
-by default to allow you to still use your computer while &kdesrc-build; is
-working.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Has support for using &kde;'s <link linkend="using-branches">tags and
-branches</link>.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-There is support for <link linkend="resuming">resuming a build</link> from a
-given module. You can even <link linkend="ignoring-modules">ignore some
-modules</link> temporarily for a given build.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-&kdesrc-build; will show the <link linkend="build-progress">progress of your
-build</link> when using &cmake;, and will always time the build
-process so you know after the fact how long it took.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Comes built-in with a sane set of default options appropriate for building
-a base &kde; single-user installation from the anonymous source repositories.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Tilde-expansion for your configuration options. For example, you can
-specify:
-<programlisting>install-dir ~/kde/usr</programlisting>
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Automatically sets up a build system, with the source directory not the
-same as the build directory, in order to keep the source directory
-pristine.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-You can specify global options to apply to every module to check out, and
-you can specify options to apply to individual modules as well.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Forced full rebuilds, by running
-&kdesrc-build; with the <option>--refresh-build</option> option.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-You can specify various environment values to be used during the build,
-including <envar>DO_NOT_COMPILE</envar>
-and <envar>CXXFLAGS</envar>.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Command logging. Logs are dated and numbered so that you always have a
-log of a script run. Also, a special symlink called latest is created to
-always point to the most recent log entry in the log directory.
-</para></listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-
-</sect1>
-
-&kdesrc-build-logging;
-
-</chapter>
diff --git a/doc/getting-started.docbook b/doc/getting-started.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index 657d8b59..00000000
--- a/doc/getting-started.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,223 +0,0 @@
-<chapter id="getting-started">
-<title>Getting Started</title>
-
-<para>
-In this chapter, we show how to use the &kdesrc-build; to checkout modules from
-the &kde; repository and build them. We also provide a basic explanation of the
-&kde; source code structure and the steps you have to perform before running
-the script.
-</para>
-
-<para>
-All topics present in this chapter are covered with even more detail in the
-<ulink url="https://community.kde.org/Guidelines_and_HOWTOs/Build_from_source">
-Build from Source</ulink> article, at the
-<ulink url="https://community.kde.org/">&kde; Community Wiki</ulink>.
-If you are compiling &kde; for the first time, it is a good idea to read
-it, or consult it as a reference source. You will find detailed information
-about packaging tools and requirements, common compilation pitfalls and
-strategies and information about running your new &kde; installation.
-</para>
-
-<sect1 id="before-building">
-<title>Preparing the System to Build &kde;</title>
-
-<sect2 id="before-building-users">
-<title>Setup a new user account</title>
-
-<para>
-It is recommended that you use a different user account to build, install,
-and run your &kde; software from, since less permissions are required, and
-to avoid interfering with your distribution's packages.
-If you already have &kde; packages installed, the best choice
-would be to create a different (dedicated) user to build and run the new &kde;.
-</para>
-
-<tip><para>Leaving your system &kde; untouched also allows you to have an
-emergency fallback in case a coding mistake causes your latest software build
-to be unusable.
-</para></tip>
-
-<para>
-You can do also setup to install to a system-wide directory (⪚ <filename
-class="directory">/usr/src/local</filename>) if you wish. This document
-does not cover this installation type, since we assume you know what you are doing.
-</para>
-
-</sect2>
-<sect2 id="before-building-preparation">
-<title>Ensure your system is ready to build &kde; software</title>
-
-<para>Before using the &kdesrc-build; script (or any other building
-strategy) you must install the development tools and libraries needed for &kde;.
-The nearly complete list of required tools can be found from
-the <ulink url="https://community.kde.org/Guidelines_and_HOWTOs/Build_from_source#Install_required_devel_packages">&kde;
-Community Wiki Build Requirements</ulink> page.
-</para>
-
-<para>Here is a list of some of the things you will need:</para>
-<itemizedlist>
-
-<listitem><para>You will need &cmake;, this software is what &kde; uses to handle
-build-time configuration of the source code and generation of the specific build
-commands for your system. The required version will vary
-depending on what versions of &kde; software you are building (see TechBase for
-specifics), but with modern distributions the &cmake; included with your distribution
-should be quite sufficient.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>You must also install the source control clients needed to checkout
-the &kde; source code. This means you need at least the following:</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para>The <ulink url="https://git-scm.com/">Git
-source control manager</ulink>, which is used for all &kde; <ulink
-url=" https://commits.kde.org/">source code</ulink></para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>Although it is not required, the <ulink
-url="http://bazaar.canonical.com/">Bazaar</ulink> source control manager is
-used for a single module (libdbusmenu-qt) that is required for the &kde;
-libraries. Most users can install this library through their distribution
-packages but &kdesrc-build; supports building it as well if you desire. But to
-build libdbusmenu-qt, you must have Bazaar installed.</para></listitem>
-</itemizedlist></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>The Perl scripting language is required for &kdesrc-build;, some &kde;
-repositories, and &Qt; (if you build that from source).</para>
-
-<para>The Perl that comes with your distribution should be suitable (it needs to be at
-least Perl 5.14), but you will also need some additional modules (&kdesrc-build;
-will warn if they are not present):</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
- <listitem><para>IO::Socket::SSL</para></listitem>
- <listitem><para>JSON::PP or JSON::XS</para></listitem>
- <listitem><para>YAML::PP, YAML::XS, or YAML::Syck</para></listitem>
-</itemizedlist>
-</listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>You will need a full C++ development environment (compiler, standard library, runtime,
-and any required development packages). The minimum required versions vary based on the &kde; module:
-the &kde; Frameworks 5 collection supports the oldest compilers, while &kde; Plasma 5 and &kde; Applications
-tend to require more recent compilers.</para>
-<para>The GCC 4.8 or Clang 4 compilers are the minimum recommended. Many distributions support easily
-installing these tools using a <quote>build-essentials</quote> package, an option to install
-"build dependencies" with &Qt;, or similar features. The KDE Community Wiki has a page <ulink url="https://community.kde.org/Guidelines_and_HOWTOs/Build_from_source/Install_the_dependencies">tracking
-recommended packages for major distributions</ulink>.
-</para>
-</listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>You will need a build tool that actually performs the
-compilation steps (as generated by &cmake;). GNU Make is recommended and should
-be available through your package manager. &cmake; does support others options, such
-as the &ninja; build tool, which can be used by &kdesrc-build; using the
-<link linkend="conf-custom-build-command">custom-build-command</link> configuration file
-option.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>Finally, you will need the appropriate &Qt; libraries (including development packages)
-for the version of &kde; software you are building. &kdesrc-build; does not officially support building &Qt; 5 (the current major version), so it is recommended to use your distribution's development packages or to
-see the KDE Community wiki page on <ulink url="https://community.kde.org/Guidelines_and_HOWTOs/Build_from_source/OwnQt5">self-building Qt 5</ulink>.
-</para></listitem>
-</itemizedlist>
-
-<note><para>Most operating system distributions include a method of easily
-installing required development tools. Consult the Community Wiki page <ulink
-url="https://community.kde.org/Guidelines_and_HOWTOs/Build_from_source#Install_required_devel_packages"
->Required devel packages</ulink> to see
-if these instructions are already available.</para></note>
-
-<important><para>
-Some of these packages are divided into libraries (or programs or utilities),
-and development packages. You will need at least the program or library
-<emphasis>and</emphasis> its development package.
-</para></important>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="before-building-prepare-script">
-<title>Setup &kdesrc-build;</title>
-
-<sect3 id="get-kdesrc-build">
-<title>Install &kdesrc-build;</title>
-<para>
-The &kde; developers make frequent changes to &kdesrc-build; to keep it in
-sync with advances in &kde; development, including improvements to the
-recommended &kdesrc-build; configuration, added modules, improving &cmake;
-flags, &etc;</para>
-
-<para>Because of this, we recommend obtaining &kdesrc-build; directly from its
-source repository and then periodically updating it.</para>
-
-<para>You can obtain &kdesrc-build; from its source repository by running:</para>
-<programlisting>
-<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput><command>git <option>clone</option> <option>https://invent.kde.org/sdk/kdesrc-build.git</option> <option><filename class="directory"><replaceable>~/kdesrc-build</replaceable></filename></option></command></userinput>
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>Replace <option><replaceable>~/kdesrc-build</replaceable></option> with
-the directory you would like to install to.
-</para>
-
-<para>You can update &kdesrc-build; later by running:</para>
-<programlisting>
-<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput><command>cd <option><filename class="directory"><replaceable>~/kdesrc-build</replaceable></filename></option></command></userinput>
-<prompt>$ </prompt><userinput><command>git <option>pull</option></command></userinput>
-</programlisting>
-
-<tip><para>We recommend adding the &kdesrc-build; installation directory to
-your <envar>PATH</envar> environment variable, so that you can run &kdesrc-build;
-without having to fully specify its path every time.</para></tip>
-</sect3>
-
-<sect3 id="setup-rcfile">
-<title>Prepare the configuration file</title>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; uses a <link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link>
-to control which modules are built, where they are installed to, etc.
-This file is located at <filename>~/.config/kdesrc-buildrc</filename>
-(<filename>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/kdesrc-buildrc</filename>, if
-<envar>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</envar> is set).</para>
-
-<para>You can use <application>kdesrc-build --generate-config</application> in order to prepare a simple
-kdesrc-build configuration. You can then edit the
-<filename>~/.config/kdesrc-buildrc</filename> configuration file to make
-any changes you see fit.</para>
-
-<sect4 id="setup-rcfile-manually">
-<title>Manual setup of configuration file</title>
-
-<para>You can also setup your configuration file manually, by copying the
-included sample configuration file <filename>kdesrc-buildrc-kf5-sample</filename>
-to <filename>~/.config/kdesrc-buildrc</filename> and then editing the file.
-<xref linkend="kdesrc-buildrc"/> will be a useful reference for this, especially
-its <link linkend="conf-options-table">table of configuration options</link>.
-</para>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; contains many recommended configuration files to support
-&kde; Frameworks 5, &plasma; 5, and other &kde; applications. See
-<xref linkend="kdesrc-buildrc-including"/> for information on how to use other
-configuration files from your own <filename>kdesrc-buildrc</filename>.
-</para>
-
-<para>You can find more information about the syntax of the <link
-linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link> in <xref
-linkend="configure-data" /> and in <xref linkend="kdesrc-buildrc" />.
-</para>
-</sect4>
-</sect3>
-</sect2>
-</sect1>
-
-&configure-data;
-
-&building-and-troubleshooting;
-
-&building-specific-modules;
-
-&environment;
-
-&kde-modules-and-selection;
-
-&quick-start-conclusion;
-
-</chapter>
diff --git a/doc/index.docbook b/doc/index.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index e6164101..00000000
--- a/doc/index.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,173 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" ?>
-<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//KDE//DTD DocBook XML V4.5-Based Variant V1.1//EN" "dtd/kdedbx45.dtd" [
- <!--
- Documentation for kdesrc-build.
- Copyright (c) 2005-2008, 2010-2022 Michael Pyne <mpyne at kde.org>
-
- Copyright (c) 2005 Carlos Leonhard Woelz <carloswoelz at imap-mail.com>
- Copyright (c) 2009 Burkhard Lück <lueck at hube-lueck.de>
- Copyright (c) 2007, 2011 Federico Zenith <federico.zenith at members.fsf.org>
- Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Yuri Chornoivan <yurchor at ukr.net>
- ... and possibly others. Check the git source repository for specifics.
-
- Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under
- the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later
- version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant
- Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts.
-
- A copy of the license is included in COPYING.DOC. The license will be
- included in the generated documentation as well.
- -->
- <!ENTITY kappname "kdesrc-build">
- <!ENTITY package "kdesdk">
- <!ENTITY % addindex "IGNORE">
- <!ENTITY % English "INCLUDE"> <!-- Change language only here -->
- <!ENTITY kdesrc-build "<application>kdesrc-build</application>">
- <!ENTITY BSD '<acronym>BSD</acronym>'>
- <!ENTITY git '<application>Git</application>'>
- <!ENTITY cmake '<application>CMake</application>'>
- <!ENTITY make '<application>Make</application>'>
- <!ENTITY ninja '<application>Ninja</application>'>
- <!ENTITY ssh '<application>SSH</application>'>
- <!ENTITY cron '<application>Cron</application>'>
- <!ENTITY sudo '<application>Sudo</application>'>
- <!ENTITY url '<acronym>URL</acronym>'>
-
- <!-- These define shortcut entities for some of the configuration options.
- Just add them as necessary.
- -->
-
- <!ENTITY configure-flags '<link linkend="conf-configure-flags">configure-flags</link>'>
- <!ENTITY install-dir '<link linkend="conf-install-dir">install-dir</link>'>
- <!ENTITY build-dir '<link linkend="conf-build-dir">build-dir</link>'>
- <!ENTITY source-dir '<link linkend="conf-source-dir">source-dir</link>'>
- <!ENTITY colorful-output '<link linkend="conf-colorful-output">colorful-output</link>'>
- <!ENTITY tag '<link linkend="conf-tag">tag</link>'>
- <!ENTITY branch '<link linkend="conf-branch">branch</link>'>
- <!ENTITY do-not-compile '<link linkend="conf-do-not-compile">do-not-compile</link>'>
- <!ENTITY repository '<link linkend="conf-repository">repository</link>'>
- <!ENTITY make-install-prefix '<link linkend="conf-make-install-prefix">make-install-prefix</link>'>
- <!ENTITY niceness '<link linkend="conf-niceness">niceness</link>'>
- <!ENTITY set-env '<link linkend="conf-set-env">set-env</link>'>
- <!ENTITY libname '<link linkend="conf-libname">libname</link>'>
- <!ENTITY libpath '<link linkend="conf-libpath">libpath</link>'>
- <!ENTITY binpath '<link linkend="conf-binpath">binpath</link>'>
-
- <!-- These define shortcut entities for some of the command line options.
- Just add them as necessary.
- -->
- <!ENTITY cmd-nice '<link linkend="cmdline-nice">--nice</link>'>
- <!ENTITY cmd-ignore-modules '<link linkend="cmdline-ignore-modules">--ignore-modules</link>'>
- <!ENTITY cmd-resume-from '<link linkend="cmdline-resume-from">--resume-from</link>'>
- <!ENTITY cmd-resume-after '<link linkend="cmdline-resume-after">--resume-after</link>'>
- <!ENTITY cmd-reconfigure '<link linkend="cmdline-reconfigure">--reconfigure</link>'>
- <!ENTITY cmd-refresh-build '<link linkend="cmdline-refresh-build">--refresh-build</link>'>
-
- <!-- These define docbook files to include.
- Just add them as necessary.
- -->
- <!ENTITY advanced-features SYSTEM "advanced-features.docbook">
- <!ENTITY appendix-modules SYSTEM "appendix-modules.docbook">
- <!ENTITY appendix-profile SYSTEM "appendix-profile.docbook">
- <!ENTITY basic-features SYSTEM "basic-features.docbook">
- <!ENTITY building-and-troubleshooting SYSTEM "building-and-troubleshooting.docbook">
- <!ENTITY building-specific-modules SYSTEM "building-specific-modules.docbook">
- <!ENTITY cmdline SYSTEM "cmdline.docbook">
- <!ENTITY conf-options-table SYSTEM "conf-options-table.docbook">
- <!ENTITY configure-data SYSTEM "configure-data.docbook">
- <!ENTITY credits-and-license SYSTEM "credits-and-license.docbook">
- <!ENTITY developer-features SYSTEM "developer-features.docbook">
- <!ENTITY environment SYSTEM "environment.docbook">
- <!ENTITY features SYSTEM "features.docbook">
- <!ENTITY getting-started SYSTEM "getting-started.docbook">
- <!ENTITY intro-toc SYSTEM "intro-toc.docbook">
- <!ENTITY introduction SYSTEM "introduction.docbook">
- <!ENTITY kde-cmake SYSTEM "kde-cmake.docbook">
- <!ENTITY kde-modules-and-selection SYSTEM "kde-modules-and-selection.docbook">
- <!ENTITY kdesrc-build-logging SYSTEM "kdesrc-build-logging.docbook">
- <!ENTITY kdesrc-buildrc SYSTEM "kdesrc-buildrc.docbook">
- <!ENTITY other-features SYSTEM "other-features.docbook">
- <!ENTITY quick-start-conclusion SYSTEM "quick-start-conclusion.docbook">
- <!ENTITY supported-cmdline-params SYSTEM "supported-cmdline-params.docbook">
- <!ENTITY supported-envvars SYSTEM "supported-envvars.docbook">
- <!ENTITY using-kdesrc-build SYSTEM "using-kdesrc-build.docbook">
-]>
-
-<book id="kdesrc-build" lang="&language;">
-
-<bookinfo>
-<title>&kdesrc-build; Script Manual</title>
-
-<authorgroup id="authors">
- <author>&Michael.Pyne; &Michael.Pyne.mail;</author>
- <author>
- <personname><firstname>Carlos</firstname><surname>Woelz</surname></personname>
- <email>carloswoelz at imap-mail.com</email>
- </author>
-
-<!-- TRANS:ROLES_OF_TRANSLATORS -->
-
-</authorgroup>
-
-<copyright>
-<year>2006</year>
-<year>2007</year>
-<year>2008</year>
-<year>2009</year>
-<year>2010</year>
-<year>2011</year>
-<year>2012</year>
-<year>2013</year>
-<year>2014</year>
-<year>2015</year>
-<year>2016</year>
-<year>2017</year>
-<year>2018</year>
-<year>2019</year>
-<holder>Michael Pyne</holder>
-</copyright>
-
-<copyright>
-<year>2005</year>
-<holder>Carlos Woelz</holder>
-</copyright>
-
-<legalnotice>&FDLNotice;</legalnotice>
-
-<date>2018-01-20</date>
-<releaseinfo>&kdesrc-build; 17.12</releaseinfo>
-
-<abstract>
-<para>&kdesrc-build; is a script which builds and installs &kde; software
-directly from the &kde; project's source code repositories.</para>
-</abstract>
-
-<keywordset>
-<keyword>KDE</keyword>
-<keyword>kdesdk</keyword>
-<keyword>git</keyword>
-<keyword>KDE development</keyword>
-</keywordset>
-
-</bookinfo>
-
-&introduction;
-
-&getting-started;
-
-&features;
-
-&kdesrc-buildrc;
-
-&cmdline;
-
-&using-kdesrc-build;
-
-&kde-cmake;
-
-&credits-and-license;
-
-&appendix-modules;
-
-&appendix-profile;
-</book>
diff --git a/doc/intro-toc.docbook b/doc/intro-toc.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index 00b36bf6..00000000
--- a/doc/intro-toc.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,22 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="intro-toc">
-<title>Documentation Overview</title>
-
-<para>
-This guide is an overview to describe the following aspects of &kdesrc-build;
-operation:
-</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para>An <link linkend="getting-started">overview</link> of the steps
-required to get started.</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para>Notable <link linkend="features">features</link>.</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para>The <link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link> syntax
-and options.</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para>The <link linkend="cmdline">command line options</link>.</para></listitem>
-</itemizedlist>
-
-<para>Also documented are the steps which you should perform using
-other tools (&ie; steps that are not automatically performed by &kdesrc-build;).
-</para>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/introduction.docbook b/doc/introduction.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index e6ca3256..00000000
--- a/doc/introduction.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,67 +0,0 @@
-<chapter id="introduction">
-<title>Introduction</title>
-
-<sect1 id="brief-intro">
-<title>A brief introduction to &kdesrc-build;</title>
-
-<sect2 id="whatis-kdesrc-build">
-<title>What is &kdesrc-build;?</title>
-
-<para>
-&kdesrc-build; is a script to help the &kde; community install <ulink
-url="https://www.kde.org/">&kde;</ulink> software from its <ulink
-url="https://git-scm.com/">&git;</ulink> source repositories,
-and continue to update that software afterwards.
-It is particularly intended to support those who need to supporting testing and
-development of &kde; software, including users testing bugfixes and developers
-working on new features.
-</para>
-
-<para>The &kdesrc-build; script can be configured to maintain a single individual
-module, a full &plasma; desktop with &kde; application set, or somewhere in between.
-</para>
-
-<para>To get started, see <xref linkend="getting-started"/>, or continue reading for more
-detail on how &kdesrc-build; works and what is covered in this documentation.
-</para>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="operation-in-a-nutshell">
-<title>&kdesrc-build; operation <quote>in a nutshell</quote></title>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; works by using the tools available to the user at the
-command-line, using the same interfaces available to the user. When
-&kdesrc-build; is run, the following sequence is followed: </para>
-
-<orderedlist>
-<listitem><para>&kdesrc-build; reads in the <link linkend="cmdline">command
-line</link> and <link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link>, to
-determine what to build, compile options to use, where to install,
-&etc;</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>&kdesrc-build; performs a source update for each <link
-linkend="module-concept">module</link>. The update continues until all modules
-have been updated. Modules that fail to update normally do not stop the build
-– you will be notified at the end which modules did not
-update.</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>Modules that were successfully updated are built, have their
-test suite run, and are then installed. To reduce the overall time spent,
-&kdesrc-build; will by default start building the code as soon as the first
-module has completed updating, and allow the remaining updates to continue
-behind the scenes.
-</para></listitem>
-</orderedlist>
-
-<tip><para>A <emphasis>very good</emphasis> overview of how &kde; modules are
-built, including informative diagrams, is provided on <ulink
-url="https://www.davidrevoy.com/article193/guide-building-krita-on-linux-for-
-cats">an online article discussing &kde;'s &krita; application</ulink>. This
-workflow is what &kdesrc-build; automates for all &kde; modules.</para>
-</tip>
-
-</sect2>
-</sect1>
-
-&intro-toc;
-</chapter>
diff --git a/doc/kde-cmake.docbook b/doc/kde-cmake.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index 9c818591..00000000
--- a/doc/kde-cmake.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,29 +0,0 @@
-<chapter id="kde-cmake">
-<title>&cmake;, the &kde; build system</title>
-
-<sect1 id="kde-cmake-intro">
-<title>Introduction to &cmake;</title>
-
-<para>In March 2006, the &cmake; program
-beat out several competitors and was selected to be the build system for &kde; 4, replacing the
-autotools-based system that &kde; had used from the beginning.</para>
-
-<para>A introduction to &cmake; page is available on the <ulink
-url="https://community.kde.org/Guidelines_HOWTOs/CMake">&kde; Community Wiki</ulink>.
-Basically, instead of running <userinput><command>make</command> <option>-f</option>
-<filename>Makefile.cvs</filename></userinput>, then <command>configure</command>,
-then &make;, we simply run &cmake; and then &make;.
-</para>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; has support for &cmake;. A few features of &kdesrc-build;
-were really features of the underlying buildsystem, including
-<link linkend="conf-configure-flags">configure-flags</link>
-and <link linkend="conf-do-not-compile">do-not-compile</link>. When equivalent
-features are available, they are provided. For instance, the equivalent to the
-configure-flags option is <link linkend="conf-cmake-options">cmake-options</link>, and the
-<link linkend="conf-do-not-compile">do-not-compile</link> option is also supported for &cmake;
-as of &kdesrc-build; version 1.6.3.
-</para>
-
-</sect1>
-</chapter>
diff --git a/doc/kde-modules-and-selection.docbook b/doc/kde-modules-and-selection.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index 83697b3e..00000000
--- a/doc/kde-modules-and-selection.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,353 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="kde-modules-and-selection">
-<title>Module Organization and selection</title>
-
-<sect2 id="kde-layers">
-<title>KDE Software Organization</title>
-
-<para>
-&kde; software is split into different components, many of which can be built
-by &kdesrc-build;. Understanding this organization will help you properly
-select the software modules that you want built.
-</para>
-
-<orderedlist>
-<listitem><para>At the lowest level comes the &Qt; library, which is a
-very powerful, cross-platform <quote>toolkit</quote> library. &kde; is based on
-&Qt;, and some of the non-&kde; libraries required by &kde; are also based on
-&Qt;. &kdesrc-build; can build &Qt;, or use the one already installed on your
-system if it is a recent enough version.</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>On top of &Qt; are required libraries that are necessary for
-&kde; software to work. Some of these libraries are not considered part of
-&kde; itself due to their generic nature, but are still essential to the &kde;
-Platform. These libraries are collected under a <literal>kdesupport</literal>
-module grouping but are not considered part of the <quote>Frameworks</quote>
-libraries.</para>
-</listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>On top of these essential libraries come the <ulink
-url="https://community.kde.org/Frameworks">&kde; Frameworks</ulink>, sometimes
-abbreviated as KF5, which are essential libraries for the &kde; Plasma desktop,
-&kde; Applications, and other third-party software.
-</para> </listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>On top of the Frameworks, come several different things:</para>
- <itemizedlist>
- <listitem><para><quote>Third-party</quote> applications. These are
- applications that use the &kde; Frameworks or are designed to run under
- &kde; Plasma but are not authored by or in association with the &kde;
- project.</para></listitem>
-
- <listitem><para>Plasma, which is a full <quote>workspace</quote> desktop
- environment. This is what users normally see when they <quote>log-in to
- &kde;</quote>.</para></listitem>
-
- <listitem><para>The &kde; Application suite. This is a collection of
- useful software included with the Platform and &plasma; Desktop, grouped into
- individual modules, including utilities like &dolphin;, games like
- <application>KSudoku</application>, and productivity software released by &kde;
- such as &kontact;.</para></listitem>
-
- <listitem><para>Finally, there is a collection of software (also
- collected in modules) whose development is supported by &kde; resources
- (such as translation, source control, bug tracking, &etc;) but is not
- released by &kde; as part of Plasma or the Application suite. These
- modules are known as <quote>Extragear</quote>.
- </para></listitem>
- </itemizedlist>
-</listitem>
-</orderedlist>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="selecting-modules">
-<title>Selecting modules to build</title>
-
-<para>Selecting which of the possible modules to build is controlled by
-<link linkend="kdesrc-buildrc">the configuration file</link>.
-After the <literal>global</literal> section is a list of modules to build,
-bracketed by module ... end module lines. An example entry for a module is
-shown in <xref linkend="conf-module-example"/>.</para>
-
-<example id="conf-module-example">
-<title>Example module entry in the configuration file</title>
-<programlisting>
-module <replaceable>kdesrc-build-git</replaceable>
- # Options for this module go here, example:
- <link linkend="conf-repository">repository</link> kde:kdesrc-build
- <link linkend="conf-make-options">make-options</link> -j4 # Run 4 compiles at a time
-end module
-</programlisting>
-</example>
-
-<note><para>In practice, this module construct is not usually used directly. Instead
-most modules are specified via module-sets as described below.</para></note>
-
-<para>When using only <literal>module</literal> entries, &kdesrc-build; builds them in the order
-you list, and does not attempt to download any other repositories other than what you specify
-directly.
-</para>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="module-sets">
-<title>Module Sets</title>
-
-<para>The &kde; source code is decomposed into a great number of relatively
-small Git-based repositories. To make it easier to manage the large number of
-repositories involved in any useful &kde;-based install, &kdesrc-build; supports
-grouping multiple modules and treating the group as a <quote>module set</quote>.
-</para>
-
-<sect3 id="module-set-concept">
-<title>The basic module set concept</title>
-
-<para>By using a module set, you can quickly declare many Git modules to be
-downloaded and built, as if you'd typed out a separate module declaration for
-each one. The <link linkend="conf-repository">repository</link> option is
-handled specially to setup where each module is downloaded from, and every
-other option contained in the module set is copied to every module generated
-in this fashion.</para>
-
-<example id="example-using-module-sets">
-<title>Using module sets</title>
-<programlisting>
-global
- <option><link linkend="conf-git-repository-base">git-repository-base</link></option> <replaceable>kde-git</replaceable> <replaceable>kde:</replaceable>
-end global
-
-module <replaceable>qt</replaceable>
- # Options removed for brevity
-end module
-
-module-set <replaceable>kde-support-libs</replaceable>
- <option><link linkend="conf-repository">repository</link></option> <replaceable>kde-git</replaceable>
- <option><link linkend="conf-use-modules">use-modules</link></option> <replaceable>automoc</replaceable> <replaceable>attica</replaceable> <replaceable>akonadi</replaceable>
-end module-set
-
-# Other modules as necessary...
-module <replaceable>kdesupport</replaceable>
-end module
-</programlisting>
-</example>
-
-<para>In <xref linkend="example-using-module-sets"/> a brief module set is
-shown. When &kdesrc-build; encounters this module set, it acts as if, for
-every module given in <option>use-modules</option>, that an individual module
-has been declared, with its <option>repository</option> equal to the
-module-set's <option>repository</option> followed immediately by the given
-module name.</para>
-
-<para>In addition, other options can be passed in a module set, which are
-copied to every new module that is created this way. By using module-set it is
-possible to quickly declare many Git modules that are all based on the same
-repository URL. In addition, it is possible to give module-sets a name (as shown
-in the example), which allows you to quickly refer to the entire group of
-modules from the command line.</para>
-
-</sect3>
-<sect3 id="module-sets-kde">
-<title>Special Support for KDE module sets</title>
-
-<para>The module set support described so far is general to any Git-based
-modules. For the &kde; Git repositories, &kdesrc-build; includes additional
-features to make things easier for users and developers. This support is
-enabled by specifying <literal>kde-projects</literal> as the
-<option>repository</option> for the module set.
-</para>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; normally only builds the modules you have listed in your
-configuration file, in the order you list them. But with a
-<literal>kde-projects</literal> module set, &kdesrc-build; can do dependency
-resolution of &kde;-specific modules, and in addition automatically include
-modules into the build even if only indirectly specified.</para>
-
-<example id="example-using-kde-module-sets">
-<title>Using kde-projects module sets</title>
-<programlisting>
-# Only adds a module for juk (the kde/kdemultimedia/juk repo)
-module-set <replaceable>juk-set</replaceable>
- <option>repository</option> kde-projects
- <option>use-modules</option> <replaceable>juk</replaceable>
-end module-set
-
-# Adds all modules that are in kde/multimedia/*, including juk,
-# but no other dependencies
-module-set <replaceable>multimedia-set</replaceable>
- <option>repository</option> kde-projects
- <option>use-modules</option> <replaceable>kde/multimedia</replaceable>
-end module-set
-
-# Adds all modules that are in kde/multimedia/*, and all kde-projects
-# dependencies from outside of kde/kdemultimedia
-module-set <replaceable>multimedia-deps-set</replaceable>
- <option>repository</option> kde-projects
- <option>use-modules</option> <replaceable>kde/multimedia</replaceable>
- <option>include-dependencies</option> <replaceable>true</replaceable>
-end module-set
-
-# All modules created out of these three module sets are automatically put in
-# proper dependency order, regardless of the setting for include-dependencies
-</programlisting>
-</example>
-
-<tip><para>This <literal>kde-projects</literal> module set construct is the main method
-of declaring which modules you want to build.</para></tip>
-
-<para>All module sets use the <link linkend="conf-repository">repository</link>
-and <link linkend="conf-use-modules">use-modules</link> options. <link
-linkend="kde-projects-module-sets"><literal>kde-projects</literal></link> module
-sets have a predefined <option>repository</option> value, but other types of
-module sets also will use the <link
-linkend="conf-git-repository-base">git-repository-base</link> option.
-</para>
-</sect3>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="kde-projects-module-sets">
-<title>The official &kde; module database</title>
-
-<para>&kde;'s Git repositories allow for grouping related Git modules into
-collections of related modules (e.g. kdegraphics). Git doesn't recognize these
-groupings, but &kdesrc-build; can understand these groups, using <link
-linkend="module-sets">module sets</link> with a <option>repository</option>
-option set to <quote><literal>kde-projects</literal></quote>.</para>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; will recognize that the <literal>kde-projects</literal>
-repository requires special handling, and adjust the build process
-appropriately. Among other things, &kdesrc-build; will:</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-
-<listitem><para>Download the latest module database from the <ulink
-url=" https://commits.kde.org/">&kde; git archive</ulink>.</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>Try to find a module with the name given in the module set's
-<option>use-modules</option> setting in that database.</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>For every module that is found, &kdesrc-build; will lookup the
-appropriate repository in the database, based upon the <link
-linkend="conf-branch-group">branch-group</link> setting in effect. If a
-repository exists and is active for the branch group, &kdesrc-build; will
-automatically use that to download or update the source code.
-</para></listitem>
-
-</itemizedlist>
-
-<note><para>In the current database, some module groups not only have a
-collection of modules, but they <emphasis>also</emphasis> declare their own
-&git; repository. In these situations &kdesrc-build; will currently prefer the
-group's &git; repository instead of including the childrens' repositories.
-</para></note>
-
-<para>The following example shows how to use the &kde; module database to
-install the Phonon multimedia library.</para>
-
-<informalexample>
-<programlisting>
-module-set <replaceable>media-support</replaceable>
- # This option must be kde-projects to use the module database.
- <option><link linkend="conf-repository">repository</link></option> <literal>kde-projects</literal>
-
- # This option chooses what modules to look for in the database.
- <option><link linkend="conf-use-modules">use-modules</link></option> <replaceable>phonon/phonon</replaceable> <replaceable>phonon-gstreamer</replaceable> <replaceable>phonon-vlc</replaceable>
-end module-set
-</programlisting>
-</informalexample>
-
-<tip><para><literal>phonon/phonon</literal> is used since (with the current
-project database) &kdesrc-build; would otherwise have to decide between the
-group of projects called <quote>phonon</quote> or the individual project named
-<quote>phonon</quote>. Currently &kdesrc-build; would pick the former, which
-would build many more backends than needed.</para></tip>
-
-<para>The following example is perhaps more realistic, and shows a feature only
-available with the &kde; module database: Building all of the &kde; graphics
-applications with only a single declaration.</para>
-
-<informalexample>
-<programlisting>
-module-set <replaceable>kdegraphics</replaceable>
- # This option must be kde-projects to use the module database.
- <option><link linkend="conf-repository">repository</link></option> <literal>kde-projects</literal>
-
- # This option chooses what modules to look for in the database.
- <option><link linkend="conf-use-modules">use-modules</link></option> <literal>kdegraphics/libs</literal> <literal>kdegraphics/*</literal>
-end module-set
-</programlisting>
-</informalexample>
-
-<para>There are two important abilities demonstrated here:</para>
-
-<orderedlist>
-
-<listitem><para>&kdesrc-build; allows you to specify modules that are
-descendents of a given module, without building the parent module, by using the
-syntax <userinput><replaceable>module-name</replaceable>/*</userinput>. It is
-actually required in this case since the base module, kdegraphics, is marked as
-inactive so that it is not accidentally built along with its children modules.
-Specifying the descendent modules allows &kdesrc-build; to skip around the
-disabled module.
-</para></listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>&kdesrc-build; will also not add a given module to the build
-list more than once. This allows us to manually set
-<literal>kdegraphics/libs</literal> to build first, before the rest of
-<literal>kdegraphics</literal>, without trying to build
-<literal>kdegraphics/libs</literal> twice. This used to be required for proper
-dependency handling, and today remains a fallback option in case the &kde;
-project database is missing dependency metadata.
-</para></listitem>
-</orderedlist>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="ignoring-project-modules">
-<title>Filtering out &kde; project modules</title>
-
-<para>You might decide that you'd like to build all programs within a &kde;
-module grouping <emphasis>except</emphasis> for a given program.</para>
-
-<para>For instance, the <literal>kdeutils</literal> group includes a program
-named <application>kremotecontrol</application>. If your computer does not have
-the proper hardware to receive the signals sent by remote controls then you may
-decide that you'd rather not download, build, and install
-<application>kremotecontrol</application> every time you update
-<literal>kdeutils</literal>.</para>
-
-<para>You can achieve this by using the <link
-linkend="conf-ignore-modules">ignore-modules</link> configuration option.
-On the command line the
-<link linkend="ignoring-modules">&cmd-ignore-modules; option</link>
-does the same thing, but is more convenient for filtering out a module just once.
-</para>
-
-<example id="example-ignoring-a-module">
-<title>Example for ignoring a kde-project module in a group</title>
-<programlisting>
-module-set <replaceable>utils</replaceable>
- <option><link linkend="conf-repository">repository</link></option> <literal>kde-projects</literal>
-
- # This option chooses what modules to look for in the database.
- <option><link linkend="conf-use-modules">use-modules</link></option> <replaceable>kdeutils</replaceable>
-
- # This option "subtracts out" modules from the modules chosen by use-modules, above.
- <option><link linkend="conf-ignore-modules">ignore-modules</link></option> <replaceable>kremotecontrol</replaceable>
-end module-set
-
-module-set <replaceable>graphics</replaceable>
- <option><link linkend="conf-repository">repository</link></option> <literal>kde-projects</literal>
-
- # This option chooses what modules to look for in the database.
- <option><link linkend="conf-use-modules">use-modules</link></option> <replaceable>extragear/graphics</replaceable>
-
- # This option "subtracts out" modules from the modules chosen by use-modules, above.
- # In this case, *both* extragear/graphics/kipi-plugins and
- # extragear/graphics/kipi-plugins/kipi-plugins-docs are ignored
- <option><link linkend="conf-ignore-modules">ignore-modules</link></option> <replaceable>extragear/graphics/kipi-plugins</replaceable>
-end module-set
-</programlisting>
-</example>
-
-</sect2>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/kdesrc-build-logging.docbook b/doc/kdesrc-build-logging.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index 91f751ac..00000000
--- a/doc/kdesrc-build-logging.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,78 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="kdesrc-build-logging">
-<title>&kdesrc-build;'s build logging</title>
-
-<sect2 id="logging-overview">
-<title>Logging overview</title>
-
-<para>Logging is a &kdesrc-build; feature whereby the output from every command
-that &kdesrc-build; runs is saved to a file for examination later, if
-necessary. This is done because it is often necessary to have the output of
-these programs when there is a build failure, because there are so many
-reasons why a build can fail in the first place.</para>
-
-<sect3 id="log-directory-layout">
-<title>Logging directory layout</title>
-
-<para>The logs are always stored under the log directory. The destination of
-the log directory is controlled by the <link linkend="conf-log-dir">log-dir</link>
-option, which defaults to <filename class="directory"><symbol>${source-dir}</symbol>/log</filename> (where
-<symbol>${source-dir}</symbol> is the value of the <link linkend="conf-source-dir">source-dir</link>
-option. The in rest of this section, this value will be referred to as
-<symbol>${log-dir}</symbol>).</para>
-
-<para>Under <symbol>${log-dir}</symbol>, is a set of directories, one for every
-time that &kdesrc-build; was run. Each directory is named with the date, and
-the run number. For instance, the second time that &kdesrc-build; is run on
-May 26, 2004, it would create a directory called <filename>2004-05-26-02</filename>,
-where the 2004-05-26 is for the date, and the -02 is the run number.</para>
-
-<para>For your convenience, &kdesrc-build; will also create a link to the
-logs for your latest run, called <filename class="directory">latest</filename>. So the logs for
-the most recent &kdesrc-build; run should always be under <filename class="directory"><symbol>${log-dir}</symbol>/latest</filename>.
-</para>
-
-<para>Now, each directory for a &kdesrc-build; run will itself contain a set of
-directories, one for every &kde; module that &kdesrc-build; tries to build. Also,
-a file called <filename>build-status</filename> will be contained in the directory,
-which will allow you to determine which modules built and which failed.</para>
-
-<note><para>
-If a module itself has a submodule (such as extragear/multimedia,
-playground/utils, or KDE/kdelibs), then there would actually be a matching
-layout in the log directory. For example, the logs for KDE/kdelibs after the
-last &kdesrc-build; run would be found in <filename class="directory"><symbol>${log-dir}</symbol>/latest/KDE/kdelibs</filename>,
-and not under <filename class="directory"><symbol>${log-dir}</symbol>/latest/kdelibs</filename>.
-</para></note>
-
-<para>In each module log directory, you will find a set of files for each
-operation that &kdesrc-build; performs. If &kdesrc-build; updates a module,
-you may see filenames such as <filename>git-checkout-update.log</filename> (for a
-module checkout or when updating a module
-that has already been checked out). If the <command>configure</command>
-command was run, then you would expect to see a <filename>configure.log</filename>
-in that directory.</para>
-
-<para>If an error occurred, you should be able to see an explanation of why in
-one of the files. To help you determine which file contains the error,
-&kdesrc-build; will create a link from the file containing the error (such as
-<filename>build-1.log</filename> to a file called <filename>error.log</filename>).</para>
-
-<para>The upshot to all of this is that to see why a module failed to build
-after your last &kdesrc-build;, the file you should look at first is
-<filename><symbol>${log-dir}</symbol>/latest/<replaceable>module-name</replaceable>/error.log</filename>.
-</para>
-
-<tip><para>If the file <filename>error.log</filename> is empty (especially after
-an installation), then perhaps there was no error. Some of the tools used by
-the &kde; build system will sometimes mistakenly report an error when there was
-none.</para>
-
-<para>Also, some commands will evade &kdesrc-build;'s output redirection and
-bypass the log file in certain circumstances (normally when performing the
-first &git; checkout), and the error output in that case is not in the log file
-but is instead at the &konsole; or terminal where you ran &kdesrc-build;.</para>
-</tip>
-
-</sect3>
-</sect2>
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/kdesrc-build.desktop b/doc/kdesrc-build.desktop
deleted file mode 100644
index 0a229bf3..00000000
--- a/doc/kdesrc-build.desktop
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,101 +0,0 @@
-# KDE Config File
-[Desktop Entry]
-Type=Application
-X-DocPath=kdesrc-build/index.html
-Name=KDE Source Builder
-Name[bs]=KDE graditelj izvornog koda
-Name[ca]=Constructor del codi font del KDE
-Name[ca at valencia]=Constructor del codi font de KDE
-Name[cs]=Sestavování KDE ze zdrojových kódů
-Name[da]=KDE Source Builder
-Name[de]=KDE-Source-Builder
-Name[el]=Κατασκευαστής πηγής του KDE
-Name[en_GB]=KDE Source Builder
-Name[eo]=KDE Source Builder
-Name[es]=Constructor del código fuente de KDE
-Name[et]=KDE lähtekoodi ehitaja
-Name[eu]=KDE sorburuaren eraikitzailea
-Name[fi]=KDE-lähdekoodin kääntämisohjelma
-Name[fr]=Compilateur de sources KDE
-Name[ga]=Tógálaí Foinse KDE
-Name[gl]=Compilador do código de KDE
-Name[hi]=केडीई स्त्रोत निर्माता
-Name[hu]=KDE forrásfordító
-Name[ia]=Constructor de Fonte de KDE
-Name[it]=Generazione del sorgente di KDE
-Name[ka]=KDE-ის კოდიდან ამგები
-Name[km]=កម្មវិធីស្ថាបនាប្រភពរបស់ KDE
-Name[ko]=KDE 소스 빌더
-Name[lt]=KDE kodo kompiliuoklis
-Name[mr]=केडीई स्रोतबिल्डर
-Name[nb]=KDE kildebygger
-Name[nds]=KDE-Bornkode-Buumoduul
-Name[nl]=KDE Source Builder
-Name[nn]=Byggjar for KDE-kjeldekode
-Name[pa]=KDE ਸਰੋਤ ਬਿਲਡਰ
-Name[pl]=Budowanie KDE ze źródeł
-Name[pt]=Compilação do Código do KDE
-Name[pt_BR]=Compilação do código do KDE
-Name[ru]=Сборка KDE из исходного кода
-Name[sk]=Prekladač zdrojového kódu KDE
-Name[sl]=Izgrajevalnik izvorne kode za KDE
-Name[sr]=Градња КДЕ‑а из извора
-Name[sr at ijekavian]=Градња КДЕ‑а из извора
-Name[sr at ijekavianlatin]=Gradnja KDE‑a iz izvora
-Name[sr at latin]=Gradnja KDE‑a iz izvora
-Name[sv]=KDE-källkodsbyggare
-Name[tr]=KDE Kaynakları Yapıcısı
-Name[ug]=KDE Source Builder
-Name[uk]=Програма для збирання KDE з початкових кодів
-Name[x-test]=xxKDE Source Builderxx
-Name[zh_CN]=KDE 源代码构建器
-Name[zh_TW]=KDE Source Builder
-Comment=Builds the KDE Platform and associated software from its source code. A command-line only program.
-Comment[bs]=Gradi platformu KDE‑a i pridruženi softver iz izvornog koda. Program komandne linije.
-Comment[ca]=Construeix la plataforma del KDE i el programari associat des del seu codi font. Un programa que només és per a la línia d'ordres.
-Comment[ca at valencia]=Construïx la plataforma de KDE i el programari associat des del seu codi font. Un programa que només és per a la línia d'ordres.
-Comment[cs]=Sestaví ze zdrojových kódů platformu KDE a přidružený software. Nástroj pouze pro příkazovou řádku.
-Comment[da]=Bygger KDE Platform og tilknyttet software fra kildekode. Et program kun til kommandolinjen.
-Comment[de]=Erstellt KDE und dazugehörige Software aus den Quelltexten. Es ist ein reines Befehlszeilenprogramm.
-Comment[el]=Δημιουργεί την πλατφόρμα του KDE και το αντίστοιχο λογισμικό από τον πηγαίο κώδικα. Ένα πρόγραμμα μόνο γραμμής εντολών.
-Comment[en_GB]=Builds the KDE Platform and associated software from its source code. A command-line only program.
-Comment[eo]=Konstruas la KDE Platform kaj rilatan programaron el sia fontkodo. Nur-komandlinia programo.
-Comment[es]=Construye la Plataforma KDE y el software asociado desde su código fuente. Un programa solo para la línea de órdenes.
-Comment[et]=KDE platvormi ja sellega seotud tarkvara ehitamine lähtekoodist. Ainult käsureal kasutatav programm.
-Comment[eu]=KDE Plataforma eta harekin lotutako softwarea bere sorburu kodetik abiatuta eraikitzen du. Bakarrik komando-lerroko programa bat da.
-Comment[fi]=Kääntää KDE-alustan ja siihen liittyvät ohjelmistot lähdekoodista. On vain komentoriviohjelma.
-Comment[fr]=Construit la plate-forme KDE et les logiciels associés à partir de son code source. Uniquement un programme en ligne de commandes.
-Comment[gl]=Compila a plataforma KDE e o software asociado a partires do código fonte. Programa de só liña de ordes.
-Comment[hi]=स्त्रोत कोड से केडीई प्लैटफ़ार्म तथा सम्बन्धित सॉफ़्टवेयर का निर्माण करता ह।केवल कमांड लाईन में उपलब्ध
-Comment[hu]=Lefordítja a KDE platformot és a kapcsolódó szoftvereket a forráskódjukból. Kizárólag parancssoros program.
-Comment[ia]=Construe le Platteforma de KDE e software associate ex su codice fonte. Un programma solmente de linea de commando.
-Comment[it]=Genera la piattaforma di KDE e il software ad essa associato dal codice sorgente. Un programma disponibile solo dalla riga di comando.
-Comment[ka]=KDE-ის პლატფორმისა და მასთან ასოცირებული პროგრამებს კოდიდან აგება. მუშაობს მხოლოდ ბრძანებების სტრიქონში (CLI).
-Comment[km]=ស្ថាបនាកម្មវិធីរបស់ KDE និងកម្មវិធីដែលភ្ជាប់ពីកូដប្រភពរបស់វា ។ កម្មវិធីបន្ទាត់ពាក្យបញ្ជាតែប៉ុណ្ណោះ ។
-Comment[ko]=KDE 플랫폼과 소프트웨어를 소스 코드에서 빌드합니다. 명령행 전용 프로그램입니다.
-Comment[lt]=Kompiliuoja KDE platformą ir susijusią programinę įrangą iš išeities kodo. Tik komandinės eilutės programa.
-Comment[nb]=Bygger KDE-plattformen og tilordnede programmer fra kildekoden. Dette er et program med bare kommandolinje.
-Comment[nds]=Buut de KDE-Systemümgeven un tohören Programmen ut den Bornkode. Bloots en Konsoolprogramm.
-Comment[nl]=Bouwt het KDE-platform en geassocieerde software uit zijn broncode. Werkt alleen op de opdrachtregel.
-Comment[nn]=Byggjer KDE-plattforma og tilhøyrande programvare frå kjeldekoden. Er eit kommandolinjebasert program.
-Comment[pl]=Budowanie Środowiska KDE i związanego z nim oprogramowania z kodu źródłowego. Program działa tylko w linii poleceń.
-Comment[pt]=Compila a Plataforma do KDE e os programas associados a partir do seu código-fonte. Um programa apenas para a linha de comandos.
-Comment[pt_BR]=Compila a Plataforma do KDE e os programas associados a partir do seu código-fonte. Um programa apenas para a linha de comando.
-Comment[ru]=Собирает платформу KDE и основанное на ней программное обеспечение из исходного кода. Программа предназначена только для запуска из командной строки.
-Comment[sk]=Vybuduje KDE platformu a asociovaný softvér z jeho zdrojového kódu. Program iba pre príkazový riadok.
-Comment[sl]=Izgradi okolje KDE in povezane programe iz izvorne kode. Gre za program ukazne vrstice.
-Comment[sr]=Гради платформу КДЕ‑а и придружени софтвер из изворног кода. Програм командне линије.
-Comment[sr at ijekavian]=Гради платформу КДЕ‑а и придружени софтвер из изворног кода. Програм командне линије.
-Comment[sr at ijekavianlatin]=Gradi platformu KDE‑a i pridruženi softver iz izvornog koda. Program komandne linije.
-Comment[sr at latin]=Gradi platformu KDE‑a i pridruženi softver iz izvornog koda. Program komandne linije.
-Comment[sv]=Bygger KDE-plattformen och tillhörande programvara från dess källkod. Ett program som bara använder kommandoraden.
-Comment[tr]=KDE Platformunu ve ilişkili yazılımları kaynak kodundan yapar. Yalnızca komut satırından oluşan bir uygulamadır.
-Comment[ug]=KDE سۇپىسى ۋە مۇناسىۋەتلىك يۇمشاق دېتاللارنى ئەسلى كودىدىن ھاسىل قىلىش. پەقەتلا بۇيرۇق قۇرىدا ئىشلەيدۇ.
-Comment[uk]=Збирає Платформу KDE і пов’язане з нею програмне забезпечення з початкових кодів. Керується за допомогою командного рядка.
-Comment[x-test]=xxBuilds the KDE Platform and associated software from its source code. A command-line only program.xx
-Comment[zh_CN]=从源代码构建 KDE 平台和相关软件。纯命令行程序。
-Comment[zh_TW]=從源碼建立 KDE 平台與相關軟體。是一個只有命令列的程式。
-Categories=Qt;KDE;Development;
-Exec=kdialog --sorry "kdesrc-build is a command-line only program. Please read the handbook at help:/kdesrc-build for more information."
-Terminal=true
-NoDisplay=true
diff --git a/doc/kdesrc-buildrc.docbook b/doc/kdesrc-buildrc.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index dd038296..00000000
--- a/doc/kdesrc-buildrc.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,261 +0,0 @@
-<chapter id="kdesrc-buildrc">
-<title>Configuring &kdesrc-build;</title>
-
-<sect1 id="kdesrc-buildrc-overview">
-<title>Overview of &kdesrc-build; configuration</title>
-
-<para>
-To use the script, you must have a file in your home directory called
-<filename>.kdesrc-buildrc</filename>, which describes the modules you would
-like to download and build, and any options or configuration parameters to
-use for these modules.
-</para>
-
-<sect2 id="kdesrc-buildrc-layout">
-<title>Layout of the configuration file</title>
-
-<sect3 id="kdesrc-buildrc-layout-global">
-<title>Global configuration</title>
-
-<para>
-The configuration file starts with the global options, specified like the
-following:
-</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-global
-<replaceable>option-name option-value</replaceable>
-<replaceable>[...]</replaceable>
-end global
-</programlisting>
-
-</sect3>
-<sect3 id="kdesrc-buildrc-layout-modules">
-<title>Module configuration</title>
-
-<para>
-It is then followed by one or more module sections, specified in one of the
-following two forms:
-</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-<listitem>
-<programlisting>
-module <replaceable>module-name</replaceable>
-<replaceable>option-name option-value</replaceable>
-<replaceable>[...]</replaceable>
-end module
-</programlisting>
-</listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-<programlisting>
-module-set <replaceable>module-set-name</replaceable>
- repository <userinput>kde-projects</userinput> or <userinput><replaceable>git://host.org/path/to/repo.git</replaceable></userinput>
- use-modules <replaceable>module-names</replaceable>
-
-# Other options may also be set
-<replaceable>option-name option-value</replaceable>
-<replaceable>[...]</replaceable>
-end module-set
-</programlisting>
-</listitem>
-</itemizedlist>
-
-<important><para>Note that the second form, module sets, <emphasis>only works
-for Git-based modules</emphasis>.</para></important>
-
-<para>
-For Git modules, <replaceable>module-name</replaceable> must be a module
-from the &kde; &git; repository (for example, kdeartwork or
-kde-wallpapers).
-</para>
-
-<para>
-For Git modules, the module name can be essentially whatever you'd like, as
-long as it does not duplicate any other module name in the configuration. Keep
-in mind the source and build directory layout will be based on the module name
-if you do not use the <link linkend="conf-dest-dir">dest-dir</link> option.
-</para>
-
-<para>However, for Git <emphasis>module sets</emphasis> the
-<replaceable>module-names</replaceable> must correspond with actual git modules
-in the chosen <option>repository</option>. See <link
-linkend="conf-git-repository-base">git-repository-base</link> or <link
-linkend="conf-use-modules">use-modules</link> for more information.
-</para>
-
-</sect3>
-
-<sect3 id="kdesrc-buildrc-option-values">
-<title>Processing of option values</title>
-
-<para>In general, the entire line contents after the
-<replaceable>option-name</replaceable> is used as the
-<replaceable>option-value</replaceable>.</para>
-
-<para>One modification that &kdesrc-build; performs is that a sequence
-"<userinput>${<replaceable>name-of-option</replaceable>}</userinput>" is replaced
-with the value of that option from the global configuration. This allows you
-to reference the value of existing options, including options already set by
-&kdesrc-build;.</para>
-
-<para>
-To see an example of this in use, see
-<xref linkend="make-options-example"/>.</para>
-
-<para>You can also introduce your own non-standard global variables for referencing them further in the config.
-To do this, your option name should be prepended with underscore symbol. Example:
-<example id="custom-global-option-example">
-<title>Introducing your own global option for referencing later in config</title>
-<programlisting>
-global
- _ver 6 # ← your custom variable (starting with underscore)
- _kde ~/kde${_ver} # ← custom variable can contain another defined variable
- source-dir ${_kde}/src # ← note that nested variable (_kde → _ver) is also resolved
-end global
-
-options kdepim
- log-dir /custom/path/logs${_ver} # ← you can use custom variable just like a standard
-end options
-</programlisting>
-</example>
-</para>
-
-</sect3>
-
-<sect3 id="kdesrc-buildrc-options-groups">
-<title><quote>options</quote> modules</title>
-
-<para>There is a final type of configuration file entry,
-<literal>options</literal> groups, which may be given wherever a
-<literal>module</literal> or <literal>module-set</literal> may be used.</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-options <replaceable>module-name</replaceable>
-<replaceable>option-name option-value</replaceable>
-<replaceable>[...]</replaceable>
-end options
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>An <literal>options</literal> group may have options set for it just like
-a module declaration, and is associated with an existing module. Any options
-set these way will be used to <emphasis>override</emphasis> options set for the
-associated module.</para>
-
-<important><para>The associated module name <emphasis>must</emphasis> match the
-name given in the <literal>options</literal> declaration. Be careful of
-mis-typing the name.</para></important>
-
-<para>This is useful to allow for declaring an entire
-<literal>module-set</literal> worth of modules, all using the same options, and
-then using <literal>options</literal> groups to make individual changes.</para>
-
-<para><literal>options</literal> groups can also apply to named module sets.
-This allows expert users to use a common configuration file (which includes
-<literal>module-set</literal> declarations) as a baseline, and then make changes
-to the options used by those module-sets in configuration files that
-use the <literal><link
-linkend="kdesrc-buildrc-including">include</link></literal> command to reference
-the base configuration.</para>
-
-<example id="ex-options-group">
-<title>Example of using options</title>
-
-<para>In this example we choose to build all modules from the &kde; multimedia
-software grouping. However we want to use a different version of the &kmix;
-application (perhaps for testing a bug fix). It works as follows:</para>
-
-<programlisting>
-module-set <replaceable>kde-multimedia-set</replaceable>
- repository <userinput>kde-projects</userinput>
- use-modules <replaceable>kde/kdemultimedia</replaceable>
- branch <replaceable>master</replaceable>
-end module-set
-
-# kmix is a part of kde/kdemultimedia group, even though we never named
-# kmix earlier in this file, &kdesrc-build; will figure out the change.
-options <replaceable>kmix</replaceable>
- branch <replaceable>KDE/4.12</replaceable>
-end options
-</programlisting>
-
-<para>Now when you run &kdesrc-build;, all of the &kde; multimedia programs will
-be built from the <quote>master</quote> branch of the source repository, but
-&kmix; will be built from the older <quote>KDE/4.12</quote> branch. By using
-<literal>options</literal> you didn't have to individually list all the
-<emphasis>other</emphasis> &kde; multimedia programs to give them the right
-branch option.</para>
-
-</example>
-
-<note>
-<para>Note that this feature is only available in &kdesrc-build; from version
-1.16, or using the development version of &kdesrc-build; after
-2014-01-12.</para></note>
-
-</sect3>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="kdesrc-buildrc-including">
-<title>Including other configuration files</title>
-
-<para>
-Within the configuration file, you may reference other files by using the
-<literal>include</literal> keyword with a file, which will act as if the file
-referenced had been inserted into the configuration file at that point.
-</para>
-
-<informalexample><para>For example, you could have something like this:</para>
-<programlisting>
-global
- include <replaceable>~/common-kdesrc-build-options</replaceable>
-
- # Insert specific options here.
-
-end global
-</programlisting>
-</informalexample>
-
-<note><para>If you don't specify the full path to the file to include, then
-the file will be searched for starting from the directory containing the source
-file. This works recursively as well.</para></note>
-
-<para>You can use variables in the value of include instruction:</para>
-<programlisting>
-global
- <replaceable>_ver</replaceable> <replaceable>6</replaceable>
- source-dir ~/kde<replaceable>${_ver}</replaceable>/src
- ...
- persistent-data-file ~/kde<replaceable>${_ver}</replaceable>/persistent-options.json
-end global
-
-include ~/kde6/src/kdesrc-build/data/build-include/kf<replaceable>${_ver}</replaceable>-qt<replaceable>${_ver}</replaceable>.ksb
-
-</programlisting>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="kdesrc-buildrc-common">
-<title>Commonly used configuration options</title>
-
-<para>
-The following is a list of commonly-used options. Click on the
-option to find out more about it. To see the full list of options, see
-<xref linkend="conf-options-table"/>.
-</para>
-
-<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-cmake-options">cmake-options</link> to define what flags to configure a module with using &cmake;.</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-branch">branch</link>, to checkout from a branch instead of <literal>master</literal>.</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-configure-flags">configure-flags</link> to define what flags to configure &Qt; with.</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-install-dir">install-dir</link>, to set the directory to install &kde; to.</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-make-options">make-options</link>, to pass options to the &make; program (such as number of CPUs to use).</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-qt-install-dir">qt-install-dir</link>, to set the directory to install &Qt; to.</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para><link linkend="conf-source-dir">source-dir</link>, to change where to download the source code to.</para></listitem>
-</itemizedlist>
-
-</sect2>
-</sect1>
-&conf-options-table;
-</chapter>
diff --git a/doc/other-features.docbook b/doc/other-features.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index c42d97fe..00000000
--- a/doc/other-features.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,175 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="other-features">
-<title>Other &kdesrc-build; features</title>
-
-<sect2 id="changing-verbosity">
-<title>Changing the amount of output from &kdesrc-build;</title>
-<para>&kdesrc-build; has several options to control the amount of output the
-script generates. In any case, errors will always be output.</para>
-
-<table>
- <title>Table of debug levels</title>
- <tgroup cols="3">
-
- <thead>
- <row>
- <entry>Debug level</entry>
- <entry>Level name</entry>
- <entry>Command line option</entry>
- </row>
- </thead>
- <tbody>
-
- <row>
- <entry>0</entry>
- <entry>DEBUG</entry>
- <entry>--debug</entry>
- </row>
-
- <row>
- <entry>1</entry>
- <entry>WHISPER</entry>
- <entry>--verbose</entry>
- </row>
-
- <row>
- <entry>2</entry>
- <entry>INFO</entry>
- <entry>Selected by default</entry>
- </row>
-
- <row>
- <entry>3</entry>
- <entry>NOTE</entry>
- <entry>--quiet</entry>
- </row>
-
- <row>
- <entry>4</entry>
- <entry>WARNING</entry>
- <entry>--really-quiet</entry>
- </row>
-
- <row>
- <entry>5</entry>
- <entry>ERROR</entry>
- <entry>No way to select</entry>
- </row>
-
- </tbody>
- </tgroup>
-</table>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="kdesrc-build-color">
-<title>Color output</title>
-<para>When being run from &konsole; or a different terminal, &kdesrc-build;
-will normally display with colorized text.</para>
-
-<para>You can disable this by using the <option>--no-color</option> on the
-command line, or by setting the &colorful-output; option in the <link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link> to
-<userinput>false</userinput>.
-</para>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>Disabling color output in the configuration file:</para>
-<screen>
-global
- colorful-output false
-end global
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2 id="deleting-build-dir">
-<title>Removing unneeded directories after a build</title>
-<para>Are you short on disk space but still want to run a bleeding-edge
-&kde; checkout? &kdesrc-build; can help reduce your disk usage when building
-&kde; from &git;.</para>
-
-<note><para>Be aware that building &kde; does take a lot of space. There are
-several major space-using pieces when using &kdesrc-build;:</para></note>
-
-<orderedlist>
-<listitem><para>The actual source checkout can take up a fair amount of space.
-The default modules take up about 1.6 gigabytes of on-disk space. You can reduce
-this amount by making sure that you are only building as many modules as you
-actually want. &kdesrc-build; will not delete source code from disk even if you
-delete the entry from the <link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link>, so make sure that you go and delete unused
-source checkouts from the source directory. Note that the source files are
-downloaded from the Internet, you <emphasis>should not</emphasis> delete them
-if you are actually using them, at least until you are done using
-&kdesrc-build;.</para>
-
-<para>Also, if you already have a &Qt; installed by your distribution (and
-the odds are good that you do), you probably do not need to install the
-qt module. That will shave about 200 megabytes off of the on-disk source
-size.</para>
-</listitem>
-
-<listitem>
-<para>&kdesrc-build; will create a separate build directory to build the source
-code in. Sometimes &kdesrc-build; will have to copy a source directory to
-create a fake build directory. When this happens, space-saving symlinks are
-used, so this should not be a hassle on disk space. The build directory will
-typically be much larger than the source directory for a module. For example,
-the build directory for kdebase is about 1050 megabytes, whereas kdebase's
-source is only around 550 megabytes.</para>
-
-<para>Luckily, the build directory is not required after a module has
-successfully been built and installed. &kdesrc-build; can automatically
-remove the build directory after installing a module, see the examples below
-for more information. Note that taking this step will make it impossible
-for &kdesrc-build; to perform the time-saving incremental builds.</para>
-</listitem>
-
-<listitem><para>
-Finally, there is disk space required for the actual installation of
-&kde;, which does not run from the build directory. This typically takes less
-space than the build directory. It is harder to get exact figures however.
-</para></listitem>
-</orderedlist>
-
-<para>How do you reduce the space requirements of &kde;? One way is to
-use the proper compiler flags, to optimize for space reduction instead of
-for speed. Another way, which can have a large effect, is to remove debugging
-information from your &kde; build.
-</para>
-
-<warning><para>
-You should be very sure you know what you are doing before deciding to remove
-debugging information. Running bleeding-edge software means you are running
-software which is potentially much more likely to crash than a stable release.
-If you are running software without debugging information, it can be very
-hard to create a good bug report to get your bug resolved, and you will likely
-have to re-enable debugging information for the affected application and
-rebuild to help a developer fix the crash. So, remove debugging information
-at your own risk!
-</para></warning>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>Removing the build directory after installation of a module. The source
-directory is still kept, and debugging is enabled:</para>
-
-<screen>
-global
- configure-flags --enable-debug
- remove-after-install builddir # Remove build directory after install
-end global
-</screen>
-
-<para>Removing the build directory after installation, without debugging
-information, with size optimization.</para>
-
-<screen>
-global
- cxxflags -Os # Optimize for size
- configure-flags --disable-debug
- remove-after-install builddir # Remove build directory after install
-end global
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-</sect2>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/quick-start-conclusion.docbook b/doc/quick-start-conclusion.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index d4a42fce..00000000
--- a/doc/quick-start-conclusion.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,17 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="quick-start-conclusion">
-<title>Getting Started Conclusion</title>
-<para>These are the major features and concepts needed to get started with
-&kdesrc-build;</para>
-
-<para>For additional information, you could keep reading through this
-documentation. In particular, the <link linkend="supported-cmdline-params">list
-of command-line options</link> and the <link linkend="conf-options-table">table
-of configuration file options</link> are useful references.</para>
-
-<para>The &kde; Community also maintains <ulink
-url="https://community.kde.org/Guidelines_and_HOWTOs/Build_from_source">an
-online Wiki reference for how to build the source code</ulink>, which refers to
-&kdesrc-build; and includes tips and other guidelines on how to use the
-tool.</para>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/supported-cmdline-params.docbook b/doc/supported-cmdline-params.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index 25ccfc7c..00000000
--- a/doc/supported-cmdline-params.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,668 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="supported-cmdline-params">
-<title>Supported command-line parameters</title>
-
-<sect2>
-<title>Generic</title>
-<variablelist>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-pretend">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-pretend">--pretend</link></option> (or <option>--dry-run</option> or <option>-p</option>)</term>
-<listitem><para>
-&kdesrc-build; will run through the update and build process, but instead of
-performing any actions to update or build, will instead output what the
-script would have done (e.g. what commands to run, general steps being taken,
-etc.).</para>
-
-<note><para>Simple read-only commands (such as reading file information) may
-still be run to make the output more relevant (such as correctly simulating
-whether source code would be checked out or updated).
-</para></note>
-
-<important><para>This option requires that some needed metadata is available,
-which is normally automatically downloaded, but downloads are disabled in
-pretend mode. If you've never run &kdesrc-build; (and therefore, don't have
-this metadata), you should run <command>kdesrc-build
-<option>--metadata-only</option></command> to download the required metadata
-first.
-</para></important>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-include-dependencies">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-include-dependencies">--include-dependencies</link></option> (or <option>-d</option>), <option>--no-include-dependencies</option> (or <option>-D</option>)</term>
-<listitem><para>
-This option causes &kdesrc-build; to automatically include other &kde; and &Qt;
-modules in the build, if required for the modules you have requested to build
-on the command line or in your
-<link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link>.</para>
-
-<para>The modules that are added are as recorded within the &kde; source code
-management system. See <xref linkend="kde-projects-module-sets"/>.</para>
-
-<para>The corresponding configuration file option is
-<link linkend="conf-include-dependencies">include-dependencies</link>.</para>
-
-<para>This option is enabled by default.</para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-ignore-modules">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-ignore-modules">--ignore-modules</link></option> (or <option>-!</option>) <parameter>module [module ...]</parameter></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Do not include the modules passed on the rest of the command line in the
-update/build process (this is useful if you want to build most of the modules
-in your <link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link> and just skip
-a few).
-</para>
-<para>Note that this option does not override <link linkend="conf-ignore-modules">ignore-modules</link> config option in global section. Instead, it appends it.</para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-run">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-run">--run</link></option> (or <option>--start-program</option>) [-e|--exec name] [-f|--fork] <parameter>program [parameters ...]</parameter></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This option interprets the next item on the command line as a program to run,
-and &kdesrc-build; will then finish reading the configuration file, source the
-prefix.sh to apply environment variables, and then execute the given program.</para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-revision">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-revision">--revision</link></option> <replaceable>id</replaceable></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This option causes &kdesrc-build; to checkout a specific numbered revision
-for each &git; module, overriding any <link linkend="conf-branch">branch</link>,
-<link linkend="conf-tag">tag</link>, or <link linkend="conf-revision">revision</link>
-options already set for these modules.</para>
-
-<para>This option is likely not a good idea, and is only supported for
-compatibility with older scripts.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-delete-my-patches">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-delete-my-patches">--delete-my-patches</link></option>, <option>--no-delete-my-patches</option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This option is used to let &kdesrc-build; delete source directories that may
-contain user data, so that the module can be re-downloaded. This would normally
-only be useful for &kde; developers (who might have local changes that would be
-deleted).</para>
-
-<para>You should not use this option normally,
-&kdesrc-build; will prompt to be re-run with it if it is needed.</para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-delete-my-settings">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-delete-my-settings">--delete-my-settings</link></option>, <option>--no-delete-my-settings</option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This option is used to let &kdesrc-build; overwrite existing files which may contain
-user data.</para>
-
-<para>This is currently only used for xsession setup for the login manager. You
-should not use this option normally, &kdesrc-build; will prompt to be re-run
-with it if it is needed.</para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-option-name">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-option-name">--<replaceable><option-name></replaceable></link></option> <replaceable>value</replaceable></term>
-<listitem><para>
-You can use this option to override an option in your <link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link> for
-every module. For instance, to override the <link
-linkend="conf-log-dir">log-dir</link> option, you would do:
-<userinput><parameter>--log-dir <filename class="directory"><replaceable>/path/to/dir</replaceable></filename></parameter></userinput>.
-</para>
-
-<note><para>This feature can only be used for option names already recognized
-by &kdesrc-build;, that are not already supported by relevant command line
-options. For example the <link linkend="conf-async">async</link> configuration
-file option has specific <link linkend="cmdline-async">--async</link> and <link
-linkend="cmdline-async">--no-async</link> command line options that are
-preferred by &kdesrc-build;.
-</para></note>
-
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-set-module-option-value">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-set-module-option-value">--set-module-option-value</link> <replaceable><module-name></replaceable>,<replaceable><option-name></replaceable>,<replaceable><option-value></replaceable></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-You can use this option to override an option in your <link linkend="configure-data">configuration file</link> for
-a specific module.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-</variablelist>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2>
-<title>Resuming and stopping</title>
-<variablelist>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-resume-from">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-resume-from">--resume-from</link></option> (or <option>--from</option> or <option>-f</option>) <replaceable>module</replaceable></term>
-<listitem><para>This option is used to resume the build starting from the given module. You should not
-specify other module names on the command line.
-</para>
-
-<note><para>If you want to avoid source updates
-when resuming, simply pass <option>--no-src</option>
-in addition to the other options.
-</para></note>
-
-<para>See also: <link linkend="cmdline-resume-after">--resume-after</link> and <xref
-linkend="resuming-failed"/>. You would prefer to use this command line option
-if you have fixed the build error and want &kdesrc-build; to complete the
-build.</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-resume-after">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-resume-after">--resume-after</link></option> (or <option>--after</option> or <option>-a</option>) <replaceable>module</replaceable></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This option is used to resume the build starting after the given module. You should not
-specify other module names on the command line.
-</para>
-
-<note><para>If you want to avoid source updates
-when resuming, simply pass <option><userinput>--no-src</userinput></option>
-in addition to the other options.
-</para></note>
-
-<para>See also: <link linkend="cmdline-resume-from">--resume-from</link> and <xref
-linkend="resuming-failed"/>. You would prefer to use this command line option
-if you have fixed the build error and have also built and installed the module
-yourself, and want &kdesrc-build; to start again with the next
-module.</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-resume">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-resume">--resume</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-
-This option can be used to run &kdesrc-build; after it has had a build failure.
-</para><para>
-It resumes the build from the module that failed, using the list of modules
-that were waiting to be built before, and disables source and metadata updates
-as well. The use case is when a simple mistake or missing dependency causes the
-build failure. Once you correct the error you can quickly get back into
-building the modules you were building before, without fiddling with
-<option><link linkend="cmdline-resume-from">--resume-from</link></option> and
-<option><link linkend="cmdline-stop-before">--stop-before</link></option>.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-stop-before">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-stop-before">--stop-before</link></option> (or <option>--until</option>) <replaceable>module</replaceable></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This option is used to stop the normal build process just
-<emphasis>before</emphasis> a module would ordinarily be built.
-</para><para>
-For example, if the normal build list was <simplelist type="inline">
-<member>moduleA</member><member>moduleB</member><member>moduleC</member></simplelist>,
-then <option>--stop-before <replaceable>moduleB</replaceable></option> would cause
-&kdesrc-build; to only build <literal>moduleA</literal>.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-stop-after">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-stop-after">--stop-after</link></option> (or <option>--to</option>) <replaceable>module</replaceable></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This option is used to stop the normal build process just
-<emphasis>after</emphasis> a module would ordinarily be built.
-</para><para>
-For example, if the normal build list was <simplelist type="inline">
-<member>moduleA</member><member>moduleB</member><member>moduleC</member></simplelist>,
-then <option>--stop-after <replaceable>moduleB</replaceable></option> would cause
-&kdesrc-build; to build <literal>moduleA</literal> and <literal>moduleB</literal>.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-stop-on-failure">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-stop-on-failure">--stop-on-failure</link></option>, <option>--no-stop-on-failure</option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This option controls if the build will be aborted as soon as a failure occurs.
-Default behavior is --stop-on-failure. You may override it if you wish to press on with the rest of the modules in the build,
-to avoid wasting time in case the problem is with a single module.
-</para><para>
-See also the <link linkend="conf-stop-on-failure">stop-on-failure</link> configuration file option.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-rebuild-failures">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-rebuild-failures">--rebuild-failures</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Use this option to build only those modules which failed to build on a previous
-&kdesrc-build; run. This is useful if a significant number of failures occurred mixed with
-successful builds. After fixing the issue causing the build failures you can then easily
-build only the modules that failed previously.</para>
-
-<note><para>Note that the list of <quote>previously-failed modules</quote> is
-reset every time a &kdesrc-build; run finishes with some module failures.
-However, it is not reset by a completely successful build, so you can
-successfully rebuild a module or two and this flag will still
-work.</para></note>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-</variablelist>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2>
-<title>Modules information</title>
-<variablelist>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-query">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-query">--query</link></option> <userinput><replaceable>mode</replaceable></userinput></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This command causes &kdesrc-build; to query a parameter of the modules in the
-build list (either passed on the command line or read in from the configuration
-file), outputting the result to screen (one module per line).</para>
-
-<para>This option must be provided with a <quote>mode</quote>, which may be
-one of the following:</para>
- <itemizedlist>
- <listitem><para><parameter>source-dir</parameter>, which causes &kdesrc-build; to
- output the full path to where the module's source code is stored.
- </para></listitem>
- <listitem><para><parameter>build-dir</parameter>, which causes &kdesrc-build; to
- output the full path to where the module build process occurs.
- </para></listitem>
- <listitem><para><parameter>install-dir</parameter>, which causes &kdesrc-build; to
- output the full path to where the module will be installed.
- </para></listitem>
- <listitem><para><parameter>project-path</parameter>, which causes &kdesrc-build; to
- output the location of the module within the hierarchy of KDE source
- code repositories. See <xref linkend="kde-projects-module-sets"/> for
- more information on this hierarchy.
- </para></listitem>
- <listitem><para><parameter>branch</parameter>, which causes &kdesrc-build; to
- output the resolved git branch that will be used for each module, based
- on the <link linkend="conf-tag">tag</link>, <link
- linkend="conf-branch">branch</link> and <link
- linkend="conf-branch-group">branch-group</link> settings in effect.
- </para></listitem>
- <listitem><para><parameter>module-set</parameter>, which causes &kdesrc-build; to
- output the name of module-set which contains the module. This can be used
- to generate zsh autocompletion cache.
- </para></listitem>
- <listitem><para><parameter>build-system</parameter>, which causes &kdesrc-build; to
- output the name of build system detected for the module. This can be used
- to debug build system auto-detection problems, or when developing tests for specific build systems.
- </para></listitem>
- <listitem><para>Any option name that is valid for modules in the
- <link linkend="conf-options-table">configuration file</link>.
- </para></listitem>
- </itemizedlist>
-
-<informalexample>
-<para>For example, the command <userinput><command>kdesrc-build</command>
-<option>--query</option> <option>branch</option> <replaceable>kactivities</replaceable> <replaceable>kdepim</replaceable></userinput>
-might end up with output like:</para>
-<screen>
-kactivities: master
-kdepim: master
-</screen>
-</informalexample>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-dependency-tree">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-dependency-tree">--dependency-tree</link></option></term>
-<listitem>
-<para>
- Prints out dependency information on the modules that would be built using a tree
- format (recursive). Listed information also includes which specific commit/branch/tag
- is depended on and whether the dependency would be built. Note: the generated
- output may become quite large for applications with many dependencies.
-</para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-dependency-tree-fullpath">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-dependency-tree-fullpath">--dependency-tree-fullpath</link></option></term>
-<listitem>
-<para>
- Prints out dependency information on the modules that would be built using a tree
- format (recursive). In fullpath format. Note: the generated
- output may become quite large for applications with many dependencies.
-</para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-list-installed">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-list-installed">--list-installed</link></option></term>
-<listitem>
-<para>
-Print installed modules and exit. This can be used to generate autocompletion for the --run option.
-</para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-</variablelist>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2>
-<title>Exclude specific action</title>
-<variablelist>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-no-metadata">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-no-metadata">--no-metadata</link></option> (or <option>-M</option>)</term>
-<listitem><para>
-Do not automatically download the extra metadata needed for &kde; git modules.
-The source updates for the modules themselves will still occur unless you pass
-<link linkend="cmdline-no-src">--no-src</link> as well.
-</para><para>
-This can be useful if you are frequently re-running &kdesrc-build; since the
-metadata does not change very often. But note that many other features require
-the metadata to be available. You might want to consider running &kdesrc-build;
-with the <link linkend="cmdline-metadata-only">--metadata-only</link> option
-one time and then using this option for subsequent runs.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-no-src">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-no-src">--no-src</link></option> (or <option>-S</option>)</term>
-<listitem><para>
-Skip contacting the &git; server.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-no-build">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-no-build">--no-build</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Skip the build process.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-no-install">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-no-install">--no-install</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Do not automatically install packages after they are built.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-</variablelist>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2>
-<title>Only specific action</title>
-<variablelist>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-metadata-only">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-metadata-only">--metadata-only</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Only perform the metadata download process. &kdesrc-build; normally handles this
-automatically, but you might manually use this to allow the <option><link
-linkend="cmdline-pretend">--pretend</link></option> command line option to work.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-src-only">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-src-only">--src-only</link></option> (or <option>-s</option>)</term>
-<listitem><para>
-Only perform the source update.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-build-only">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-build-only">--build-only</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Only perform the build process.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-install-only">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-install-only">--install-only</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-If this is the only command-line option, it tries to install all the modules
-contained in <filename>log/latest/build-status</filename>. If command-line
-options are specified after this option, they are all
-assumed to be modules to install (even if they did not successfully build on
-the last run).
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-build-system-only">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-build-system-only">--build-system-only</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This option causes &kdesrc-build; to abort building a module just before
-the <command>make</command> command would have been run. This is supported
-for compatibility with older versions only, this effect is not helpful for
-the current &kde; build system.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-</variablelist>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2>
-<title>Build behavior</title>
-<variablelist>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-build-when-unchanged">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-build-when-unchanged">--build-when-unchanged</link></option> (or <option>--force-build</option>), <option>--no-build-when-unchanged</option> (or <option>--no-force-build</option>)</term>
-<listitem><para>
-Enabling this option explicitly disables skipping the build process (an optimization
-controlled by the <link
-linkend="conf-build-when-unchanged">build-when-unchanged</link> option). This is
-useful for making &kdesrc-build; run the build when you have changed something
-that &kdesrc-build; cannot check. This option is enabled by default.</para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-refresh-build">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-refresh-build">--refresh-build</link></option> (or <option>-r</option>)</term>
-<listitem><para>
-Recreate the build system and make from scratch.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-reconfigure">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-reconfigure">--reconfigure</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Run <command>cmake</command> (for &kde; modules) or
-<command>configure</command> (for &Qt;) again, without cleaning the build
-directory. You should not normally have to specify this, as &kdesrc-build; will
-detect when you change the relevant options and automatically re-run the build
-setup. This option is implied if <parameter><link
-linkend="cmdline-refresh-build">--refresh-build</link></parameter> is used.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-install-dir">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-install-dir">--install-dir</link> <replaceable>path</replaceable></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This allows you to change the directory where modules will be installed to. This option implies <link
-linkend="cmdline-reconfigure"><option>--reconfigure</option></link>,
-but using <link linkend="cmdline-refresh-build"><option>--refresh-build</option></link>
-may still be required.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-generate-vscode-project-config">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-generate-vscode-project-config">--generate-vscode-project-config</link></option>, <option>--no-generate-vscode-project-config</option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Generate a <filename>.vscode</filename> directory with configurations for building and debugging
-in Visual Studio Code. This option is disabled by default.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-</variablelist>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2>
-<title>Script runtime</title>
-<variablelist>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-async">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-async">--async</link></option>, <option>--no-async</option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Enables or disables the <link linkend="conf-async">asynchronous mode</link>, which can
-perform the source code updates and module builds at the same time.
-If disabled, the update will be performed in its entirety before the build starts.
-Disabling this option will slow down the overall process. If you encounter IPC errors
-while running &kdesrc-build; try disabling it, and submitting a
-<ulink url="https://bugs.kde.org/">bug report</ulink>. This option is enabled by default.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-color">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-color">--color</link></option> (or <option>--colorful-output</option>), <option>--no-color</option> (or <option>--no-colorful-output</option>)</term>
-<listitem><para>
-Enable or disable colorful output. By default, this option is enabled for interactive terminals.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-nice">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-nice">--nice</link></option> (or <option>--niceness</option>) <replaceable>value</replaceable></term>
-<listitem><para>
-This value adjusts the computer CPU priority requested by &kdesrc-build;, and
-should be in the range of 0-20. 0 is highest priority (because it is the
-least <quote>nice</quote>), 20 is the lowest priority. This option defaults to 10.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-rc-file">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-rc-file">--rc-file</link></option> <replaceable>file</replaceable></term>
-<listitem><para>
-The file to read the configuration options from. The default value for this parameter is
-<filename>kdesrc-buildrc</filename> (checked in the current working directory).
-If this file doesn't exist, <filename>~/.config/kdesrc-buildrc</filename>
-(<filename>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/kdesrc-buildrc</filename>, if
-<envar>$XDG_CONFIG_HOME</envar> is set) will be used instead. See also
-<xref linkend="kdesrc-buildrc"/>.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-</variablelist>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2>
-<title>Setup</title>
-<variablelist>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-initial-setup">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-initial-setup">--initial-setup</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Has &kdesrc-build; perform the one-time initial setup necessary to prepare
-the system for &kdesrc-build; to operate, and for the newly-installed &kde;
-software to run.
-</para>
-<para>This includes:</para>
-<itemizedlist>
-<listitem><para>Installing known dependencies (on supported &Linux; distributions)</para></listitem>
-<listitem><para>Adding required environment variables to <literal>~/.bashrc</literal></para></listitem>
-</itemizedlist>
-<para>This option is exactly equivalent to using
- <option><link linkend="cmdline-install-distro-packages">--install-distro-packages</link></option>
- <option><link linkend="cmdline-generate-config">--generate-config</link></option>
- at the same time.
- In kdesrc-build (perl implementation) it additionally uses "--install-distro-packages-perl".
-</para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-install-distro-packages">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-install-distro-packages">--install-distro-packages</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Installs distro packages (on supported &Linux; distributions) necessary to prepare the system for &kdesrc-build; to operate, and for the newly-installed &kde;
-software to run.
-</para>
-<para>See also <option><link linkend="cmdline-initial-setup">--initial-setup</link></option></para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-generate-config">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-generate-config">--generate-config</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Generate the &kdesrc-build; configuration file.
-</para>
-<para>See also <option><link linkend="cmdline-initial-setup">--initial-setup</link></option></para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-</variablelist>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2>
-<title>Verbosity level</title>
-<para>
-
-</para>
-<variablelist>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-debug">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-debug">--debug</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Enables debug mode for the script. Currently, this means that all output will be
-dumped to the standard output in addition to being logged in the log directory
-like normal. Also, many functions are much more verbose about what they are
-doing in debugging mode.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-quiet">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-quiet">--quiet</link></option> (or <option>--quite</option> or <option>-q</option>)</term>
-<listitem><para>
-Do not be as noisy with the output. With this switch only the basics are
-output.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-really-quiet">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-really-quiet">--really-quiet</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Only output warnings and errors.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-verbose">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-verbose">--verbose</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Be very descriptive about what is going on, and what &kdesrc-build; is doing.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-</variablelist>
-</sect2>
-
-<sect2>
-<title>Script information</title>
-<variablelist>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-version">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-version">--version</link></option> (or <option>-v</option>)</term>
-<listitem><para>
-Display the program version.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-help">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-help">--help</link></option> (or <option>-h</option>)</term>
-<listitem><para>
-Only display simple help on this script.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-show-info">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-show-info">--show-info</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Displays information about &kdesrc-build; and the operating system, that may
-prove useful in bug reports or when asking for help in forums or mailing lists.
-</para>
-</listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-<varlistentry id="cmdline-show-options-specifiers">
-<term><option><link linkend="cmdline-show-options-specifiers">--show-options-specifiers</link></option></term>
-<listitem><para>
-Print the specifier lines (in the format that GetOpts::Long accepts) for all command line options supported by the script.
-This may be used by developers, for example, for generating zsh autocompletion functions.
-</para></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-
-</variablelist>
-
-</sect2>
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/supported-envvars.docbook b/doc/supported-envvars.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index 772b325b..00000000
--- a/doc/supported-envvars.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,10 +0,0 @@
-<sect1 id="supported-envvars">
-<title>Supported Environment Variables</title>
-
-<para>
-&kdesrc-build; does not use environment variables. If you need to set environment
-variables for the build or install process, please see the <link
-linkend="conf-set-env">set-env</link> option.
-</para>
-
-</sect1>
diff --git a/doc/using-kdesrc-build.docbook b/doc/using-kdesrc-build.docbook
deleted file mode 100644
index 5c3fabd2..00000000
--- a/doc/using-kdesrc-build.docbook
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
-<chapter id="using-kdesrc-build">
-<title>Using &kdesrc-build;</title>
-
-<sect1 id="using-kdesrc-build-preface">
-<title>Preface</title>
-
-<para>Normally using &kdesrc-build; after you have gone through <xref linkend="getting-started" />
-is as easy as doing the following from a terminal prompt:</para>
-
-<screen>
-<prompt>%</prompt> <command><userinput>kdesrc-build</userinput></command>
-</screen>
-
-<para>&kdesrc-build; will then download the sources for &kde;, try to configure
-and build them, and then install them.</para>
-
-<para>Read on to discover how &kdesrc-build; does this, and what else you can
-do with this tool.</para>
-
-</sect1>
-
-&basic-features;
-
-&advanced-features;
-
-&developer-features;
-
-&other-features;
-
-</chapter>
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