1.1 Running raco make
The raco make command accepts a few flags:
- -l ‹path› — - Compiles ‹path› interpreted as a collection-based module path, as for require. 
- -j ‹n› — - Compiles argument modules in parallel, using up to ‹n› parallel tasks. 
- --disable-inline — - Disables function inlining while compiling (but does not re-compile files that are already up-to-date). This flag is often useful to simplify generated code before decompiling, and it corresponds to setting compile-context-preservation-enabled to #t. 
- --disable-constant — - Disables inference of definitions within a module as constant (but does not re-compile files that are already up-to-date). The value associated with a non-constant definition is never inlined or constant-propagated, either within its own module or an importing module. This flag corresponds to setting compile-enforce-module-constants to #f. 
- --no-deps — - Compiles a non-module file (i.e., one that is run via load instead of require). See Compiling to Raw Bytecode for more information. 
- -p ‹file› or --prefix ‹file› — - For use with --no-deps; see Compiling to Raw Bytecode. 
- -no-prim — - For use with --no-deps; see Compiling to Raw Bytecode. 
- -v — - Verbose mode, which shows which files are compiled. 
- --vv — - Very verbose mode, which implies -v and also shows every dependency that is checked.