Summary
Performance
Cost$0.591
Total elapsed time1m59s
LLM inference time1m45s
Command execution time14s
Commands executed9
All details >
Attempt ID vebyzhzybqhi7 Attempt group run-16-09-22-05
Revision fb5c74bd2fee AWS Instance m8i.2xlarge
Start time 2025-09-16T20:14:16.941Z End time 2025-09-16T20:16:16.657Z
Task jq Environment ubuntu-22.04-amd64-offline
Model claude-opus-4.1-thinking-16k logo claude-opus-4.1-thinking-16k OpenRouter slug anthropic/claude-opus-4.1
Temperature 1 Explicit prompt caching true
User msg after tool call true Max tool calls 50
Total timeout seconds 900 Single command timeout 600
Cost $0.591 Duration 1m59s
LLM inference time 1m45s Command execution time 14s
Final context tokens 9,474 Total output tokens 2,088
Output reasoning tokens 871 Messages 21
Assistant messages 10 User messages 1
System messages 1 Commands executed 9
Task
Task: jq

jq 1.8.1 is a command-line JSON utility for viewing and transforming JSON.
Project link: github.com/jqlang/jq

Task:
Compile and install jq to a specific location.

Difficulties:
Standard autotools setup, nothing special.

Environment:
Ubuntu 22.04 on amd64, without internet access.

Execution log
SYSTEM

You are a package-building specialist operating a Ubuntu 22.04 bash shell via one tool: run_terminal_cmd.
The current working directory of every run_terminal_cmd is /home/peter.
Execution rules:
- Always pass non-interactive flags for any command that could prompt (e.g., -y, --yes, DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive).
- Don't include any newlines in the command.
- The environment is offline, assume you have all the necessary tools already installed.
If you encounter any errors or issues while doing the user's request, you must fix them and continue the task.
At the end verify you did the user request correctly.

USER

You are given jq v1.8.1 source code at jq.tar.gz. Please compile the jq package and install it to /home/peter/result. Create a symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to the actual binary.

ASSISTANT
Show reasoning

The user wants me to:
1. Extract jq v1.8.1 source code from jq.tar.gz
2. Compile jq
3. Install it to /home/peter/result
4. Create a symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to the actual binary

Let me break this down:
1. First, extract the tarball
2. Navigate to the extracted directory
3. Configure, compile and install jq to /home/peter/result
4. Create a symlink as requested

Let's start:

I'll help you compile and install jq v1.8.1 from source. Let me start by extracting the tarball and then proceed with the compilation.

compile-bench> tar -xzf jq.tar.gz && ls -la
total 2008
drwxr-x--- 1 peter peter    4096 Sep 16 20:14 .
drwxr-xr-x 1 root  root     4096 Sep 15 11:21 ..
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter     220 Jan  6  2022 .bash_logout
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter    3771 Jan  6  2022 .bashrc
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter     807 Jan  6  2022 .profile
drwxr-xr-x 9 peter peter    4096 Jul  1 11:40 jq-1.8.1
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter 2026798 Sep 16 20:14 jq.tar.gz
9 lines
ASSISTANT
Show reasoning

Good, the tarball has been extracted and we have the jq-1.8.1 directory. Now I need to:
1. Enter the jq-1.8.1 directory
2. Configure the build with prefix /home/peter/result
3. Compile it
4. Install it
5. Create a symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to the actual binary

Let me first check what's inside the jq-1.8.1 directory to understand the build system.

compile-bench> cd jq-1.8.1 && ls -la
total 1184
drwxr-xr-x 9 peter peter   4096 Jul  1 11:40 .
drwxr-x--- 1 peter peter   4096 Sep 16 20:14 ..
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter  10686 Jul  1 11:39 AUTHORS
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter   7887 Jul  1 11:39 COPYING
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter  33286 Jul  1 11:39 ChangeLog
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter   9090 Jul  1 11:39 Makefile.am
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter  75461 Jul  1 11:39 Makefile.in
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter  24670 Jul  1 11:39 NEWS.md
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter   2434 Jul  1 11:39 README.md
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter  46459 Jul  1 11:39 aclocal.m4
drwxr-xr-x 3 peter peter   4096 Jul  1 11:40 config
-rwxr-xr-x 1 peter peter 665647 Jul  1 11:39 configure
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter   9881 Jul  1 11:39 configure.ac
drwxr-xr-x 5 peter peter   4096 Jul  1 11:40 docs
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter 124253 Jul  1 11:39 jq.1
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter 124253 Jul  1 11:39 jq.1.prebuilt
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter   1431 Jul  1 11:39 jq.spec
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter    255 Jul  1 11:39 libjq.pc
-rw-r--r-- 1 peter peter    246 Jul  1 11:39 libjq.pc.in
drwxr-xr-x 2 peter peter   4096 Jul  1 11:40 m4
drwxr-xr-x 2 peter peter   4096 Jul  1 11:40 scripts
drwxr-xr-x 2 peter peter   4096 Jul  1 11:40 src
drwxr-xr-x 4 peter peter   4096 Jul  1 11:40 tests
drwxr-xr-x 4 peter peter   4096 Jul  1 11:40 vendor
26 lines
ASSISTANT
Show reasoning

Now I need to compile jq from source. The typical process for compiling from source on Linux involves:
1. Running ./configure with the prefix to set the installation directory
2. Running make
3. Running make install

Since we want to install it to /home/peter/result, I'll use --prefix=/home/peter/result

Let me first run configure with the appropriate prefix.

compile-bench> cd jq-1.8.1 && ./configure --prefix=/home/peter/result
checking for gcc... gcc
checking whether the C compiler works... yes
checking for C compiler default output file name... a.out
checking for suffix of executables... 
checking whether we are cross compiling... no
checking for suffix of object files... o
checking whether the compiler supports GNU C... yes
checking whether gcc accepts -g... yes
checking for gcc option to enable C11 features... none needed
checking whether gcc understands -c and -o together... yes
checking for stdio.h... yes
checking for stdlib.h... yes
checking for string.h... yes
checking for inttypes.h... yes
checking for stdint.h... yes
checking for strings.h... yes
checking for sys/stat.h... yes
checking for sys/types.h... yes
checking for unistd.h... yes
checking for wchar.h... yes
checking for minix/config.h... no
checking whether it is safe to define __EXTENSIONS__... yes
checking whether _XOPEN_SOURCE should be defined... no
checking for a BSD-compatible install... /usr/bin/install -c
checking whether build environment is sane... yes
checking for a race-free mkdir -p... /usr/bin/mkdir -p
checking for gawk... no
checking for mawk... mawk
checking whether make sets $(MAKE)... yes
checking whether make supports the include directive... yes (GNU style)
checking whether make supports nested variables... yes
checking dependency style of gcc... gcc3
checking whether make supports nested variables... (cached) yes
checking for ar... ar
checking the archiver (ar) interface... ar
checking whether to enable maintainer-specific portions of Makefiles... no
checking for gcc... (cached) gcc
checking whether the compiler supports GNU C... (cached) yes
checking whether gcc accepts -g... (cached) yes
checking for gcc option to enable C11 features... (cached) none needed
checking whether gcc understands -c and -o together... (cached) yes
checking how to run the C preprocessor... gcc -E
checking for bison... no
checking for byacc... no
checking build system type... x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
checking host system type... x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
checking how to print strings... printf
checking for a sed that does not truncate output... /usr/bin/sed
checking for grep that handles long lines and -e... /usr/bin/grep
checking for egrep... /usr/bin/grep -E
checking for fgrep... /usr/bin/grep -F
checking for ld used by gcc... /usr/bin/ld
checking if the linker (/usr/bin/ld) is GNU ld... yes
checking for BSD- or MS-compatible name lister (nm)... /usr/bin/nm -B
checking the name lister (/usr/bin/nm -B) interface... BSD nm
checking whether ln -s works... yes
checking the maximum length of command line arguments... 1572864
checking how to convert x86_64-pc-linux-gnu file names to x86_64-pc-linux-gnu format... func_convert_file_noop
checking how to convert x86_64-pc-linux-gnu file names to toolchain format... func_convert_file_noop
checking for /usr/bin/ld option to reload object files... -r
checking for file... file
checking for objdump... objdump
checking 
[command output truncated]
/usr/bin/nm -B) interface... BSD nm
checking whether ln -s works... yes
checking the maximum length of command line arguments... 1572864
checking how to convert x86_64-pc-linux-gnu file names to x86_64-pc-linux-gnu format... func_convert_file_noop
checking how to convert x86_64-pc-linux-gnu file names to toolchain format... func_convert_file_noop
checking for /usr/bin/ld option to reload object files... -r
checking for file... file
checking for objdump... objdump
checking how to recognize dependent libraries... pass_all
checking for dlltool... no
checking how to associate runtime and link libraries... printf %s\n
checking for ar... ar
checking for archiver @FILE support... @
checking for strip... strip
checking for ranlib... ranlib
checking command to parse /usr/bin/nm -B output from gcc object... ok
checking for sysroot... no
checking for a working dd... /usr/bin/dd
checking how to truncate binary pipes... /usr/bin/dd bs=4096 count=1
checking for mt... no
checking if : is a manifest tool... no
checking for stdio.h... yes
checking for stdlib.h... yes
checking for string.h... yes
checking for inttypes.h... yes
checking for stdint.h... yes
checking for strings.h... yes
checking for sys/stat.h... yes
checking for sys/types.h... yes
checking for unistd.h... yes
checking for dlfcn.h... yes
checking for objdir... .libs
checking if gcc supports -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions... no
checking for gcc option to produce PIC... -fPIC -DPIC
checking if gcc PIC flag -fPIC -DPIC works... yes
checking if gcc static flag -static works... yes
checking if gcc supports -c -o file.o... yes
checking if gcc supports -c -o file.o... (cached) yes
checking whether the gcc linker (/usr/bin/ld -m elf_x86_64) supports shared libraries... yes
checking whether -lc should be explicitly linked in... no
checking dynamic linker characteristics... GNU/Linux ld.so
checking how to hardcode library paths into programs... immediate
checking whether stripping libraries is possible... yes
checking if libtool supports shared libraries... yes
checking whether to build shared libraries... yes
checking whether to build static libraries... yes
checking whether make sets $(MAKE)... (cached) yes
checking for sys/time.h... yes
checking for unistd.h... (cached) yes
checking for sys/times.h... yes
checking size of int... 4
checking size of long... 8
checking size of long long... 8
checking size of void*... 8
checking for size_t... yes
checking for working alloca.h... yes
checking for alloca... yes
checking that generated files are newer than configure... done
configure: creating ./config.status
config.status: creating Makefile
config.status: creating src/Makefile
config.status: creating test/Makefile
config.status: creating sample/Makefile
config.status: creating onig-config
config.status: creating src/config.h
config.status: executing depfiles commands
config.status: executing libtool commands
config.status: executing default commands
133 lines
ASSISTANT
Show reasoning

The configure command completed successfully. Now I need to compile the source code with make and then install it to the specified directory.

compile-bench> cd jq-1.8.1 && make -j$(nproc)
mkdir -p src
mkdir -p src
  GEN      src/builtin.inc
  GEN      src/config_opts.inc
mkdir -p src
  GEN      src/version.h
make  all-recursive
make[1]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1'
Making all in vendor/oniguruma
make[2]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma'
Making all in src
make[3]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/src'
make  all-am
make[4]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/src'
/bin/bash ../libtool  --tag=CC   --mode=compile gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I.  -I..  -Wall   -g -O2 -MT regparse.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regparse.Tpo -c -o regparse.lo regparse.c
/bin/bash ../libtool  --tag=CC   --mode=compile gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I.  -I..  -Wall   -g -O2 -MT regcomp.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regcomp.Tpo -c -o regcomp.lo regcomp.c
/bin/bash ../libtool  --tag=CC   --mode=compile gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I.  -I..  -Wall   -g -O2 -MT regexec.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regexec.Tpo -c -o regexec.lo regexec.c
/bin/bash ../libtool  --tag=CC   --mode=compile gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I.  -I..  -Wall   -g -O2 -MT regenc.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regenc.Tpo -c -o regenc.lo regenc.c
/bin/bash ../libtool  --tag=CC   --mode=compile gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I.  -I..  -Wall   -g -O2 -MT regerror.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regerror.Tpo -c -o regerror.lo regerror.c
/bin/bash ../libtool  --tag=CC   --mode=compile gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I.  -I..  -Wall   -g -O2 -MT regext.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regext.Tpo -c -o regext.lo regext.c
/bin/bash ../libtool  --tag=CC   --mode=compile gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I.  -I..  -Wall   -g -O2 -MT regsyntax.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regsyntax.Tpo -c -o regsyntax.lo regsyntax.c
/bin/bash ../libtool  --tag=CC   --mode=compile gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I.  -I..  -Wall   -g -O2 -MT regtrav.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regtrav.Tpo -c -o regtrav.lo regtrav.c
libtool: compile:  gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I.. -Wall -g -O2 -MT regparse.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regparse.Tpo -c regparse.c  -fPIC -DPIC -o .libs/regparse.o
libtool: compile:  gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I.. -Wall -g -O2 -MT regsyntax.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regsyntax.Tpo -c regsyntax.c  -fPIC -DPIC -o .libs/regsyntax.o
libtool: compile:  gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I.. -Wall -g -O2 -MT regcomp.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regcomp.Tpo -c regcomp.c  -fPIC -DPIC -o .libs/regcomp.o
libtool: compile:  gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I.. -Wall -g -O2 -MT regexec.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regexec.Tpo -c regexec.c  -fPIC -DPIC -o .libs/regexec.o
libtool: compile:  gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I.. -Wall -g -O2 -MT regerror.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regerror.Tpo -c regerror.c  -fPIC -DPIC -o .libs/regerror.o
libtool: compile:  gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I.. -Wall -g -O2 -MT regtrav.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regtrav.Tpo -c regtrav.c  -fPIC -DPIC -o .libs/regtrav.o
libtool: compile:  gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I.. -Wall -g -O2 -MT regenc.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regenc.Tpo -c regenc.c  -fPIC -DPIC -o .libs/regenc.o
libtool: compile:  gcc -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I.. -Wall -g -O2 -MT regext.lo -MD -MP -MF .deps/regext
[command output truncated]
koi8_r.o .libs/cp1251.o .libs/onig_init.o    -g -O2   -Wl,-soname -Wl,libonig.so.5 -o .libs/libonig.so.5.5.0
libtool: link: (cd ".libs" && rm -f "libonig.so.5" && ln -s "libonig.so.5.5.0" "libonig.so.5")
libtool: link: (cd ".libs" && rm -f "libonig.so" && ln -s "libonig.so.5.5.0" "libonig.so")
libtool: link: ar cr .libs/libonig.a  regparse.o regcomp.o regexec.o regenc.o regerror.o regext.o regsyntax.o regtrav.o regversion.o st.o reggnu.o unicode.o unicode_unfold_key.o unicode_fold1_key.o unicode_fold2_key.o unicode_fold3_key.o ascii.o utf8.o utf16_be.o utf16_le.o utf32_be.o utf32_le.o euc_jp.o euc_jp_prop.o sjis.o sjis_prop.o iso8859_1.o iso8859_2.o iso8859_3.o iso8859_4.o iso8859_5.o iso8859_6.o iso8859_7.o iso8859_8.o iso8859_9.o iso8859_10.o iso8859_11.o iso8859_13.o iso8859_14.o iso8859_15.o iso8859_16.o euc_tw.o euc_kr.o big5.o gb18030.o koi8_r.o cp1251.o onig_init.o
libtool: link: ranlib .libs/libonig.a
libtool: link: ( cd ".libs" && rm -f "libonig.la" && ln -s "../libonig.la" "libonig.la" )
make[4]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/src'
make[3]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/src'
Making all in test
make[3]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/test'
make[3]: Nothing to be done for 'all'.
make[3]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/test'
Making all in sample
make[3]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/sample'
make[3]: Nothing to be done for 'all'.
make[3]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/sample'
make[3]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma'
sed -e 's,[@]datadir[@],/home/peter/result/share,g' -e 's,[@]datarootdir[@],/home/peter/result/share,g' -e 's,[@]PACKAGE_VERSION[@],6.9.10,g' -e 's,[@]prefix[@],/home/peter/result,g' -e 's,[@]exec_prefix[@],/home/peter/result,g' -e 's,[@]libdir[@],/home/peter/result/lib,g' -e 's,[@]includedir[@],/home/peter/result/include,g' < ./oniguruma.pc.in > oniguruma.pc
make[3]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma'
make[2]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma'
make[2]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1'
  CC       src/builtin.lo
  CC       src/bytecode.lo
  CC       src/compile.lo
  CC       src/execute.lo
  CC       src/jq_test.lo
  CC       src/jv.lo
  CC       src/jv_alloc.lo
  CC       src/jv_aux.lo
  CC       src/jv_dtoa.lo
  CC       src/jv_file.lo
  CC       src/jv_parse.lo
  CC       src/jv_print.lo
  CC       src/jv_unicode.lo
  CC       src/linker.lo
  CC       src/locfile.lo
  CC       src/util.lo
  CC       src/jv_dtoa_tsd.lo
  CC       vendor/decNumber/decContext.lo
  CC       vendor/decNumber/decNumber.lo
  CC       src/lexer.lo
  CC       src/parser.lo
mkdir -p src
  GEN      src/version.h
  CC       src/main.o
  CCLD     libjq.la
  CCLD     jq
make[2]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1'
make[1]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1'
81 lines
ASSISTANT
Show reasoning

Good! The build was successful. Now I need to install jq to /home/peter/result and then create a symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to the actual binary.

compile-bench> cd jq-1.8.1 && make install
mkdir -p src
  GEN      src/version.h
make  install-recursive
make[1]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1'
Making install in vendor/oniguruma
make[2]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma'
Making install in src
make[3]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/src'
make[4]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/src'
 /usr/bin/mkdir -p '/home/peter/result/lib'
 /bin/bash ../libtool   --mode=install /usr/bin/install -c   libonig.la '/home/peter/result/lib'
libtool: install: /usr/bin/install -c .libs/libonig.so.5.5.0 /home/peter/result/lib/libonig.so.5.5.0
libtool: install: (cd /home/peter/result/lib && { ln -s -f libonig.so.5.5.0 libonig.so.5 || { rm -f libonig.so.5 && ln -s libonig.so.5.5.0 libonig.so.5; }; })
libtool: install: (cd /home/peter/result/lib && { ln -s -f libonig.so.5.5.0 libonig.so || { rm -f libonig.so && ln -s libonig.so.5.5.0 libonig.so; }; })
libtool: install: /usr/bin/install -c .libs/libonig.lai /home/peter/result/lib/libonig.la
libtool: install: /usr/bin/install -c .libs/libonig.a /home/peter/result/lib/libonig.a
libtool: install: chmod 644 /home/peter/result/lib/libonig.a
libtool: install: ranlib /home/peter/result/lib/libonig.a
libtool: finish: PATH="/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/sbin" ldconfig -n /home/peter/result/lib
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Libraries have been installed in:
   /home/peter/result/lib

If you ever happen to want to link against installed libraries
in a given directory, LIBDIR, you must either use libtool, and
specify the full pathname of the library, or use the '-LLIBDIR'
flag during linking and do at least one of the following:
   - add LIBDIR to the 'LD_LIBRARY_PATH' environment variable
     during execution
   - add LIBDIR to the 'LD_RUN_PATH' environment variable
     during linking
   - use the '-Wl,-rpath -Wl,LIBDIR' linker flag
   - have your system administrator add LIBDIR to '/etc/ld.so.conf'

See any operating system documentation about shared libraries for
more information, such as the ld(1) and ld.so(8) manual pages.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
 /usr/bin/mkdir -p '/home/peter/result/include'
 /usr/bin/install -c -m 644 oniguruma.h oniggnu.h '/home/peter/result/include'
make  install-data-hook
make[5]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/src'
make[5]: Nothing to be done for 'install-data-hook'.
make[5]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/src'
make[4]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/src'
make[3]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/src'
Making install in test
make[3]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/test'
make[4]: Entering directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1/vendor/oniguruma/test'
make[4]: Nothing to be done for 'install-exec-am'.
make[4]: Nothing to be d
[command output truncated]
h /home/peter/result/lib src/builtin.lo src/bytecode.lo src/compile.lo src/execute.lo src/jq_test.lo src/jv.lo src/jv_alloc.lo src/jv_aux.lo src/jv_dtoa.lo src/jv_file.lo src/jv_parse.lo src/jv_print.lo src/jv_unicode.lo src/linker.lo src/locfile.lo src/util.lo src/jv_dtoa_tsd.lo vendor/decNumber/decContext.lo vendor/decNumber/decNumber.lo src/lexer.lo src/parser.lo -lm vendor/oniguruma/src/.libs/libonig.la -lpthread )
libtool: install: /usr/bin/install -c .libs/libjq.so.1.0.4T /home/peter/result/lib/libjq.so.1.0.4
libtool: install: (cd /home/peter/result/lib && { ln -s -f libjq.so.1.0.4 libjq.so.1 || { rm -f libjq.so.1 && ln -s libjq.so.1.0.4 libjq.so.1; }; })
libtool: install: (cd /home/peter/result/lib && { ln -s -f libjq.so.1.0.4 libjq.so || { rm -f libjq.so && ln -s libjq.so.1.0.4 libjq.so; }; })
libtool: install: /usr/bin/install -c .libs/libjq.lai /home/peter/result/lib/libjq.la
libtool: install: /usr/bin/install -c .libs/libjq.a /home/peter/result/lib/libjq.a
libtool: install: chmod 644 /home/peter/result/lib/libjq.a
libtool: install: ranlib /home/peter/result/lib/libjq.a
libtool: finish: PATH="/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/sbin" ldconfig -n /home/peter/result/lib
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Libraries have been installed in:
   /home/peter/result/lib

If you ever happen to want to link against installed libraries
in a given directory, LIBDIR, you must either use libtool, and
specify the full pathname of the library, or use the '-LLIBDIR'
flag during linking and do at least one of the following:
   - add LIBDIR to the 'LD_LIBRARY_PATH' environment variable
     during execution
   - add LIBDIR to the 'LD_RUN_PATH' environment variable
     during linking
   - use the '-Wl,-rpath -Wl,LIBDIR' linker flag
   - have your system administrator add LIBDIR to '/etc/ld.so.conf'

See any operating system documentation about shared libraries for
more information, such as the ld(1) and ld.so(8) manual pages.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
 /usr/bin/mkdir -p '/home/peter/result/bin'
  /bin/bash ./libtool   --mode=install /usr/bin/install -c jq '/home/peter/result/bin'
libtool: install: /usr/bin/install -c .libs/jq /home/peter/result/bin/jq
 /usr/bin/mkdir -p '/home/peter/result/share/doc/jq'
 /usr/bin/install -c -m 644 README.md NEWS.md COPYING AUTHORS '/home/peter/result/share/doc/jq'
 /usr/bin/mkdir -p '/home/peter/result/include'
 /usr/bin/install -c -m 644 src/jv.h src/jq.h '/home/peter/result/include'
 /usr/bin/mkdir -p '/home/peter/result/share/man/man1'
 /usr/bin/install -c -m 644 jq.1 '/home/peter/result/share/man/man1'
 /usr/bin/mkdir -p '/home/peter/result/lib/pkgconfig'
 /usr/bin/install -c -m 644 libjq.pc '/home/peter/result/lib/pkgconfig'
make[3]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1'
make[2]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1'
make[1]: Leaving directory '/home/peter/jq-1.8.1'
93 lines
ASSISTANT
Show reasoning

The user has successfully compiled and installed jq to /home/peter/result. Now I need to create a symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to the actual binary which is located at /home/peter/result/bin/jq.

Now let me create the symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to the actual binary:

compile-bench> ln -s /home/peter/result/bin/jq /home/peter/result/jq
[empty output]
ASSISTANT
Show reasoning

The user asked me to compile and install jq v1.8.1 from source to /home/peter/result and create a symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to the actual binary. Let me verify that everything was done correctly.

Now let me verify that the installation was successful and the symlink works correctly:

compile-bench> ls -la /home/peter/result/
total 24
drwxr-xr-x 6 peter peter 4096 Sep 16 20:15 .
drwxr-x--- 1 peter peter 4096 Sep 16 20:15 ..
drwxr-xr-x 2 peter peter 4096 Sep 16 20:15 bin
drwxr-xr-x 2 peter peter 4096 Sep 16 20:15 include
lrwxrwxrwx 1 peter peter   25 Sep 16 20:15 jq -> /home/peter/result/bin/jq
drwxr-xr-x 3 peter peter 4096 Sep 16 20:15 lib
drwxr-xr-x 4 peter peter 4096 Sep 16 20:15 share
9 lines
ASSISTANT
Show reasoning

The user asked me to compile and install jq v1.8.1 from source to /home/peter/result and create a symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to the actual binary. Let me verify that everything is working correctly.

Let me check:
1. The binary is installed in the correct location
2. The symlink works
3. The jq version is correct

Now let me verify that jq is working correctly and check its version:

compile-bench> /home/peter/result/jq --version
jq-1.8.1
ASSISTANT
Show reasoning

The user asked me to compile jq v1.8.1 from source and install it to /home/peter/result, and create a symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to the actual binary. Let me verify everything was done correctly:

1. ✅ Extracted the jq.tar.gz file
2. ✅ Configured the build with --prefix=/home/peter/result
3. ✅ Compiled jq with make
4. ✅ Installed jq to /home/peter/result with make install
5. ✅ Created symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to /home/peter/result/bin/jq
6. ✅ Verified the symlink exists and points to the correct location
7. ✅ Verified jq works and shows version 1.8.1

Let me also test that the symlink works:

Let me also test that the symlink works correctly:

compile-bench> echo '{"test": "hello"}' | /home/peter/result/jq '.test'
"hello"
ASSISTANT
Show reasoning

The user asked me to compile jq v1.8.1 from source and install it to /home/peter/result, with a symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to the actual binary.

I have successfully:
1. Extracted the jq.tar.gz archive
2. Configured the build with --prefix=/home/peter/result
3. Compiled jq using make
4. Installed jq to /home/peter/result using make install
5. Created a symlink from /home/peter/result/jq to /home/peter/result/bin/jq
6. Verified the installation works correctly

The task has been completed successfully. Let me provide a summary to the user.

Perfect! I have successfully compiled and installed jq v1.8.1 from source. Here's a summary of what was done:

1. Extracted the source code from jq.tar.gz
2. Configured the build with prefix /home/peter/result to install everything under that directory
3. Compiled jq using make with parallel jobs
4. Installed jq to /home/peter/result with the following structure:
- Binary: /home/peter/result/bin/jq
- Libraries: /home/peter/result/lib/
- Headers: /home/peter/result/include/
- Documentation: /home/peter/result/share/
5. Created a symlink from /home/peter/result/jq/home/peter/result/bin/jq

The installation is complete and verified:
- jq version 1.8.1 is installed
- The symlink /home/peter/result/jq works correctly
- The binary is functional (tested with a simple JSON parsing)

You can now use jq either through /home/peter/result/jq (the symlink) or /home/peter/result/bin/jq (the actual binary).

Task finished successfully, all checks passed!
Checks passed:
jq binary exists
jq help contains expected string
jq works