make/read.c

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1994-03-23 22:12:55 +08:00
/* Reading and parsing of makefiles for GNU Make.
Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997,
2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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This file is part of GNU Make.
GNU Make is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
any later version.
GNU Make is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with GNU Make; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
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#include "make.h"
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#include <assert.h>
#include <glob.h>
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#include "dep.h"
#include "filedef.h"
#include "job.h"
#include "commands.h"
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#include "variable.h"
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#include "rule.h"
#include "debug.h"
#include "hash.h"
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#ifndef WINDOWS32
#ifndef _AMIGA
#ifndef VMS
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#include <pwd.h>
#else
struct passwd *getpwnam PARAMS ((char *name));
#endif
#endif
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#endif /* !WINDOWS32 */
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/* A 'struct ebuffer' controls the origin of the makefile we are currently
eval'ing.
*/
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struct ebuffer
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{
char *buffer; /* Start of the current line in the buffer. */
char *bufnext; /* Start of the next line in the buffer. */
char *bufstart; /* Start of the entire buffer. */
unsigned int size; /* Malloc'd size of buffer. */
FILE *fp; /* File, or NULL if this is an internal buffer. */
struct floc floc; /* Info on the file in fp (if any). */
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};
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/* Types of "words" that can be read in a makefile. */
enum make_word_type
{
w_bogus, w_eol, w_static, w_variable, w_colon, w_dcolon, w_semicolon,
w_comment, w_varassign
};
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/* A `struct conditionals' contains the information describing
all the active conditionals in a makefile.
The global variable `conditionals' contains the conditionals
information for the current makefile. It is initialized from
the static structure `toplevel_conditionals' and is later changed
to new structures for included makefiles. */
struct conditionals
{
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unsigned int if_cmds; /* Depth of conditional nesting. */
unsigned int allocated; /* Elts allocated in following arrays. */
char *ignoring; /* Are we ignoring or interepreting? */
char *seen_else; /* Have we already seen an `else'? */
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};
static struct conditionals toplevel_conditionals;
static struct conditionals *conditionals = &toplevel_conditionals;
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/* Default directories to search for include files in */
static char *default_include_directories[] =
{
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#if defined(WINDOWS32) && !defined(INCLUDEDIR)
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-23 05:51:45 +08:00
/*
* This completely up to the user when they install MSVC or other packages.
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
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* This is defined as a placeholder.
*/
#define INCLUDEDIR "."
#endif
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INCLUDEDIR,
Thu May 9 13:54:49 1996 Roland McGrath <roland@delasyd.gnu.ai.mit.edu> * GNUmakefile (globfiles): Add AmigaDOS support files. (distfiles): Add $(amigafiles). (amigafiles): New variable. Thu Nov 7 10:18:16 1995 Aaron Digulla <digulla@fh-konstanz.de> * Added Amiga support in commands.c, dir.c, function.c, job.c, main.c, make.h, read.c, remake.c * commands.c: Amiga has neither SIGHUP nor SIGQUIT * dir.c: Amiga has filenames with Upper- and Lowercase, but "FileName" is the same as "filename". Added strieq() which is use to compare filenames. This is like streq() on all other systems. Also there is no such thing as "." under AmigaDOS. * function.c: On Amiga, the environment is not passed as envp, there are no pipes and Amiga can't fork. Use my own function to create a new child. * job.c: default_shell is "" (The system automatically chooses a shell for me). Have to use the same workaround as MSDOS for running batch commands. Added HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H. NOFILE isn't known on Amiga. Cloned code to run children from MSDOS. Own version of sh_chars[] and sh_cmds[]. No dup2() or dup() on Amiga. * main.c: Force stack to 20000 bytes. Read environment from ENV: device. On Amiga, exec_command() does return, so I exit() afterwards. * make.h: Added strieq() to compare filenames. * read.c: Amiga needs special extension to have passwd. Only one include-dir. "Makefile" and "makefile" are the same. Added "SMakefile". Added special code to handle device names (xxx:) and "./" in rules. * remake.c: Only one lib-dir. Amiga link-libs are named "%s.lib" instead of "lib%s.a". * main.c, rule.c, variable.c: Avoid floats at all costs. * vpath.c: Get rid of as many alloca()s as possible.
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#ifndef _AMIGA
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"/usr/gnu/include",
"/usr/local/include",
"/usr/include",
Thu May 9 13:54:49 1996 Roland McGrath <roland@delasyd.gnu.ai.mit.edu> * GNUmakefile (globfiles): Add AmigaDOS support files. (distfiles): Add $(amigafiles). (amigafiles): New variable. Thu Nov 7 10:18:16 1995 Aaron Digulla <digulla@fh-konstanz.de> * Added Amiga support in commands.c, dir.c, function.c, job.c, main.c, make.h, read.c, remake.c * commands.c: Amiga has neither SIGHUP nor SIGQUIT * dir.c: Amiga has filenames with Upper- and Lowercase, but "FileName" is the same as "filename". Added strieq() which is use to compare filenames. This is like streq() on all other systems. Also there is no such thing as "." under AmigaDOS. * function.c: On Amiga, the environment is not passed as envp, there are no pipes and Amiga can't fork. Use my own function to create a new child. * job.c: default_shell is "" (The system automatically chooses a shell for me). Have to use the same workaround as MSDOS for running batch commands. Added HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H. NOFILE isn't known on Amiga. Cloned code to run children from MSDOS. Own version of sh_chars[] and sh_cmds[]. No dup2() or dup() on Amiga. * main.c: Force stack to 20000 bytes. Read environment from ENV: device. On Amiga, exec_command() does return, so I exit() afterwards. * make.h: Added strieq() to compare filenames. * read.c: Amiga needs special extension to have passwd. Only one include-dir. "Makefile" and "makefile" are the same. Added "SMakefile". Added special code to handle device names (xxx:) and "./" in rules. * remake.c: Only one lib-dir. Amiga link-libs are named "%s.lib" instead of "lib%s.a". * main.c, rule.c, variable.c: Avoid floats at all costs. * vpath.c: Get rid of as many alloca()s as possible.
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#endif
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0
};
/* List of directories to search for include files in */
static char **include_directories;
/* Maximum length of an element of the above. */
static unsigned int max_incl_len;
/* The filename and pointer to line number of the
makefile currently being read in. */
const struct floc *reading_file = 0;
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/* The chain of makefiles read by read_makefile. */
static struct dep *read_makefiles = 0;
static int eval_makefile PARAMS ((char *filename, int flags));
static int eval PARAMS ((struct ebuffer *buffer, int flags));
static long readline PARAMS ((struct ebuffer *ebuf));
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static void do_define PARAMS ((char *name, unsigned int namelen,
enum variable_origin origin,
struct ebuffer *ebuf));
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static int conditional_line PARAMS ((char *line, const struct floc *flocp));
static void record_files PARAMS ((struct nameseq *filenames, char *pattern, char *pattern_percent,
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struct dep *deps, unsigned int cmds_started, char *commands,
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unsigned int commands_idx, int two_colon,
int have_sysv_atvar,
const struct floc *flocp, int set_default));
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static void record_target_var PARAMS ((struct nameseq *filenames, char *defn,
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int two_colon,
enum variable_origin origin,
const struct floc *flocp));
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static enum make_word_type get_next_mword PARAMS ((char *buffer, char *delim,
char **startp, unsigned int *length));
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/* Read in all the makefiles and return the chain of their names. */
struct dep *
read_all_makefiles (makefiles)
char **makefiles;
{
unsigned int num_makefiles = 0;
/* Create *_LIST variables, to hold the makefiles, targets, and variables
we will be reading. */
define_variable ("MAKEFILE_LIST", sizeof ("MAKEFILE_LIST")-1, "", o_file, 0);
DB (DB_BASIC, (_("Reading makefiles...\n")));
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/* If there's a non-null variable MAKEFILES, its value is a list of
files to read first thing. But don't let it prevent reading the
default makefiles and don't let the default goal come from there. */
{
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char *value;
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char *name, *p;
unsigned int length;
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{
/* Turn off --warn-undefined-variables while we expand MAKEFILES. */
int save = warn_undefined_variables_flag;
warn_undefined_variables_flag = 0;
value = allocated_variable_expand ("$(MAKEFILES)");
warn_undefined_variables_flag = save;
}
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/* Set NAME to the start of next token and LENGTH to its length.
MAKEFILES is updated for finding remaining tokens. */
p = value;
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while ((name = find_next_token (&p, &length)) != 0)
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{
if (*p != '\0')
*p++ = '\0';
name = xstrdup (name);
if (eval_makefile (name,
RM_NO_DEFAULT_GOAL|RM_INCLUDED|RM_DONTCARE) < 2)
free (name);
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}
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free (value);
}
/* Read makefiles specified with -f switches. */
if (makefiles != 0)
while (*makefiles != 0)
{
struct dep *tail = read_makefiles;
register struct dep *d;
if (! eval_makefile (*makefiles, 0))
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perror_with_name ("", *makefiles);
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/* Find the right element of read_makefiles. */
d = read_makefiles;
while (d->next != tail)
d = d->next;
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/* Use the storage read_makefile allocates. */
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*makefiles = dep_name (d);
++num_makefiles;
++makefiles;
}
/* If there were no -f switches, try the default names. */
if (num_makefiles == 0)
{
static char *default_makefiles[] =
#ifdef VMS
/* all lower case since readdir() (the vms version) 'lowercasifies' */
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{ "makefile.vms", "gnumakefile.", "makefile.", 0 };
#else
#ifdef _AMIGA
{ "GNUmakefile", "Makefile", "SMakefile", 0 };
#else /* !Amiga && !VMS */
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{ "GNUmakefile", "makefile", "Makefile", 0 };
#endif /* AMIGA */
#endif /* VMS */
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register char **p = default_makefiles;
while (*p != 0 && !file_exists_p (*p))
++p;
if (*p != 0)
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{
if (! eval_makefile (*p, 0))
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perror_with_name ("", *p);
}
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else
{
/* No default makefile was found. Add the default makefiles to the
`read_makefiles' chain so they will be updated if possible. */
struct dep *tail = read_makefiles;
/* Add them to the tail, after any MAKEFILES variable makefiles. */
while (tail != 0 && tail->next != 0)
tail = tail->next;
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for (p = default_makefiles; *p != 0; ++p)
{
struct dep *d = (struct dep *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct dep));
d->name = 0;
d->file = enter_file (*p);
d->file->dontcare = 1;
d->ignore_mtime = 0;
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/* Tell update_goal_chain to bail out as soon as this file is
made, and main not to die if we can't make this file. */
d->changed = RM_DONTCARE;
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if (tail == 0)
read_makefiles = d;
else
tail->next = d;
tail = d;
}
if (tail != 0)
tail->next = 0;
}
}
return read_makefiles;
}
int
eval_makefile (filename, flags)
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char *filename;
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int flags;
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{
struct dep *deps;
struct ebuffer ebuf;
const struct floc *curfile;
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int makefile_errno;
int r;
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ebuf.floc.filenm = filename;
ebuf.floc.lineno = 1;
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if (ISDB (DB_VERBOSE))
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{
printf (_("Reading makefile `%s'"), filename);
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if (flags & RM_NO_DEFAULT_GOAL)
printf (_(" (no default goal)"));
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if (flags & RM_INCLUDED)
printf (_(" (search path)"));
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if (flags & RM_DONTCARE)
printf (_(" (don't care)"));
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if (flags & RM_NO_TILDE)
printf (_(" (no ~ expansion)"));
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puts ("...");
}
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/* First, get a stream to read. */
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/* Expand ~ in FILENAME unless it came from `include',
in which case it was already done. */
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if (!(flags & RM_NO_TILDE) && filename[0] == '~')
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{
char *expanded = tilde_expand (filename);
if (expanded != 0)
filename = expanded;
}
ebuf.fp = fopen (filename, "r");
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/* Save the error code so we print the right message later. */
makefile_errno = errno;
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/* If the makefile wasn't found and it's either a makefile from
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the `MAKEFILES' variable or an included makefile,
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search the included makefile search path for this makefile. */
if (ebuf.fp == 0 && (flags & RM_INCLUDED) && *filename != '/')
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{
register unsigned int i;
for (i = 0; include_directories[i] != 0; ++i)
{
char *name = concat (include_directories[i], "/", filename);
ebuf.fp = fopen (name, "r");
if (ebuf.fp == 0)
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free (name);
else
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{
filename = name;
break;
}
}
}
/* Add FILENAME to the chain of read makefiles. */
deps = (struct dep *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct dep));
deps->next = read_makefiles;
read_makefiles = deps;
deps->name = 0;
deps->file = lookup_file (filename);
if (deps->file == 0)
{
deps->file = enter_file (xstrdup (filename));
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if (flags & RM_DONTCARE)
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deps->file->dontcare = 1;
}
if (filename != ebuf.floc.filenm)
free (filename);
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filename = deps->file->name;
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deps->changed = flags;
deps->ignore_mtime = 0;
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/* If the makefile can't be found at all, give up entirely. */
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if (ebuf.fp == 0)
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{
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/* If we did some searching, errno has the error from the last
attempt, rather from FILENAME itself. Restore it in case the
caller wants to use it in a message. */
errno = makefile_errno;
return 0;
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}
/* Add this makefile to the list. */
do_variable_definition (&ebuf.floc, "MAKEFILE_LIST", filename, o_file,
f_append, 0);
/* Evaluate the makefile */
ebuf.size = 200;
ebuf.buffer = ebuf.bufnext = ebuf.bufstart = xmalloc (ebuf.size);
curfile = reading_file;
reading_file = &ebuf.floc;
r = eval (&ebuf, !(flags & RM_NO_DEFAULT_GOAL));
reading_file = curfile;
fclose (ebuf.fp);
free (ebuf.bufstart);
return r;
}
int
eval_buffer (buffer)
char *buffer;
{
struct ebuffer ebuf;
const struct floc *curfile;
int r;
/* Evaluate the buffer */
ebuf.size = strlen (buffer);
ebuf.buffer = ebuf.bufnext = ebuf.bufstart = buffer;
ebuf.fp = NULL;
ebuf.floc = *reading_file;
curfile = reading_file;
reading_file = &ebuf.floc;
r = eval (&ebuf, 1);
reading_file = curfile;
return r;
}
/* Read file FILENAME as a makefile and add its contents to the data base.
SET_DEFAULT is true if we are allowed to set the default goal.
FILENAME is added to the `read_makefiles' chain.
Returns 0 if a file was not found or not read.
Returns 1 if FILENAME was found and read.
Returns 2 if FILENAME was read, and we kept a reference (don't free it). */
static int
eval (ebuf, set_default)
struct ebuffer *ebuf;
int set_default;
{
static char *collapsed = 0;
static unsigned int collapsed_length = 0;
unsigned int commands_len = 200;
char *commands;
unsigned int commands_idx = 0;
unsigned int cmds_started, tgts_started;
int ignoring = 0, in_ignored_define = 0;
int no_targets = 0; /* Set when reading a rule without targets. */
int have_sysv_atvar = 0;
struct nameseq *filenames = 0;
struct dep *deps = 0;
long nlines = 0;
int two_colon = 0;
char *pattern = 0, *pattern_percent;
struct floc *fstart;
struct floc fi;
#define record_waiting_files() \
do \
{ \
if (filenames != 0) \
{ \
fi.lineno = tgts_started; \
record_files (filenames, pattern, pattern_percent, deps, \
cmds_started, commands, commands_idx, two_colon, \
have_sysv_atvar, &fi, set_default); \
} \
filenames = 0; \
commands_idx = 0; \
no_targets = 0; \
if (pattern) { free(pattern); pattern = 0; } \
} while (0)
pattern_percent = 0;
cmds_started = tgts_started = 1;
fstart = &ebuf->floc;
fi.filenm = ebuf->floc.filenm;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Loop over lines in the file.
The strategy is to accumulate target names in FILENAMES, dependencies
in DEPS and commands in COMMANDS. These are used to define a rule
when the start of the next rule (or eof) is encountered.
When you see a "continue" in the loop below, that means we are moving on
to the next line _without_ ending any rule that we happen to be working
with at the moment. If you see a "goto rule_complete", then the
statement we just parsed also finishes the previous rule. */
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
commands = xmalloc (200);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
while (1)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
int linelen;
char *line;
int len;
char *p;
char *p2;
/* Grab the next line to be evaluated */
ebuf->floc.lineno += nlines;
nlines = readline (ebuf);
/* If there is nothing left to eval, we're done. */
if (nlines < 0)
break;
/* If this line is empty, skip it. */
line = ebuf->buffer;
if (line[0] == '\0')
continue;
linelen = strlen (line);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Check for a shell command line first.
If it is not one, we can stop treating tab specially. */
if (line[0] == '\t')
{
if (no_targets)
/* Ignore the commands in a rule with no targets. */
continue;
/* If there is no preceding rule line, don't treat this line
as a command, even though it begins with a tab character.
SunOS 4 make appears to behave this way. */
if (filenames != 0)
{
if (ignoring)
/* Yep, this is a shell command, and we don't care. */
continue;
/* Append this command line to the line being accumulated. */
if (commands_idx == 0)
cmds_started = ebuf->floc.lineno;
if (linelen + 1 + commands_idx > commands_len)
{
commands_len = (linelen + 1 + commands_idx) * 2;
commands = xrealloc (commands, commands_len);
}
bcopy (line, &commands[commands_idx], linelen);
commands_idx += linelen;
commands[commands_idx++] = '\n';
continue;
}
}
/* This line is not a shell command line. Don't worry about tabs. */
if (collapsed_length < linelen+1)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
collapsed_length = linelen+1;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
if (collapsed != 0)
free (collapsed);
collapsed = (char *) xmalloc (collapsed_length);
}
strcpy (collapsed, line);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Collapse continuation lines. */
collapse_continuations (collapsed);
remove_comments (collapsed);
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
/* Compare a word, both length and contents. */
#define word1eq(s) (len == sizeof(s)-1 && strneq (s, p, sizeof(s)-1))
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
p = collapsed;
while (isspace ((unsigned char)*p))
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
++p;
if (*p == '\0')
/* This line is completely empty--ignore it. */
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
continue;
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
/* Find the end of the first token. Note we don't need to worry about
* ":" here since we compare tokens by length (so "export" will never
* be equal to "export:").
*/
for (p2 = p+1; *p2 != '\0' && !isspace ((unsigned char)*p2); ++p2)
;
1997-04-07 15:21:16 +08:00
len = p2 - p;
/* Find the start of the second token. If it looks like a target or
variable definition it can't be a preprocessor token so skip
them--this allows variables/targets named `ifdef', `export', etc. */
while (isspace ((unsigned char)*p2))
1997-04-07 15:21:16 +08:00
++p2;
if ((p2[0] == ':' || p2[0] == '+' || p2[0] == '=') && p2[1] == '\0')
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
{
/* It can't be a preprocessor token so skip it if we're ignoring */
if (ignoring)
continue;
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
goto skip_conditionals;
}
1997-04-07 15:21:16 +08:00
/* We must first check for conditional and `define' directives before
ignoring anything, since they control what we will do with
following lines. */
1992-02-14 19:30:14 +08:00
if (!in_ignored_define
&& (word1eq ("ifdef") || word1eq ("ifndef")
|| word1eq ("ifeq") || word1eq ("ifneq")
|| word1eq ("else") || word1eq ("endif")))
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
int i = conditional_line (p, fstart);
if (i < 0)
fatal (fstart, _("invalid syntax in conditional"));
ignoring = i;
1992-10-25 11:24:24 +08:00
continue;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
if (word1eq ("endef"))
1992-02-14 19:30:14 +08:00
{
if (!in_ignored_define)
fatal (fstart, _("extraneous `endef'"));
in_ignored_define = 0;
1992-10-25 11:24:24 +08:00
continue;
1992-02-14 19:30:14 +08:00
}
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
if (word1eq ("define"))
1992-02-14 19:30:14 +08:00
{
if (ignoring)
in_ignored_define = 1;
else
{
1999-07-16 10:25:03 +08:00
if (*p2 == '\0')
fatal (fstart, _("empty variable name"));
1999-07-16 10:25:03 +08:00
1994-03-04 13:10:22 +08:00
/* Let the variable name be the whole rest of the line,
with trailing blanks stripped (comments have already been
removed), so it could be a complex variable/function
reference that might contain blanks. */
p = strchr (p2, '\0');
while (isblank ((unsigned char)p[-1]))
1994-03-04 13:10:22 +08:00
--p;
do_define (p2, p - p2, o_file, ebuf);
1992-02-14 19:30:14 +08:00
}
1992-10-25 11:24:24 +08:00
continue;
1992-02-14 19:30:14 +08:00
}
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
if (word1eq ("override"))
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
{
1999-07-16 10:25:03 +08:00
if (*p2 == '\0')
error (fstart, _("empty `override' directive"));
if (strneq (p2, "define", 6)
&& (isblank ((unsigned char)p2[6]) || p2[6] == '\0'))
1993-01-15 03:26:47 +08:00
{
if (ignoring)
in_ignored_define = 1;
else
{
p2 = next_token (p2 + 6);
1999-07-16 10:25:03 +08:00
if (*p2 == '\0')
fatal (fstart, _("empty variable name"));
1999-07-16 10:25:03 +08:00
1994-03-04 13:10:22 +08:00
/* Let the variable name be the whole rest of the line,
with trailing blanks stripped (comments have already been
removed), so it could be a complex variable/function
reference that might contain blanks. */
p = strchr (p2, '\0');
while (isblank ((unsigned char)p[-1]))
1994-03-04 13:10:22 +08:00
--p;
do_define (p2, p - p2, o_override, ebuf);
1993-01-15 03:26:47 +08:00
}
}
1993-02-22 03:28:27 +08:00
else if (!ignoring
&& !try_variable_definition (fstart, p2, o_override, 0))
error (fstart, _("invalid `override' directive"));
1993-01-19 08:14:29 +08:00
continue;
1993-01-15 03:26:47 +08:00
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
if (ignoring)
1992-10-30 05:49:15 +08:00
/* Ignore the line. We continue here so conditionals
can appear in the middle of a rule. */
continue;
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
if (word1eq ("export"))
1992-05-04 06:03:26 +08:00
{
/* 'export' by itself causes everything to be exported. */
1992-05-05 06:37:19 +08:00
if (*p2 == '\0')
export_all_variables = 1;
else
{
struct variable *v;
v = try_variable_definition (fstart, p2, o_file, 0);
if (v != 0)
v->export = v_export;
else
{
unsigned int len;
for (p = find_next_token (&p2, &len); p != 0;
p = find_next_token (&p2, &len))
{
char *var;
int l;
/* Expand the thing we're looking up, so we can use
indirect and constructed variable names. */
p[len] = '\0';
var = allocated_variable_expand (p);
l = strlen (var);
v = lookup_variable (var, l);
if (v == 0)
v = define_variable_loc (var, l, "", o_file, 0,
fstart);
v->export = v_export;
free (var);
}
}
}
goto rule_complete;
1992-05-04 06:03:26 +08:00
}
if (word1eq ("unexport"))
1992-05-04 06:03:26 +08:00
{
1992-05-05 06:37:19 +08:00
if (*p2 == '\0')
export_all_variables = 0;
else
{
unsigned int len;
struct variable *v;
for (p = find_next_token (&p2, &len); p != 0;
p = find_next_token (&p2, &len))
{
char *var;
int l;
/* Expand the thing we're looking up, so we can use
indirect and constructed variable names. */
p[len] = '\0';
var = allocated_variable_expand (p);
l = strlen (var);
v = lookup_variable (var, l);
if (v == 0)
v = define_variable_loc (var, l, "", o_file, 0, fstart);
v->export = v_noexport;
free (var);
}
}
goto rule_complete;
1992-05-04 06:03:26 +08:00
}
skip_conditionals:
if (word1eq ("vpath"))
1997-04-07 15:21:16 +08:00
{
char *pattern;
unsigned int len;
p2 = variable_expand (p2);
1997-04-07 15:21:16 +08:00
p = find_next_token (&p2, &len);
if (p != 0)
{
pattern = savestring (p, len);
p = find_next_token (&p2, &len);
/* No searchpath means remove all previous
selective VPATH's with the same pattern. */
}
else
/* No pattern means remove all previous selective VPATH's. */
pattern = 0;
construct_vpath_list (pattern, p);
if (pattern != 0)
free (pattern);
goto rule_complete;
1997-04-07 15:21:16 +08:00
}
if (word1eq ("include") || word1eq ("-include") || word1eq ("sinclude"))
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
/* We have found an `include' line specifying a nested
makefile to be read at this point. */
struct conditionals *save;
struct conditionals new_conditionals;
1992-08-28 07:53:17 +08:00
struct nameseq *files;
/* "-include" (vs "include") says no error if the file does not
exist. "sinclude" is an alias for this from SGI. */
int noerror = (p[0] != 'i');
1992-08-28 07:53:17 +08:00
p = allocated_variable_expand (p2);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
if (*p == '\0')
{
error (fstart,
_("no file name for `%sinclude'"), noerror ? "-" : "");
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
continue;
}
1992-08-28 07:53:17 +08:00
/* Parse the list of file names. */
p2 = p;
files = multi_glob (parse_file_seq (&p2, '\0',
1993-05-04 05:14:22 +08:00
sizeof (struct nameseq),
1),
sizeof (struct nameseq));
1992-08-28 07:53:17 +08:00
free (p);
/* Save the state of conditionals and start
the included makefile with a clean slate. */
save = conditionals;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
bzero ((char *) &new_conditionals, sizeof new_conditionals);
conditionals = &new_conditionals;
1992-08-28 07:53:17 +08:00
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Record the rules that are waiting so they will determine
the default goal before those in the included makefile. */
record_waiting_files ();
1992-08-28 07:53:17 +08:00
/* Read each included makefile. */
while (files != 0)
{
struct nameseq *next = files->next;
char *name = files->name;
int r;
free ((char *)files);
1992-08-28 07:53:17 +08:00
files = next;
r = eval_makefile (name, (RM_INCLUDED | RM_NO_TILDE
| (noerror ? RM_DONTCARE : 0)));
if (!r)
{
if (!noerror)
error (fstart, "%s: %s", name, strerror (errno));
free (name);
}
1992-08-28 07:53:17 +08:00
}
1993-08-19 03:01:46 +08:00
/* Free any space allocated by conditional_line. */
if (conditionals->ignoring)
free (conditionals->ignoring);
if (conditionals->seen_else)
free (conditionals->seen_else);
1992-08-28 07:53:17 +08:00
/* Restore state. */
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
conditionals = save;
goto rule_complete;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
if (try_variable_definition (fstart, p, o_file, 0))
1992-10-25 11:24:24 +08:00
/* This line has been dealt with. */
goto rule_complete;
if (line[0] == '\t')
1994-02-17 06:55:31 +08:00
{
p = collapsed; /* Ignore comments, etc. */
while (isblank ((unsigned char)*p))
1994-02-17 06:55:31 +08:00
++p;
if (*p == '\0')
/* The line is completely blank; that is harmless. */
continue;
1994-02-17 06:55:31 +08:00
/* This line starts with a tab but was not caught above
because there was no preceding target, and the line
might have been usable as a variable definition.
But now we know it is definitely lossage. */
fatal(fstart, _("commands commence before first target"));
1994-02-17 06:55:31 +08:00
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* This line describes some target files. This is complicated by
the existence of target-specific variables, because we can't
expand the entire line until we know if we have one or not. So
we expand the line word by word until we find the first `:',
then check to see if it's a target-specific variable.
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
In this algorithm, `lb_next' will point to the beginning of the
unexpanded parts of the input buffer, while `p2' points to the
parts of the expanded buffer we haven't searched yet. */
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
{
enum make_word_type wtype;
enum variable_origin v_origin;
char *cmdleft, *semip, *lb_next;
unsigned int len, plen = 0;
char *colonp;
/* Record the previous rule. */
record_waiting_files ();
tgts_started = fstart->lineno;
/* Search the line for an unquoted ; that is not after an
unquoted #. */
cmdleft = find_char_unquote (line, ';', '#', 0);
if (cmdleft != 0 && *cmdleft == '#')
{
/* We found a comment before a semicolon. */
*cmdleft = '\0';
cmdleft = 0;
}
else if (cmdleft != 0)
/* Found one. Cut the line short there before expanding it. */
*(cmdleft++) = '\0';
semip = cmdleft;
collapse_continuations (line);
/* We can't expand the entire line, since if it's a per-target
variable we don't want to expand it. So, walk from the
beginning, expanding as we go, and looking for "interesting"
chars. The first word is always expandable. */
wtype = get_next_mword(line, NULL, &lb_next, &len);
switch (wtype)
{
case w_eol:
if (cmdleft != 0)
fatal(fstart, _("missing rule before commands"));
/* This line contained something but turned out to be nothing
but whitespace (a comment?). */
continue;
case w_colon:
case w_dcolon:
/* We accept and ignore rules without targets for
compatibility with SunOS 4 make. */
no_targets = 1;
continue;
default:
break;
}
p2 = variable_expand_string(NULL, lb_next, len);
while (1)
{
lb_next += len;
if (cmdleft == 0)
{
/* Look for a semicolon in the expanded line. */
cmdleft = find_char_unquote (p2, ';', 0, 0);
if (cmdleft != 0)
{
unsigned long p2_off = p2 - variable_buffer;
unsigned long cmd_off = cmdleft - variable_buffer;
char *pend = p2 + strlen(p2);
/* Append any remnants of lb, then cut the line short
at the semicolon. */
*cmdleft = '\0';
/* One school of thought says that you shouldn't expand
here, but merely copy, since now you're beyond a ";"
and into a command script. However, the old parser
expanded the whole line, so we continue that for
backwards-compatiblity. Also, it wouldn't be
entirely consistent, since we do an unconditional
expand below once we know we don't have a
target-specific variable. */
(void)variable_expand_string(pend, lb_next, (long)-1);
lb_next += strlen(lb_next);
p2 = variable_buffer + p2_off;
cmdleft = variable_buffer + cmd_off + 1;
}
}
colonp = find_char_unquote(p2, ':', 0, 0);
#ifdef HAVE_DOS_PATHS
/* The drive spec brain-damage strikes again... */
/* Note that the only separators of targets in this context
are whitespace and a left paren. If others are possible,
they should be added to the string in the call to index. */
while (colonp && (colonp[1] == '/' || colonp[1] == '\\') &&
colonp > p2 && isalpha ((unsigned char)colonp[-1]) &&
(colonp == p2 + 1 || strchr (" \t(", colonp[-2]) != 0))
colonp = find_char_unquote(colonp + 1, ':', 0, 0);
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
#endif
if (colonp != 0)
break;
1993-05-15 06:25:11 +08:00
wtype = get_next_mword(lb_next, NULL, &lb_next, &len);
if (wtype == w_eol)
break;
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
p2 += strlen(p2);
*(p2++) = ' ';
p2 = variable_expand_string(p2, lb_next, len);
/* We don't need to worry about cmdleft here, because if it was
found in the variable_buffer the entire buffer has already
been expanded... we'll never get here. */
}
p2 = next_token (variable_buffer);
/* If the word we're looking at is EOL, see if there's _anything_
on the line. If not, a variable expanded to nothing, so ignore
it. If so, we can't parse this line so punt. */
if (wtype == w_eol)
{
if (*p2 != '\0')
/* There's no need to be ivory-tower about this: check for
one of the most common bugs found in makefiles... */
fatal (fstart, _("missing separator%s"),
!strneq(line, " ", 8) ? ""
: _(" (did you mean TAB instead of 8 spaces?)"));
continue;
}
/* Make the colon the end-of-string so we know where to stop
looking for targets. */
*colonp = '\0';
filenames = multi_glob (parse_file_seq (&p2, '\0',
sizeof (struct nameseq),
1),
sizeof (struct nameseq));
*p2 = ':';
if (!filenames)
{
/* We accept and ignore rules without targets for
compatibility with SunOS 4 make. */
no_targets = 1;
continue;
}
/* This should never be possible; we handled it above. */
assert (*p2 != '\0');
++p2;
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
/* Is this a one-colon or two-colon entry? */
two_colon = *p2 == ':';
if (two_colon)
p2++;
/* Test to see if it's a target-specific variable. Copy the rest
of the buffer over, possibly temporarily (we'll expand it later
if it's not a target-specific variable). PLEN saves the length
of the unparsed section of p2, for later. */
if (*lb_next != '\0')
{
unsigned int l = p2 - variable_buffer;
plen = strlen (p2);
(void) variable_buffer_output (p2+plen,
lb_next, strlen (lb_next)+1);
p2 = variable_buffer + l;
}
/* See if it's an "override" keyword; if so see if what comes after
it looks like a variable definition. */
wtype = get_next_mword (p2, NULL, &p, &len);
v_origin = o_file;
if (wtype == w_static && word1eq ("override"))
{
v_origin = o_override;
wtype = get_next_mword (p+len, NULL, &p, &len);
}
if (wtype != w_eol)
wtype = get_next_mword (p+len, NULL, NULL, NULL);
if (wtype == w_varassign)
{
/* If there was a semicolon found, add it back, plus anything
after it. */
if (semip)
{
*(--semip) = ';';
variable_buffer_output (p2 + strlen (p2),
semip, strlen (semip)+1);
}
record_target_var (filenames, p, two_colon, v_origin, fstart);
filenames = 0;
continue;
}
/* This is a normal target, _not_ a target-specific variable.
Unquote any = in the dependency list. */
find_char_unquote (lb_next, '=', 0, 0);
/* We have some targets, so don't ignore the following commands. */
no_targets = 0;
/* Expand the dependencies, etc. */
if (*lb_next != '\0')
{
unsigned int l = p2 - variable_buffer;
(void) variable_expand_string (p2 + plen, lb_next, (long)-1);
p2 = variable_buffer + l;
/* Look for a semicolon in the expanded line. */
if (cmdleft == 0)
{
cmdleft = find_char_unquote (p2, ';', 0, 0);
if (cmdleft != 0)
*(cmdleft++) = '\0';
}
}
/* Do any of the prerequisites appear to have $@ etc.? */
have_sysv_atvar = 0;
if (!posix_pedantic)
for (p = strchr (p2, '$'); p != 0; p = strchr (p+1, '$'))
if (p[1] == '@' || (p[1] == '(' && p[2] == '@'))
{
have_sysv_atvar = 1;
break;
}
/* Is this a static pattern rule: `target: %targ: %dep; ...'? */
p = strchr (p2, ':');
while (p != 0 && p[-1] == '\\')
{
register char *q = &p[-1];
register int backslash = 0;
while (*q-- == '\\')
backslash = !backslash;
if (backslash)
p = strchr (p + 1, ':');
else
break;
}
Thu May 9 13:54:49 1996 Roland McGrath <roland@delasyd.gnu.ai.mit.edu> * GNUmakefile (globfiles): Add AmigaDOS support files. (distfiles): Add $(amigafiles). (amigafiles): New variable. Thu Nov 7 10:18:16 1995 Aaron Digulla <digulla@fh-konstanz.de> * Added Amiga support in commands.c, dir.c, function.c, job.c, main.c, make.h, read.c, remake.c * commands.c: Amiga has neither SIGHUP nor SIGQUIT * dir.c: Amiga has filenames with Upper- and Lowercase, but "FileName" is the same as "filename". Added strieq() which is use to compare filenames. This is like streq() on all other systems. Also there is no such thing as "." under AmigaDOS. * function.c: On Amiga, the environment is not passed as envp, there are no pipes and Amiga can't fork. Use my own function to create a new child. * job.c: default_shell is "" (The system automatically chooses a shell for me). Have to use the same workaround as MSDOS for running batch commands. Added HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H. NOFILE isn't known on Amiga. Cloned code to run children from MSDOS. Own version of sh_chars[] and sh_cmds[]. No dup2() or dup() on Amiga. * main.c: Force stack to 20000 bytes. Read environment from ENV: device. On Amiga, exec_command() does return, so I exit() afterwards. * make.h: Added strieq() to compare filenames. * read.c: Amiga needs special extension to have passwd. Only one include-dir. "Makefile" and "makefile" are the same. Added "SMakefile". Added special code to handle device names (xxx:) and "./" in rules. * remake.c: Only one lib-dir. Amiga link-libs are named "%s.lib" instead of "lib%s.a". * main.c, rule.c, variable.c: Avoid floats at all costs. * vpath.c: Get rid of as many alloca()s as possible.
1996-05-10 02:02:06 +08:00
#ifdef _AMIGA
/* Here, the situation is quite complicated. Let's have a look
at a couple of targets:
Thu May 9 13:54:49 1996 Roland McGrath <roland@delasyd.gnu.ai.mit.edu> * GNUmakefile (globfiles): Add AmigaDOS support files. (distfiles): Add $(amigafiles). (amigafiles): New variable. Thu Nov 7 10:18:16 1995 Aaron Digulla <digulla@fh-konstanz.de> * Added Amiga support in commands.c, dir.c, function.c, job.c, main.c, make.h, read.c, remake.c * commands.c: Amiga has neither SIGHUP nor SIGQUIT * dir.c: Amiga has filenames with Upper- and Lowercase, but "FileName" is the same as "filename". Added strieq() which is use to compare filenames. This is like streq() on all other systems. Also there is no such thing as "." under AmigaDOS. * function.c: On Amiga, the environment is not passed as envp, there are no pipes and Amiga can't fork. Use my own function to create a new child. * job.c: default_shell is "" (The system automatically chooses a shell for me). Have to use the same workaround as MSDOS for running batch commands. Added HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H. NOFILE isn't known on Amiga. Cloned code to run children from MSDOS. Own version of sh_chars[] and sh_cmds[]. No dup2() or dup() on Amiga. * main.c: Force stack to 20000 bytes. Read environment from ENV: device. On Amiga, exec_command() does return, so I exit() afterwards. * make.h: Added strieq() to compare filenames. * read.c: Amiga needs special extension to have passwd. Only one include-dir. "Makefile" and "makefile" are the same. Added "SMakefile". Added special code to handle device names (xxx:) and "./" in rules. * remake.c: Only one lib-dir. Amiga link-libs are named "%s.lib" instead of "lib%s.a". * main.c, rule.c, variable.c: Avoid floats at all costs. * vpath.c: Get rid of as many alloca()s as possible.
1996-05-10 02:02:06 +08:00
install: dev:make
Thu May 9 13:54:49 1996 Roland McGrath <roland@delasyd.gnu.ai.mit.edu> * GNUmakefile (globfiles): Add AmigaDOS support files. (distfiles): Add $(amigafiles). (amigafiles): New variable. Thu Nov 7 10:18:16 1995 Aaron Digulla <digulla@fh-konstanz.de> * Added Amiga support in commands.c, dir.c, function.c, job.c, main.c, make.h, read.c, remake.c * commands.c: Amiga has neither SIGHUP nor SIGQUIT * dir.c: Amiga has filenames with Upper- and Lowercase, but "FileName" is the same as "filename". Added strieq() which is use to compare filenames. This is like streq() on all other systems. Also there is no such thing as "." under AmigaDOS. * function.c: On Amiga, the environment is not passed as envp, there are no pipes and Amiga can't fork. Use my own function to create a new child. * job.c: default_shell is "" (The system automatically chooses a shell for me). Have to use the same workaround as MSDOS for running batch commands. Added HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H. NOFILE isn't known on Amiga. Cloned code to run children from MSDOS. Own version of sh_chars[] and sh_cmds[]. No dup2() or dup() on Amiga. * main.c: Force stack to 20000 bytes. Read environment from ENV: device. On Amiga, exec_command() does return, so I exit() afterwards. * make.h: Added strieq() to compare filenames. * read.c: Amiga needs special extension to have passwd. Only one include-dir. "Makefile" and "makefile" are the same. Added "SMakefile". Added special code to handle device names (xxx:) and "./" in rules. * remake.c: Only one lib-dir. Amiga link-libs are named "%s.lib" instead of "lib%s.a". * main.c, rule.c, variable.c: Avoid floats at all costs. * vpath.c: Get rid of as many alloca()s as possible.
1996-05-10 02:02:06 +08:00
dev:make: make
Thu May 9 13:54:49 1996 Roland McGrath <roland@delasyd.gnu.ai.mit.edu> * GNUmakefile (globfiles): Add AmigaDOS support files. (distfiles): Add $(amigafiles). (amigafiles): New variable. Thu Nov 7 10:18:16 1995 Aaron Digulla <digulla@fh-konstanz.de> * Added Amiga support in commands.c, dir.c, function.c, job.c, main.c, make.h, read.c, remake.c * commands.c: Amiga has neither SIGHUP nor SIGQUIT * dir.c: Amiga has filenames with Upper- and Lowercase, but "FileName" is the same as "filename". Added strieq() which is use to compare filenames. This is like streq() on all other systems. Also there is no such thing as "." under AmigaDOS. * function.c: On Amiga, the environment is not passed as envp, there are no pipes and Amiga can't fork. Use my own function to create a new child. * job.c: default_shell is "" (The system automatically chooses a shell for me). Have to use the same workaround as MSDOS for running batch commands. Added HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H. NOFILE isn't known on Amiga. Cloned code to run children from MSDOS. Own version of sh_chars[] and sh_cmds[]. No dup2() or dup() on Amiga. * main.c: Force stack to 20000 bytes. Read environment from ENV: device. On Amiga, exec_command() does return, so I exit() afterwards. * make.h: Added strieq() to compare filenames. * read.c: Amiga needs special extension to have passwd. Only one include-dir. "Makefile" and "makefile" are the same. Added "SMakefile". Added special code to handle device names (xxx:) and "./" in rules. * remake.c: Only one lib-dir. Amiga link-libs are named "%s.lib" instead of "lib%s.a". * main.c, rule.c, variable.c: Avoid floats at all costs. * vpath.c: Get rid of as many alloca()s as possible.
1996-05-10 02:02:06 +08:00
dev:make:: xyz
Thu May 9 13:54:49 1996 Roland McGrath <roland@delasyd.gnu.ai.mit.edu> * GNUmakefile (globfiles): Add AmigaDOS support files. (distfiles): Add $(amigafiles). (amigafiles): New variable. Thu Nov 7 10:18:16 1995 Aaron Digulla <digulla@fh-konstanz.de> * Added Amiga support in commands.c, dir.c, function.c, job.c, main.c, make.h, read.c, remake.c * commands.c: Amiga has neither SIGHUP nor SIGQUIT * dir.c: Amiga has filenames with Upper- and Lowercase, but "FileName" is the same as "filename". Added strieq() which is use to compare filenames. This is like streq() on all other systems. Also there is no such thing as "." under AmigaDOS. * function.c: On Amiga, the environment is not passed as envp, there are no pipes and Amiga can't fork. Use my own function to create a new child. * job.c: default_shell is "" (The system automatically chooses a shell for me). Have to use the same workaround as MSDOS for running batch commands. Added HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H. NOFILE isn't known on Amiga. Cloned code to run children from MSDOS. Own version of sh_chars[] and sh_cmds[]. No dup2() or dup() on Amiga. * main.c: Force stack to 20000 bytes. Read environment from ENV: device. On Amiga, exec_command() does return, so I exit() afterwards. * make.h: Added strieq() to compare filenames. * read.c: Amiga needs special extension to have passwd. Only one include-dir. "Makefile" and "makefile" are the same. Added "SMakefile". Added special code to handle device names (xxx:) and "./" in rules. * remake.c: Only one lib-dir. Amiga link-libs are named "%s.lib" instead of "lib%s.a". * main.c, rule.c, variable.c: Avoid floats at all costs. * vpath.c: Get rid of as many alloca()s as possible.
1996-05-10 02:02:06 +08:00
The rule is that it's only a target, if there are TWO :'s
OR a space around the :.
*/
if (p && !(isspace ((unsigned char)p[1]) || !p[1]
|| isspace ((unsigned char)p[-1])))
p = 0;
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-23 05:51:45 +08:00
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_DOS_PATHS
{
int check_again;
do {
check_again = 0;
/* For DOS paths, skip a "C:\..." or a "C:/..." */
if (p != 0 && (p[1] == '\\' || p[1] == '/') &&
isalpha ((unsigned char)p[-1]) &&
(p == p2 + 1 || strchr (" \t:(", p[-2]) != 0)) {
p = strchr (p + 1, ':');
check_again = 1;
}
} while (check_again);
}
#endif
if (p != 0)
{
struct nameseq *target;
target = parse_file_seq (&p2, ':', sizeof (struct nameseq), 1);
++p2;
if (target == 0)
fatal (fstart, _("missing target pattern"));
else if (target->next != 0)
fatal (fstart, _("multiple target patterns"));
pattern = target->name;
pattern_percent = find_percent (pattern);
if (pattern_percent == 0)
fatal (fstart, _("target pattern contains no `%%'"));
free((char *)target);
}
else
pattern = 0;
/* Parse the dependencies. */
deps = (struct dep *)
multi_glob (parse_file_seq (&p2, '|', sizeof (struct dep), 1),
sizeof (struct dep));
if (*p2)
{
/* Files that follow '|' are special prerequisites that
need only exist in order to satisfy the dependency.
Their modification times are irrelevant. */
struct dep **deps_ptr = &deps;
struct dep *d;
for (deps_ptr = &deps; *deps_ptr; deps_ptr = &(*deps_ptr)->next)
;
++p2;
*deps_ptr = (struct dep *)
multi_glob (parse_file_seq (&p2, '\0', sizeof (struct dep), 1),
sizeof (struct dep));
for (d = *deps_ptr; d != 0; d = d->next)
d->ignore_mtime = 1;
}
commands_idx = 0;
if (cmdleft != 0)
{
/* Semicolon means rest of line is a command. */
unsigned int len = strlen (cmdleft);
cmds_started = fstart->lineno;
/* Add this command line to the buffer. */
if (len + 2 > commands_len)
{
commands_len = (len + 2) * 2;
commands = (char *) xrealloc (commands, commands_len);
}
bcopy (cmdleft, commands, len);
commands_idx += len;
commands[commands_idx++] = '\n';
}
continue;
}
1992-10-25 11:24:24 +08:00
/* We get here except in the case that we just read a rule line.
Record now the last rule we read, so following spurious
commands are properly diagnosed. */
rule_complete:
1992-10-25 11:24:24 +08:00
record_waiting_files ();
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
#undef word1eq
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if (conditionals->if_cmds)
fatal (fstart, _("missing `endif'"));
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* At eof, record the last rule. */
record_waiting_files ();
free ((char *) commands);
1993-12-03 04:44:03 +08:00
return 1;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Execute a `define' directive.
The first line has already been read, and NAME is the name of
the variable to be defined. The following lines remain to be read. */
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
1998-10-03 13:39:55 +08:00
static void
do_define (name, namelen, origin, ebuf)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
char *name;
unsigned int namelen;
enum variable_origin origin;
struct ebuffer *ebuf;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
struct floc defstart;
long nlines = 0;
int nlevels = 1;
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unsigned int length = 100;
char *definition = (char *) xmalloc (length);
unsigned int idx = 0;
char *p;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
1992-12-10 05:02:53 +08:00
/* Expand the variable name. */
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char *var = (char *) alloca (namelen + 1);
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bcopy (name, var, namelen);
var[namelen] = '\0';
var = variable_expand (var);
defstart = ebuf->floc;
while (1)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
1997-08-28 04:30:54 +08:00
unsigned int len;
char *line;
1997-08-28 04:30:54 +08:00
ebuf->floc.lineno += nlines;
nlines = readline (ebuf);
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/* If there is nothing left to eval, we're done. */
if (nlines < 0)
break;
line = ebuf->buffer;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
collapse_continuations (line);
/* If the line doesn't begin with a tab, test to see if it introduces
another define, or ends one. */
/* Stop if we find an 'endef' */
if (line[0] != '\t')
{
p = next_token (line);
len = strlen (p);
/* If this is another 'define', increment the level count. */
if ((len == 6 || (len > 6 && isblank ((unsigned char)p[6])))
&& strneq (p, "define", 6))
++nlevels;
/* If this is an 'endef', decrement the count. If it's now 0,
we've found the last one. */
else if ((len == 5 || (len > 5 && isblank ((unsigned char)p[5])))
&& strneq (p, "endef", 5))
{
p += 5;
remove_comments (p);
if (*next_token (p) != '\0')
error (&ebuf->floc,
_("Extraneous text after `endef' directive"));
if (--nlevels == 0)
{
/* Define the variable. */
if (idx == 0)
definition[0] = '\0';
else
definition[idx - 1] = '\0';
/* Always define these variables in the global set. */
define_variable_global (var, strlen (var), definition,
origin, 1, &defstart);
free (definition);
return;
}
}
}
/* Otherwise add this line to the variable definition. */
len = strlen (line);
if (idx + len + 1 > length)
{
length = (idx + len) * 2;
definition = (char *) xrealloc (definition, length + 1);
}
bcopy (line, &definition[idx], len);
idx += len;
/* Separate lines with a newline. */
definition[idx++] = '\n';
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
/* No `endef'!! */
fatal (&defstart, _("missing `endef', unterminated `define'"));
1992-10-10 02:00:37 +08:00
/* NOTREACHED */
1998-10-03 13:39:55 +08:00
return;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
/* Interpret conditional commands "ifdef", "ifndef", "ifeq",
"ifneq", "else" and "endif".
LINE is the input line, with the command as its first word.
FILENAME and LINENO are the filename and line number in the
current makefile. They are used for error messages.
Value is -1 if the line is invalid,
0 if following text should be interpreted,
1 if following text should be ignored. */
static int
1998-10-03 13:39:55 +08:00
conditional_line (line, flocp)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
char *line;
1998-10-03 13:39:55 +08:00
const struct floc *flocp;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
int notdef;
char *cmdname;
register unsigned int i;
if (*line == 'i')
{
/* It's an "if..." command. */
notdef = line[2] == 'n';
if (notdef)
{
cmdname = line[3] == 'd' ? "ifndef" : "ifneq";
line += cmdname[3] == 'd' ? 7 : 6;
}
else
{
cmdname = line[2] == 'd' ? "ifdef" : "ifeq";
line += cmdname[2] == 'd' ? 6 : 5;
}
}
else
{
/* It's an "else" or "endif" command. */
notdef = line[1] == 'n';
cmdname = notdef ? "endif" : "else";
line += notdef ? 5 : 4;
}
line = next_token (line);
if (*cmdname == 'e')
{
if (*line != '\0')
error (flocp, _("Extraneous text after `%s' directive"), cmdname);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* "Else" or "endif". */
if (conditionals->if_cmds == 0)
fatal (flocp, _("extraneous `%s'"), cmdname);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* NOTDEF indicates an `endif' command. */
if (notdef)
--conditionals->if_cmds;
1992-12-24 05:14:20 +08:00
else if (conditionals->seen_else[conditionals->if_cmds - 1])
fatal (flocp, _("only one `else' per conditional"));
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
else
1992-12-24 05:14:20 +08:00
{
/* Toggle the state of ignorance. */
conditionals->ignoring[conditionals->if_cmds - 1]
= !conditionals->ignoring[conditionals->if_cmds - 1];
/* Record that we have seen an `else' in this conditional.
A second `else' will be erroneous. */
conditionals->seen_else[conditionals->if_cmds - 1] = 1;
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
for (i = 0; i < conditionals->if_cmds; ++i)
if (conditionals->ignoring[i])
return 1;
return 0;
}
1992-12-24 05:14:20 +08:00
if (conditionals->allocated == 0)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
1992-12-24 05:14:20 +08:00
conditionals->allocated = 5;
conditionals->ignoring = (char *) xmalloc (conditionals->allocated);
conditionals->seen_else = (char *) xmalloc (conditionals->allocated);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
++conditionals->if_cmds;
1992-12-24 05:14:20 +08:00
if (conditionals->if_cmds > conditionals->allocated)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
1992-12-24 05:14:20 +08:00
conditionals->allocated += 5;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
conditionals->ignoring = (char *)
1992-12-24 05:14:20 +08:00
xrealloc (conditionals->ignoring, conditionals->allocated);
conditionals->seen_else = (char *)
xrealloc (conditionals->seen_else, conditionals->allocated);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
1992-12-24 05:14:20 +08:00
/* Record that we have seen an `if...' but no `else' so far. */
conditionals->seen_else[conditionals->if_cmds - 1] = 0;
1992-06-11 10:07:33 +08:00
/* Search through the stack to see if we're already ignoring. */
1992-06-11 13:16:34 +08:00
for (i = 0; i < conditionals->if_cmds - 1; ++i)
1992-06-11 10:07:33 +08:00
if (conditionals->ignoring[i])
{
/* We are already ignoring, so just push a level
to match the next "else" or "endif", and keep ignoring.
We don't want to expand variables in the condition. */
conditionals->ignoring[conditionals->if_cmds - 1] = 1;
return 1;
}
1992-06-11 13:16:34 +08:00
if (cmdname[notdef ? 3 : 2] == 'd')
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
/* "Ifdef" or "ifndef". */
char *var;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
struct variable *v;
register char *p = end_of_token (line);
i = p - line;
p = next_token (p);
if (*p != '\0')
return -1;
/* Expand the thing we're looking up, so we can use indirect and
constructed variable names. */
line[i] = '\0';
var = allocated_variable_expand (line);
v = lookup_variable (var, strlen (var));
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
conditionals->ignoring[conditionals->if_cmds - 1]
= (v != 0 && *v->value != '\0') == notdef;
free (var);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
else
{
/* "Ifeq" or "ifneq". */
char *s1, *s2;
unsigned int len;
char termin = *line == '(' ? ',' : *line;
if (termin != ',' && termin != '"' && termin != '\'')
return -1;
s1 = ++line;
/* Find the end of the first string. */
if (termin == ',')
{
register int count = 0;
for (; *line != '\0'; ++line)
if (*line == '(')
++count;
else if (*line == ')')
--count;
else if (*line == ',' && count <= 0)
break;
}
else
while (*line != '\0' && *line != termin)
++line;
if (*line == '\0')
return -1;
if (termin == ',')
{
/* Strip blanks after the first string. */
char *p = line++;
while (isblank ((unsigned char)p[-1]))
--p;
*p = '\0';
}
else
*line++ = '\0';
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
s2 = variable_expand (s1);
/* We must allocate a new copy of the expanded string because
variable_expand re-uses the same buffer. */
len = strlen (s2);
s1 = (char *) alloca (len + 1);
bcopy (s2, s1, len + 1);
if (termin != ',')
/* Find the start of the second string. */
line = next_token (line);
termin = termin == ',' ? ')' : *line;
if (termin != ')' && termin != '"' && termin != '\'')
return -1;
/* Find the end of the second string. */
if (termin == ')')
{
register int count = 0;
s2 = next_token (line);
for (line = s2; *line != '\0'; ++line)
{
if (*line == '(')
++count;
else if (*line == ')')
1999-06-14 14:50:28 +08:00
{
if (count <= 0)
break;
else
--count;
}
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}
}
else
{
++line;
s2 = line;
while (*line != '\0' && *line != termin)
++line;
}
if (*line == '\0')
return -1;
*line = '\0';
line = next_token (++line);
if (*line != '\0')
error (flocp, _("Extraneous text after `%s' directive"), cmdname);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
s2 = variable_expand (s2);
conditionals->ignoring[conditionals->if_cmds - 1]
= streq (s1, s2) == notdef;
}
/* Search through the stack to see if we're ignoring. */
for (i = 0; i < conditionals->if_cmds; ++i)
if (conditionals->ignoring[i])
return 1;
return 0;
}
/* Remove duplicate dependencies in CHAIN. */
static unsigned long
dep_hash_1 (void const *key)
{
return_STRING_HASH_1 (dep_name ((struct dep const *) key));
}
static unsigned long
dep_hash_2 (void const *key)
{
return_STRING_HASH_2 (dep_name ((struct dep const *) key));
}
static int
dep_hash_cmp (void const *x, void const *y)
{
struct dep *dx = (struct dep *) x;
struct dep *dy = (struct dep *) y;
int cmp = strcmp (dep_name (dx), dep_name (dy));
/* If the names are the same but ignore_mtimes are not equal, one of these
is an order-only prerequisite and one isn't. That means that we should
remove the one that isn't and keep the one that is. */
if (!cmp && dx->ignore_mtime != dy->ignore_mtime)
dx->ignore_mtime = dy->ignore_mtime = 0;
return cmp;
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
void
uniquize_deps (chain)
struct dep *chain;
{
struct hash_table deps;
register struct dep **depp;
hash_init (&deps, 500, dep_hash_1, dep_hash_2, dep_hash_cmp);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Make sure that no dependencies are repeated. This does not
really matter for the purpose of updating targets, but it
might make some names be listed twice for $^ and $?. */
depp = &chain;
while (*depp)
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{
struct dep *dep = *depp;
struct dep **dep_slot = (struct dep **) hash_find_slot (&deps, dep);
if (HASH_VACANT (*dep_slot))
{
hash_insert_at (&deps, dep, dep_slot);
depp = &dep->next;
}
else
{
/* Don't bother freeing duplicates.
It's dangerous and little benefit accrues. */
*depp = dep->next;
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
hash_free (&deps, 0);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
/* Record target-specific variable values for files FILENAMES.
TWO_COLON is nonzero if a double colon was used.
The links of FILENAMES are freed, and so are any names in it
that are not incorporated into other data structures.
If the target is a pattern, add the variable to the pattern-specific
variable value list. */
static void
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record_target_var (filenames, defn, two_colon, origin, flocp)
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struct nameseq *filenames;
char *defn;
int two_colon;
enum variable_origin origin;
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const struct floc *flocp;
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{
struct nameseq *nextf;
struct variable_set_list *global;
global = current_variable_set_list;
/* If the variable is an append version, store that but treat it as a
normal recursive variable. */
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for (; filenames != 0; filenames = nextf)
{
struct variable *v;
register char *name = filenames->name;
struct variable_set_list *vlist;
char *fname;
char *percent;
nextf = filenames->next;
free ((char *) filenames);
/* If it's a pattern target, then add it to the pattern-specific
variable list. */
percent = find_percent (name);
if (percent)
{
struct pattern_var *p;
/* Get a reference for this pattern-specific variable struct. */
p = create_pattern_var(name, percent);
vlist = p->vars;
fname = p->target;
}
else
{
struct file *f;
/* Get a file reference for this file, and initialize it. */
f = enter_file (name);
initialize_file_variables (f, 1);
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
vlist = f->variables;
fname = f->name;
}
/* Make the new variable context current and define the variable. */
current_variable_set_list = vlist;
v = try_variable_definition (flocp, defn, origin, 1);
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if (!v)
error (flocp, _("Malformed per-target variable definition"));
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v->per_target = 1;
/* If it's not an override, check to see if there was a command-line
setting. If so, reset the value. */
if (origin != o_override)
{
struct variable *gv;
int len = strlen(v->name);
current_variable_set_list = global;
gv = lookup_variable (v->name, len);
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if (gv && (gv->origin == o_env_override || gv->origin == o_command))
{
v = define_variable_in_set (v->name, len, gv->value, gv->origin,
gv->recursive, vlist->set, flocp);
v->append = 0;
}
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
}
/* Free name if not needed further. */
if (name != fname && (name < fname || name > fname + strlen (fname)))
free (name);
}
current_variable_set_list = global;
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Record a description line for files FILENAMES,
with dependencies DEPS, commands to execute described
by COMMANDS and COMMANDS_IDX, coming from FILENAME:COMMANDS_STARTED.
TWO_COLON is nonzero if a double colon was used.
If not nil, PATTERN is the `%' pattern to make this
a static pattern rule, and PATTERN_PERCENT is a pointer
to the `%' within it.
The links of FILENAMES are freed, and so are any names in it
that are not incorporated into other data structures. */
static void
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
record_files (filenames, pattern, pattern_percent, deps, cmds_started,
commands, commands_idx, two_colon, have_sysv_atvar,
flocp, set_default)
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struct nameseq *filenames;
char *pattern, *pattern_percent;
struct dep *deps;
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unsigned int cmds_started;
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char *commands;
unsigned int commands_idx;
int two_colon;
int have_sysv_atvar;
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const struct floc *flocp;
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int set_default;
{
struct nameseq *nextf;
int implicit = 0;
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unsigned int max_targets = 0, target_idx = 0;
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char **targets = 0, **target_percents = 0;
struct commands *cmds;
if (commands_idx > 0)
{
cmds = (struct commands *) xmalloc (sizeof (struct commands));
1998-10-03 13:39:55 +08:00
cmds->fileinfo.filenm = flocp->filenm;
cmds->fileinfo.lineno = cmds_started;
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cmds->commands = savestring (commands, commands_idx);
cmds->command_lines = 0;
}
else
cmds = 0;
for (; filenames != 0; filenames = nextf)
{
char *name = filenames->name;
struct file *f;
struct dep *d;
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struct dep *this;
char *implicit_percent;
nextf = filenames->next;
free (filenames);
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/* Check for .POSIX. We used to do this in snap_deps() but that's not
good enough: it doesn't happen until after the makefile is read,
which means we cannot use its value during parsing. */
if (streq (name, ".POSIX"))
posix_pedantic = 1;
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implicit_percent = find_percent (name);
implicit |= implicit_percent != 0;
if (implicit && pattern != 0)
fatal (flocp, _("mixed implicit and static pattern rules"));
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
if (implicit && implicit_percent == 0)
fatal (flocp, _("mixed implicit and normal rules"));
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if (implicit)
{
if (targets == 0)
{
max_targets = 5;
targets = (char **) xmalloc (5 * sizeof (char *));
target_percents = (char **) xmalloc (5 * sizeof (char *));
target_idx = 0;
}
else if (target_idx == max_targets - 1)
{
max_targets += 5;
targets = (char **) xrealloc ((char *) targets,
max_targets * sizeof (char *));
target_percents
= (char **) xrealloc ((char *) target_percents,
max_targets * sizeof (char *));
}
targets[target_idx] = name;
target_percents[target_idx] = implicit_percent;
++target_idx;
continue;
}
/* If there are multiple filenames, copy the chain DEPS
for all but the last one. It is not safe for the same deps
to go in more than one place in the data base. */
this = nextf != 0 ? copy_dep_chain (deps) : deps;
if (pattern != 0)
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{
/* If this is an extended static rule:
`targets: target%pattern: dep%pattern; cmds',
translate each dependency pattern into a plain filename
using the target pattern and this target's name. */
if (!pattern_matches (pattern, pattern_percent, name))
{
/* Give a warning if the rule is meaningless. */
error (flocp,
_("target `%s' doesn't match the target pattern"), name);
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this = 0;
}
else
{
/* We use patsubst_expand to do the work of translating
the target pattern, the target's name and the dependencies'
patterns into plain dependency names. */
char *buffer = variable_expand ("");
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
1999-06-14 14:50:28 +08:00
for (d = this; d != 0; d = d->next)
{
char *o;
char *percent = find_percent (d->name);
if (percent == 0)
continue;
o = patsubst_expand (buffer, name, pattern, d->name,
pattern_percent, percent);
/* If the name expanded to the empty string, that's
illegal. */
if (o == buffer)
fatal (flocp,
_("target `%s' leaves prerequisite pattern empty"),
name);
1999-06-14 14:50:28 +08:00
free (d->name);
d->name = savestring (buffer, o - buffer);
}
}
}
/* If at least one of the dependencies uses $$@ etc. deal with that.
It would be very nice and very simple to just expand everything, but
it would break a lot of backward compatibility. Maybe that's OK
since we're just emulating a SysV function, and if we do that then
why not emulate it completely (that's what SysV make does: it
re-expands the entire prerequisite list, all the time, with $@
etc. in scope. But, it would be a pain indeed to document this
("iff you use $$@, your prerequisite lists is expanded twice...")
Ouch. Maybe better to make the code more complex. */
if (have_sysv_atvar)
{
char *p;
int tlen = strlen (name);
char *fnp = strrchr (name, '/');
int dlen;
int flen;
if (fnp)
{
dlen = fnp - name;
++fnp;
flen = strlen (fnp);
}
else
{
dlen = 0;
fnp = name;
flen = tlen;
}
for (d = this; d != 0; d = d->next)
for (p = strchr (d->name, '$'); p != 0; p = strchr (p+1, '$'))
{
char *s = p;
char *at;
int atlen;
/* If it's a '$@' or '$(@', it's escaped */
if ((++p)[0] == '$'
&& (p[1] == '@' || (p[1] == '(' && p[2] == '@')))
{
bcopy (p, s, strlen (p)+1);
continue;
}
/* Maybe found one. Check. p will point to '@' [for $@] or
')' [for $(@)] or 'D' [for $(@D)] or 'F' [for $(@F)]. */
if (p[0] != '@'
&& (p[0] != '(' || (++p)[0] != '@'
|| ((++p)[0] != ')'
&& (p[1] != ')' || (p[0] != 'D' && p[0] != 'F')))))
continue;
/* Found one. Compute the length and string ptr. Move p
past the variable reference. */
switch (p[0])
{
case 'D':
atlen = dlen;
at = name;
p += 2;
break;
case 'F':
atlen = flen;
at = fnp;
p += 2;
break;
default:
atlen = tlen;
at = name;
++p;
break;
}
/* Get more space. */
{
int soff = s - d->name;
int poff = p - d->name;
d->name = (char *) xrealloc (d->name,
strlen (d->name) + atlen + 1);
s = d->name + soff;
p = d->name + poff;
}
/* Copy the string over. */
bcopy(p, s+atlen, strlen (p)+1);
bcopy(at, s, atlen);
p = s + atlen - 1;
}
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
if (!two_colon)
{
/* Single-colon. Combine these dependencies
with others in file's existing record, if any. */
f = enter_file (name);
if (f->double_colon)
1998-10-03 13:39:55 +08:00
fatal (flocp,
_("target file `%s' has both : and :: entries"), f->name);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* If CMDS == F->CMDS, this target was listed in this rule
more than once. Just give a warning since this is harmless. */
if (cmds != 0 && cmds == f->cmds)
error (flocp,
_("target `%s' given more than once in the same rule."),
f->name);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Check for two single-colon entries both with commands.
Check is_target so that we don't lose on files such as .c.o
whose commands were preinitialized. */
else if (cmds != 0 && f->cmds != 0 && f->is_target)
{
1998-10-03 13:39:55 +08:00
error (&cmds->fileinfo,
_("warning: overriding commands for target `%s'"),
f->name);
1998-10-03 13:39:55 +08:00
error (&f->cmds->fileinfo,
_("warning: ignoring old commands for target `%s'"),
f->name);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
f->is_target = 1;
/* Defining .DEFAULT with no deps or cmds clears it. */
if (f == default_file && this == 0 && cmds == 0)
f->cmds = 0;
if (cmds != 0)
f->cmds = cmds;
/* Defining .SUFFIXES with no dependencies
clears out the list of suffixes. */
if (f == suffix_file && this == 0)
1992-10-10 02:00:37 +08:00
{
d = f->deps;
while (d != 0)
{
struct dep *nextd = d->next;
free (d->name);
free ((char *)d);
1992-10-10 02:00:37 +08:00
d = nextd;
}
f->deps = 0;
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
else if (f->deps != 0)
{
1992-11-11 05:41:55 +08:00
/* Add the file's old deps and the new ones in THIS together. */
struct dep *firstdeps, *moredeps;
if (cmds != 0)
{
/* This is the rule with commands, so put its deps first.
The rationale behind this is that $< expands to the
first dep in the chain, and commands use $< expecting
to get the dep that rule specifies. */
firstdeps = this;
moredeps = f->deps;
}
else
{
/* Append the new deps to the old ones. */
firstdeps = f->deps;
moredeps = this;
}
1992-11-19 03:54:01 +08:00
if (firstdeps == 0)
firstdeps = moredeps;
else
{
d = firstdeps;
while (d->next != 0)
d = d->next;
d->next = moredeps;
}
1992-11-11 05:41:55 +08:00
f->deps = firstdeps;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
else
f->deps = this;
/* If this is a static pattern rule, set the file's stem to
the part of its name that matched the `%' in the pattern,
so you can use $* in the commands. */
if (pattern != 0)
{
static char *percent = "%";
char *buffer = variable_expand ("");
char *o = patsubst_expand (buffer, name, pattern, percent,
pattern_percent, percent);
f->stem = savestring (buffer, o - buffer);
}
}
else
{
/* Double-colon. Make a new record
even if the file already has one. */
f = lookup_file (name);
/* Check for both : and :: rules. Check is_target so
we don't lose on default suffix rules or makefiles. */
if (f != 0 && f->is_target && !f->double_colon)
1998-10-03 13:39:55 +08:00
fatal (flocp,
_("target file `%s' has both : and :: entries"), f->name);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
f = enter_file (name);
/* If there was an existing entry and it was a double-colon
entry, enter_file will have returned a new one, making it the
prev pointer of the old one, and setting its double_colon
pointer to the first one. */
if (f->double_colon == 0)
/* This is the first entry for this name, so we must
set its double_colon pointer to itself. */
f->double_colon = f;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
f->is_target = 1;
f->deps = this;
f->cmds = cmds;
}
/* Free name if not needed further. */
if (f != 0 && name != f->name
1992-10-10 02:00:37 +08:00
&& (name < f->name || name > f->name + strlen (f->name)))
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
free (name);
name = f->name;
}
/* See if this is first target seen whose name does
not start with a `.', unless it contains a slash. */
if (default_goal_file == 0 && set_default
&& (*name != '.' || strchr (name, '/') != 0
#ifdef HAVE_DOS_PATHS
|| strchr (name, '\\') != 0
1997-04-07 15:21:16 +08:00
#endif
))
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
int reject = 0;
/* If this file is a suffix, don't
let it be the default goal file. */
for (d = suffix_file->deps; d != 0; d = d->next)
{
register struct dep *d2;
if (*dep_name (d) != '.' && streq (name, dep_name (d)))
{
reject = 1;
break;
}
for (d2 = suffix_file->deps; d2 != 0; d2 = d2->next)
{
register unsigned int len = strlen (dep_name (d2));
if (!strneq (name, dep_name (d2), len))
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
continue;
if (streq (name + len, dep_name (d)))
{
reject = 1;
break;
}
}
if (reject)
break;
}
if (!reject)
default_goal_file = f;
}
}
if (implicit)
{
targets[target_idx] = 0;
target_percents[target_idx] = 0;
create_pattern_rule (targets, target_percents, two_colon, deps, cmds, 1);
free ((char *) target_percents);
}
}
/* Search STRING for an unquoted STOPCHAR or blank (if BLANK is nonzero).
Backslashes quote STOPCHAR, blanks if BLANK is nonzero, and backslash.
Quoting backslashes are removed from STRING by compacting it into
itself. Returns a pointer to the first unquoted STOPCHAR if there is
one, or nil if there are none. */
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
char *
find_char_unquote (string, stop1, stop2, blank)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
char *string;
int stop1;
int stop2;
int blank;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
unsigned int string_len = 0;
register char *p = string;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
while (1)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
if (stop2 && blank)
while (*p != '\0' && *p != stop1 && *p != stop2
&& ! isblank ((unsigned char) *p))
++p;
else if (stop2)
while (*p != '\0' && *p != stop1 && *p != stop2)
++p;
else if (blank)
while (*p != '\0' && *p != stop1
&& ! isblank ((unsigned char) *p))
++p;
else
while (*p != '\0' && *p != stop1)
++p;
if (*p == '\0')
break;
if (p > string && p[-1] == '\\')
{
/* Search for more backslashes. */
register int i = -2;
while (&p[i] >= string && p[i] == '\\')
--i;
++i;
/* Only compute the length if really needed. */
if (string_len == 0)
string_len = strlen (string);
/* The number of backslashes is now -I.
Copy P over itself to swallow half of them. */
bcopy (&p[i / 2], &p[i], (string_len - (p - string)) - (i / 2) + 1);
p += i / 2;
if (i % 2 == 0)
/* All the backslashes quoted each other; the STOPCHAR was
unquoted. */
return p;
/* The STOPCHAR was quoted by a backslash. Look for another. */
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
else
/* No backslash in sight. */
return p;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
/* Never hit a STOPCHAR or blank (with BLANK nonzero). */
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
return 0;
}
/* Search PATTERN for an unquoted %. */
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
char *
find_percent (pattern)
char *pattern;
{
return find_char_unquote (pattern, '%', 0, 0);
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Parse a string into a sequence of filenames represented as a
chain of struct nameseq's in reverse order and return that chain.
The string is passed as STRINGP, the address of a string pointer.
The string pointer is updated to point at the first character
not parsed, which either is a null char or equals STOPCHAR.
SIZE is how big to construct chain elements.
This is useful if we want them actually to be other structures
1993-04-16 06:30:01 +08:00
that have room for additional info.
If STRIP is nonzero, strip `./'s off the beginning. */
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
struct nameseq *
1993-04-16 06:30:01 +08:00
parse_file_seq (stringp, stopchar, size, strip)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
char **stringp;
int stopchar;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
unsigned int size;
1993-04-16 06:30:01 +08:00
int strip;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
register struct nameseq *new = 0;
register struct nameseq *new1, *lastnew1;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
register char *p = *stringp;
char *q;
char *name;
#ifdef VMS
# define VMS_COMMA ','
#else
# define VMS_COMMA 0
#endif
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
while (1)
{
/* Skip whitespace; see if any more names are left. */
p = next_token (p);
if (*p == '\0')
break;
if (*p == stopchar)
break;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Yes, find end of next name. */
q = p;
p = find_char_unquote (q, stopchar, VMS_COMMA, 1);
#ifdef VMS
/* convert comma separated list to space separated */
if (p && *p == ',')
*p =' ';
#endif
Thu May 9 13:54:49 1996 Roland McGrath <roland@delasyd.gnu.ai.mit.edu> * GNUmakefile (globfiles): Add AmigaDOS support files. (distfiles): Add $(amigafiles). (amigafiles): New variable. Thu Nov 7 10:18:16 1995 Aaron Digulla <digulla@fh-konstanz.de> * Added Amiga support in commands.c, dir.c, function.c, job.c, main.c, make.h, read.c, remake.c * commands.c: Amiga has neither SIGHUP nor SIGQUIT * dir.c: Amiga has filenames with Upper- and Lowercase, but "FileName" is the same as "filename". Added strieq() which is use to compare filenames. This is like streq() on all other systems. Also there is no such thing as "." under AmigaDOS. * function.c: On Amiga, the environment is not passed as envp, there are no pipes and Amiga can't fork. Use my own function to create a new child. * job.c: default_shell is "" (The system automatically chooses a shell for me). Have to use the same workaround as MSDOS for running batch commands. Added HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H. NOFILE isn't known on Amiga. Cloned code to run children from MSDOS. Own version of sh_chars[] and sh_cmds[]. No dup2() or dup() on Amiga. * main.c: Force stack to 20000 bytes. Read environment from ENV: device. On Amiga, exec_command() does return, so I exit() afterwards. * make.h: Added strieq() to compare filenames. * read.c: Amiga needs special extension to have passwd. Only one include-dir. "Makefile" and "makefile" are the same. Added "SMakefile". Added special code to handle device names (xxx:) and "./" in rules. * remake.c: Only one lib-dir. Amiga link-libs are named "%s.lib" instead of "lib%s.a". * main.c, rule.c, variable.c: Avoid floats at all costs. * vpath.c: Get rid of as many alloca()s as possible.
1996-05-10 02:02:06 +08:00
#ifdef _AMIGA
if (stopchar == ':' && p && *p == ':'
&& !(isspace ((unsigned char)p[1]) || !p[1]
|| isspace ((unsigned char)p[-1])))
Thu May 9 13:54:49 1996 Roland McGrath <roland@delasyd.gnu.ai.mit.edu> * GNUmakefile (globfiles): Add AmigaDOS support files. (distfiles): Add $(amigafiles). (amigafiles): New variable. Thu Nov 7 10:18:16 1995 Aaron Digulla <digulla@fh-konstanz.de> * Added Amiga support in commands.c, dir.c, function.c, job.c, main.c, make.h, read.c, remake.c * commands.c: Amiga has neither SIGHUP nor SIGQUIT * dir.c: Amiga has filenames with Upper- and Lowercase, but "FileName" is the same as "filename". Added strieq() which is use to compare filenames. This is like streq() on all other systems. Also there is no such thing as "." under AmigaDOS. * function.c: On Amiga, the environment is not passed as envp, there are no pipes and Amiga can't fork. Use my own function to create a new child. * job.c: default_shell is "" (The system automatically chooses a shell for me). Have to use the same workaround as MSDOS for running batch commands. Added HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H. NOFILE isn't known on Amiga. Cloned code to run children from MSDOS. Own version of sh_chars[] and sh_cmds[]. No dup2() or dup() on Amiga. * main.c: Force stack to 20000 bytes. Read environment from ENV: device. On Amiga, exec_command() does return, so I exit() afterwards. * make.h: Added strieq() to compare filenames. * read.c: Amiga needs special extension to have passwd. Only one include-dir. "Makefile" and "makefile" are the same. Added "SMakefile". Added special code to handle device names (xxx:) and "./" in rules. * remake.c: Only one lib-dir. Amiga link-libs are named "%s.lib" instead of "lib%s.a". * main.c, rule.c, variable.c: Avoid floats at all costs. * vpath.c: Get rid of as many alloca()s as possible.
1996-05-10 02:02:06 +08:00
{
p = find_char_unquote (p+1, stopchar, VMS_COMMA, 1);
Thu May 9 13:54:49 1996 Roland McGrath <roland@delasyd.gnu.ai.mit.edu> * GNUmakefile (globfiles): Add AmigaDOS support files. (distfiles): Add $(amigafiles). (amigafiles): New variable. Thu Nov 7 10:18:16 1995 Aaron Digulla <digulla@fh-konstanz.de> * Added Amiga support in commands.c, dir.c, function.c, job.c, main.c, make.h, read.c, remake.c * commands.c: Amiga has neither SIGHUP nor SIGQUIT * dir.c: Amiga has filenames with Upper- and Lowercase, but "FileName" is the same as "filename". Added strieq() which is use to compare filenames. This is like streq() on all other systems. Also there is no such thing as "." under AmigaDOS. * function.c: On Amiga, the environment is not passed as envp, there are no pipes and Amiga can't fork. Use my own function to create a new child. * job.c: default_shell is "" (The system automatically chooses a shell for me). Have to use the same workaround as MSDOS for running batch commands. Added HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H. NOFILE isn't known on Amiga. Cloned code to run children from MSDOS. Own version of sh_chars[] and sh_cmds[]. No dup2() or dup() on Amiga. * main.c: Force stack to 20000 bytes. Read environment from ENV: device. On Amiga, exec_command() does return, so I exit() afterwards. * make.h: Added strieq() to compare filenames. * read.c: Amiga needs special extension to have passwd. Only one include-dir. "Makefile" and "makefile" are the same. Added "SMakefile". Added special code to handle device names (xxx:) and "./" in rules. * remake.c: Only one lib-dir. Amiga link-libs are named "%s.lib" instead of "lib%s.a". * main.c, rule.c, variable.c: Avoid floats at all costs. * vpath.c: Get rid of as many alloca()s as possible.
1996-05-10 02:02:06 +08:00
}
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-23 05:51:45 +08:00
#endif
#ifdef HAVE_DOS_PATHS
/* For DOS paths, skip a "C:\..." or a "C:/..." until we find the
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
first colon which isn't followed by a slash or a backslash.
Note that tokens separated by spaces should be treated as separate
tokens since make doesn't allow path names with spaces */
if (stopchar == ':')
while (p != 0 && !isspace ((unsigned char)*p) &&
(p[1] == '\\' || p[1] == '/') && isalpha ((unsigned char)p[-1]))
p = find_char_unquote (p + 1, stopchar, VMS_COMMA, 1);
#endif
if (p == 0)
p = q + strlen (q);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
1993-04-16 06:30:01 +08:00
if (strip)
#ifdef VMS
/* Skip leading `[]'s. */
while (p - q > 2 && q[0] == '[' && q[1] == ']')
#else
1993-04-16 06:30:01 +08:00
/* Skip leading `./'s. */
while (p - q > 2 && q[0] == '.' && q[1] == '/')
#endif
1993-04-16 06:30:01 +08:00
{
q += 2; /* Skip "./". */
while (q < p && *q == '/')
/* Skip following slashes: ".//foo" is "foo", not "/foo". */
++q;
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Extract the filename just found, and skip it. */
1992-10-13 01:35:43 +08:00
if (q == p)
/* ".///" was stripped to "". */
#ifdef VMS
continue;
#else
#ifdef _AMIGA
name = savestring ("", 0);
#else
1992-10-13 01:35:43 +08:00
name = savestring ("./", 2);
#endif
#endif
1992-10-13 01:35:43 +08:00
else
#ifdef VMS
/* VMS filenames can have a ':' in them but they have to be '\'ed but we need
* to remove this '\' before we can use the filename.
* Savestring called because q may be read-only string constant.
*/
{
char *qbase = xstrdup (q);
char *pbase = qbase + (p-q);
char *q1 = qbase;
char *q2 = q1;
char *p1 = pbase;
while (q1 != pbase)
{
if (*q1 == '\\' && *(q1+1) == ':')
{
q1++;
p1--;
}
*q2++ = *q1++;
}
name = savestring (qbase, p1 - qbase);
free (qbase);
}
#else
1992-10-13 01:35:43 +08:00
name = savestring (q, p - q);
#endif
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Add it to the front of the chain. */
new1 = (struct nameseq *) xmalloc (size);
new1->name = name;
new1->next = new;
new = new1;
}
1993-06-10 09:31:02 +08:00
#ifndef NO_ARCHIVES
/* Look for multi-word archive references.
They are indicated by a elt ending with an unmatched `)' and
an elt further down the chain (i.e., previous in the file list)
with an unmatched `(' (e.g., "lib(mem"). */
new1 = new;
lastnew1 = 0;
while (new1 != 0)
1993-06-10 09:31:02 +08:00
if (new1->name[0] != '(' /* Don't catch "(%)" and suchlike. */
&& new1->name[strlen (new1->name) - 1] == ')'
&& strchr (new1->name, '(') == 0)
1993-06-10 09:31:02 +08:00
{
/* NEW1 ends with a `)' but does not contain a `('.
Look back for an elt with an opening `(' but no closing `)'. */
struct nameseq *n = new1->next, *lastn = new1;
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
char *paren = 0;
while (n != 0 && (paren = strchr (n->name, '(')) == 0)
1993-06-10 09:31:02 +08:00
{
lastn = n;
n = n->next;
}
1993-10-26 03:25:17 +08:00
if (n != 0
/* Ignore something starting with `(', as that cannot actually
be an archive-member reference (and treating it as such
results in an empty file name, which causes much lossage). */
&& n->name[0] != '(')
1993-06-10 09:31:02 +08:00
{
/* N is the first element in the archive group.
Its name looks like "lib(mem" (with no closing `)'). */
char *libname;
/* Copy "lib(" into LIBNAME. */
++paren;
libname = (char *) alloca (paren - n->name + 1);
bcopy (n->name, libname, paren - n->name);
libname[paren - n->name] = '\0';
if (*paren == '\0')
{
/* N was just "lib(", part of something like "lib( a b)".
Edit it out of the chain and free its storage. */
lastn->next = n->next;
free (n->name);
free ((char *) n);
/* LASTN->next is the new stopping elt for the loop below. */
n = lastn->next;
}
else
{
/* Replace N's name with the full archive reference. */
name = concat (libname, paren, ")");
free (n->name);
n->name = name;
}
if (new1->name[1] == '\0')
{
/* NEW1 is just ")", part of something like "lib(a b )".
Omit it from the chain and free its storage. */
if (lastnew1 == 0)
new = new1->next;
else
lastnew1->next = new1->next;
1993-06-10 09:31:02 +08:00
lastn = new1;
new1 = new1->next;
free (lastn->name);
free ((char *) lastn);
}
else
{
/* Replace also NEW1->name, which already has closing `)'. */
name = concat (libname, new1->name, "");
free (new1->name);
new1->name = name;
new1 = new1->next;
}
/* Trace back from NEW1 (the end of the list) until N
(the beginning of the list), rewriting each name
with the full archive reference. */
1993-06-10 09:31:02 +08:00
while (new1 != n)
{
name = concat (libname, new1->name, ")");
free (new1->name);
new1->name = name;
lastnew1 = new1;
1993-06-10 09:31:02 +08:00
new1 = new1->next;
}
}
else
{
/* No frobnication happening. Just step down the list. */
lastnew1 = new1;
new1 = new1->next;
}
}
else
{
lastnew1 = new1;
new1 = new1->next;
1993-06-10 09:31:02 +08:00
}
#endif
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
*stringp = p;
return new;
}
/* Find the next line of text in an eval buffer, combining continuation lines
into one line.
Return the number of actual lines read (> 1 if continuation lines).
Returns -1 if there's nothing left in the buffer.
After this function, ebuf->buffer points to the first character of the
line we just found.
*/
/* Read a line of text from a STRING.
Since we aren't really reading from a file, don't bother with linenumbers.
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
*/
1998-10-03 13:39:55 +08:00
static unsigned long
readstring (ebuf)
struct ebuffer *ebuf;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
char *p;
/* If there is nothing left in this buffer, return 0. */
if (ebuf->bufnext > ebuf->bufstart + ebuf->size)
return -1;
/* Set up a new starting point for the buffer, and find the end of the
next logical line (taking into account backslash/newline pairs). */
p = ebuf->buffer = ebuf->bufnext;
while (1)
{
int backslash = 0;
/* Find the next newline. Keep track of backslashes as we look. */
for (; *p != '\n' && *p != '\0'; ++p)
if (*p == '\\')
backslash = !backslash;
/* If we got to the end of the string or a newline with no backslash,
we're done. */
if (*p == '\0' || !backslash)
break;
}
/* Overwrite the newline char. */
*p = '\0';
ebuf->bufnext = p+1;
return 0;
}
static long
readline (ebuf)
struct ebuffer *ebuf;
{
char *p;
char *end;
char *start;
long nlines = 0;
/* The behaviors between string and stream buffers are different enough to
warrant different functions. Do the Right Thing. */
if (!ebuf->fp)
return readstring (ebuf);
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* When reading from a file, we always start over at the beginning of the
buffer for each new line. */
p = start = ebuf->bufstart;
end = p + ebuf->size;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
*p = '\0';
while (fgets (p, end - p, ebuf->fp) != 0)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
char *p2;
unsigned long len;
int backslash;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
len = strlen (p);
1992-12-29 08:20:25 +08:00
if (len == 0)
1993-12-15 04:09:51 +08:00
{
/* This only happens when the first thing on the line is a '\0'.
It is a pretty hopeless case, but (wonder of wonders) Athena
lossage strikes again! (xmkmf puts NULs in its makefiles.)
There is nothing really to be done; we synthesize a newline so
the following line doesn't appear to be part of this line. */
error (&ebuf->floc,
_("warning: NUL character seen; rest of line ignored"));
1993-12-15 04:09:51 +08:00
p[0] = '\n';
len = 1;
}
1992-12-29 08:20:25 +08:00
/* Jump past the text we just read. */
1992-12-24 05:14:20 +08:00
p += len;
/* If the last char isn't a newline, the whole line didn't fit into the
buffer. Get some more buffer and try again. */
1992-12-24 05:14:20 +08:00
if (p[-1] != '\n')
goto more_buffer;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* We got a newline, so add one to the count of lines. */
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
++nlines;
#if !defined(WINDOWS32) && !defined(__MSDOS__)
/* Check to see if the line was really ended with CRLF; if so ignore
the CR. */
if ((p - start) > 1 && p[-2] == '\r')
{
--p;
p[-1] = '\n';
}
#endif
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
backslash = 0;
for (p2 = p - 2; p2 >= start; --p2)
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
{
if (*p2 != '\\')
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
break;
backslash = !backslash;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
if (!backslash)
{
p[-1] = '\0';
1992-12-29 08:20:25 +08:00
break;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
/* It was a backslash/newline combo. If we have more space, read
another line. */
if (end - p >= 80)
continue;
/* We need more space at the end of our buffer, so realloc it.
Make sure to preserve the current offset of p. */
more_buffer:
{
unsigned long off = p - start;
ebuf->size *= 2;
start = ebuf->buffer = ebuf->bufstart = (char *) xrealloc (start,
ebuf->size);
p = start + off;
end = start + ebuf->size;
*p = '\0';
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
1992-12-29 08:20:25 +08:00
if (ferror (ebuf->fp))
pfatal_with_name (ebuf->floc.filenm);
1993-12-15 04:09:51 +08:00
/* If we found some lines, return how many.
If we didn't, but we did find _something_, that indicates we read the last
line of a file with no final newline; return 1.
If we read nothing, we're at EOF; return -1. */
return nlines ? nlines : p == ebuf->bufstart ? -1 : 1;
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
}
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
/* Parse the next "makefile word" from the input buffer, and return info
about it.
A "makefile word" is one of:
w_bogus Should never happen
w_eol End of input
w_static A static word; cannot be expanded
w_variable A word containing one or more variables/functions
w_colon A colon
w_dcolon A double-colon
w_semicolon A semicolon
w_comment A comment character
w_varassign A variable assignment operator (=, :=, +=, or ?=)
Note that this function is only used when reading certain parts of the
makefile. Don't use it where special rules hold sway (RHS of a variable,
in a command list, etc.) */
static enum make_word_type
get_next_mword (buffer, delim, startp, length)
char *buffer;
char *delim;
char **startp;
unsigned int *length;
{
enum make_word_type wtype = w_bogus;
char *p = buffer, *beg;
char c;
/* Skip any leading whitespace. */
while (isblank ((unsigned char)*p))
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
++p;
beg = p;
c = *(p++);
switch (c)
{
case '\0':
wtype = w_eol;
break;
case '#':
wtype = w_comment;
break;
case ';':
wtype = w_semicolon;
break;
case '=':
wtype = w_varassign;
break;
case ':':
wtype = w_colon;
switch (*p)
{
case ':':
++p;
wtype = w_dcolon;
break;
case '=':
++p;
wtype = w_varassign;
break;
}
break;
case '+':
case '?':
if (*p == '=')
{
++p;
wtype = w_varassign;
break;
}
default:
if (delim && strchr (delim, c))
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
wtype = w_static;
break;
}
/* Did we find something? If so, return now. */
if (wtype != w_bogus)
goto done;
/* This is some non-operator word. A word consists of the longest
string of characters that doesn't contain whitespace, one of [:=#],
or [?+]=, or one of the chars in the DELIM string. */
/* We start out assuming a static word; if we see a variable we'll
adjust our assumptions then. */
wtype = w_static;
/* We already found the first value of "c", above. */
while (1)
{
char closeparen;
int count;
switch (c)
{
case '\0':
case ' ':
case '\t':
case '=':
case '#':
goto done_word;
case ':':
#ifdef HAVE_DOS_PATHS
1998-10-03 13:39:55 +08:00
/* A word CAN include a colon in its drive spec. The drive
spec is allowed either at the beginning of a word, or as part
of the archive member name, like in "libfoo.a(d:/foo/bar.o)". */
if (!(p - beg >= 2
&& (*p == '/' || *p == '\\') && isalpha ((unsigned char)p[-2])
&& (p - beg == 2 || p[-3] == '(')))
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
#endif
goto done_word;
case '$':
c = *(p++);
if (c == '$')
break;
/* This is a variable reference, so note that it's expandable.
Then read it to the matching close paren. */
wtype = w_variable;
if (c == '(')
closeparen = ')';
else if (c == '{')
closeparen = '}';
else
/* This is a single-letter variable reference. */
break;
for (count=0; *p != '\0'; ++p)
{
if (*p == c)
++count;
else if (*p == closeparen && --count < 0)
{
++p;
break;
}
}
break;
case '?':
case '+':
if (*p == '=')
goto done_word;
break;
case '\\':
switch (*p)
{
1999-06-14 14:50:28 +08:00
case ':':
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
case ';':
case '=':
case '\\':
++p;
break;
}
break;
default:
if (delim && strchr (delim, c))
1998-07-31 04:54:47 +08:00
goto done_word;
break;
}
c = *(p++);
}
done_word:
--p;
done:
if (startp)
*startp = beg;
if (length)
*length = p - beg;
return wtype;
}
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Construct the list of include directories
from the arguments and the default list. */
void
construct_include_path (arg_dirs)
char **arg_dirs;
{
register unsigned int i;
#ifdef VAXC /* just don't ask ... */
stat_t stbuf;
#else
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
struct stat stbuf;
#endif
1992-02-14 18:52:22 +08:00
/* Table to hold the dirs. */
register unsigned int defsize = (sizeof (default_include_directories)
/ sizeof (default_include_directories[0]));
register unsigned int max = 5;
register char **dirs = (char **) xmalloc ((5 + defsize) * sizeof (char *));
register unsigned int idx = 0;
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#ifdef __MSDOS__
defsize++;
#endif
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/* First consider any dirs specified with -I switches.
Ignore dirs that don't exist. */
if (arg_dirs != 0)
while (*arg_dirs != 0)
{
char *dir = *arg_dirs++;
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if (dir[0] == '~')
{
char *expanded = tilde_expand (dir);
if (expanded != 0)
dir = expanded;
}
if (stat (dir, &stbuf) == 0 && S_ISDIR (stbuf.st_mode))
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{
if (idx == max - 1)
{
max += 5;
dirs = (char **)
xrealloc ((char *) dirs, (max + defsize) * sizeof (char *));
}
dirs[idx++] = dir;
}
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else if (dir != arg_dirs[-1])
free (dir);
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}
/* Now add at the end the standard default dirs. */
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#ifdef __MSDOS__
{
/* The environment variable $DJDIR holds the root of the
DJGPP directory tree; add ${DJDIR}/include. */
struct variable *djdir = lookup_variable ("DJDIR", 5);
if (djdir)
{
char *defdir = (char *) xmalloc (strlen (djdir->value) + 8 + 1);
strcat (strcpy (defdir, djdir->value), "/include");
dirs[idx++] = defdir;
}
}
#endif
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for (i = 0; default_include_directories[i] != 0; ++i)
if (stat (default_include_directories[i], &stbuf) == 0
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&& S_ISDIR (stbuf.st_mode))
dirs[idx++] = default_include_directories[i];
dirs[idx] = 0;
/* Now compute the maximum length of any name in it. */
max_incl_len = 0;
for (i = 0; i < idx; ++i)
{
unsigned int len = strlen (dirs[i]);
/* If dir name is written with a trailing slash, discard it. */
if (dirs[i][len - 1] == '/')
/* We can't just clobber a null in because it may have come from
a literal string and literal strings may not be writable. */
dirs[i] = savestring (dirs[i], len - 1);
if (len > max_incl_len)
max_incl_len = len;
}
include_directories = dirs;
}
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/* Expand ~ or ~USER at the beginning of NAME.
Return a newly malloc'd string or 0. */
char *
tilde_expand (name)
char *name;
{
#ifndef VMS
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if (name[1] == '/' || name[1] == '\0')
{
extern char *getenv ();
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char *home_dir;
int is_variable;
{
/* Turn off --warn-undefined-variables while we expand HOME. */
int save = warn_undefined_variables_flag;
warn_undefined_variables_flag = 0;
home_dir = allocated_variable_expand ("$(HOME)");
warn_undefined_variables_flag = save;
}
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is_variable = home_dir[0] != '\0';
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if (!is_variable)
{
free (home_dir);
home_dir = getenv ("HOME");
}
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#if !defined(_AMIGA) && !defined(WINDOWS32)
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if (home_dir == 0 || home_dir[0] == '\0')
{
extern char *getlogin ();
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char *logname = getlogin ();
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home_dir = 0;
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if (logname != 0)
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{
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struct passwd *p = getpwnam (logname);
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if (p != 0)
home_dir = p->pw_dir;
}
}
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#endif /* !AMIGA && !WINDOWS32 */
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if (home_dir != 0)
{
char *new = concat (home_dir, "", name + 1);
if (is_variable)
free (home_dir);
return new;
}
}
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#if !defined(_AMIGA) && !defined(WINDOWS32)
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else
{
struct passwd *pwent;
char *userend = strchr (name + 1, '/');
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if (userend != 0)
*userend = '\0';
pwent = getpwnam (name + 1);
if (pwent != 0)
{
if (userend == 0)
return xstrdup (pwent->pw_dir);
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else
return concat (pwent->pw_dir, "/", userend + 1);
}
else if (userend != 0)
*userend = '/';
}
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#endif /* !AMIGA && !WINDOWS32 */
#endif /* !VMS */
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return 0;
}
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/* Given a chain of struct nameseq's describing a sequence of filenames,
in reverse of the intended order, return a new chain describing the
result of globbing the filenames. The new chain is in forward order.
The links of the old chain are freed or used in the new chain.
Likewise for the names in the old chain.
SIZE is how big to construct chain elements.
This is useful if we want them actually to be other structures
that have room for additional info. */
struct nameseq *
multi_glob (chain, size)
struct nameseq *chain;
unsigned int size;
{
extern void dir_setup_glob ();
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register struct nameseq *new = 0;
register struct nameseq *old;
struct nameseq *nexto;
glob_t gl;
dir_setup_glob (&gl);
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for (old = chain; old != 0; old = nexto)
{
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#ifndef NO_ARCHIVES
char *memname;
#endif
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nexto = old->next;
if (old->name[0] == '~')
{
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char *newname = tilde_expand (old->name);
if (newname != 0)
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{
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free (old->name);
old->name = newname;
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}
}
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#ifndef NO_ARCHIVES
if (ar_name (old->name))
{
/* OLD->name is an archive member reference.
Replace it with the archive file name,
and save the member name in MEMNAME.
We will glob on the archive name and then
reattach MEMNAME later. */
char *arname;
ar_parse_name (old->name, &arname, &memname);
free (old->name);
old->name = arname;
}
else
memname = 0;
#endif /* !NO_ARCHIVES */
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switch (glob (old->name, GLOB_NOCHECK|GLOB_ALTDIRFUNC, NULL, &gl))
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{
case 0: /* Success. */
{
register int i = gl.gl_pathc;
while (i-- > 0)
{
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#ifndef NO_ARCHIVES
if (memname != 0)
{
/* Try to glob on MEMNAME within the archive. */
struct nameseq *found
= ar_glob (gl.gl_pathv[i], memname, size);
if (found == 0)
{
/* No matches. Use MEMNAME as-is. */
unsigned int alen = strlen (gl.gl_pathv[i]);
unsigned int mlen = strlen (memname);
struct nameseq *elt
= (struct nameseq *) xmalloc (size);
if (size > sizeof (struct nameseq))
bzero (((char *) elt) + sizeof (struct nameseq),
size - sizeof (struct nameseq));
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elt->name = (char *) xmalloc (alen + 1 + mlen + 2);
bcopy (gl.gl_pathv[i], elt->name, alen);
elt->name[alen] = '(';
bcopy (memname, &elt->name[alen + 1], mlen);
elt->name[alen + 1 + mlen] = ')';
elt->name[alen + 1 + mlen + 1] = '\0';
elt->next = new;
new = elt;
}
else
{
/* Find the end of the FOUND chain. */
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struct nameseq *f = found;
while (f->next != 0)
f = f->next;
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/* Attach the chain being built to the end of the FOUND
chain, and make FOUND the new NEW chain. */
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f->next = new;
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new = found;
}
free (memname);
}
else
#endif /* !NO_ARCHIVES */
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{
struct nameseq *elt = (struct nameseq *) xmalloc (size);
if (size > sizeof (struct nameseq))
bzero (((char *) elt) + sizeof (struct nameseq),
size - sizeof (struct nameseq));
elt->name = xstrdup (gl.gl_pathv[i]);
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elt->next = new;
new = elt;
}
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}
globfree (&gl);
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free (old->name);
free ((char *)old);
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break;
}
case GLOB_NOSPACE:
fatal (NILF, _("virtual memory exhausted"));
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break;
default:
old->next = new;
new = old;
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break;
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}
}
return new;
}