If a -include file does not exist, then some subsequent operation
creates it, then allow it to be successfully included.
* src/read.c (eval_makefile): If our last mtime was NONEXISTENT then
reset it to 0 so we'll check it again.
* tests/scripts/features/include: Add a test for this behavior.
Using sscanf() to parse archive header values (struct ar_hdr) can lead
to valgrind warnings which are probably bogus but are annoying.
To be safer, create a local method to convert the ASCII integer
strings into integers.
* src/arscan.c (parse_int): Turn integer strings into integers.
(ar_scan): Initialize struct ar_hdr memory.
Call parse_int() rather than sscanf/atol.
Each time we invoke a command it's possible that it will change the
filesystem in ways that were not described by the target. If that
happens but we have cached previous directory contents then we may
make decisions or report results based on obsolete information.
Keep a count of how many commands we've invoked, and remember the
current command count every time we load the contents of a directory.
If we request the directory and the current command count has changed
we know the cache is outdated so reload from scratch.
* NEWS: Announce the change.
* src/makeint.h (command_count): Create a global counter.
* src/main.c (command_count): Ditto.
* src/job.c (reap_children): Increment the counter on job completion.
* src/function.c (func_file): Increment if we write a file.
* src/dir.c (clear_directory_contents): Clear the current contents of
a cached directory.
(struct directory_contents): Remember the counter value.
(struct directory): Remember the counter value for non-existing dirs.
(find_directory): If we have a cached directory and the count hasn't
changed then return it. Else, clear the previous contents and re-read
from scratch.
* tests/scripts/features/dircache: Add tests of the directory cache.
Rewrite the environment variable algorithm to correctly inherit
export settings from parent variable sets. The new algorithm
for computing the table of environment variables is:
- Start with the most local variable set and proceed to global.
- If the variable already exists in the table and we don't know
its export status, update it with the current variable's status.
- If the variable is not in the table and it's not global, add it
regardless of its status so if it's unexported we remember that.
- If the variable is not in the table and is global, check its
export status and don't add it if we won't export it.
Then when generating the environment variables, check the export
status of each variable in case it was a target-specific variable
and we have determined it should not be exported.
Rework SHELL handling to check at the end whether we added it or
not and if we didn't, add the value from the environment.
* NEWS: Announce support for target-specific "unexport"."
* doc/make.texi (Target-specific): Document the support.
* src/variable.h (enum variable_export): Make into a global type.
* src/read.c (struct vmodifiers): Use enum variable_export rather
than individual booleans.
(parse_var_assignment): Parse the "unexport" keyword.
(eval): Remember the vmodifier value in the variable.
(record_target_var): Ditto.
* src/variable.c (should_export): Check if the variable should be
exported.
(target_environment): Implement the above algorithm.
* tests/scripts/features/export: Test export/unexport with variable
assignments on the same line.
* tests/scripts/features/targetvars: Add a comprehensive suite of
tests for different types of target-specific export / unexport.
* tests/scripts/variables/SHELL: Update the comment.
When checking for invalid environment variable names we searched the
entire name string instead of just the first LENGTH chars; this could
cause us to incorrectly decide the variable was not exportable.
Dmitry Goncharov <dgoncharov@users.sf.net> found this bug and
provided a test case and sample fix: I used the test but chose a
slightly different fix.
* src/variable.c (define_variable_in_set): check the variable name
not the input string.
* tests/scripts/features/targetvars: Ensure environment variable
values are exported.
Reported by Dmitry Goncharov <dgoncharov@users.sf.net>, with a patch
changing the pattern rule for building archives. I decided to
change the default value of ARFLAGS on AIX instead.
GNU make must recognize some special targets as they are defined.
Because of the way targets are defined, we were not recognizing these
special targets until we were handling the NEXT statement. However
that's too late for some special targets such as .POSIX etc. which can
change the behavior of make during parsing.
Check for special targets earlier, as soon as we've finished parsing
the target introduction line (before we've even parsed the recipe).
* NEWS: Mention the change.
* src/read.c (check_specials): New function to look for special
targets. Move checks from eval() and record_files() to this new
function.
(eval): Call check_specials() after we've completed parsing the target
introduction line. Move default goal detection to check_specials().
(record_files): Move handling of .POSIX, .SECONDEXPANSION, and
.ONESHELL to check_specials().
* tests/scripts/misc/bs-nl: Remove workaround for late .POSIX issue.
* tests/scripts/targets/POSIX: Add a comment.
* src/function.c (func_filter_filterout): Allocate arrays to hold
pattern and word information rather than creating linked lists on
the stack.
* tests/scripts/functions/filter-out: Test large filters.
Ensure that makefiles are rebuilt in the order in which make first
considered them, and document this behavior in the manual.
* NEWS: Add a note about the new behavior
* doc/make.text (How make Processes a Makefile): Document it.
* main.c (main): Inverse the list of makefile goals.
* read.c (read_all_makefiles): Add default makefiles to the list at
the front in reverse order, the same way other makefiles are added.
* tests/scripts/features/include: Add tests to verify rebuild order.
The "[" link may be missing during OS boostrapping.
* build.sh: Convert "[ ... ]" to "test ..."
* maintMakefile: Ditto.
* scripts/copyright-update: Ditto
* tests/scripts/features/reinvoke: Ditto
* tests/scripts/features/targetvars: Ditto
A parent make will invoke a sub-make with close-on-exec disabled for
the jobserver pipe FDs. Force close-on-exec to be to be enabled in
the sub-make so the pipe is not always passed to child jobs.
I have a test case which, when invoked with a suitable -j switch,
will hang if the recipe inherits the jobserver pipe. This test case
was inspired by a real world case in which testing GDB on Fedora
would hang due to some poorly written test GDB cases having been
passed the jobserver file descriptors.
* src/posixos.c (jobserver_parse_auth): Call fd_noinherit() for
jobserver pipe descriptors.
Copyright-paperwork-exempt: yes
When using execvp() if $PATH is not present in the environment
it will automatically search the system default PATH string. Emulate
this by passing the system default PATH to find_in_given_path() if
we don't find PATH in the environment.
* src/job.c (child_execute_job): Use confstr(_CS_PATH) if PATH is not
found.
Rather than having an %extraENV that is added to the default %ENV
and resetting %ENV _before_ each test, allow the test setup to
modify %ENV directly as needed then reset %ENV _after_ each test.
* tests/test_driver.pl: Remove unused %extraENV.
(resetENV): Don't add in %extraENV.
(_run_command): Reset after we run the command rather than before.
* tests/scripts/features/export: Convert %extraENV to %ENV
* tests/scripts/features/jobserver: Ditto
* tests/scripts/features/parallelism: Ditto
* tests/scripts/features/targetvars: Ditto
* tests/scripts/functions/eval: Ditto
* tests/scripts/functions/foreach: Ditto
* tests/scripts/functions/origin: Ditto
* tests/scripts/misc/general4: Ditto
* tests/scripts/options/dash-e: Ditto
* tests/scripts/targets/POSIX: Ditto
* tests/scripts/variables/GNUMAKEFLAGS: Ditto
* tests/scripts/variables/SHELL: Ditto
If gnulib fcntl is available (for MinGW32) use it rather than our
homegrown version.
Signed-off-by: Jens Rehsack <sno@netbsd.org>
Copyright-paperwork-exempt: yes
We want to process -C options as early as possible, before we might
write informational messages, so that Entering/Leaving messages have
the correct directory.
* src/main.c (main): Move code dealing with changing directories
before parsing of the jobserver auth flag.
* tests/scripts/features/jobserver: Test the order of enter/leave.
APPEND is a permanent mode shared by all users of a file. If we
set it on a tty, pipe, etc. it will stay in effect even after make
exits, which can cause problems.
Patch provided by 0xef967c36@gmail.com
* src/output.c (set_append_mode): Check for a regular file.
Copyright-paperwork-exempt: yes
Previously if --no-print-directory was seen anywhere even once
(environment, command line, etc.) it would always take precedence
over any --print-directory option. Change this so that the last
seen option (which will be the command line, if present there) takes
precedence.
* NEWS: Mark this change in behavior.
* src/makeint.h (print_directory): A new variable to control printing.
* src/output.c (output_dump): Use the new variable.
(output_start): Ditto.
* src/main.c: Add a new variable print_directory. Use -1 for
print_directory_flag so we know of the option was seen or not. Add a
new default_print_directory_flag set to -1 to keep options from being
added.
(switches): Use flag_off for --no-print-directory, rather than a
separate inhibit_print_directory_flag.
(main): If print_directory_flag was set by the user, use that for
print_directory. If not, compute the print_directory value based on
-s, -C, and sub-makes as before.
* tests/scripts/variables/GNUMAKEFLAGS: -w is not added automatically
* tests/scripts/options/print-directory: Add tests for overriding
print-directory options.
* src/config.h.W32.template (HAVE_DIRECT_H, HAVE_STRCASECMP)
(HAVE_STRNCASECMP, HAVE_UMASK): Add __TINYC__ to MinGW condition.
(BATCH_MODE_ONLY_SHELL): Make this the default for Tiny C.
* build_w32.bat: Support building with Tiny C's tcc compiler.
POSIX says that suffix rules cannot have prerequisites, but after
making this change we observed a number of makefiles "in the wild"
that were relying on this behavior and failed.
For .POSIX: makefiles, obey POSIX. Otherwise preserve the old
behavior. However, generate a warning so users know this is a
problem. In a future version we will change all behavior to be
POSIX-conforming.
* NEWS: describe the change
* src/rule.c (convert_to_pattern): If posix_pedantic don't make a
pattern rule if prereqs exist. Otherwise show a warning.
* tests/scripts/features/suffixrules: Add tests for the new behavior
including .POSIX vs. non-.POSIX.
* configure.ac: Try compiling Guile headers: they don't work with C90.
* maintMakefile: Simplify config checks via target-specific variables.
* src/makeint.h: Use ATTRIBUTE rather than defining __attribute__,
as that causes compile issues with system headers.
(ENUM_BITFIELD): Don't use enum bitfields in ANSI mode.
* src/main.c: Use ATTRIBUTE instead of __attribute__.
* src/job.h: Ditto.
* src/file.c: Don't define variables inside for loops.
* src/rule.c: Ditto.
* src/dep.h (SI): Only use static inline in non-ANSI mode.