* src/variable.c (lookup_variable_for_file): New function to retrieve
a variable assignment in a file context.
* src/variable.h (lookup_variable_for_file): Declare it.
* src/job.c (construct_command_argv): Look up .SHELLFLAGS. If .POSIX
is set and we're using the default value, choose -c if we're ignoring
errors else choose -ec.
(construct_command_argv_internal): Ditto.
* tests/scripts/targets/POSIX: Add tests.
Allow z/OS customizations to apply to regex output matching.
* tests/scripts/features/output-sync: Use a regex for Terminated.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Ditto.
The other issues related to whitespace reported in this bug are
not addressed by this change.
* src/functions.c (func_file): Strip whitespace from the start and
end of the filename provided to the $(file ...) function.
* tests/scripts/functions/file: Add tests for this.
* tests/test_driver.pl: Use 3-arg version of open().
If -e was given we weren't expanding MAKEFLAGS before passing it
through the environment to jobs: we don't expand variables we
receive from the environment and when -e is given we set the
origin of MAKEFLAGS to "environment override". Check for MAKEFLAGS
specifically, which seems like a hack but I don't have a better
idea offhand.
* src/main.c (main): Drive-by: use o_default for MAKEOVERRIDES.
* src/variable.c (target_environment): Always expand MAKEFLAGS
regardless of the origin type.
* tests/scripts/options/dash-e: Create a test.
Original patches provided by Igor Todorovski <itodorov@ca.ibm.com>
Reworked by Paul Smith <psmith@gnu.org>.
Thanks to IBM for providing a test system.
* NEWS: Announce support.
* AUTHORS: Ditto.
* README.zOS: Provide details on building GNU Make on z/OS.
* build.sh (get_mk_var): z/OS sh has a strange bug which causes it to
generate extra lines of output: rework the function to print output
as we compute it instead of collecting it into a variable, which
works around this bug.
* src/makeint.h: Declare MK_OS_ZOS if we're building for z/OS.
* src/arscan.c: Don't include <ar.h> on z/OS.
* src/job.c: We can't change environ in ASCII mode on z/OS.
* src/main.c: Ditto. Also we can't use pselect() on z/OS.
* src/posixos.c: pselect() seems to hang on z/OS: don't use it.
* tests/run_make_tests.pl: Handle different exit codes on z/OS.
* tests/test_driver.pl: Preserve some special z/OS env.vars.
Add special checks to output comparisons when on z/OS.
* tests/scripts/features/archives: Don't validate names. Don't
try to compile empty files as IBM compilers complain.
* tests/scripts/features/shell_assignment: Fix octal value of #.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Don't print "term".
* tests/scripts/functions/shell: Handle shell exit codes.
* tests/scripts/targets/ONESHELL: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/targets/POSIX: sh -x prints differently.
* tests/scripts/variables/SHELL: Ditto.
Reported by Dmitry Goncharov <dgoncharov@users.sf.net>
* src/variable.c (struct defined_vars): Create a struct that holds the
name and length of each variable name.
(warn_undefined): Check the lengths before comparing the contents.
* tests/scripts/options/warn-undefined-variables: Add a test.
Compare the timestamp of the object file (if it exists) with the
archived object and if the object file is newer, ensure it's updated
in the archive.
* NEWS: Announce the new capability.
* doc/make.texi (Dangers When Using Archives): Explain how to enable
parallel builds with archives.
* src/remake.c (f_mtime): For archive element files check the mod
time of the object file (if it exists) against the archive object
(if it exists).
* tests/scripts/features/archives: Add tests for this capability.
If a parent target has an exported variable that is private, don't
export it in child targets.
* NEWS: Mention this change.
* src/variable.c (target_environment): Ignore private inherited
variables.
* tests/thelp.pl: Add a new "env" operation to show env.var. values.
* tests/scripts/variables/private: Verify this new behavior.
The POSIX standard only requires false(1) to return a "non-zero" exit
code; almost all systems return 1 but some (Solaris!!!) return 255 or
possibly even other values. Use our helper "fail" instead.
* tests/thelp.pl: Have the "fail" command obey -q.
* tests/scripts/features/parallelism: Helper -q no longer prints fail.
* tests/scripts/targets/POSIX: Replace false with #HELPER# -q fail 1.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/variables/SHELL: Ditto.
Don't generate undefined variable warnings for variables that are
internal / special to make and where the empty string is valid.
Rather than defining them to empty, which could introduce unwanted
behavior, keep a list of variable names which we should never warn
about.
* src/variable.h (warn_undefined): Convert the macro to a function.
* src/variable.c (defined_vars): Always "defined" variable names.
(warn_undefined): Implement as a function and check against the
defined_vars before generating a warning.
* src/read.c (read_all_makefiles): No need to reset warning flag.
* src/vpath.c (build_vpath_lists): Ditto.
* tests/scripts/options/warn-undefined-variables: Expand all the
pre-defined variables to ensure warnings are not generated.
* src/makeint.h (reset_makeflags): New function to handle changing
MAKEFLAGS from within makefiles. Remove decode_env_switches().
* src/variable.c (set_special_var): Call reset_makeflags() instead
of various internal methods.
* src/main.c (decode_env_switches): Only internal now so make static.
(decode_switches): Don't invoke construct_include_path() yet.
(reset_makeflags): Decode env switches and construct include paths.
(main): Construct include paths after we process -C options.
* tests/scripts/options/dash-C: Rewrite to use new test constructs.
Add a test using both -C and -I together.
Add a test for multiple -C options.
Strawberry Perl has some different behaviors from ActiveState Perl
which impact the test suite:
- Avoid Perl's chomp() as it may not remove CRs; chomp() may remove
only the final NL but not the CR in a CRNL line ending.
- Strawberry Perl doesn't support ActiveState's system(1, ...) form.
- Strawberry Perl (or msys?) does something weird with "/tmp" when
provided to exec(), replacing it with the user's %TEMP%.
- Strawberry Perl uses msys paths like /c/foo instead of C:\foo.
* tests/test_driver.pl (get_osname): Strawberry Perl uses 'msys' as
its $^O so if we see that use a port of 'W32'.
(_run_with_timeout): Strawberry Perl doesn't support the special
system(1, ...) form of system() so use POSIX standard fork/exec.
(compare_answer): Paths generated by Strawberry Perl use msys path
format (e.g., /c/foo instead of C:\foo); check for those differences
and compare RE against both the unmodified and modified log.
* tests/run_make_tests.pl (set_defaults): Switch from chomp to s///
to remove CRNL and NL line endings.
* tests/scripts/features/errors: Executing directories on Strawberry
will give an error; translate it to Windows error output format.
* tests/scripts/features/output-sync: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/functions/realpath: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/options/dash-I: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/variables/INCLUDE_DIRS: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/misc/close_stdout: /dev/full is reported as existing
on Strawberry Perl, but it doesn't do anything. Skip the test.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: When an argument containing
/tmp is passed to a program via exec(), something replaces it with
the expansion of the %TEMP% variable. Instead of using /tmp create
a local directory to use.
* doc/make.texi (Options/Recursion): Clarify that MAKEFLAGS values
from the environment have precedence over those set in the makefile.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Check boolean switches -k/-S,
-w/--no-print-directory and -s/--no-silent as follows:
1. A switch can be enabled or disabled on the command line.
2. A switch can be enabled or disabled in env.
3. A switch can be enabled or disabled in makefile.
4. Command line beats env and makefile.
5. Env beats makefile.
6. MAKEFLAGS contains each specified switch at parse and build time.
7. If switches are specified in multiple origins, MAKEFLAGS contains
the winning switch at parse and build time.
8. MAKEFLAGS does not contain the losing switch.
Also test that --debug settings from different origins are combined
together into one option.
Ensure included makefiles are not treated as intermediate, even if
they are created by an implicit rule.
Reported by Patrick Oppenlander <patrick.oppenlander@gmail.com>.
* src/read.c (eval_makefile): Mark makefiles as explicit.
* tests/scripts/features/include: Add a test.
* src/makeint.h (HAVE_DRIVESPEC): Create a macro to check.
* src/main.c (.FEATURES): Add "dospaths" as a feature.
* src/read.c (eval_makefile) [DOS]: If the included makefile name
starts with a drivespec, don't search the include directories.
* doc/make.texi (Include): Document this behavior.
* tests/scripts/features/include: Add a test.
Fix .NOTINTERMEDIATE without prerequisites to disable intermediate
status for all targets.
* src/makeint.h: Declare extern no_intermediates.
* src/main.c: Add global definition of no_intermediates.
* src/file.c: Remove static no_intermediates to use global variable.
(remove_intermediates): Check no_intermediates.
* src/implicit.c (pattern_search): For a file found by implicit search
set file->notintermediate if no_intermediates is set.
* src/remake.c (update_file_1): Don't set file->secondary for a
pre-existing file if no_intermediates is set. The check for
no_intermediates here is redundant, but won't hurt: keep it in case
things change so that it matters.
* tests/scripts/targets/NOTINTERMEDIATE: Fix a test.
This commit introduces two visible changes:
1. Keep command line variable assignments in MAKEFLAGS at all times,
even while parsing makefiles.
2. Define makeflags immediately when a makefile modifies MAKEFLAGS.
The new MAKEFLAGS and MAKEOVERRIDES initialization procedure:
1. decode_switches (argc, argv, o_command) is called to parse command
line variable assignments.
2. Command line variable assignments go through quote_for_env.
Initialize -*-command-variables-*- to the quoted values.
3. MAKEOVERRIDES is initialized to refer to -*-command-variables-*-
with origin o_env to keep the definitions in the database intact.
4. define_makeflags() is called which adds MAKEOVERRIDES to MAKEFLAGS.
5. Makefiles are parsed. If a makefile modifies MAKEFLAGS, the new
value of MAKEFLAGS is defined right away.
6. Env switches are decoded again as o_env. The definitions set by
decode_switches at step 1 stay intact, as o_command beats o_env.
We must preserve the original intact definitions in order to detect
failure cases; for example:
$ cat makefile
all:; $(hello)
$ make hello='$(world'
makefile:1: *** unterminated variable reference. Stop.
* src/makeint.h: Declare enum variable_origin, struct variable and
define_makeflags(). Add parameter origin to decode_env_switches().
* src/main.c (define_makeflags): Remove "all". If a variable is
assigned on the command line then append MAKEOVERRIDES to MAKEFLAGS.
(decode_env_switches): Replace parameter env with origin.
(decode_switches): Replace parameter env with origin.
Treat origin == o_command as env == 0.
(handle_non_switch_argument): Replace parameter env with origin.
Treat origin == o_command as env == 0.
(main): Call decode_switches() with origin==o_command before parsing
makefiles. Call decode_switches() with origin==o_env after parsing
makefiles.
* src/variable.c (set_special_var): Define makeflags at parse time,
each time a makefile modifies MAKEFLAGS.
(do_variable_definition): Strip command line variable assignments from
MAKEFLAGS before appending extra flags. set_special_var() adds them
back.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Add tests.
* src/read.c (eval): If "missing separator" appears to be due to
missing space after ifeq/ifneq, give a hint about the error.
* tests/scripts/misc/failure: Check for these types of failures.
* tests/scripts/variables/special: Move error checking unrelated
to special variables, to misc/failure.
If make cannot create a temporary lock file for output sync, continue
without output sync enabled rather than dying.
However, if make cannot store a makefile from stdin to a temporary
file that is still a fatal error.
* misc.c (get_tmppath): Keep running on failure to generate a
temporary file name.
(get_tmpfd): Keep running on failure to get a temporary file.
(get_tmpfile): Keep running on failure to open a temporary file.
Ensure memory is freed if we return an error.
* posixos.c (os_anontmp): Keep running on failure to open an
anonymous temporary file.
* output.c (setup_tmpfile): Print an error on failure to create an
output sync lock file.
* main.c (main): Die on failure to store makefile from stdin to a
temporary file.
* tests/scripts/features/output-sync: Add tests.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Ditto.
* src/posixos.c (jobserver_parse_auth): Don't invoke fatal() if we
can't connect to an existing jobserver: just keep going without it.
* src/w32/w32os.c (jobserver_parse_auth): Ditto.
* tests/scripts/features/jobserver: Add a test for invalid FIFO
auth files.
Tests that try to kill the make process were not behaving as expected
on OpenBSD: the signal was sent from make to its children but the
sleep didn't die. Something odd about the way the shell treats TERM.
To reduce platform dependencies add "term" to the helper tool and run
that instead of kill / sleep.
* tests/thelp.pl: Add a new operation "term" that takes a PID.
* tests/scripts/features/output-sync: Use it.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Ditto.
When tests compare the output they will try converting backslashes
to slashes to see if that works. When we compare using regex's,
we can't do that because backslashes can escape special characters.
* tests/test_driver.pl (compare_output): Clean up this function.
(compare_answer_vms) [VMS]: Comparing answers on VMS is complex;
move all of it into its own function returning 0/1.
(compare_answer): A new function to compare answers: return 0/1.
Remember the CRLF->LF conversion forever; only check \ -> / when
we compare strings, not regex's.
* tests/test_driver.pl: Preserve the LSAN_OPTIONS variable.
* tests/scripts/targets/ONESHELL: Don't set a local variable.
* tests/scripts/functions/let: Test empty let variable.
* src/posixos.c (osync_parse_mutex): Free existing osync_tmpfile.
* src/misc.c (get_tmpfd): Set umask() before invoking mkstemp().
* src/ar.c (ar_parse_name): Check invalid name (shouldn't happen).
* src/function.c (define_new_function): Free previous function entry
when replacing it with a new one.
* src/job.c (child_execute_job): Initialize pid for safety.
(construct_command_argv_internal): In oneshell mode ensure that the
returned argv has the right format (0th element is a pointer to the
entire buffer).
This was added in Perl 5.8 but some systems still only provide older
versions such as Perl 5.6. We don't really need it anyway.
Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> reported this issue.
* tests/README: Update this to be a bit more modern.
* tests/test_driver.pl: Delete the $TEMPDIR variable.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Use $temppath not $TEMPDIR.
We attempt to do this with POSIX::setlocale() but apparently on some
systems (AIX) this isn't sufficient. So, in addition force the LC
environment variables to use "C".
Reported by Dmitry Goncharov <dgoncharov@users.sf.net>.
* tests/run_make_tests.pl: Move the global setup into set_default().
Force the %ENV locale variables to use the ones we'll use when running
make, then reset them back again after we find error messages.
Using C shells (csh, tcsh) with make is known to be problematic due
to incorrect ways it handles open file descriptors, at least. If
the user's shell is *csh then don't try it during exec tests.
It seems that some of the test environments hit the 5s timeout on
some tests. Since it doesn't really matter, as long as we don't
hang forever, increase the timeout to 60s.
* tests/test_driver.pl: Increase $test_timout to 60. We don't need
to handle VMS timeouts specially anymore.
* tests/scripts/features/parallelism: We don't need to override the
default timeout anymore.
* tests/scripts/features/patternrules: Remove confusing comment.
The previous attempt to detect missing peer targets for implicit
rules had some holes. Move the detection to notice_finished_file().
* src/remake.c (check_also_make): If we don't have the current mtime
for the file, obtain it.
(update_goal_chain): Don't call check_also_make() here.
(check_dep): Ditto.
(notice_finished_file): If we finished running an implicit rule that
has also_make targets, invoke check_also_make().
* README.in: Add a section on running regression tests.
* Makefile.am (check-regression): Capture the test run output, and
on failure collect configure and test results into a tar file.
The GNU platform testers reported a number of test errors on
different systems; try to address them.
* tests/thelp.pl: A number of tests timed out with a 4-second
timeout. Increase the default timeout to 10 seconds.
* tests/run_make_tests.pl: Executing directories on cygwin behaves
differently in Perl than make so skip these tests there.
* tests/scripts/options/symlinks: Check for the symlink feature
in make, rather than whether the system supports them.
* tests/scripts/features/implicit_search: On some systems "false"
exits with a different exit code. Use the helper instead.
* tests/scripts/features/loadapi: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/features/output-sync: Sleep before make -f bar in
the first test as well as the second one.
* tests/scripts/features/exec: Skip on cygwin, which seems to
be "UNIX" but where scripts don't run normally.
* tests/scripts/misc/fopen-fail: Skip on cygwin, where make
eventually exits with exit code 0 and no error messages.
Original patch from Frank Heckenbach <f.heckenbach@fh-soft.de>.
* tests/scripts/features/output-sync: Introduce a sleep to let make
write its error message. Some systems use different names for
SIGTERM so match with a regex.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Ditto.
* configure.ac: MK_CONFIGURE shows config.h was generated by configure.
* src/config.ami: Define MK_AMIGAOS.
* src/config.h-vms: Define MK_VMS.
* src/configh.dos: Define MK_DJGPP.
* src/config.h.W32: Define MK_W32 and WINDOWS32.
* src/build_w32.bat: Let WINDOWS32 be defined by config.h. Remove
unused setting of WIN32.
* src/job.c: Clean up use of WIN32.
* src/main.c: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/features/default_names: Ditto.
Original patch from Dmitry Goncharov <dgoncharov@users.sf.net>.
When handling a fatal signal ensure the temporary files for
stdin and the jobserver fifo (if in use) are deleted.
* src/makeint.h (temp_stdin_unlink): Declare a new method.
* src/main.c (temp_stdin_unlink): Delete the stdin temporary file
if it exists. If the unlink fails and we're not handling a signal
then show an error.
(main): Call temp_stdin_unlink() instead of unlinking by hand.
* src/commands.c (fatal_error_signal): Invoke cleanup methods if
we're handling a fatal signal.
* tests/scripts/features/output-sync: Test signal handling during
output sync and jobserver with FIFO.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Test signal handling when
makefiles are read from stdin.
The fix for SV 12078 caused a backward-compatibility issue with some
makefiles. In order to allow users to resolve this issue, revert
that change for this release cycle: it will be reinstated in the
next release cycle. Introduce a warning if we detect that the recipe
of a multi-target pattern rule doesn't create all the targets.
* NEWS: Announce the future backward-incompatibility.
* doc/make.texi (Pattern Intro): Describe the behavior and that it
will change in the future.
* src/remake.c (check_also_make): Check for also_make targets that
were not created and generate a warning.
(update_goal_chain): Call the new function.
(check_dep): Ditto.
(update_file_1): Defer implicit rule detection until after we check
all the also_make files (as it used to be).
* tests/scripts/features/patternrules: Add tests of the new warning.
Skip the tests for SV 12078.
* src/read.c (eval): Initialize the goaldep floc pointer.
* tests/scripts/features/loadapi: Verify that the floc is set after
unloading and reloading dynamic objects.
We may change the global environ variable in the child; when using
vfork() this also sets it in the parent. Preserve the parent's
environ in child_execute_job() so it takes effect for all callers.
Reported by Denis Excoffier <bug-tar@Denis-Excoffier.org>
Root cause found by Martin Dorey <Martin.Dorey@hitachivantara.com>
* src/job.c (start_job_command): Remove save/restore of the parent
environment.
(child_execute_job): Add save/restore of the parent environment,
if we use vfork().
* tests/scripts/functions/shell: Add a test the crashes if we don't
reset environ after we run $(shell ...).
Fail if a mandatory include file fails to be built even if it's
built as part of a grouped target where the other include file
is optional.
* src/main.c (main): If a makefile doesn't build set any_failed.
* tests/scripts/features/include: Add tests.
* tests/scripts/options/dash-k: Stop after include build failure.
If any of a set of grouped targets is missing or out of date, even
if make is not trying to build that target, rebuild them all.
Ensure this is true for explicit grouped targets as well as pattern
rule grouped targets.
Original patch by Jonathan Gravel <jo@stashed.dev>
* src/remake.c (update_file_1): After matching any pattern rules,
go through the also_make targets and set noexist as needed. Also
compute the oldest this_mtime.
* tests/scripts/features/grouped_targets: Add regression tests.
* tests/scripts/features/patternrules: Ditto.
* tests/features/vpath: Rewrite to use modern run_make_test().
Add a test that we check for VPATH before implicit rule search.
Move the tests in vpath2 and vpath3 into this suite.
* tests/features/vpathplus: Rewrite to use modern run_make_test().
The next version of the POSIX standard defines parallel execution
and requires the .WAIT special target as is implemented in some other
versions of make.
This implementation behaves similarly to others in that it does not
create a relationship between targets in the dependency graph, so
that the same two targets may be run in parallel if they appear as
prerequisites elsewhere without .WAIT between them.
Now that we support .WAIT it's trivial to also support prerequisites
of the .NOTPARALLEL special target, which forces the prerequisites of
those targets to be run serially (as if .WAIT was specified between
each one).
* NEWS: Announce the new .WAIT and .NOTPARALLEL support.
* doc/make.texi (Parallel Disable): A new section to discuss ways in
which parallel execution can be controlled. Modify cross-refs to
refer to this section.
* src/dep.h (struct dep): Add a new wait_here boolean.
(parse_file_seq): Add PARSEFS_WAIT to check for .WAIT dependencies.
* src/file.c (split_prereqs): Use PARSEFS_WAIT.
(snap_deps): If .NOTPARALLEL has prerequisites, set .WAIT between
each of _their_ prerequisites.
(print_prereqs): Add back in .WAIT when printing prerequisites.
* src/implicit.c (struct patdeps): Preserve wait_here.
(pattern_search): Ditto. Use PARSEFS_WAIT when parsing prereqs for
pattern rule expansion.
* src/read.c (check_specials): Don't give up early: remembering to
update these options is not worth the rare speedup.
(check_special_file): If .WAIT is given as a target show an error--
once--if it has prereqs or commands.
(record_files): Call check_special_file on each target.
(parse_file_seq): If PARSEFS_WAIT is given, look for .WAIT prereqs.
If we see one assume that we are building a struct dep chain and set
the wait_here option while not putting it into the list.
* src/remake.c (update_file_1): If wait_here is set and we are still
running, then stop trying to build this target's prerequisites.
* src/rule.c (get_rule_defn): Add .WAIT to the prerequisite list.
* src/shuffle.c (shuffle_deps): Don't shuffle the prerequisite list
if .WAIT appears anywhere in it.
* tests/scripts/targets/WAIT: Add a test suite for this feature.
If makefile rules do not update an unloaded shared object, load it
again. Avoid double loading of the same object if the setup function
returns -1.
* src/filedef.h (struct file): Add "unloaded" flag.
* src/makeint.h (load_file): Take struct file *.
(unload_file): Return int.
* src/main.c (main): Reload unloaded shared objects if they weren't
updated.
* src/commands.c (execute_file_commands): Set "unloaded" and reset
"loaded" when a shared object is unloaded.
* src/read.c (eval): Set "loaded" and reset "unloaded" when a shared
object is loaded. Add successfully loaded files to the db.
* src/load.c (load_file): Check "loaded" to avoid double loading the
same object. Fix a memory leak of string loaded. Return -1, rather
than 1, if the object is already loaded. This fixes double loading of
the same object when the setup routine returns -1.
(load_object): Add a log message.
(unload_file): Return an error on dlclose failure. Log a message.
* tests/scripts/features/loadapi: Add new tests.
Commit 07eea3aa4 `make --shuffle` prevented shuffling prerequisites
that use .SECONDEXPANSION, since shuffle happens before expansion.
This has two problems:
1. No shuffling happens for such prerequisites.
2. Use-after-free when outdated '->shuf' links are used.
Add a reshuffle into expansion phase right after dependency changes.
* src/file.c (expand_deps): Add reshuffle if dependencies change.
* src/shuffle.c (identity_shuffle_array): Fix comment typo.
* tests/scripts/options/shuffle: Add new SECONDEXPANSION test.
Allow build systems to choose an alternative location for make to
store its temporary files.
* NEWS: Announce the new environment variable.
* doc/make.texi (Temporary Files): Provide documentation.
* src/misc.c (get_tmpdir): Split into a new function. Compute the
temporary directory and store it in a static location.
* tests/scripts/features/jobserver: Add a test of MAKE_TMPDIR.
* src/load.c (load_file): Update .LOADED if setup returns non-0.
* tests/scripts/features/load: Change the return value based on an
environment variable. Ensure that returning -1 still adds to
.LOADED. Also add a test that verifies that make doesn't try to
rebuild the loaded file if -1 is returned.
* tests/scripts/features/load: Add function prototypes.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Only set user execute bits.
Some configurations don't allow changing the group bits...??
If we detect a recursive variable reference when constructing the
environment for the shell function, return the original value from the
caller's environment. Other options such as failing, returning the
empty string, or returning the unexpanded make variable value have
been shown to not behave well in real-world environments. If the
variable doesn't exist in the caller's environment, return the empty
string.
Found by Sergei Trofimovich <slyich@gmail.com> when testing older
versions of autoconf.
* NEWS: Clarify this behavior.
* doc/make.texi (Shell Function): Ditto. Also add info about !=.
* src/expand.c (recursively_expand_for_file): Search the caller's
environment if we detect a recursive variable expansion.
* tests/scripts/functions/shell: Add tests for this behavior.
The fix for SV 10593 caused recursive expansion errors when exporting
a variable that contains a $(shell ...) invocation. If we see this
type of recursion, ignore it and expand to the empty string rather
than failing.
* src/variable.h (env_recursion): New global variable.
* src/variable.c (target_environment): If creating the environment
for a $(shell ...) function increment env_recursion. Remove the
check for expansion in a shell function context.
* src/expand.c (recursively_expand_for_file): Check for recursive
expansion in a $(shell ...) environment context and if present,
show the verbose message and return the empty string.
* tests/scripts/functions/shell: Add a test for this situation.
* maintMakefile: Remove the template headers as prerequisites.
* tests/scripts/features/jobserver: Only test fifo if enabled.
* tests/scripts/variables/INCLUDE_DIRS: On MacOS none of the default
directories exist so .INCLUDE_DIRS is empty by default.
* tests/scripts/features/se_explicit: Fail via exit. cp will show
different error messages on different systems.
* tests/scripts/features/se_implicit: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/features/se_statpat: Ditto.
Some POSIX systems do not allow locks to be taken on non-files, such
as pipes. This is a problem since very often make is invoked with
its stdout redirected to a pipe. Also, if stdout is redirected to a
file that already has a lock on it for some other reason (perhaps a
shared file such as /dev/null) it can cause a hang.
This means our previous method of locking stdout, although it had some
nice advantages, is not portable enough. Instead, use a temporary
file and take the lock on that. We pass the name of the file to child
make processes. On Windows we continue to use a shared mutex for
output sync.
Remove POSIX emulation functions like fcntl from Windows; instead
follow the lead of the jobserver and create an interface in os.h for
output sync, and move the OS-specific content to posixos.c and
w32os.c.
* NEWS: Add a note.
* src/makeint.h (ALL_SET): Check that all bits are set.
* src/os.h: Add bits for checking the state of stdin/stdout/stderr.
Add prototypes for OS-specific output sync methods.
* src/posixos.c (check_io_state): Determine the status of stdin,
stdout, stderr an return a suite of bits describing them.
(osync_enabled): If the global variable holding the FD of the lock
file (osync_handle) is valid return true.
(osync_setup): Create a temporary file and remember its name in a
global variable (osync_tmpfile), and set osync_handle.
(osync_get_mutex): If output sync is enabled, return the filename
of the lock file prefixed with "fnm:" to denote a filename.
(osync_parse_mutex): If the provided filename has the wrong format
disable output sync. Else open the lock file and set osync_handle.
(osync_clear): Close osync_handle. If we're the parent make, then
also unlink the temporary file.
(osync_acquire): Take a lock on the osync_handle descriptor.
(osync_release): Release the lock on the osync_handle descriptor.
(fd_set_append): Add APPEND mode to a file descriptor.
* src/w32/w32os.c: Perform the same actions as posixos.c, copying
the details from src/w32/compat/posixfcn.c. Use a mutex rather
than locking a temporary file.
* src/output.h: Remove all the OS-specific content.
* src/output.c: Remove all the OS-specific content.
(set_append_mode): Remove and replace with fd_set_append().
(sync_init): Remove and replace with check_io_state().
(acquire_semaphore): Remove and replace with osync_acquire().
(release_semaphore): Remove and replace with osync_release().
(setup_tmpfile): If the IO state is not obtained, get it. If stdout
and/or stderr are valid, set up a tempfile to capture them.
(output_init): Set io_state if not set already, and check it when
deciding whether to close stdout on exit.
* src/main.c (main): If we're syncing, set up the mutex using the
new osync_setup() / osync_parse_mutex() methods.
(prepare_mutex_handl_string): Replace with osync_parse_mutex().
(die): Call osync_clear().
* src/w32/compat/posixfcn.c: Remove implementations of fcntl(),
record_sync_mutex(), create_mutex(), and same_stream().
Reset the temp directory for every test to a local directory, then
after each test see if any new temp files were created and not
deleted: if they were then fail the test. Rather than delete the
temp files we leave them there and avoid reporting files that were
seen before, so the user can investigate them.
Rewrite the temp_stdin tests to rely on this built-in behavior
rather than implementing the checks directly.
* tests/test_driver.pl: Create a $TEMPDIR variable pointing to a
temporary directory outside the test temp directory.
(toplevel) Before starting any tests create a temp directory and set
the POSIX and Windows temp directory environment variables to use it.
(compare_output) Check the contents of the temp directory. If any
new files have appeared, fail the test.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Remove check_tempfile() and
all users of it, plus setting of temp environment variables.
* README.git: Clarify that these methods are lightly tested.
* build_w32.bat: Don't support any config step: fail if not completed.
Move the config steps into bootstrap.bat. Don't print compile lines
by default and add a --verbose option to show them.
* bootstrap.bat: Ensure we have curl and sed before we do anything.
Pull the latest necessary files from gnulib. Create a convert.sed
script that can update the various template files, and update
Basic.mk, config.h.W32, and gmk-default.h.
* tests/run_make_tests.pl: Remove CRLF rather than using chop. If we
run perl in Git for Bash it seems to handle newlines differently.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Remove the make copy and close
STDIN so we can delete the temp file on Windows.
* .gitignore: Ignore the convert.sed script.
Using anonymous pipes for jobserver support has some advantages:
for example there is nothing on disk that needs to be cleaned up.
However it has many obscure problems, related to the fact that in
order for it to work we need to ensure these resources are properly
passed through to child processes that want to use the jobserver.
At the same time we don't want to pass the pipe to process which
DON'T know about the jobserver.
Other processes can open file descriptors which we then think are
our jobserver, but aren't. And, we open the pipe file descriptors
in blocking mode which doesn't work for all users.
See issues such as SV 57178, SV 57242, and SV 62397
To avoid these issues, use named pipes (on systems where they are
available) instead of anonoymous pipes. This simplifies many things:
we never need to pass open file descriptors to our children; they
can open the jobserver named pipe. We don't need to worry about
recursive vs. non-recursive children. Users don't have to "pass
through" the resources if they are invoking sub-makes. Each child
can open its own file descriptor and set blocking as needed.
The downside is the named pipe exists on disk and so must be cleaned
up when the "top-level" make instance exits.
In order to allow make to continue to be used in build systems where
older versions of GNU make, or other tools that want to use the
jobserver, but don't understand named pipes, introduce a new option
--jobserver-style that allows the user to choose anonymous pipes.
* NEWS: Announce the change and the --jobserver-style option.
* doc/make.1: Add --jobserver-style documentation.
* doc/make.texi (Special Variables): Add missing items to .FEATURES.
(Options Summary): Add --jobserver-style.
(POSIX Jobserver): Named pipes, changes to --jobserver-auth, and the
--jobserver-style option.
(Windows Jobserver): Document --jobserver-style for Windows.
* configure.ac: Check for mkfifo.
* src/config.h-vms.template: Undefined HAVE_MKFIFO.
* src/config.h.W32.template: Ditto.
* src/main.c: Add jobserver-style as a new command line option.
(main): Add jobserver-fifo to .FEATURES if supported. Pass the style
option to jobserver_setup().
* src/os.h (jobserver_setup): Accept a style string option.
* src/posixos.c (enum js_type): Enumeration of the jobserver style.
(js_type): Which style we are currently using.
(fifo_name): The path to the named pipe (if in use).
(jobserver_setup): If no style is given, or "fifo" is given, set up a
named pipe: get a temporary file and use mkfifo() on it, then open it
for reading and writing. If something fails fall back to anonymous
pipes.
(jobserver_parse_auth): Parse jobserver-auth to determine the style.
If we are using a named pipe, open it. If we're using anonymous pipes
ensure they're valid as before.
(jobserver_get_invalid_auth): Don't invalidate the jobserver when
using named pipes.
(jobserver_clear): Clean up memory used for named pipes.
(jobserver_acquire_all): Unlink the named pipe when done.
* src/w32/w32os.c (jobserver_setup): Check the style argument.
* tests/scripts/features/jobserver: Use --jobserver-style to test
the anonymous pipe behavior, and also test named pipe/semaphore
behavior. Check invalid jobserver-style options.
* tests/scripts/functions/shell: Use --jobserver-style to test the
anonymous pipe behavior, and also test named pipe/semaphore
behavior.
Second-expand only the prerequisites of the targets being built.
Defer second-expanding the prerequisites of targets until we need
to decide if they should be built.
* NEWS: Mention the change in behavior.
* doc/make.texi (Secondary Expansion): Document the new behavior.
* src/filedef.h (struct file): Add flag snapped.
(expand_deps): Declare a function to second expand the
prerequisites of a target.
* src/file.c (rehash_file): Merge flag snapped.
(expand_deps): Remove qualifier static. Check flag snapped.
(snap_deps): Remove the loop which performed second expansion for all
targets.
* src/remake.c (update_file_1): Second expand the prerequisites of
the considered target.
* tests/scripts/features/se_explicit: Add tests.
* tests/scripts/features/se_implicit: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/features/se_statpat: Ditto.
Savannah issues such as SV 57242 and SV 62397 show how passing
references to closed file descriptors via the --jobserver-auth option
in MAKEFLAGS can lead to problematic outcomes.
When computing the child environment for a non-recursive shell, add
an extra option to MAKEFLAGS to disable the file descriptors for the
jobserver.
Unfortunately this doesn't modify the value of the make variable
MAKEFLAGS, it only modifies the value of the sub-shell environment
variable MAKEFLAGS. This can lead to confusion if the user is not
considering the distinction.
* src/makeint.h: Publish the jobserver-auth value. Add a global
definition of the name of the command line option.
* src/os.h (jobserver_get_invalid_auth): New function to return a
string invalidating the jobserver-auth option.
* src/w32/w32os.c (jobserver_get_invaid_auth): Implement it. On
Windows we use a semaphore so there's no need to invalidate.
* src/posixos.c (jobserver_parse_auth): If we parse the invalid
auth string, don't set up the jobserver.
(jobserver_get_invalid_auth): Return an invalid option.
* src/variable.h (target_environment): Specify if the target
environment is for a recursive shell or non-recursive shell.
* src/variable.c (target_environment): Move checking for MAKELEVEL
into the loop rather than doing it at the end.
Along with this, check for MAKEFLAGS and MFLAGS, and update them
based on whether we're invoking a recursive or non-recursive child,
and also on whether it's necessary to invalidate the jobserver.
* src/function.c (func_shell_base): Shell functions can never be
recursive to pass 0 to target_environment().
* src/job.c (start_job_command): Specify whether the child is
recursive when calling target_environment().
* src/main.c: Export jobserver_auth. sync_mutex doesn't need to
be exported. Use the global definition for the option name.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Add tests for $MAKEFLAGS.
* src/main.c (main): Don't reset the jobserver if the number of
slots has not changed.
(define_makeflags): Add all normal flags even when ALL is not set.
* tests/scripts/functions/shell: Test invoking make in $(shell ...).
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Test the value of MAKEFLAGS in
$(shell ...).
Export all variables, including exported makefile variables, when
invoking a shell for the $(shell ...) function. If we detect a
recursive variable expansion, silently ignore that variable and do
not export it. We do print a debug message.
* NEWS: Announce the potential backward-incompatibility.
* doc/make.texi (Shell Function): Document the export behavior.
* src/main.c (main): Add "shell-export" to .FEATURES.
* src/job.h: New function to free struct childbase.
* src/job.c (free_childbase): Implement it; call from free_child.
* src/function.c (func_shell_base): Use target_environment() to
obtain the proper environment for the shell function.
Use free_childbase() to free memory.
(windows32_openpipe): Don't reset the environment: the caller
already provided a proper PATH variable in envp.
* src/variable.c (target_environment): If we detect a recursive
expansion and we're called from func_shell, ignore the variable.
(sync_Path_environment): Simplify and reduce memory allocation.
* tests/scripts/functions/shell: Add tests for this.
* src/file.c (rehash_file): Fix warning message.
(rehash_file): Fix comment to match the behavior.
* tests/scripts/features/se_explicit: Fix test.
* tests/scripts/features/mult_rules: Add a new test.
Commit f2771aa614 introduced a bug where some switches were left out
of MAKEFLAGS. Instead of resetting switches, get the same results by
filtering out duplicates.
* src/makeint.h: Remove reset_switches.
* src/main.c: (reset_switches): Remove reset_switches.
* (main): Remove call to reset_switches.
* (decode_switches): Filter out duplicate flags.
* src/variable.c: (set_special_var): Remove call to reset_switches.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Verify that duplicate flags are
properly filtered out.
If GNUMAKEFLAGS was not present in the environment when we started,
don't add it.
* src/main.c (main): Don't mess with GNUMAKEFLAGS unless it exists.
* tests/scripts/variables/GNUMAKEFLAGS: Test this behavior.
Introduce non-deterministic ordering into goal and prerequisite
traversal to help tease out inconsistent failures that may happen
when running in parallel build mode.
Introduce second order into each dependency chain:
1. Existing order is syntactic order reachable via 'dep->next'
2. New order is shuffled order stored as 'dep->shuf' in each 'dep'
When updating goals and prerequisites and '--shuffle' is provided,
use the shuffled order to walk the graph. When automatic variable
are set always use the syntactic order of parameters.
* Makefile.am: Add new src/shuffle.c and src/shuffle.h file.
* build_w32.bat: Ditto.
* builddos.bat: Ditto.
* makefile.com: Ditto.
* po/POTFILES.in: Ditto.
* doc/make.texi: Add documentation for --shuffle.
* doc/make.1: Ditto.
* src/dep.h (DEP): Add the shuf pointer.
* src/filedef.h (struct file): Add was_shuffled flag.
* src/main.c: (shuffle_mode): Global flag for the shuffle mode.
(usage): Add the --shuffle option.
(switches): Ditto.
(main): Set shuffle_mode based on the command line parameter.
Reshuffle prerequisites if requested.
* src/remake.c (update_goal_chain): Walk the shuffled list if enabled.
(update_file_1): Ditto.
* src/shuffle.h: Provide an interface for shuffling prerequisites.
* src/shuffle.c: Implement option parsing and prerequisite shuffling.
* tests/scripts/options/shuffle: Test shuffle option and modes.
During second expansion of pattern rules only the first pattern in
each "group" was being substituted. E.g. in this makefile:
.SECONDEXPANSION:
all: hello.x
%.x: $$(wordlist 1, 99, %.1 %.%.2) ; $(info $@ from $^)
hello.1 hello.\%.2 \%.1 \%.\%.2: ;
the output would build "hello.1" and "%.%.2" because each function
is considered a single "word" and only the first pattern is replaced.
Fix the expansion so each whitespace-separated string is considered a
word and the first pattern is replaced, giving "hello.1" and
"hello.%.2".
* src/rule.c (snap_implicit_rules): Keep enough space to replace %
with $(*F) if necessary.
* src/implicit.c (pattern_search): During second expansion break each
get_next_word result into individual words and replace the first % in
each with $* or $(*F) as needed.
* tests/scripts/features/patternrules: Add tests for variations.
The hash function we use can yield different results on big- and
little-endian systems which makes test output different. Choose
names to avoid this.
* tests/scripts/features/patternrules: Choose portable target names.
* tests/scripts/features/se_explicit: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/features/se_implicit: Ditto.
If -R is given on the command line it implies -r as well; make this
same assumption if -R is provided in MAKEFLAGS set in the makefile.
* src/main.c (main): Check no_builtin_variables_flag after reading
makefiles.
* tests/scripts/options/dash-r: Add a test.
Previously we always used the file->stem value as our stem in
set_file_variables(); when that wasn't correct we had to temporarily
set that value while the function was called, then reset it afterward.
This led to issues (for example when we assumed the stem was a cached
string but it wasn't).
Avoid this by passing in the stem as an argument so that different
values can be provided.
Add tests to verify this.
* src/commands.c (set_file_variables): Take second parameter stem to
relieve the callers of set_file_variables() from setting/restoring
file->stem.
* src/commands.h (set_file_variables): Ditto.
(execute_file_commands): Pass file->stem to set_file_variables().
* src/file.c (expand_deps): Pass d->stem to set_file_variables() and
remove set and restore of file->stem.
* src/implicit.c (pattern_search): Pass stem to set_file_variables()
and remove set and restore of file->stem.
* tests/scripts/features/se_explicit: Add new tests.
* tests/scripts/features/se_implicit: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/features/se_statpat: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/variables/automatic: Ditto.
During normal pattern rule expansion only the first pattern (%) is
expanded; however during secondary expansion all patterns were
expanded. Modify secondary expansion to match the behavior of normal
expansion.
Implementation tweaked by Paul Smith <psmith@gnu.org>
* src/file.c (expand_deps): Don't use subst_expand() which replaces
all % with $*: instead replace only the first one, by hand.
Fix a memory leak where the dep structure was not always freed.
* tests/scripts/features/statipattrules: Use .RECIPEPREFIX not TAB.
Add a series of tests verifying that static pattern rules with and
without secondary expansion both return the same results.
Original patch from Dmitry Goncharov <dgoncharov@users.sf.net>
Fix the ar flags to match the default values in make. If the
U option is supported, add it to the end not the beginning,
since ARFLAGS now starts with a "-".
* tests/test_driver.pl: Add defaults for global variables.
(get_osname): Preserve $osname if it's set from $^O
* tests/scripts/features/archive: Set the default arflags.
If "U" is available add it to the end of the flags.
If the re-exec fails, be sure to remove a temp makefile that was
created to read from stdin.
* src/job.c (exec_command): Return on failure.
(child_execute_job): Call exit if exec_command returns.
* src/job.h (exec_command): Don't mark as NORETURN.
* src/main.c (main): Unlink stdin temporary file if re-exec fails.
* tests/run_make_tests.pl: Get value for ERR_nonexe_file/ERR_exe_dir.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Test that temp file unlink works.
The -f, -file, and --makefile options were not properly handled when
re-exec'ing due to makefile updates. This problem, plus a patch and
tests, was reported by Dmitry Goncharov <dgoncharov@users.sf.net>.
While examining this I found another bug: after re-exec we forgot the
batch file was temporary and never deleted it.
I decided to fix all these problems at once using a different fix
than Dmitry's: I created a new internal-only command-line option,
--temp-stdin. When reconstructing the make options for a re-exec,
replace the -f/--file/--makefile option that reads from stdin with
--temp-stdin=<filename> so that the re-exec'd version of make knows
it's a temporary batch file and will delete it.
We no longer need to add the -o options because the re-exec'd make
knows this is a temporary makefile and treats it as such.
To simplify, replace the --file and --makefile options taking a
filename, with just -f<filename> on re-exec.
Some examples of the rewrite:
User command line Re-exec command line
----------------- --------------------
-f- --temp-stdin=<batch>
--file - --temp-stdin=<batch>
-f - --makefile a.mk --temp-stdin=<batch> -fa.mk
--file=a.mk -fa.mk
-fa.mk -fa.mk
-Rf a.mk -Rf a.mk
-Rf- -R --temp-stdin=<batch>
* src/main.c (stdin_offset): Remember the offset into the makefiles
list of the batch file read from stdin. Remove stdin_nm.
(struct command_switch): Create a new --temp-stdin option, which
also updates the makefiles list.
(main): Add the temporary filename to the string cache.
Move the tempfile handling after checking makefile arguments for "-"
so that files provided via --temp-stdin are also handled specially.
When rewriting re-exec options, we may need one more than we had
originally so create a new argv list. Walk through the original
list and convert it to the new list, following the above process.
(decode_switches): Set the stdin_offset flag if we see --temp-stdin.
* tests/scripts/options/dash-f: Add many more tests, provided by
Dmitry Goncharov <dgoncharov@users.sf.net>.
The fix for SV 60595 causes make to re-execute when the makefile is
read from stdin. E.g.
$ printf 'all:; $(info hello)' | make -sf -
Reported by Sergei Trofimovich <siarheit@google.com>
Test added by Paul Smith <psmith@gnu.org>
* src/main.c (main): Set the mtime of the stdin temporary file.
* tests/scripts/features/reinvoke: Add a test.
We already use undef makefile strings to mean "re-use the previous
makefile", so if the string is empty we'll assume it means "don't
use a makefile at all" (don't add -f).
* tests/run_make_tests.pl (run_make_test): If the makefile string
is empty, don't create a makefile or add -f.
* tests/scripts/features/include: Change empty makefile to "\n".
* tests/scripts/misc/close_stdout: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/options/dash-r: Ditto.
* src/main.c (main): Show the temp filename on error. Also on
Windows prefer TMP, then TEMP, and only lastly TMPDIR.
* tests/test_driver.pl: Add TMP, TEMP, and USERPROFILE to the list
of environment variables to preserve.
If a $(shell ...) invocation failed due to a command-not-found error,
make wrote the stdout of that shell to our stderr for some reason.
That seems very wrong.
If the command's stderr was not redirected then its output would have
already been written to its stderr, and if it was redirected then we
shouldn't take it upon ourselves to force it to go to stderr!
* src/function.c (func_shell_base): Append shell stdout even if the
shell command failed.
* tests/run_make_tests.pl: Determine the error generated for
command-not-found situations.
* tests/scripts/functions/shell: Verify that redirecting stderr to
stdout will behave properly if the command is not found.