#!@PERL@ -w # -*- perl -*- # @configure_input@ eval 'case $# in 0) exec @PERL@ -S "$0";; *) exec @PERL@ -S "$0" "$@";; esac' if 0; # automake - create Makefile.in from Makefile.am # Copyright (C) 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 # Free Software Foundation, Inc. # This program 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. # This program 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 this program; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA # 02111-1307, USA. # Originally written by David Mackenzie . # Perl reimplementation by Tom Tromey . package Language; BEGIN { my $prefix = "@prefix@"; my $perllibdir = $ENV{'perllibdir'} || "@datadir@/@PACKAGE@-@APIVERSION@"; unshift @INC, "$perllibdir"; } use Automake::Struct; struct (# Short name of the language (c, f77...). 'name' => "\$", # Nice name of the language (C, Fortran 77...). 'Name' => "\$", # List of configure variables which must be defined. 'config_vars' => '@', 'ansi' => "\$", # `pure' is `1' or `'. A `pure' language is one where, if # all the files in a directory are of that language, then we # do not require the C compiler or any code to call it. 'pure' => "\$", 'autodep' => "\$", # Name of the compiling variable (COMPILE). 'compiler' => "\$", # Content of the compiling variable. 'compile' => "\$", # Flag to require compilation without linking (-c). 'compile_flag' => "\$", 'extensions' => '@', # A subroutine to compute a list of possible extensions of # the product given the input extensions. # (defaults to a subroutine which returns ('.$(OBJEXT)', '.lo')) 'output_extensions' => "\$", # A list of flag variables used in 'compile'. # (defaults to []) 'flags' => "@", # The file to use when generating rules for this language. # The default is 'depend2'. 'rule_file' => "\$", # Name of the linking variable (LINK). 'linker' => "\$", # Content of the linking variable. 'link' => "\$", # Name of the linker variable (LD). 'lder' => "\$", # Content of the linker variable ($(CC)). 'ld' => "\$", # Flag to specify the output file (-o). 'output_flag' => "\$", '_finish' => "\$", # This is a subroutine which is called whenever we finally # determine the context in which a source file will be # compiled. '_target_hook' => "\$"); sub finish ($) { my ($self) = @_; if (defined $self->_finish) { &{$self->_finish} (); } } sub target_hook ($$$$) { my ($self) = @_; if (defined $self->_target_hook) { &{$self->_target_hook} (@_); } } package Automake; use strict 'vars', 'subs'; use Automake::General; use Automake::XFile; use Automake::Channels; use File::Basename; use Carp; ## ----------- ## ## Constants. ## ## ----------- ## # Parameters set by configure. Not to be changed. NOTE: assign # VERSION as string so that eg version 0.30 will print correctly. my $VERSION = "@VERSION@"; my $PACKAGE = "@PACKAGE@"; my $prefix = "@prefix@"; my $libdir = "@datadir@/@PACKAGE@-@APIVERSION@"; # Some regular expressions. One reason to put them here is that it # makes indentation work better in Emacs. # Writting singled-quoted-$-terminated regexes is a pain because # perl-mode thinks of $' as the ${'} variable (intead of a $ followed # by a closing quote. Letting perl-mode think the quote is not closed # leads to all sort of misindentations. On the other hand, defining # regexes as double-quoted strings is far less readable. So usually # we will write: # # $REGEX = '^regex_value' . "\$"; my $IGNORE_PATTERN = '^\s*##([^#\n].*)?\n'; my $WHITE_PATTERN = '^\s*' . "\$"; my $COMMENT_PATTERN = '^#'; my $TARGET_PATTERN='[$a-zA-Z_.@][-.a-zA-Z0-9_(){}/$+@]*'; # A rule has three parts: a list of targets, a list of dependencies, # and optionally actions. my $RULE_PATTERN = "^($TARGET_PATTERN(?:(?:\\\\\n|\\s)+$TARGET_PATTERN)*) *:([^=].*|)\$"; my $SUFFIX_RULE_PATTERN = '^(\.[a-zA-Z0-9_(){}$+@]+)(\.[a-zA-Z0-9_(){}$+@]+)' . "\$"; # Only recognize leading spaces, not leading tabs. If we recognize # leading tabs here then we need to make the reader smarter, because # otherwise it will think rules like `foo=bar; \' are errors. my $MACRO_PATTERN = '^[A-Za-z0-9_@]+' . "\$"; my $ASSIGNMENT_PATTERN = '^ *([^ \t=:+]*)\s*([:+]?)=\s*(.*)' . "\$"; # This pattern recognizes a Gnits version id and sets $1 if the # release is an alpha release. We also allow a suffix which can be # used to extend the version number with a "fork" identifier. my $GNITS_VERSION_PATTERN = '\d+\.\d+([a-z]|\.\d+)?(-[A-Za-z0-9]+)?'; my $IF_PATTERN = '^if\s+(!?)\s*([A-Za-z][A-Za-z0-9_]*)\s*(?:#.*)?' . "\$"; my $ELSE_PATTERN = '^else(?:\s+(!?)\s*([A-Za-z][A-Za-z0-9_]*))?\s*(?:#.*)?' . "\$"; my $ENDIF_PATTERN = '^endif(?:\s+(!?)\s*([A-Za-z][A-Za-z0-9_]*))?\s*(?:#.*)?' . "\$"; my $PATH_PATTERN = '(\w|[/.-])+'; # This will pass through anything not of the prescribed form. my $INCLUDE_PATTERN = ('^include\s+' . '((\$\(top_srcdir\)/' . $PATH_PATTERN . ')' . '|(\$\(srcdir\)/' . $PATH_PATTERN . ')' . '|([^/\$]' . $PATH_PATTERN . '))\s*(#.*)?' . "\$"); # This handles substitution references like ${foo:.a=.b}. my $SUBST_REF_PATTERN = "^([^:]*):([^=]*)=(.*)\$"; # Match `-d' as a command-line argument in a string. my $DASH_D_PATTERN = "(^|\\s)-d(\\s|\$)"; # Directories installed during 'install-exec' phase. my $EXEC_DIR_PATTERN = '^(?:bin|sbin|libexec|sysconf|localstate|lib|pkglib|.*exec.*)' . "\$"; # Constants to define the "strictness" level. use constant FOREIGN => 0; use constant GNU => 1; use constant GNITS => 2; # Values for AC_CANONICAL_* use constant AC_CANONICAL_HOST => 1; use constant AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM => 2; # Values indicating when something should be cleaned. Right now we # only need to handle `mostly'- and `dist'-clean; add more as # required. use constant MOSTLY_CLEAN => 0; use constant DIST_CLEAN => 1; # Libtool files. my @libtool_files = qw(ltmain.sh config.guess config.sub); # ltconfig appears here for compatibility with old versions of libtool. my @libtool_sometimes = qw(ltconfig ltcf-c.sh ltcf-cxx.sh ltcf-gcj.sh); # Commonly found files we look for and automatically include in # DISTFILES. my @common_files = (qw(ABOUT-GNU ABOUT-NLS AUTHORS BACKLOG COPYING COPYING.DOC COPYING.LIB COPYING.LESSER ChangeLog INSTALL NEWS README THANKS TODO acinclude.m4 ansi2knr.1 ansi2knr.c compile config.guess config.rpath config.sub configure configure.ac configure.in depcomp elisp-comp install-sh libversion.in mdate-sh missing mkinstalldirs py-compile texinfo.tex ylwrap), @libtool_files, @libtool_sometimes); # Commonly used files we auto-include, but only sometimes. my @common_sometimes = qw(aclocal.m4 acconfig.h config.h.top config.h.bot stamp-vti); # Standard directories from the GNU Coding Standards, and additional # pkg* directories from Automake. Stored in a hash for fast member check. my %standard_prefix = map { $_ => 1 } (qw(bin data exec include info lib libexec lisp localstate man man1 man2 man3 man4 man5 man6 man7 man8 man9 oldinclude pkgdatadir pkgincludedir pkglibdir sbin sharedstate sysconf)); # Declare the macros that define known variables, so we can # hint the user if she try to use one of these variables. # Macros accessible via aclocal. my %am_macro_for_var = ( ANSI2KNR => 'AM_C_PROTOTYPES', CCAS => 'AM_PROG_AS', CCASFLAGS => 'AM_PROG_AS', EMACS => 'AM_PATH_LISPDIR', GCJ => 'AM_PROG_GCJ', LEX => 'AM_PROG_LEX', LIBTOOL => 'AC_PROG_LIBTOOL', lispdir => 'AM_PATH_LISPDIR', pkgpyexecdir => 'AM_PATH_PYTHON', pkgpythondir => 'AM_PATH_PYTHON', pyexecdir => 'AM_PATH_PYTHON', PYTHON => 'AM_PATH_PYTHON', pythondir => 'AM_PATH_PYTHON', U => 'AM_C_PROTOTYPES', ); # Macros shipped with Autoconf. my %ac_macro_for_var = ( CC => 'AC_PROG_CC', CFLAGS => 'AC_PROG_CC', CXX => 'AC_PROG_CXX', CXXFLAGS => 'AC_PROG_CXX', F77 => 'AC_PROG_F77', F77FLAGS => 'AC_PROG_F77', RANLIB => 'AC_PROG_RANLIB', YACC => 'AC_PROG_YACC', ); # Copyright on generated Makefile.ins. my $gen_copyright = "\ # Copyright 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 # Free Software Foundation, Inc. # This Makefile.in is free software; the Free Software Foundation # gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, # with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law; without # even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A # PARTICULAR PURPOSE. "; # These constants are returned by lang_*_rewrite functions. # LANG_SUBDIR means that the resulting object file should be in a # subdir if the source file is. In this case the file name cannot # have `..' components. use constant LANG_IGNORE => 0; use constant LANG_PROCESS => 1; use constant LANG_SUBDIR => 2; # These are used when keeping track of whether an object can be built # by two different paths. use constant COMPILE_LIBTOOL => 1; use constant COMPILE_ORDINARY => 2; ## ---------------------------------- ## ## Variables related to the options. ## ## ---------------------------------- ## # TRUE if we should always generate Makefile.in. my $force_generation = 1; # Strictness level as set on command line. my $default_strictness = GNU; # Name of strictness level, as set on command line. my $default_strictness_name = 'gnu'; # This is TRUE if automatic dependency generation code should be # included in generated Makefile.in. my $cmdline_use_dependencies = 1; # From the Perl manual. my $symlink_exists = (eval 'symlink ("", "");', $@ eq ''); # TRUE if missing standard files should be installed. my $add_missing = 0; # TRUE if we should copy missing files; otherwise symlink if possible. my $copy_missing = 0; # TRUE if we should always update files that we know about. my $force_missing = 0; ## ---------------------------------------- ## ## Variables filled during files scanning. ## ## ---------------------------------------- ## # Name of the top autoconf input: `configure.ac' or `configure.in'. my $configure_ac = ''; # Files found by scanning configure.ac for LIBOBJS. my %libsources = (); # Names used in AC_CONFIG_HEADER call. my @config_headers = (); # Where AC_CONFIG_HEADER appears. my $config_header_location; # Directory where output files go. Actually, output files are # relative to this directory. my $output_directory; # List of Makefile.am's to process, and their corresponding outputs. my @input_files = (); my %output_files = (); # Complete list of Makefile.am's that exist. my @configure_input_files = (); # List of files in AC_CONFIG_FILES/AC_OUTPUT without Makefile.am's, # and their outputs. my @other_input_files = (); # Where the last AC_CONFIG_FILES/AC_OUTPUT appears. my $ac_config_files_location; # List of directories to search for configure-required files. This # can be set by AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR. my @config_aux_path = qw(. .. ../..); my $config_aux_dir = ''; my $config_aux_dir_set_in_configure_in = 0; # Whether AM_GNU_GETTEXT has been seen in configure.ac. my $seen_gettext = 0; # Whether AM_GNU_GETTEXT([external]) is used. my $seen_gettext_external = 0; # Where AM_GNU_GETTEXT appears. my $ac_gettext_location; # TRUE if we've seen AC_CANONICAL_(HOST|SYSTEM). my $seen_canonical = 0; my $canonical_location; # Where AM_MAINTAINER_MODE appears. my $seen_maint_mode; # Actual version we've seen. my $package_version = ''; # Where version is defined. my $package_version_location; # TRUE if we've seen AC_ENABLE_MULTILIB. my $seen_multilib = 0; # TRUE if we've seen AM_PROG_CC_C_O my $seen_cc_c_o = 0; # Where AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE is called; my $seen_init_automake = 0; # TRUE if we've seen AM_AUTOMAKE_VERSION. my $seen_automake_version = 0; # Hash table of discovered configure substitutions. Keys are names, # values are `FILE:LINE' strings which are used by error message # generation. my %configure_vars = (); # This is used to keep track of which variable definitions we are # scanning. It is only used in certain limited ways, but it has to be # global. It is declared just for documentation purposes. my %vars_scanned = (); # TRUE if --cygnus seen. my $cygnus_mode = 0; # Hash table of AM_CONDITIONAL variables seen in configure. my %configure_cond = (); # This maps extensions onto language names. my %extension_map = (); # List of the DIST_COMMON files we discovered while reading # configure.in my $configure_dist_common = ''; # This maps languages names onto objects. my %languages = (); # List of targets we must always output. # FIXME: Complete, and remove falsely required targets. my %required_targets = ( 'all' => 1, 'dvi' => 1, 'pdf' => 1, 'ps' => 1, 'info' => 1, 'install-info' => 1, 'install' => 1, 'install-data' => 1, 'install-exec' => 1, 'uninstall' => 1, # FIXME: Not required, temporary hacks. # Well, actually they are sort of required: the -recursive # targets will run them anyway... 'dvi-am' => 1, 'pdf-am' => 1, 'ps-am' => 1, 'info-am' => 1, 'install-data-am' => 1, 'install-exec-am' => 1, 'installcheck-am' => 1, 'uninstall-am' => 1, 'install-man' => 1, ); # This is set to 1 when Automake needs to be run again. # (For instance, this happens when an auxiliary file such as # depcomp is added after the toplevel Makefile.in -- which # should distribute depcomp -- has been generated.) my $automake_needs_to_reprocess_all_files = 0; # Options set via AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE. my $global_options = ''; # Same as $suffix_rules (declared below), but records only the # default rules supplied by the languages Automake supports. my $suffix_rules_default; # If a file name appears as a key in this hash, then it has already # been checked for. This variable is local to the "require file" # functions. my %require_file_found = (); ################################################################ ## ------------------------------------------ ## ## Variables reset by &initialize_per_input. ## ## ------------------------------------------ ## # Basename and relative dir of the input file. my $am_file_name; my $am_relative_dir; # Same but wrt Makefile.in. my $in_file_name; my $relative_dir; # These two variables are used when generating each Makefile.in. # They hold the Makefile.in until it is ready to be printed. my $output_rules; my $output_vars; my $output_trailer; my $output_all; my $output_header; # Suffixes found during a run. my @suffixes; # Handling the variables. # # For a $VAR: # - $var_value{$VAR}{$COND} is its value associated to $COND, # - $var_location{$VAR} is where it was defined, # - $var_comment{$VAR} are the comments associated to it. # - $var_type{$VAR} is how it has been defined (`', `+', or `:'), # - $var_owner{$VAR} tells who owns the variable (VAR_AUTOMAKE, # VAR_CONFIGURE, or VAR_MAKEFILE). my %var_value; my %var_location; my %var_comment; my %var_type; my %var_owner; # Possible values for var_owner. Defined so that the owner of # a variable can only be increased (e.g Automake should not # override a configure or Makefile variable). use constant VAR_AUTOMAKE => 0; # Variable defined by Automake. use constant VAR_CONFIGURE => 1;# Variable defined in configure.ac. use constant VAR_MAKEFILE => 2; # Variable defined in Makefile.am. # This holds a 1 if a particular variable was examined. my %content_seen; # This holds the names which are targets. These also appear in # %contents. my %targets; # Same as %VAR_VALUE, but for targets. my %target_conditional; # This is the conditional stack. my @cond_stack; # This holds the set of included files. my @include_stack; # This holds a list of directories which we must create at `dist' # time. This is used in some strange scenarios involving weird # AC_OUTPUT commands. my %dist_dirs; # List of dependencies for the obvious targets. my @all; my @check; my @check_tests; # Holds the dependencies of targets which dependencies are factored. # Typically, `.PHONY' will appear in plenty of *.am files, but must # be output once. Arguably all pure dependencies could be subject # to this factorization, but it is not unpleasant to have paragraphs # in Makefile: keeping related stuff altogether. my %dependencies; # Holds the factored actions. Tied to %DEPENDENCIES, i.e., filled # only when keys exists in %DEPENDENCIES. my %actions; # A list of files deleted by `maintainer-clean'. my @maintainer_clean_files; # Keys in this hash table are object files or other files in # subdirectories which need to be removed. This only holds files # which are created by compilations. The value in the hash indicates # when the file should be removed. my %compile_clean_files; # Keys in this hash table are directories where we expect to build a # libtool object. We use this information to decide what directories # to delete. my %libtool_clean_directories; # Value of `$(SOURCES)', used by tags.am. my @sources; # Sources which go in the distribution. my @dist_sources; # This hash maps object file names onto their corresponding source # file names. This is used to ensure that each object is created # by a single source file. my %object_map; # This hash maps object file names onto an integer value representing # whether this object has been built via ordinary compilation or # libtool compilation (the COMPILE_* constants). my %object_compilation_map; # This keeps track of the directories for which we've already # created `.dirstamp' code. my %directory_map; # All .P files. my %dep_files; # Strictness levels. my $strictness; my $strictness_name; # Options from AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS. my %options; # Whether or not dependencies are handled. Can be further changed # in handle_options. my $use_dependencies; # This is a list of all targets to run during "make dist". my @dist_targets; # Keys in this hash are the basenames of files which must depend on # ansi2knr. Values are either the empty string, or the directory in # which the ANSI source file appears; the directory must have a # trailing `/'. my %de_ansi_files; # This maps the source extension for all suffix rule seen to # a \hash whose keys are the possible output extensions. # # Note that this is transitively closed by construction: # if we have # exists $suffix_rules{$ext1}{$ext2} # && exists $suffix_rules{$ext2}{$ext3} # then we also have # exists $suffix_rules{$ext1}{$ext3} # # So it's easy to check whether '.foo' can be transformed to '.$(OBJEXT)' # by checking whether $suffix_rules{'.foo'}{'.$(OBJEXT)'} exist. This # will work even if transforming '.foo' to '.$(OBJEXT)' involves a chain # of several suffix rules. # # The value of `$suffix_rules{$ext1}{$ext2}' is the a pair # `[ $next_sfx, $dist ]' where `$next_sfx' is target suffix # for the next rule to use to reach '$ext2', and `$dist' the # distance to `$ext2'. my $suffix_rules; # This is the name of the redirect `all' target to use. my $all_target; # This keeps track of which extensions we've seen (that we care # about). my %extension_seen; # This is random scratch space for the language finish functions. # Don't randomly overwrite it; examine other uses of keys first. my %language_scratch; # We keep track of which objects need special (per-executable) # handling on a per-language basis. my %lang_specific_files; # This is set when `handle_dist' has finished. Once this happens, # we should no longer push on dist_common. my $handle_dist_run; # Used to store a set of linkers needed to generate the sources currently # under consideration. my %linkers_used; # True if we need `LINK' defined. This is a hack. my $need_link; # This is the list of such variables to output. # FIXME: Might be useless actually. my @var_list; # Was get_object_extension run? # FIXME: This is a hack. a better switch should be found. my $get_object_extension_was_run; # Contains a stack of `from' parts of variable substitutions currently in # force. my @substfroms; # Contains a stack of `to' parts of variable substitutions currently in # force. my @substtos; # This keeps track of all variables defined by subobjname. # The value stored is the variable names. # The key has the form "(COND1)VAL1(COND2)VAL2..." where VAL1 and VAL2 # are the values of the variable for condition COND1 and COND2. my %subobjvar = (); # This hash records helper variables used to implement '+=' in conditionals. # Keys have the form "VAR:CONDITIONS". The value associated to a key is # the named of the helper variable used to append to VAR in CONDITIONS. my %appendvar = (); ## --------------------------------- ## ## Forward subroutine declarations. ## ## --------------------------------- ## sub register_language (%); sub file_contents_internal ($$%); sub define_objects_from_sources ($$$$$$$); # &initialize_per_input () # ------------------------ # (Re)-Initialize per-Makefile.am variables. sub initialize_per_input () { reset_local_duplicates (); $am_file_name = ''; $am_relative_dir = ''; $in_file_name = ''; $relative_dir = ''; $output_rules = ''; $output_vars = ''; $output_trailer = ''; $output_all = ''; $output_header = ''; @suffixes = (); %var_value = (); %var_location = (); %var_comment = (); %var_type = (); %var_owner = (); %content_seen = (); %targets = (); %target_conditional = (); @cond_stack = (); @include_stack = (); %dist_dirs = (); @all = (); @check = (); @check_tests = (); %dependencies = ( # Texinfoing. 'dvi' => [], 'dvi-am' => [], 'pdf' => [], 'pdf-am' => [], 'ps' => [], 'ps-am' => [], 'info' => [], 'info-am' => [], # Installing/uninstalling. 'install-data-am' => [], 'install-exec-am' => [], 'uninstall-am' => [], 'install-man' => [], 'uninstall-man' => [], 'install-info' => [], 'install-info-am' => [], 'uninstall-info' => [], 'installcheck-am' => [], # Cleaning. 'clean-am' => [], 'mostlyclean-am' => [], 'maintainer-clean-am' => [], 'distclean-am' => [], 'clean' => [], 'mostlyclean' => [], 'maintainer-clean' => [], 'distclean' => [], # Tarballing. 'dist-all' => [], # Phoning. '.PHONY' => [] ); %actions = (); @maintainer_clean_files = (); @sources = (); @dist_sources = (); %object_map = (); %object_compilation_map = (); %directory_map = (); %dep_files = (); $strictness = $default_strictness; $strictness_name = $default_strictness_name; %options = (); $use_dependencies = $cmdline_use_dependencies; @dist_targets = (); %de_ansi_files = (); # The first time we initialize the variables, # we save the value of $suffix_rules. if (defined $suffix_rules_default) { $suffix_rules = $suffix_rules_default; } else { $suffix_rules_default = $suffix_rules; } $all_target = ''; %extension_seen = (); %language_scratch = (); %lang_specific_files = (); $handle_dist_run = 0; $need_link = 0; @var_list = (); $get_object_extension_was_run = 0; %compile_clean_files = (); # We always include `.'. This isn't strictly correct. %libtool_clean_directories = ('.' => 1); %subobjvar = (); %appendvar = (); } ################################################################ # Initialize our list of error/warning channels. # Do not forget to update &usage and the manual # if you add or change a warning channel. # Fatal errors. register_channel 'fatal', type => 'fatal'; # Common errors. register_channel 'error', type => 'error'; # Errors related to GNU Standards. register_channel 'error-gnu', type => 'error'; # Errors related to GNU Standards that should be warnings in `foreign' mode. register_channel 'error-gnu/warn', type => 'error'; # Errors related to GNITS Standards (silent by default). register_channel 'error-gnits', type => 'error', silent => 1; # Internal errors. register_channel 'automake', type => 'fatal', header => ("####################\n" . "## Internal Error ##\n" . "####################\n"), footer => "\nPlease contact ."; # Warnings about unsupported (or mis-supported) features. register_channel 'unsupported', type => 'warning'; # Unused variables. register_channel 'unused', type => 'warning'; # Warnings about obsolete features (silent by default). register_channel 'obsolete', type => 'warning', silent => 1; # Warnings about non-portable constructs. register_channel 'portability', type => 'warning', silent => 1; # Warnings related to GNU Coding Standards. register_channel 'gnu', type => 'warning'; # For &verb. register_channel 'verb', type => 'debug', silent => 1; # Informative messages. register_channel 'note', type => 'debug', silent => 0; # Initialize our list of languages that are internally supported. # C. register_language ('name' => 'c', 'Name' => 'C', 'config_vars' => ['CC'], 'ansi' => 1, 'autodep' => '', 'flags' => ['CFLAGS', 'CPPFLAGS'], 'compiler' => 'COMPILE', 'compile' => '$(CC) $(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(AM_CFLAGS) $(CFLAGS)', 'lder' => 'CCLD', 'ld' => '$(CC)', 'linker' => 'LINK', 'link' => '$(CCLD) $(AM_CFLAGS) $(CFLAGS) $(AM_LDFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@', 'compile_flag' => '-c', 'extensions' => ['.c'], '_finish' => \&lang_c_finish); # C++. register_language ('name' => 'cxx', 'Name' => 'C++', 'config_vars' => ['CXX'], 'linker' => 'CXXLINK', 'link' => '$(CXXLD) $(AM_CXXFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS) $(AM_LDFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@', 'autodep' => 'CXX', 'flags' => ['CXXFLAGS', 'CPPFLAGS'], 'compile' => '$(CXX) $(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(AM_CXXFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS)', 'compiler' => 'CXXCOMPILE', 'compile_flag' => '-c', 'output_flag' => '-o', 'lder' => 'CXXLD', 'ld' => '$(CXX)', 'pure' => 1, 'extensions' => ['.c++', '.cc', '.cpp', '.cxx', '.C']); # Objective C. register_language ('name' => 'objc', 'Name' => 'Objective C', 'config_vars' => ['OBJC'], 'linker' => 'OBJCLINK',, 'link' => '$(OBJCLD) $(AM_OBJCFLAGS) $(OBJCFLAGS) $(AM_LDFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@', 'autodep' => 'OBJC', 'flags' => ['OBJCFLAGS', 'CPPFLAGS'], 'compile' => '$(OBJC) $(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(AM_OBJCFLAGS) $(OBJCFLAGS)', 'compiler' => 'OBJCCOMPILE', 'compile_flag' => '-c', 'output_flag' => '-o', 'lder' => 'OBJCLD', 'ld' => '$(OBJC)', 'pure' => 1, 'extensions' => ['.m']); # Headers. register_language ('name' => 'header', 'Name' => 'Header', 'extensions' => ['.h', '.H', '.hxx', '.h++', '.hh', '.hpp', '.inc'], # No output. 'output_extensions' => sub { return () }, # Nothing to do. '_finish' => sub { }); # Yacc (C & C++). register_language ('name' => 'yacc', 'Name' => 'Yacc', 'config_vars' => ['YACC'], 'flags' => ['YFLAGS'], 'compile' => '$(YACC) $(YFLAGS) $(AM_YFLAGS)', 'compiler' => 'YACCCOMPILE', 'extensions' => ['.y'], 'output_extensions' => sub { (my $ext = $_[0]) =~ tr/y/c/; return ($ext,) }, 'rule_file' => 'yacc', '_finish' => \&lang_yacc_finish, '_target_hook' => \&lang_yacc_target_hook); register_language ('name' => 'yaccxx', 'Name' => 'Yacc (C++)', 'config_vars' => ['YACC'], 'rule_file' => 'yacc', 'flags' => ['YFLAGS'], 'compiler' => 'YACCCOMPILE', 'compile' => '$(YACC) $(YFLAGS) $(AM_YFLAGS)', 'extensions' => ['.y++', '.yy', '.yxx', '.ypp'], 'output_extensions' => sub { (my $ext = $_[0]) =~ tr/y/c/; return ($ext,) }, '_finish' => \&lang_yacc_finish, '_target_hook' => \&lang_yacc_target_hook); # Lex (C & C++). register_language ('name' => 'lex', 'Name' => 'Lex', 'config_vars' => ['LEX'], 'rule_file' => 'lex', 'flags' => ['LFLAGS'], 'compile' => '$(LEX) $(LFLAGS) $(AM_LFLAGS)', 'compiler' => 'LEXCOMPILE', 'extensions' => ['.l'], 'output_extensions' => sub { (my $ext = $_[0]) =~ tr/l/c/; return ($ext,) }, '_finish' => \&lang_lex_finish, '_target_hook' => \&lang_lex_target_hook); register_language ('name' => 'lexxx', 'Name' => 'Lex (C++)', 'config_vars' => ['LEX'], 'rule_file' => 'lex', 'flags' => ['LFLAGS'], 'compile' => '$(LEX) $(LFLAGS) $(AM_LFLAGS)', 'compiler' => 'LEXCOMPILE', 'extensions' => ['.l++', '.ll', '.lxx', '.lpp'], 'output_extensions' => sub { (my $ext = $_[0]) =~ tr/l/c/; return ($ext,) }, '_finish' => \&lang_lex_finish, '_target_hook' => \&lang_lex_target_hook); # Assembler. register_language ('name' => 'asm', 'Name' => 'Assembler', 'config_vars' => ['CCAS', 'CCASFLAGS'], 'flags' => ['CCASFLAGS'], # Users can set AM_ASFLAGS to includes DEFS, INCLUDES, # or anything else required. They can also set AS. 'compile' => '$(CCAS) $(AM_CCASFLAGS) $(CCASFLAGS)', 'compiler' => 'CCASCOMPILE', 'compile_flag' => '-c', 'extensions' => ['.s', '.S'], # With assembly we still use the C linker. '_finish' => \&lang_c_finish); # Fortran 77 register_language ('name' => 'f77', 'Name' => 'Fortran 77', 'linker' => 'F77LINK', 'link' => '$(F77LD) $(AM_FFLAGS) $(FFLAGS) $(AM_LDFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@', 'flags' => ['FFLAGS'], 'compile' => '$(F77) $(AM_FFLAGS) $(FFLAGS)', 'compiler' => 'F77COMPILE', 'compile_flag' => '-c', 'output_flag' => '-o', 'lder' => 'F77LD', 'ld' => '$(F77)', 'pure' => 1, 'extensions' => ['.f', '.for', '.f90']); # Preprocessed Fortran 77 # # The current support for preprocessing Fortran 77 just involves # passing `$(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) # $(CPPFLAGS)' as additional flags to the Fortran 77 compiler, since # this is how GNU Make does it; see the `GNU Make Manual, Edition 0.51 # for `make' Version 3.76 Beta' (specifically, from info file # `(make)Catalogue of Rules'). # # A better approach would be to write an Autoconf test # (i.e. AC_PROG_FPP) for a Fortran 77 preprocessor, because not all # Fortran 77 compilers know how to do preprocessing. The Autoconf # macro AC_PROG_FPP should test the Fortran 77 compiler first for # preprocessing capabilities, and then fall back on cpp (if cpp were # available). register_language ('name' => 'ppf77', 'Name' => 'Preprocessed Fortran 77', 'config_vars' => ['F77'], 'linker' => 'F77LINK', 'link' => '$(F77LD) $(AM_FFLAGS) $(FFLAGS) $(AM_LDFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@', 'lder' => 'F77LD', 'ld' => '$(F77)', 'flags' => ['FFLAGS', 'CPPFLAGS'], 'compiler' => 'PPF77COMPILE', 'compile' => '$(F77) $(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) $(AM_FFLAGS) $(FFLAGS)', 'compile_flag' => '-c', 'output_flag' => '-o', 'pure' => 1, 'extensions' => ['.F']); # Ratfor. register_language ('name' => 'ratfor', 'Name' => 'Ratfor', 'config_vars' => ['F77'], 'linker' => 'F77LINK', 'link' => '$(F77LD) $(AM_FFLAGS) $(FFLAGS) $(AM_LDFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@', 'lder' => 'F77LD', 'ld' => '$(F77)', 'flags' => ['RFLAGS', 'FFLAGS'], # FIXME also FFLAGS. 'compile' => '$(F77) $(AM_FFLAGS) $(FFLAGS) $(AM_RFLAGS) $(RFLAGS)', 'compiler' => 'RCOMPILE', 'compile_flag' => '-c', 'output_flag' => '-o', 'pure' => 1, 'extensions' => ['.r']); # Java via gcj. register_language ('name' => 'java', 'Name' => 'Java', 'config_vars' => ['GCJ'], 'linker' => 'GCJLINK', 'link' => '$(GCJLD) $(AM_GCJFLAGS) $(GCJFLAGS) $(AM_LDFLAGS) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@', 'autodep' => 'GCJ', 'flags' => ['GCJFLAGS'], 'compile' => '$(GCJ) $(AM_GCJFLAGS) $(GCJFLAGS)', 'compiler' => 'GCJCOMPILE', 'compile_flag' => '-c', 'output_flag' => '-o', 'lder' => 'GCJLD', 'ld' => '$(GCJ)', 'pure' => 1, 'extensions' => ['.java', '.class', '.zip', '.jar']); ################################################################ # Parse the WARNINGS environnent variable. &parse_WARNINGS; # Parse command line. &parse_arguments; # Do configure.ac scan only once. &scan_autoconf_files; &fatal ("no `Makefile.am' found or specified\n") if ! @input_files; my $automake_has_run = 0; do { if ($automake_has_run) { &verb ('processing Makefiles another time to fix them up.'); &prog_error ('running more than two times should never be needed.') if $automake_has_run >= 2; } $automake_needs_to_reprocess_all_files = 0; # Now do all the work on each file. # This guy must be local otherwise it's private to the loop. use vars '$am_file'; local $am_file; foreach $am_file (@input_files) { if (! -f ($am_file . '.am')) { &err ("`$am_file.am' does not exist"); } else { &generate_makefile ($output_files{$am_file}, $am_file); } } ++$automake_has_run; } while ($automake_needs_to_reprocess_all_files); exit $exit_code; ################################################################ # Error reporting functions. # prog_error ($MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # ------------------------------- # Signal a programming error, display $MESSAGE, and exit 1. sub prog_error ($;%) { my ($msg, %opts) = @_; msg 'automake', '', $msg, %opts; } # err ($WHERE, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # err ($MESSAGE) # ---------------------------------- # Uncategorized errors. sub err ($;$%) { my ($where, $msg, %opts) = @_; msg ('error', $where, $msg, %opts); } # fatal ($WHERE, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # fatal ($MESSAGE) # ---------------------------------- # Fatal errors. sub fatal ($;$%) { my ($where, $msg, %opts) = @_; msg ('fatal', $where, $msg, %opts); } # err_var ($VARNAME, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # ---------------------------------------- # Uncategorized errors about variables. sub err_var ($$;%) { msg_var ('error', @_); } # err_target ($TARGETNAME, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # ---------------------------------------------- # Uncategorized errors about targets. sub err_target ($$;%) { msg_target ('error', @_); } # err_am ($MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # ----------------------------- # Uncategorized errors about the current Makefile.am. sub err_am ($;%) { msg_am ('error', @_); } # err_ac ($MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # ----------------------------- # Uncategorized errors about configure.ac. sub err_ac ($;%) { msg_ac ('error', @_); } # msg_var ($CHANNEL, $VARNAME, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # -------------------------------------------------- # Messages about variables. sub msg_var ($$$;%) { my ($channel, $macro, $msg, %opts) = @_; msg $channel, $var_location{$macro}, $msg, %opts; } # msg_target ($CHANNEL, $TARGETNAME, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # -------------------------------------------------------- # Messages about targets. sub msg_target ($$$;%) { my ($channel, $target, $msg, %opts) = @_; msg $channel, $targets{$target}, $msg, %opts; } # msg_am ($CHANNEL, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # --------------------------------------- # Messages about about the current Makefile.am. sub msg_am ($$;%) { my ($channel, $msg, %opts) = @_; msg $channel, "${am_file}.am", $msg, %opts; } # msg_ac ($CHANNEL, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # --------------------------------------- # Messages about about configure.ac. sub msg_ac ($$;%) { my ($channel, $msg, %opts) = @_; msg $channel, $configure_ac, $msg, %opts; } # $BOOL # reject_var ($VAR, $ERROR_MSG) # ---------------------------------- sub reject_var ($$) { my ($var, $msg) = @_; if (variable_defined ($var)) { err_var $var, $msg; return 1; } return 0; } # $BOOL # reject_target ($VAR, $ERROR_MSG) # -------------------------------- sub reject_target ($$) { my ($target, $msg) = @_; if (target_defined ($target)) { err_target $target, $msg; return 1; } return 0; } # verb ($MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]) # --------------------------- sub verb ($;%) { my ($msg, %opts) = @_; msg 'verb', '', $msg, %opts; } ################################################################ # subst ($TEXT) # ------------- # Return a configure-style substitution using the indicated text. # We do this to avoid having the substitutions directly in automake.in; # when we do that they are sometimes removed and this causes confusion # and bugs. sub subst ($) { my ($text) = @_; return '@' . $text . '@'; } ################################################################ # $BACKPATH # &backname ($REL-DIR) # -------------------- # If I `cd $REL-DIR', then to come back, I should `cd $BACKPATH'. # For instance `src/foo' => `../..'. # Works with non strictly increasing paths, i.e., `src/../lib' => `..'. sub backname ($) { my ($file) = @_; my @res; foreach (split (/\//, $file)) { next if $_ eq '.' || $_ eq ''; if ($_ eq '..') { pop @res; } else { push (@res, '..'); } } return join ('/', @res) || '.'; } ################################################################ # Pattern that matches all know input extensions (i.e. extensions used # by the languages supported by Automake). Using this pattern # (instead of `\..*$') to match extensions allows Automake to support # dot-less extensions. my $KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN = ""; my @known_extensions_list = (); # accept_extensions (@EXTS) # ------------------------- # Update $KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN to recognize the extensions # listed @EXTS. Extensions should contain a dot if needed. sub accept_extensions (@) { push @known_extensions_list, @_; $KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN = '(?:' . join ('|', map (quotemeta, @known_extensions_list)) . ')'; } # var_SUFFIXES_trigger ($TYPE, $VALUE) # ------------------------------------ # This is called automagically by define_macro() when SUFFIXES # is defined ($TYPE eq '') or appended ($TYPE eq '+'). # The work here needs to be performed as a side-effect of the # define_macro() call because SUFFIXES definitions impact # on $KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN, and $KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN # are used when parsing the input am file. sub var_SUFFIXES_trigger ($$) { my ($type, $value) = @_; accept_extensions (split (' ', $value)); } ################################################################ # switch_warning ($CATEGORY) # -------------------------- # If $CATEGORY is mumble, turn on the mumble channel. # If it's no-mumble, turn mumble off. # Alse handle `all' and `none' for completeness. sub switch_warning ($) { my ($cat) = @_; my $has_no = 0; if ($cat =~ /^no-(.*)$/) { $cat = $1; $has_no = 1; } if ($cat eq 'all') { setup_channel_type 'warning', silent => $has_no; } elsif ($cat eq 'none') { setup_channel_type 'warning', silent => 1 - $has_no; } elsif ($cat eq 'error') { $warnings_are_errors = 1 - $has_no; } elsif (channel_type ($cat) eq 'warning') { setup_channel $cat, silent => $has_no; } else { return 1; } return 0; } # parse_WARNINGS # -------------- # Honor the WARNINGS environment variable. sub parse_WARNINGS ($$) { if (exists $ENV{'WARNINGS'}) { # Ignore unknown categories. This is required because WARNINGS # should be honored by many tools. switch_warning $_ foreach (split (',', $ENV{'WARNINGS'})); } } # parse_warning ($OPTION, $ARGUMENT) # ---------------------------------- # Parse the argument of --warning=CATEGORY or -WCATEGORY. sub parse_warnings ($$) { my ($opt, $categories) = @_; foreach my $cat (split (',', $categories)) { msg 'unsupported', "unknown warning category `$cat'" if switch_warning $cat; } } # Parse command line. sub parse_arguments () { # Start off as gnu. &set_strictness ('gnu'); my %options = ( 'libdir:s' => \$libdir, 'gnu' => sub { &set_strictness ('gnu'); }, 'gnits' => sub { &set_strictness ('gnits'); }, 'cygnus' => \$cygnus_mode, 'foreign' => sub { &set_strictness ('foreign'); }, 'include-deps' => sub { $cmdline_use_dependencies = 1; }, 'i|ignore-deps' => sub { $cmdline_use_dependencies = 0; }, 'no-force' => sub { $force_generation = 0; }, 'f|force-missing' => \$force_missing, 'o|output-dir:s' => \$output_directory, 'a|add-missing' => \$add_missing, 'c|copy' => \$copy_missing, 'v|verbose' => sub { setup_channel 'verb', silent => 0; }, 'W|warnings:s' => \&parse_warnings, # These long options (--Werror and --Wno-error) for backward # compatibility. Use -Werror and -Wno-error today. 'Werror' => sub { parse_warnings 'W', 'error'; }, 'Wno-error' => sub { parse_warnings 'W', 'no-error'; }, ); use Getopt::Long; Getopt::Long::config ("bundling", "pass_through"); # See if --version or --help is used. We want to process these before # anything else because the GNU Coding Standards require us to # `exit 0' after processing these options, and we can't garanty this # if we treat other options first. (Handling other options first # could produce error diagnostics, and in this condition it is # confusing if Automake `exit 0'.) my %options_1st_pass = ( 'version' => \&version, 'help' => \&usage, # Recognize all other options (and their arguments) but do nothing. map { $_ => sub {} } (keys %options) ); my @ARGV_backup = @ARGV; Getopt::Long::GetOptions %options_1st_pass or exit 1; @ARGV = @ARGV_backup; # Now *really* process the options. This time we know # that --help and --version are not present. Getopt::Long::GetOptions %options or exit 1; if (defined $output_directory) { msg 'obsolete', "`--output-dir' is deprecated\n"; } else { # In the next release we'll remove this entirely. $output_directory = '.'; } foreach my $arg (@ARGV) { if ($arg =~ /^-./) { fatal ("unrecognized option `$arg'\n" . "Try `$0 --help' for more information."); } # Handle $local:$input syntax. Note that we only examine the # first ":" file to see if it is automake input; the rest are # just taken verbatim. We still keep all the files around for # dependency checking, however. my ($local, $input, @rest) = split (/:/, $arg); if (! $input) { $input = $local; } else { # Strip .in; later on .am is tacked on. That is how the # automake input file is found. Maybe not the best way, but # it is easy to explain. $input =~ s/\.in$// or fatal "invalid input file name `$arg'\n."; } push (@input_files, $input); $output_files{$input} = join (':', ($local, @rest)); } # Take global strictness from whatever we currently have set. $default_strictness = $strictness; $default_strictness_name = $strictness_name; } ################################################################ # Generate a Makefile.in given the name of the corresponding Makefile and # the name of the file output by config.status. sub generate_makefile { my ($output, $makefile) = @_; # Reset all the Makefile.am related variables. &initialize_per_input; # Any warning setting now local to this Makefile.am. &dup_channel_setup; # Name of input file ("Makefile.am") and output file # ("Makefile.in"). These have no directory components. $am_file_name = basename ($makefile) . '.am'; $in_file_name = basename ($makefile) . '.in'; # $OUTPUT is encoded. If it contains a ":" then the first element # is the real output file, and all remaining elements are input # files. We don't scan or otherwise deal with these input file, # other than to mark them as dependencies. See # &scan_autoconf_files for details. my (@secondary_inputs); ($output, @secondary_inputs) = split (/:/, $output); $relative_dir = dirname ($output); $am_relative_dir = dirname ($makefile); &read_main_am_file ($makefile . '.am'); if (&handle_options) { # Fatal error. Just return, so we can continue with next file. return; } # There are a few install-related variables that you should not define. foreach my $var ('PRE_INSTALL', 'POST_INSTALL', 'NORMAL_INSTALL') { reject_var $var, "`$var' should not be defined" if $var_owner{$var} != VAR_AUTOMAKE; } # Catch some obsolete variables. msg_var ('obsolete', 'INCLUDES', "`INCLUDES' is the old name for `AM_CPPFLAGS'") if variable_defined ('INCLUDES'); # At the toplevel directory, we might need config.guess, config.sub # or libtool scripts (ltconfig and ltmain.sh). if ($relative_dir eq '.') { # AC_CANONICAL_HOST and AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM need config.guess and # config.sub. require_conf_file ($canonical_location, FOREIGN, 'config.guess', 'config.sub') if $seen_canonical; } # We still need Makefile.in here, because sometimes the `dist' # target doesn't re-run automake. if ($am_relative_dir eq $relative_dir) { # Only distribute the files if they are in the same subdir as # the generated makefile. &push_dist_common ($in_file_name, $am_file_name); } push (@sources, '$(SOURCES)') if variable_defined ('SOURCES'); # Must do this after reading .am file. See read_main_am_file to # understand weird tricks we play there with variables. &define_variable ('subdir', $relative_dir); # Check first, because we might modify some state. &check_cygnus; &check_gnu_standards; &check_gnits_standards; &handle_configure ($output, $makefile, @secondary_inputs); &handle_gettext; &handle_libraries; &handle_ltlibraries; &handle_programs; &handle_scripts; # This must run first so that the ANSI2KNR definition is generated # before it is used by the _.c rules. We have to do this because # a variable which is used in a dependency must be defined before # the target, or else make won't properly see it. &handle_compile; # This must be run after all the sources are scanned. &handle_languages; # We have to run this after dealing with all the programs. &handle_libtool; # Re-init SOURCES. FIXME: other code shouldn't depend on this # (but currently does). macro_define ('SOURCES', VAR_AUTOMAKE, '', 'TRUE', "@sources", 'internal'); define_pretty_variable ('DIST_SOURCES', '', @dist_sources); &handle_multilib; &handle_texinfo; &handle_emacs_lisp; &handle_python; &handle_java; &handle_man_pages; &handle_data; &handle_headers; &handle_subdirs; &handle_tags; &handle_minor_options; &handle_tests; # This must come after most other rules. &handle_dist ($makefile); &handle_footer; &do_check_merge_target; &handle_all ($output); # FIXME: Gross! if (variable_defined ('lib_LTLIBRARIES') && variable_defined ('bin_PROGRAMS')) { $output_rules .= "install-binPROGRAMS: install-libLTLIBRARIES\n\n"; } &handle_installdirs; &handle_clean; &handle_factored_dependencies; check_typos (); if (! -d ($output_directory . '/' . $am_relative_dir)) { mkdir ($output_directory . '/' . $am_relative_dir, 0755); } my ($out_file) = $output_directory . '/' . $makefile . ".in"; if (! $force_generation && -e $out_file) { my ($am_time) = (stat ($makefile . '.am'))[9]; my ($in_time) = (stat ($out_file))[9]; # FIXME: should cache these times. my ($conf_time) = (stat ($configure_ac))[9]; # FIXME: how to do unsigned comparison? if ($am_time < $in_time || $am_time < $conf_time) { # No need to update. return; } if (-f 'aclocal.m4') { my ($acl_time) = (stat _)[9]; return if ($am_time < $acl_time); } } if (-e "$out_file") { unlink ($out_file) or fatal "cannot remove $out_file: $!\n"; } my $gm_file = new Automake::XFile "> $out_file"; verb "creating $makefile.in"; print $gm_file $output_vars; # We make sure that `all:' is the first target. print $gm_file $output_all; print $gm_file $output_header; print $gm_file $output_rules; print $gm_file $output_trailer; # Back out any warning setting. &drop_channel_setup; } ################################################################ # A version is a string that looks like # MAJOR.MINOR[.MICRO][ALPHA][-FORK] # where # MAJOR, MINOR, and MICRO are digits, ALPHA is a character, and # FORK any alphanumeric word. # Usually, ALPHA is used to label alpha releases or intermediate snapshots, # FORK is used for CVS branches or patched releases, and MICRO is used # for bug fixes releases on the MAJOR.MINOR branch. # # For the purpose of ordering, 1.4 is the same as 1.4.0, but 1.4g is # the same as 1.4.99g. The FORK identifier is ignored in the # ordering, except when it looks like -pMINOR[ALPHA]: some versions # were labelled like 1.4-p3a, this is the same as an alpha release # labelled 1.4.3a. Yes it's horrible, but Automake did not support # two-dot versions in the past. # version_split (VERSION) # ----------------------- # Split a version string into the corresponding (MAJOR, MINOR, MICRO, # ALPHA, FORK) tuple. For instance "1.4g" would be split into # (1, 4, 99, 'g', ''). # Return () on error. sub version_split ($) { my ($ver) = @_; # Special case for versions like 1.4-p2a. if ($ver =~ /^(\d+)\.(\d+)(?:-p(\d+)([a-z]+)?)$/) { return ($1, $2, $3, $4 || '', ''); } # Common case. elsif ($ver =~ /^(\d+)\.(\d+)(?:\.(\d+))?([a-z])?(?:-([A-Za-z0-9]+))?$/) { return ($1, $2, $3 || (defined $4 ? 99 : 0), $4 || '', $5 || ''); } return (); } # version_compare (\@LVERSION, \@RVERSION) # ---------------------------------------- # Return 1 if LVERSION > RVERSION, # -1 if LVERSION < RVERSION, # 0 if LVERSION = RVERSION. sub version_compare (\@\@) { my @l = @{$_[0]}; my @r = @{$_[1]}; for my $i (0, 1, 2) { return 1 if ($l[$i] > $r[$i]); return -1 if ($l[$i] < $r[$i]); } for my $i (3, 4) { return 1 if ($l[$i] gt $r[$i]); return -1 if ($l[$i] lt $r[$i]); } return 0; } # Handles the logic of requiring a version number in AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS. # Return 0 if the required version is satisfied, 1 otherwise. sub version_check ($) { my ($required) = @_; my @version = version_split $VERSION; my @required = version_split $required; prog_error "version is incorrect: $VERSION" if $#version == -1; # This should not happen, because process_option_list and split_version # use similar regexes. prog_error "required version is incorrect: $required" if $#required == -1; # If we require 3.4n-foo then we require something # >= 3.4n, with the `foo' fork identifier. return 1 if ($required[4] ne '' && $required[4] ne $version[4]); return 0 > version_compare @version, @required; } # $BOOL # process_option_list ($CONFIG, @OPTIONS) # ------------------------------ # Process a list of options. Return 1 on error, 0 otherwise. # This is a helper for handle_options. CONFIG is true if we're # handling global options. sub process_option_list { my ($config, @list) = @_; my $where = ($config ? $seen_init_automake : $var_location{'AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS'}); foreach (@list) { $options{$_} = 1; if ($_ eq 'gnits' || $_ eq 'gnu' || $_ eq 'foreign') { &set_strictness ($_); } elsif ($_ eq 'cygnus') { $cygnus_mode = 1; } elsif (/^(.*\/)?ansi2knr$/) { # An option like "../lib/ansi2knr" is allowed. With no # path prefix, we assume the required programs are in this # directory. We save the actual option for later. $options{'ansi2knr'} = $_; } elsif ($_ eq 'no-installman' || $_ eq 'no-installinfo' || $_ eq 'dist-shar' || $_ eq 'dist-zip' || $_ eq 'dist-tarZ' || $_ eq 'dist-bzip2' || $_ eq 'dejagnu' || $_ eq 'no-texinfo.tex' || $_ eq 'readme-alpha' || $_ eq 'check-news' || $_ eq 'subdir-objects' || $_ eq 'nostdinc' || $_ eq 'no-exeext' || $_ eq 'no-define' || $_ eq 'std-options') { # Explicitly recognize these. } elsif ($_ eq 'no-dependencies') { $use_dependencies = 0; } elsif (/^\d+\.\d+(?:\.\d+)?[a-z]?(?:-[A-Za-z0-9]+)?$/) { # Got a version number. if (version_check $&) { err ($where, "require version $_, but have $VERSION", uniq_scope => US_GLOBAL); return 1; } } elsif (/^(?:--warnings=|-W)(.*)$/) { foreach my $cat (split (',', $1)) { msg 'unsupported', $where, "unknown warning category `$cat'" if switch_warning $cat; } } else { err ($where, "option `$_' not recognized", uniq_scope => US_GLOBAL); return 1; } } } # Handle AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS variable. Return 1 on error, 0 otherwise. sub handle_options { # Process global options first so that more specific options can # override. if (&process_option_list (1, split (' ', $global_options))) { return 1; } if (variable_defined ('AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS')) { if (&process_option_list (0, &variable_value_as_list_recursive ('AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS', ''))) { return 1; } } if ($strictness == GNITS) { $options{'readme-alpha'} = 1; $options{'std-options'} = 1; $options{'check-news'} = 1; } return 0; } # get_object_extension ($OUT) # --------------------------- # Return object extension. Just once, put some code into the output. # OUT is the name of the output file sub get_object_extension { my ($out) = @_; # Maybe require libtool library object files. my $extension = '.$(OBJEXT)'; $extension = '.lo' if ($out =~ /\.la$/); # Check for automatic de-ANSI-fication. $extension = '$U' . $extension if defined $options{'ansi2knr'}; $get_object_extension_was_run = 1; return $extension; } # Call finish function for each language that was used. sub handle_languages { if ($use_dependencies) { # Include auto-dep code. Don't include it if DEP_FILES would # be empty. if (&saw_sources_p (0) && keys %dep_files) { # Set location of depcomp. &define_variable ('depcomp', "\$(SHELL) $config_aux_dir/depcomp"); &define_variable ('am__depfiles_maybe', 'depfiles'); require_conf_file ("$am_file.am", FOREIGN, 'depcomp'); my @deplist = sort keys %dep_files; # We define this as a conditional variable because BSD # make can't handle backslashes for continuing comments on # the following line. define_pretty_variable ('DEP_FILES', 'AMDEP_TRUE', @deplist); # Generate each `include' individually. Irix 6 make will # not properly include several files resulting from a # variable expansion; generating many separate includes # seems safest. $output_rules .= "\n"; foreach my $iter (@deplist) { $output_rules .= (subst ('AMDEP_TRUE') . subst ('am__include') . ' ' . subst ('am__quote') . $iter . subst ('am__quote') . "\n"); } # Compute the set of directories to remove in distclean-depend. my @depdirs = uniq (map { dirname ($_) } @deplist); $output_rules .= &file_contents ('depend', DEPDIRS => "@depdirs"); } } else { &define_variable ('depcomp', ''); &define_variable ('am__depfiles_maybe', ''); } my %done; # Is the c linker needed? my $needs_c = 0; foreach my $ext (sort keys %extension_seen) { next unless $extension_map{$ext}; my $lang = $languages{$extension_map{$ext}}; my $rule_file = $lang->rule_file || 'depend2'; # Get information on $LANG. my $pfx = $lang->autodep; my $fpfx = ($pfx eq '') ? 'CC' : $pfx; my $AMDEP = (($use_dependencies && $lang->autodep ne 'no') ? 'AMDEP' : 'FALSE'); my $FASTDEP = (($use_dependencies && $lang->autodep ne 'no') ? ('am__fastdep' . $fpfx) : 'FALSE'); my %transform = ('EXT' => $ext, 'PFX' => $pfx, 'FPFX' => $fpfx, 'AMDEP' => $AMDEP, 'FASTDEP' => $FASTDEP, '-c' => $lang->compile_flag || '', 'MORE-THAN-ONE' => (count_files_for_language ($lang->name) > 1)); # Generate the appropriate rules for this extension. if (($use_dependencies && $lang->autodep ne 'no') || defined $lang->compile) { # Some C compilers don't support -c -o. Use it only if really # needed. my $output_flag = $lang->output_flag || ''; $output_flag = '-o' if (! $output_flag && $lang->name eq 'c' && defined $options{'subdir-objects'}); # Compute a possible derived extension. # This is not used by depend2.am. my $der_ext = (&{$lang->output_extensions} ($ext))[0]; $output_rules .= file_contents ($rule_file, %transform, 'GENERIC' => 1, 'DERIVED-EXT' => $der_ext, # In this situation we know that the # object is in this directory, so # $(DEPDIR) is the correct location for # dependencies. 'DEPBASE' => '$(DEPDIR)/$*', 'BASE' => '$*', 'SOURCE' => '$<', 'OBJ' => '$@', 'OBJOBJ' => '$@', 'LTOBJ' => '$@', 'COMPILE' => '$(' . $lang->compiler . ')', 'LTCOMPILE' => '$(LT' . $lang->compiler . ')', '-o' => $output_flag); } # Now include code for each specially handled object with this # language. my %seen_files = (); foreach my $file (@{$lang_specific_files{$lang->name}}) { my ($derived, $source, $obj, $myext) = split (' ', $file); # For any specially-generated object, we must respect the # ansi2knr setting so that we don't inadvertently try to # use the default rule. if ($lang->ansi && defined $options{'ansi2knr'}) { $myext = '$U' . $myext; } # We might see a given object twice, for instance if it is # used under different conditions. next if defined $seen_files{$obj}; $seen_files{$obj} = 1; prog_error ("found " . $lang->name . " in handle_languages, but compiler not defined") unless defined $lang->compile; my $obj_compile = $lang->compile; # Rewrite each occurence of `AM_$flag' in the compile # rule into `${derived}_$flag' if it exists. for my $flag (@{$lang->flags}) { my $val = "${derived}_$flag"; $obj_compile =~ s/\(AM_$flag\)/\($val\)/ if variable_defined ($val); } my $obj_ltcompile = '$(LIBTOOL) --mode=compile ' . $obj_compile; # We _need_ `-o' for per object rules. my $output_flag = $lang->output_flag || '-o'; my $depbase = dirname ($obj); $depbase = '' if $depbase eq '.'; $depbase .= '/' unless $depbase eq ''; $depbase .= '$(DEPDIR)/' . basename ($obj); # Generate a transform which will turn suffix targets in # depend2.am into real targets for the particular objects we # are building. $output_rules .= file_contents ($rule_file, (%transform, 'GENERIC' => 0, 'DEPBASE' => $depbase, 'BASE' => $obj, 'SOURCE' => $source, # Use $myext and not `.o' here, in case # we are actually building a new source # file -- e.g. via yacc. 'OBJ' => "$obj$myext", 'OBJOBJ' => "$obj.obj", 'LTOBJ' => "$obj.lo", 'COMPILE' => $obj_compile, 'LTCOMPILE' => $obj_ltcompile, '-o' => $output_flag)); } # The rest of the loop is done once per language. next if defined $done{$lang}; $done{$lang} = 1; # Load the language dependent Makefile chunks. my %lang = map { uc ($_) => 0 } keys %languages; $lang{uc ($lang->name)} = 1; $output_rules .= file_contents ('lang-compile', %transform, %lang); # If the source to a program consists entirely of code from a # `pure' language, for instance C++ for Fortran 77, then we # don't need the C compiler code. However if we run into # something unusual then we do generate the C code. There are # probably corner cases here that do not work properly. # People linking Java code to Fortran code deserve pain. $needs_c ||= ! $lang->pure; define_compiler_variable ($lang) if ($lang->compile); define_linker_variable ($lang) if ($lang->link); require_variables ("$am_file.am", $lang->Name . " source seen", @{$lang->config_vars}); # Call the finisher. $lang->finish; # Flags listed in `->flags' are user variables (per GNU Standards), # they should not be overriden in the Makefile... my @dont_override = @{$lang->flags}; # ... and so is LDFLAGS. push @dont_override, 'LDFLAGS' if $lang->link; foreach my $flag (@dont_override) { if (exists $var_owner{$flag} && $var_owner{$flag} == VAR_MAKEFILE) { msg ('gnu', $var_location{$flag}, "`$flag' is a user variable, you should not " . "override it;\nuse `AM_$flag' instead."); } } } # If the project is entirely C++ or entirely Fortran 77 (i.e., 1 # suffix rule was learned), don't bother with the C stuff. But if # anything else creeps in, then use it. $needs_c = 1 if $need_link || ((scalar keys %$suffix_rules) - (scalar keys %$suffix_rules_default)) > 1; if ($needs_c) { &define_compiler_variable ($languages{'c'}) unless defined $done{$languages{'c'}}; define_linker_variable ($languages{'c'}); } } # Check to make sure a source defined in LIBOBJS is not explicitly # mentioned. This is a separate function (as opposed to being inlined # in handle_source_transform) because it isn't always appropriate to # do this check. sub check_libobjs_sources { my ($one_file, $unxformed) = @_; foreach my $prefix ('', 'EXTRA_', 'dist_', 'nodist_', 'dist_EXTRA_', 'nodist_EXTRA_') { my @files; if (variable_defined ($prefix . $one_file . '_SOURCES')) { @files = &variable_value_as_list_recursive ( ($prefix . $one_file . '_SOURCES'), 'all'); } elsif ($prefix eq '') { @files = ($unxformed . '.c'); } else { next; } foreach my $file (@files) { err_var ($prefix . $one_file . '_SOURCES', "automatically discovered file `$file' should not" . " be explicitly mentioned") if defined $libsources{$file}; } } } # @OBJECTS # handle_single_transform_list ($VAR, $TOPPARENT, $DERIVED, $OBJ, @FILES) # ----------------------------------------------------------------------- # Does much of the actual work for handle_source_transform. # Arguments are: # $VAR is the name of the variable that the source filenames come from # $TOPPARENT is the name of the _SOURCES variable which is being processed # $DERIVED is the name of resulting executable or library # $OBJ is the object extension (e.g., `$U.lo') # @FILES is the list of source files to transform # Result is a list of the names of objects # %linkers_used will be updated with any linkers needed sub handle_single_transform_list ($$$$@) { my ($var, $topparent, $derived, $obj, @files) = @_; my @result = (); my $nonansi_obj = $obj; $nonansi_obj =~ s/\$U//g; # Turn sources into objects. We use a while loop like this # because we might add to @files in the loop. while (scalar @files > 0) { $_ = shift @files; # Configure substitutions in _SOURCES variables are errors. if (/^\@.*\@$/) { err_var ($var, "`$var' includes configure substitution `$_', and is " . "referred to\nfrom `$topparent': configure " . "substitutions are not allowed\nin _SOURCES variables"); next; } # If the source file is in a subdirectory then the `.o' is put # into the current directory, unless the subdir-objects option # is in effect. # Split file name into base and extension. next if ! /^(?:(.*)\/)?([^\/]*)($KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN)$/; my $full = $_; my $directory = $1 || ''; my $base = $2; my $extension = $3; # We must generate a rule for the object if it requires its own flags. my $renamed = 0; my ($linker, $object); # This records whether we've seen a derived source file (eg, # yacc output). my $derived_source = 0; # This holds the `aggregate context' of the file we are # currently examining. If the file is compiled with # per-object flags, then it will be the name of the object. # Otherwise it will be `AM'. This is used by the target hook # language function. my $aggregate = 'AM'; $extension = &derive_suffix ($extension, $nonansi_obj); my $lang; if ($extension_map{$extension} && ($lang = $languages{$extension_map{$extension}})) { # Found the language, so see what it says. &saw_extension ($extension); # Note: computed subr call. The language rewrite function # should return one of the LANG_* constants. It could # also return a list whose first value is such a constant # and whose second value is a new source extension which # should be applied. This means this particular language # generates another source file which we must then process # further. my $subr = 'lang_' . $lang->name . '_rewrite'; my ($r, $source_extension) = & $subr ($directory, $base, $extension); # Skip this entry if we were asked not to process it. next if $r == LANG_IGNORE; # Now extract linker and other info. $linker = $lang->linker; my $this_obj_ext; if (defined $source_extension) { $this_obj_ext = $source_extension; $derived_source = 1; } elsif ($lang->ansi) { $this_obj_ext = $obj; } else { $this_obj_ext = $nonansi_obj; } $object = $base . $this_obj_ext; # Do we have per-executable flags for this executable? my $have_per_exec_flags = 0; foreach my $flag (@{$lang->flags}) { if (variable_defined ("${derived}_$flag")) { $have_per_exec_flags = 1; last; } } if ($have_per_exec_flags) { # We have a per-executable flag in effect for this # object. In this case we rewrite the object's # name to ensure it is unique. We also require # the `compile' program to deal with compilers # where `-c -o' does not work. # We choose the name `DERIVED_OBJECT' to ensure # (1) uniqueness, and (2) continuity between # invocations. However, this will result in a # name that is too long for losing systems, in # some situations. So we provide _SHORTNAME to # override. my $dname = $derived; if (variable_defined ($derived . '_SHORTNAME')) { # FIXME: should use the same conditional as # the _SOURCES variable. But this is really # silly overkill -- nobody should have # conditional shortnames. $dname = &variable_value ($derived . '_SHORTNAME'); } $object = $dname . '-' . $object; require_conf_file ("$am_file.am", FOREIGN, 'compile') if $lang->name eq 'c'; prog_error ($lang->name . " flags defined without compiler") if ! defined $lang->compile; $renamed = 1; } # If rewrite said it was ok, put the object into a # subdir. if ($r == LANG_SUBDIR && $directory ne '') { $object = $directory . '/' . $object; } # If doing dependency tracking, then we can't print # the rule. If we have a subdir object, we need to # generate an explicit rule. Actually, in any case # where the object is not in `.' we need a special # rule. The per-object rules in this case are # generated later, by handle_languages. if ($renamed || $directory ne '') { my $obj_sans_ext = substr ($object, 0, - length ($this_obj_ext)); my $val = ("$full $obj_sans_ext " # Only use $this_obj_ext in the derived # source case because in the other case we # *don't* want $(OBJEXT) to appear here. . ($derived_source ? $this_obj_ext : '.o')); # If we renamed the object then we want to use the # per-executable flag name. But if this is simply a # subdir build then we still want to use the AM_ flag # name. if ($renamed) { $val = "$derived $val"; $aggregate = $derived; } else { $val = "AM $val"; } # Each item on this list is a string consisting of # four space-separated values: the derived flag prefix # (eg, for `foo_CFLAGS', it is `foo'), the name of the # source file, the base name of the output file, and # the extension for the object file. push (@{$lang_specific_files{$lang->name}}, $val); } } elsif ($extension eq $nonansi_obj) { # This is probably the result of a direct suffix rule. # In this case we just accept the rewrite. $object = "$base$extension"; $linker = ''; } else { # No error message here. Used to have one, but it was # very unpopular. # FIXME: we could potentially do more processing here, # perhaps treating the new extension as though it were a # new source extension (as above). This would require # more restructuring than is appropriate right now. next; } err_am "object `$object' created by `$full' and `$object_map{$object}'" if (defined $object_map{$object} && $object_map{$object} ne $full); my $comp_val = (($object =~ /\.lo$/) ? COMPILE_LIBTOOL : COMPILE_ORDINARY); (my $comp_obj = $object) =~ s/\.lo$/.\$(OBJEXT)/; if (defined $object_compilation_map{$comp_obj} && $object_compilation_map{$comp_obj} != 0 # Only see the error once. && ($object_compilation_map{$comp_obj} != (COMPILE_LIBTOOL | COMPILE_ORDINARY)) && $object_compilation_map{$comp_obj} != $comp_val) { err_am "object `$object' created both with libtool and without"; } $object_compilation_map{$comp_obj} |= $comp_val; if (defined $lang) { # Let the language do some special magic if required. $lang->target_hook ($aggregate, $object, $full); } if ($derived_source) { prog_error ($lang->name . " has automatic dependency tracking") if $lang->autodep ne 'no'; # Make sure this new source file is handled next. That will # make it appear to be at the right place in the list. unshift (@files, $object); # Distribute derived sources unless the source they are # derived from is not. &push_dist_common ($object) unless ($topparent =~ /^(?:nobase_)?nodist_/); next; } $linkers_used{$linker} = 1; push (@result, $object); if (! defined $object_map{$object}) { my @dep_list = (); $object_map{$object} = $full; # If file is in subdirectory, we need explicit # dependency. if ($directory ne '' || $renamed) { push (@dep_list, $full); } # If resulting object is in subdir, we need to make # sure the subdir exists at build time. if ($object =~ /\//) { # FIXME: check that $DIRECTORY is somewhere in the # project # For Java, the way we're handling it right now, a # `..' component doesn't make sense. if ($lang->name eq 'java' && $object =~ /(\/|^)\.\.\//) { err_am "`$full' should not contain a `..' component"; } # Make sure object is removed by `make mostlyclean'. $compile_clean_files{$object} = MOSTLY_CLEAN; # If we have a libtool object then we also must remove # the ordinary .o. if ($object =~ /\.lo$/) { (my $xobj = $object) =~ s,lo$,\$(OBJEXT),; $compile_clean_files{$xobj} = MOSTLY_CLEAN; $libtool_clean_directories{$directory} = 1; } push (@dep_list, require_build_directory ($directory)); # If we're generating dependencies, we also want # to make sure that the appropriate subdir of the # .deps directory is created. push (@dep_list, require_build_directory ($directory . '/$(DEPDIR)')) if $use_dependencies; } &pretty_print_rule ($object . ':', "\t", @dep_list) if scalar @dep_list > 0; } # Transform .o or $o file into .P file (for automatic # dependency code). if ($lang && $lang->autodep ne 'no') { my $depfile = $object; $depfile =~ s/\.([^.]*)$/.P$1/; $depfile =~ s/\$\(OBJEXT\)$/o/; $dep_files{dirname ($depfile) . '/$(DEPDIR)/' . basename ($depfile)} = 1; } } return @result; } # ($LINKER, $OBJVAR) # define_objects_from_sources ($VAR, $OBJVAR, $NODEFINE, $ONE_FILE, # $OBJ, $PARENT, $TOPPARENT) # --------------------------------------------------------------------- # Define an _OBJECTS variable for a _SOURCES variable (or subvariable) # # Arguments are: # $VAR is the name of the _SOURCES variable # $OBJVAR is the name of the _OBJECTS variable if known (otherwise # it will be generated and returned). # $NODEFINE is a boolean: if true, $OBJVAR will not be defined (but # work done to determine the linker will be). # $ONE_FILE is the canonical (transformed) name of object to build # $OBJ is the object extension (ie either `.o' or `.lo'). # $PARENT is the variable in which $VAR is used, or $VAR if not applicable. # $TOPPARENT is the _SOURCES variable being processed. # # Result is a pair ($LINKER, $OBJVAR): # $LINKER is a boolean, true if a linker is needed to deal with the objects, # $OBJVAR is the name of the variable defined to hold the objects. # # %linkers_used, %vars_scanned, @substfroms and @substtos should be cleared # before use: # %linkers_used variable will be set to contain the linkers desired. # %vars_scanned will be used to check for recursive definitions. # @substfroms and @substtos will be used to keep a stack of variable # substitutions to be applied. # sub define_objects_from_sources ($$$$$$$) { my ($var, $objvar, $nodefine, $one_file, $obj, $parent, $topparent) = @_; if (defined $vars_scanned{$var}) { err_var $var, "variable `$var' recursively defined"; return ""; } $vars_scanned{$var} = 1; my $needlinker = ""; my @allresults = (); foreach my $cond (variable_conditions ($var)) { my @result; foreach my $val (&variable_value_as_list ($var, $cond, $parent)) { # If $val is a variable (i.e. ${foo} or $(bar), not a filename), # handle the sub variable recursively. if ($val =~ /^\$\{([^}]*)\}$/ || $val =~ /^\$\(([^)]*)\)$/) { my $subvar = $1; # If the user uses a losing variable name, just ignore it. # This isn't ideal, but people have requested it. next if ($subvar =~ /\@.*\@/); # See if the variable is actually a substitution reference my ($from, $to); my @temp_list; if ($subvar =~ /$SUBST_REF_PATTERN/o) { $subvar = $1; $to = $3; $from = quotemeta $2; } push @substfroms, $from; push @substtos, $to; my ($temp, $varname) = define_objects_from_sources ($subvar, undef, $nodefine, $one_file, $obj, $var, $topparent); push (@result, '$('. $varname . ')'); $needlinker ||= $temp; pop @substfroms; pop @substtos; } else # $var is a filename { my $substnum=$#substfroms; while ($substnum >= 0) { $val =~ s/$substfroms[$substnum]$/$substtos[$substnum]/ if defined $substfroms[$substnum]; $substnum -= 1; } my (@transformed) = &handle_single_transform_list ($var, $topparent, $one_file, $obj, $val); push (@result, @transformed); $needlinker = "true" if @transformed; } } push (@allresults, [$cond, @result]); } # Find a name for the variable, unless imposed. $objvar = subobjname (@allresults) unless defined $objvar; # Define _OBJECTS conditionally unless ($nodefine) { foreach my $pair (@allresults) { my ($cond, @result) = @$pair; define_pretty_variable ($objvar, $cond, @result); } } delete $vars_scanned{$var}; return ($needlinker, $objvar); } # $VARNAME # subobjname (@DEFINITIONS) # ------------------------- # Return a name for an object variable that with definitions @DEFINITIONS. # @DEFINITIONS is a list of pair [$COND, @OBJECTS]. # # If we already have an object variable containing @DEFINITIONS, reuse it. # This way, we avoid combinatorial explosion of the generated # variables. Especially, in a Makefile such as: # # | if FOO1 # | A1=1 # | endif # | # | if FOO2 # | A2=2 # | endif # | # | ... # | # | if FOON # | AN=N # | endif # | # | B=$(A1) $(A2) ... $(AN) # | # | c_SOURCES=$(B) # | d_SOURCES=$(B) # # The generated c_OBJECTS and d_OBJECTS will share the same variable # definitions. # # This setup can be the case of a testsuite containing lots (>100) of # small C programs, all testing the same set of source files. sub subobjname (@) { my $key = ''; foreach my $pair (@_) { my ($cond, @values) = @$pair; $key .= "($cond)@values"; } return $subobjvar{$key} if exists $subobjvar{$key}; my $num = 1 + keys (%subobjvar); my $name = "am__objects_${num}"; $subobjvar{$key} = $name; return $name; } # Handle SOURCE->OBJECT transform for one program or library. # Arguments are: # canonical (transformed) name of object to build # actual name of object to build # object extension (ie either `.o' or `$o'. # Return result is name of linker variable that must be used. # Empty return means just use `LINK'. sub handle_source_transform { # one_file is canonical name. unxformed is given name. obj is # object extension. my ($one_file, $unxformed, $obj) = @_; my ($linker) = ''; # No point in continuing if _OBJECTS is defined. return if reject_var ($one_file . '_OBJECTS', $one_file . '_OBJECTS should not be defined'); my %used_pfx = (); my $needlinker; %linkers_used = (); foreach my $prefix ('', 'EXTRA_', 'dist_', 'nodist_', 'dist_EXTRA_', 'nodist_EXTRA_') { my $var = $prefix . $one_file . "_SOURCES"; next if !variable_defined ($var); # We are going to define _OBJECTS variables using the prefix. # Then we glom them all together. So we can't use the null # prefix here as we need it later. my $xpfx = ($prefix eq '') ? 'am_' : $prefix; # Keep track of which prefixes we saw. $used_pfx{$xpfx} = 1 unless $prefix =~ /EXTRA_/; push @sources, "\$($var)"; push @dist_sources, "\$($var)" unless $prefix =~ /^nodist_/; @substfroms = (); @substtos = (); %vars_scanned = (); my ($temp, $objvar) = define_objects_from_sources ($var, $xpfx . $one_file . '_OBJECTS', $prefix =~ /EXTRA_/, $one_file, $obj, $var, $var); $needlinker ||= $temp; } if ($needlinker) { $linker ||= &resolve_linker (%linkers_used); } my @keys = sort keys %used_pfx; if (scalar @keys == 0) { &define_variable ($one_file . "_SOURCES", $unxformed . ".c"); push (@sources, $unxformed . '.c'); push (@dist_sources, $unxformed . '.c'); %linkers_used = (); my (@result) = &handle_single_transform_list ($one_file . '_SOURCES', $one_file . '_SOURCES', $one_file, $obj, "$unxformed.c"); $linker ||= &resolve_linker (%linkers_used); define_pretty_variable ($one_file . "_OBJECTS", '', @result) } else { grep ($_ = '$(' . $_ . $one_file . '_OBJECTS)', @keys); define_pretty_variable ($one_file . '_OBJECTS', '', @keys); } # If we want to use `LINK' we must make sure it is defined. if ($linker eq '') { $need_link = 1; } return $linker; } # handle_lib_objects ($XNAME, $VAR) # --------------------------------- # Special-case ALLOCA and LIBOBJS substitutions in _LDADD or _LIBADD variables. # Also, generate _DEPENDENCIES variable if appropriate. # Arguments are: # transformed name of object being built, or empty string if no object # name of _LDADD/_LIBADD-type variable to examine # Returns 1 if LIBOBJS seen, 0 otherwise. sub handle_lib_objects { my ($xname, $var) = @_; prog_error "handle_lib_objects: $var undefined" if ! variable_defined ($var); my $ret = 0; foreach my $cond (variable_conditions_recursive ($var)) { if (&handle_lib_objects_cond ($xname, $var, $cond)) { $ret = 1; } } return $ret; } # Subroutine of handle_lib_objects: handle a particular condition. sub handle_lib_objects_cond { my ($xname, $var, $cond) = @_; # We recognize certain things that are commonly put in LIBADD or # LDADD. my @dep_list = (); my $seen_libobjs = 0; my $flagvar = 0; foreach my $lsearch (&variable_value_as_list_recursive ($var, $cond)) { # Skip -lfoo and -Ldir; these are explicitly allowed. next if $lsearch =~ /^-[lL]/; if (! $flagvar && $lsearch =~ /^-/) { if ($var =~ /^(.*)LDADD$/) { # Skip -dlopen and -dlpreopen; these are explicitly allowed. next if $lsearch =~ /^-dl(pre)?open$/; my $prefix = $1 || 'AM_'; err_var ($var, "linker flags such as `$lsearch' belong in " . "`${prefix}LDFLAGS"); } else { $var =~ /^(.*)LIBADD$/; # Only get this error once. $flagvar = 1; err_var ($var, "linker flags such as `$lsearch' belong in " . "`${1}LDFLAGS"); } } # Assume we have a file of some sort, and push it onto the # dependency list. Autoconf substitutions are not pushed; # rarely is a new dependency substituted into (eg) foo_LDADD # -- but "bad things (eg -lX11) are routinely substituted. # Note that LIBOBJS and ALLOCA are exceptions to this rule, # and handled specially below. push (@dep_list, $lsearch) unless $lsearch =~ /^\@.*\@$/; # Automatically handle LIBOBJS and ALLOCA substitutions. # Basically this means adding entries to dep_files. if ($lsearch =~ /^\@(LT)?LIBOBJS\@$/) { my $lt = $1 ? $1 : ''; my $myobjext = ($1 ? 'l' : '') . 'o'; push (@dep_list, $lsearch); $seen_libobjs = 1; if (! keys %libsources && ! variable_defined ($lt . 'LIBOBJS')) { err_var ($var, "\@${lt}LIBOBJS\@ seen but never set in " . "`$configure_ac'"); } foreach my $iter (keys %libsources) { if ($iter =~ /\.[cly]$/) { &saw_extension ($&); &saw_extension ('.c'); } if ($iter =~ /\.h$/) { require_file_with_macro ($var, FOREIGN, $iter); } elsif ($iter ne 'alloca.c') { my $rewrite = $iter; $rewrite =~ s/\.c$/.P$myobjext/; $dep_files{'$(DEPDIR)/' . $rewrite} = 1; $rewrite = "^" . quotemeta ($iter) . "\$"; # Only require the file if it is not a built source. if (! variable_defined ('BUILT_SOURCES') || ! grep (/$rewrite/, &variable_value_as_list_recursive ( 'BUILT_SOURCES', 'all'))) { require_file_with_macro ($var, FOREIGN, $iter); } } } } elsif ($lsearch =~ /^\@(LT)?ALLOCA\@$/) { my $lt = $1 ? $1 : ''; my $myobjext = ($1 ? 'l' : '') . 'o'; push (@dep_list, $lsearch); err_var ($var, "\@${lt}ALLOCA\@ seen but `AC_FUNC_ALLOCA' not in " . "`$configure_ac'") if ! defined $libsources{'alloca.c'}; $dep_files{'$(DEPDIR)/alloca.P' . $myobjext} = 1; require_file_with_macro ($var, FOREIGN, 'alloca.c'); &saw_extension ('c'); } } if ($xname ne '') { if (conditional_ambiguous_p ($xname . '_DEPENDENCIES', $cond) ne '') { # Note that we've examined this. &examine_variable ($xname . '_DEPENDENCIES'); } else { define_pretty_variable ($xname . '_DEPENDENCIES', $cond, @dep_list); } } return $seen_libobjs; } # Canonicalize the input parameter sub canonicalize { my ($string) = @_; $string =~ tr/A-Za-z0-9_\@/_/c; return $string; } # Canonicalize a name, and check to make sure the non-canonical name # is never used. Returns canonical name. Arguments are name and a # list of suffixes to check for. sub check_canonical_spelling { my ($name, @suffixes) = @_; my $xname = &canonicalize ($name); if ($xname ne $name) { foreach my $xt (@suffixes) { reject_var ("$name$xt", "use `$xname$xt', not `$name$xt'"); } } return $xname; } # handle_compile () # ----------------- # Set up the compile suite. sub handle_compile () { return unless $get_object_extension_was_run; # Boilerplate. my $default_includes = ''; if (! defined $options{'nostdinc'}) { $default_includes = ' -I. -I$(srcdir)'; if (variable_defined ('CONFIG_HEADER')) { foreach my $hdr (split (' ', &variable_value ('CONFIG_HEADER'))) { $default_includes .= ' -I' . dirname ($hdr); } } } my (@mostly_rms, @dist_rms); foreach my $item (sort keys %compile_clean_files) { if ($compile_clean_files{$item} == MOSTLY_CLEAN) { push (@mostly_rms, "\t-rm -f $item"); } elsif ($compile_clean_files{$item} == DIST_CLEAN) { push (@dist_rms, "\t-rm -f $item"); } else { prog_error 'invalid entry in %compile_clean_files'; } } my ($coms, $vars, $rules) = &file_contents_internal (1, "$libdir/am/compile.am", ('DEFAULT_INCLUDES' => $default_includes, 'MOSTLYRMS' => join ("\n", @mostly_rms), 'DISTRMS' => join ("\n", @dist_rms))); $output_vars .= $vars; $output_rules .= "$coms$rules"; # Check for automatic de-ANSI-fication. if (defined $options{'ansi2knr'}) { require_variables_for_macro ('AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS', "option `ansi2knr' is used", "ANSI2KNR", "U"); # topdir is where ansi2knr should be. if ($options{'ansi2knr'} eq 'ansi2knr') { # Only require ansi2knr files if they should appear in # this directory. require_file_with_macro ('AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS', FOREIGN, 'ansi2knr.c', 'ansi2knr.1'); # ansi2knr needs to be built before subdirs, so unshift it. unshift (@all, '$(ANSI2KNR)'); } my $ansi2knr_dir = ''; $ansi2knr_dir = dirname ($options{'ansi2knr'}) if $options{'ansi2knr'} ne 'ansi2knr'; $output_rules .= &file_contents ('ansi2knr', ('ANSI2KNR-DIR' => $ansi2knr_dir)); } } # handle_libtool () # ----------------- # Handle libtool rules. sub handle_libtool { return unless variable_defined ('LIBTOOL'); # Libtool requires some files, but only at top level. require_conf_file_with_macro ('LIBTOOL', FOREIGN, @libtool_files) if $relative_dir eq '.'; my @libtool_rms; foreach my $item (sort keys %libtool_clean_directories) { my $dir = ($item eq '.') ? '' : "$item/"; # .libs is for Unix, _libs for DOS. push (@libtool_rms, "\t-rm -rf ${dir}.libs ${dir}_libs"); } # Output the libtool compilation rules. $output_rules .= &file_contents ('libtool', ('LTRMS' => join ("\n", @libtool_rms))); } # handle_programs () # ------------------ # Handle C programs. sub handle_programs { my @proglist = &am_install_var ('progs', 'PROGRAMS', 'bin', 'sbin', 'libexec', 'pkglib', 'noinst', 'check'); return if ! @proglist; my $seen_libobjs = 0; foreach my $one_file (@proglist) { my $obj = &get_object_extension ($one_file); # Canonicalize names and check for misspellings. my $xname = &check_canonical_spelling ($one_file, '_LDADD', '_LDFLAGS', '_SOURCES', '_OBJECTS', '_DEPENDENCIES'); my $linker = &handle_source_transform ($xname, $one_file, $obj); my $xt = ''; if (variable_defined ($xname . "_LDADD")) { if (&handle_lib_objects ($xname, $xname . '_LDADD')) { $seen_libobjs = 1; } $xt = '_LDADD'; } else { # User didn't define prog_LDADD override. So do it. &define_variable ($xname . '_LDADD', '$(LDADD)'); # This does a bit too much work. But we need it to # generate _DEPENDENCIES when appropriate. if (variable_defined ('LDADD')) { if (&handle_lib_objects ($xname, 'LDADD')) { $seen_libobjs = 1; } } elsif (! variable_defined ($xname . '_DEPENDENCIES')) { &define_variable ($xname . '_DEPENDENCIES', ''); } $xt = '_SOURCES' } reject_var ($xname . '_LIBADD', "use `${xname}_LDADD', not `${xname}_LIBADD'"); if (! variable_defined ($xname . '_LDFLAGS')) { # Define the prog_LDFLAGS variable. &define_variable ($xname . '_LDFLAGS', ''); } # Determine program to use for link. my $xlink; if (variable_defined ($xname . '_LINK')) { $xlink = $xname . '_LINK'; } else { $xlink = $linker ? $linker : 'LINK'; } # If the resulting program lies into a subdirectory, # make sure this directory will exist. my $dirstamp = require_build_directory_maybe ($one_file); # Don't add $(EXEEXT) if user already did. my $extension = ($one_file !~ /\$\(EXEEXT\)$/ ? "\$(EXEEXT)" : ''); $output_rules .= &file_contents ('program', ('PROGRAM' => $one_file, 'XPROGRAM' => $xname, 'XLINK' => $xlink, 'DIRSTAMP' => $dirstamp, 'EXEEXT' => $extension)); } if (variable_defined ('LDADD') && &handle_lib_objects ('', 'LDADD')) { $seen_libobjs = 1; } if ($seen_libobjs) { foreach my $one_file (@proglist) { my $xname = &canonicalize ($one_file); if (variable_defined ($xname . '_LDADD')) { &check_libobjs_sources ($xname, $xname . '_LDADD'); } elsif (variable_defined ('LDADD')) { &check_libobjs_sources ($xname, 'LDADD'); } } } } # handle_libraries () # ------------------- # Handle libraries. sub handle_libraries { my @liblist = &am_install_var ('libs', 'LIBRARIES', 'lib', 'pkglib', 'noinst', 'check'); return if ! @liblist; my @prefix = am_primary_prefixes ('LIBRARIES', 0, 'lib', 'pkglib', 'noinst', 'check'); require_variables_for_macro ($prefix[0] . '_LIBRARIES', 'library used', 'RANLIB') if (@prefix); my $seen_libobjs = 0; foreach my $onelib (@liblist) { # Check that the library fits the standard naming convention. if (basename ($onelib) !~ /^lib.*\.a/) { # FIXME should put line number here. That means mapping # from library name back to variable name. err_am "`$onelib' is not a standard library name"; } my $obj = &get_object_extension ($onelib); # Canonicalize names and check for misspellings. my $xlib = &check_canonical_spelling ($onelib, '_LIBADD', '_SOURCES', '_OBJECTS', '_DEPENDENCIES', '_AR'); if (! variable_defined ($xlib . '_AR')) { &define_variable ($xlib . '_AR', '$(AR) cru'); } if (variable_defined ($xlib . '_LIBADD')) { if (&handle_lib_objects ($xlib, $xlib . '_LIBADD')) { $seen_libobjs = 1; } } else { # Generate support for conditional object inclusion in # libraries. &define_variable ($xlib . "_LIBADD", ''); } reject_var ($xlib . '_LDADD', "use `${xlib}_LIBADD', not `${xlib}_LDADD'"); # Make sure we at look at this. &examine_variable ($xlib . '_DEPENDENCIES'); &handle_source_transform ($xlib, $onelib, $obj); # If the resulting library lies into a subdirectory, # make sure this directory will exist. my $dirstamp = require_build_directory_maybe ($onelib); $output_rules .= &file_contents ('library', ('LIBRARY' => $onelib, 'XLIBRARY' => $xlib, 'DIRSTAMP' => $dirstamp)); } if ($seen_libobjs) { foreach my $onelib (@liblist) { my $xlib = &canonicalize ($onelib); if (variable_defined ($xlib . '_LIBADD')) { &check_libobjs_sources ($xlib, $xlib . '_LIBADD'); } } } } # handle_ltlibraries () # --------------------- # Handle shared libraries. sub handle_ltlibraries { my @liblist = &am_install_var ('ltlib', 'LTLIBRARIES', 'noinst', 'lib', 'pkglib', 'check'); return if ! @liblist; my %instdirs; my @prefix = am_primary_prefixes ('LTLIBRARIES', 0, 'lib', 'pkglib', 'noinst', 'check'); require_variables_for_macro ($prefix[0] . '_KTLIBRARIES', 'Libtool library used', 'LIBTOOL') if (@prefix); foreach my $key (@prefix) { # Get the installation directory of each library. (my $dir = $key) =~ s/^nobase_//; for (variable_value_as_list_recursive ($key . '_LTLIBRARIES', 'all')) { if ($instdirs{$_}) { err_am ("`$_' is already going to be installed in " . "`$instdirs{$_}'"); } else { $instdirs{$_} = $dir; } } } my $seen_libobjs = 0; foreach my $onelib (@liblist) { my $obj = &get_object_extension ($onelib); # Canonicalize names and check for misspellings. my $xlib = &check_canonical_spelling ($onelib, '_LIBADD', '_LDFLAGS', '_SOURCES', '_OBJECTS', '_DEPENDENCIES'); if (! variable_defined ($xlib . '_LDFLAGS')) { # Define the lib_LDFLAGS variable. &define_variable ($xlib . '_LDFLAGS', ''); } # Check that the library fits the standard naming convention. my $libname_rx = "^lib.*\.la"; if ((variable_defined ($xlib . '_LDFLAGS') && grep (/-module/, &variable_value_as_list_recursive ( $xlib . '_LDFLAGS', 'all'))) || (variable_defined ('LDFLAGS') && grep (/-module/, &variable_value_as_list_recursive ( 'LDFLAGS', 'all')))) { # Relax name checking for libtool modules. $libname_rx = "\.la"; } if (basename ($onelib) !~ /$libname_rx$/) { # FIXME should put line number here. That means mapping # from library name back to variable name. msg_am ('error-gnu/warn', "`$onelib' is not a standard libtool library name"); } if (variable_defined ($xlib . '_LIBADD')) { if (&handle_lib_objects ($xlib, $xlib . '_LIBADD')) { $seen_libobjs = 1; } } else { # Generate support for conditional object inclusion in # libraries. &define_variable ($xlib . "_LIBADD", ''); } reject_var ("${xlib}_LDADD", "use `${xlib}_LIBADD', not `${xlib}_LDADD'"); # Make sure we at look at this. &examine_variable ($xlib . '_DEPENDENCIES'); my $linker = &handle_source_transform ($xlib, $onelib, $obj); # Determine program to use for link. my $xlink; if (variable_defined ($xlib . '_LINK')) { $xlink = $xlib . '_LINK'; } else { $xlink = $linker ? $linker : 'LINK'; } my $rpath; if ($instdirs{$onelib} eq 'EXTRA' || $instdirs{$onelib} eq 'noinst' || $instdirs{$onelib} eq 'check') { # It's an EXTRA_ library, so we can't specify -rpath, # because we don't know where the library will end up. # The user probably knows, but generally speaking automake # doesn't -- and in fact configure could decide # dynamically between two different locations. $rpath = ''; } else { $rpath = ('-rpath $(' . $instdirs{$onelib} . 'dir)'); } # If the resulting library lies into a subdirectory, # make sure this directory will exist. my $dirstamp = require_build_directory_maybe ($onelib); $output_rules .= &file_contents ('ltlibrary', ('LTLIBRARY' => $onelib, 'XLTLIBRARY' => $xlib, 'RPATH' => $rpath, 'XLINK' => $xlink, 'DIRSTAMP' => $dirstamp)); } if ($seen_libobjs) { foreach my $onelib (@liblist) { my $xlib = &canonicalize ($onelib); if (variable_defined ($xlib . '_LIBADD')) { &check_libobjs_sources ($xlib, $xlib . '_LIBADD'); } } } } # See if any _SOURCES variable were misspelled. Also, make sure that # EXTRA_ variables don't contain configure substitutions. sub check_typos () { # It is ok if the user sets this particular variable. &examine_variable ('AM_LDFLAGS'); foreach my $varname (keys %var_value) { foreach my $primary ('_SOURCES', '_LIBADD', '_LDADD', '_LDFLAGS', '_DEPENDENCIES') { msg_var 'unused', $varname, "unused variable: `$varname'" # Note that a configure variable is always legitimate. if ($varname =~ /$primary$/ && ! $content_seen{$varname} && ! exists $configure_vars{$varname}); } } } # Handle scripts. sub handle_scripts { # NOTE we no longer automatically clean SCRIPTS, because it is # useful to sometimes distribute scripts verbatim. This happens # eg in Automake itself. &am_install_var ('-candist', 'scripts', 'SCRIPTS', 'bin', 'sbin', 'libexec', 'pkgdata', 'noinst', 'check'); } # ($OUTFILE, $VFILE, @CLEAN_FILES) # &scan_texinfo_file ($FILENAME) # ------------------------------ # $OUTFILE is the name of the info file produced by $FILENAME. # $VFILE is the name of the version.texi file used (empty if none). # @CLEAN_FILES is the list of by products (indexes etc.) sub scan_texinfo_file { my ($filename) = @_; # These are always created, no matter whether indexes are used or not. # (Actually tmp is only created if an @macro is used and a certain e-TeX # feature is not available.) my @clean_suffixes = qw(aux dvi log pdf ps toc tmp cp fn ky vr tp pg); # grep new.*index texinfo.tex # There are predefined indexes which don't follow the regular rules. my %predefined_index = qw(c cps f fns k kys v vrs t tps p pgs); # There are commands which include a hidden index command. my %hidden_index = (tp => 'tps'); $hidden_index{$_} = 'fns' foreach qw(fn un typefn typefun max spec op typeop method typemethod); $hidden_index{$_} = 'vrs' foreach qw(vr var typevr typevar opt cv ivar typeivar); # Indexes stored into another one. In this case, the *.??s file # is not created. my @syncodeindexes = (); my $texi = new Automake::XFile "< $filename"; verb "reading $filename"; my ($outfile, $vfile); while ($_ = $texi->getline) { if (/^\@setfilename +(\S+)/) { $outfile = $1; if ($outfile =~ /\.(.+)$/ && $1 ne 'info') { err "$filename:$.", "output `$outfile' has unrecognized extension"; return; } } # A "version.texi" file is actually any file whose name # matches "vers*.texi". elsif (/^\@include\s+(vers[^.]*\.texi)\s*$/) { $vfile = $1; } # Try to find what are the indexes which are used. # Creating a new category of index. elsif (/^\@def(code)?index (\w+)/) { push @clean_suffixes, $2; } # Storing in a predefined index. elsif (/^\@([cfkvtp])index /) { push @clean_suffixes, $predefined_index{$1}; } elsif (/^\@def(\w+) /) { push @clean_suffixes, $hidden_index{$1} if defined $hidden_index{$1}; } # Merging an index into an another. elsif (/^\@syn(code)?index (\w+) (\w+)/) { push @syncodeindexes, "$2s"; push @clean_suffixes, "$3s"; } } if ($outfile eq '') { err_am "`$filename' missing \@setfilename"; return; } my $infobase = basename ($filename); $infobase =~ s/\.te?xi(nfo)?$//; my %clean_files = map { +"$infobase.$_" => 1 } @clean_suffixes; grep { delete $clean_files{"$infobase.$_"} } @syncodeindexes; return ($outfile, $vfile, (sort keys %clean_files)); } # output_texinfo_build_rules ($SOURCE, $DEST, @DEPENDENCIES) # ---------------------------------------------------------- # SOURCE - the source Texinfo file # DEST - the destination Info file # DEPENDENCIES - known dependencies sub output_texinfo_build_rules ($$@) { my ($source, $dest, @deps) = @_; # Split `a.texi' into `a' and `.texi'. my ($spfx, $ssfx) = ($source =~ /^(.*?)(\.[^.]*)?$/); my ($dpfx, $dsfx) = ($dest =~ /^(.*?)(\.[^.]*)?$/); $ssfx ||= ""; $dsfx ||= ""; # We can output two kinds of rules: the "generic" rules # use Make suffix rules and are appropritate when # $source and $dest lie in the current directory; the "specifix" # rules is needed in the other case. # # The former are output only once (this is not really apparent # here, but just remember that some logic deeper in Automake will # not output the same rule twice); while the later need to be output # for each Texinfo source. my $generic; my $makeinfoflags; my $sdir = dirname $source; if ($sdir eq '.' && dirname ($dest) eq '.') { $generic = 1; $makeinfoflags = '-I $(srcdir)'; } else { $generic = 0; $makeinfoflags = "-I $sdir -I \$(srcdir)/$sdir"; } # If the resulting file lie into a subdirectory, # make sure this directory will exist. my $dirstamp = require_build_directory_maybe ($dest); # It is wrong to make $SOURCE dependent on $DIRSTAMP, because # $SOURCE is distributed and $DIRSTAMP is not. A generated file # should never be dependent upon a non-distributed built file. # # So don't do that: # # push @deps, $dirstamp; # # Instead we append all dirstamps to the $(am__texinfo_dirstamps) # variable and have this variable in the dependencies of # info, dvi, etc. (FIXME: this is not done yet -- support for # Texinfo files in subdirectories is not complete.) macro_define ('am__texinfo_dirstamps', VAR_AUTOMAKE, '+', 'TRUE', $dirstamp, 'internal'); $output_rules .= &file_contents ('texibuild', GENERIC => $generic, SOURCE_SUFFIX => $ssfx, SOURCE => ($generic ? '$<' : $source), DEST_PREFIX => $dpfx, DEST_SUFFIX => $dsfx, MAKEINFOFLAGS => $makeinfoflags, DEPS => "@deps"); } # ($DO-SOMETHING, $TEXICLEANS) # handle_texinfo_helper () # ------------------------ # Handle all Texinfo source; helper for handle_texinfo sub handle_texinfo_helper { reject_var 'TEXINFOS', "`TEXINFOS' is an anachronism; use `info_TEXINFOS'"; reject_var 'html_TEXINFOS', "HTML generation not yet supported"; return (0, '') if ! variable_defined ('info_TEXINFOS'); my @texis = &variable_value_as_list_recursive ('info_TEXINFOS', 'all'); my (@info_deps_list, @dvis_list, @pdfs_list, @pss_list, @texi_deps); my %versions; my $done = 0; my @texi_cleans; my $canonical; foreach my $info_cursor (@texis) { my $infobase = $info_cursor; $infobase =~ s/\.(txi|texinfo|texi)$//; if ($infobase eq $info_cursor) { # FIXME: report line number. err_am "texinfo file `$info_cursor' has unrecognized extension"; next; } # If 'version.texi' is referenced by input file, then include # automatic versioning capability. my ($out_file, $vtexi, @clean_files) = &scan_texinfo_file ("$relative_dir/$info_cursor") or next; push (@texi_cleans, @clean_files); # If the Texinfo source is in a subdirectory, create the # resulting info in this subdirectory. If it is in the # current directory, try hard to not prefix "./" because # it breaks the generic rules. my $outdir = dirname ($info_cursor) . '/'; $outdir = "" if $outdir eq './'; $out_file = $outdir . $out_file; if ($vtexi) { err_am ("`$vtexi', included in `$info_cursor', " . "also included in `$versions{$vtexi}'") if defined $versions{$vtexi}; $versions{$vtexi} = $info_cursor; # We number the stamp-vti files. This is doable since the # actual names don't matter much. We only number starting # with the second one, so that the common case looks nice. my $vti = ($done ? $done : 'vti'); ++$done; # This is ugly, but it is our historical practice. if ($config_aux_dir_set_in_configure_in) { require_conf_file_with_macro ('info_TEXINFOS', FOREIGN, 'mdate-sh'); } else { require_file_with_macro ('info_TEXINFOS', FOREIGN, 'mdate-sh'); } my $conf_dir; if ($config_aux_dir_set_in_configure_in) { $conf_dir = $config_aux_dir; $conf_dir .= '/' unless $conf_dir =~ /\/$/; } else { $conf_dir = '$(srcdir)/'; } $output_rules .= &file_contents ('texi-vers', TEXI => $info_cursor, VTI => $vti, STAMPVTI => "${outdir}stamp-$vti", VTEXI => "$outdir$vtexi", MDDIR => $conf_dir); } # If user specified file_TEXINFOS, then use that as explicit # dependency list. @texi_deps = (); push (@texi_deps, "$outdir$vtexi") if $vtexi; my $canonical = &canonicalize ($infobase); if (variable_defined ($canonical . "_TEXINFOS")) { push (@texi_deps, '$(' . $canonical . '_TEXINFOS)'); &push_dist_common ('$(' . $canonical . '_TEXINFOS)'); } output_texinfo_build_rules ($info_cursor, $out_file, @texi_deps); push (@info_deps_list, $out_file); push (@dvis_list, $infobase . '.dvi'); push (@pdfs_list, $infobase . '.pdf'); push (@pss_list, $infobase . '.ps'); } # Handle location of texinfo.tex. my $need_texi_file = 0; my $texinfodir; if ($cygnus_mode) { $texinfodir = '$(top_srcdir)/../texinfo'; &define_variable ('TEXINFO_TEX', "$texinfodir/texinfo.tex"); } elsif ($config_aux_dir_set_in_configure_in) { $texinfodir = $config_aux_dir; &define_variable ('TEXINFO_TEX', "$texinfodir/texinfo.tex"); $need_texi_file = 2; # so that we require_conf_file later } elsif (variable_defined ('TEXINFO_TEX')) { # The user defined TEXINFO_TEX so assume he knows what he is # doing. $texinfodir = ('$(srcdir)/' . dirname (&variable_value ('TEXINFO_TEX'))); } else { $texinfodir = '$(srcdir)'; $need_texi_file = 1; } &define_variable ('am__TEXINFO_TEX_DIR', $texinfodir); # The return value. my $texiclean = &pretty_print_internal ("", "\t ", @texi_cleans); push (@dist_targets, 'dist-info'); if (! defined $options{'no-installinfo'}) { # Make sure documentation is made and installed first. Use # $(INFO_DEPS), not 'info', because otherwise recursive makes # get run twice during "make all". unshift (@all, '$(INFO_DEPS)'); } &define_variable ("INFO_DEPS", "@info_deps_list"); &define_variable ("DVIS", "@dvis_list"); &define_variable ("PDFS", "@pdfs_list"); &define_variable ("PSS", "@pss_list"); # This next isn't strictly needed now -- the places that look here # could easily be changed to look in info_TEXINFOS. But this is # probably better, in case noinst_TEXINFOS is ever supported. &define_variable ("TEXINFOS", &variable_value ('info_TEXINFOS')); # Do some error checking. Note that this file is not required # when in Cygnus mode; instead we defined TEXINFO_TEX explicitly # up above. if ($need_texi_file && ! defined $options{'no-texinfo.tex'}) { if ($need_texi_file > 1) { require_conf_file_with_macro ('info_TEXINFOS', FOREIGN, 'texinfo.tex'); } else { require_file_with_macro ('info_TEXINFOS', FOREIGN, 'texinfo.tex'); } } return (1, $texiclean); } # handle_texinfo () # ----------------- # Handle all Texinfo source. sub handle_texinfo { my ($do_something, $texiclean) = handle_texinfo_helper (); $output_rules .= &file_contents ('texinfos', ('TEXICLEAN' => $texiclean, 'LOCAL-TEXIS' => $do_something)); } # Handle any man pages. sub handle_man_pages { reject_var 'MANS', "`MANS' is an anachronism; use `man_MANS'"; # Find all the sections in use. We do this by first looking for # "standard" sections, and then looking for any additional # sections used in man_MANS. my (%sections, %vlist); # We handle nodist_ for uniformity. man pages aren't distributed # by default so it isn't actually very important. foreach my $pfx ('', 'dist_', 'nodist_') { # Add more sections as needed. foreach my $section ('0'..'9', 'n', 'l') { if (variable_defined ($pfx . 'man' . $section . '_MANS')) { $sections{$section} = 1; $vlist{'$(' . $pfx . 'man' . $section . '_MANS)'} = 1; &push_dist_common ('$(' . $pfx . 'man' . $section . '_MANS)') if $pfx eq 'dist_'; } } if (variable_defined ($pfx . 'man_MANS')) { $vlist{'$(' . $pfx . 'man_MANS)'} = 1; foreach (&variable_value_as_list_recursive ($pfx . 'man_MANS', 'all')) { # A page like `foo.1c' goes into man1dir. if (/\.([0-9a-z])([a-z]*)$/) { $sections{$1} = 1; } } &push_dist_common ('$(' . $pfx . 'man_MANS)') if $pfx eq 'dist_'; } } return unless %sections; # Now for each section, generate an install and unintall rule. # Sort sections so output is deterministic. foreach my $section (sort keys %sections) { $output_rules .= &file_contents ('mans', ('SECTION' => $section)); } my @mans = sort keys %vlist; $output_vars .= file_contents ('mans-vars', ('MANS' => "@mans")); if (! defined $options{'no-installman'}) { push (@all, '$(MANS)'); } } # Handle DATA variables. sub handle_data { &am_install_var ('-noextra', '-candist', 'data', 'DATA', 'data', 'sysconf', 'sharedstate', 'localstate', 'pkgdata', 'noinst', 'check'); } # Handle TAGS. sub handle_tags { my @tag_deps = (); my @ctag_deps = (); if (variable_defined ('SUBDIRS')) { $output_rules .= ("tags-recursive:\n" . "\tlist=\'\$(SUBDIRS)\'; for subdir in \$\$list; do \\\n" # Never fail here if a subdir fails; it # isn't important. . "\t test \"\$\$subdir\" = . || (cd \$\$subdir" . " && \$(MAKE) \$(AM_MAKEFLAGS) tags); \\\n" . "\tdone\n"); push (@tag_deps, 'tags-recursive'); &depend ('.PHONY', 'tags-recursive'); $output_rules .= ("ctags-recursive:\n" . "\tlist=\'\$(SUBDIRS)\'; for subdir in \$\$list; do \\\n" # Never fail here if a subdir fails; it # isn't important. . "\t test \"\$\$subdir\" = . || (cd \$\$subdir" . " && \$(MAKE) \$(AM_MAKEFLAGS) ctags); \\\n" . "\tdone\n"); push (@ctag_deps, 'ctags-recursive'); &depend ('.PHONY', 'ctags-recursive'); } if (&saw_sources_p (1) || variable_defined ('ETAGS_ARGS') || @tag_deps) { my @config; foreach my $spec (@config_headers) { my ($out, @ins) = split_config_file_spec ($spec); foreach my $in (@ins) { # If the config header source is in this directory, # require it. push @config, basename ($in) if $relative_dir eq dirname ($in); } } $output_rules .= &file_contents ('tags', ('CONFIG' => "@config", 'TAGSDIRS' => "@tag_deps", 'CTAGSDIRS' => "@ctag_deps")); &examine_variable ('TAGS_DEPENDENCIES'); } elsif (reject_var ('TAGS_DEPENDENCIES', "doesn't make sense to define `TAGS_DEPENDENCIES'" . "without\nsources or `ETAGS_ARGS'")) { } else { # Every Makefile must define some sort of TAGS rule. # Otherwise, it would be possible for a top-level "make TAGS" # to fail because some subdirectory failed. $output_rules .= "tags: TAGS\nTAGS:\n\n"; # Ditto ctags. $output_rules .= "ctags: CTAGS\nCTAGS:\n\n"; } } # Handle multilib support. sub handle_multilib { if ($seen_multilib && $relative_dir eq '.') { $output_rules .= &file_contents ('multilib'); } } # $BOOLEAN # &for_dist_common ($A, $B) # ------------------------- # Subroutine for &handle_dist: sort files to dist. # # We put README first because it then becomes easier to make a # Usenet-compliant shar file (in these, README must be first). # # FIXME: do more ordering of files here. sub for_dist_common { return 0 if $a eq $b; return -1 if $a eq 'README'; return 1 if $b eq 'README'; return $a cmp $b; } # handle_dist ($MAKEFILE) # ----------------------- # Handle 'dist' target. sub handle_dist { my ($makefile) = @_; # `make dist' isn't used in a Cygnus-style tree. # Omit the rules so that people don't try to use them. return if $cygnus_mode; # Look for common files that should be included in distribution. # If the aux dir is set, and it does not have a Makefile.am, then # we check for these files there as well. my $check_aux = 0; my $auxdir = ''; if ($relative_dir eq '.' && $config_aux_dir_set_in_configure_in) { ($auxdir = $config_aux_dir) =~ s,^\$\(top_srcdir\)/,,; if (! &is_make_dir ($auxdir)) { $check_aux = 1; } } foreach my $cfile (@common_files) { if (-f ($relative_dir . "/" . $cfile) # The file might be absent, but if it can be built it's ok. || exists $targets{$cfile}) { &push_dist_common ($cfile); } # Don't use `elsif' here because a file might meaningfully # appear in both directories. if ($check_aux && -f ($auxdir . '/' . $cfile)) { &push_dist_common ($auxdir . '/' . $cfile); } } # We might copy elements from $configure_dist_common to # %dist_common if we think we need to. If the file appears in our # directory, we would have discovered it already, so we don't # check that. But if the file is in a subdir without a Makefile, # we want to distribute it here if we are doing `.'. Ugly! if ($relative_dir eq '.') { foreach my $file (split (' ' , $configure_dist_common)) { push_dist_common ($file) unless is_make_dir (dirname ($file)); } } # Files to distributed. Don't use &variable_value_as_list_recursive # as it recursively expands `$(dist_pkgdata_DATA)' etc. check_variable_defined_unconditionally ('DIST_COMMON'); my @dist_common = split (' ', variable_value ('DIST_COMMON', 'TRUE')); @dist_common = uniq (sort for_dist_common (@dist_common)); pretty_print ('DIST_COMMON = ', "\t", @dist_common); # Now that we've processed DIST_COMMON, disallow further attempts # to set it. $handle_dist_run = 1; # Scan EXTRA_DIST to see if we need to distribute anything from a # subdir. If so, add it to the list. I didn't want to do this # originally, but there were so many requests that I finally # relented. if (variable_defined ('EXTRA_DIST')) { # FIXME: This should be fixed to work with conditionals. That # will require only making the entries in %dist_dirs under the # appropriate condition. This is meaningful if the nature of # the distribution should depend upon the configure options # used. foreach (&variable_value_as_list_recursive ('EXTRA_DIST', '')) { next if /^\@.*\@$/; next unless s,/+[^/]+$,,; $dist_dirs{$_} = 1 unless $_ eq '.'; } } # We have to check DIST_COMMON for extra directories in case the # user put a source used in AC_OUTPUT into a subdir. foreach (&variable_value_as_list_recursive ('DIST_COMMON', 'all')) { next if /^\@.*\@$/; next unless s,/+[^/]+$,,; $dist_dirs{$_} = 1 unless $_ eq '.'; } # Rule to check whether a distribution is viable. my %transform = ('DISTCHECK-HOOK' => &target_defined ('distcheck-hook'), 'GETTEXT' => $seen_gettext); # Prepend $(distdir) to each directory given. my %rewritten = map { '$(distdir)/' . "$_" => 1 } keys %dist_dirs; $transform{'DISTDIRS'} = join (' ', sort keys %rewritten); # If we have SUBDIRS, create all dist subdirectories and do # recursive build. if (variable_defined ('SUBDIRS')) { # If SUBDIRS is conditionally defined, then set DIST_SUBDIRS # to all possible directories, and use it. If DIST_SUBDIRS is # defined, just use it. my $dist_subdir_name; # Note that we check DIST_SUBDIRS first on purpose. At least # one project uses so many conditional subdirectories that # calling variable_conditionally_defined on SUBDIRS will cause # automake to grow to 150Mb. Sigh. if (variable_defined ('DIST_SUBDIRS') || variable_conditionally_defined ('SUBDIRS')) { $dist_subdir_name = 'DIST_SUBDIRS'; if (! variable_defined ('DIST_SUBDIRS')) { define_pretty_variable ('DIST_SUBDIRS', '', uniq (&variable_value_as_list_recursive ('SUBDIRS', 'all'))); } } else { $dist_subdir_name = 'SUBDIRS'; # We always define this because that is what `distclean' # wants. define_pretty_variable ('DIST_SUBDIRS', '', '$(SUBDIRS)'); } $transform{'DIST_SUBDIR_NAME'} = $dist_subdir_name; } # If the target `dist-hook' exists, make sure it is run. This # allows users to do random weird things to the distribution # before it is packaged up. push (@dist_targets, 'dist-hook') if &target_defined ('dist-hook'); $transform{'DIST-TARGETS'} = join(' ', @dist_targets); # Defining $(DISTDIR). $transform{'DISTDIR'} = !variable_defined('distdir'); $transform{'TOP_DISTDIR'} = backname ($relative_dir); $output_rules .= &file_contents ('distdir', %transform); } # Handle subdirectories. sub handle_subdirs { return unless variable_defined ('SUBDIRS'); my @subdirs = &variable_value_as_list_recursive ('SUBDIRS', 'all'); my @dsubdirs = (); @dsubdirs = &variable_value_as_list_recursive ('DIST_SUBDIRS', 'all') if variable_defined ('DIST_SUBDIRS'); # If an `obj/' directory exists, BSD make will enter it before # reading `Makefile'. Hence the `Makefile' in the current directory # will not be read. # # % cat Makefile # all: # echo Hello # % cat obj/Makefile # all: # echo World # % make # GNU make # echo Hello # Hello # % pmake # BSD make # echo World # World msg_var ('portability', 'SUBDIRS', "naming a subdirectory `obj' causes troubles with BSD make") if grep ($_ eq 'obj', @subdirs); msg_var ('portability', 'DIST_SUBDIRS', "naming a subdirectory `obj' causes troubles with BSD make") if grep ($_ eq 'obj', @dsubdirs); # Make sure each directory mentioned in SUBDIRS actually exists. foreach my $dir (@subdirs) { # Skip directories substituted by configure. next if $dir =~ /^\@.*\@$/; if (! -d $am_relative_dir . '/' . $dir) { err_var ('SUBDIRS', "required directory $am_relative_dir/$dir " . "does not exist"); next; } err_var 'SUBDIRS', "directory should not contain `/'" if $dir =~ /\//; } $output_rules .= &file_contents ('subdirs'); variable_pretty_output ('RECURSIVE_TARGETS', 'TRUE'); } # ($REGEN, @DEPENDENCIES) # &scan_aclocal_m4 # ---------------- # If aclocal.m4 creation is automated, return the list of its dependencies. sub scan_aclocal_m4 { my $regen_aclocal = 0; return (0, ()) unless $relative_dir eq '.'; &examine_variable ('CONFIG_STATUS_DEPENDENCIES'); &examine_variable ('CONFIGURE_DEPENDENCIES'); if (-f 'aclocal.m4') { &define_variable ("ACLOCAL_M4", '$(top_srcdir)/aclocal.m4'); &push_dist_common ('aclocal.m4'); my $aclocal = new Automake::XFile "< aclocal.m4"; my $line = $aclocal->getline; $regen_aclocal = $line =~ 'generated automatically by aclocal'; } my @ac_deps = (); if (-f 'acinclude.m4') { $regen_aclocal = 1; push @ac_deps, 'acinclude.m4'; } if (variable_defined ('ACLOCAL_M4_SOURCES')) { push (@ac_deps, '$(ACLOCAL_M4_SOURCES)'); } elsif (variable_defined ('ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS')) { # Scan all -I directories for m4 files. These are our # dependencies. my $examine_next = 0; foreach my $amdir (&variable_value_as_list_recursive ('ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS', '')) { if ($examine_next) { $examine_next = 0; if ($amdir !~ /^\// && -d $amdir) { foreach my $ac_dep (&my_glob ($amdir . '/*.m4')) { $ac_dep =~ s/^\.\/+//; push (@ac_deps, $ac_dep) unless $ac_dep eq "aclocal.m4" || $ac_dep eq "acinclude.m4"; } } } elsif ($amdir eq '-I') { $examine_next = 1; } } } # Note that it might be possible that aclocal.m4 doesn't exist but # should be auto-generated. This case probably isn't very # important. return ($regen_aclocal, @ac_deps); } # @DEPENDENCY # &rewrite_inputs_into_dependencies ($ADD_SRCDIR, @INPUTS) # -------------------------------------------------------- # Rewrite a list of input files into a form suitable to put on a # dependency list. The idea is that if an input file has a directory # part the same as the current directory, then the directory part is # simply removed. But if the directory part is different, then # $(top_srcdir) is prepended. Among other things, this is used to # generate the dependency list for the output files generated by # AC_OUTPUT. Consider what the dependencies should look like in this # case: # AC_OUTPUT(src/out:src/in1:lib/in2) # The first argument, ADD_SRCDIR, is 1 if $(top_srcdir) should be added. # If 0 then files that require this addition will simply be ignored. sub rewrite_inputs_into_dependencies ($@) { my ($add_srcdir, @inputs) = @_; my @newinputs; foreach my $single (@inputs) { if (dirname ($single) eq $relative_dir) { push (@newinputs, basename ($single)); } elsif ($add_srcdir) { push (@newinputs, '$(top_srcdir)/' . $single); } } return @newinputs; } # Handle remaking and configure stuff. # We need the name of the input file, to do proper remaking rules. sub handle_configure { my ($local, $input, @secondary_inputs) = @_; my $input_base = basename ($input); my $local_base = basename ($local); my $amfile = $input_base . '.am'; # We know we can always add '.in' because it really should be an # error if the .in was missing originally. my $infile = '$(srcdir)/' . $input_base . '.in'; my $colon_infile = ''; if ($local ne $input || @secondary_inputs) { $colon_infile = ':' . $input . '.in'; } $colon_infile .= ':' . join (':', @secondary_inputs) if @secondary_inputs; my @rewritten = rewrite_inputs_into_dependencies (1, @secondary_inputs); my ($regen_aclocal_m4, @aclocal_m4_deps) = scan_aclocal_m4 (); $output_rules .= &file_contents ('configure', ('MAKEFILE' => $local_base, 'MAKEFILE-DEPS' => "@rewritten", 'CONFIG-MAKEFILE' => ((($relative_dir eq '.') ? '$@' : '$(subdir)/$@') . $colon_infile), 'MAKEFILE-IN' => $infile, 'MAKEFILE-IN-DEPS' => "@include_stack", 'MAKEFILE-AM' => $amfile, 'STRICTNESS' => $cygnus_mode ? 'cygnus' : $strictness_name, 'USE-DEPS' => $cmdline_use_dependencies ? '' : ' --ignore-deps', 'MAKEFILE-AM-SOURCES' => "$input$colon_infile", 'REGEN-ACLOCAL-M4' => $regen_aclocal_m4, 'ACLOCAL_M4_DEPS' => "@aclocal_m4_deps")); if ($relative_dir eq '.') { &push_dist_common ('acconfig.h') if -f 'acconfig.h'; } # If we have a configure header, require it. my $hdr_index = 0; my @distclean_config; foreach my $spec (@config_headers) { $hdr_index += 1; # $CONFIG_H_PATH: config.h from top level. my ($config_h_path, @ins) = split_config_file_spec ($spec); my $config_h_dir = dirname ($config_h_path); # If the header is in the current directory we want to build # the header here. Otherwise, if we're at the topmost # directory and the header's directory doesn't have a # Makefile, then we also want to build the header. if ($relative_dir eq $config_h_dir || ($relative_dir eq '.' && ! &is_make_dir ($config_h_dir))) { my ($cn_sans_dir, $stamp_dir); if ($relative_dir eq $config_h_dir) { $cn_sans_dir = basename ($config_h_path); $stamp_dir = ''; } else { $cn_sans_dir = $config_h_path; if ($config_h_dir eq '.') { $stamp_dir = ''; } else { $stamp_dir = $config_h_dir . '/'; } } # Compute relative path from directory holding output # header to directory holding input header. FIXME: # doesn't handle case where we have multiple inputs. my $in0_sans_dir; if (dirname ($ins[0]) eq $relative_dir) { $in0_sans_dir = basename ($ins[0]); } else { $in0_sans_dir = backname ($relative_dir) . '/' . $ins[0]; } require_file ($config_header_location, FOREIGN, $in0_sans_dir); # Header defined and in this directory. my @files; if (-f $config_h_path . '.top') { push (@files, "$cn_sans_dir.top"); } if (-f $config_h_path . '.bot') { push (@files, "$cn_sans_dir.bot"); } push_dist_common (@files); # For now, acconfig.h can only appear in the top srcdir. if (-f 'acconfig.h') { push (@files, '$(top_srcdir)/acconfig.h'); } my $stamp = "${stamp_dir}stamp-h${hdr_index}"; $output_rules .= file_contents ('remake-hdr', ('FILES' => "@files", 'CONFIG_H' => $cn_sans_dir, 'CONFIG_HIN' => $in0_sans_dir, 'CONFIG_H_PATH' => $config_h_path, 'STAMP' => "$stamp")); push @distclean_config, $cn_sans_dir, $stamp; } } $output_rules .= file_contents ('clean-hdr', ('FILES' => "@distclean_config")) if @distclean_config; # Set location of mkinstalldirs. define_variable ('mkinstalldirs', ('$(SHELL) ' . $config_aux_dir . '/mkinstalldirs')); reject_var ('CONFIG_HEADER', "`CONFIG_HEADER' is an anachronism; now determined " . "automatically\nfrom `$configure_ac'"); my @config_h; foreach my $spec (@config_headers) { my ($out, @ins) = split_config_file_spec ($spec); # Generate CONFIG_HEADER define. if ($relative_dir eq dirname ($out)) { push @config_h, basename ($out); } else { push @config_h, "\$(top_builddir)/$out"; } } define_variable ("CONFIG_HEADER", "@config_h") if @config_h; # Now look for other files in this directory which must be remade # by config.status, and generate rules for them. my @actual_other_files = (); foreach my $lfile (@other_input_files) { my $file; my @inputs; if ($lfile =~ /^([^:]*):(.*)$/) { # This is the ":" syntax of AC_OUTPUT. $file = $1; @inputs = split (':', $2); } else { # Normal usage. $file = $lfile; @inputs = $file . '.in'; } # Automake files should not be stored in here, but in %MAKE_LIST. prog_error "$lfile in \@other_input_files" if -f $file . '.am'; my $local = basename ($file); # Make sure the dist directory for each input file is created. # We only have to do this at the topmost level though. This # is a bit ugly but it easier than spreading out the logic, # especially in cases like AC_OUTPUT(foo/out:bar/in), where # there is no Makefile in bar/. if ($relative_dir eq '.') { foreach (@inputs) { $dist_dirs{dirname ($_)} = 1; } } # We skip files that aren't in this directory. However, if # the file's directory does not have a Makefile, and we are # currently doing `.', then we create a rule to rebuild the # file in the subdir. my $fd = dirname ($file); if ($fd ne $relative_dir) { if ($relative_dir eq '.' && ! &is_make_dir ($fd)) { $local = $file; } else { next; } } my @rewritten_inputs = rewrite_inputs_into_dependencies (1, @inputs); $output_rules .= ($local . ': ' . '$(top_builddir)/config.status ' . "@rewritten_inputs\n" . "\t" . 'cd $(top_builddir) && ' . '$(SHELL) ./config.status ' . ($relative_dir eq '.' ? '' : '$(subdir)/') . '$@' . "\n"); push (@actual_other_files, $local); # Require all input files. require_file ($ac_config_files_location, FOREIGN, rewrite_inputs_into_dependencies (0, @inputs)); } # These files get removed by "make clean". define_pretty_variable ('CONFIG_CLEAN_FILES', '', @actual_other_files); } # Handle C headers. sub handle_headers { my @r = &am_install_var ('-defaultdist', 'header', 'HEADERS', 'include', 'oldinclude', 'pkginclude', 'noinst', 'check'); foreach (@r) { next unless /\..*$/; &saw_extension ($&); } } sub handle_gettext { return if ! $seen_gettext || $relative_dir ne '.'; if (! variable_defined ('SUBDIRS')) { err_ac "AM_GNU_GETTEXT used but SUBDIRS not defined"; return; } my @subdirs = &variable_value_as_list_recursive ('SUBDIRS', 'all'); err_var 'SUBDIRS', "AM_GNU_GETTEXT used but `po' not in SUBDIRS" if ! grep ($_ eq 'po', @subdirs); # intl/ is not required when AM_GNU_GETTEXT is called with # the `external' option. err_var 'SUBDIRS', "AM_GNU_GETTEXT used but `intl' not in SUBDIRS" if (! $seen_gettext_external && ! grep ($_ eq 'intl', @subdirs)); require_file ($ac_gettext_location, GNU, 'ABOUT-NLS'); } # Handle footer elements. sub handle_footer { # NOTE don't use define_pretty_variable here, because # $contents{...} is already defined. $output_vars .= 'SOURCES = ' . variable_value ('SOURCES') . "\n\n" if variable_value ('SOURCES'); reject_target ('.SUFFIXES', "use variable `SUFFIXES', not target `.SUFFIXES'"); # Note: AIX 4.1 /bin/make will fail if any suffix rule appears # before .SUFFIXES. So we make sure that .SUFFIXES appears before # anything else, by sticking it right after the default: target. $output_header .= ".SUFFIXES:\n"; if (@suffixes || variable_defined ('SUFFIXES')) { # Make sure suffixes has unique elements. Sort them to ensure # the output remains consistent. However, $(SUFFIXES) is # always at the start of the list, unsorted. This is done # because make will choose rules depending on the ordering of # suffixes, and this lets the user have some control. Push # actual suffixes, and not $(SUFFIXES). Some versions of make # do not like variable substitutions on the .SUFFIXES line. my @user_suffixes = (variable_defined ('SUFFIXES') ? &variable_value_as_list_recursive ('SUFFIXES', '') : ()); my %suffixes = map { $_ => 1 } @suffixes; delete @suffixes{@user_suffixes}; $output_header .= (".SUFFIXES: " . join (' ', @user_suffixes, sort keys %suffixes) . "\n"); } $output_trailer .= file_contents ('footer'); } # Deal with installdirs target. sub handle_installdirs () { $output_rules .= &file_contents ('install', ('am__installdirs' => variable_value ('am__installdirs') || '', 'installdirs-local' => (target_defined ('installdirs-local') ? ' installdirs-local' : ''))); } # Deal with all and all-am. sub handle_all ($) { my ($makefile) = @_; # Output `all-am'. # Put this at the beginning for the sake of non-GNU makes. This # is still wrong if these makes can run parallel jobs. But it is # right enough. unshift (@all, basename ($makefile)); foreach my $spec (@config_headers) { my ($out, @ins) = split_config_file_spec ($spec); push (@all, basename ($out)) if dirname ($out) eq $relative_dir; } # Install `all' hooks. if (&target_defined ("all-local")) { push (@all, "all-local"); &depend ('.PHONY', "all-local"); } &pretty_print_rule ("all-am:", "\t\t", @all); &depend ('.PHONY', 'all-am', 'all'); # Output `all'. my @local_headers = (); push @local_headers, '$(BUILT_SOURCES)' if variable_defined ('BUILT_SOURCES'); foreach my $spec (@config_headers) { my ($out, @ins) = split_config_file_spec ($spec); push @local_headers, basename ($out) if dirname ($out) eq $relative_dir; } if (@local_headers) { # We need to make sure config.h is built before we recurse. # We also want to make sure that built sources are built # before any ordinary `all' targets are run. We can't do this # by changing the order of dependencies to the "all" because # that breaks when using parallel makes. Instead we handle # things explicitly. $output_all .= ("all: @local_headers" . "\n\t" . '$(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) ' . (variable_defined ('SUBDIRS') ? 'all-recursive' : 'all-am') . "\n\n"); } else { $output_all .= "all: " . (variable_defined ('SUBDIRS') ? 'all-recursive' : 'all-am') . "\n\n"; } } # Handle check merge target specially. sub do_check_merge_target { if (&target_defined ('check-local')) { # User defined local form of target. So include it. push (@check_tests, 'check-local'); &depend ('.PHONY', 'check-local'); } # In --cygnus mode, check doesn't depend on all. if ($cygnus_mode) { # Just run the local check rules. &pretty_print_rule ('check-am:', "\t\t", @check); } else { # The check target must depend on the local equivalent of # `all', to ensure all the primary targets are built. Then it # must build the local check rules. $output_rules .= "check-am: all-am\n"; &pretty_print_rule ("\t\$(MAKE) \$(AM_MAKEFLAGS)", "\t ", @check) if @check; } &pretty_print_rule ("\t\$(MAKE) \$(AM_MAKEFLAGS)", "\t ", @check_tests) if @check_tests; &depend ('.PHONY', 'check', 'check-am'); $output_rules .= ("check: " . (variable_defined ('SUBDIRS') ? 'check-recursive' : 'check-am') . "\n"); } # Handle all 'clean' targets. sub handle_clean { my %transform; # Don't include `MAINTAINER'; it is handled specially below. foreach my $name ('MOSTLY', '', 'DIST') { $transform{"${name}CLEAN"} = variable_defined ("${name}CLEANFILES"); } # Built sources are automatically removed by maintainer-clean. push (@maintainer_clean_files, '$(BUILT_SOURCES)') if variable_defined ('BUILT_SOURCES'); push (@maintainer_clean_files, '$(MAINTAINERCLEANFILES)') if variable_defined ('MAINTAINERCLEANFILES'); $output_rules .= &file_contents ('clean', (%transform, 'MCFILES' # Join with no space to avoid # spurious `test -z' success at # runtime. => join ('', @maintainer_clean_files), 'MFILES' # A space is required in the join here. => "@maintainer_clean_files")); } # &depend ($CATEGORY, @DEPENDENDEES) # ---------------------------------- # The target $CATEGORY depends on @DEPENDENDEES. sub depend { my ($category, @dependendees) = @_; { push (@{$dependencies{$category}}, @dependendees); } } # &target_cmp ($A, $B) # -------------------- # Subroutine for &handle_factored_dependencies to let `.PHONY' be last. sub target_cmp { return 0 if $a eq $b; return -1 if $b eq '.PHONY'; return 1 if $a eq '.PHONY'; return $a cmp $b; } # &handle_factored_dependencies () # -------------------------------- # Handle everything related to gathered targets. sub handle_factored_dependencies { # Reject bad hooks. foreach my $utarg ('uninstall-data-local', 'uninstall-data-hook', 'uninstall-exec-local', 'uninstall-exec-hook') { my $x = $utarg; $x =~ s/(data|exec)-//; reject_target ($utarg, "use `$x', not `$utarg'"); } reject_target ('install-local', "use `install-data-local' or `install-exec-local', " . "not `install-local'"); reject_target ('install-info-local', "`install-info-local' target defined but " . "`no-installinfo' option not in use") unless defined $options{'no-installinfo'}; # Install the -local hooks. foreach (keys %dependencies) { # Hooks are installed on the -am targets. s/-am$// or next; if (&target_defined ("$_-local")) { depend ("$_-am", "$_-local"); &depend ('.PHONY', "$_-local"); } } # Install the -hook hooks. # FIXME: Why not be as liberal as we are with -local hooks? foreach ('install-exec', 'install-data', 'uninstall') { if (&target_defined ("$_-hook")) { $actions{"$_-am"} .= ("\t\@\$(NORMAL_INSTALL)\n" . "\t" . '$(MAKE) $(AM_MAKEFLAGS) ' . "$_-hook\n"); } } # All the required targets are phony. depend ('.PHONY', keys %required_targets); # Actually output gathered targets. foreach (sort target_cmp keys %dependencies) { # If there is nothing about this guy, skip it. next unless (@{$dependencies{$_}} || $actions{$_} || $required_targets{$_}); &pretty_print_rule ("$_:", "\t", uniq (sort @{$dependencies{$_}})); $output_rules .= $actions{$_} if defined $actions{$_}; $output_rules .= "\n"; } } # &handle_tests_dejagnu () # ------------------------ sub handle_tests_dejagnu { push (@check_tests, 'check-DEJAGNU'); $output_rules .= file_contents ('dejagnu'); } # Handle TESTS variable and other checks. sub handle_tests { if (defined $options{'dejagnu'}) { &handle_tests_dejagnu; } else { foreach my $c ('DEJATOOL', 'RUNTEST', 'RUNTESTFLAGS') { reject_var ($c, "`$c' defined but `dejagnu' not in " . "`AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS'"); } } if (variable_defined ('TESTS')) { push (@check_tests, 'check-TESTS'); $output_rules .= &file_contents ('check'); } } # Handle Emacs Lisp. sub handle_emacs_lisp { my @elfiles = &am_install_var ('-candist', 'lisp', 'LISP', 'lisp', 'noinst'); return if ! @elfiles; # Generate .elc files. my @elcfiles = map { $_ . 'c' } @elfiles; define_pretty_variable ('ELCFILES', '', @elcfiles); push (@all, '$(ELCFILES)'); require_variables ("$am_file.am", "Emacs Lisp sources seen", 'EMACS', 'lispdir'); require_conf_file ("$am_file.am", FOREIGN, 'elisp-comp'); &define_variable ('elisp_comp', $config_aux_dir . '/elisp-comp'); } # Handle Python sub handle_python { my @pyfiles = &am_install_var ('-defaultdist', 'python', 'PYTHON', 'noinst'); return if ! @pyfiles; require_variables ("$am_file.am", "Python sources seen", 'PYTHON'); require_conf_file ("$am_file.am", FOREIGN, 'py-compile'); &define_variable ('py_compile', $config_aux_dir . '/py-compile'); } # Handle Java. sub handle_java { my @sourcelist = &am_install_var ('-candist', 'java', 'JAVA', 'java', 'noinst', 'check'); return if ! @sourcelist; my @prefix = am_primary_prefixes ('JAVA', 1, 'java', 'noinst', 'check'); my $dir; foreach my $curs (@prefix) { next if $curs eq 'EXTRA'; err_var "${curs}_JAVA", "multiple _JAVA primaries in use" if defined $dir; $dir = $curs; } push (@all, 'class' . $dir . '.stamp'); } # Handle some of the minor options. sub handle_minor_options { if (defined $options{'readme-alpha'}) { if ($relative_dir eq '.') { if ($package_version !~ /^$GNITS_VERSION_PATTERN$/) { msg ('error-gnits', $package_version_location, "version `$package_version' doesn't follow " . "Gnits standards"); } if (defined $1 && -f 'README-alpha') { # This means we have an alpha release. See # GNITS_VERSION_PATTERN for details. require_file_with_macro ('AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS', FOREIGN, 'README-alpha'); } } } } ################################################################ # ($OUTPUT, @INPUTS) # &split_config_file_spec ($SPEC) # ------------------------------- # Decode the Autoconf syntax for config files (files, headers, links # etc.). sub split_config_file_spec ($) { my ($spec) = @_; my ($output, @inputs) = split (/:/, $spec); push @inputs, "$output.in" unless @inputs; return ($output, @inputs); } my %make_list; # &scan_autoconf_config_files ($CONFIG-FILES) # ------------------------------------------- # Study $CONFIG-FILES which is the first argument to AC_CONFIG_FILES # (or AC_OUTPUT). sub scan_autoconf_config_files { my ($config_files) = @_; # Look at potential Makefile.am's. foreach (split ' ', $config_files) { # Must skip empty string for Perl 4. next if $_ eq "\\" || $_ eq ''; # Handle $local:$input syntax. Note that we ignore # every input file past the first, though we keep # those around for later. my ($local, $input, @rest) = split (/:/); if (! $input) { $input = $local; } else { # FIXME: should be error if .in is missing. $input =~ s/\.in$//; } if (-f $input . '.am') { # We have a file that automake should generate. $make_list{$input} = join (':', ($local, @rest)); } else { # We have a file that automake should cause to be # rebuilt, but shouldn't generate itself. push (@other_input_files, $_); } } } # &scan_autoconf_traces ($FILENAME) # --------------------------------- sub scan_autoconf_traces ($) { my ($filename) = @_; my @traced = qw(AC_CANONICAL_HOST AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR AC_CONFIG_FILES AC_CONFIG_HEADERS AC_INIT AC_LIBSOURCE AC_SUBST AM_AUTOMAKE_VERSION AM_CONDITIONAL AM_GNU_GETTEXT AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE AM_MAINTAINER_MODE AM_PROG_CC_C_O); my $traces = ($ENV{AUTOCONF} || 'autoconf') . " "; # Use a separator unlikely to be used, not `:', the default, which # has a precise meaning for AC_CONFIG_FILES and so on. $traces .= join (' ', map { "--trace=$_" . ':\$f:\$l::\$n::\${::}%' } @traced); my $tracefh = new Automake::XFile ("$traces $filename |"); verb "reading $traces"; while ($_ = $tracefh->getline) { chomp; my ($here, @args) = split /::/; my $macro = $args[0]; # Alphabetical ordering please. if ($macro eq 'AC_CANONICAL_HOST') { if (! $seen_canonical) { $seen_canonical = AC_CANONICAL_HOST; $canonical_location = $here; }; } elsif ($macro eq 'AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM') { $seen_canonical = AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM; $canonical_location = $here; } elsif ($macro eq 'AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR') { @config_aux_path = $args[1]; $config_aux_dir_set_in_configure_in = 1; } elsif ($macro eq 'AC_CONFIG_FILES') { # Look at potential Makefile.am's. $ac_config_files_location = $here; &scan_autoconf_config_files ($args[1]); } elsif ($macro eq 'AC_CONFIG_HEADERS') { $config_header_location = $here; push @config_headers, split (' ', $args[1]); } elsif ($macro eq 'AC_INIT') { if (defined $args[2]) { $package_version = $args[2]; $package_version_location = $here; } } elsif ($macro eq 'AC_LIBSOURCE') { $libsources{$args[1]} = $here; } elsif ($macro eq 'AC_SUBST') { # Just check for alphanumeric in AC_SUBST. If you do # AC_SUBST(5), then too bad. $configure_vars{$args[1]} = $here if $args[1] =~ /^\w+$/; } elsif ($macro eq 'AM_AUTOMAKE_VERSION') { err ($here, "version mismatch. This is Automake $VERSION,\n" . "but the definition used by this AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE\n" . "comes from Automake $args[1]. You should recreate\n" . "aclocal.m4 with aclocal and run automake again.\n") if ($VERSION ne $args[1]); $seen_automake_version = 1; } elsif ($macro eq 'AM_CONDITIONAL') { $configure_cond{$args[1]} = $here; } elsif ($macro eq 'AM_GNU_GETTEXT') { $seen_gettext = $here; $ac_gettext_location = $here; $seen_gettext_external = grep ($_ eq 'external', @args); } elsif ($macro eq 'AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE') { $seen_init_automake = $here; if (defined $args[2]) { $package_version = $args[2]; $package_version_location = $here; } elsif (defined $args[1]) { $global_options = $args[1]; } } elsif ($macro eq 'AM_MAINTAINER_MODE') { $seen_maint_mode = $here; } elsif ($macro eq 'AM_PROG_CC_C_O') { $seen_cc_c_o = $here; } } } # &scan_autoconf_files () # ----------------------- # Check whether we use `configure.ac' or `configure.in'. # Scan it (and possibly `aclocal.m4') for interesting things. # We must scan aclocal.m4 because there might be AC_SUBSTs and such there. sub scan_autoconf_files { # Reinitialize libsources here. This isn't really necessary, # since we currently assume there is only one configure.ac. But # that won't always be the case. %libsources = (); $configure_ac = find_configure_ac; fatal "`configure.ac' or `configure.in' is required\n" if !$configure_ac; scan_autoconf_traces ($configure_ac); # Set input and output files if not specified by user. if (! @input_files) { @input_files = sort keys %make_list; %output_files = %make_list; } @configure_input_files = sort keys %make_list; err_ac "`AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE' must be used" if ! $seen_init_automake; if (! $seen_automake_version) { if (-f 'aclocal.m4') { err ($seen_init_automake || $me, "your implementation of AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE comes from " . "an\nold Automake version. You should recreate " . "aclocal.m4\nwith aclocal and run automake again.\n"); } else { err ($seen_init_automake || $me, "no proper implementation of AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE was " . "found,\nprobably because aclocal.m4 is missing...\n" . "You should run aclocal to create this file, then\n" . "run automake again.\n"); } } # Look for some files we need. Always check for these. This # check must be done for every run, even those where we are only # looking at a subdir Makefile. We must set relative_dir so that # the file-finding machinery works. # FIXME: Is this broken because it needs dynamic scopes. # My tests seems to show it's not the case. $relative_dir = '.'; require_conf_file ($configure_ac, FOREIGN, 'install-sh', 'mkinstalldirs', 'missing'); err_am "`install.sh' is an anachronism; use `install-sh' instead" if -f $config_aux_path[0] . '/install.sh'; # Preserve dist_common for later. $configure_dist_common = variable_value ('DIST_COMMON', 'TRUE') || ''; } ################################################################ # Set up for Cygnus mode. sub check_cygnus { return unless $cygnus_mode; &set_strictness ('foreign'); $options{'no-installinfo'} = 1; $options{'no-dependencies'} = 1; $use_dependencies = 0; err_ac "`AM_MAINTAINER_MODE' required when --cygnus specified" if !$seen_maint_mode; } # Do any extra checking for GNU standards. sub check_gnu_standards { if ($relative_dir eq '.') { # In top level (or only) directory. # Accept one of these three licenses; default to COPYING. my $license = 'COPYING'; foreach (qw /COPYING.LIB COPYING.LESSER/) { $license = $_ if -f $_; } require_file ("$am_file.am", GNU, $license, qw/INSTALL NEWS README AUTHORS ChangeLog/); } for my $opt ('no-installman', 'no-installinfo') { msg_var ('error-gnu', 'AUTOMAKE_OPTIONS', "option `$opt' disallowed by GNU standards") if (defined $options{$opt}); } } # Do any extra checking for GNITS standards. sub check_gnits_standards { if ($relative_dir eq '.') { # In top level (or only) directory. require_file ("$am_file.am", GNITS, 'THANKS'); } } ################################################################ # # Functions to handle files of each language. # Each `lang_X_rewrite($DIRECTORY, $BASE, $EXT)' function follows a # simple formula: Return value is LANG_SUBDIR if the resulting object # file should be in a subdir if the source file is, LANG_PROCESS if # file is to be dealt with, LANG_IGNORE otherwise. # Much of the actual processing is handled in # handle_single_transform_list. These functions exist so that # auxiliary information can be recorded for a later cleanup pass. # Note that the calls to these functions are computed, so don't bother # searching for their precise names in the source. # This is just a convenience function that can be used to determine # when a subdir object should be used. sub lang_sub_obj { return defined $options{'subdir-objects'} ? LANG_SUBDIR : LANG_PROCESS; } # Rewrite a single C source file. sub lang_c_rewrite { my ($directory, $base, $ext) = @_; if (defined $options{'ansi2knr'} && $base =~ /_$/) { # FIXME: include line number in error. err_am "C source file `$base.c' would be deleted by ansi2knr rules"; } my $r = LANG_PROCESS; if (defined $options{'subdir-objects'}) { $r = LANG_SUBDIR; $base = $directory . '/' . $base unless $directory eq '.' || $directory eq ''; err_am ("C objects in subdir but `AM_PROG_CC_C_O' " . "not in `$configure_ac'", uniq_scope => US_GLOBAL) unless $seen_cc_c_o; require_conf_file ("$am_file.am", FOREIGN, 'compile'); # In this case we already have the directory information, so # don't add it again. $de_ansi_files{$base} = ''; } else { $de_ansi_files{$base} = (($directory eq '.' || $directory eq '') ? '' : "$directory/"); } return $r; } # Rewrite a single C++ source file. sub lang_cxx_rewrite { return &lang_sub_obj; } # Rewrite a single header file. sub lang_header_rewrite { # Header files are simply ignored. return LANG_IGNORE; } # Rewrite a single yacc file. sub lang_yacc_rewrite { my ($directory, $base, $ext) = @_; my $r = &lang_sub_obj; (my $newext = $ext) =~ tr/y/c/; return ($r, $newext); } # Rewrite a single yacc++ file. sub lang_yaccxx_rewrite { my ($directory, $base, $ext) = @_; my $r = &lang_sub_obj; (my $newext = $ext) =~ tr/y/c/; return ($r, $newext); } # Rewrite a single lex file. sub lang_lex_rewrite { my ($directory, $base, $ext) = @_; my $r = &lang_sub_obj; (my $newext = $ext) =~ tr/l/c/; return ($r, $newext); } # Rewrite a single lex++ file. sub lang_lexxx_rewrite { my ($directory, $base, $ext) = @_; my $r = &lang_sub_obj; (my $newext = $ext) =~ tr/l/c/; return ($r, $newext); } # Rewrite a single assembly file. sub lang_asm_rewrite { return &lang_sub_obj; } # Rewrite a single Fortran 77 file. sub lang_f77_rewrite { return LANG_PROCESS; } # Rewrite a single preprocessed Fortran 77 file. sub lang_ppf77_rewrite { return LANG_PROCESS; } # Rewrite a single ratfor file. sub lang_ratfor_rewrite { return LANG_PROCESS; } # Rewrite a single Objective C file. sub lang_objc_rewrite { return &lang_sub_obj; } # Rewrite a single Java file. sub lang_java_rewrite { return LANG_SUBDIR; } # The lang_X_finish functions are called after all source file # processing is done. Each should handle defining rules for the # language, etc. A finish function is only called if a source file of # the appropriate type has been seen. sub lang_c_finish { # Push all libobjs files onto de_ansi_files. We actually only # push files which exist in the current directory, and which are # genuine source files. foreach my $file (keys %libsources) { if ($file =~ /^(.*)\.[cly]$/ && -f "$relative_dir/$file") { $de_ansi_files{$1} = (($relative_dir eq '.' || $relative_dir eq '') ? '' : "$relative_dir/"); } } if (defined $options{'ansi2knr'} && keys %de_ansi_files) { # Make all _.c files depend on their corresponding .c files. my @objects; foreach my $base (sort keys %de_ansi_files) { # Each _.c file must depend on ansi2knr; otherwise it # might be used in a parallel build before it is built. # We need to support files in the srcdir and in the build # dir (because these files might be auto-generated. But # we can't use $< -- some makes only define $< during a # suffix rule. my $ansfile = $de_ansi_files{$base} . $base . '.c'; $output_rules .= ($base . "_.c: $ansfile \$(ANSI2KNR)\n\t" . '$(CPP) $(DEFS) $(DEFAULT_INCLUDES) $(INCLUDES) $(AM_CPPFLAGS) $(CPPFLAGS) ' . '`if test -f $(srcdir)/' . $ansfile . '; then echo $(srcdir)/' . $ansfile . '; else echo ' . $ansfile . '; fi` ' . "| sed 's/^# \\([0-9]\\)/#line \\1/' " . '| $(ANSI2KNR) > ' . $base . "_.c" # If ansi2knr fails then we shouldn't # create the _.c file . " || rm -f ${base}_.c\n"); push (@objects, $base . '_.$(OBJEXT)'); push (@objects, $base . '_.lo') if variable_defined ('LIBTOOL'); } # Make all _.o (and _.lo) files depend on ansi2knr. # Use a sneaky little hack to make it print nicely. &pretty_print_rule ('', '', @objects, ':', '$(ANSI2KNR)'); } } # This is a yacc helper which is called whenever we have decided to # compile a yacc file. sub lang_yacc_target_hook { my ($self, $aggregate, $output, $input) = @_; my $flag = $aggregate . "_YFLAGS"; if ((variable_defined ($flag) && &variable_value ($flag) =~ /$DASH_D_PATTERN/o) || (variable_defined ('YFLAGS') && &variable_value ('YFLAGS') =~ /$DASH_D_PATTERN/o)) { (my $output_base = $output) =~ s/$KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN$//; my $header = $output_base . '.h'; # Found a `-d' that applies to the compilation of this file. # Add a dependency for the generated header file, and arrange # for that file to be included in the distribution. # FIXME: this fails for `nodist_*_SOURCES'. $output_rules .= ("${header}: $output\n" # Recover from removal of $header . "\t\@if test ! -f \$@; then \\\n" . "\t rm -f $output; \\\n" . "\t \$(MAKE) $output; \\\n" . "\telse :; fi\n"); &push_dist_common ($header); # If the files are built in the build directory, then we want # to remove them with `make clean'. If they are in srcdir # they shouldn't be touched. However, we can't determine this # statically, and the GNU rules say that yacc/lex output files # should be removed by maintainer-clean. So that's what we # do. push (@maintainer_clean_files, $header); } # Erase $OUTPUT on `make maintainer-clean' (by GNU standards). # See the comment above for $HEADER. push (@maintainer_clean_files, $output); } # This is a lex helper which is called whenever we have decided to # compile a lex file. sub lang_lex_target_hook { my ($self, $aggregate, $output, $input) = @_; # If the files are built in the build directory, then we want to # remove them with `make clean'. If they are in srcdir they # shouldn't be touched. However, we can't determine this # statically, and the GNU rules say that yacc/lex output files # should be removed by maintainer-clean. So that's what we do. push (@maintainer_clean_files, $output); } # This is a helper for both lex and yacc. sub yacc_lex_finish_helper { return if defined $language_scratch{'lex-yacc-done'}; $language_scratch{'lex-yacc-done'} = 1; # If there is more than one distinct yacc (resp lex) source file # in a given directory, then the `ylwrap' program is required to # allow parallel builds to work correctly. FIXME: for now, no # line number. require_conf_file ($configure_ac, FOREIGN, 'ylwrap'); if ($config_aux_dir_set_in_configure_in) { &define_variable ('YLWRAP', $config_aux_dir . "/ylwrap"); } else { &define_variable ('YLWRAP', '$(top_srcdir)/ylwrap'); } } sub lang_yacc_finish { return if defined $language_scratch{'yacc-done'}; $language_scratch{'yacc-done'} = 1; reject_var 'YACCFLAGS', "`YACCFLAGS' obsolete; use `YFLAGS' instead"; &yacc_lex_finish_helper if count_files_for_language ('yacc') > 1; } sub lang_lex_finish { return if defined $language_scratch{'lex-done'}; $language_scratch{'lex-done'} = 1; &yacc_lex_finish_helper if count_files_for_language ('lex') > 1; } # Given a hash table of linker names, pick the name that has the most # precedence. This is lame, but something has to have global # knowledge in order to eliminate the conflict. Add more linkers as # required. sub resolve_linker { my (%linkers) = @_; foreach my $l (qw(GCJLINK CXXLINK F77LINK OBJCLINK)) { return $l if defined $linkers{$l}; } return 'LINK'; } # Called to indicate that an extension was used. sub saw_extension { my ($ext) = @_; if (! defined $extension_seen{$ext}) { $extension_seen{$ext} = 1; } else { ++$extension_seen{$ext}; } } # Return the number of files seen for a given language. Knows about # special cases we care about. FIXME: this is hideous. We need # something that involves real language objects. For instance yacc # and yaccxx could both derive from a common yacc class which would # know about the strange ylwrap requirement. (Or better yet we could # just not support legacy yacc!) sub count_files_for_language { my ($name) = @_; my @names; if ($name eq 'yacc' || $name eq 'yaccxx') { @names = ('yacc', 'yaccxx'); } elsif ($name eq 'lex' || $name eq 'lexxx') { @names = ('lex', 'lexxx'); } else { @names = ($name); } my $r = 0; foreach $name (@names) { my $lang = $languages{$name}; foreach my $ext (@{$lang->extensions}) { $r += $extension_seen{$ext} if defined $extension_seen{$ext}; } } return $r } # Called to ask whether source files have been seen . If HEADERS is 1, # headers can be included. sub saw_sources_p { my ($headers) = @_; # count all the sources my $count = 0; foreach my $val (values %extension_seen) { $count += $val; } if (!$headers) { $count -= count_files_for_language ('header'); } return $count > 0; } # register_language (%ATTRIBUTE) # ------------------------------ # Register a single language. # Each %ATTRIBUTE is of the form ATTRIBUTE => VALUE. sub register_language (%) { my (%option) = @_; # Set the defaults. $option{'ansi'} = 0 unless defined $option{'ansi'}; $option{'autodep'} = 'no' unless defined $option{'autodep'}; $option{'linker'} = '' unless defined $option{'linker'}; $option{'flags'} = [] unless defined $option{'flags'}; $option{'output_extensions'} = sub { return ( '.$(OBJEXT)', '.lo' ) } unless defined $option{'output_extensions'}; my $lang = new Language (%option); # Fill indexes. grep ($extension_map{$_} = $lang->name, @{$lang->extensions}); $languages{$lang->name} = $lang; # Update the pattern of known extensions. accept_extensions (@{$lang->extensions}); # Upate the $suffix_rule map. foreach my $suffix (@{$lang->extensions}) { foreach my $dest (&{$lang->output_extensions} ($suffix)) { ®ister_suffix_rule ('internal', $suffix, $dest); } } } # derive_suffix ($EXT, $OBJ) # -------------------------- # This function is used to find a path from a user-specified suffix $EXT # to $OBJ or to some other suffix we recognize internally, eg `cc'. sub derive_suffix ($$) { my ($source_ext, $obj) = @_; while (! $extension_map{$source_ext} && $source_ext ne $obj && exists $suffix_rules->{$source_ext} && exists $suffix_rules->{$source_ext}{$obj}) { $source_ext = $suffix_rules->{$source_ext}{$obj}[0]; } return $source_ext; } ################################################################ # Pretty-print something. HEAD is what should be printed at the # beginning of the first line, FILL is what should be printed at the # beginning of every subsequent line. sub pretty_print_internal { my ($head, $fill, @values) = @_; my $column = length ($head); my $result = $head; # Fill length is number of characters. However, each Tab # character counts for eight. So we count the number of Tabs and # multiply by 7. my $fill_length = length ($fill); $fill_length += 7 * ($fill =~ tr/\t/\t/d); foreach (@values) { # "71" because we also print a space. if ($column + length ($_) > 71) { $result .= " \\\n" . $fill; $column = $fill_length; } $result .= ' ' if $result =~ /\S\z/; $result .= $_; $column += length ($_) + 1; } $result .= "\n"; return $result; } # Pretty-print something and append to output_vars. sub pretty_print { $output_vars .= &pretty_print_internal (@_); } # Pretty-print something and append to output_rules. sub pretty_print_rule { $output_rules .= &pretty_print_internal (@_); } ################################################################ # $STRING # &conditional_string(@COND-STACK) # -------------------------------- # Build a string which denotes the conditional in @COND-STACK. Some # simplifications are done: `TRUE' entries are elided, and any `FALSE' # entry results in a return of `FALSE'. sub conditional_string { my (@stack) = @_; if (grep (/^FALSE$/, @stack)) { return 'FALSE'; } else { return join (' ', uniq sort grep (!/^TRUE$/, @stack)); } } # $BOOLEAN # &conditional_true_when ($COND, $WHEN) # ------------------------------------- # See if a conditional is true. Both arguments are conditional # strings. This returns true if the first conditional is true when # the second conditional is true. # For instance with $COND = `BAR FOO', and $WHEN = `BAR BAZ FOO', # obviously return 1, and 0 when, for instance, $WHEN = `FOO'. sub conditional_true_when ($$) { my ($cond, $when) = @_; # Make a hash holding all the values from $WHEN. my %cond_vals = map { $_ => 1 } split (' ', $when); # Nothing is true when FALSE (not even FALSE itself, but it # shouldn't hurt if you decide to change that). return 0 if exists $cond_vals{'FALSE'}; # Check each component of $cond, which looks `COND1 COND2'. foreach my $comp (split (' ', $cond)) { # TRUE is always true. next if $comp eq 'TRUE'; return 0 if ! defined $cond_vals{$comp}; } return 1; } # $BOOLEAN # &conditional_is_redundant ($COND, @WHENS) # ---------------------------------------- # Determine whether $COND is redundant with respect to @WHENS. # # Returns true if $COND is true for any of the conditions in @WHENS. # # If there are no @WHENS, then behave as if @WHENS contained a single empty # condition. sub conditional_is_redundant ($@) { my ($cond, @whens) = @_; @whens = ("") if @whens == 0; foreach my $when (@whens) { return 1 if conditional_true_when ($cond, $when); } return 0; } # $BOOLEAN # &conditional_implies_any ($COND, @CONDS) # ---------------------------------------- # Returns true iff $COND implies any of the conditions in @CONDS. sub conditional_implies_any ($@) { my ($cond, @conds) = @_; @conds = ("") if @conds == 0; foreach my $c (@conds) { return 1 if conditional_true_when ($c, $cond); } return 0; } # $NEGATION # condition_negate ($COND) # ------------------------ sub condition_negate ($) { my ($cond) = @_; $cond =~ s/TRUE$/TRUEO/; $cond =~ s/FALSE$/TRUE/; $cond =~ s/TRUEO$/FALSE/; return $cond; } # Compare condition names. # Issue them in alphabetical order, foo_TRUE before foo_FALSE. sub by_condition { # Be careful we might be comparing `' or `#'. $a =~ /^(.*)_(TRUE|FALSE)$/; my ($aname, $abool) = ($1 || '', $2 || ''); $b =~ /^(.*)_(TRUE|FALSE)$/; my ($bname, $bbool) = ($1 || '', $2 || ''); return ($aname cmp $bname # Don't bother with IFs, given that TRUE is after FALSE # just cmp in the reverse order. || $bbool cmp $abool # Just in case... || $a cmp $b); } # &make_condition (@CONDITIONS) # ----------------------------- # Transform a list of conditions (themselves can be an internal list # of conditions, e.g., @CONDITIONS = ('cond1 cond2', 'cond3')) into a # Make conditional (a pattern for AC_SUBST). # Correctly returns the empty string when there are no conditions. sub make_condition { my $res = conditional_string (@_); # There are no conditions. if ($res eq '') { # Nothing to do. } # It's impossible. elsif ($res eq 'FALSE') { $res = '#'; } # Build it. else { $res = '@' . $res . '@'; $res =~ s/ /@@/g; } return $res; } ## ------------------------------ ## ## Handling the condition stack. ## ## ------------------------------ ## # $COND_STRING # cond_stack_if ($NEGATE, $COND, $WHERE) # -------------------------------------- sub cond_stack_if ($$$) { my ($negate, $cond, $where) = @_; err $where, "$cond does not appear in AM_CONDITIONAL" if ! $configure_cond{$cond} && $cond !~ /^TRUE|FALSE$/; $cond = "${cond}_TRUE" unless $cond =~ /^TRUE|FALSE$/; $cond = condition_negate ($cond) if $negate; push (@cond_stack, $cond); return conditional_string (@cond_stack); } # $COND_STRING # cond_stack_else ($NEGATE, $COND, $WHERE) # ---------------------------------------- sub cond_stack_else ($$$) { my ($negate, $cond, $where) = @_; if (! @cond_stack) { err $where, "else without if"; return; } $cond_stack[$#cond_stack] = condition_negate ($cond_stack[$#cond_stack]); # If $COND is given, check against it. if (defined $cond) { $cond = "${cond}_TRUE" unless $cond =~ /^TRUE|FALSE$/; $cond = condition_negate ($cond) if $negate; err ($where, "else reminder ($negate$cond) incompatible with " . "current conditional: $cond_stack[$#cond_stack]") if $cond_stack[$#cond_stack] ne $cond; } return conditional_string (@cond_stack); } # $COND_STRING # cond_stack_endif ($NEGATE, $COND, $WHERE) # ----------------------------------------- sub cond_stack_endif ($$$) { my ($negate, $cond, $where) = @_; my $old_cond; if (! @cond_stack) { err $where, "endif without if: $negate$cond"; return; } # If $COND is given, check against it. if (defined $cond) { $cond = "${cond}_TRUE" unless $cond =~ /^TRUE|FALSE$/; $cond = condition_negate ($cond) if $negate; err ($where, "endif reminder ($negate$cond) incompatible with " . "current conditional: $cond_stack[$#cond_stack]") if $cond_stack[$#cond_stack] ne $cond; } pop @cond_stack; return conditional_string (@cond_stack); } ## ------------------------ ## ## Handling the variables. ## ## ------------------------ ## # check_ambiguous_conditional ($VAR, $COND) # ----------------------------------------- # Check for an ambiguous conditional. This is called when a variable # is being defined conditionally. If we already know about a # definition that is true under the same conditions, then we have an # ambiguity. sub check_ambiguous_conditional ($$) { my ($var, $cond) = @_; my $message = conditional_ambiguous_p ($var, $cond); err_var $var, "$message\n" . macro_dump ($var) if $message; } # $STRING # conditional_ambiguous_p ($VAR, $COND) # ------------------------------------- # Check for an ambiguous conditional. Return an error message if we # have one, the empty string otherwise. sub conditional_ambiguous_p ($$) { my ($var, $cond) = @_; foreach my $vcond (keys %{$var_value{$var}}) { # Note that these rules doesn't consider the following # example as ambiguous. # # if COND1 # FOO = foo # endif # if COND2 # FOO = bar # endif # # It's up to the user to not define COND1 and COND2 # simultaneously. my $message; if ($vcond eq $cond) { return "$var multiply defined in condition $cond"; } elsif (&conditional_true_when ($vcond, $cond)) { return ("$var was already defined in condition $vcond, " . "which implies condition $cond"); } elsif (&conditional_true_when ($cond, $vcond)) { return ("$var was already defined in condition $vcond, " . "which is implied by condition $cond"); } } return ''; } # @MISSING_CONDS # variable_not_always_defined_in_cond ($VAR, $COND) # --------------------------------------------- # Check whether $VAR is always defined for condition $COND. # Return a list of conditions where the definition is missing. # # For instance, given # # if COND1 # if COND2 # A = foo # D = d1 # else # A = bar # D = d2 # endif # else # D = d3 # endif # if COND3 # A = baz # B = mumble # endif # C = mumble # # we should have: # variable_not_always_defined_in_cond ('A', 'COND1_TRUE COND2_TRUE') # => () # variable_not_always_defined_in_cond ('A', 'COND1_TRUE') # => () # variable_not_always_defined_in_cond ('A', 'TRUE') # => ("COND1_FALSE COND2_FALSE COND3_FALSE", # "COND1_FALSE COND2_TRUE COND3_FALSE", # "COND1_TRUE COND2_FALSE COND3_FALSE", # "COND1_TRUE COND2_TRUE COND3_FALSE") # variable_not_always_defined_in_cond ('B', 'COND1_TRUE') # => ("COND3_FALSE") # variable_not_always_defined_in_cond ('C', 'COND1_TRUE') # => () # variable_not_always_defined_in_cond ('D', 'TRUE') # => () # variable_not_always_defined_in_cond ('Z', 'TRUE') # => ("TRUE") # sub variable_not_always_defined_in_cond ($$) { my ($var, $cond) = @_; # It's easy to answer if the variable is not defined. return ("TRUE",) unless exists $var_value{$var}; # How does it work? Let's take the second example: # # variable_not_always_defined_in_cond ('A', 'COND1_TRUE') # # (1) First, we get the list of conditions where A is defined: # # ("COND1_TRUE COND2_TRUE", "COND1_TRUE COND2_FALSE", "COND3_TRUE") # # (2) Then we generate the set of inverted conditions: # # ("COND1_FALSE COND2_TRUE COND3_FALSE", # "COND1_FALSE COND2_FALSE COND3_FALSE") # # (3) Finally we remove these conditions which are not implied by # COND1_TRUE. This yields an empty list and we are done. my @res = (); my @cond_defs = keys %{$var_value{$var}}; # (1) foreach my $icond (invert_conditions (@cond_defs)) # (2) { prog_error "invert_conditions returned an input condition" if exists $var_value{$var}{$icond}; push @res, $icond if (conditional_true_when ($cond, $icond)); # (3) } return @res; } # ¯o_define($VAR, $OWNER, $TYPE, $COND, $VALUE, $WHERE) # ------------------------------------------------------------- # The $VAR can go from Automake to user, but not the converse. sub macro_define ($$$$$$) { my ($var, $owner, $type, $cond, $value, $where) = @_; err $where, "bad characters in variable name `$var'" if $var !~ /$MACRO_PATTERN/o; # NEWS-OS 4.2R complains if a Makefile variable begins with `_'. msg ('portability', $where, "$var: variable names starting with `_' are not portable") if $var =~ /^_/; $cond ||= 'TRUE'; # An Automake variable must be consistently defined with the same # sign by Automake. A user variable must be set by either `=' or # `:=', and later promoted to `+='. if ($owner == VAR_AUTOMAKE) { err ($where, "$var was set with `$var_type{$var}=' " . "and is now set with `$type='") if defined $var_type{$var} && $var_type{$var} ne $type; } else { err $where, "$var must be set with `=' before using `+='" if !defined $var_type{$var} && $type eq '+'; } $var_type{$var} = $type; # When adding, since we rewrite, don't try to preserve the # Automake continuation backslashes. $value =~ s/\\$//mg if $type eq '+' && $owner == VAR_AUTOMAKE; # Differentiate assignment types. # 1. append (+=) to a variable defined for current condition if ($type eq '+' && defined $var_value{$var}{$cond}) { if (chomp $var_value{$var}{$cond}) { # Insert a backslash before a trailing newline. $var_value{$var}{$cond} .= "\\\n"; } elsif ($var_value{$var}{$cond}) { # Insert a separator. $var_value{$var}{$cond} .= ' '; } $var_value{$var}{$cond} .= $value; } # 2. append (+=) to a variable defined for *another* condition elsif ($type eq '+' && keys %{$var_value{$var}}) { # * Generally, $cond is not TRUE. For instance: # FOO = foo # if COND # FOO += bar # endif # In this case, we declare an helper variable conditionally, # and append it to FOO: # FOO = foo $(am__append_1) # @COND_TRUE@am__append_1 = bar # Of course if FOO is defined under several conditions, we add # $(am__append_1) to each definitions. # # * If $cond is TRUE, we don't need the helper variable. E.g., in # if COND1 # FOO = foo1 # else # FOO = foo2 # endif # FOO += bar # we can add bar directly to all definition of FOO, and output # @COND_TRUE@FOO = foo1 bar # @COND_FALSE@FOO = foo2 bar # Do we need an helper variable? if ($cond ne 'TRUE') { # Does the helper variable already exists? my $key = "$var:$cond"; if (exists $appendvar{$key}) { # Yes, let's simply append to it. $var = $appendvar{$key}; $owner = VAR_AUTOMAKE; } else { # No, create it. my $num = 1 + keys (%appendvar); my $hvar = "am__append_$num"; $appendvar{$key} = $hvar; ¯o_define ($hvar, VAR_AUTOMAKE, '+', $cond, $value, $where); push @var_list, $hvar; # Now HVAR is to be added to VAR. $value = "\$($hvar)"; } } # Add VALUE to all definitions of VAR. foreach my $vcond (keys %{$var_value{$var}}) { # We have a bit of error detection to do here. # This: # if COND1 # X = Y # endif # X += Z # should be rejected because X is not defined for all conditions # where `+=' applies. my @undef_cond = variable_not_always_defined_in_cond $var, $cond; if (@undef_cond != 0) { err ($where, "Cannot apply `+=' because `$var' is not defined " . "in\nthe following conditions:\n " . join ("\n ", @undef_cond) . "\nEither define `$var' in these conditions," . " or use\n`+=' in the same conditions as" . " the definitions."); } else { ¯o_define ($var, $owner, '+', $vcond, $value, $where); } } } # 3. first assignment (=, :=, or +=) else { # The first assignment to a macro sets its location. Ideally I # suppose we would associate line numbers with random bits of text. # FIXME: We sometimes redefine some variables, but we want to keep # the original location. More subs are needed to handle # properly variables. Once this done, remove this hack. $var_location{$var} = $where unless defined $var_location{$var}; # If Automake tries to override a value specified by the user, # just don't let it do. if (defined $var_value{$var}{$cond} && $var_owner{$var} != VAR_AUTOMAKE && $owner == VAR_AUTOMAKE) { verb ("refusing to override the user definition of:\n" . macro_dump ($var) ."with `$cond' => `$value'"); } else { # There must be no previous value unless the user is redefining # an Automake variable or an AC_SUBST variable for an existing # condition. check_ambiguous_conditional ($var, $cond) unless (exists $var_value{$var}{$cond} && (($var_owner{$var} == VAR_AUTOMAKE && $owner != VAR_AUTOMAKE) || $var_owner{$var} == VAR_CONFIGURE)); $var_value{$var}{$cond} = $value; } } # The owner of a variable can only increase, because an Automake # variable can be given to the user, but not the converse. if (! defined $var_owner{$var} || $owner > $var_owner{$var}) { $var_owner{$var} = $owner; } # Call var_VAR_trigger if it's defined. # This hook helps to update some internal state *while* # parsing the file. For instance the handling of SUFFIXES # requires this (see var_SUFFIXES_trigger). my $var_trigger = "var_${var}_trigger"; &$var_trigger($type, $value) if defined &$var_trigger; } # ¯o_delete ($VAR, [@CONDS]) # ------------------------------ # Forget about $VAR under the conditions @CONDS, or completely if # @CONDS is empty. sub macro_delete ($@) { my ($var, @conds) = @_; if (!@conds) { delete $var_value{$var}; delete $var_location{$var}; delete $var_owner{$var}; delete $var_comment{$var}; delete $var_type{$var}; } else { foreach my $cond (@conds) { delete $var_value{$var}{$cond}; } } } # ¯o_dump ($VAR) # ------------------ sub macro_dump ($) { my ($var) = @_; my $text = ''; if (!exists $var_value{$var}) { $text = " $var does not exist\n"; } else { prog_error ("`$var' is a key in \$var_value, but not in \$var_owner\n") unless exists $var_owner{$var}; my $var_owner; if ($var_owner{$var} == VAR_AUTOMAKE) { $var_owner = 'Automake'; } elsif ($var_owner{$var} == VAR_CONFIGURE) { $var_owner = 'Configure'; } elsif ($var_owner{$var} == VAR_MAKEFILE) { $var_owner = 'Makefile'; } else { prog_error ("unexpected value for `\$var_owner{$var}': " . $var_owner{$var}) unless defined $var_owner; } my $where = (defined $var_location{$var} ? $var_location{$var} : "undefined"); $text .= "$var_comment{$var}" if defined $var_comment{$var}; $text .= " $var ($var_owner, where = $where) $var_type{$var}=\n {\n"; foreach my $vcond (sort by_condition keys %{$var_value{$var}}) { $text .= " $vcond => $var_value{$var}{$vcond}\n"; } $text .= " }\n"; } return $text; } # ¯os_dump () # --------------- sub macros_dump () { my ($var) = @_; my $text = "%var_value =\n{\n"; foreach my $var (sort (keys %var_value)) { $text .= macro_dump ($var); } $text .= "}\n"; return $text; } # $BOOLEAN # variable_defined ($VAR, [$COND]) # --------------------------------- # See if a variable exists. $VAR is the variable name, and $COND is # the condition which we should check. If no condition is given, we # currently return true if the variable is defined under any # condition. sub variable_defined ($;$) { my ($var, $cond) = @_; # Unfortunately we can't just check for $var_value{VAR}{COND} # as this would make perl create $condition{VAR}, which we # don't want. if (!exists $var_value{$var}) { err_target $var, "`$var' is a target; expected a variable" if defined $targets{$var}; # The variable is not defined return 0; } # The variable is not defined for the given condition. return 0 if $cond && !exists $var_value{$var}{$cond}; # Even a var_value examination is good enough for us. FIXME: # really should maintain examined status on a per-condition basis. $content_seen{$var} = 1; return 1; } # $BOOLEAN # variable_assert ($VAR, $WHERE) # ------------------------------ # Make sure a variable exists. $VAR is the variable name, and $WHERE # is the name of a macro which refers to $VAR. sub variable_assert ($$) { my ($var, $where) = @_; return 1 if variable_defined $var; require_variables ($where, "variable `$var' is used", $var); return 0; } # Mark a variable as examined. sub examine_variable { my ($var) = @_; variable_defined ($var); } # &variable_conditions_recursive ($VAR) # ------------------------------------- # Return the set of conditions for which a variable is defined. # If the variable is not defined conditionally, and is not defined in # terms of any variables which are defined conditionally, then this # returns the empty list. # If the variable is defined conditionally, but is not defined in # terms of any variables which are defined conditionally, then this # returns the list of conditions for which the variable is defined. # If the variable is defined in terms of any variables which are # defined conditionally, then this returns a full set of permutations # of the subvariable conditions. For example, if the variable is # defined in terms of a variable which is defined for COND_TRUE, # then this returns both COND_TRUE and COND_FALSE. This is # because we will need to define the variable under both conditions. sub variable_conditions_recursive ($) { my ($var) = @_; %vars_scanned = (); my @new_conds = variable_conditions_recursive_sub ($var, ''); # Now we want to return all permutations of the subvariable # conditions. my %allconds = (); foreach my $item (@new_conds) { foreach (split (' ', $item)) { s/^(.*)_(TRUE|FALSE)$/$1_TRUE/; $allconds{$_} = 1; } } @new_conds = variable_conditions_permutations (sort keys %allconds); my %uniqify; foreach my $cond (@new_conds) { my $reduce = variable_conditions_reduce (split (' ', $cond)); next if $reduce eq 'FALSE'; $uniqify{$cond} = 1; } # Note we cannot just do `return sort keys %uniqify', because this # function is sometimes used in a scalar context. my @uniq_list = sort by_condition keys %uniqify; return @uniq_list; } # @CONDS # variable_conditions ($VAR) # -------------------------- # Get the list of conditions that a variable is defined with, without # recursing through the conditions of any subvariables. # Argument is $VAR: the variable to get the conditions of. # Returns the list of conditions. sub variable_conditions ($) { my ($var) = @_; my @conds = keys %{$var_value{$var}}; return sort by_condition @conds; } # $BOOLEAN # &variable_conditionally_defined ($VAR) # -------------------------------------- sub variable_conditionally_defined ($) { my ($var) = @_; foreach my $cond (variable_conditions_recursive ($var)) { return 1 unless $cond =~ /^TRUE|FALSE$/; } return 0; } # &variable_conditions_recursive_sub ($VAR, $PARENT) # ------------------------------------------------------- # A subroutine of variable_conditions_recursive. This returns all the # conditions of $VAR, including those of any sub-variables. sub variable_conditions_recursive_sub { my ($var, $parent) = @_; my @new_conds = (); if (defined $vars_scanned{$var}) { err_var $parent, "variable `$var' recursively defined"; return (); } $vars_scanned{$var} = 1; my @this_conds = (); # Examine every condition under which $VAR is defined. foreach my $vcond (keys %{$var_value{$var}}) { push (@this_conds, $vcond); # If $VAR references some other variable, then compute the # conditions for that subvariable. my @subvar_conds = (); foreach (split (' ', $var_value{$var}{$vcond})) { # If a comment seen, just leave. last if /^#/; # Handle variable substitutions. if (/^\$\{(.*)\}$/ || /^\$\((.*)\)$/) { my $varname = $1; if ($varname =~ /$SUBST_REF_PATTERN/o) { $varname = $1; } # Here we compute all the conditions under which the # subvariable is defined. Then we go through and add # $VCOND to each. my @svc = variable_conditions_recursive_sub ($varname, $var); foreach my $item (@svc) { my $val = conditional_string ($vcond, split (' ', $item)); $val ||= 'TRUE'; push (@subvar_conds, $val); } } } # If there are no conditional subvariables, then we want to # return this condition. Otherwise, we want to return the # permutations of the subvariables, taking into account the # conditions of $VAR. if (! @subvar_conds) { push (@new_conds, $vcond); } else { push (@new_conds, variable_conditions_reduce (@subvar_conds)); } } # Unset our entry in vars_scanned. We only care about recursive # definitions. delete $vars_scanned{$var}; # If we are being called on behalf of another variable, we need to # return all possible permutations of the conditions. We have # already handled everything in @this_conds along with their # subvariables. We now need to add any permutations that are not # in @this_conds. foreach my $this_cond (@this_conds) { my @perms = variable_conditions_permutations (split (' ', $this_cond)); foreach my $perm (@perms) { my $ok = 1; foreach my $scan (@this_conds) { if (&conditional_true_when ($perm, $scan) || &conditional_true_when ($scan, $perm)) { $ok = 0; last; } } next if ! $ok; # This permutation was not already handled, and is valid # for the parents. push (@new_conds, $perm); } } return @new_conds; } # Filter a list of conditionals so that only the exclusive ones are # retained. For example, if both `COND1_TRUE COND2_TRUE' and # `COND1_TRUE' are in the list, discard the latter. # If the list is empty, return TRUE sub variable_conditions_reduce { my (@conds) = @_; my @ret = (); my $cond; while(@conds > 0) { $cond = shift(@conds); # FALSE is absorbent. return 'FALSE' if $cond eq 'FALSE'; if (!conditional_is_redundant ($cond, @ret, @conds)) { push (@ret, $cond); } } return "TRUE" if @ret == 0; return @ret; } # @CONDS # invert_conditions (@CONDS) # -------------------------- # Invert a list of conditionals. Returns a set of conditionals which # are never true for any of the input conditionals, and when taken # together with the input conditionals cover all possible cases. # # For example: # invert_conditions("A_TRUE B_TRUE", "A_FALSE B_FALSE") # => ("A_FALSE B_TRUE", "A_TRUE B_FALSE") # # invert_conditions("A_TRUE B_TRUE", "A_TRUE B_FALSE", "A_FALSE") # => () sub invert_conditions { my (@conds) = @_; my @notconds = (); # Generate all permutation for all inputs. my @perm = map { variable_conditions_permutations (split(' ', $_)); } @conds; # Remove redundant conditions. @perm = variable_conditions_reduce @perm; # Now remove all conditions which imply one of the input conditions. foreach my $perm (@perm) { push @notconds, $perm if ! conditional_implies_any ($perm, @conds); } return @notconds; } # Return a list of permutations of a conditional string. # (But never output FALSE conditions, they are useless.) # # Examples: # variable_conditions_permutations ("FOO_FALSE", "BAR_TRUE") # => ("FOO_FALSE BAR_FALSE", # "FOO_FALSE BAR_TRUE", # "FOO_TRUE BAR_FALSE", # "FOO_TRUE BAR_TRUE") # variable_conditions_permutations ("FOO_FALSE", "TRUE") # => ("FOO_FALSE TRUE", # "FOO_TRUE TRUE") # variable_conditions_permutations ("TRUE") # => ("TRUE") # variable_conditions_permutations ("FALSE") # => ("TRUE") sub variable_conditions_permutations { my (@comps) = @_; return () if ! @comps; my $comp = shift (@comps); return variable_conditions_permutations (@comps) if $comp eq ''; my $neg = condition_negate ($comp); my @ret; foreach my $sub (variable_conditions_permutations (@comps)) { push (@ret, "$comp $sub") if $comp ne 'FALSE'; push (@ret, "$neg $sub") if $neg ne 'FALSE'; } if (! @ret) { push (@ret, $comp) if $comp ne 'FALSE'; push (@ret, $neg) if $neg ne 'FALSE'; } return @ret; } # $BOOL # &check_variable_defined_unconditionally($VAR, $PARENT) # ------------------------------------------------------ # Warn if a variable is conditionally defined. This is called if we # are using the value of a variable. sub check_variable_defined_unconditionally ($$) { my ($var, $parent) = @_; foreach my $cond (keys %{$var_value{$var}}) { next if $cond =~ /^TRUE|FALSE$/; if ($parent) { msg_var ('unsupported', $parent, "automake does not support conditional definition of " . "$var in $parent"); } else { msg_var ('unsupported', $var, "automake does not support $var being defined " . "conditionally"); } } } # Get the TRUE value of a variable, warn if the variable is # conditionally defined. sub variable_value { my ($var) = @_; &check_variable_defined_unconditionally ($var); return $var_value{$var}{'TRUE'}; } # @VALUES # &value_to_list ($VAR, $VAL, $COND) # ---------------------------------- # Convert a variable value to a list, split as whitespace. This will # recursively follow $(...) and ${...} inclusions. It preserves @...@ # substitutions. # # If COND is 'all', then all values under all conditions should be # returned; if COND is a particular condition (all conditions are # surrounded by @...@) then only the value for that condition should # be returned; otherwise, warn if VAR is conditionally defined. # SCANNED is a global hash listing whose keys are all the variables # already scanned; it is an error to rescan a variable. sub value_to_list ($$$) { my ($var, $val, $cond) = @_; my @result; # Strip backslashes $val =~ s/\\(\n|$)/ /g; foreach (split (' ', $val)) { # If a comment seen, just leave. last if /^#/; # Handle variable substitutions. if (/^\$\{([^}]*)\}$/ || /^\$\(([^)]*)\)$/) { my $varname = $1; # If the user uses a losing variable name, just ignore it. # This isn't ideal, but people have requested it. next if ($varname =~ /\@.*\@/); my ($from, $to); my @temp_list; if ($varname =~ /$SUBST_REF_PATTERN/o) { $varname = $1; $to = $3; $from = quotemeta $2; } # Find the value. @temp_list = variable_value_as_list_recursive_worker ($1, $cond, $var); # Now rewrite the value if appropriate. if (defined $from) { grep (s/$from$/$to/, @temp_list); } push (@result, @temp_list); } else { push (@result, $_); } } return @result; } # @VALUES # variable_value_as_list ($VAR, $COND, $PARENT) # --------------------------------------------- # Get the value of a variable given a specified condition. without # recursing through any subvariables. # Arguments are: # $VAR is the variable # $COND is the condition. If this is not given, the value for the # "TRUE" condition will be returned. # $PARENT is the variable in which the variable is used: this is used # only for error messages. # Returns the list of conditions. # For example, if A is defined as "foo $(B) bar", and B is defined as # "baz", this will return ("foo", "$(B)", "bar") sub variable_value_as_list { my ($var, $cond, $parent) = @_; my @result; # Check defined return unless variable_assert $var, $parent; # Get value for given condition $cond ||= 'TRUE'; my $onceflag; foreach my $vcond (keys %{$var_value{$var}}) { my $val = $var_value{$var}{$vcond}; if (&conditional_true_when ($vcond, $cond)) { # Unless variable is not defined conditionally, there should only # be one value of $vcond true when $cond. &check_variable_defined_unconditionally ($var, $parent) if $onceflag; $onceflag = 1; # Strip backslashes $val =~ s/\\(\n|$)/ /g; foreach (split (' ', $val)) { # If a comment seen, just leave. last if /^#/; push (@result, $_); } } } return @result; } # @VALUE # &variable_value_as_list_recursive_worker ($VAR, $COND, $PARENT) # --------------------------------------------------------------- # Return contents of VAR as a list, split on whitespace. This will # recursively follow $(...) and ${...} inclusions. It preserves @...@ # substitutions. If COND is 'all', then all values under all # conditions should be returned; if COND is a particular condition # (all conditions are surrounded by @...@) then only the value for # that condition should be returned; otherwise, warn if VAR is # conditionally defined. If PARENT is specified, it is the name of # the including variable; this is only used for error reports. sub variable_value_as_list_recursive_worker ($$$) { my ($var, $cond, $parent) = @_; my @result = (); return unless variable_assert $var, $parent; if (defined $vars_scanned{$var}) { # `vars_scanned' is a global we use to keep track of which # variables we've already examined. err_var $parent, "variable `$var' recursively defined"; } elsif ($cond eq 'all') { $vars_scanned{$var} = 1; foreach my $vcond (keys %{$var_value{$var}}) { my $val = $var_value{$var}{$vcond}; push (@result, &value_to_list ($var, $val, $cond)); } } else { $cond ||= 'TRUE'; $vars_scanned{$var} = 1; my $onceflag; foreach my $vcond (keys %{$var_value{$var}}) { my $val = $var_value{$var}{$vcond}; if (&conditional_true_when ($vcond, $cond)) { # Warn if we have an ambiguity. It's hard to know how # to handle this case correctly. &check_variable_defined_unconditionally ($var, $parent) if $onceflag; $onceflag = 1; push (@result, &value_to_list ($var, $val, $cond)); } } } # Unset our entry in vars_scanned. We only care about recursive # definitions. delete $vars_scanned{$var}; return @result; } # &variable_output ($VAR, [@CONDS]) # --------------------------------- # Output all the values of $VAR is @COND is not specified, else only # that corresponding to @COND. sub variable_output ($@) { my ($var, @conds) = @_; @conds = keys %{$var_value{$var}} unless @conds; $output_vars .= $var_comment{$var} if defined $var_comment{$var}; foreach my $cond (sort by_condition @conds) { my $val = $var_value{$var}{$cond}; my $equals = $var_type{$var} eq ':' ? ':=' : '='; my $output_var = "$var $equals $val"; $output_var =~ s/^/make_condition ($cond)/meg; $output_vars .= $output_var . "\n"; } } # &variable_pretty_output ($VAR, [@CONDS]) # ---------------------------------------- # Likewise, but pretty, i.e., we *split* the values at spaces. Use only # with variables holding filenames. sub variable_pretty_output ($@) { my ($var, @conds) = @_; @conds = keys %{$var_value{$var}} unless @conds; $output_vars .= $var_comment{$var} if defined $var_comment{$var}; foreach my $cond (sort by_condition @conds) { my $val = $var_value{$var}{$cond}; my $equals = $var_type{$var} eq ':' ? ':=' : '='; my $make_condition = make_condition ($cond); $output_vars .= pretty_print_internal ("$make_condition$var $equals", "$make_condition\t", split (' ' , $val)); } } # &variable_value_as_list_recursive ($VAR, $COND, $PARENT) # -------------------------------------------------------- # This is just a wrapper for variable_value_as_list_recursive_worker that # initializes the global hash `vars_scanned'. This hash is used to # avoid infinite recursion. sub variable_value_as_list_recursive ($$@) { my ($var, $cond, $parent) = @_; %vars_scanned = (); return &variable_value_as_list_recursive_worker ($var, $cond, $parent); } # &define_pretty_variable ($VAR, $COND, @VALUE) # --------------------------------------------- # Like define_variable, but the value is a list, and the variable may # be defined conditionally. The second argument is the conditional # under which the value should be defined; this should be the empty # string to define the variable unconditionally. The third argument # is a list holding the values to use for the variable. The value is # pretty printed in the output file. sub define_pretty_variable ($$@) { my ($var, $cond, @value) = @_; # Beware that an empty $cond has a different semantics for # macro_define and variable_pretty_output. $cond ||= 'TRUE'; if (! variable_defined ($var, $cond)) { macro_define ($var, VAR_AUTOMAKE, '', $cond, "@value", undef); variable_pretty_output ($var, $cond || 'TRUE'); $content_seen{$var} = 1; } } # define_variable ($VAR, $VALUE) # ------------------------------ # Define a new user variable VAR to VALUE, but only if not already defined. sub define_variable ($$) { my ($var, $value) = @_; define_pretty_variable ($var, 'TRUE', $value); } # Like define_variable, but define a variable to be the configure # substitution by the same name. sub define_configure_variable ($) { my ($var) = @_; if (! variable_defined ($var, 'TRUE') # Explicitly avoid ANSI2KNR -- we AC_SUBST that in # protos.m4, but later define it elsewhere. This is # pretty hacky. We also explicitly avoid AMDEPBACKSLASH: # it might be subst'd by `\', which certainly would not be # appreciated by Make. && ! grep { $_ eq $var } (qw(ANSI2KNR AMDEPBACKSLASH))) { macro_define ($var, VAR_CONFIGURE, '', 'TRUE', subst $var, $configure_vars{$var}); variable_pretty_output ($var, 'TRUE'); } } # define_compiler_variable ($LANG) # -------------------------------- # Define a compiler variable. We also handle defining the `LT' # version of the command when using libtool. sub define_compiler_variable ($) { my ($lang) = @_; my ($var, $value) = ($lang->compiler, $lang->compile); &define_variable ($var, $value); &define_variable ("LT$var", "\$(LIBTOOL) --mode=compile $value") if variable_defined ('LIBTOOL'); } # define_linker_variable ($LANG) # ------------------------------ # Define linker variables. sub define_linker_variable ($) { my ($lang) = @_; my ($var, $value) = ($lang->lder, $lang->ld); # CCLD = $(CC). &define_variable ($lang->lder, $lang->ld); # CCLINK = $(CCLD) blah blah... &define_variable ($lang->linker, ((variable_defined ('LIBTOOL') ? '$(LIBTOOL) --mode=link ' : '') . $lang->link)); } ################################################################ ## ---------------- ## ## Handling rules. ## ## ---------------- ## sub register_suffix_rule ($$$) { my ($where, $src, $dest) = @_; verb "Sources ending in $src become $dest"; push @suffixes, $src, $dest; # When tranforming sources to objects, Automake uses the # %suffix_rules to move from each source extension to # `.$(OBJEXT)', not to `.o' or `.obj'. However some people # define suffix rules for `.o' or `.obj', so internally we will # consider these extensions equivalent to `.$(OBJEXT)'. We # CANNOT rewrite the target (i.e., automagically replace `.o' # and `.obj' by `.$(OBJEXT)' in the output), or warn the user # that (s)he'd better use `.$(OBJEXT)', because Automake itself # output suffix rules for `.o' or `.obj'... $dest = '.$(OBJEXT)' if ($dest eq '.o' || $dest eq '.obj'); # Reading the comments near the declaration of $suffix_rules might # help to understand the update of $suffix_rules that follows... # Register $dest as a possible destination from $src. # We might have the create the \hash. if (exists $suffix_rules->{$src}) { $suffix_rules->{$src}{$dest} = [ $dest, 1 ]; } else { $suffix_rules->{$src} = { $dest => [ $dest, 1 ] }; } # If we know how to transform $dest in something else, then # we know how to transform $src in that "something else". if (exists $suffix_rules->{$dest}) { for my $dest2 (keys %{$suffix_rules->{$dest}}) { my $dist = $suffix_rules->{$dest}{$dest2}[1] + 1; # Overwrite an existing $src->$dest2 path only if # the path via $dest which is shorter. if (! exists $suffix_rules->{$src}{$dest2} || $suffix_rules->{$src}{$dest2}[1] > $dist) { $suffix_rules->{$src}{$dest2} = [ $dest, $dist ]; } } } # Similarly, any extension that can be derived into $src # can be derived into the same extenstions as $src can. my @dest2 = keys %{$suffix_rules->{$src}}; for my $src2 (keys %$suffix_rules) { if (exists $suffix_rules->{$src2}{$src}) { for my $dest2 (@dest2) { my $dist = $suffix_rules->{$src}{$dest2} + 1; # Overwrite an existing $src2->$dest2 path only if # the path via $src is shorter. if (! exists $suffix_rules->{$src2}{$dest2} || $suffix_rules->{$src2}{$dest2}[1] > $dist) { $suffix_rules->{$src2}{$dest2} = [ $src, $dist ]; } } } } } # $BOOL # rule_define ($TARGET, $IS_AM, $COND, $WHERE) # -------------------------------------------- # Define a new rule. $TARGET is the rule name. $IS_AM is a boolean # which is true if the new rule is defined by the user. $COND is the # condition under which the rule is defined. $WHERE is where the rule # is defined (file name or line number). Returns true if it is ok to # define the rule, false otherwise. sub rule_define ($$$$) { my ($target, $rule_is_am, $cond, $where) = @_; # For now `foo:' will override `foo$(EXEEXT):'. This is temporary, # though, so we emit a warning. (my $noexe = $target) =~ s,\$\(EXEEXT\)$,,; if ($noexe ne $target && defined $targets{$noexe}) { # The no-exeext option enables this feature. if (! defined $options{'no-exeext'}) { msg ('obsolete', $noexe, "deprecated feature: `$noexe' overrides `$noexe\$(EXEEXT)'\n" . "change your target to read `$noexe\$(EXEEXT)'"); } # Don't define. return 0; } reject_target ($target, "$target defined both conditionally and unconditionally") if ($cond ? ! exists $target_conditional{$target} : exists $target_conditional{$target}); # Value here doesn't matter; for targets we only note existence. $targets{$target} = $where; if ($cond) { if ($target_conditional{$target}) { &check_ambiguous_conditional ($target, $cond); } $target_conditional{$target}{$cond} = $where; } # Check the rule for being a suffix rule. If so, store in a hash. # Either it's a rule for two known extensions... if ($target =~ /^($KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN)($KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN)$/ # ...or it's a rule with unknown extensions (.i.e, the rule looks like # `.foo.bar:' but `.foo' or `.bar' are not declared in SUFFIXES # and are not known language extensions). # Automake will complete SUFFIXES from @suffixes automatically # (see handle_footer). || ($target =~ /$SUFFIX_RULE_PATTERN/o && accept_extensions($1))) { register_suffix_rule ($where, $1, $2); } return 1; } # See if a target exists. sub target_defined { my ($target) = @_; return defined $targets{$target}; } ################################################################ # &append_comments ($VARIABLE, $SPACING, $COMMENT) # ------------------------------------------------ # Apped $COMMENT to the other comments for $VARIABLE, using # $SPACING as separator. sub append_comments ($$$) { my ($var, $spacing, $comment) = @_; $var_comment{$var} .= $spacing if (!defined $var_comment{$var} || $var_comment{$var} !~ /\n$/o); $var_comment{$var} .= $comment; } # &read_am_file ($AMFILE) # ----------------------- # Read Makefile.am and set up %contents. Simultaneously copy lines # from Makefile.am into $output_trailer or $output_vars as # appropriate. NOTE we put rules in the trailer section. We want # user rules to come after our generated stuff. sub read_am_file ($) { my ($amfile) = @_; my $am_file = new Automake::XFile ("< $amfile"); verb "reading $amfile"; my $spacing = ''; my $comment = ''; my $blank = 0; my $saw_bk = 0; use constant IN_VAR_DEF => 0; use constant IN_RULE_DEF => 1; use constant IN_COMMENT => 2; my $prev_state = IN_RULE_DEF; while ($_ = $am_file->getline) { if (/$IGNORE_PATTERN/o) { # Merely delete comments beginning with two hashes. } elsif (/$WHITE_PATTERN/o) { err "$amfile:$.", "blank line following trailing backslash" if $saw_bk; # Stick a single white line before the incoming macro or rule. $spacing = "\n"; $blank = 1; # Flush all comments seen so far. if ($comment ne '') { $output_vars .= $comment; $comment = ''; } } elsif (/$COMMENT_PATTERN/o) { # Stick comments before the incoming macro or rule. Make # sure a blank line preceeds first block of comments. $spacing = "\n" unless $blank; $blank = 1; $comment .= $spacing . $_; $spacing = ''; $prev_state = IN_COMMENT; } else { last; } $saw_bk = /\\$/ && ! /$IGNORE_PATTERN/o; } # We save the conditional stack on entry, and then check to make # sure it is the same on exit. This lets us conditonally include # other files. my @saved_cond_stack = @cond_stack; my $cond = conditional_string (@cond_stack); my $last_var_name = ''; my $last_var_type = ''; my $last_var_value = ''; # FIXME: shouldn't use $_ in this loop; it is too big. while ($_) { my $here = "$amfile:$."; # Make sure the line is \n-terminated. chomp; $_ .= "\n"; # Don't look at MAINTAINER_MODE_TRUE here. That shouldn't be # used by users. @MAINT@ is an anachronism now. $_ =~ s/\@MAINT\@//g unless $seen_maint_mode; my $new_saw_bk = /\\$/ && ! /$IGNORE_PATTERN/o; if (/$IGNORE_PATTERN/o) { # Merely delete comments beginning with two hashes. } elsif (/$WHITE_PATTERN/o) { # Stick a single white line before the incoming macro or rule. $spacing = "\n"; err $here, "blank line following trailing backslash" if $saw_bk; } elsif (/$COMMENT_PATTERN/o) { # Stick comments before the incoming macro or rule. $comment .= $spacing . $_; $spacing = ''; err $here, "comment following trailing backslash" if $saw_bk && $comment eq ''; $prev_state = IN_COMMENT; } elsif ($saw_bk) { if ($prev_state == IN_RULE_DEF) { $output_trailer .= &make_condition (@cond_stack); $output_trailer .= $_; } elsif ($prev_state == IN_COMMENT) { # If the line doesn't start with a `#', add it. # We do this because a continuated comment like # # A = foo \ # bar \ # baz # is not portable. BSD make doesn't honor # escaped newlines in comments. s/^#?/#/; $comment .= $spacing . $_; } else # $prev_state == IN_VAR_DEF { $last_var_value .= ' ' unless $last_var_value =~ /\s$/; $last_var_value .= $_; if (!/\\$/) { append_comments $last_var_name, $spacing, $comment; $comment = $spacing = ''; macro_define ($last_var_name, VAR_MAKEFILE, $last_var_type, $cond, $last_var_value, $here) if $cond ne 'FALSE'; push (@var_list, $last_var_name); } } } elsif (/$IF_PATTERN/o) { $cond = cond_stack_if ($1, $2, $here); } elsif (/$ELSE_PATTERN/o) { $cond = cond_stack_else ($1, $2, $here); } elsif (/$ENDIF_PATTERN/o) { $cond = cond_stack_endif ($1, $2, $here); } elsif (/$RULE_PATTERN/o) { # Found a rule. $prev_state = IN_RULE_DEF; rule_define ($1, 0, $cond, $here); $output_trailer .= $comment . $spacing; $output_trailer .= &make_condition (@cond_stack); $output_trailer .= $_; $comment = $spacing = ''; } elsif (/$ASSIGNMENT_PATTERN/o) { # Found a macro definition. $prev_state = IN_VAR_DEF; $last_var_name = $1; $last_var_type = $2; $last_var_value = $3; if ($3 ne '' && substr ($3, -1) eq "\\") { # We preserve the `\' because otherwise the long lines # that are generated will be truncated by broken # `sed's. $last_var_value = $3 . "\n"; } if (!/\\$/) { # FIXME: this doesn't always work correctly; it will # group all comments for a given variable, no matter # where defined. # Accumulating variables must not be output. append_comments $last_var_name, $spacing, $comment; $comment = $spacing = ''; macro_define ($last_var_name, VAR_MAKEFILE, $last_var_type, $cond, $last_var_value, $here) if $cond ne 'FALSE'; push (@var_list, $last_var_name); } } elsif (/$INCLUDE_PATTERN/o) { my $path = $1; if ($path =~ s/^\$\(top_srcdir\)\///) { push (@include_stack, "\$\(top_srcdir\)/$path"); } else { $path =~ s/\$\(srcdir\)\///; push (@include_stack, "\$\(srcdir\)/$path"); $path = $relative_dir . "/" . $path; } &read_am_file ($path); } else { # This isn't an error; it is probably a continued rule. # In fact, this is what we assume. $prev_state = IN_RULE_DEF; $output_trailer .= $comment . $spacing; $output_trailer .= &make_condition (@cond_stack); $output_trailer .= $_; $comment = $spacing = ''; err $here, "`#' comment at start of rule is unportable" if $_ =~ /^\t\s*\#/; } $saw_bk = $new_saw_bk; $_ = $am_file->getline; } $output_trailer .= $comment; err_am (@cond_stack ? "unterminated conditionals: @cond_stack" : "too many conditionals closed in include file") if "@saved_cond_stack" ne "@cond_stack"; } # define_standard_variables () # ---------------------------- # A helper for read_main_am_file which initializes configure variables # and variables from header-vars.am. sub define_standard_variables { my $saved_output_vars = $output_vars; my ($comments, undef, $rules) = file_contents_internal (1, "$libdir/am/header-vars.am"); # This will output the definitions in $output_vars, which we don't # want... foreach my $var (sort keys %configure_vars) { &define_configure_variable ($var); push (@var_list, $var); } # ... hence, we restore $output_vars. $output_vars = $saved_output_vars . $comments . $rules; } # Read main am file. sub read_main_am_file { my ($amfile) = @_; # This supports the strange variable tricks we are about to play. prog_error (macros_dump () . "variable defined before read_main_am_file") if (scalar keys %var_value > 0); # Generate copyright header for generated Makefile.in. # We do discard the output of predefined variables, handled below. $output_vars = ("# $in_file_name generated by automake " . $VERSION . " from $am_file_name.\n"); $output_vars .= '# ' . subst ('configure_input') . "\n"; $output_vars .= $gen_copyright; # We want to predefine as many variables as possible. This lets # the user set them with `+=' in Makefile.am. However, we don't # want these initial definitions to end up in the output quite # yet. So we just load them, but output them later. &define_standard_variables; # Read user file, which might override some of our values. &read_am_file ($amfile); # Output all the Automake variables. If the user changed one, # then it is now marked as VAR_CONFIGURE or VAR_MAKEFILE. foreach my $var (uniq @var_list) { variable_output ($var) if exists $var_owner{$var} && $var_owner{$var} == VAR_AUTOMAKE; } # Now dump the user variables that were defined. We do it in the same # order in which they were defined (skipping duplicates). foreach my $var (uniq @var_list) { variable_output ($var) if exists $var_owner{$var} && $var_owner{$var} != VAR_AUTOMAKE; } } ################################################################ # $FLATTENED # &flatten ($STRING) # ------------------ # Flatten the $STRING and return the result. sub flatten { $_ = shift; s/\\\n//somg; s/\s+/ /g; s/^ //; s/ $//; return $_; } # @PARAGRAPHS # &make_paragraphs ($MAKEFILE, [%TRANSFORM]) # ------------------------------------------ # Load a $MAKEFILE, apply the %TRANSFORM, and return it as a list of # paragraphs. sub make_paragraphs ($%) { my ($file, %transform) = @_; # Complete %transform with global options and make it a Perl # $command. my $command = "s/$IGNORE_PATTERN//gm;" . transform (%transform, 'CYGNUS' => $cygnus_mode, 'MAINTAINER-MODE' => $seen_maint_mode ? subst ('MAINTAINER_MODE_TRUE') : '', 'SHAR' => $options{'dist-shar'} || 0, 'BZIP2' => $options{'dist-bzip2'} || 0, 'ZIP' => $options{'dist-zip'} || 0, 'COMPRESS' => $options{'dist-tarZ'} || 0, 'INSTALL-INFO' => !$options{'no-installinfo'}, 'INSTALL-MAN' => !$options{'no-installman'}, 'CK-NEWS' => $options{'check-news'} || 0, 'SUBDIRS' => variable_defined ('SUBDIRS'), 'TOPDIR' => backname ($relative_dir), 'TOPDIR_P' => $relative_dir eq '.', 'CONFIGURE-AC' => $configure_ac, 'BUILD' => $seen_canonical == AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM, 'HOST' => $seen_canonical, 'TARGET' => $seen_canonical == AC_CANONICAL_SYSTEM, 'LIBTOOL' => variable_defined ('LIBTOOL')) # We don't need more than two consecutive new-lines. . 's/\n{3,}/\n\n/g'; # Swallow the file and apply the COMMAND. my $fc_file = new Automake::XFile "< $file"; # Looks stupid? verb "reading $file"; my $saved_dollar_slash = $/; undef $/; $_ = $fc_file->getline; $/ = $saved_dollar_slash; eval $command; $fc_file->close; my $content = $_; # Split at unescaped new lines. my @lines = split (/(? 0 } @prefixes; $valid{'EXTRA'} = 0; foreach my $varname (keys %var_value) { # Automake is allowed to define variables that look like primaries # but which aren't. E.g. INSTALL_sh_DATA. # Autoconf can also define variables like INSTALL_DATA, so # ignore all configure variables (at least those which are not # redefined in Makefile.am). next if (exists $var_owner{$varname} && $var_owner{$varname} != VAR_MAKEFILE); if ($varname =~ /^(nobase_)?(dist_|nodist_)?(.*)_$primary$/) { my ($base, $dist, $X) = ($1 || '', $2 || '', $3 || ''); if ($dist ne '' && ! $can_dist) { err_var ($varname, "invalid variable `$varname': `dist' is forbidden"); } # Standard directories must be explicitely allowed. elsif (! defined $valid{$X} && exists $standard_prefix{$X}) { err_var ($varname, "`${X}dir' is not a legitimate directory " . "for `$primary'"); } # A not explicitely valid directory is allowed if Xdir is defined. elsif (! defined $valid{$X} && require_variables_for_macro ($varname, "`$varname' is used", "${X}dir")) { # Nothing to do. Any error message has been output # by require_variables_for_macro. } else { # Ensure all extended prefixes are actually used. $valid{"$base$dist$X"} = 1; } } } # Return only those which are actually defined. return sort grep { variable_defined ($_ . '_' . $primary) } keys %valid; } # Handle `where_HOW' variable magic. Does all lookups, generates # install code, and possibly generates code to define the primary # variable. The first argument is the name of the .am file to munge, # the second argument is the primary variable (eg HEADERS), and all # subsequent arguments are possible installation locations. Returns # list of all values of all _HOW targets. # # FIXME: this should be rewritten to be cleaner. It should be broken # up into multiple functions. # # Usage is: am_install_var (OPTION..., file, HOW, where...) sub am_install_var { my (@args) = @_; my $do_require = 1; my $can_dist = 0; my $default_dist = 0; while (@args) { if ($args[0] eq '-noextra') { $do_require = 0; } elsif ($args[0] eq '-candist') { $can_dist = 1; } elsif ($args[0] eq '-defaultdist') { $default_dist = 1; $can_dist = 1; } elsif ($args[0] !~ /^-/) { last; } shift (@args); } my ($file, $primary, @prefix) = @args; # Now that configure substitutions are allowed in where_HOW # variables, it is an error to actually define the primary. We # allow `JAVA', as it is customarily used to mean the Java # interpreter. This is but one of several Java hacks. Similarly, # `PYTHON' is customarily used to mean the Python interpreter. reject_var $primary, "`$primary' is an anachronism" unless $primary eq 'JAVA' || $primary eq 'PYTHON'; # Get the prefixes which are valid and actually used. @prefix = am_primary_prefixes ($primary, $can_dist, @prefix); # If a primary includes a configure substitution, then the EXTRA_ # form is required. Otherwise we can't properly do our job. my $require_extra; my @used = (); my @result = (); # True if the iteration is the first one. Used for instance to # output parts of the associated file only once. my $first = 1; foreach my $X (@prefix) { my $nodir_name = $X; my $one_name = $X . '_' . $primary; my $strip_subdir = 1; # If subdir prefix should be preserved, do so. if ($nodir_name =~ /^nobase_/) { $strip_subdir = 0; $nodir_name =~ s/^nobase_//; } # If files should be distributed, do so. my $dist_p = 0; if ($can_dist) { $dist_p = (($default_dist && $nodir_name !~ /^nodist_/) || (! $default_dist && $nodir_name =~ /^dist_/)); $nodir_name =~ s/^(dist|nodist)_//; } # Append actual contents of where_PRIMARY variable to # result. foreach my $rcurs (&variable_value_as_list_recursive ($one_name, 'all')) { # Skip configure substitutions. Possibly bogus. if ($rcurs =~ /^\@.*\@$/) { if ($nodir_name eq 'EXTRA') { err_var ($one_name, "`$one_name' contains configure substitution, " . "but shouldn't"); } # Check here to make sure variables defined in # configure.ac do not imply that EXTRA_PRIMARY # must be defined. elsif (! defined $configure_vars{$one_name}) { $require_extra = $one_name if $do_require; } next; } push (@result, $rcurs); } # A blatant hack: we rewrite each _PROGRAMS primary to include # EXEEXT. append_exeext ($one_name) if $primary eq 'PROGRAMS'; # "EXTRA" shouldn't be used when generating clean targets, # all, or install targets. We used to warn if EXTRA_FOO was # defined uselessly, but this was annoying. next if $nodir_name eq 'EXTRA'; if ($nodir_name eq 'check') { push (@check, '$(' . $one_name . ')'); } else { push (@used, '$(' . $one_name . ')'); } # Is this to be installed? my $install_p = $nodir_name ne 'noinst' && $nodir_name ne 'check'; # If so, with install-exec? (or install-data?). my $exec_p = ($nodir_name =~ /$EXEC_DIR_PATTERN/o); my $check_options_p = $install_p && defined $options{'std-options'}; # Singular form of $PRIMARY. (my $one_primary = $primary) =~ s/S$//; $output_rules .= &file_contents ($file, ('FIRST' => $first, 'PRIMARY' => $primary, 'ONE_PRIMARY' => $one_primary, 'DIR' => $X, 'NDIR' => $nodir_name, 'BASE' => $strip_subdir, 'EXEC' => $exec_p, 'INSTALL' => $install_p, 'DIST' => $dist_p, 'CK-OPTS' => $check_options_p)); $first = 0; } # The JAVA variable is used as the name of the Java interpreter. # The PYTHON variable is used as the name of the Python interpreter. if (@used && $primary ne 'JAVA' && $primary ne 'PYTHON') { # Define it. define_pretty_variable ($primary, '', @used); $output_vars .= "\n"; } err_var ($require_extra, "`$require_extra' contains configure substitution,\n" . "but `EXTRA_$primary' not defined") if ($require_extra && ! variable_defined ('EXTRA_' . $primary)); # Push here because PRIMARY might be configure time determined. push (@all, '$(' . $primary . ')') if @used && $primary ne 'JAVA' && $primary ne 'PYTHON'; # Make the result unique. This lets the user use conditionals in # a natural way, but still lets us program lazily -- we don't have # to worry about handling a particular object more than once. return uniq (sort @result); } ################################################################ # Each key in this hash is the name of a directory holding a # Makefile.in. These variables are local to `is_make_dir'. my %make_dirs = (); my $make_dirs_set = 0; sub is_make_dir { my ($dir) = @_; if (! $make_dirs_set) { foreach my $iter (@configure_input_files) { $make_dirs{dirname ($iter)} = 1; } # We also want to notice Makefile.in's. foreach my $iter (@other_input_files) { if ($iter =~ /Makefile\.in$/) { $make_dirs{dirname ($iter)} = 1; } } $make_dirs_set = 1; } return defined $make_dirs{$dir}; } ################################################################ # This variable is local to the "require file" set of functions. my @require_file_paths = (); # &maybe_push_required_file ($DIR, $FILE, $FULLFILE) # -------------------------------------------------- # See if we want to push this file onto dist_common. This function # encodes the rules for deciding when to do so. sub maybe_push_required_file { my ($dir, $file, $fullfile) = @_; if ($dir eq $relative_dir) { push_dist_common ($file); return 1; } elsif ($relative_dir eq '.' && ! &is_make_dir ($dir)) { # If we are doing the topmost directory, and the file is in a # subdir which does not have a Makefile, then we distribute it # here. push_dist_common ($fullfile); return 1; } return 0; } # &require_file_internal ($WHERE, $MYSTRICT, @FILES) # -------------------------------------------------- # Verify that the file must exist in the current directory. # $MYSTRICT is the strictness level at which this file becomes required. # # Must set require_file_paths before calling this function. # require_file_paths is set to hold a single directory (the one in # which the first file was found) before return. sub require_file_internal ($$@) { my ($where, $mystrict, @files) = @_; foreach my $file (@files) { my $fullfile; my $errdir; my $errfile; my $save_dir; my $found_it = 0; my $dangling_sym = 0; foreach my $dir (@require_file_paths) { $fullfile = $dir . "/" . $file; $errdir = $dir unless $errdir; # Use different name for "error filename". Otherwise on # an error the bad file will be reported as eg # `../../install-sh' when using the default # config_aux_path. $errfile = $errdir . '/' . $file; if (-l $fullfile && ! -f $fullfile) { $dangling_sym = 1; last; } elsif (-f $fullfile) { $found_it = 1; maybe_push_required_file ($dir, $file, $fullfile); $save_dir = $dir; last; } } # `--force-missing' only has an effect if `--add-missing' is # specified. if ($found_it && (! $add_missing || ! $force_missing)) { # Prune the path list. @require_file_paths = $save_dir; } else { # If we've already looked for it, we're done. You might # wonder why we don't do this before searching for the # file. If we do that, then something like # AC_OUTPUT(subdir/foo foo) will fail to put foo.in into # DIST_COMMON. if (! $found_it) { next if defined $require_file_found{$fullfile}; $require_file_found{$fullfile} = 1; } if ($strictness >= $mystrict) { if ($dangling_sym && $add_missing) { unlink ($fullfile); } my $trailer = ''; my $suppress = 0; # Only install missing files according to our desired # strictness level. my $message = "required file `$errfile' not found"; if ($add_missing) { $suppress = 1; if (-f ("$libdir/$file")) { # Install the missing file. Symlink if we # can, copy if we must. Note: delete the file # first, in case it is a dangling symlink. $message = "installing `$errfile'"; # Windows Perl will hang if we try to delete a # file that doesn't exist. unlink ($errfile) if -f $errfile; if ($symlink_exists && ! $copy_missing) { if (! symlink ("$libdir/$file", $errfile)) { $suppress = 0; $trailer = "; error while making link: $!"; } } elsif (system ('cp', "$libdir/$file", $errfile)) { $suppress = 0; $trailer = "\n error while copying"; } } if (! maybe_push_required_file (dirname ($errfile), $file, $errfile)) { if (! $found_it) { # We have added the file but could not push it # into DIST_COMMON (probably because this is # an auxiliary file and we are not processing # the top level Makefile). This is unfortunate, # since it means we are using a file which is not # distributed! # Get Automake to be run again: on the second # run the file will be found, and pushed into # the toplevel DIST_COMMON automatically. $automake_needs_to_reprocess_all_files = 1; } } # Prune the path list. @require_file_paths = &dirname ($errfile); } # If --force-missing was specified, and we have # actually found the file, then do nothing. next if $found_it && $force_missing; msg ($suppress ? 'note' : 'error', $where, "$message$trailer"); } } } } # &require_file ($WHERE, $MYSTRICT, @FILES) # ----------------------------------------- sub require_file ($$@) { my ($where, $mystrict, @files) = @_; @require_file_paths = $relative_dir; require_file_internal ($where, $mystrict, @files); } # &require_file_with_macro ($MACRO, $MYSTRICT, @FILES) # ---------------------------------------------------- sub require_file_with_macro ($$@) { my ($macro, $mystrict, @files) = @_; require_file ($var_location{$macro}, $mystrict, @files); } # &require_conf_file ($WHERE, $MYSTRICT, @FILES) # ---------------------------------------------- # Looks in configuration path, as specified by AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR. sub require_conf_file ($$@) { my ($where, $mystrict, @files) = @_; @require_file_paths = @config_aux_path; require_file_internal ($where, $mystrict, @files); my $dir = $require_file_paths[0]; @config_aux_path = @require_file_paths; # Avoid unsightly '/.'s. $config_aux_dir = '$(top_srcdir)' . ($dir eq '.' ? "" : "/$dir"); } # &require_conf_file_with_macro ($MACRO, $MYSTRICT, @FILES) # --------------------------------------------------------- sub require_conf_file_with_macro ($$@) { my ($macro, $mystrict, @files) = @_; require_conf_file ($var_location{$macro}, $mystrict, @files); } ################################################################ # &require_build_directory ($DIRECTORY) # ------------------------------------ # Emit rules to create $DIRECTORY if needed, and return # the file that any target requiring this directory should be made # dependent upon. sub require_build_directory ($) { my $directory = shift; my $dirstamp = "$directory/.dirstamp"; # Don't emit the rule twice. if (! defined $directory_map{$directory}) { $directory_map{$directory} = 1; # Directory must be removed by `make distclean'. $compile_clean_files{$dirstamp} = DIST_CLEAN; $output_rules .= ("$dirstamp:\n" . "\t\@\$(mkinstalldirs) $directory\n" . "\t\@: > $dirstamp\n"); } return $dirstamp; } # &require_build_directory_maybe ($FILE) # -------------------------------------- # If $FILE lies in a subdirectory, emit a rule to create this # directory and return the file that $FILE should be made # dependent upon. Otherwise, just return the empty string. sub require_build_directory_maybe ($) { my $file = shift; my $directory = dirname ($file); if ($directory ne '.') { return require_build_directory ($directory); } else { return ''; } } ################################################################ # Push a list of files onto dist_common. sub push_dist_common { prog_error "push_dist_common run after handle_dist" if $handle_dist_run; macro_define ('DIST_COMMON', VAR_AUTOMAKE, '+', '', "@_", ''); } # Set strictness. sub set_strictness { $strictness_name = $_[0]; if ($strictness_name eq 'gnu') { $strictness = GNU; setup_channel 'error-gnu', silent => 0; setup_channel 'error-gnu/warn', silent => 0, type => 'error'; setup_channel 'error-gnits', silent => 1; setup_channel 'portability', silent => 0; setup_channel 'gnu', silent => 0; } elsif ($strictness_name eq 'gnits') { $strictness = GNITS; setup_channel 'error-gnu', silent => 0; setup_channel 'error-gnu/warn', silent => 0, type => 'error'; setup_channel 'error-gnits', silent => 0; setup_channel 'portability', silent => 0; setup_channel 'gnu', silent => 0; } elsif ($strictness_name eq 'foreign') { $strictness = FOREIGN; setup_channel 'error-gnu', silent => 1; setup_channel 'error-gnu/warn', silent => 0, type => 'warning'; setup_channel 'error-gnits', silent => 1; setup_channel 'portability', silent => 1; setup_channel 'gnu', silent => 1; } else { prog_error "level `$strictness_name' not recognized\n"; } } ################################################################ # Glob something. Do this to avoid indentation screwups everywhere we # want to glob. Gross! sub my_glob { my ($pat) = @_; return <${pat}>; } ################################################################ # INTEGER # require_variables ($WHERE, $REASON, @VARIABLES) # ----------------------------------------------- # Make sure that each supplied variable is defined. # Otherwise, issue a warning. If we know which macro can # define this variable, hint the user. # Return the number of undefined variables. sub require_variables ($$@) { my ($where, $reason, @vars) = @_; my $res = 0; $reason .= ' but ' unless $reason eq ''; foreach my $var (@vars) { # Nothing to do if the variable exists. The $configure_vars test # needed for strange variables like AMDEPBACKSLASH or ANSI2KNR # that are AC_SUBST'ed but never macro_define'd. next if (exists $var_value{$var} || exists $configure_vars{$var}); ++$res; my $text = "$reason`$var' is undefined."; if (exists $am_macro_for_var{$var}) { $text .= "\nThe usual way to define `$var' is to add " . "`$am_macro_for_var{$var}'\nto `$configure_ac' and run " . "`aclocal' and `autoconf' again."; } elsif (exists $ac_macro_for_var{$var}) { $text .= "\nThe usual way to define `$var' is to add " . "`$ac_macro_for_var{$var}'\nto `$configure_ac' and run " . "`autoconf' again."; } err $where, $text, uniq_scope => US_GLOBAL; } return $res; } # INTEGER # require_variables_for_macro ($MACRO, $REASON, @VARIABLES) # --------------------------------------------------------- # Same as require_variables, but take a macro mame as first argument. sub require_variables_for_macro ($$@) { my ($macro, $reason, @args) = @_; return require_variables ($var_location{$macro}, $reason, @args); } # Print usage information. sub usage () { print "Usage: $0 [OPTION] ... [Makefile]... Generate Makefile.in for configure from Makefile.am. Operation modes: --help print this help, then exit --version print version number, then exit -v, --verbose verbosely list files processed --no-force only update Makefile.in's that are out of date -W, --warnings=CATEGORY report the warnings falling in CATEGORY Dependency tracking: -i, --ignore-deps disable dependency tracking code --include-deps enable dependency tracking code Flavors: --cygnus assume program is part of Cygnus-style tree --foreign set strictness to foreign --gnits set strictness to gnits --gnu set strictness to gnu Library files: -a, --add-missing add missing standard files to package --libdir=DIR directory storing library files -c, --copy with -a, copy missing files (default is symlink) -f, --force-missing force update of standard files Warning categories include: `gnu' GNU coding standards (default in gnu and gnits modes) `obsolete' obsolete features or constructions `unsupported' unsupported or incomplete features (default) `unused' unused variables (default) `portability' portability issues (default in gnu and gnits modes) `all' all the warnings `no-CATEGORY' turn off warnings in CATEGORY `none' turn off all the warnings `error' treat warnings as errors "; my ($last, @lcomm); $last = ''; foreach my $iter (sort ((@common_files, @common_sometimes))) { push (@lcomm, $iter) unless $iter eq $last; $last = $iter; } my @four; print "\nFiles which are automatically distributed, if found:\n"; format USAGE_FORMAT = @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< $four[0], $four[1], $four[2], $four[3] . $~ = "USAGE_FORMAT"; my $cols = 4; my $rows = int(@lcomm / $cols); my $rest = @lcomm % $cols; if ($rest) { $rows++; } else { $rest = $cols; } for (my $y = 0; $y < $rows; $y++) { @four = ("", "", "", ""); for (my $x = 0; $x < $cols; $x++) { last if $y + 1 == $rows && $x == $rest; my $idx = (($x > $rest) ? ($rows * $rest + ($rows - 1) * ($x - $rest)) : ($rows * $x)); $idx += $y; $four[$x] = $lcomm[$idx]; } write; } print "\nReport bugs to .\n"; # --help always returns 0 per GNU standards. exit 0; } # &version () # ----------- # Print version information sub version () { print <. Copyright 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. EOF # --version always returns 0 per GNU standards. exit 0; } ### Setup "GNU" style for perl-mode and cperl-mode. ## Local Variables: ## perl-indent-level: 2 ## perl-continued-statement-offset: 2 ## perl-continued-brace-offset: 0 ## perl-brace-offset: 0 ## perl-brace-imaginary-offset: 0 ## perl-label-offset: -2 ## cperl-indent-level: 2 ## cperl-brace-offset: 0 ## cperl-continued-brace-offset: 0 ## cperl-label-offset: -2 ## cperl-extra-newline-before-brace: t ## cperl-merge-trailing-else: nil ## cperl-continued-statement-offset: 2 ## End: