| # Copyright (C) 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007 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, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. |
| |
| package Automake::Rule; |
| use strict; |
| use Carp; |
| |
| use Automake::Item; |
| use Automake::RuleDef; |
| use Automake::ChannelDefs; |
| use Automake::Channels; |
| use Automake::Options; |
| use Automake::Condition qw (TRUE FALSE); |
| use Automake::DisjConditions; |
| require Exporter; |
| use vars '@ISA', '@EXPORT', '@EXPORT_OK'; |
| @ISA = qw/Automake::Item Exporter/; |
| @EXPORT = qw (reset register_suffix_rule suffix_rules_count |
| suffixes rules $suffix_rules $KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN |
| depend %dependencies %actions register_action |
| accept_extensions |
| reject_rule msg_rule msg_cond_rule err_rule err_cond_rule |
| rule rrule ruledef rruledef); |
| |
| =head1 NAME |
| |
| Automake::Rule - support for rules definitions |
| |
| =head1 SYNOPSIS |
| |
| use Automake::Rule; |
| use Automake::RuleDef; |
| |
| |
| =head1 DESCRIPTION |
| |
| This package provides support for Makefile rule definitions. |
| |
| An C<Automake::Rule> is a rule name associated to possibly |
| many conditional definitions. These definitions are instances |
| of C<Automake::RuleDef>. |
| |
| Therefore obtaining the value of a rule under a given |
| condition involves two lookups. One to look up the rule, |
| and one to look up the conditional definition: |
| |
| my $rule = rule $name; |
| if ($rule) |
| { |
| my $def = $rule->def ($cond); |
| if ($def) |
| { |
| return $def->location; |
| } |
| ... |
| } |
| ... |
| |
| when it is known that the rule and the definition |
| being looked up exist, the above can be simplified to |
| |
| return rule ($name)->def ($cond)->location; # do not write this. |
| |
| but is better written |
| |
| return rrule ($name)->rdef ($cond)->location; |
| |
| or even |
| |
| return rruledef ($name, $cond)->location; |
| |
| The I<r> variants of the C<rule>, C<def>, and C<ruledef> methods add |
| an extra test to ensure that the lookup succeeded, and will diagnose |
| failures as internal errors (with a message which is much more |
| informative than Perl's warning about calling a method on a |
| non-object). |
| |
| =head2 Global variables |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| my $_SUFFIX_RULE_PATTERN = |
| '^(\.[a-zA-Z0-9_(){}$+@\-]+)(\.[a-zA-Z0-9_(){}$+@\-]+)' . "\$"; |
| |
| # Suffixes found during a run. |
| use vars '@_suffixes'; |
| |
| # Same as $suffix_rules (declared below), but records only the |
| # default rules supplied by the languages Automake supports. |
| use vars '$_suffix_rules_default'; |
| |
| =item C<%dependencies> |
| |
| Holds the dependencies of targets which dependencies are factored. |
| Typically, C<.PHONY> will appear in plenty of F<*.am> files, but must |
| be output once. Arguably all pure dependencies could be subject to |
| this factoring, but it is not unpleasant to have paragraphs in |
| Makefile: keeping related stuff altogether. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| use vars '%dependencies'; |
| |
| =item <%actions> |
| |
| Holds the factored actions. Tied to C<%dependencies>, i.e., filled |
| only when keys exists in C<%dependencies>. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| use vars '%actions'; |
| |
| =item <$suffix_rules> |
| |
| This maps the source extension for all suffix rule seen to |
| a C<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}{$ext3} |
| |
| So it's easy to check whether C<.foo> can be transformed to |
| C<.$(OBJEXT)> by checking whether |
| C<$suffix_rules{'.foo'}{'.$(OBJEXT)'}> exists. This will work even if |
| transforming C<.foo> to C<.$(OBJEXT)> involves a chain of several |
| suffix rules. |
| |
| The value of C<$suffix_rules{$ext1}{$ext2}> is a pair |
| C<[ $next_sfx, $dist ]> where C<$next_sfx> is target suffix |
| for the next rule to use to reach C<$ext2>, and C<$dist> the |
| distance to C<$ext2'>. |
| |
| The content of this variable should be updated via the |
| C<register_suffix_rule> function. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| use vars '$suffix_rules'; |
| |
| =item C<$KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN> |
| |
| Pattern that matches all know input extensions (i.e. extensions used |
| by the languages supported by Automake). Using this pattern (instead |
| of `\..*$') to match extensions allows Automake to support dot-less |
| extensions. |
| |
| New extensions should be registered with C<accept_extensions>. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| use vars qw ($KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN @_known_extensions_list); |
| $KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN = ""; |
| @_known_extensions_list = (); |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head2 Error reporting functions |
| |
| In these functions, C<$rule> can be either a rule name, or |
| an instance of C<Automake::Rule>. |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item C<err_rule ($rule, $message, [%options])> |
| |
| Uncategorized errors about rules. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub err_rule ($$;%) |
| { |
| msg_rule ('error', @_); |
| } |
| |
| =item C<err_cond_rule ($cond, $rule, $message, [%options])> |
| |
| Uncategorized errors about conditional rules. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub err_cond_rule ($$$;%) |
| { |
| msg_cond_rule ('error', @_); |
| } |
| |
| =item C<msg_cond_rule ($channel, $cond, $rule, $message, [%options])> |
| |
| Messages about conditional rules. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub msg_cond_rule ($$$$;%) |
| { |
| my ($channel, $cond, $rule, $msg, %opts) = @_; |
| my $r = ref ($rule) ? $rule : rrule ($rule); |
| msg $channel, $r->rdef ($cond)->location, $msg, %opts; |
| } |
| |
| =item C<msg_rule ($channel, $targetname, $message, [%options])> |
| |
| Messages about rules. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub msg_rule ($$$;%) |
| { |
| my ($channel, $rule, $msg, %opts) = @_; |
| my $r = ref ($rule) ? $rule : rrule ($rule); |
| # Don't know which condition is concerned. Pick any. |
| my $cond = $r->conditions->one_cond; |
| msg_cond_rule ($channel, $cond, $r, $msg, %opts); |
| } |
| |
| |
| =item C<$bool = reject_rule ($rule, $error_msg)> |
| |
| Bail out with C<$error_msg> if a rule with name C<$rule> has been |
| defined. |
| |
| Return true iff C<$rule> is defined. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub reject_rule ($$) |
| { |
| my ($rule, $msg) = @_; |
| if (rule ($rule)) |
| { |
| err_rule $rule, $msg; |
| return 1; |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head2 Administrative functions |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item C<accept_extensions (@exts)> |
| |
| Update C<$KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN> to recognize the extensions |
| listed C<@exts>. Extensions should contain a dot if needed. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub accept_extensions (@) |
| { |
| push @_known_extensions_list, @_; |
| $KNOWN_EXTENSIONS_PATTERN = |
| '(?:' . join ('|', map (quotemeta, @_known_extensions_list)) . ')'; |
| } |
| |
| =item C<rules> |
| |
| Return the list of all L<Automake::Rule> instances. (I.e., all |
| rules defined so far.) |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| use vars '%_rule_dict'; |
| sub rules () |
| { |
| return values %_rule_dict; |
| } |
| |
| |
| =item C<register_action($target, $action)> |
| |
| Append the C<$action> to C<$actions{$target}> taking care of special |
| cases. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub register_action ($$) |
| { |
| my ($target, $action) = @_; |
| if ($actions{$target}) |
| { |
| $actions{$target} .= "\n$action" if $action; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| $actions{$target} = $action; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| =item C<Automake::Rule::reset> |
| |
| The I<forget all> function. Clears all know rules and reset some |
| other internal data. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub reset() |
| { |
| %_rule_dict = (); |
| @_suffixes = (); |
| # 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 = $suffix_rules; |
| } |
| |
| %dependencies = |
| ( |
| # Texinfoing. |
| 'dvi' => [], |
| 'dvi-am' => [], |
| 'pdf' => [], |
| 'pdf-am' => [], |
| 'ps' => [], |
| 'ps-am' => [], |
| 'info' => [], |
| 'info-am' => [], |
| 'html' => [], |
| 'html-am' => [], |
| |
| # Installing/uninstalling. |
| 'install-data-am' => [], |
| 'install-exec-am' => [], |
| 'uninstall-am' => [], |
| |
| 'install-man' => [], |
| 'uninstall-man' => [], |
| |
| 'install-dvi' => [], |
| 'install-dvi-am' => [], |
| 'install-html' => [], |
| 'install-html-am' => [], |
| 'install-info' => [], |
| 'install-info-am' => [], |
| 'install-pdf' => [], |
| 'install-pdf-am' => [], |
| 'install-ps' => [], |
| 'install-ps-am' => [], |
| |
| 'installcheck-am' => [], |
| |
| # Cleaning. |
| 'clean-am' => [], |
| 'mostlyclean-am' => [], |
| 'maintainer-clean-am' => [], |
| 'distclean-am' => [], |
| 'clean' => [], |
| 'mostlyclean' => [], |
| 'maintainer-clean' => [], |
| 'distclean' => [], |
| |
| # Tarballing. |
| 'dist-all' => [], |
| |
| # Phoning. |
| '.PHONY' => [], |
| # Recursive install targets (so `make -n install' works for BSD Make). |
| '.MAKE' => [], |
| ); |
| %actions = (); |
| } |
| |
| =item C<register_suffix_rule ($where, $src, $dest)> |
| |
| Register a suffix rules defined on C<$where> that transform |
| files ending in C<$src> into files ending in C<$dest>. |
| |
| This upgrades the C<$suffix_rules> variables. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub register_suffix_rule ($$$) |
| { |
| my ($where, $src, $dest) = @_; |
| |
| verb "Sources ending in $src become $dest"; |
| push @_suffixes, $src, $dest; |
| |
| # When transforming sources to objects, Automake uses the |
| # %suffix_rules to move from each source extension to |
| # `.$(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 extensions 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, $dist ]; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| =item C<$count = suffix_rules_count> |
| |
| Return the number of suffix rules added while processing the current |
| F<Makefile> (excluding predefined suffix rules). |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub suffix_rules_count () |
| { |
| return (scalar keys %$suffix_rules) - (scalar keys %$_suffix_rules_default); |
| } |
| |
| =item C<@list = suffixes> |
| |
| Return the list of known suffixes. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub suffixes () |
| { |
| return @_suffixes; |
| } |
| |
| =item C<rule ($rulename)> |
| |
| Return the C<Automake::Rule> object for the rule |
| named C<$rulename> if defined. Return 0 otherwise. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub rule ($) |
| { |
| my ($name) = @_; |
| # Strip $(EXEEXT) from $name, so we can diagnose |
| # a clash if `ctags$(EXEEXT):' is redefined after `ctags:'. |
| $name =~ s,\$\(EXEEXT\)$,,; |
| return $_rule_dict{$name} || 0; |
| } |
| |
| =item C<ruledef ($rulename, $cond)> |
| |
| Return the C<Automake::RuleDef> object for the rule named |
| C<$rulename> if defined in condition C<$cond>. Return false |
| if the condition or the rule does not exist. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub ruledef ($$) |
| { |
| my ($name, $cond) = @_; |
| my $rule = rule $name; |
| return $rule && $rule->def ($cond); |
| } |
| |
| =item C<rrule ($rulename) |
| |
| Return the C<Automake::Rule> object for the variable named |
| C<$rulename>. Abort with an internal error if the variable was not |
| defined. |
| |
| The I<r> in front of C<var> stands for I<required>. One |
| should call C<rvar> to assert the rule's existence. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub rrule ($) |
| { |
| my ($name) = @_; |
| my $r = rule $name; |
| prog_error ("undefined rule $name\n" . &rules_dump) |
| unless $r; |
| return $r; |
| } |
| |
| =item C<rruledef ($varname, $cond)> |
| |
| Return the C<Automake::RuleDef> object for the rule named |
| C<$rulename> if defined in condition C<$cond>. Abort with an internal |
| error if the condition or the rule does not exist. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub rruledef ($$) |
| { |
| my ($name, $cond) = @_; |
| return rrule ($name)->rdef ($cond); |
| } |
| |
| # Create the variable if it does not exist. |
| # This is used only by other functions in this package. |
| sub _crule ($) |
| { |
| my ($name) = @_; |
| my $r = rule $name; |
| return $r if $r; |
| return _new Automake::Rule $name; |
| } |
| |
| sub _new ($$) |
| { |
| my ($class, $name) = @_; |
| |
| # Strip $(EXEEXT) from $name, so we can diagnose |
| # a clash if `ctags$(EXEEXT):' is redefined after `ctags:'. |
| (my $keyname = $name) =~ s,\$\(EXEEXT\)$,,; |
| |
| my $self = Automake::Item::new ($class, $name); |
| $_rule_dict{$keyname} = $self; |
| return $self; |
| } |
| |
| |
| =item C<@conds = define ($rulename, $source, $owner, $cond, $where)> |
| |
| Define a new rule. C<$rulename> is the list of targets. C<$source> |
| is the filename the rule comes from. C<$owner> is the owner of the |
| rule (C<RULE_AUTOMAKE> or C<RULE_USER>). C<$cond> is the |
| C<Automake::Condition> under which the rule is defined. C<$where> is |
| the C<Automake::Location> where the rule is defined. |
| |
| Returns a (possibly empty) list of C<Automake::Condition>s where the |
| rule's definition should be output. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub define ($$$$$) |
| { |
| my ($target, $source, $owner, $cond, $where) = @_; |
| |
| prog_error "$where is not a reference" |
| unless ref $where; |
| prog_error "$cond is not a reference" |
| unless ref $cond; |
| |
| # Don't even think about defining a rule in condition FALSE. |
| return () if $cond == FALSE; |
| |
| # For now `foo:' will override `foo$(EXEEXT):'. This is temporary, |
| # though, so we emit a warning. |
| (my $noexe = $target) =~ s,\$\(EXEEXT\)$,,; |
| my $noexerule = rule $noexe; |
| my $tdef = $noexerule ? $noexerule->def ($cond) : undef; |
| |
| if ($noexe ne $target |
| && $tdef |
| && $noexerule->name ne $target) |
| { |
| # The no-exeext option enables this feature. |
| if (! option 'no-exeext') |
| { |
| msg ('obsolete', $tdef->location, |
| "deprecated feature: target `$noexe' overrides " |
| . "`$noexe\$(EXEEXT)'\n" |
| . "change your target to read `$noexe\$(EXEEXT)'"); |
| msg ('obsolete', $where, "target `$target' was defined here"); |
| } |
| # Don't `return ()' now, as this might hide target clashes |
| # detected below. |
| } |
| |
| |
| # A GNU make-style pattern rule has a single "%" in the target name. |
| msg ('portability', $where, |
| "`%'-style pattern rules are a GNU make extension") |
| if $target =~ /^[^%]*%[^%]*$/; |
| |
| # Diagnose target redefinitions. |
| if ($tdef) |
| { |
| my $oldowner = $tdef->owner; |
| # Ok, it's the name target, but the name maybe different because |
| # `foo$(EXEEXT)' and `foo' have the same key in our table. |
| my $oldname = $tdef->name; |
| |
| # Don't mention true conditions in diagnostics. |
| my $condmsg = |
| $cond == TRUE ? '' : " in condition `" . $cond->human . "'"; |
| |
| if ($owner == RULE_USER) |
| { |
| if ($oldowner == RULE_USER) |
| { |
| # Ignore `%'-style pattern rules. We'd need the |
| # dependencies to detect duplicates, and they are |
| # already diagnosed as unportable by -Wportability. |
| if ($target !~ /^[^%]*%[^%]*$/) |
| { |
| ## FIXME: Presently we can't diagnose duplicate user rules |
| ## because we don't distinguish rules with commands |
| ## from rules that only add dependencies. E.g., |
| ## .PHONY: foo |
| ## .PHONY: bar |
| ## is legitimate. (This is phony.test.) |
| |
| # msg ('syntax', $where, |
| # "redefinition of `$target'$condmsg...", partial => 1); |
| # msg_cond_rule ('syntax', $cond, $target, |
| # "... `$target' previously defined here"); |
| } |
| # Return so we don't redefine the rule in our tables, |
| # don't check for ambiguous condition, etc. The rule |
| # will be output anyway because &read_am_file ignore the |
| # return code. |
| return (); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| # Since we parse the user Makefile.am before reading |
| # the Automake fragments, this condition should never happen. |
| prog_error ("user target `$target'$condmsg seen after Automake's" |
| . " definition\nfrom " . $tdef->source); |
| } |
| } |
| else # $owner == RULE_AUTOMAKE |
| { |
| if ($oldowner == RULE_USER) |
| { |
| # -am targets listed in %dependencies support a -local |
| # variant. If the user tries to override TARGET or |
| # TARGET-am for which there exists a -local variant, |
| # just tell the user to use it. |
| my $hint = 0; |
| my $noam = $target; |
| $noam =~ s/-am$//; |
| if (exists $dependencies{"$noam-am"}) |
| { |
| $hint = "consider using $noam-local instead of $target"; |
| } |
| |
| msg_cond_rule ('override', $cond, $target, |
| "user target `$target' defined here" |
| . "$condmsg...", partial => 1); |
| msg ('override', $where, |
| "... overrides Automake target `$oldname' defined here", |
| partial => $hint); |
| msg_cond_rule ('override', $cond, $target, $hint) |
| if $hint; |
| |
| # Don't overwrite the user definition of TARGET. |
| return (); |
| } |
| else # $oldowner == RULE_AUTOMAKE |
| { |
| # Automake should ignore redefinitions of its own |
| # rules if they came from the same file. This makes |
| # it easier to process a Makefile fragment several times. |
| # However it's an error if the target is defined in many |
| # files. E.g., the user might be using bin_PROGRAMS = ctags |
| # which clashes with our `ctags' rule. |
| # (It would be more accurate if we had a way to compare |
| # the *content* of both rules. Then $targets_source would |
| # be useless.) |
| my $oldsource = $tdef->source; |
| return () if $source eq $oldsource && $target eq $oldname; |
| |
| msg ('syntax', $where, "redefinition of `$target'$condmsg...", |
| partial => 1); |
| msg_cond_rule ('syntax', $cond, $target, |
| "... `$oldname' previously defined here"); |
| return (); |
| } |
| } |
| # Never reached. |
| prog_error ("Unreachable place reached."); |
| } |
| |
| # Conditions for which the rule should be defined. |
| my @conds = $cond; |
| |
| # Check ambiguous conditional definitions. |
| my $rule = _crule $target; |
| my ($message, $ambig_cond) = $rule->conditions->ambiguous_p ($target, $cond); |
| if ($message) # We have an ambiguity. |
| { |
| if ($owner == RULE_USER) |
| { |
| # For user rules, just diagnose the ambiguity. |
| msg 'syntax', $where, "$message ...", partial => 1; |
| msg_cond_rule ('syntax', $ambig_cond, $target, |
| "... `$target' previously defined here"); |
| return (); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| # FIXME: for Automake rules, we can't diagnose ambiguities yet. |
| # The point is that Automake doesn't propagate conditions |
| # everywhere. For instance &handle_PROGRAMS doesn't care if |
| # bin_PROGRAMS was defined conditionally or not. |
| # On the following input |
| # if COND1 |
| # foo: |
| # ... |
| # else |
| # bin_PROGRAMS = foo |
| # endif |
| # &handle_PROGRAMS will attempt to define a `foo:' rule |
| # in condition TRUE (which conflicts with COND1). Fixing |
| # this in &handle_PROGRAMS and siblings seems hard: you'd |
| # have to explain &file_contents what to do with a |
| # condition. So for now we do our best *here*. If `foo:' |
| # was already defined in condition COND1 and we want to define |
| # it in condition TRUE, then define it only in condition !COND1. |
| # (See cond14.test and cond15.test for some test cases.) |
| @conds = $rule->not_always_defined_in_cond ($cond)->conds; |
| |
| # No conditions left to define the rule. |
| # Warn, because our workaround is meaningless in this case. |
| if (scalar @conds == 0) |
| { |
| msg 'syntax', $where, "$message ...", partial => 1; |
| msg_cond_rule ('syntax', $ambig_cond, $target, |
| "... `$target' previously defined here"); |
| return (); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # Finally define this rule. |
| for my $c (@conds) |
| { |
| my $def = new Automake::RuleDef ($target, '', $where->clone, |
| $owner, $source); |
| $rule->set ($c, $def); |
| } |
| |
| # We honor inference rules with multiple targets because many |
| # make support this and people use it. However this is disallowed |
| # by POSIX. We'll print a warning later. |
| my $target_count = 0; |
| my $inference_rule_count = 0; |
| |
| for my $t (split (' ', $target)) |
| { |
| ++$target_count; |
| # Check if the rule is a suffix rule: either it's a rule for |
| # two known extensions... |
| if ($t =~ /^($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). |
| |
| |
| || ($t =~ /$_SUFFIX_RULE_PATTERN/o && accept_extensions($1))) |
| { |
| ++$inference_rule_count; |
| register_suffix_rule ($where, $1, $2); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # POSIX allows multiple targets before the colon, but disallows |
| # definitions of multiple inference rules. It's also |
| # disallowed to mix plain targets with inference rules. |
| msg ('portability', $where, |
| "Inference rules can have only one target before the colon (POSIX).") |
| if $inference_rule_count > 0 && $target_count > 1; |
| |
| return @conds; |
| } |
| |
| =item C<depend ($target, @deps)> |
| |
| Adds C<@deps> to the dependencies of target C<$target>. This should |
| be used only with factored targets (those appearing in |
| C<%dependees>). |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| sub depend ($@) |
| { |
| my ($category, @dependees) = @_; |
| push (@{$dependencies{$category}}, @dependees); |
| } |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head1 SEE ALSO |
| |
| L<Automake::RuleDef>, L<Automake::Condition>, |
| L<Automake::DisjConditions>, L<Automake::Location>. |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| 1; |
| |
| ### 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: |