| #! /usr/bin/perl -w |
| # -*- perl -*- |
| # Generated from autoupdate.in; do not edit by hand. |
| |
| # autoupdate - modernize an Autoconf file. |
| # Copyright (C) 1994, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, |
| # 2007, 2008, 2009 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 3 of the License, 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/>. |
| |
| # Originally written by David MacKenzie <djm@gnu.ai.mit.edu>. |
| # Rewritten by Akim Demaille <akim@freefriends.org>. |
| |
| eval 'case $# in 0) exec /usr/bin/perl -S "$0";; *) exec /usr/bin/perl -S "$0" "$@";; esac' |
| if 0; |
| |
| BEGIN |
| { |
| my $pkgdatadir = $ENV{'autom4te_perllibdir'} || '/usr/local/google/apenwarr/athena/out.mstc/host/usr/share/autoconf'; |
| unshift @INC, $pkgdatadir; |
| |
| # Override SHELL. On DJGPP SHELL may not be set to a shell |
| # that can handle redirection and quote arguments correctly, |
| # e.g.: COMMAND.COM. For DJGPP always use the shell that configure |
| # has detected. |
| $ENV{'SHELL'} = '/bin/sh' if ($^O eq 'dos'); |
| } |
| |
| use Autom4te::ChannelDefs; |
| use Autom4te::Channels; |
| use Autom4te::Configure_ac; |
| use Autom4te::FileUtils; |
| use Autom4te::General; |
| use Autom4te::XFile; |
| use File::Basename; |
| use strict; |
| |
| # Lib files. |
| my $autom4te = $ENV{'AUTOM4TE'} || '/usr/local/google/apenwarr/athena/out.mstc/host/usr/bin/autom4te'; |
| my $autoconf = "$autom4te --language=autoconf"; |
| # We need to find m4sugar. |
| my @prepend_include; |
| my @include = ('/usr/local/google/apenwarr/athena/out.mstc/host/usr/share/autoconf'); |
| my $force = 0; |
| # m4. |
| my $m4 = $ENV{"M4"} || '/usr/local/google/apenwarr/athena/out.mstc/host/usr/bin/m4'; |
| |
| |
| # $HELP |
| # ----- |
| $help = "Usage: $0 [OPTION]... [TEMPLATE-FILE]... |
| |
| Update each TEMPLATE-FILE if given, or `configure.ac' if present, |
| or else `configure.in', to the syntax of the current version of |
| Autoconf. The original files are backed up. |
| |
| Operation modes: |
| -h, --help print this help, then exit |
| -V, --version print version number, then exit |
| -v, --verbose verbosely report processing |
| -d, --debug don't remove temporary files |
| -f, --force consider all files obsolete |
| |
| Library directories: |
| -B, --prepend-include=DIR prepend directory DIR to search path |
| -I, --include=DIR append directory DIR to search path |
| |
| Report bugs to <bug-autoconf\@gnu.org>. |
| GNU Autoconf home page: <http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/>. |
| General help using GNU software: <http://www.gnu.org/gethelp/>. |
| "; |
| |
| # $VERSION |
| # -------- |
| $version = "autoupdate (GNU Autoconf) 2.65 |
| Copyright (C) 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| License GPLv3+/Autoconf: GNU GPL version 3 or later |
| <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>, <http://gnu.org/licenses/exceptions.html> |
| This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. |
| There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law. |
| |
| Written by David J. MacKenzie and Akim Demaille. |
| "; |
| |
| ## ---------- ## |
| ## Routines. ## |
| ## ---------- ## |
| |
| |
| # parse_args () |
| # ------------- |
| # Process any command line arguments. |
| sub parse_args () |
| { |
| my $srcdir; |
| |
| getopt ('I|include=s' => \@include, |
| 'B|prepend-include=s' => \@prepend_include, |
| 'f|force' => \$force); |
| |
| if (! @ARGV) |
| { |
| my $configure_ac = require_configure_ac; |
| push @ARGV, $configure_ac; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| |
| # ----------------- # |
| # Autoconf macros. # |
| # ----------------- # |
| |
| my (%ac_macros, %au_macros, %m4_builtins); |
| |
| # HANDLE_AUTOCONF_MACROS () |
| # ------------------------- |
| # @M4_BUILTINS -- M4 builtins and a useful comment. |
| sub handle_autoconf_macros () |
| { |
| # Get the builtins. |
| xsystem ("echo dumpdef | $m4 2>" . shell_quote ("$tmp/m4.defs") . " >/dev/null"); |
| my $m4_defs = new Autom4te::XFile "< " . open_quote ("$tmp/m4.defs"); |
| while ($_ = $m4_defs->getline) |
| { |
| $m4_builtins{$1} = 1 |
| if /^(\w+):/; |
| } |
| $m4_defs->close; |
| |
| my $macros = new Autom4te::XFile ("$autoconf" |
| . " --trace AU_DEFINE:'AU:\$f:\$1'" |
| . " --trace define:'AC:\$f:\$1'" |
| . " --melt /dev/null |"); |
| while ($_ = $macros->getline) |
| { |
| chomp; |
| my ($domain, $file, $macro) = /^(AC|AU):(.*):([^:]*)$/ or next; |
| if ($domain eq "AU") |
| { |
| $au_macros{$macro} = 1; |
| } |
| elsif ($file =~ /(^|\/)m4sugar\/(m4sugar|version)\.m4$/) |
| { |
| # Add the m4sugar macros to m4_builtins. |
| $m4_builtins{$macro} = 1; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| # Autoconf, aclocal, and m4sh macros. |
| $ac_macros{$macro} = 1; |
| } |
| } |
| $macros->close; |
| |
| |
| # Don't keep AU macros in @AC_MACROS. |
| delete $ac_macros{$_} |
| foreach (keys %au_macros); |
| # Don't keep M4sugar macros which are redefined by Autoconf, |
| # such as `builtin', `changequote' etc. See autoconf/autoconf.m4. |
| delete $ac_macros{$_} |
| foreach (keys %m4_builtins); |
| error "no current Autoconf macros found" |
| unless keys %ac_macros; |
| error "no obsolete Autoconf macros found" |
| unless keys %au_macros; |
| |
| if ($debug) |
| { |
| print STDERR "Current Autoconf macros:\n"; |
| print STDERR join (' ', sort keys %ac_macros) . "\n\n"; |
| print STDERR "Obsolete Autoconf macros:\n"; |
| print STDERR join (' ', sort keys %au_macros) . "\n\n"; |
| } |
| |
| # ac.m4 -- autoquoting definitions of the AC macros (M4sugar excluded). |
| # unac.m4 -- undefine the AC macros. |
| my $ac_m4 = new Autom4te::XFile "> " . open_quote ("$tmp/ac.m4"); |
| print $ac_m4 "# ac.m4 -- autoquoting definitions of the AC macros.\n"; |
| my $unac_m4 = new Autom4te::XFile "> " . open_quote ("$tmp/unac.m4"); |
| print $unac_m4 "# unac.m4 -- undefine the AC macros.\n"; |
| foreach (sort keys %ac_macros) |
| { |
| print $ac_m4 "_au_m4_define([$_], [m4_if(\$#, 0, [[\$0]], [[\$0(\$\@)]])])\n"; |
| print $unac_m4 "_au_m4_undefine([$_])\n"; |
| } |
| |
| # m4save.m4 -- save the m4 builtins. |
| # unm4.m4 -- disable the m4 builtins. |
| # m4.m4 -- enable the m4 builtins. |
| my $m4save_m4 = new Autom4te::XFile "> " . open_quote ("$tmp/m4save.m4"); |
| print $m4save_m4 "# m4save.m4 -- save the m4 builtins.\n"; |
| my $unm4_m4 = new Autom4te::XFile "> " . open_quote ("$tmp/unm4.m4"); |
| print $unm4_m4 "# unm4.m4 -- disable the m4 builtins.\n"; |
| my $m4_m4 = new Autom4te::XFile "> " . open_quote ("$tmp/m4.m4"); |
| print $m4_m4 "# m4.m4 -- enable the m4 builtins.\n"; |
| foreach (sort keys %m4_builtins) |
| { |
| print $m4save_m4 "_au__save([$_])\n"; |
| print $unm4_m4 "_au__undefine([$_])\n"; |
| print $m4_m4 "_au__restore([$_])\n"; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| ## -------------- ## |
| ## Main program. ## |
| ## -------------- ## |
| |
| parse_args; |
| $autoconf .= " --debug" if $debug; |
| $autoconf .= " --force" if $force; |
| $autoconf .= " --verbose" if $verbose; |
| $autoconf .= join (' --include=', '', map { shell_quote ($_) } @include); |
| $autoconf .= join (' --prepend-include=', '', map { shell_quote ($_) } @prepend_include); |
| |
| mktmpdir ('au'); |
| handle_autoconf_macros; |
| |
| # $au_changequote -- enable the quote `[', `]' right before any AU macro. |
| my $au_changequote = |
| 's/\b(' . join ('|', keys %au_macros) . ')\b/_au_m4_changequote([,])$1/g'; |
| |
| # au.m4 -- definitions the AU macros. |
| xsystem ("$autoconf --trace AU_DEFINE:'_au_defun(\@<:\@\$1\@:>\@, |
| \@<:\@\$2\@:>\@)' --melt /dev/null " |
| . ">" . shell_quote ("$tmp/au.m4")); |
| |
| |
| |
| ## ------------------- ## |
| ## Process the files. ## |
| ## ------------------- ## |
| |
| foreach my $file (@ARGV) |
| { |
| # We need an actual file. |
| if ($file eq '-') |
| { |
| $file = "$tmp/stdin"; |
| system "cat >" . shell_quote ($file); |
| } |
| elsif (! -r "$file") |
| { |
| die "$me: $file: No such file or directory"; |
| } |
| |
| # input.m4 -- m4 program to produce the updated file. |
| # Load the values, the dispatcher, neutralize m4, and the prepared |
| # input file. |
| my $input_m4 = <<\EOF; |
| divert(-1) -*- Autoconf -*- |
| changequote([,]) |
| |
| # Define our special macros: |
| define([_au__defn], defn([defn])) |
| define([_au__divert], defn([divert])) |
| define([_au__ifdef], defn([ifdef])) |
| define([_au__include], defn([include])) |
| define([_au___undefine], defn([undefine])) |
| define([_au__undefine], [_au__ifdef([$1], [_au___undefine([$1])])]) |
| define([_au__save], [m4_ifdef([$1], |
| [m4_define([_au_$1], _m4_defn([$1]))])]) |
| define([_au__restore], |
| [_au_m4_ifdef([_au_$1], |
| [_au_m4_define([$1], _au__defn([_au_$1]))])]) |
| |
| # Set up m4sugar. |
| include(m4sugar/m4sugar.m4) |
| |
| # Redefine __file__ to make warnings nicer; $file is replaced below. |
| m4_define([__file__], [$file]) |
| |
| # Redefine m4_location to fix the line number. |
| m4_define([m4_location], [__file__:m4_eval(__line__ - _au__first_line)]) |
| |
| # Move all the builtins into the `_au_' pseudo namespace |
| m4_include([m4save.m4]) |
| |
| # _au_defun(NAME, BODY) |
| # --------------------- |
| # Define NAME to BODY, plus AU activation/deactivation. |
| _au_m4_define([_au_defun], |
| [_au_m4_define([$1], |
| [_au_enable()dnl |
| $2[]dnl |
| _au_disable()])]) |
| |
| # Import the definition of the obsolete macros. |
| _au__include([au.m4]) |
| |
| |
| ## ------------------------ ## |
| ## _au_enable/_au_disable. ## |
| ## ------------------------ ## |
| |
| # They work by pair: each time an AU macro is activated, it runs |
| # _au_enable, and at its end its runs _au_disable (see _au_defun |
| # above). AU macros might use AU macros, which should |
| # enable/disable only for the outer AU macros. |
| # |
| # `_au_enabled' is used to this end, determining whether we really |
| # enable/disable. |
| |
| |
| # __au_enable |
| # ----------- |
| # Reenable the builtins, m4sugar, and the autoquoting AC macros. |
| _au_m4_define([__au_enable], |
| [_au__divert(-1) |
| # Enable special characters. |
| _au_m4_changecom([#]) |
| |
| _au__include([m4.m4]) |
| _au__include([ac.m4]) |
| |
| _au__divert(0)]) |
| |
| # _au_enable |
| # ---------- |
| # Called at the beginning of all the obsolete macros. If this is the |
| # outermost level, call __au_enable. |
| _au_m4_define([_au_enable], |
| [_au_m4_ifdef([_au_enabled], |
| [], |
| [__au_enable()])_au_dnl |
| _au_m4_pushdef([_au_enabled])]) |
| |
| |
| # __au_disable |
| # ------------ |
| # Disable the AC autoquoting macros, m4sugar, and m4. |
| _au_m4_define([__au_disable], |
| [_au__divert(-1) |
| _au__include([unac.m4]) |
| _au__include([unm4.m4]) |
| |
| # Disable special characters. |
| _au_m4_changequote() |
| _au_m4_changecom() |
| |
| _au__divert(0)]) |
| |
| # _au_disable |
| # ----------- |
| # Called at the end of all the obsolete macros. If we are at the |
| # outermost level, call __au_disable. |
| _au_m4_define([_au_disable], |
| [_au_m4_popdef([_au_enabled])_au_dnl |
| _au_m4_ifdef([_au_enabled], |
| [], |
| [__au_disable()])]) |
| |
| |
| ## ------------------------------- ## |
| ## Disable, and process the file. ## |
| ## ------------------------------- ## |
| # The AC autoquoting macros are not loaded yet, hence invoking |
| # `_au_disable' would be wrong. |
| _au__include([unm4.m4]) |
| |
| # Disable special characters, and set the first line number. |
| _au_m4_changequote() |
| _au_m4_changecom() |
| |
| _au_m4_define(_au__first_line, _au___line__)_au__divert(0)_au_dnl |
| EOF |
| |
| $input_m4 =~ s/^ //mg; |
| $input_m4 =~ s/\$file/$file/g; |
| |
| # prepared input -- input, but reenables the quote before each AU macro. |
| open INPUT_M4, "> " . open_quote ("$tmp/input.m4") |
| or error "cannot open: $!"; |
| open FILE, "< " . open_quote ($file) |
| or error "cannot open: $!"; |
| print INPUT_M4 "$input_m4"; |
| while (<FILE>) |
| { |
| eval $au_changequote; |
| print INPUT_M4; |
| } |
| close FILE |
| or error "cannot close $file: $!"; |
| close INPUT_M4 |
| or error "cannot close $tmp/input.m4: $!"; |
| |
| # Now ask m4 to perform the update. |
| xsystem ("$m4 --include=" . shell_quote ($tmp) |
| . join (' --include=', '', map { shell_quote ($_) } reverse (@prepend_include)) |
| . join (' --include=', '', map { shell_quote ($_) } @include) |
| . " " . shell_quote ("$tmp/input.m4") . " > " . shell_quote ("$tmp/updated")); |
| update_file ("$tmp/updated", |
| "$file" eq "$tmp/stdin" ? '-' : "$file"); |
| } |
| exit 0; |
| |
| |
| # ## ---------------------------- ## |
| # ## How `autoupdate' functions. ## |
| # ## ---------------------------- ## |
| # |
| # The task of `autoupdate' is not trivial: the biggest difficulty being |
| # that you must limit the changes to the parts that really need to be |
| # updated. Finding a satisfying implementation proved to be quite hard, |
| # as this is the fifth implementation of `autoupdate'. |
| # |
| # Below, we will use a simple example of an obsolete macro: |
| # |
| # AU_DEFUN([OLD], [NEW([$1, $2], m4_eval([$1 + $2]))]) |
| # AC_DEFUN([NEW], [echo "sum($1) = $2"]) |
| # |
| # the input file contains |
| # |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # OLD(1, 2) |
| # NEW([0, 0], [0]) |
| # |
| # Of course the expected output is |
| # |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # NEW([1, 2], [3]) |
| # NEW([0, 0], [0]) |
| # |
| # |
| # # First implementation: sed |
| # # ========================= |
| # |
| # The first implementation was only able to change the name of obsolete |
| # macros. |
| # |
| # The file `acoldnames.m4' defined the old names based on the new names. |
| # It was simple then to produce a sed script such as: |
| # |
| # s/OLD/NEW/g |
| # |
| # Updating merely consisted in running this script on the file to |
| # update. |
| # |
| # This scheme suffers from an obvious limitation: that `autoupdate' was |
| # unable to cope with new macros that just swap some of its arguments |
| # compared to the old macro. Fortunately, that was enough to upgrade |
| # from Autoconf 1 to Autoconf 2. (But I have no idea whether the |
| # changes in Autoconf 2 were precisely limited by this constraint.) |
| # |
| # |
| # # Second implementation: hooks |
| # # ============================ |
| # |
| # The version 2.15 of Autoconf brought a vast number of changes compared |
| # to 2.13, so a solution was needed. One could think of extending the |
| # `sed' scripts with specialized code for complex macros. However, this |
| # approach is of course full of flaws: |
| # |
| # a. the Autoconf maintainers have to write these snippets, which we |
| # just don't want to, |
| # |
| # b. I really don't think you'll ever manage to handle the quoting of |
| # m4 with a sed script. |
| # |
| # To satisfy a., let's remark that the code which implements the old |
| # features in term of the new feature is exactly the code which should |
| # replace the old code. |
| # |
| # To answer point b, as usual in the history of Autoconf, the answer, at |
| # least on the paper, is simple: m4 is the best tool to parse m4, so |
| # let's use m4. |
| # |
| # Therefore the specification is: |
| # |
| # I want to be able to tell Autoconf, well, m4, that the macro I |
| # am currently defining is an obsolete macro (so that the user is |
| # warned), and its code is the code to use when running autoconf, |
| # but that the very same code has to be used when running |
| # autoupdate. To summarize, the interface I want is |
| # `AU_DEFUN(OLD-NAME, NEW-CODE)'. |
| # |
| # |
| # Now for the technical details. |
| # |
| # When running autoconf, except for the warning, AU_DEFUN is basically |
| # AC_DEFUN. |
| # |
| # When running autoupdate, we want *only* OLD-NAMEs to be expanded. |
| # This obviously means that acgeneral.m4 and acspecific.m4 must not be |
| # loaded. Nonetheless, because we want to use a rich set of m4 |
| # features, m4sugar.m4 is needed. Please note that the fact that |
| # Autoconf's macros are not loaded is positive on two points: |
| # |
| # - we do get an updated `configure.ac', not a `configure'! |
| # |
| # - the old macros are replaced by *calls* to the new-macros, not the |
| # body of the new macros, since their body is not defined!!! |
| # (Whoa, that's really beautiful!). |
| # |
| # Additionally we need to disable the quotes when reading the input for |
| # two reasons: first because otherwise `m4' will swallow the quotes of |
| # other macros: |
| # |
| # NEW([1, 2], 3) |
| # => NEW(1, 2, 3) |
| # |
| # and second, because we want to update the macro calls which are |
| # quoted, i.e., we want |
| # |
| # FOO([OLD(1, 2)]) |
| # => FOO([NEW([1, 2], [3])]) |
| # |
| # If we don't disable the quotes, only the macros called at the top |
| # level would be updated. |
| # |
| # So, let's disable the quotes. |
| # |
| # Well, not quite: m4sugar.m4 still needs to use quotes for some macros. |
| # Well, in this case, when running in autoupdate code, each macro first |
| # reestablishes the quotes, expands itself, and disables the quotes. |
| # |
| # Thinking a bit more, you realize that in fact, people may use `define', |
| # `ifelse' etc. in their files, and you certainly don't want to process |
| # them. Another example is `dnl': you don't want to remove the |
| # comments. You then realize you don't want exactly to import m4sugar: |
| # you want to specify when it is enabled (macros active), and disabled. |
| # m4sugar provides m4_disable/m4_enable to this end. |
| # |
| # You're getting close to it. Now remains one task: how to handle |
| # twofold definitions? |
| # |
| # Remember that the same AU_DEFUN must be understood in two different |
| # ways, the AC way, and the AU way. |
| # |
| # One first solution is to check whether acgeneral.m4 was loaded. But |
| # that's definitely not cute. Another is simply to install `hooks', |
| # that is to say, to keep in some place m4 knows, late `define' to be |
| # triggered *only* in AU mode. |
| # |
| # You first think of designing AU_DEFUN like this: |
| # |
| # 1. AC_DEFUN(OLD-NAME, |
| # [Warn the user OLD-NAME is obsolete. |
| # NEW-CODE]) |
| # |
| # 2. Store for late AU binding([define(OLD_NAME, |
| # [Reestablish the quotes. |
| # NEW-CODE |
| # Disable the quotes.])]) |
| # |
| # but this will not work: NEW-CODE probably uses $1, $2 etc. and these |
| # guys will be replaced with the argument of `Store for late AU binding' |
| # when you call it. |
| # |
| # I don't think there is a means to avoid this using this technology |
| # (remember that $1 etc. are *always* expanded in m4). You may also try |
| # to replace them with $[1] to preserve them for a later evaluation, but |
| # if `Store for late AU binding' is properly written, it will remain |
| # quoted till the end... |
| # |
| # You have to change technology. Since the problem is that `$1' |
| # etc. should be `consumed' right away, one solution is to define now a |
| # second macro, `AU_OLD-NAME', and to install a hook than binds OLD-NAME |
| # to AU_OLD-NAME. Then, autoupdate.m4 just need to run the hooks. By |
| # the way, the same method was used in autoheader. |
| # |
| # |
| # # Third implementation: m4 namespaces by m4sugar |
| # # ============================================== |
| # |
| # Actually, this implementation was just a clean up of the previous |
| # implementation: instead of defining hooks by hand, m4sugar was equipped |
| # with `namespaces'. What are they? |
| # |
| # Sometimes we want to disable some *set* of macros, and restore them |
| # later. We provide support for this via namespaces. |
| # |
| # There are basically three characters playing this scene: defining a |
| # macro in a namespace, disabling a namespace, and restoring a namespace |
| # (i.e., all the definitions it holds). |
| # |
| # Technically, to define a MACRO in NAMESPACE means to define the macro |
| # named `NAMESPACE::MACRO' to the VALUE. At the same time, we append |
| # `undefine(NAME)' in the macro named `m4_disable(NAMESPACE)', and |
| # similarly a binding of NAME to the value of `NAMESPACE::MACRO' in |
| # `m4_enable(NAMESPACE)'. These mechanisms allow to bind the macro of |
| # NAMESPACE and to unbind them at will. |
| # |
| # Of course this implementation is really inefficient: m4 has to grow |
| # strings which can become quickly huge, which slows it significantly. |
| # |
| # In particular one should avoid as much as possible to use `define' for |
| # temporaries. Now that `define' has quite a complex meaning, it is an |
| # expensive operations that should be limited to macros. Use |
| # `m4_define' for temporaries. |
| # |
| # Private copies of the macros we used in entering / exiting the m4sugar |
| # namespace. It is much more convenient than fighting with the renamed |
| # version of define etc. |
| # |
| # |
| # |
| # Those two implementations suffered from serious problems: |
| # |
| # - namespaces were really expensive, and incurred a major performance |
| # loss on `autoconf' itself, not only `autoupdate'. One solution |
| # would have been the limit the use of namespaces to `autoupdate', but |
| # that's again some complications on m4sugar, which really doesn't need |
| # this. So we wanted to get rid of the namespaces. |
| # |
| # - since the quotes were disabled, autoupdate was sometimes making |
| # wrong guesses, for instance on: |
| # |
| # foo([1, 2]) |
| # |
| # m4 saw 2 arguments: `[1'and `2]'. A simple solution, somewhat |
| # fragile, is to reestablish the quotes right before all the obsolete |
| # macros, i.e., to use sed so that the previous text becomes |
| # |
| # changequote([, ])foo([1, 2]) |
| # |
| # To this end, one wants to trace the definition of obsolete macros. |
| # |
| # It was there that the limitations of the namespace approach became |
| # painful: because it was a complex machinery playing a lot with the |
| # builtins of m4 (hence, quite fragile), tracing was almost impossible. |
| # |
| # |
| # So this approach was dropped. |
| # |
| # |
| # # The fourth implementation: two steps |
| # # ==================================== |
| # |
| # If you drop the uses of namespaces, you no longer can compute the |
| # updated value, and replace the old call with it simultaneously. |
| # |
| # Obviously you will use m4 to compute the updated values, but you may |
| # use some other tool to achieve the replacement. Personally, I trust |
| # nobody but m4 to parse m4, so below, m4 will perform the two tasks. |
| # |
| # How can m4 be used to replace *some* macros calls with newer values. |
| # Well, that's dead simple: m4 should learn the definitions of obsolete |
| # macros, forget its builtins, disable the quotes, and then run on the |
| # input file, which amounts to doing this: |
| # |
| # divert(-1)dnl |
| # changequote([, ]) |
| # define([OLD], [NEW([$1, $2], m4_eval([$1 + $2]))changequote()]) |
| # undefine([dnl]) |
| # undefine([m4_eval]) |
| # # Some more undefines... |
| # changequote() |
| # divert(0)dnl |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # changequote([, ])OLD(1, 2) |
| # NEW([0, 0], |
| # 0) |
| # |
| # which will result in |
| # |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # NEW(1, 2, m4_eval(1 + 2)) |
| # NEW([0, 0], |
| # 0) |
| # |
| # Grpmh. Two problems. A minor problem: it would have been much better |
| # to have the `m4_eval' computed, and a major problem: you lost the |
| # quotation in the result. |
| # |
| # Let's address the big problem first. One solution is to define any |
| # modern macro to rewrite its calls with the proper quotation, thanks to |
| # `$@'. Again, tracing the `define's makes it possible to know which |
| # are these macros, so you input is: |
| # |
| # divert(-1)dnl |
| # changequote([, ]) |
| # define([OLD], [NEW([$1, $2], m4_eval([$1 + $2]))changequote()]) |
| # define([NEW], [[NEW($@)]changequote()]) |
| # undefine([dnl]) |
| # undefine([m4_eval]) |
| # # Some more undefines... |
| # changequote() |
| # divert(0)dnl |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # changequote([, ])OLD(1, 2) |
| # changequote([, ])NEW([0, 0], |
| # 0) |
| # |
| # which results in |
| # |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # NEW([1, 2],[m4_eval(1 + 2)]) |
| # NEW([0, 0],[0]) |
| # |
| # Our problem is solved, i.e., the first call to `NEW' is properly |
| # quoted, but introduced another problem: we changed the layout of the |
| # second calls, which can be a drama in the case of huge macro calls |
| # (think of `AC_TRY_RUN' for instance). This example didn't show it, |
| # but we also introduced parens to macros which did not have some: |
| # |
| # AC_INIT |
| # => AC_INIT() |
| # |
| # No big deal for the semantics (unless the macro depends upon $#, which |
| # is bad), but the users would not be happy. |
| # |
| # Additionally, we introduced quotes that were not there before, which is |
| # OK in most cases, but could change the semantics of the file. |
| # |
| # Cruel dilemma: we do want the auto-quoting definition of `NEW' when |
| # evaluating `OLD', but we don't when we evaluate the second `NEW'. |
| # Back to namespaces? |
| # |
| # No. |
| # |
| # |
| # # Second step: replacement |
| # # ------------------------ |
| # |
| # No, as announced above, we will work in two steps: in a first step we |
| # compute the updated values, and in a second step we replace them. Our |
| # goal is something like this: |
| # |
| # divert(-1)dnl |
| # changequote([, ]) |
| # define([OLD], [NEW([1, 2], [3])changequote()]) |
| # undefine([dnl]) |
| # undefine([m4_eval]) |
| # # Some more undefines... |
| # changequote() |
| # divert(0)dnl |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # changequote([, ])OLD(1, 2) |
| # NEW([0, 0], |
| # 0) |
| # |
| # i.e., the new value of `OLD' is precomputed using the auto-quoting |
| # definition of `NEW' and the m4 builtins. We'll see how afterwards, |
| # let's finish with the replacement. |
| # |
| # Of course the solution above is wrong: if there were other calls to |
| # `OLD' with different values, we would smash them to the same value. |
| # But it is quite easy to generalize the scheme above: |
| # |
| # divert(-1)dnl |
| # changequote([, ]) |
| # define([OLD([1],[2])], [NEW([1, 2], [3])]) |
| # define([OLD], [defn([OLD($@)])changequote()]) |
| # undefine([dnl]) |
| # undefine([m4_eval]) |
| # # Some more undefines... |
| # changequote() |
| # divert(0)dnl |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # changequote([, ])OLD(1, 2) |
| # NEW([0, 0], |
| # 0) |
| # |
| # i.e., for each call to obsolete macros, we build an array `call => |
| # value', and use a macro to dispatch these values. This results in: |
| # |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # NEW([1, 2], [3]) |
| # NEW([0, 0], |
| # 0) |
| # |
| # In French, we say `Youpi !', which you might roughly translate as |
| # `Yippee!'. |
| # |
| # |
| # # First step: computation |
| # # ----------------------- |
| # |
| # Let's study the anatomy of the file, and name its sections: |
| # |
| # prologue |
| # divert(-1)dnl |
| # changequote([, ]) |
| # values |
| # define([OLD([1],[2])], [NEW([1, 2], [3])]) |
| # dispatcher |
| # define([OLD], [defn([OLD($@)])changequote()]) |
| # disabler |
| # undefine([dnl]) |
| # undefine([m4_eval]) |
| # # Some more undefines... |
| # changequote() |
| # divert(0)dnl |
| # input |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # changequote([, ])OLD(1, 2) |
| # NEW([0, 0], |
| # 0) |
| # |
| # |
| # # Computing the `values' section |
| # # .............................. |
| # |
| # First we need to get the list of all the AU macro uses. To this end, |
| # first get the list of all the AU macros names by tracing `AU_DEFUN' in |
| # the initialization of autoconf. This list is computed in the file |
| # `au.txt' below. |
| # |
| # Then use this list to trace all the AU macro uses in the input. The |
| # goal is obtain in the case of our example: |
| # |
| # [define([OLD([1],[2])],]@<<@OLD([1],[2])@>>@[)] |
| # |
| # This is the file `values.in' below. |
| # |
| # We want to evaluate this with only the builtins (in fact m4sugar), the |
| # auto-quoting definitions of the new macros (`new.m4'), and the |
| # definition of the old macros (`old.m4'). Computing these last two |
| # files is easy: it's just a matter of using the right `--trace' option. |
| # |
| # So the content of `values.in' is: |
| # |
| # include($autoconf_dir/m4sugar.m4) |
| # m4_include(new.m4) |
| # m4_include(old.m4) |
| # divert(0)dnl |
| # [define([OLD([1],[2])],]@<<@OLD([1],[2])@>>@[)] |
| # |
| # We run m4 on it, which yields: |
| # |
| # define([OLD([1],[2])],@<<@NEW([1, 2], [3])@>>@) |
| # |
| # Transform `@<<@' and `@>>@' into quotes and we get |
| # |
| # define([OLD([1],[2])],[NEW([1, 2], [3])]) |
| # |
| # This is `values.m4'. |
| # |
| # |
| # # Computing the `dispatcher' section |
| # # .................................. |
| # |
| # The `prologue', and the `disabler' are simple and need no commenting. |
| # |
| # To compute the `dispatcher' (`dispatch.m4'), again, it is a simple |
| # matter of using the right `--trace'. |
| # |
| # Finally, the input is not exactly the input file, rather it is the |
| # input file with the added `changequote'. To this end, we build |
| # `quote.sed'. |
| # |
| # |
| # # Putting it all together |
| # # ....................... |
| # |
| # We build the file `input.m4' which contains: |
| # |
| # divert(-1)dnl |
| # changequote([, ]) |
| # include(values.m4) |
| # include(dispatch.m4) |
| # undefine([dnl]) |
| # undefine([eval]) |
| # # Some more undefines... |
| # changequote() |
| # divert(0)dnl |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # changequote([, ])OLD(1, 2) |
| # NEW([0, 0], |
| # 0) |
| # |
| # And we just run m4 on it. Et voila`, Monsieur ! Mais oui, mais oui. |
| # |
| # Well, there are a few additional technicalities. For instance, we |
| # rely on `changequote', `ifelse' and `defn', but we don't want to |
| # interpret the changequotes of the user, so we simply use another name: |
| # `_au_changequote' etc. |
| # |
| # |
| # # Failure of the fourth approach |
| # # ------------------------------ |
| # |
| # This approach is heavily based on traces, but then there is an obvious |
| # problem: non expanded code will never be seen. In particular, the body |
| # of a `define' definition is not seen, so on the input |
| # |
| # define([idem], [OLD(0, [$1])]) |
| # |
| # autoupdate would never see the `OLD', and wouldn't have updated it. |
| # Worse yet, if `idem(0)' was used later, then autoupdate sees that |
| # `OLD' is used, computes the result for `OLD(0, 0)' and sets up a |
| # dispatcher for `OLD'. Since there was no computed value for `OLD(0, |
| # [$1])', the dispatcher would have replaced with... nothing, leading |
| # to |
| # |
| # define([idem], []) |
| # |
| # With some more thinking, you see that the two step approach is wrong, |
| # the namespace approach was much saner. |
| # |
| # But you learned a lot, in particular you realized that using traces |
| # can make it possible to simulate namespaces! |
| # |
| # |
| # |
| # # The fifth implementation: m4 namespaces by files |
| # # ================================================ |
| # |
| # The fourth implementation demonstrated something unsurprising: you |
| # cannot precompute, i.e., the namespace approach was the right one. |
| # Still, we no longer want them, they're too expensive. Let's have a |
| # look at the way it worked. |
| # |
| # When updating |
| # |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # OLD(1, 2) |
| # NEW([0, 0], [0]) |
| # |
| # you evaluate `input.m4': |
| # |
| # divert(-1) |
| # changequote([, ]) |
| # define([OLD], |
| # [m4_enable()NEW([$1, $2], m4_eval([$1 + $2]))m4_disable()]) |
| # ... |
| # m4_disable() |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # OLD(1, 2) |
| # NEW([0, 0], [0]) |
| # |
| # where `m4_disable' undefines the m4 and m4sugar, and disables the quotes |
| # and comments: |
| # |
| # define([m4_disable], |
| # [undefine([__file__]) |
| # ... |
| # changecom(#) |
| # changequote()]) |
| # |
| # `m4_enable' does the converse: reestablish quotes and comments |
| # --easy--, reestablish m4sugar --easy: just load `m4sugar.m4' again-- and |
| # reenable the builtins. This later task requires that you first save |
| # the builtins. And BTW, the definition above of `m4_disable' cannot |
| # work: you undefined `changequote' before using it! So you need to use |
| # your privates copies of the builtins. Let's introduce three files for |
| # this: |
| # |
| # `m4save.m4' |
| # moves the m4 builtins into the `_au_' pseudo namespace, |
| # `unm4.m4' |
| # undefines the builtins, |
| # `m4.m4' |
| # restores them. |
| # |
| # So `input.m4' is: |
| # |
| # divert(-1) |
| # changequote([, ]) |
| # |
| # include([m4save.m4]) |
| # |
| # # Import AU. |
| # define([OLD], |
| # [m4_enable()NEW([$1, $2], m4_eval([$1 + $2]))m4_disable()]) |
| # |
| # define([_au_enable], |
| # [_au_changecom([#]) |
| # _au_include([m4.m4]) |
| # _au_include(m4sugar.m4)]) |
| # |
| # define([_au_disable], |
| # [# Disable m4sugar. |
| # # Disable the m4 builtins. |
| # _au_include([unm4.m4]) |
| # # 1. Disable special characters. |
| # _au_changequote() |
| # _au_changecom()]) |
| # |
| # m4_disable() |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # OLD(1, 2) |
| # NEW([0, 0], [0]) |
| # |
| # Based on what we learned in the fourth implementation we know that we |
| # have to enable the quotes *before* any AU macro, and we know we need |
| # to build autoquoting versions of the AC macros. But the autoquoting |
| # AC definitions must be disabled in the rest of the file, and enabled |
| # inside AU macros. |
| # |
| # Using `autoconf --trace' it is easy to build the files |
| # |
| # `ac.m4' |
| # define the autoquoting AC fake macros |
| # `disable.m4' |
| # undefine the m4sugar and AC autoquoting macros. |
| # `au.m4' |
| # definitions of the AU macros (such as `OLD' above). |
| # |
| # Now, `input.m4' is: |
| # |
| # divert(-1) |
| # changequote([, ]) |
| # |
| # include([m4save.m4]) |
| # # Import AU. |
| # include([au.m4]) |
| # |
| # define([_au_enable], |
| # [_au_changecom([#]) |
| # _au_include([m4.m4]) |
| # _au_include(m4sugar.m4) |
| # _au_include(ac.m4)]) |
| # |
| # define([_au_disable], |
| # [_au_include([disable.m4]) |
| # _au_include([unm4.m4]) |
| # # 1. Disable special characters. |
| # _au_changequote() |
| # _au_changecom()]) |
| # |
| # m4_disable() |
| # dnl The Unbelievable Truth |
| # _au_changequote([, ])OLD(1, 2) |
| # NEW([0, 0], [0]) |
| # |
| # Finally, version V is ready. |
| # |
| # Well... almost. |
| # |
| # There is a slight problem that remains: if an AU macro OUTER includes |
| # an AU macro INNER, then _au_enable will be run when entering OUTER |
| # and when entering INNER (not good, but not too bad yet). But when |
| # getting out of INNER, _au_disable will disable everything while we |
| # were still in OUTER. Badaboom. |
| # |
| # Therefore _au_enable and _au_disable have to be written to work by |
| # pairs: each _au_enable pushdef's _au_enabled, and each _au_disable |
| # popdef's _au_enabled. And of course _au_enable and _au_disable are |
| # effective when _au_enabled is *not* defined. |
| # |
| # Finally, version V' is ready. And there is much rejoicing. (And I |
| # have free time again. I think. Yeah, right.) |
| |
| ### 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: |