# -*-Makefile-*- # This Makefile fragment tries to be general-purpose enough to be # used by many projects via the gnulib maintainer-makefile module. ## Copyright (C) 2001-2019 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 . # This is reported not to work with make-3.79.1 # ME := $(word $(words $(MAKEFILE_LIST)),$(MAKEFILE_LIST)) ME := $(_build-aux)/maint.mk # These variables ought to be defined through the configure.ac section # of the module description. But some packages import this file directly, # ignoring the module description. AWK ?= awk GREP ?= grep SED ?= sed # Helper variables. _empty = _sp = $(_empty) $(_empty) # _equal,S1,S2 # ------------ # If S1 == S2, return S1, otherwise the empty string. _equal = $(and $(findstring $(1),$(2)),$(findstring $(2),$(1))) GIT = git VC = $(GIT) VC_LIST = $(srcdir)/$(_build-aux)/vc-list-files -C $(srcdir) # You can override this variable in cfg.mk if your gnulib submodule lives # in a different location. gnulib_dir ?= $(srcdir)/gnulib # You can override this variable in cfg.mk to set your own regexp # matching files to ignore. VC_LIST_ALWAYS_EXCLUDE_REGEX ?= ^$$ # This is to preprocess robustly the output of $(VC_LIST), so that even # when $(srcdir) is a pathological name like "....", the leading sed command # removes only the intended prefix. _dot_escaped_srcdir = $(subst .,\.,$(srcdir)) # Post-process $(VC_LIST) output, prepending $(srcdir)/, but only # when $(srcdir) is not ".". ifeq ($(srcdir),.) _prepend_srcdir_prefix = else _prepend_srcdir_prefix = | $(SED) 's|^|$(srcdir)/|' endif # In order to be able to consistently filter "."-relative names, # (i.e., with no $(srcdir) prefix), this definition is careful to # remove any $(srcdir) prefix, and to restore what it removes. _sc_excl = \ $(or $(exclude_file_name_regexp--$@),^$$) VC_LIST_EXCEPT = \ $(VC_LIST) | $(SED) 's|^$(_dot_escaped_srcdir)/||' \ | if test -f $(srcdir)/.x-$@; then $(GREP) -vEf $(srcdir)/.x-$@; \ else $(GREP) -Ev -e "$${VC_LIST_EXCEPT_DEFAULT-ChangeLog}"; fi \ | $(GREP) -Ev -e '($(VC_LIST_ALWAYS_EXCLUDE_REGEX)|$(_sc_excl))' \ $(_prepend_srcdir_prefix) # Override this in cfg.mk if you are using a different format in your # NEWS file. today = $(shell date +%Y-%m-%d) # Prevent programs like 'sort' from considering distinct strings to be equal. # Doing it here saves us from having to set LC_ALL elsewhere in this file. export LC_ALL = C ## --------------- ## ## Sanity checks. ## ## --------------- ## _cfg_mk := $(wildcard $(srcdir)/$(_build-aux)/cfg.mk) # Collect the names of rules starting with 'sc_'. syntax-check-rules := $(sort $(shell $(SED) -n \ 's/^\(sc_[a-zA-Z0-9_-]*\):.*/\1/p' $(srcdir)/$(ME) $(_cfg_mk))) .PHONY: $(syntax-check-rules) ifeq ($(shell $(VC_LIST) >/dev/null 2>&1; echo $$?),0) local-checks-available += $(syntax-check-rules) else local-checks-available += no-vc-detected no-vc-detected: @echo "No version control files detected; skipping syntax check" endif .PHONY: $(local-checks-available) # Arrange to print the name of each syntax-checking rule just before running it. $(syntax-check-rules): %: %.m sc_m_rules_ = $(patsubst %, %.m, $(syntax-check-rules)) .PHONY: $(sc_m_rules_) $(sc_m_rules_): @echo $(patsubst sc_%.m, %, $@) @date +%s.%N > .sc-start-$(basename $@) # Compute and print the elapsed time for each syntax-check rule. sc_z_rules_ = $(patsubst %, %.z, $(syntax-check-rules)) .PHONY: $(sc_z_rules_) $(sc_z_rules_): %.z: % @end=$$(date +%s.%N); \ start=$$(cat .sc-start-$*); \ rm -f .sc-start-$*; \ $(AWK) -v s=$$start -v e=$$end \ 'END {printf "%.2f $(patsubst sc_%,%,$*)\n", e - s}' < /dev/null # The patsubst here is to replace each sc_% rule with its sc_%.z wrapper # that computes and prints elapsed time. local-check := \ $(patsubst sc_%, sc_%.z, \ $(filter-out $(local-checks-to-skip), $(local-checks-available))) syntax-check: $(local-check) # _sc_search_regexp # # This macro searches for a given construct in the selected files and # then takes some action. # # Parameters (shell variables): # # prohibit | require # # Regular expression (ERE) denoting either a forbidden construct # or a required construct. Those arguments are exclusive. # # exclude # # Regular expression (ERE) denoting lines to ignore that matched # a prohibit construct. For example, this can be used to exclude # comments that mention why the nearby code uses an alternative # construct instead of the simpler prohibited construct. # # in_vc_files | in_files # # grep-E-style regexp selecting the files to check. For in_vc_files, # the regexp is used to select matching files from the list of all # version-controlled files; for in_files, it's from the names printed # by "find $(srcdir)". When neither is specified, use all files that # are under version control. # # containing | non_containing # # Select the files (non) containing strings matching this regexp. # If both arguments are specified then CONTAINING takes # precedence. # # with_grep_options # # Extra options for grep. # # ignore_case # # Ignore case. # # halt # # Message to display before to halting execution. # # Finally, you may exempt files based on an ERE matching file names. # For example, to exempt from the sc_space_tab check all files with the # .diff suffix, set this Make variable: # # exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_space_tab = \.diff$ # # Note that while this functionality is mostly inherited via VC_LIST_EXCEPT, # when filtering by name via in_files, we explicitly filter out matching # names here as well. # Initialize each, so that envvar settings cannot interfere. export require = export prohibit = export exclude = export in_vc_files = export in_files = export containing = export non_containing = export halt = export with_grep_options = # By default, _sc_search_regexp does not ignore case. export ignore_case = _ignore_case = $$(test -n "$$ignore_case" && printf %s -i || :) define _sc_say_and_exit dummy=; : so we do not need a semicolon before each use; \ { printf '%s\n' "$(ME): $$msg" 1>&2; exit 1; }; endef define _sc_search_regexp dummy=; : so we do not need a semicolon before each use; \ \ : Check arguments; \ test -n "$$prohibit" && test -n "$$require" \ && { msg='Cannot specify both prohibit and require' \ $(_sc_say_and_exit) } || :; \ test -z "$$prohibit" && test -z "$$require" \ && { msg='Should specify either prohibit or require' \ $(_sc_say_and_exit) } || :; \ test -z "$$prohibit" && test -n "$$exclude" \ && { msg='Use of exclude requires a prohibit pattern' \ $(_sc_say_and_exit) } || :; \ test -n "$$in_vc_files" && test -n "$$in_files" \ && { msg='Cannot specify both in_vc_files and in_files' \ $(_sc_say_and_exit) } || :; \ test "x$$halt" != x \ || { msg='halt not defined' $(_sc_say_and_exit) }; \ \ : Filter by file name; \ if test -n "$$in_files"; then \ files=$$(find $(srcdir) | $(GREP) -E "$$in_files" \ | $(GREP) -Ev '$(_sc_excl)'); \ else \ files=$$($(VC_LIST_EXCEPT)); \ if test -n "$$in_vc_files"; then \ files=$$(echo "$$files" | $(GREP) -E "$$in_vc_files"); \ fi; \ fi; \ \ : Filter by content; \ test -n "$$files" \ && test -n "$$containing" \ && { files=$$(echo "$$files" | xargs $(GREP) -l "$$containing"); } \ || :; \ test -n "$$files" \ && test -n "$$non_containing" \ && { files=$$(echo "$$files" | xargs $(GREP) -vl "$$non_containing"); } \ || :; \ \ : Check for the construct; \ if test -n "$$files"; then \ if test -n "$$prohibit"; then \ echo "$$files" \ | xargs $(GREP) $$with_grep_options $(_ignore_case) -nE \ "$$prohibit" /dev/null \ | $(GREP) -vE "$${exclude:-^$$}" \ && { msg="$$halt" $(_sc_say_and_exit) } \ || :; \ else \ echo "$$files" \ | xargs \ $(GREP) $$with_grep_options $(_ignore_case) -LE "$$require" \ | $(GREP) . \ && { msg="$$halt" $(_sc_say_and_exit) } \ || :; \ fi \ else :; \ fi || :; endef sc_avoid_if_before_free: @$(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) \ | $(GREP) -v useless-if-before-free \ | xargs \ $(srcdir)/$(_build-aux)/useless-if-before-free \ $(useless_free_options) \ && { printf '$(ME): found useless "if"' \ ' before "free" above\n' 1>&2; \ exit 1; } \ || : sc_cast_of_argument_to_free: @prohibit='\/dev/null 2>&1; then \ (cd $(srcdir) && autoconf --trace AC_CONFIG_FILES:'$$1') | \ tr ' ' '\n' | \ $(SED) -ne '/Makefile/{s/\.in$$//;p;}' | \ while read m; do \ $(MAKE) -qp -f $$m .DUMMY-TARGET 2>/dev/null | \ $(AWK) -v file=$$m -e '$($@_awk_)' || exit 1; \ done; \ fi # Using EXIT_SUCCESS as the first argument to error is misleading, # since when that parameter is 0, error does not exit. Use '0' instead. sc_error_exit_success: @prohibit='error *\(EXIT_SUCCESS,' \ in_vc_files='\.[chly]$$' \ halt='found error (EXIT_SUCCESS' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # "FATAL:" should be fully upper-cased in error messages # "WARNING:" should be fully upper-cased, or fully lower-cased sc_error_message_warn_fatal: @$(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) \ | xargs $(GREP) -nEA2 '[^rp]error *\(' /dev/null \ | $(GREP) -E '"Warning|"Fatal|"fatal' \ && { echo '$(ME): use FATAL, WARNING or warning' 1>&2; \ exit 1; } \ || : # Error messages should not start with a capital letter sc_error_message_uppercase: @$(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) \ | xargs $(GREP) -nEA2 '[^rp]error *\(' /dev/null \ | $(GREP) -E '"[A-Z]' \ | $(GREP) -vE '"FATAL|"WARNING|"Java|"C#|PRIuMAX' \ && { echo '$(ME): found capitalized error message' 1>&2; \ exit 1; } \ || : # Error messages should not end with a period sc_error_message_period: @$(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) \ | xargs $(GREP) -nEA2 '[^rp]error *\(' /dev/null \ | $(GREP) -E '[^."]\."' \ && { echo '$(ME): found error message ending in period' 1>&2; \ exit 1; } \ || : sc_file_system: @prohibit=file''system \ exclude='/proc/filesystems' \ ignore_case=1 \ halt='found use of "file''system"; spell it "file system"' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # Don't use cpp tests of this symbol. All code assumes config.h is included. sc_prohibit_have_config_h: @prohibit='^# *if.*HAVE''_CONFIG_H' \ halt='found use of HAVE''_CONFIG_H; remove' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # Nearly all .c files must include . However, we also permit this # via inclusion of a package-specific header, if cfg.mk specified one. # config_h_header must be suitable for grep -E. config_h_header ?= sc_require_config_h: @require='^# *include $(config_h_header)' \ in_vc_files='\.c$$' \ halt='the above files do not include ' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # Print each file name for which the first #include does not match # $(config_h_header). Like grep -m 1, this only looks at the first match. perl_config_h_first_ = \ -e 'BEGIN {$$ret = 0}' \ -e 'if (/^\# *include\b/) {' \ -e ' if (not m{^\# *include $(config_h_header)}) {' \ -e ' print "$$ARGV\n";' \ -e ' $$ret = 1;' \ -e ' }' \ -e ' \# Move on to next file after first include' \ -e ' close ARGV;' \ -e '}' \ -e 'END {exit $$ret}' # You must include before including any other header file. # This can possibly be via a package-specific header, if given by cfg.mk. sc_require_config_h_first: @if $(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) | $(GREP) '\.c$$' > /dev/null; then \ files=$$($(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) | $(GREP) '\.c$$') && \ perl -n $(perl_config_h_first_) $$files || \ { echo '$(ME): the above files include some other header' \ 'before ' 1>&2; exit 1; } || :; \ else :; \ fi sc_prohibit_HAVE_MBRTOWC: @prohibit='\bHAVE_MBRTOWC\b' \ halt="do not use $$prohibit; it is always defined" \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # To use this "command" macro, you must first define two shell variables: # h: the header name, with no enclosing <> or "" # re: a regular expression that matches IFF something provided by $h is used. define _sc_header_without_use dummy=; : so we do not need a semicolon before each use; \ h_esc=`echo '[<"]'"$$h"'[">]'|$(SED) 's/\./\\\\./g'`; \ if $(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) | $(GREP) '\.c$$' > /dev/null; then \ files=$$($(GREP) -l '^# *include '"$$h_esc" \ $$($(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) | $(GREP) '\.c$$')) && \ $(GREP) -LE "$$re" $$files | $(GREP) . && \ { echo "$(ME): the above files include $$h but don't use it" \ 1>&2; exit 1; } || :; \ else :; \ fi endef # Prohibit the inclusion of assert.h without an actual use of assert. sc_prohibit_assert_without_use: @h='assert.h' re='\new(file => "/dev/stdin")->as_string'|sed 's/\?://g' # Note this was produced by the above: # _xa1 = \ #x(((2n?)?re|c(har)?|n(re|m)|z)alloc|alloc_(oversized|die)|m(alloc|emdup)|strdup) # But we can do better, in at least two ways: # 1) take advantage of two "dup"-suffixed strings: # x(((2n?)?re|c(har)?|n(re|m)|[mz])alloc|alloc_(oversized|die)|(mem|str)dup) # 2) notice that "c(har)?|[mz]" is equivalent to the shorter and more readable # "char|[cmz]" # x(((2n?)?re|char|n(re|m)|[cmz])alloc|alloc_(oversized|die)|(mem|str)dup) _xa1 = x(((2n?)?re|char|n(re|m)|[cmz])alloc|alloc_(oversized|die)|(mem|str)dup) _xa2 = X([CZ]|N?M)ALLOC sc_prohibit_xalloc_without_use: @h='xalloc.h' \ re='\<($(_xa1)|$(_xa2)) *\('\ $(_sc_header_without_use) # Extract function names: # perl -lne '/^(?:extern )?(?:void|char) \*?(\w+) *\(/ and print $1' lib/hash.h _hash_re = \ clear|delete|free|get_(first|next)|insert|lookup|print_statistics|reset_tuning _hash_fn = \<($(_hash_re)) *\( _hash_struct = (struct )?\<[Hh]ash_(table|tuning)\> sc_prohibit_hash_without_use: @h='hash.h' \ re='$(_hash_fn)|$(_hash_struct)'\ $(_sc_header_without_use) sc_prohibit_cloexec_without_use: @h='cloexec.h' re='\<(set_cloexec_flag|dup_cloexec) *\(' \ $(_sc_header_without_use) sc_prohibit_posixver_without_use: @h='posixver.h' re='\' \ halt='do not use HAVE''_FCNTL_H or O'_NDELAY \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # FIXME: warn about definitions of EXIT_FAILURE, EXIT_SUCCESS, STREQ # Each nonempty ChangeLog line must start with a year number, or a TAB. sc_changelog: @prohibit='^[^12 ]' \ in_vc_files='^ChangeLog$$' \ halt='found unexpected prefix in a ChangeLog' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # Ensure that each .c file containing a "main" function also # calls bindtextdomain. sc_bindtextdomain: @require='bindtextdomain *\(' \ in_vc_files='\.c$$' \ containing='\
/dev/null \ && : || { die=1; echo $$i; } \ done; \ test $$die = 1 && \ { echo 1>&2 '$(ME): the final line in each of the above is not:'; \ echo 1>&2 'Exit something'; \ exit 1; } || :; \ fi sc_trailing_blank: @prohibit='[ ]$$' \ halt='found trailing blank(s)' \ exclude='^Binary file .* matches$$' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # Match lines like the following, but where there is only one space # between the options and the description: # -D, --all-repeated[=delimit-method] print all duplicate lines\n longopt_re = --[a-z][0-9A-Za-z-]*(\[?=[0-9A-Za-z-]*\]?)? sc_two_space_separator_in_usage: @prohibit='^ *(-[A-Za-z],)? $(longopt_re) [^ ].*\\$$' \ halt='help2man requires at least two spaces between an option and its description'\ $(_sc_search_regexp) # A regexp matching function names like "error" that may be used # to emit translatable messages. _gl_translatable_diag_func_re ?= error # Look for diagnostics that aren't marked for translation. # This won't find any for which error's format string is on a separate line. sc_unmarked_diagnostics: @prohibit='\<$(_gl_translatable_diag_func_re) *\([^"]*"[^"]*[a-z]{3}' \ exclude='(_|ngettext ?)\(' \ halt='found unmarked diagnostic(s)' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # Avoid useless parentheses like those in this example: # #if defined (SYMBOL) || defined (SYM2) sc_useless_cpp_parens: @prohibit='^# *if .*defined *\(' \ halt='found useless parentheses in cpp directive' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # List headers for which HAVE_HEADER_H is always true, assuming you are # using the appropriate gnulib module. CAUTION: for each "unnecessary" # #if HAVE_HEADER_H that you remove, be sure that your project explicitly # requires the gnulib module that guarantees the usability of that header. gl_assured_headers_ = \ cd $(gnulib_dir)/lib && echo *.in.h|$(SED) 's/\.in\.h//g' # Convert the list of names to upper case, and replace each space with "|". az_ = abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz AZ_ = ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ gl_header_upper_case_or_ = \ $$($(gl_assured_headers_) \ | tr $(az_)/.- $(AZ_)___ \ | tr -s ' ' '|' \ ) sc_prohibit_always_true_header_tests: @or=$(gl_header_upper_case_or_); \ re="HAVE_($$or)_H"; \ prohibit='\<'"$$re"'\>' \ halt=$$(printf '%s\n' \ 'do not test the above HAVE_
_H symbol(s);' \ ' with the corresponding gnulib module, they are always true') \ $(_sc_search_regexp) sc_prohibit_defined_have_decl_tests: @prohibit='(#[ ]*ifn?def|\[ (]+HAVE_DECL_' \ halt='HAVE_DECL macros are always defined' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # ================================================================== gl_other_headers_ ?= \ intprops.h \ openat.h \ stat-macros.h # Perl -lne code to extract "significant" cpp-defined symbols from a # gnulib header file, eliminating a few common false-positives. # The exempted names below are defined only conditionally in gnulib, # and hence sometimes must/may be defined in application code. gl_extract_significant_defines_ = \ /^\# *define ([^_ (][^ (]*)(\s*\(|\s+\w+)/\ && $$2 !~ /(?:rpl_|_used_without_)/\ && $$1 !~ /^(?:NSIG|ENODATA)$$/\ && $$1 !~ /^(?:SA_RESETHAND|SA_RESTART)$$/\ and print $$1 # Create a list of regular expressions matching the names # of macros that are guaranteed to be defined by parts of gnulib. define def_sym_regex gen_h=$(gl_generated_headers_); \ (cd $(gnulib_dir)/lib; \ for f in *.in.h $(gl_other_headers_); do \ test -f $$f \ && perl -lne '$(gl_extract_significant_defines_)' $$f; \ done; \ ) | sort -u \ | $(SED) 's/^/^ *# *(define|undef) */;s/$$/\\>/' endef # Don't define macros that we already get from gnulib header files. sc_prohibit_always-defined_macros: @if test -d $(gnulib_dir); then \ case $$(echo all: | $(GREP) -l -f - $(abs_top_builddir)/Makefile) in $(abs_top_builddir)/Makefile);; *) \ echo '$(ME): skipping $@: you lack GNU grep' 1>&2; exit 0;; \ esac; \ regex=$$($(def_sym_regex)); export regex; \ $(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) \ | xargs sh -c 'echo $$regex | $(GREP) -E -f - "$$@"' \ dummy /dev/null \ && { printf '$(ME): define the above' \ ' via some gnulib .h file\n' 1>&2; \ exit 1; } \ || :; \ fi # ================================================================== # Prohibit checked in backup files. sc_prohibit_backup_files: @$(VC_LIST) | $(GREP) '~$$' && \ { echo '$(ME): found version controlled backup file' 1>&2; \ exit 1; } || : # Require the latest GPL. sc_GPL_version: @prohibit='either ''version [^3]' \ halt='GPL vN, N!=3' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # Require the latest GFDL. Two regexp, since some .texi files end up # line wrapping between 'Free Documentation License,' and 'Version'. _GFDL_regexp = (Free ''Documentation.*Version 1\.[^3]|Version 1\.[^3] or any) sc_GFDL_version: @prohibit='$(_GFDL_regexp)' \ halt='GFDL vN, N!=3' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # Don't use Texinfo's @acronym{}. # https://lists.gnu.org/r/bug-gnulib/2010-03/msg00321.html texinfo_suffix_re_ ?= \.(txi|texi(nfo)?)$$ sc_texinfo_acronym: @prohibit='@acronym\{' \ in_vc_files='$(texinfo_suffix_re_)' \ halt='found use of Texinfo @acronym{}' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) cvs_keywords = \ Author|Date|Header|Id|Name|Locker|Log|RCSfile|Revision|Source|State sc_prohibit_cvs_keyword: @prohibit='\$$($(cvs_keywords))\$$' \ halt='do not use CVS keyword expansion' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # This Perl code is slightly obfuscated. Not only is each "$" doubled # because it's in a Makefile, but the $$c's are comments; we cannot # use "#" due to the way the script ends up concatenated onto one line. # It would be much more concise, and would produce better output (including # counts) if written as: # perl -ln -0777 -e '/\n(\n+)$/ and print "$ARGV: ".length $1' ... # but that would be far less efficient, reading the entire contents # of each file, rather than just the last two bytes of each. # In addition, while the code below detects both blank lines and a missing # newline at EOF, the above detects only the former. # # This is a perl script that is expected to be the single-quoted argument # to a command-line "-le". The remaining arguments are file names. # Print the name of each file that does not end in exactly one newline byte. # I.e., warn if there are blank lines (2 or more newlines), or if the # last byte is not a newline. However, currently we don't complain # about any file that contains exactly one byte. # Exit nonzero if at least one such file is found, otherwise, exit 0. # Warn about, but otherwise ignore open failure. Ignore seek/read failure. # # Use this if you want to remove trailing empty lines from selected files: # perl -pi -0777 -e 's/\n\n+$/\n/' files... # require_exactly_one_NL_at_EOF_ = \ foreach my $$f (@ARGV) \ { \ open F, "<", $$f or (warn "failed to open $$f: $$!\n"), next; \ my $$p = sysseek (F, -2, 2); \ my $$c = "seek failure probably means file has < 2 bytes; ignore"; \ my $$last_two_bytes; \ defined $$p and $$p = sysread F, $$last_two_bytes, 2; \ close F; \ $$c = "ignore read failure"; \ $$p && ($$last_two_bytes eq "\n\n" \ || substr ($$last_two_bytes,1) ne "\n") \ and (print $$f), $$fail=1; \ } \ END { exit defined $$fail } sc_prohibit_empty_lines_at_EOF: @$(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) \ | xargs perl -le '$(require_exactly_one_NL_at_EOF_)' \ || { echo '$(ME): empty line(s) or no newline at EOF' 1>&2; \ exit 1; } \ || : # Make sure we don't use st_blocks. Use ST_NBLOCKS instead. # This is a bit of a kludge, since it prevents use of the string # even in comments, but for now it does the job with no false positives. sc_prohibit_stat_st_blocks: @prohibit='[.>]st_blocks' \ halt='do not use st_blocks; use ST_NBLOCKS' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # Make sure we don't define any S_IS* macros in src/*.c files. # They're already defined via gnulib's sys/stat.h replacement. sc_prohibit_S_IS_definition: @prohibit='^ *# *define *S_IS' \ halt='do not define S_IS* macros; include ' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # Perl block to convert a match to FILE_NAME:LINENO:TEST, # that is shared by two definitions below. perl_filename_lineno_text_ = \ -e ' {' \ -e ' $$n = ($$` =~ tr/\n/\n/ + 1);' \ -e ' ($$v = $$&) =~ s/\n/\\n/g;' \ -e ' print "$$ARGV:$$n:$$v\n";' \ -e ' }' prohibit_doubled_words_ = \ the then in an on if is it but for or at and do to # expand the regex before running the check to avoid using expensive captures prohibit_doubled_word_expanded_ = \ $(join $(prohibit_doubled_words_),$(addprefix \s+,$(prohibit_doubled_words_))) prohibit_doubled_word_RE_ ?= \ /\b(?:$(subst $(_sp),|,$(prohibit_doubled_word_expanded_)))\b/gims prohibit_doubled_word_ = \ -e 'while ($(prohibit_doubled_word_RE_))' \ $(perl_filename_lineno_text_) # Define this to a regular expression that matches # any filename:dd:match lines you want to ignore. # The default is to ignore no matches. ignore_doubled_word_match_RE_ ?= ^$$ sc_prohibit_doubled_word: @$(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) \ | xargs perl -n -0777 $(prohibit_doubled_word_) \ | $(GREP) -vE '$(ignore_doubled_word_match_RE_)' \ | $(GREP) . \ && { echo '$(ME): doubled words' 1>&2; exit 1; } \ || : # A regular expression matching undesirable combinations of words like # "can not"; this matches them even when the two words appear on different # lines, but not when there is an intervening delimiter like "#" or "*". # Similarly undesirable, "See @xref{...}", since an @xref should start # a sentence. Explicitly prohibit any prefix of "see" or "also". # Also prohibit a prefix matching "\w+ +". # @pxref gets the same see/also treatment and should be parenthesized; # presume it must *not* start a sentence. # POSIX spells it "timestamp" rather than "time\s+stamp", so we do, too. bad_xref_re_ ?= (?:[\w,:;] +|(?:see|also)\s+)\@xref\{ bad_pxref_re_ ?= (?:[.!?]|(?:see|also))\s+\@pxref\{ prohibit_undesirable_word_seq_RE_ ?= \ /(?:\bcan\s+not\b|\btime\s+stamps?\b|$(bad_xref_re_)|$(bad_pxref_re_))/gims prohibit_undesirable_word_seq_ = \ -e 'while ($(prohibit_undesirable_word_seq_RE_))' \ $(perl_filename_lineno_text_) # Define this to a regular expression that matches # any filename:dd:match lines you want to ignore. # The default is to ignore no matches. ignore_undesirable_word_sequence_RE_ ?= ^$$ sc_prohibit_undesirable_word_seq: @$(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) \ | xargs perl -n -0777 $(prohibit_undesirable_word_seq_) \ | $(GREP) -vE '$(ignore_undesirable_word_sequence_RE_)' \ | $(GREP) . \ && { echo '$(ME): undesirable word sequence' >&2; exit 1; } \ || : # Except for shell files and for loops, double semicolon is probably a mistake sc_prohibit_double_semicolon: @prohibit='; *;[ {} \]*(/[/*]|$$)' \ in_vc_files='\.[chly]$$' \ exclude='\bfor *\(.*\)' \ halt="Double semicolon detected" \ $(_sc_search_regexp) _ptm1 = use "test C1 && test C2", not "test C1 -''a C2" _ptm2 = use "test C1 || test C2", not "test C1 -''o C2" # Using test's -a and -o operators is not portable. # We prefer test over [, since the latter is spelled [[ in configure.ac. sc_prohibit_test_minus_ao: @prohibit='(\ /dev/null \ || { fail=1; echo 1>&2 "$(ME): $$p uses proper_name_utf8"; }; \ done; \ test $$fail = 1 && \ { echo 1>&2 '$(ME): the above do not link with any ICONV library'; \ exit 1; } || :; \ fi # Warn about "c0nst struct Foo const foo[]", # but not about "char const *const foo" or "#define const const". sc_redundant_const: @prohibit='\bconst\b[[:space:][:alnum:]]{2,}\bconst\b' \ halt='redundant "const" in declarations' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) sc_const_long_option: @prohibit='^ *static.*struct option ' \ exclude='const struct option|struct option const' \ halt='add "const" to the above declarations' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) NEWS_hash = \ $$($(SED) -n '/^\*.* $(PREV_VERSION_REGEXP) ([0-9-]*)/,$$p' \ $(srcdir)/NEWS \ | perl -0777 -pe \ 's/^Copyright.+?Free\sSoftware\sFoundation,\sInc\.\n//ms' \ | md5sum - \ | $(SED) 's/ .*//') # Ensure that we don't accidentally insert an entry into an old NEWS block. sc_immutable_NEWS: @if test -f $(srcdir)/NEWS; then \ test "$(NEWS_hash)" = '$(old_NEWS_hash)' && : || \ { echo '$(ME): you have modified old NEWS' 1>&2; exit 1; }; \ fi # Update the hash stored above. Do this after each release and # for any corrections to old entries. update-NEWS-hash: NEWS perl -pi -e 's/^(old_NEWS_hash[ \t]+:?=[ \t]+).*/$${1}'"$(NEWS_hash)/" \ $(srcdir)/cfg.mk # Ensure that we use only the standard $(VAR) notation, # not @...@ in Makefile.am, now that we can rely on automake # to emit a definition for each substituted variable. # However, there is still one case in which @VAR@ use is not just # legitimate, but actually required: when augmenting an automake-defined # variable with a prefix. For example, gettext uses this: # MAKEINFO = env LANG= LC_MESSAGES= LC_ALL= LANGUAGE= @MAKEINFO@ # otherwise, makeinfo would put German or French (current locale) # navigation hints in the otherwise-English documentation. # # Allow the package to add exceptions via a hook in cfg.mk; # for example, @PRAGMA_SYSTEM_HEADER@ can be permitted by # setting this to ' && !/PRAGMA_SYSTEM_HEADER/'. _makefile_at_at_check_exceptions ?= sc_makefile_at_at_check: @perl -ne '/\@\w+\@/' \ -e ' && !/(\w+)\s+=.*\@\1\@$$/' \ -e ''$(_makefile_at_at_check_exceptions) \ -e 'and (print "$$ARGV:$$.: $$_"), $$m=1; END {exit !$$m}' \ $$($(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) | $(GREP) -E '(^|/)(Makefile\.am|[^/]+\.mk)$$') \ && { echo '$(ME): use $$(...), not @...@' 1>&2; exit 1; } || : sc_makefile_TAB_only_indentation: @prohibit='^ [ ]{8}' \ in_vc_files='akefile|\.mk$$' \ halt='found TAB-8-space indentation' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) sc_m4_quote_check: @prohibit='(AC_DEFINE(_UNQUOTED)?|AC_DEFUN)\([^[]' \ in_vc_files='(^configure\.ac|\.m4)$$' \ halt='quote the first arg to AC_DEF*' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) fix_po_file_diag = \ 'you have changed the set of files with translatable diagnostics;\n\ apply the above patch\n' # Generate a list of files in which to search for translatable strings. perl_translatable_files_list_ = \ -e 'foreach $$file (@ARGV) {' \ -e ' \# Consider only file extensions with one or two letters' \ -e ' $$file =~ /\...?$$/ or next;' \ -e ' \# Ignore m4 and mk files' \ -e ' $$file =~ /\.m[4k]$$/ and next;' \ -e ' \# Ignore a .c or .h file with a corresponding .l or .y file' \ -e ' $$file =~ /(.+)\.[ch]$$/ && (-e "$${1}.l" || -e "$${1}.y")' \ -e ' and next;' \ -e ' \# Skip unreadable files' \ -e ' -r $$file or next;' \ -e ' print "$$file ";' \ -e '}' # Verify that all source files using _() (more specifically, files that # match $(_gl_translatable_string_re)) are listed in po/POTFILES.in. po_file ?= $(srcdir)/po/POTFILES.in generated_files ?= $(srcdir)/lib/*.[ch] _gl_translatable_string_re ?= \b(N?_|gettext *)\([^)"]*("|$$) sc_po_check: @if test -f $(po_file); then \ $(GREP) -E -v '^(#|$$)' $(po_file) \ | $(GREP) -v '^src/false\.c$$' | sort > $@-1; \ { $(VC_LIST_EXCEPT); echo $(generated_files); } \ | xargs perl $(perl_translatable_files_list_) \ | xargs $(GREP) -E -l '$(_gl_translatable_string_re)' \ | $(SED) 's|^$(_dot_escaped_srcdir)/||' \ | sort -u > $@-2; \ diff -u -L $(po_file) -L $(po_file) $@-1 $@-2 \ || { printf '$(ME): '$(fix_po_file_diag) 1>&2; exit 1; }; \ rm -f $@-1 $@-2; \ fi # Sometimes it is useful to change the PATH environment variable # in Makefiles. When doing so, it's better not to use the Unix-centric # path separator of ':', but rather the automake-provided '$(PATH_SEPARATOR)'. msg = 'Do not use ":" above; use $$(PATH_SEPARATOR) instead' sc_makefile_path_separator_check: @prohibit='PATH[=].*:' \ in_vc_files='akefile|\.mk$$' \ halt=$(msg) \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # Check that 'make alpha' will not fail at the end of the process, # i.e., when pkg-M.N.tar.xz already exists (either in "." or in ../release) # and is read-only. writable-files: $(AM_V_GEN)if test -d $(release_archive_dir); then \ for file in $(DIST_ARCHIVES); do \ for p in ./ $(release_archive_dir)/; do \ test -e $$p$$file || continue; \ test -w $$p$$file \ || { echo ERROR: $$p$$file is not writable; fail=1; }; \ done; \ done; \ test "$$fail" && exit 1 || : ; \ else :; \ fi v_etc_file = $(gnulib_dir)/lib/version-etc.c sample-test = tests/sample-test texi = doc/$(PACKAGE).texi # Make sure that the copyright date in $(v_etc_file) is up to date. # Do the same for the $(sample-test) and the main doc/.texi file. sc_copyright_check: @require='enum { COPYRIGHT_YEAR = '$$(date +%Y)' };' \ in_files=$(v_etc_file) \ halt='out of date copyright in $(v_etc_file); update it' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) @require='# Copyright \(C\) '$$(date +%Y)' Free' \ in_vc_files=$(sample-test) \ halt='out of date copyright in $(sample-test); update it' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) @require='Copyright @copyright\{\} .*'$$(date +%Y) \ in_vc_files=$(texi) \ halt='out of date copyright in $(texi); update it' \ $(_sc_search_regexp) # If tests/help-version exists and seems to be new enough, assume that its # use of init.sh and path_prepend_ is correct, and ensure that every other # use of init.sh is identical. # This is useful because help-version cross-checks prog --version # with $(VERSION), which verifies that its path_prepend_ invocation # sets PATH correctly. This is an inexpensive way to ensure that # the other init.sh-using tests also get it right. _hv_file ?= $(srcdir)/tests/help-version _hv_regex_weak ?= ^ *\. .*/init\.sh" # Fix syntax-highlighters " _hv_regex_strong ?= ^ *\. "\$${srcdir=\.}/init\.sh" sc_cross_check_PATH_usage_in_tests: @if test -f $(_hv_file); then \ $(GREP) -l 'VERSION mismatch' $(_hv_file) >/dev/null \ || { echo "$@: skipped: no such file: $(_hv_file)" 1>&2; \ exit 0; }; \ $(GREP) -lE '$(_hv_regex_strong)' $(_hv_file) >/dev/null \ || { echo "$@: $(_hv_file) lacks conforming use of init.sh" 1>&2; \ exit 1; }; \ good=$$($(GREP) -E '$(_hv_regex_strong)' $(_hv_file)); \ $(VC_LIST_EXCEPT) \ | xargs $(GREP) -lE '$(_hv_regex_weak)' \ | xargs $(GREP) -LFx "$$good" \ | $(GREP) . \ && { printf "$(ME): the above files use" \ " path_prepend_ inconsistently\n" 1>&2; \ exit 1; } \ || :; \ fi # BRE regex of file contents to identify a test script. _test_script_regex ?= \ # In tests, use "compare expected actual", not the reverse. sc_prohibit_reversed_compare_failure: @prohibit='\