98 lines
2.8 KiB
Makefile
98 lines
2.8 KiB
Makefile
# $NetBSD: cond-token-plain.mk,v 1.6 2020/11/15 14:58:14 rillig Exp $
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#
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# Tests for plain tokens (that is, string literals without quotes)
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# in .if conditions.
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.MAKEFLAGS: -dc
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.if ${:Uvalue} != value
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. error
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.endif
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# Malformed condition since comment parsing is done in an early phase
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# and removes the '#' and everything behind it long before the condition
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# parser gets to see it.
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#
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# XXX: The error message is missing for this malformed condition.
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# The right-hand side of the comparison is just a '"', before unescaping.
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.if ${:U} != "#hash"
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. error
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.endif
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# To get a '#' into a condition, it has to be escaped using a backslash.
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# This prevents the comment parser from removing it, and in turn, it becomes
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# visible to CondParser_String.
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.if ${:U\#hash} != "\#hash"
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. error
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.endif
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# Since 2002-12-30, and still as of 2020-09-11, CondParser_Token handles
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# the '#' specially, even though at this point, there should be no need for
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# comment handling anymore. The comments are supposed to be stripped off
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# in a very early parsing phase.
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#
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# See https://gnats.netbsd.org/19596 for example makefiles demonstrating the
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# original problems. This workaround is probably not needed anymore.
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#
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# XXX: Missing error message for the malformed condition. The right-hand
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# side before unescaping is double-quotes, backslash, backslash.
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.if ${:U\\} != "\\#hash"
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. error
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.endif
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# The right-hand side of a comparison is not parsed as a token, therefore
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# the code from CondParser_Token does not apply to it.
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# TODO: Explain the consequences.
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# TODO: Does this mean that more syntactic variants are allowed here?
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.if ${:U\#hash} != \#hash
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. error
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.endif
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# XXX: What is the purpose of treating an escaped '#' in the following
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# condition as a comment? And why only at the beginning of a token,
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# just as in the shell?
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.if 0 \# This is treated as a comment, but why?
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. error
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.endif
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# Ah, ok, this can be used to add an end-of-condition comment. But does
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# anybody really use this? This is neither documented nor obvious since
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# the '#' is escaped. It's much clearer to write a comment in the line
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# above the condition.
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.if ${0 \# comment :?yes:no} != no
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. error
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.endif
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.if ${1 \# comment :?yes:no} != yes
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. error
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.endif
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# Usually there is whitespace around the comparison operator, but this is
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# not required.
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.if ${UNDEF:Uundefined}!=undefined
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. error
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.endif
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.if ${UNDEF:U12345}>12345
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. error
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.endif
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.if ${UNDEF:U12345}<12345
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. error
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.endif
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.if (${UNDEF:U0})||0
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. error
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.endif
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# Only the comparison operator terminates the comparison operand, and it's
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# a coincidence that the '!' is both used in the '!=' comparison operator
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# as well as for negating a comparison result.
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#
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# The boolean operators '&' and '|' don't terminate a comparison operand.
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.if ${:Uvar}&&name != "var&&name"
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. error
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.endif
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.if ${:Uvar}||name != "var||name"
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. error
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.endif
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all:
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@:;
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