/usr/share/cagefs-skeleton.old/usr/bin
#! /usr/bin/perl -w # -*- perl -*- # Generated from autoupdate.in; do not edit by hand. # autoupdate - modernize an Autoconf file. # Copyright (C) 1994, 1999-2012 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/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/bin/autom4te'; my $autoconf = "$autom4te --language=autoconf"; # We need to find m4sugar. my @prepend_include; my @include = ('/usr/share/autoconf'); my $force = 0; # m4. my $m4 = $ENV{"M4"} || '/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) 2.69 Copyright (C) 2012 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:
.
Edit
..
Edit
GET
Edit
Mail
Edit
[
Edit
aclocal
Edit
aclocal-1.16
Edit
addr2line
Edit
animate
Edit
ar
Edit
arch
Edit
arpaname
Edit
as
Edit
aspell
Edit
at
Edit
atq
Edit
atrm
Edit
autoconf
Edit
autoheader
Edit
autom4te
Edit
automake
Edit
automake-1.16
Edit
autoreconf
Edit
autoscan
Edit
autoupdate
Edit
awk
Edit
b2sum
Edit
base32
Edit
base64
Edit
basename
Edit
basenc
Edit
bash
Edit
bashbug-64
Edit
batch
Edit
bison
Edit
bunzip2
Edit
bzcat
Edit
bzcmp
Edit
bzdiff
Edit
bzgrep
Edit
bzip2
Edit
bzip2recover
Edit
bzless
Edit
bzmore
Edit
c++
Edit
c++filt
Edit
c89
Edit
c99
Edit
cagefs_enter.proxied
Edit
cal
Edit
captoinfo
Edit
cat
Edit
catchsegv
Edit
cc
Edit
chcon
Edit
chgrp
Edit
chmod
Edit
chown
Edit
chrt
Edit
cksum
Edit
cldetect
Edit
clear
Edit
cloudlinux-awp-user
Edit
clwpos-user
Edit
cmp
Edit
col
Edit
colcrt
Edit
colrm
Edit
column
Edit
comm
Edit
compare
Edit
composite
Edit
conjure
Edit
convert
Edit
cp
Edit
cpan
Edit
cpp
Edit
crontab
Edit
crontab.cagefs
Edit
csplit
Edit
curl
Edit
cut
Edit
cyrusbdb2current
Edit
date
Edit
dbiprof
Edit
dd
Edit
delv
Edit
df
Edit
diff
Edit
diff3
Edit
dig
Edit
dir
Edit
dircolors
Edit
dirname
Edit
display
Edit
dnstap-read
Edit
du
Edit
echo
Edit
ed
Edit
egrep
Edit
enc2xs
Edit
enchant
Edit
enchant-lsmod
Edit
env
Edit
eps2eps
Edit
eqn
Edit
ex
Edit
expand
Edit
expr
Edit
factor
Edit
false
Edit
fc-cache
Edit
fc-cache-64
Edit
fc-cat
Edit
fc-conflist
Edit
fc-list
Edit
fc-match
Edit
fc-pattern
Edit
fc-query
Edit
fc-scan
Edit
fc-validate
Edit
fgrep
Edit
file
Edit
find
Edit
flex
Edit
flex++
Edit
flock
Edit
fmt
Edit
fold
Edit
free
Edit
freetype-config
Edit
funzip
Edit
g++
Edit
gawk
Edit
gcc
Edit
gcc-ar
Edit
gcc-nm
Edit
gcc-ranlib
Edit
gcov
Edit
gcov-dump
Edit
gcov-tool
Edit
gem
Edit
gencat
Edit
geoiplookup
Edit
geoiplookup6
Edit
geqn
Edit
getconf
Edit
getent
Edit
getopt
Edit
ghostscript
Edit
git
Edit
git-receive-pack
Edit
git-shell
Edit
git-upload-archive
Edit
git-upload-pack
Edit
gm
Edit
gmake
Edit
gneqn
Edit
gnroff
Edit
gpg
Edit
gpg-agent
Edit
gpg-error
Edit
gpgsplit
Edit
gpgv
Edit
gpic
Edit
gprof
Edit
grep
Edit
groff
Edit
grops
Edit
grotty
Edit
groups
Edit
gs
Edit
gsnd
Edit
gsoelim
Edit
gtar
Edit
gtbl
Edit
gtroff
Edit
gunzip
Edit
gzexe
Edit
gzip
Edit
h2ph
Edit
h2xs
Edit
head
Edit
hexdump
Edit
host
Edit
hostid
Edit
hostname
Edit
hunspell
Edit
iconv
Edit
icu-config
Edit
icu-config-64
Edit
icuinfo
Edit
id
Edit
identify
Edit
idn
Edit
ifnames
Edit
import
Edit
infocmp
Edit
infotocap
Edit
install
Edit
instmodsh
Edit
ionice
Edit
ipcrm
Edit
ipcs
Edit
isosize
Edit
ispell
Edit
join
Edit
kill
Edit
ld
Edit
ld.bfd
Edit
ldd
Edit
less
Edit
lessecho
Edit
lesskey
Edit
lesspipe.sh
Edit
lex
Edit
libnetcfg
Edit
libtool
Edit
libtoolize
Edit
link
Edit
ln
Edit
locale
Edit
localedef
Edit
logger
Edit
login
Edit
logname
Edit
look
Edit
ls
Edit
lto-dump
Edit
m4
Edit
mail
Edit
mailx
Edit
make
Edit
make-dummy-cert
Edit
mariadb
Edit
mariadb-access
Edit
mariadb-admin
Edit
mariadb-binlog
Edit
mariadb-check
Edit
mariadb-conv
Edit
mariadb-convert-table-format
Edit
mariadb-dump
Edit
mariadb-dumpslow
Edit
mariadb-embedded
Edit
mariadb-find-rows
Edit
mariadb-hotcopy
Edit
mariadb-import
Edit
mariadb-plugin
Edit
mariadb-secure-installation
Edit
mariadb-setpermission
Edit
mariadb-show
Edit
mariadb-slap
Edit
mariadb-tzinfo-to-sql
Edit
mariadb-waitpid
Edit
mcookie
Edit
md5sum
Edit
mesg
Edit
mkdir
Edit
mkfifo
Edit
mknod
Edit
mktemp
Edit
mogrify
Edit
montage
Edit
more
Edit
msql2mysql
Edit
mv
Edit
my_print_defaults
Edit
mysql
Edit
mysql_config
Edit
mysql_find_rows
Edit
mysql_waitpid
Edit
mysqlaccess
Edit
mysqladmin
Edit
mysqlbinlog
Edit
mysqlcheck
Edit
mysqldump
Edit
mysqlimport
Edit
mysqlshow
Edit
mytop
Edit
namei
Edit
nano
Edit
neqn
Edit
nice
Edit
nl
Edit
nm
Edit
nohup
Edit
nproc
Edit
nroff
Edit
nslookup
Edit
nsupdate
Edit
numfmt
Edit
objcopy
Edit
objdump
Edit
od
Edit
openssl
Edit
pango-list
Edit
pango-segmentation
Edit
pango-view
Edit
passenger
Edit
passwd
Edit
paste
Edit
patch
Edit
pathchk
Edit
pdf2dsc
Edit
pdf2ps
Edit
perl
Edit
perl5.32.1
Edit
perlbug
Edit
perldoc
Edit
perlivp
Edit
perlml
Edit
perlthanks
Edit
pgrep
Edit
php
Edit
pic
Edit
piconv
Edit
ping
Edit
pinky
Edit
pkg-config
Edit
pkill
Edit
pl2pm
Edit
pmap
Edit
pod2html
Edit
pod2man
Edit
pod2text
Edit
pod2usage
Edit
podchecker
Edit
post-grohtml
Edit
pr
Edit
pre-grohtml
Edit
precat
Edit
preunzip
Edit
prezip
Edit
prezip-bin
Edit
printenv
Edit
printf
Edit
prove
Edit
ps
Edit
ps2ascii
Edit
ps2epsi
Edit
ps2pdf
Edit
ps2pdf12
Edit
ps2pdf13
Edit
ps2pdf14
Edit
ps2pdfwr
Edit
ps2ps
Edit
ps2ps2
Edit
ptx
Edit
pwd
Edit
pwdx
Edit
pydoc
Edit
pydoc3
Edit
pydoc3.9
Edit
ranlib
Edit
readelf
Edit
readlink
Edit
realpath
Edit
recode
Edit
red
Edit
rename
Edit
renew-dummy-cert
Edit
renice
Edit
replace
Edit
reset
Edit
rev
Edit
rm
Edit
rmdir
Edit
rnano
Edit
ruby
Edit
run-with-aspell
Edit
runcon
Edit
rvi
Edit
rview
Edit
scalar
Edit
scl
Edit
scl_enabled
Edit
scl_source
Edit
scp
Edit
screen
Edit
script
Edit
sdiff
Edit
sed
Edit
selectorctl
Edit
seq
Edit
setsid
Edit
setterm
Edit
sftp
Edit
sh
Edit
sha1sum
Edit
sha224sum
Edit
sha256sum
Edit
sha384sum
Edit
sha512sum
Edit
shred
Edit
shuf
Edit
size
Edit
skill
Edit
slabtop
Edit
sleep
Edit
snice
Edit
soelim
Edit
sort
Edit
spell
Edit
splain
Edit
split
Edit
sprof
Edit
sqlite3
Edit
ssh
Edit
ssh-add
Edit
ssh-agent
Edit
ssh-copy-id
Edit
ssh-keygen
Edit
ssh-keyscan
Edit
stat
Edit
stdbuf
Edit
strace
Edit
stream
Edit
strings
Edit
strip
Edit
stty
Edit
sum
Edit
sync
Edit
tabs
Edit
tac
Edit
tail
Edit
tar
Edit
taskset
Edit
tbl
Edit
tclsh
Edit
tclsh8.6
Edit
tee
Edit
test
Edit
tic
Edit
timeout
Edit
tload
Edit
tmpwatch
Edit
toe
Edit
top
Edit
touch
Edit
tput
Edit
tr
Edit
troff
Edit
true
Edit
truncate
Edit
tset
Edit
tsort
Edit
tty
Edit
tzselect
Edit
uapi
Edit
ul
Edit
uname
Edit
unexpand
Edit
uniq
Edit
unlink
Edit
unzip
Edit
unzipsfx
Edit
uptime
Edit
users
Edit
utmpdump
Edit
vdir
Edit
vi
Edit
view
Edit
vmstat
Edit
watch
Edit
wc
Edit
wget
Edit
whereis
Edit
which
Edit
who
Edit
whoami
Edit
word-list-compress
Edit
x86_64-redhat-linux-c++
Edit
x86_64-redhat-linux-g++
Edit
x86_64-redhat-linux-gcc
Edit
x86_64-redhat-linux-gcc-11
Edit
xargs
Edit
xmlcatalog
Edit
xmllint
Edit
xmlwf
Edit
xsltproc
Edit
xsubpp
Edit
yes
Edit
zcat
Edit
zcmp
Edit
zdiff
Edit
zegrep
Edit
zfgrep
Edit
zforce
Edit
zgrep
Edit
zip
Edit
zipcloak
Edit
zipgrep
Edit
zipinfo
Edit
zipnote
Edit
zipsplit
Edit
zless
Edit
zmore
Edit
znew
Edit
zsoelim
Edit