make/variable.c

1546 lines
45 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
/* Internals of variables for GNU Make.
Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997,
1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software
2006-02-11 22:16:04 +00:00
Foundation, Inc.
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
This file is part of GNU Make.
GNU Make 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.
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
GNU Make 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.
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
#include "make.h"
#include <assert.h>
#include "dep.h"
#include "filedef.h"
#include "job.h"
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
#include "commands.h"
#include "variable.h"
#include "rule.h"
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
#ifdef WINDOWS32
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-22 21:51:45 +00:00
#include "pathstuff.h"
#endif
#include "hash.h"
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
/* Chain of all pattern-specific variables. */
static struct pattern_var *pattern_vars;
/* Pointer to last struct in the chain, so we can add onto the end. */
static struct pattern_var *last_pattern_var;
/* Create a new pattern-specific variable struct. */
struct pattern_var *
create_pattern_var (const char *target, const char *suffix)
{
register struct pattern_var *p = xmalloc (sizeof (struct pattern_var));
if (last_pattern_var != 0)
last_pattern_var->next = p;
else
pattern_vars = p;
last_pattern_var = p;
p->next = 0;
p->target = target;
p->len = strlen (target);
p->suffix = suffix + 1;
return p;
}
/* Look up a target in the pattern-specific variable list. */
static struct pattern_var *
lookup_pattern_var (struct pattern_var *start, const char *target)
{
struct pattern_var *p;
unsigned int targlen = strlen(target);
for (p = start ? start->next : pattern_vars; p != 0; p = p->next)
{
const char *stem;
unsigned int stemlen;
if (p->len > targlen)
/* It can't possibly match. */
continue;
/* From the lengths of the filename and the pattern parts,
find the stem: the part of the filename that matches the %. */
stem = target + (p->suffix - p->target - 1);
stemlen = targlen - p->len + 1;
/* Compare the text in the pattern before the stem, if any. */
if (stem > target && !strneq (p->target, target, stem - target))
continue;
/* Compare the text in the pattern after the stem, if any.
We could test simply using streq, but this way we compare the
first two characters immediately. This saves time in the very
common case where the first character matches because it is a
period. */
if (*p->suffix == stem[stemlen]
&& (*p->suffix == '\0' || streq (&p->suffix[1], &stem[stemlen+1])))
break;
}
return p;
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
/* Hash table of all global variable definitions. */
static unsigned long
variable_hash_1 (const void *keyv)
{
struct variable const *key = (struct variable const *) keyv;
return_STRING_N_HASH_1 (key->name, key->length);
}
static unsigned long
variable_hash_2 (const void *keyv)
{
struct variable const *key = (struct variable const *) keyv;
return_STRING_N_HASH_2 (key->name, key->length);
}
static int
variable_hash_cmp (const void *xv, const void *yv)
{
struct variable const *x = (struct variable const *) xv;
struct variable const *y = (struct variable const *) yv;
int result = x->length - y->length;
if (result)
return result;
return_STRING_N_COMPARE (x->name, y->name, x->length);
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
#ifndef VARIABLE_BUCKETS
#define VARIABLE_BUCKETS 523
#endif
#ifndef PERFILE_VARIABLE_BUCKETS
#define PERFILE_VARIABLE_BUCKETS 23
#endif
#ifndef SMALL_SCOPE_VARIABLE_BUCKETS
#define SMALL_SCOPE_VARIABLE_BUCKETS 13
#endif
static struct variable_set global_variable_set;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
static struct variable_set_list global_setlist
= { 0, &global_variable_set };
struct variable_set_list *current_variable_set_list = &global_setlist;
/* Implement variables. */
void
init_hash_global_variable_set (void)
{
hash_init (&global_variable_set.table, VARIABLE_BUCKETS,
variable_hash_1, variable_hash_2, variable_hash_cmp);
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
/* Define variable named NAME with value VALUE in SET. VALUE is copied.
LENGTH is the length of NAME, which does not need to be null-terminated.
ORIGIN specifies the origin of the variable (makefile, command line
or environment).
If RECURSIVE is nonzero a flag is set in the variable saying
that it should be recursively re-expanded. */
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
struct variable *
define_variable_in_set (const char *name, unsigned int length,
const char *value, enum variable_origin origin,
int recursive, struct variable_set *set,
const struct floc *flocp)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
struct variable *v;
struct variable **var_slot;
struct variable var_key;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
if (set == NULL)
set = &global_variable_set;
var_key.name = (char *) name;
var_key.length = length;
var_slot = (struct variable **) hash_find_slot (&set->table, &var_key);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
if (env_overrides && origin == o_env)
origin = o_env_override;
v = *var_slot;
if (! HASH_VACANT (v))
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
if (env_overrides && v->origin == o_env)
/* V came from in the environment. Since it was defined
before the switches were parsed, it wasn't affected by -e. */
v->origin = o_env_override;
/* A variable of this name is already defined.
If the old definition is from a stronger source
than this one, don't redefine it. */
if ((int) origin >= (int) v->origin)
{
1992-10-09 17:50:55 +00:00
if (v->value != 0)
free (v->value);
v->value = xstrdup (value);
if (flocp != 0)
v->fileinfo = *flocp;
else
v->fileinfo.filenm = 0;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
v->origin = origin;
v->recursive = recursive;
}
return v;
}
/* Create a new variable definition and add it to the hash table. */
v = xmalloc (sizeof (struct variable));
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
v->name = savestring (name, length);
v->length = length;
hash_insert_at (&set->table, v, var_slot);
v->value = xstrdup (value);
if (flocp != 0)
v->fileinfo = *flocp;
else
v->fileinfo.filenm = 0;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
v->origin = origin;
v->recursive = recursive;
v->special = 0;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
v->expanding = 0;
v->exp_count = 0;
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
v->per_target = 0;
v->append = 0;
1992-05-03 22:02:26 +00:00
v->export = v_default;
v->exportable = 1;
if (*name != '_' && (*name < 'A' || *name > 'Z')
&& (*name < 'a' || *name > 'z'))
v->exportable = 0;
else
{
for (++name; *name != '\0'; ++name)
if (*name != '_' && (*name < 'a' || *name > 'z')
&& (*name < 'A' || *name > 'Z') && !ISDIGIT(*name))
break;
if (*name != '\0')
v->exportable = 0;
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
return v;
}
/* If the variable passed in is "special", handle its special nature.
Currently there are two such variables, both used for introspection:
.VARIABLES expands to a list of all the variables defined in this instance
of make.
.TARGETS expands to a list of all the targets defined in this
instance of make.
Returns the variable reference passed in. */
#define EXPANSION_INCREMENT(_l) ((((_l) / 500) + 1) * 500)
static struct variable *
lookup_special_var (struct variable *var)
{
static unsigned long last_var_count = 0;
/* This one actually turns out to be very hard, due to the way the parser
records targets. The way it works is that target information is collected
internally until make knows the target is completely specified. It unitl
it sees that some new construct (a new target or variable) is defined that
it knows the previous one is done. In short, this means that if you do
this:
all:
TARGS := $(.TARGETS)
then $(TARGS) won't contain "all", because it's not until after the
variable is created that the previous target is completed.
Changing this would be a major pain. I think a less complex way to do it
would be to pre-define the target files as soon as the first line is
parsed, then come back and do the rest of the definition as now. That
would allow $(.TARGETS) to be correct without a major change to the way
the parser works.
if (streq (var->name, ".TARGETS"))
var->value = build_target_list (var->value);
else
*/
if (streq (var->name, ".VARIABLES")
&& global_variable_set.table.ht_fill != last_var_count)
{
unsigned long max = EXPANSION_INCREMENT (strlen (var->value));
unsigned long len;
char *p;
struct variable **vp = (struct variable **) global_variable_set.table.ht_vec;
struct variable **end = &vp[global_variable_set.table.ht_size];
/* Make sure we have at least MAX bytes in the allocated buffer. */
var->value = xrealloc (var->value, max);
/* Walk through the hash of variables, constructing a list of names. */
p = var->value;
len = 0;
for (; vp < end; ++vp)
if (!HASH_VACANT (*vp))
{
struct variable *v = *vp;
int l = v->length;
len += l + 1;
if (len > max)
{
unsigned long off = p - var->value;
max += EXPANSION_INCREMENT (l + 1);
var->value = xrealloc (var->value, max);
p = &var->value[off];
}
memcpy (p, v->name, l);
p += l;
*(p++) = ' ';
}
*(p-1) = '\0';
/* Remember how many variables are in our current count. Since we never
remove variables from the list, this is a reliable way to know whether
the list is up to date or needs to be recomputed. */
last_var_count = global_variable_set.table.ht_fill;
}
return var;
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
/* Lookup a variable whose name is a string starting at NAME
and with LENGTH chars. NAME need not be null-terminated.
Returns address of the `struct variable' containing all info
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
on the variable, or nil if no such variable is defined. */
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
struct variable *
lookup_variable (const char *name, unsigned int length)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
const struct variable_set_list *setlist;
struct variable var_key;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
var_key.name = (char *) name;
var_key.length = length;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
for (setlist = current_variable_set_list;
setlist != 0; setlist = setlist->next)
{
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
const struct variable_set *set = setlist->set;
struct variable *v;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
v = (struct variable *) hash_find_item ((struct hash_table *) &set->table, &var_key);
if (v)
return v->special ? lookup_special_var (v) : v;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
}
2000-01-22 05:43:03 +00:00
#ifdef VMS
/* since we don't read envp[] on startup, try to get the
variable via getenv() here. */
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
{
char *vname = alloca (length + 1);
char *value;
strncpy (vname, name, length);
vname[length] = 0;
value = getenv (vname);
if (value != 0)
{
char *sptr;
int scnt;
2000-01-22 05:43:03 +00:00
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
sptr = value;
scnt = 0;
2000-01-22 05:43:03 +00:00
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
while ((sptr = strchr (sptr, '$')))
{
scnt++;
sptr++;
}
2000-01-22 05:43:03 +00:00
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
if (scnt > 0)
{
char *nvalue;
char *nptr;
nvalue = alloca (strlen (value) + scnt + 1);
sptr = value;
nptr = nvalue;
while (*sptr)
{
if (*sptr == '$')
{
*nptr++ = '$';
*nptr++ = '$';
}
else
{
*nptr++ = *sptr;
}
sptr++;
}
*nptr = '\0';
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
return define_variable (vname, length, nvalue, o_env, 1);
2000-01-22 05:43:03 +00:00
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
}
2000-01-22 05:43:03 +00:00
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
return define_variable (vname, length, value, o_env, 1);
}
}
2000-01-22 05:43:03 +00:00
#endif /* VMS */
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
return 0;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
}
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
/* Lookup a variable whose name is a string starting at NAME
and with LENGTH chars in set SET. NAME need not be null-terminated.
Returns address of the `struct variable' containing all info
on the variable, or nil if no such variable is defined. */
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
struct variable *
lookup_variable_in_set (const char *name, unsigned int length,
const struct variable_set *set)
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
{
struct variable var_key;
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
var_key.name = (char *) name;
var_key.length = length;
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
return (struct variable *) hash_find_item ((struct hash_table *) &set->table, &var_key);
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
/* Initialize FILE's variable set list. If FILE already has a variable set
list, the topmost variable set is left intact, but the the rest of the
chain is replaced with FILE->parent's setlist. If FILE is a double-colon
rule, then we will use the "root" double-colon target's variable set as the
parent of FILE's variable set.
If we're READING a makefile, don't do the pattern variable search now,
since the pattern variable might not have been defined yet. */
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
void
initialize_file_variables (struct file *file, int reading)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
struct variable_set_list *l = file->variables;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
if (l == 0)
{
l = (struct variable_set_list *)
xmalloc (sizeof (struct variable_set_list));
l->set = xmalloc (sizeof (struct variable_set));
hash_init (&l->set->table, PERFILE_VARIABLE_BUCKETS,
variable_hash_1, variable_hash_2, variable_hash_cmp);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
file->variables = l;
}
/* If this is a double-colon, then our "parent" is the "root" target for
this double-colon rule. Since that rule has the same name, parent,
etc. we can just use its variables as the "next" for ours. */
if (file->double_colon && file->double_colon != file)
{
initialize_file_variables (file->double_colon, reading);
l->next = file->double_colon->variables;
return;
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
if (file->parent == 0)
l->next = &global_setlist;
else
{
initialize_file_variables (file->parent, reading);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
l->next = file->parent->variables;
}
/* If we're not reading makefiles and we haven't looked yet, see if
we can find pattern variables for this target. */
if (!reading && !file->pat_searched)
{
struct pattern_var *p;
p = lookup_pattern_var (0, file->name);
if (p != 0)
{
struct variable_set_list *global = current_variable_set_list;
/* We found at least one. Set up a new variable set to accumulate
all the pattern variables that match this target. */
file->pat_variables = create_new_variable_set ();
current_variable_set_list = file->pat_variables;
do
{
/* We found one, so insert it into the set. */
struct variable *v;
if (p->variable.flavor == f_simple)
{
v = define_variable_loc (
p->variable.name, strlen (p->variable.name),
p->variable.value, p->variable.origin,
0, &p->variable.fileinfo);
v->flavor = f_simple;
}
else
{
v = do_variable_definition (
&p->variable.fileinfo, p->variable.name,
p->variable.value, p->variable.origin,
p->variable.flavor, 1);
}
/* Also mark it as a per-target and copy export status. */
v->per_target = p->variable.per_target;
v->export = p->variable.export;
}
while ((p = lookup_pattern_var (p, file->name)) != 0);
current_variable_set_list = global;
}
file->pat_searched = 1;
}
/* If we have a pattern variable match, set it up. */
if (file->pat_variables != 0)
{
file->pat_variables->next = l->next;
l->next = file->pat_variables;
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
}
/* Pop the top set off the current variable set list,
and free all its storage. */
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
struct variable_set_list *
create_new_variable_set (void)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
register struct variable_set_list *setlist;
register struct variable_set *set;
set = xmalloc (sizeof (struct variable_set));
hash_init (&set->table, SMALL_SCOPE_VARIABLE_BUCKETS,
variable_hash_1, variable_hash_2, variable_hash_cmp);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
setlist = (struct variable_set_list *)
xmalloc (sizeof (struct variable_set_list));
setlist->set = set;
setlist->next = current_variable_set_list;
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
return setlist;
}
static void
free_variable_name_and_value (const void *item)
{
struct variable *v = (struct variable *) item;
free (v->name);
free (v->value);
}
void
free_variable_set (struct variable_set_list *list)
{
hash_map (&list->set->table, free_variable_name_and_value);
hash_free (&list->set->table, 1);
free (list->set);
free (list);
}
/* Create a new variable set and push it on the current setlist.
If we're pushing a global scope (that is, the current scope is the global
scope) then we need to "push" it the other way: file variable sets point
directly to the global_setlist so we need to replace that with the new one.
*/
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
struct variable_set_list *
push_new_variable_scope (void)
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
{
current_variable_set_list = create_new_variable_set();
if (current_variable_set_list->next == &global_setlist)
{
/* It was the global, so instead of new -> &global we want to replace
&global with the new one and have &global -> new, with current still
pointing to &global */
struct variable_set *set = current_variable_set_list->set;
current_variable_set_list->set = global_setlist.set;
global_setlist.set = set;
current_variable_set_list->next = global_setlist.next;
global_setlist.next = current_variable_set_list;
current_variable_set_list = &global_setlist;
}
return (current_variable_set_list);
}
void
pop_variable_scope (void)
{
struct variable_set_list *setlist;
struct variable_set *set;
/* Can't call this if there's no scope to pop! */
assert(current_variable_set_list->next != NULL);
if (current_variable_set_list != &global_setlist)
{
/* We're not pointing to the global setlist, so pop this one. */
setlist = current_variable_set_list;
set = setlist->set;
current_variable_set_list = setlist->next;
}
else
{
/* This set is the one in the global_setlist, but there is another global
set beyond that. We want to copy that set to global_setlist, then
delete what used to be in global_setlist. */
setlist = global_setlist.next;
set = global_setlist.set;
global_setlist.set = setlist->set;
global_setlist.next = setlist->next;
}
/* Free the one we no longer need. */
free (setlist);
hash_map (&set->table, free_variable_name_and_value);
hash_free (&set->table, 1);
free (set);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
}
/* Merge FROM_SET into TO_SET, freeing unused storage in FROM_SET. */
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
static void
merge_variable_sets (struct variable_set *to_set,
struct variable_set *from_set)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
struct variable **from_var_slot = (struct variable **) from_set->table.ht_vec;
struct variable **from_var_end = from_var_slot + from_set->table.ht_size;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
for ( ; from_var_slot < from_var_end; from_var_slot++)
if (! HASH_VACANT (*from_var_slot))
{
struct variable *from_var = *from_var_slot;
struct variable **to_var_slot
= (struct variable **) hash_find_slot (&to_set->table, *from_var_slot);
if (HASH_VACANT (*to_var_slot))
hash_insert_at (&to_set->table, from_var, to_var_slot);
else
{
/* GKM FIXME: delete in from_set->table */
free (from_var->value);
free (from_var);
}
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
}
/* Merge SETLIST1 into SETLIST0, freeing unused storage in SETLIST1. */
void
merge_variable_set_lists (struct variable_set_list **setlist0,
struct variable_set_list *setlist1)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
struct variable_set_list *to = *setlist0;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
struct variable_set_list *last0 = 0;
/* If there's nothing to merge, stop now. */
if (!setlist1)
return;
/* This loop relies on the fact that all setlists terminate with the global
setlist (before NULL). If that's not true, arguably we SHOULD die. */
if (to)
while (setlist1 != &global_setlist && to != &global_setlist)
{
struct variable_set_list *from = setlist1;
setlist1 = setlist1->next;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
merge_variable_sets (to->set, from->set);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
last0 = to;
to = to->next;
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
if (setlist1 != &global_setlist)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
if (last0 == 0)
*setlist0 = setlist1;
else
last0->next = setlist1;
}
}
/* Define the automatic variables, and record the addresses
of their structures so we can change their values quickly. */
void
define_automatic_variables (void)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
#if defined(WINDOWS32) || defined(__EMX__)
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-22 21:51:45 +00:00
extern char* default_shell;
#else
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
extern char default_shell[];
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-22 21:51:45 +00:00
#endif
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
register struct variable *v;
1993-08-19 20:36:05 +00:00
char buf[200];
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
sprintf (buf, "%u", makelevel);
(void) define_variable (MAKELEVEL_NAME, MAKELEVEL_LENGTH, buf, o_env, 0);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
1993-08-19 20:36:05 +00:00
sprintf (buf, "%s%s%s",
version_string,
(remote_description == 0 || remote_description[0] == '\0')
? "" : "-",
(remote_description == 0 || remote_description[0] == '\0')
? "" : remote_description);
(void) define_variable ("MAKE_VERSION", 12, buf, o_default, 0);
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
#ifdef __MSDOS__
/* Allow to specify a special shell just for Make,
and use $COMSPEC as the default $SHELL when appropriate. */
{
static char shell_str[] = "SHELL";
const int shlen = sizeof (shell_str) - 1;
struct variable *mshp = lookup_variable ("MAKESHELL", 9);
struct variable *comp = lookup_variable ("COMSPEC", 7);
/* Make $MAKESHELL override $SHELL even if -e is in effect. */
if (mshp)
(void) define_variable (shell_str, shlen,
mshp->value, o_env_override, 0);
else if (comp)
{
/* $COMSPEC shouldn't override $SHELL. */
struct variable *shp = lookup_variable (shell_str, shlen);
if (!shp)
(void) define_variable (shell_str, shlen, comp->value, o_env, 0);
}
}
#elif defined(__EMX__)
{
static char shell_str[] = "SHELL";
const int shlen = sizeof (shell_str) - 1;
struct variable *shell = lookup_variable (shell_str, shlen);
struct variable *replace = lookup_variable ("MAKESHELL", 9);
/* if $MAKESHELL is defined in the environment assume o_env_override */
if (replace && *replace->value && replace->origin == o_env)
replace->origin = o_env_override;
/* if $MAKESHELL is not defined use $SHELL but only if the variable
did not come from the environment */
if (!replace || !*replace->value)
if (shell && *shell->value && (shell->origin == o_env
|| shell->origin == o_env_override))
{
/* overwrite whatever we got from the environment */
free(shell->value);
shell->value = xstrdup (default_shell);
shell->origin = o_default;
}
/* Some people do not like cmd to be used as the default
if $SHELL is not defined in the Makefile.
With -DNO_CMD_DEFAULT you can turn off this behaviour */
# ifndef NO_CMD_DEFAULT
/* otherwise use $COMSPEC */
if (!replace || !*replace->value)
replace = lookup_variable ("COMSPEC", 7);
/* otherwise use $OS2_SHELL */
if (!replace || !*replace->value)
replace = lookup_variable ("OS2_SHELL", 9);
# else
# warning NO_CMD_DEFAULT: GNU make will not use CMD.EXE as default shell
# endif
if (replace && *replace->value)
/* overwrite $SHELL */
(void) define_variable (shell_str, shlen, replace->value,
replace->origin, 0);
else
/* provide a definition if there is none */
(void) define_variable (shell_str, shlen, default_shell,
o_default, 0);
}
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
#endif
/* This won't override any definition, but it will provide one if there
isn't one there. */
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
v = define_variable ("SHELL", 5, default_shell, o_default, 0);
#ifdef __MSDOS__
v->export = v_export; /* Export always SHELL. */
#endif
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
/* On MSDOS we do use SHELL from environment, since it isn't a standard
environment variable on MSDOS, so whoever sets it, does that on purpose.
On OS/2 we do not use SHELL from environment but we have already handled
that problem above. */
#if !defined(__MSDOS__) && !defined(__EMX__)
1992-05-12 04:42:11 +00:00
/* Don't let SHELL come from the environment. */
1993-01-13 21:09:20 +00:00
if (*v->value == '\0' || v->origin == o_env || v->origin == o_env_override)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
1992-10-23 19:57:55 +00:00
free (v->value);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
v->origin = o_file;
v->value = xstrdup (default_shell);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
}
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
#endif
1992-07-10 04:06:22 +00:00
/* Make sure MAKEFILES gets exported if it is set. */
1992-07-24 06:16:47 +00:00
v = define_variable ("MAKEFILES", 9, "", o_default, 0);
1992-07-10 04:06:22 +00:00
v->export = v_ifset;
1993-01-28 23:01:01 +00:00
/* Define the magic D and F variables in terms of
the automatic variables they are variations of. */
2000-01-22 05:43:03 +00:00
#ifdef VMS
define_variable ("@D", 2, "$(dir $@)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("%D", 2, "$(dir $%)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("*D", 2, "$(dir $*)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("<D", 2, "$(dir $<)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("?D", 2, "$(dir $?)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("^D", 2, "$(dir $^)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("+D", 2, "$(dir $+)", o_automatic, 1);
#else
1994-01-26 00:48:30 +00:00
define_variable ("@D", 2, "$(patsubst %/,%,$(dir $@))", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("%D", 2, "$(patsubst %/,%,$(dir $%))", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("*D", 2, "$(patsubst %/,%,$(dir $*))", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("<D", 2, "$(patsubst %/,%,$(dir $<))", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("?D", 2, "$(patsubst %/,%,$(dir $?))", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("^D", 2, "$(patsubst %/,%,$(dir $^))", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("+D", 2, "$(patsubst %/,%,$(dir $+))", o_automatic, 1);
2000-01-22 05:43:03 +00:00
#endif
1993-01-28 23:01:01 +00:00
define_variable ("@F", 2, "$(notdir $@)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("%F", 2, "$(notdir $%)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("*F", 2, "$(notdir $*)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("<F", 2, "$(notdir $<)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("?F", 2, "$(notdir $?)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("^F", 2, "$(notdir $^)", o_automatic, 1);
define_variable ("+F", 2, "$(notdir $+)", o_automatic, 1);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
}
1992-05-04 22:37:22 +00:00
int export_all_variables;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
/* Create a new environment for FILE's commands.
1993-07-15 00:22:56 +00:00
If FILE is nil, this is for the `shell' function.
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
The child's MAKELEVEL variable is incremented. */
char **
target_environment (struct file *file)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
1993-07-15 01:59:03 +00:00
struct variable_set_list *set_list;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
register struct variable_set_list *s;
struct hash_table table;
struct variable **v_slot;
struct variable **v_end;
struct variable makelevel_key;
char **result_0;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
char **result;
1993-07-15 00:22:56 +00:00
if (file == 0)
1993-07-15 01:59:03 +00:00
set_list = current_variable_set_list;
1993-07-15 00:22:56 +00:00
else
1993-07-15 01:59:03 +00:00
set_list = file->variables;
1993-07-15 00:22:56 +00:00
hash_init (&table, VARIABLE_BUCKETS,
variable_hash_1, variable_hash_2, variable_hash_cmp);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
/* Run through all the variable sets in the list,
accumulating variables in TABLE. */
1993-07-15 01:59:03 +00:00
for (s = set_list; s != 0; s = s->next)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
struct variable_set *set = s->set;
v_slot = (struct variable **) set->table.ht_vec;
v_end = v_slot + set->table.ht_size;
for ( ; v_slot < v_end; v_slot++)
if (! HASH_VACANT (*v_slot))
{
struct variable **new_slot;
struct variable *v = *v_slot;
/* If this is a per-target variable and it hasn't been touched
already then look up the global version and take its export
value. */
if (v->per_target && v->export == v_default)
{
struct variable *gv;
gv = lookup_variable_in_set (v->name, strlen(v->name),
&global_variable_set);
if (gv)
v->export = gv->export;
}
switch (v->export)
{
case v_default:
if (v->origin == o_default || v->origin == o_automatic)
/* Only export default variables by explicit request. */
continue;
/* The variable doesn't have a name that can be exported. */
if (! v->exportable)
continue;
if (! export_all_variables
&& v->origin != o_command
&& v->origin != o_env && v->origin != o_env_override)
continue;
break;
1992-05-03 22:02:26 +00:00
case v_export:
break;
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
case v_noexport:
{
/* If this is the SHELL variable and it's not exported,
then add the value from our original environment, if
the original environment defined a value for SHELL. */
extern struct variable shell_var;
if (streq (v->name, "SHELL") && shell_var.value)
{
v = &shell_var;
break;
}
continue;
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
case v_ifset:
if (v->origin == o_default)
continue;
break;
}
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
new_slot = (struct variable **) hash_find_slot (&table, v);
if (HASH_VACANT (*new_slot))
hash_insert_at (&table, v, new_slot);
}
}
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
makelevel_key.name = MAKELEVEL_NAME;
makelevel_key.length = MAKELEVEL_LENGTH;
hash_delete (&table, &makelevel_key);
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
result = result_0 = xmalloc ((table.ht_fill + 2) * sizeof (char *));
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
v_slot = (struct variable **) table.ht_vec;
v_end = v_slot + table.ht_size;
for ( ; v_slot < v_end; v_slot++)
if (! HASH_VACANT (*v_slot))
{
struct variable *v = *v_slot;
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
/* If V is recursively expanded and didn't come from the environment,
expand its value. If it came from the environment, it should
go back into the environment unchanged. */
if (v->recursive
&& v->origin != o_env && v->origin != o_env_override)
{
char *value = recursively_expand_for_file (v, file);
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
#ifdef WINDOWS32
if (strcmp(v->name, "Path") == 0 ||
strcmp(v->name, "PATH") == 0)
convert_Path_to_windows32(value, ';');
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-22 21:51:45 +00:00
#endif
*result++ = xstrdup (concat (v->name, "=", value));
free (value);
}
else
{
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
#ifdef WINDOWS32
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-22 21:51:45 +00:00
if (strcmp(v->name, "Path") == 0 ||
strcmp(v->name, "PATH") == 0)
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
convert_Path_to_windows32(v->value, ';');
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-22 21:51:45 +00:00
#endif
*result++ = xstrdup (concat (v->name, "=", v->value));
}
}
*result = xmalloc (100);
sprintf (*result, "%s=%u", MAKELEVEL_NAME, makelevel + 1);
*++result = 0;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
hash_free (&table, 0);
return result_0;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
}
static struct variable *
set_special_var (struct variable *var)
{
if (streq (var->name, RECIPEPREFIX_NAME))
{
/* The user is resetting the command introduction prefix. This has to
happen immediately, so that subsequent rules are interpreted
properly. */
cmd_prefix = var->value[0]=='\0' ? RECIPEPREFIX_DEFAULT : var->value[0];
}
return var;
}
/* Given a variable, a value, and a flavor, define the variable.
See the try_variable_definition() function for details on the parameters. */
1992-05-03 22:02:26 +00:00
struct variable *
do_variable_definition (const struct floc *flocp, const char *varname,
const char *value, enum variable_origin origin,
enum variable_flavor flavor, int target_var)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
const char *p;
char *alloc_value = NULL;
1992-11-23 20:53:24 +00:00
struct variable *v;
int append = 0;
int conditional = 0;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
1993-04-12 20:02:24 +00:00
/* Calculate the variable's new value in VALUE. */
switch (flavor)
{
default:
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
case f_bogus:
1993-04-12 20:02:24 +00:00
/* Should not be possible. */
abort ();
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
case f_simple:
/* A simple variable definition "var := value". Expand the value.
We have to allocate memory since otherwise it'll clobber the
1999-08-22 17:50:57 +00:00
variable buffer, and we may still need that if we're looking at a
target-specific variable. */
p = alloc_value = allocated_variable_expand (value);
1993-04-12 20:02:24 +00:00
break;
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
case f_conditional:
/* A conditional variable definition "var ?= value".
The value is set IFF the variable is not defined yet. */
v = lookup_variable (varname, strlen (varname));
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
if (v)
return v->special ? set_special_var (v) : v;
conditional = 1;
flavor = f_recursive;
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
/* FALLTHROUGH */
case f_recursive:
1993-04-12 20:02:24 +00:00
/* A recursive variable definition "var = value".
The value is used verbatim. */
p = value;
1993-04-12 20:02:24 +00:00
break;
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
case f_append:
2000-08-21 06:18:35 +00:00
{
/* If we have += but we're in a target variable context, we want to
append only with other variables in the context of this target. */
if (target_var)
{
append = 1;
v = lookup_variable_in_set (varname, strlen (varname),
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
current_variable_set_list->set);
/* Don't append from the global set if a previous non-appending
target-specific variable definition exists. */
if (v && !v->append)
append = 0;
2000-08-21 06:18:35 +00:00
}
2001-01-21 06:49:11 +00:00
else
v = lookup_variable (varname, strlen (varname));
2000-08-21 06:18:35 +00:00
if (v == 0)
{
/* There was no old value.
This becomes a normal recursive definition. */
p = value;
2000-08-21 06:18:35 +00:00
flavor = f_recursive;
}
else
{
/* Paste the old and new values together in VALUE. */
unsigned int oldlen, vallen;
const char *val;
char *tp;
2000-08-21 06:18:35 +00:00
val = value;
2000-08-21 06:18:35 +00:00
if (v->recursive)
/* The previous definition of the variable was recursive.
The new value is the unexpanded old and new values. */
flavor = f_recursive;
else
/* The previous definition of the variable was simple.
The new value comes from the old value, which was expanded
when it was set; and from the expanded new value. Allocate
memory for the expansion as we may still need the rest of the
buffer if we're looking at a target-specific variable. */
val = alloc_value = allocated_variable_expand (val);
2000-08-21 06:18:35 +00:00
oldlen = strlen (v->value);
vallen = strlen (val);
tp = alloca (oldlen + 1 + vallen + 1);
memcpy (tp, v->value, oldlen);
tp[oldlen] = ' ';
memcpy (&tp[oldlen + 1], val, vallen + 1);
p = tp;
2000-08-21 06:18:35 +00:00
}
}
1993-04-12 20:02:24 +00:00
}
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
#ifdef __MSDOS__
/* Many Unix Makefiles include a line saying "SHELL=/bin/sh", but
non-Unix systems don't conform to this default configuration (in
fact, most of them don't even have `/bin'). On the other hand,
$SHELL in the environment, if set, points to the real pathname of
the shell.
Therefore, we generally won't let lines like "SHELL=/bin/sh" from
the Makefile override $SHELL from the environment. But first, we
look for the basename of the shell in the directory where SHELL=
points, and along the $PATH; if it is found in any of these places,
we define $SHELL to be the actual pathname of the shell. Thus, if
you have bash.exe installed as d:/unix/bash.exe, and d:/unix is on
your $PATH, then SHELL=/usr/local/bin/bash will have the effect of
defining SHELL to be "d:/unix/bash.exe". */
1999-07-16 02:25:03 +00:00
if ((origin == o_file || origin == o_override)
&& strcmp (varname, "SHELL") == 0)
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
{
PATH_VAR (shellpath);
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
extern char * __dosexec_find_on_path (const char *, char *[], char *);
/* See if we can find "/bin/sh.exe", "/bin/sh.com", etc. */
if (__dosexec_find_on_path (p, NULL, shellpath))
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
{
char *tp;
for (tp = shellpath; *tp; tp++)
if (*tp == '\\')
*tp = '/';
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
v = define_variable_loc (varname, strlen (varname),
shellpath, origin, flavor == f_recursive,
flocp);
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
}
else
{
const char *shellbase, *bslash;
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
struct variable *pathv = lookup_variable ("PATH", 4);
char *path_string;
char *fake_env[2];
size_t pathlen = 0;
shellbase = strrchr (p, '/');
bslash = strrchr (p, '\\');
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
if (!shellbase || bslash > shellbase)
shellbase = bslash;
if (!shellbase && p[1] == ':')
shellbase = p + 1;
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
if (shellbase)
shellbase++;
else
shellbase = p;
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
/* Search for the basename of the shell (with standard
executable extensions) along the $PATH. */
if (pathv)
pathlen = strlen (pathv->value);
path_string = xmalloc (5 + pathlen + 2 + 1);
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
/* On MSDOS, current directory is considered as part of $PATH. */
sprintf (path_string, "PATH=.;%s", pathv ? pathv->value : "");
fake_env[0] = path_string;
fake_env[1] = 0;
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
if (__dosexec_find_on_path (shellbase, fake_env, shellpath))
{
char *tp;
for (tp = shellpath; *tp; tp++)
if (*tp == '\\')
*tp = '/';
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
v = define_variable_loc (varname, strlen (varname),
shellpath, origin,
flavor == f_recursive, flocp);
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
}
else
v = lookup_variable (varname, strlen (varname));
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
free (path_string);
}
}
else
#endif /* __MSDOS__ */
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
#ifdef WINDOWS32
if ((origin == o_file || origin == o_override || origin == o_command)
&& streq (varname, "SHELL"))
2000-08-21 06:18:35 +00:00
{
extern char *default_shell;
/* Call shell locator function. If it returns TRUE, then
set no_default_sh_exe to indicate sh was found and
set new value for SHELL variable. */
if (find_and_set_default_shell (p))
{
v = define_variable_in_set (varname, strlen (varname), default_shell,
origin, flavor == f_recursive,
(target_var
? current_variable_set_list->set
: NULL),
flocp);
no_default_sh_exe = 0;
}
else
{
if (alloc_value)
free (alloc_value);
alloc_value = allocated_variable_expand (p);
if (find_and_set_default_shell (alloc_value))
{
v = define_variable_in_set (varname, strlen (varname), p,
origin, flavor == f_recursive,
(target_var
? current_variable_set_list->set
: NULL),
flocp);
no_default_sh_exe = 0;
}
else
v = lookup_variable (varname, strlen (varname));
}
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
}
2000-08-21 06:18:35 +00:00
else
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
#endif
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
/* If we are defining variables inside an $(eval ...), we might have a
different variable context pushed, not the global context (maybe we're
inside a $(call ...) or something. Since this function is only ever
invoked in places where we want to define globally visible variables,
make sure we define this variable in the global set. */
v = define_variable_in_set (varname, strlen (varname), p,
origin, flavor == f_recursive,
(target_var
? current_variable_set_list->set : NULL),
flocp);
v->append = append;
v->conditional = conditional;
if (alloc_value)
free (alloc_value);
return v->special ? set_special_var (v) : v;
}
/* Try to interpret LINE (a null-terminated string) as a variable definition.
ORIGIN may be o_file, o_override, o_env, o_env_override,
or o_command specifying that the variable definition comes
from a makefile, an override directive, the environment with
or without the -e switch, or the command line.
See the comments for parse_variable_definition().
If LINE was recognized as a variable definition, a pointer to its `struct
variable' is returned. If LINE is not a variable definition, NULL is
returned. */
struct variable *
parse_variable_definition (struct variable *v, char *line)
{
register int c;
register char *p = line;
register char *beg;
register char *end;
enum variable_flavor flavor = f_bogus;
char *name;
while (1)
{
c = *p++;
if (c == '\0' || c == '#')
return 0;
if (c == '=')
{
end = p - 1;
flavor = f_recursive;
break;
}
else if (c == ':')
if (*p == '=')
{
end = p++ - 1;
flavor = f_simple;
break;
}
else
/* A colon other than := is a rule line, not a variable defn. */
return 0;
else if (c == '+' && *p == '=')
{
end = p++ - 1;
flavor = f_append;
break;
}
else if (c == '?' && *p == '=')
{
end = p++ - 1;
flavor = f_conditional;
break;
}
else if (c == '$')
{
/* This might begin a variable expansion reference. Make sure we
don't misrecognize chars inside the reference as =, := or +=. */
char closeparen;
int count;
c = *p++;
if (c == '(')
closeparen = ')';
else if (c == '{')
closeparen = '}';
else
continue; /* Nope. */
/* P now points past the opening paren or brace.
Count parens or braces until it is matched. */
count = 0;
for (; *p != '\0'; ++p)
{
if (*p == c)
++count;
else if (*p == closeparen && --count < 0)
{
++p;
break;
}
}
}
}
v->flavor = flavor;
beg = next_token (line);
while (end > beg && isblank ((unsigned char)end[-1]))
--end;
p = next_token (p);
v->value = p;
/* Expand the name, so "$(foo)bar = baz" works. */
name = alloca (end - beg + 1);
memcpy (name, beg, end - beg);
name[end - beg] = '\0';
v->name = allocated_variable_expand (name);
if (v->name[0] == '\0')
fatal (&v->fileinfo, _("empty variable name"));
return v;
}
/* Try to interpret LINE (a null-terminated string) as a variable definition.
ORIGIN may be o_file, o_override, o_env, o_env_override,
or o_command specifying that the variable definition comes
from a makefile, an override directive, the environment with
or without the -e switch, or the command line.
See the comments for parse_variable_definition().
If LINE was recognized as a variable definition, a pointer to its `struct
variable' is returned. If LINE is not a variable definition, NULL is
returned. */
1992-11-23 20:53:24 +00:00
struct variable *
try_variable_definition (const struct floc *flocp, char *line,
enum variable_origin origin, int target_var)
{
struct variable v;
struct variable *vp;
if (flocp != 0)
v.fileinfo = *flocp;
else
v.fileinfo.filenm = 0;
if (!parse_variable_definition (&v, line))
return 0;
vp = do_variable_definition (flocp, v.name, v.value,
origin, v.flavor, target_var);
free (v.name);
return vp;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
}
/* Print information for variable V, prefixing it with PREFIX. */
static void
print_variable (const void *item, void *arg)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
const struct variable *v = item;
const char *prefix = arg;
1999-08-25 21:39:28 +00:00
const char *origin;
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
switch (v->origin)
{
case o_default:
origin = _("default");
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
break;
case o_env:
origin = _("environment");
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
break;
case o_file:
origin = _("makefile");
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
break;
case o_env_override:
origin = _("environment under -e");
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
break;
case o_command:
origin = _("command line");
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
break;
case o_override:
origin = _("`override' directive");
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
break;
case o_automatic:
origin = _("automatic");
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
break;
case o_invalid:
default:
abort ();
}
fputs ("# ", stdout);
fputs (origin, stdout);
if (v->fileinfo.filenm)
printf (_(" (from `%s', line %lu)"),
v->fileinfo.filenm, v->fileinfo.lineno);
putchar ('\n');
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
fputs (prefix, stdout);
/* Is this a `define'? */
if (v->recursive && strchr (v->value, '\n') != 0)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
printf ("define %s\n%s\nendef\n", v->name, v->value);
else
{
register char *p;
printf ("%s %s= ", v->name, v->recursive ? v->append ? "+" : "" : ":");
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
/* Check if the value is just whitespace. */
p = next_token (v->value);
if (p != v->value && *p == '\0')
/* All whitespace. */
printf ("$(subst ,,%s)", v->value);
else if (v->recursive)
fputs (v->value, stdout);
else
/* Double up dollar signs. */
for (p = v->value; *p != '\0'; ++p)
{
if (*p == '$')
putchar ('$');
putchar (*p);
}
putchar ('\n');
}
}
/* Print all the variables in SET. PREFIX is printed before
the actual variable definitions (everything else is comments). */
1998-07-30 20:54:47 +00:00
void
print_variable_set (struct variable_set *set, char *prefix)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
hash_map_arg (&set->table, print_variable, prefix);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
fputs (_("# variable set hash-table stats:\n"), stdout);
fputs ("# ", stdout);
hash_print_stats (&set->table, stdout);
putc ('\n', stdout);
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
}
/* Print the data base of variables. */
void
print_variable_data_base (void)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
puts (_("\n# Variables\n"));
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
print_variable_set (&global_variable_set, "");
puts (_("\n# Pattern-specific Variable Values"));
{
struct pattern_var *p;
int rules = 0;
for (p = pattern_vars; p != 0; p = p->next)
{
++rules;
printf ("\n%s :\n", p->target);
print_variable (&p->variable, "# ");
}
if (rules == 0)
puts (_("\n# No pattern-specific variable values."));
else
printf (_("\n# %u pattern-specific variable values"), rules);
}
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
}
/* Print all the local variables of FILE. */
void
print_file_variables (const struct file *file)
1991-10-07 22:04:20 +00:00
{
if (file->variables != 0)
print_variable_set (file->variables->set, "# ");
}
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-22 21:51:45 +00:00
1997-04-07 07:21:16 +00:00
#ifdef WINDOWS32
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-22 21:51:45 +00:00
void
sync_Path_environment (void)
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-22 21:51:45 +00:00
{
char *path = allocated_variable_expand ("$(PATH)");
static char *environ_path = NULL;
if (!path)
return;
/*
* If done this before, don't leak memory unnecessarily.
* Free the previous entry before allocating new one.
*/
if (environ_path)
free (environ_path);
/*
* Create something WINDOWS32 world can grok
*/
convert_Path_to_windows32 (path, ';');
environ_path = xstrdup (concat ("PATH", "=", path));
putenv (environ_path);
free (path);
Wed May 15 10:14:14 CDT 1996 Rob Tulloh <tulloh@tivoli.com> * dir.c: WIN32 does not support inode. For now, fully qualified pathname along with st_mtime will be keys for files. Fixed problem where vpath can be confused when files are added to a directory after the directory has already been read in. The code now attempts to reread the directory if it discovers that the datestamp on the directory has changed since it was cached by make. This problem only seems to occur on WIN32 right now so it is lumped under port #ifdef WIN32. * function.c: WIN32: call subproc library (CreateProcess()) instead of fork/exec. * job.c: WIN32: Added the code to do fork/exec/waitpid style processing on WIN32 systems via calls to subproc library. * main.c: WIN32: Several things added here. First, there is code for dealing with PATH and SHELL defaults. Make tries to figure out if the user has %PATH% set in the environment and sets it to %Path% if it is not set already. Make also looks to see if sh.exe is anywhere to be found. Code path through job.c will change based on existence of a working Bourne shell. The checking for default shell is done twice: once before makefiles are read in and again after. Fall back to MSDOS style execution mode if no sh.exe is found. Also added some debug support that allows user to pause make with -D switch and attach a debugger. This is especially useful for debugging recursive calls to make where problems appear only in the sub-make. * make.h: WIN32: A few macros and header files for WIN32 support. * misc.c: WIN32: Added a function end_of_token_w32() to assist in parsing code in read.c. * read.c: WIN32: Fixes similar to MSDOS which allow colon to appear in filenames. Use of colon in filenames would otherwise confuse make. * remake.c: WIN32: Added include of io.h to eliminate compiler warnings. Added some code to default LIBDIR if it is not set on WIN32. * variable.c: WIN32: Added support for detecting Path/PATH and converting them to semicolon separated lists for make's internal use. New function sync_Path_environment() which is called in job.c and function.c before creating a new process. Caller must set Path in environment since we don't have fork() to do this for us. * vpath.c: WIN32: Added detection for filenames containing forward or backward slashes. * NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Use this to build GNU make the first time on Windows NT or Windows 95. * README.WIN32: WIN32: Contains some helpful notes. * build_w32.bat: WIN32: If you don't like nmake, use this the first time you build GNU make on Windows NT or Windows 95. * config.h.WIN32: WIN32 version of config.h * subproc.bat: WIN32: A bat file used to build the subproc library from the top-level NMakefile. Needed because WIndows 95 (nmake) doesn't allow you to cd in a make rule. * w32/include/dirent.h * w32/compat/dirent.c: WIN32: opendir, readdir, closedir, etc. * w32/include/pathstuff.h: WIN32: used by files needed functions defined in pathstuff.c (prototypes). * w32/include/sub_proc.h: WIN32: prototypes for subproc.lib functions. * w32/include/w32err.h: WIN32: prototypes for w32err.c. * w32/pathstuff.c: WIN32: File and Path/Path conversion functions. * w32/subproc/build.bat: WIN32: build script for subproc library if you don't wish to use nmake. * w32/subproc/NMakefile: WIN32: Visual C compatible makefile for use with nmake. Used to build subproc library. * w32/subproc/misc.c: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/proc.h: WIN32: subproc library support code * w32/subproc/sub_proc.c: WIN32: subproc library source code * w32/subproc/w32err.c: WIN32: subproc library support code
1996-05-22 21:51:45 +00:00
}
#endif