Make enters an infinite loop when some option and MAKEFLAGS=<value>
are specified on the command line. For example,
$ make -r MAKEFLAGS=hello=world
If decode_switches() runs handle_non_switch_argument() from within
the getopt() loop, it would recursively call decode_switches() to
enter a new getopt() loop, corrupting the state of the outer loop.
* src/main.c (decode_switches): Save up non-option arguments and run
handle_non_switch_argument() only after we're done with getopt().
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Add tests.
Disable builtin variables and rules immediately, when -R or -r is
added to MAKEFLAGS inside the makefile.
* src/main.c (disable_builtins): Add new function disable_builtins().
(main): Call disable_builtins().
(reset_makeflags): Call disable_builtins().
* tests/scripts/options/dash-r: Add tests.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Update tests.
Replace the singleton --warn-undefined-variables with infrastructure
to manage multiple warnings: the --warn option can take an action
"ignore", "warn", or "error" (which will apply to all warnings), or
a specific warning type and an action for that type. Multiple
options can be provided and are consolidated.
* NEWS: Announce the new option.
* doc/make.1: Document in the man page.
* doc/make.texi (Warnings): Document in the user's manual.
* Makefile.am: Add new header warning.h.
* src/warning.h: Define enum for actions and warning types, and
macros to test whether they are set. Keep the default settings
separate so that we can correctly reconstruct MAKEFLAGS.
* src/makeint.h: Remove deprecated warn_undefined_variables_flag.
* src/main.c: Create global variables to hold warning settings.
(switches): Add a new switch for --warn.
(initialize_warnings): Set the default warning actions.
(main): Call initialize_warnings().
(encode_warning_state, decode_warning_state): Convert warning states
between strings and enums.
(encode_warning_name, decode_warning_name): Convert warning names
between strings and enums.
(decode_warn_flags): Convert a --warn option into enum values. If
deprecated warn_undefined_variables_flag is set convert it to --warn.
(decode_switches): Don't remove duplicates of --warn since order
matters. Call decode_warn_flags() to handle --warn.
(define_makeflags): Special-case handling of --warn options written
to MAKEFLAGS: write out the current settings.
* src/read.c (tilde_expand): Use new warning control macros.
* src/variable.c (warn_undefined): Ditto.
* src/job.c (construct_command_argv): Ditto.
* tests/scripts/options/warn: Rename from warn-undefined-variables
and add tests for --warn.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Expect the new behavior.
The POSIX standard only requires false(1) to return a "non-zero" exit
code; almost all systems return 1 but some (Solaris!!!) return 255 or
possibly even other values. Use our helper "fail" instead.
* tests/thelp.pl: Have the "fail" command obey -q.
* tests/scripts/features/parallelism: Helper -q no longer prints fail.
* tests/scripts/targets/POSIX: Replace false with #HELPER# -q fail 1.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/variables/SHELL: Ditto.
Strawberry Perl has some different behaviors from ActiveState Perl
which impact the test suite:
- Avoid Perl's chomp() as it may not remove CRs; chomp() may remove
only the final NL but not the CR in a CRNL line ending.
- Strawberry Perl doesn't support ActiveState's system(1, ...) form.
- Strawberry Perl (or msys?) does something weird with "/tmp" when
provided to exec(), replacing it with the user's %TEMP%.
- Strawberry Perl uses msys paths like /c/foo instead of C:\foo.
* tests/test_driver.pl (get_osname): Strawberry Perl uses 'msys' as
its $^O so if we see that use a port of 'W32'.
(_run_with_timeout): Strawberry Perl doesn't support the special
system(1, ...) form of system() so use POSIX standard fork/exec.
(compare_answer): Paths generated by Strawberry Perl use msys path
format (e.g., /c/foo instead of C:\foo); check for those differences
and compare RE against both the unmodified and modified log.
* tests/run_make_tests.pl (set_defaults): Switch from chomp to s///
to remove CRNL and NL line endings.
* tests/scripts/features/errors: Executing directories on Strawberry
will give an error; translate it to Windows error output format.
* tests/scripts/features/output-sync: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/features/temp_stdin: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/functions/realpath: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/options/dash-I: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/variables/INCLUDE_DIRS: Ditto.
* tests/scripts/misc/close_stdout: /dev/full is reported as existing
on Strawberry Perl, but it doesn't do anything. Skip the test.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: When an argument containing
/tmp is passed to a program via exec(), something replaces it with
the expansion of the %TEMP% variable. Instead of using /tmp create
a local directory to use.
* doc/make.texi (Options/Recursion): Clarify that MAKEFLAGS values
from the environment have precedence over those set in the makefile.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Check boolean switches -k/-S,
-w/--no-print-directory and -s/--no-silent as follows:
1. A switch can be enabled or disabled on the command line.
2. A switch can be enabled or disabled in env.
3. A switch can be enabled or disabled in makefile.
4. Command line beats env and makefile.
5. Env beats makefile.
6. MAKEFLAGS contains each specified switch at parse and build time.
7. If switches are specified in multiple origins, MAKEFLAGS contains
the winning switch at parse and build time.
8. MAKEFLAGS does not contain the losing switch.
Also test that --debug settings from different origins are combined
together into one option.
This commit introduces two visible changes:
1. Keep command line variable assignments in MAKEFLAGS at all times,
even while parsing makefiles.
2. Define makeflags immediately when a makefile modifies MAKEFLAGS.
The new MAKEFLAGS and MAKEOVERRIDES initialization procedure:
1. decode_switches (argc, argv, o_command) is called to parse command
line variable assignments.
2. Command line variable assignments go through quote_for_env.
Initialize -*-command-variables-*- to the quoted values.
3. MAKEOVERRIDES is initialized to refer to -*-command-variables-*-
with origin o_env to keep the definitions in the database intact.
4. define_makeflags() is called which adds MAKEOVERRIDES to MAKEFLAGS.
5. Makefiles are parsed. If a makefile modifies MAKEFLAGS, the new
value of MAKEFLAGS is defined right away.
6. Env switches are decoded again as o_env. The definitions set by
decode_switches at step 1 stay intact, as o_command beats o_env.
We must preserve the original intact definitions in order to detect
failure cases; for example:
$ cat makefile
all:; $(hello)
$ make hello='$(world'
makefile:1: *** unterminated variable reference. Stop.
* src/makeint.h: Declare enum variable_origin, struct variable and
define_makeflags(). Add parameter origin to decode_env_switches().
* src/main.c (define_makeflags): Remove "all". If a variable is
assigned on the command line then append MAKEOVERRIDES to MAKEFLAGS.
(decode_env_switches): Replace parameter env with origin.
(decode_switches): Replace parameter env with origin.
Treat origin == o_command as env == 0.
(handle_non_switch_argument): Replace parameter env with origin.
Treat origin == o_command as env == 0.
(main): Call decode_switches() with origin==o_command before parsing
makefiles. Call decode_switches() with origin==o_env after parsing
makefiles.
* src/variable.c (set_special_var): Define makeflags at parse time,
each time a makefile modifies MAKEFLAGS.
(do_variable_definition): Strip command line variable assignments from
MAKEFLAGS before appending extra flags. set_special_var() adds them
back.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Add tests.
Savannah issues such as SV 57242 and SV 62397 show how passing
references to closed file descriptors via the --jobserver-auth option
in MAKEFLAGS can lead to problematic outcomes.
When computing the child environment for a non-recursive shell, add
an extra option to MAKEFLAGS to disable the file descriptors for the
jobserver.
Unfortunately this doesn't modify the value of the make variable
MAKEFLAGS, it only modifies the value of the sub-shell environment
variable MAKEFLAGS. This can lead to confusion if the user is not
considering the distinction.
* src/makeint.h: Publish the jobserver-auth value. Add a global
definition of the name of the command line option.
* src/os.h (jobserver_get_invalid_auth): New function to return a
string invalidating the jobserver-auth option.
* src/w32/w32os.c (jobserver_get_invaid_auth): Implement it. On
Windows we use a semaphore so there's no need to invalidate.
* src/posixos.c (jobserver_parse_auth): If we parse the invalid
auth string, don't set up the jobserver.
(jobserver_get_invalid_auth): Return an invalid option.
* src/variable.h (target_environment): Specify if the target
environment is for a recursive shell or non-recursive shell.
* src/variable.c (target_environment): Move checking for MAKELEVEL
into the loop rather than doing it at the end.
Along with this, check for MAKEFLAGS and MFLAGS, and update them
based on whether we're invoking a recursive or non-recursive child,
and also on whether it's necessary to invalidate the jobserver.
* src/function.c (func_shell_base): Shell functions can never be
recursive to pass 0 to target_environment().
* src/job.c (start_job_command): Specify whether the child is
recursive when calling target_environment().
* src/main.c: Export jobserver_auth. sync_mutex doesn't need to
be exported. Use the global definition for the option name.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Add tests for $MAKEFLAGS.
* src/main.c (main): Don't reset the jobserver if the number of
slots has not changed.
(define_makeflags): Add all normal flags even when ALL is not set.
* tests/scripts/functions/shell: Test invoking make in $(shell ...).
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Test the value of MAKEFLAGS in
$(shell ...).
Commit f2771aa614 introduced a bug where some switches were left out
of MAKEFLAGS. Instead of resetting switches, get the same results by
filtering out duplicates.
* src/makeint.h: Remove reset_switches.
* src/main.c: (reset_switches): Remove reset_switches.
* (main): Remove call to reset_switches.
* (decode_switches): Filter out duplicate flags.
* src/variable.c: (set_special_var): Remove call to reset_switches.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Verify that duplicate flags are
properly filtered out.
When MAKEFLAGS is set in a makefile, reparse it immediately rather
than waiting until after all makefiles have been read and parsed.
This change doesn't actually fix the SV bug referenced because, even
though we do reparse MAKEFLAGS, we don't handle the -r or -R options
immediately. Doing this will require more effort.
* NEWS: Announce the change.
* src/makeint.h: Publish reset_switches() and decode_env_switches()
from main.c
* src/main.c (main): Don't call construct_include_path(); it will be
invoked decode_switches().
Preserve the old values of builtin_rules, builtin_variables, and
job_slots before we read makefiles since they can be changed now.
(reset_switches): Publish (remove static). Set the initial value of
the stringlist list to NULL.
(decode_switches): Call construct_include_path() after decoding.
(decode_env_switches): Publish (remove static).
(define_makeflags): Set the MAKEFLAGS variable for special handling.
* src/read.c (eval_makefile): Check for empty include_directories.
(construct_include_path): Clear any old value of .INCLUDE_DIRS before
appending new values. Free the previous include_directories.
* src/variable.c (lookup_special_var): When MAKEFLAGS is set, first
reset the switches then re-parse the variable.
* tests/run_make_tests.pl: Memo-ize some default variable values.
* tests/scripts/options/dash-r: Create tests for setting -r and -R.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Test that resetting -I from
within the makefile takes effect immediately.
Add debug options to print recipes even if they would otherwise be
silent, and to print the reason that a target was considered out of
date.
Modify --trace to simply be a shorthand for --debug=print,why.
* NEWS: Announce changes.
* doc/make.texi (Summary of Options): Document the new options.
* doc/make.1: Ditto.
* src/debug.h: Add new flags DB_PRINT and DB_WHY.
* src/makeint.h: Remove the trace_flag variable.
* src/job.c (start_job_command): Check debug flags not trace_flag.
(new_job): Ditto.
* src/main.c (trace_flag): Make a static variable for switches.
(decode_debug_flags): Set DB_PRINT and DB_WHY if trace_flag is set.
* tests/scripts/variables/GNUMAKEFLAGS: Update known-good messages.
* tests/scripts/variables/MAKEFLAGS: Ditto.
Previously if the jobserver was active, MAKEFLAGS would contain only
the -j option but not the number (not -j5 or whatever) so users
could not discover that value. Allow that value to be provided in
MAKEFLAGS without error but still give warnings if -jN is provided
on the command line if the jobserver is already activated.
* NEWS: Discuss the new behavior.
* os.h, posixos.c, w32/w32os.c: Return success/failure from
jobserver_setup() and jobserver_parse_auth().
* main.c (main): Separate the command line storage of job slots (now
in arg_job_slots) from the control storage (in job_slots). Make a
distinction between -jN flags read from MAKEFLAGS and those seen
on the command line: for the latter if the jobserver is enabled then
warn and disable it, as before.
* tests/scripts/features/jobserver: Add new testing.
Create a new file, output.c, and collect functions that generate output there.
We introduce a new global context specifying where output should go (to stdout
or to a sync file), and the lowest level output generator chooses where to
write output based on that context.
This allows us to set the context globally, and all operations that write
output (including functions like $(info ...) etc.) will use it.
Removed the "--trace=dir" capability. It was too confusing. If you have
directory tracking enabled then output sync will print the enter/leave message
for each synchronized block. If you don't want that, disable directory
tracking.