/* Variable expansion functions for GNU Make. Copyright (C) 1988-2014 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 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. 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. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #include "makeint.h" #include #include "filedef.h" #include "job.h" #include "commands.h" #include "variable.h" #include "rule.h" /* Initially, any errors reported when expanding strings will be reported against the file where the error appears. */ const gmk_floc **expanding_var = &reading_file; /* The next two describe the variable output buffer. This buffer is used to hold the variable-expansion of a line of the makefile. It is made bigger with realloc whenever it is too small. variable_buffer_length is the size currently allocated. variable_buffer is the address of the buffer. For efficiency, it's guaranteed that the buffer will always have VARIABLE_BUFFER_ZONE extra bytes allocated. This allows you to add a few extra chars without having to call a function. Note you should never use these bytes unless you're _sure_ you have room (you know when the buffer length was last checked. */ #define VARIABLE_BUFFER_ZONE 5 static unsigned int variable_buffer_length; char *variable_buffer; /* Subroutine of variable_expand and friends: The text to add is LENGTH chars starting at STRING to the variable_buffer. The text is added to the buffer at PTR, and the updated pointer into the buffer is returned as the value. Thus, the value returned by each call to variable_buffer_output should be the first argument to the following call. */ char * variable_buffer_output (char *ptr, const char *string, unsigned int length) { register unsigned int newlen = length + (ptr - variable_buffer); if ((newlen + VARIABLE_BUFFER_ZONE) > variable_buffer_length) { unsigned int offset = ptr - variable_buffer; variable_buffer_length = (newlen + 100 > 2 * variable_buffer_length ? newlen + 100 : 2 * variable_buffer_length); variable_buffer = xrealloc (variable_buffer, variable_buffer_length); ptr = variable_buffer + offset; } memcpy (ptr, string, length); return ptr + length; } /* Return a pointer to the beginning of the variable buffer. */ static char * initialize_variable_output (void) { /* If we don't have a variable output buffer yet, get one. */ if (variable_buffer == 0) { variable_buffer_length = 200; variable_buffer = xmalloc (variable_buffer_length); variable_buffer[0] = '\0'; } return variable_buffer; } /* Recursively expand V. The returned string is malloc'd. */ static char *allocated_variable_append (const struct variable *v); char * recursively_expand_for_file (struct variable *v, struct file *file) { char *value; const gmk_floc *this_var; const gmk_floc **saved_varp; struct variable_set_list *save = 0; int set_reading = 0; /* Don't install a new location if this location is empty. This can happen for command-line variables, builtin variables, etc. */ saved_varp = expanding_var; if (v->fileinfo.filenm) { this_var = &v->fileinfo; expanding_var = &this_var; } /* If we have no other file-reading context, use the variable's context. */ if (!reading_file) { set_reading = 1; reading_file = &v->fileinfo; } if (v->expanding) { if (!v->exp_count) /* Expanding V causes infinite recursion. Lose. */ OS (fatal, *expanding_var, _("Recursive variable '%s' references itself (eventually)"), v->name); --v->exp_count; } if (file) { save = current_variable_set_list; current_variable_set_list = file->variables; } v->expanding = 1; if (v->append) value = allocated_variable_append (v); else value = allocated_variable_expand (v->value); v->expanding = 0; if (set_reading) reading_file = 0; if (file) current_variable_set_list = save; expanding_var = saved_varp; return value; } /* Expand a simple reference to variable NAME, which is LENGTH chars long. */ #ifdef __GNUC__ __inline #endif static char * reference_variable (char *o, const char *name, unsigned int length) { struct variable *v; char *value; v = lookup_variable (name, length); if (v == 0) warn_undefined (name, length); /* If there's no variable by that name or it has no value, stop now. */ if (v == 0 || (*v->value == '\0' && !v->append)) return o; value = (v->recursive ? recursively_expand (v) : v->value); o = variable_buffer_output (o, value, strlen (value)); if (v->recursive) free (value); return o; } /* Scan STRING for variable references and expansion-function calls. Only LENGTH bytes of STRING are actually scanned. If LENGTH is -1, scan until a null byte is found. Write the results to LINE, which must point into 'variable_buffer'. If LINE is NULL, start at the beginning of the buffer. Return a pointer to LINE, or to the beginning of the buffer if LINE is NULL. */ char * variable_expand_string (char *line, const char *string, long length) { struct variable *v; const char *p, *p1; char *save; char *o; unsigned int line_offset; if (!line) line = initialize_variable_output (); o = line; line_offset = line - variable_buffer; if (length == 0) { variable_buffer_output (o, "", 1); return (variable_buffer); } /* We need a copy of STRING: due to eval, it's possible that it will get freed as we process it (it might be the value of a variable that's reset for example). Also having a nil-terminated string is handy. */ save = length < 0 ? xstrdup (string) : xstrndup (string, length); p = save; while (1) { /* Copy all following uninteresting chars all at once to the variable output buffer, and skip them. Uninteresting chars end at the next $ or the end of the input. */ p1 = strchr (p, '$'); o = variable_buffer_output (o, p, p1 != 0 ? (unsigned int)(p1 - p) : strlen (p) + 1); if (p1 == 0) break; p = p1 + 1; /* Dispatch on the char that follows the $. */ switch (*p) { case '$': /* $$ seen means output one $ to the variable output buffer. */ o = variable_buffer_output (o, p, 1); break; case '(': case '{': /* $(...) or ${...} is the general case of substitution. */ { char openparen = *p; char closeparen = (openparen == '(') ? ')' : '}'; const char *begp; const char *beg = p + 1; char *op; char *abeg = NULL; const char *end, *colon; op = o; begp = p; if (handle_function (&op, &begp)) { o = op; p = begp; break; } /* Is there a variable reference inside the parens or braces? If so, expand it before expanding the entire reference. */ end = strchr (beg, closeparen); if (end == 0) /* Unterminated variable reference. */ O (fatal, *expanding_var, _("unterminated variable reference")); p1 = lindex (beg, end, '$'); if (p1 != 0) { /* BEG now points past the opening paren or brace. Count parens or braces until it is matched. */ int count = 0; for (p = beg; *p != '\0'; ++p) { if (*p == openparen) ++count; else if (*p == closeparen && --count < 0) break; } /* If COUNT is >= 0, there were unmatched opening parens or braces, so we go to the simple case of a variable name such as '$($(a)'. */ if (count < 0) { abeg = expand_argument (beg, p); /* Expand the name. */ beg = abeg; end = strchr (beg, '\0'); } } else /* Advance P to the end of this reference. After we are finished expanding this one, P will be incremented to continue the scan. */ p = end; /* This is not a reference to a built-in function and any variable references inside are now expanded. Is the resultant text a substitution reference? */ colon = lindex (beg, end, ':'); if (colon) { /* This looks like a substitution reference: $(FOO:A=B). */ const char *subst_beg = colon + 1; const char *subst_end = lindex (subst_beg, end, '='); if (subst_end == 0) /* There is no = in sight. Punt on the substitution reference and treat this as a variable name containing a colon, in the code below. */ colon = 0; else { const char *replace_beg = subst_end + 1; const char *replace_end = end; /* Extract the variable name before the colon and look up that variable. */ v = lookup_variable (beg, colon - beg); if (v == 0) warn_undefined (beg, colon - beg); /* If the variable is not empty, perform the substitution. */ if (v != 0 && *v->value != '\0') { char *pattern, *replace, *ppercent, *rpercent; char *value = (v->recursive ? recursively_expand (v) : v->value); /* Copy the pattern and the replacement. Add in an extra % at the beginning to use in case there isn't one in the pattern. */ pattern = alloca (subst_end - subst_beg + 2); *(pattern++) = '%'; memcpy (pattern, subst_beg, subst_end - subst_beg); pattern[subst_end - subst_beg] = '\0'; replace = alloca (replace_end - replace_beg + 2); *(replace++) = '%'; memcpy (replace, replace_beg, replace_end - replace_beg); replace[replace_end - replace_beg] = '\0'; /* Look for %. Set the percent pointers properly based on whether we find one or not. */ ppercent = find_percent (pattern); if (ppercent) { ++ppercent; rpercent = find_percent (replace); if (rpercent) ++rpercent; } else { ppercent = pattern; rpercent = replace; --pattern; --replace; } o = patsubst_expand_pat (o, value, pattern, replace, ppercent, rpercent); if (v->recursive) free (value); } } } if (colon == 0) /* This is an ordinary variable reference. Look up the value of the variable. */ o = reference_variable (o, beg, end - beg); free (abeg); } break; case '\0': break; default: if (isblank ((unsigned char)p[-1])) break; /* A $ followed by a random char is a variable reference: $a is equivalent to $(a). */ o = reference_variable (o, p, 1); break; } if (*p == '\0') break; ++p; } free (save); variable_buffer_output (o, "", 1); return (variable_buffer + line_offset); } /* Scan LINE for variable references and expansion-function calls. Build in 'variable_buffer' the result of expanding the references and calls. Return the address of the resulting string, which is null-terminated and is valid only until the next time this function is called. */ char * variable_expand (const char *line) { return variable_expand_string (NULL, line, (long)-1); } /* Expand an argument for an expansion function. The text starting at STR and ending at END is variable-expanded into a null-terminated string that is returned as the value. This is done without clobbering 'variable_buffer' or the current variable-expansion that is in progress. */ char * expand_argument (const char *str, const char *end) { char *tmp, *alloc = NULL; char *r; if (str == end) return xstrdup (""); if (!end || *end == '\0') return allocated_variable_expand (str); if (end - str + 1 > 1000) tmp = alloc = xmalloc (end - str + 1); else tmp = alloca (end - str + 1); memcpy (tmp, str, end - str); tmp[end - str] = '\0'; r = allocated_variable_expand (tmp); free (alloc); return r; } /* Expand LINE for FILE. Error messages refer to the file and line where FILE's commands were found. Expansion uses FILE's variable set list. */ char * variable_expand_for_file (const char *line, struct file *file) { char *result; struct variable_set_list *savev; const gmk_floc *savef; if (file == 0) return variable_expand (line); savev = current_variable_set_list; current_variable_set_list = file->variables; savef = reading_file; if (file->cmds && file->cmds->fileinfo.filenm) reading_file = &file->cmds->fileinfo; else reading_file = 0; result = variable_expand (line); current_variable_set_list = savev; reading_file = savef; return result; } /* Like allocated_variable_expand, but for += target-specific variables. First recursively construct the variable value from its appended parts in any upper variable sets. Then expand the resulting value. */ static char * variable_append (const char *name, unsigned int length, const struct variable_set_list *set, int local) { const struct variable *v; char *buf = 0; /* If this set is local and the next is not a parent, then next is local. */ int nextlocal = local && set->next_is_parent == 0; /* If there's nothing left to check, return the empty buffer. */ if (!set) return initialize_variable_output (); /* Try to find the variable in this variable set. */ v = lookup_variable_in_set (name, length, set->set); /* If there isn't one, or this one is private, try the set above us. */ if (!v || (!local && v->private_var)) return variable_append (name, length, set->next, nextlocal); /* If this variable type is append, first get any upper values. If not, initialize the buffer. */ if (v->append) buf = variable_append (name, length, set->next, nextlocal); else buf = initialize_variable_output (); /* Append this value to the buffer, and return it. If we already have a value, first add a space. */ if (buf > variable_buffer) buf = variable_buffer_output (buf, " ", 1); /* Either expand it or copy it, depending. */ if (! v->recursive) return variable_buffer_output (buf, v->value, strlen (v->value)); buf = variable_expand_string (buf, v->value, strlen (v->value)); return (buf + strlen (buf)); } static char * allocated_variable_append (const struct variable *v) { char *val; /* Construct the appended variable value. */ char *obuf = variable_buffer; unsigned int olen = variable_buffer_length; variable_buffer = 0; val = variable_append (v->name, strlen (v->name), current_variable_set_list, 1); variable_buffer_output (val, "", 1); val = variable_buffer; variable_buffer = obuf; variable_buffer_length = olen; return val; } /* Like variable_expand_for_file, but the returned string is malloc'd. This function is called a lot. It wants to be efficient. */ char * allocated_variable_expand_for_file (const char *line, struct file *file) { char *value; char *obuf = variable_buffer; unsigned int olen = variable_buffer_length; variable_buffer = 0; value = variable_expand_for_file (line, file); variable_buffer = obuf; variable_buffer_length = olen; return value; } /* Install a new variable_buffer context, returning the current one for safe-keeping. */ void install_variable_buffer (char **bufp, unsigned int *lenp) { *bufp = variable_buffer; *lenp = variable_buffer_length; variable_buffer = 0; initialize_variable_output (); } /* Restore a previously-saved variable_buffer setting (free the current one). */ void restore_variable_buffer (char *buf, unsigned int len) { free (variable_buffer); variable_buffer = buf; variable_buffer_length = len; }