#!perl -w use strict; use Pod::Usage; use Getopt::Std; use Config; $Getopt::Std::STANDARD_HELP_VERSION = 1; my $trysource = "try.c"; my $tryout = "try.i"; getopts('fF:ekvI:X', \my %opt) or pod2usage(); my($expr, @headers) = @ARGV ? splice @ARGV : "-"; pod2usage "-f and -F are exclusive\n" if $opt{f} and $opt{F}; foreach($trysource, $tryout) { unlink $_ if $opt{e}; die "You already have a $_" if -e $_; } if ($expr eq '-') { warn "reading from stdin...\n"; $expr = do { local $/; <> }; } my($macro, $args) = $expr =~ /^\s*(\w+)((?:\s*\(.*\))?)\s*;?\s*$/s or pod2usage "$expr doesn't look like a macro-name or macro-expression to me"; if (!(@ARGV = @headers)) { open my $fh, '<', 'MANIFEST' or die "Can't open MANIFEST: $!"; while (<$fh>) { push @ARGV, $1 if m!^([^/]+\.h)\t!; } push @ARGV, 'config.h' if -f 'config.h'; } my $header; while (<>) { next unless /^#\s*define\s+$macro\b/; my ($def_args) = /^#\s*define\s+$macro\(([^)]*)\)/; if (defined $def_args && !$args) { my @args = split ',', $def_args; print "# macro: $macro args: @args in $_\n" if $opt{v}; my $argname = "A0"; $args = '(' . join (', ', map {$argname++} 1..@args) . ')'; } $header = $ARGV; last; } die "$macro not found\n" unless defined $header; if ($^O =~ /MSWin(32|64)/) { # The Win32 (and Win64) build process expects to be run from # bleadperl/Win32 chdir "Win32" or die "Couldn't chdir to win32: $!"; }; open my $out, '>', $trysource or die "Can't open $trysource: $!"; my $sentinel = "$macro expands to"; my %done_header; sub do_header { my $header = shift; return if $done_header{$header}++; print $out qq{#include "$header"\n}; } print $out <<'EOF' if $opt{X}; /* Need to do this like this, as cflags.sh sets it for us come what may. */ #undef PERL_CORE EOF do_header('EXTERN.h'); do_header('perl.h'); do_header($header); do_header('XSUB.h') if $opt{X}; print $out <<"EOF"; #line 4 "$sentinel" $macro$args EOF close $out or die "Can't close $trysource: $!"; print "doing: $Config{make} $tryout\n" if $opt{v}; my $cmd = "$Config{make} $tryout"; system( $cmd ) == 0 or die "Couldn't launch [$cmd]: $! / $?"; # if user wants 'indent' formatting .. my $out_fh; if ($opt{f} || $opt{F}) { # a: indent is a well behaved filter when given 0 arguments, reading from # stdin and writing to stdout # b: all our braces should be balanced, indented back to column 0, in the # headers, hence everything before our #line directive can be ignored # # We can take advantage of this to reduce the work to indent. my $indent_command = $opt{f} ? 'indent' : $opt{F}; if (defined $opt{I}) { $indent_command .= " $opt{I}"; } open $out_fh, '|-', $indent_command or die $?; } else { $out_fh = \*STDOUT; } { open my $fh, '<', $tryout or die "Can't open $tryout: $!"; while (<$fh>) { print $out_fh $_ if /$sentinel/o .. 1; } }; unless ($opt{k}) { foreach($trysource, $tryout) { die "Can't unlink $_: $!" unless unlink $_; } } __END__ =head1 NAME expand-macro.pl - expand C macros using the C preprocessor =head1 SYNOPSIS expand-macro.pl [options] [ < macro-name | macro-expression | - > [headers] ] options: -f use 'indent' to format output -F use to format output (instead of -f) -e erase try.[ic] instead of failing when they're present (errdetect) -k keep them after generating (for handy inspection) -v verbose -I passed into indent -X include "XSUB.h" (and undefine PERL_CORE) =cut