Alien-Base-Dino
view release on metacpan or search on metacpan
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
# in the command search PATH.
: ${CP="cp -f"}
: ${ECHO="printf %s\n"}
: ${EGREP="$GREP -E"}
: ${FGREP="$GREP -F"}
: ${LN_S="ln -s"}
: ${MAKE="make"}
: ${MKDIR="mkdir"}
: ${MV="mv -f"}
: ${RM="rm -f"}
: ${SHELL="${CONFIG_SHELL-/bin/sh}"}
## -------------------- ##
## Useful sed snippets. ##
## -------------------- ##
sed_dirname='s|/[^/]*$||'
sed_basename='s|^.*/||'
# Sed substitution that helps us do robust quoting. It backslashifies
# metacharacters that are still active within double-quoted strings.
sed_quote_subst='s|\([`"$\\]\)|\\\1|g'
# Same as above, but do not quote variable references.
sed_double_quote_subst='s/\(["`\\]\)/\\\1/g'
# Sed substitution that turns a string into a regex matching for the
# string literally.
sed_make_literal_regex='s|[].[^$\\*\/]|\\&|g'
# Sed substitution that converts a w32 file name or path
# that contains forward slashes, into one that contains
# (escaped) backslashes. A very naive implementation.
sed_naive_backslashify='s|\\\\*|\\|g;s|/|\\|g;s|\\|\\\\|g'
# Re-'\' parameter expansions in output of sed_double_quote_subst that
# were '\'-ed in input to the same. If an odd number of '\' preceded a
# '$' in input to sed_double_quote_subst, that '$' was protected from
# expansion. Since each input '\' is now two '\'s, look for any number
# of runs of four '\'s followed by two '\'s and then a '$'. '\' that '$'.
_G_bs='\\'
_G_bs2='\\\\'
_G_bs4='\\\\\\\\'
_G_dollar='\$'
sed_double_backslash="\
s/$_G_bs4/&\\
/g
s/^$_G_bs2$_G_dollar/$_G_bs&/
s/\\([^$_G_bs]\\)$_G_bs2$_G_dollar/\\1$_G_bs2$_G_bs$_G_dollar/g
s/\n//g"
## ----------------- ##
## Global variables. ##
## ----------------- ##
# Except for the global variables explicitly listed below, the following
# functions in the '^func_' namespace, and the '^require_' namespace
# variables initialised in the 'Resource management' section, sourcing
# this file will not pollute your global namespace with anything
# else. There's no portable way to scope variables in Bourne shell
# though, so actually running these functions will sometimes place
# results into a variable named after the function, and often use
# temporary variables in the '^_G_' namespace. If you are careful to
# avoid using those namespaces casually in your sourcing script, things
# should continue to work as you expect. And, of course, you can freely
# overwrite any of the functions or variables defined here before
# calling anything to customize them.
EXIT_SUCCESS=0
EXIT_FAILURE=1
EXIT_MISMATCH=63 # $? = 63 is used to indicate version mismatch to missing.
EXIT_SKIP=77 # $? = 77 is used to indicate a skipped test to automake.
# Allow overriding, eg assuming that you follow the convention of
# putting '$debug_cmd' at the start of all your functions, you can get
# bash to show function call trace with:
#
# debug_cmd='eval echo "${FUNCNAME[0]} $*" >&2' bash your-script-name
debug_cmd=${debug_cmd-":"}
exit_cmd=:
# By convention, finish your script with:
#
# exit $exit_status
#
# so that you can set exit_status to non-zero if you want to indicate
# something went wrong during execution without actually bailing out at
# the point of failure.
exit_status=$EXIT_SUCCESS
# Work around backward compatibility issue on IRIX 6.5. On IRIX 6.4+, sh
# is ksh but when the shell is invoked as "sh" and the current value of
# the _XPG environment variable is not equal to 1 (one), the special
# positional parameter $0, within a function call, is the name of the
# function.
progpath=$0
# The name of this program.
progname=`$ECHO "$progpath" |$SED "$sed_basename"`
# Make sure we have an absolute progpath for reexecution:
case $progpath in
[\\/]*|[A-Za-z]:\\*) ;;
*[\\/]*)
progdir=`$ECHO "$progpath" |$SED "$sed_dirname"`
progdir=`cd "$progdir" && pwd`
progpath=$progdir/$progname
;;
*)
_G_IFS=$IFS
IFS=${PATH_SEPARATOR-:}
for progdir in $PATH; do
IFS=$_G_IFS
test -x "$progdir/$progname" && break
done
IFS=$_G_IFS
test -n "$progdir" || progdir=`pwd`
progpath=$progdir/$progname
;;
esac
## ----------------- ##
## Standard options. ##
## ----------------- ##
# The following options affect the operation of the functions defined
# below, and should be set appropriately depending on run-time para-
# meters passed on the command line.
opt_dry_run=false
opt_quiet=false
opt_verbose=false
# Categories 'all' and 'none' are always available. Append any others
# you will pass as the first argument to func_warning from your own
# code.
warning_categories=
# By default, display warnings according to 'opt_warning_types'. Set
# 'warning_func' to ':' to elide all warnings, or func_fatal_error to
# treat the next displayed warning as a fatal error.
warning_func=func_warn_and_continue
# Set to 'all' to display all warnings, 'none' to suppress all
# warnings, or a space delimited list of some subset of
# 'warning_categories' to display only the listed warnings.
opt_warning_types=all
## -------------------- ##
## Resource management. ##
## -------------------- ##
# This section contains definitions for functions that each ensure a
# particular resource (a file, or a non-empty configuration variable for
# example) is available, and if appropriate to extract default values
# from pertinent package files. Call them using their associated
# 'require_*' variable to ensure that they are executed, at most, once.
#
# It's entirely deliberate that calling these functions can set
# variables that don't obey the namespace limitations obeyed by the rest
# of this file, in order that that they be as useful as possible to
# callers.
# require_term_colors
# -------------------
# Allow display of bold text on terminals that support it.
require_term_colors=func_require_term_colors
func_require_term_colors ()
{
$debug_cmd
test -t 1 && {
# COLORTERM and USE_ANSI_COLORS environment variables take
# precedence, because most terminfo databases neglect to describe
# whether color sequences are supported.
test -n "${COLORTERM+set}" && : ${USE_ANSI_COLORS="1"}
if test 1 = "$USE_ANSI_COLORS"; then
# Standard ANSI escape sequences
tc_reset='[0m'
tc_bold='[1m'; tc_standout='[7m'
tc_red='[31m'; tc_green='[32m'
tc_blue='[34m'; tc_cyan='[36m'
else
# Otherwise trust the terminfo database after all.
test -n "`tput sgr0 2>/dev/null`" && {
tc_reset=`tput sgr0`
test -n "`tput bold 2>/dev/null`" && tc_bold=`tput bold`
tc_standout=$tc_bold
test -n "`tput smso 2>/dev/null`" && tc_standout=`tput smso`
test -n "`tput setaf 1 2>/dev/null`" && tc_red=`tput setaf 1`
test -n "`tput setaf 2 2>/dev/null`" && tc_green=`tput setaf 2`
test -n "`tput setaf 4 2>/dev/null`" && tc_blue=`tput setaf 4`
test -n "`tput setaf 5 2>/dev/null`" && tc_cyan=`tput setaf 5`
}
fi
}
require_term_colors=:
}
## ----------------- ##
## Function library. ##
## ----------------- ##
# This section contains a variety of useful functions to call in your
# scripts. Take note of the portable wrappers for features provided by
# some modern shells, which will fall back to slower equivalents on
# less featureful shells.
# func_append VAR VALUE
# ---------------------
# Append VALUE onto the existing contents of VAR.
# We should try to minimise forks, especially on Windows where they are
# unreasonably slow, so skip the feature probes when bash or zsh are
# being used:
if test set = "${BASH_VERSION+set}${ZSH_VERSION+set}"; then
: ${_G_HAVE_ARITH_OP="yes"}
: ${_G_HAVE_XSI_OPS="yes"}
# The += operator was introduced in bash 3.1
case $BASH_VERSION in
[12].* | 3.0 | 3.0*) ;;
*)
: ${_G_HAVE_PLUSEQ_OP="yes"}
;;
esac
fi
# _G_HAVE_PLUSEQ_OP
# Can be empty, in which case the shell is probed, "yes" if += is
# useable or anything else if it does not work.
test -z "$_G_HAVE_PLUSEQ_OP" \
&& (eval 'x=a; x+=" b"; test "a b" = "$x"') 2>/dev/null \
&& _G_HAVE_PLUSEQ_OP=yes
if test yes = "$_G_HAVE_PLUSEQ_OP"
then
# This is an XSI compatible shell, allowing a faster implementation...
eval 'func_append ()
{
$debug_cmd
eval "$1+=\$2"
}'
else
# ...otherwise fall back to using expr, which is often a shell builtin.
func_append ()
{
$debug_cmd
eval "$1=\$$1\$2"
}
fi
# func_append_quoted VAR VALUE
# ----------------------------
# Quote VALUE and append to the end of shell variable VAR, separated
# by a space.
if test yes = "$_G_HAVE_PLUSEQ_OP"; then
eval 'func_append_quoted ()
{
$debug_cmd
func_quote_for_eval "$2"
eval "$1+=\\ \$func_quote_for_eval_result"
}'
else
func_append_quoted ()
{
$debug_cmd
func_quote_for_eval "$2"
eval "$1=\$$1\\ \$func_quote_for_eval_result"
}
fi
# func_append_uniq VAR VALUE
# --------------------------
# Append unique VALUE onto the existing contents of VAR, assuming
# entries are delimited by the first character of VALUE. For example:
#
# func_append_uniq options " --another-option option-argument"
#
# will only append to $options if " --another-option option-argument "
# is not already present somewhere in $options already (note spaces at
# each end implied by leading space in second argument).
func_append_uniq ()
{
$debug_cmd
eval _G_current_value='`$ECHO $'$1'`'
_G_delim=`expr "$2" : '\(.\)'`
case $_G_delim$_G_current_value$_G_delim in
*"$2$_G_delim"*) ;;
*) func_append "$@" ;;
esac
}
# func_arith TERM...
# ------------------
# Set func_arith_result to the result of evaluating TERMs.
test -z "$_G_HAVE_ARITH_OP" \
&& (eval 'test 2 = $(( 1 + 1 ))') 2>/dev/null \
&& _G_HAVE_ARITH_OP=yes
if test yes = "$_G_HAVE_ARITH_OP"; then
eval 'func_arith ()
{
$debug_cmd
func_arith_result=$(( $* ))
}'
else
func_arith ()
{
$debug_cmd
func_arith_result=`expr "$@"`
}
fi
# func_basename FILE
# ------------------
# Set func_basename_result to FILE with everything up to and including
# the last / stripped.
if test yes = "$_G_HAVE_XSI_OPS"; then
# If this shell supports suffix pattern removal, then use it to avoid
# forking. Hide the definitions single quotes in case the shell chokes
# on unsupported syntax...
_b='func_basename_result=${1##*/}'
_d='case $1 in
*/*) func_dirname_result=${1%/*}$2 ;;
* ) func_dirname_result=$3 ;;
esac'
else
# ...otherwise fall back to using sed.
_b='func_basename_result=`$ECHO "$1" |$SED "$sed_basename"`'
_d='func_dirname_result=`$ECHO "$1" |$SED "$sed_dirname"`
if test "X$func_dirname_result" = "X$1"; then
func_dirname_result=$3
else
func_append func_dirname_result "$2"
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
# Set a version string for this script.
scriptversion=2014-01-07.03; # UTC
# A portable, pluggable option parser for Bourne shell.
# Written by Gary V. Vaughan, 2010
# Copyright (C) 2010-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
# warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# Please report bugs or propose patches to gary@gnu.org.
## ------ ##
## Usage. ##
## ------ ##
# This file is a library for parsing options in your shell scripts along
# with assorted other useful supporting features that you can make use
# of too.
#
# For the simplest scripts you might need only:
#
# #!/bin/sh
# . relative/path/to/funclib.sh
# . relative/path/to/options-parser
# scriptversion=1.0
# func_options ${1+"$@"}
# eval set dummy "$func_options_result"; shift
# ...rest of your script...
#
# In order for the '--version' option to work, you will need to have a
# suitably formatted comment like the one at the top of this file
# starting with '# Written by ' and ending with '# warranty; '.
#
# For '-h' and '--help' to work, you will also need a one line
# description of your script's purpose in a comment directly above the
# '# Written by ' line, like the one at the top of this file.
#
# The default options also support '--debug', which will turn on shell
# execution tracing (see the comment above debug_cmd below for another
# use), and '--verbose' and the func_verbose function to allow your script
# to display verbose messages only when your user has specified
# '--verbose'.
#
# After sourcing this file, you can plug processing for additional
# options by amending the variables from the 'Configuration' section
# below, and following the instructions in the 'Option parsing'
# section further down.
## -------------- ##
## Configuration. ##
## -------------- ##
# You should override these variables in your script after sourcing this
# file so that they reflect the customisations you have added to the
# option parser.
# The usage line for option parsing errors and the start of '-h' and
# '--help' output messages. You can embed shell variables for delayed
# expansion at the time the message is displayed, but you will need to
# quote other shell meta-characters carefully to prevent them being
# expanded when the contents are evaled.
usage='$progpath [OPTION]...'
# Short help message in response to '-h' and '--help'. Add to this or
# override it after sourcing this library to reflect the full set of
# options your script accepts.
usage_message="\
--debug enable verbose shell tracing
-W, --warnings=CATEGORY
report the warnings falling in CATEGORY [all]
-v, --verbose verbosely report processing
--version print version information and exit
-h, --help print short or long help message and exit
"
# Additional text appended to 'usage_message' in response to '--help'.
long_help_message="
Warning categories include:
'all' show all warnings
'none' turn off all the warnings
'error' warnings are treated as fatal errors"
# Help message printed before fatal option parsing errors.
fatal_help="Try '\$progname --help' for more information."
## ------------------------- ##
## Hook function management. ##
## ------------------------- ##
# This section contains functions for adding, removing, and running hooks
# to the main code. A hook is just a named list of of function, that can
# be run in order later on.
# func_hookable FUNC_NAME
# -----------------------
# Declare that FUNC_NAME will run hooks added with
# 'func_add_hook FUNC_NAME ...'.
func_hookable ()
{
$debug_cmd
func_append hookable_fns " $1"
}
# func_add_hook FUNC_NAME HOOK_FUNC
# ---------------------------------
# Request that FUNC_NAME call HOOK_FUNC before it returns. FUNC_NAME must
# first have been declared "hookable" by a call to 'func_hookable'.
func_add_hook ()
{
$debug_cmd
case " $hookable_fns " in
*" $1 "*) ;;
*) func_fatal_error "'$1' does not accept hook functions." ;;
esac
eval func_append ${1}_hooks '" $2"'
}
# func_remove_hook FUNC_NAME HOOK_FUNC
# ------------------------------------
# Remove HOOK_FUNC from the list of functions called by FUNC_NAME.
func_remove_hook ()
{
$debug_cmd
eval ${1}_hooks='`$ECHO "\$'$1'_hooks" |$SED "s| '$2'||"`'
}
# func_run_hooks FUNC_NAME [ARG]...
# ---------------------------------
# Run all hook functions registered to FUNC_NAME.
# It is assumed that the list of hook functions contains nothing more
# than a whitespace-delimited list of legal shell function names, and
# no effort is wasted trying to catch shell meta-characters or preserve
# whitespace.
func_run_hooks ()
{
$debug_cmd
case " $hookable_fns " in
*" $1 "*) ;;
*) func_fatal_error "'$1' does not support hook funcions.n" ;;
esac
eval _G_hook_fns=\$$1_hooks; shift
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
set dummy "$func_split_equals_lhs" \
"$func_split_equals_rhs" ${1+"$@"}
shift
;;
# Separate optargs to short options:
-W*)
func_split_short_opt "$_G_opt"
set dummy "$func_split_short_opt_name" \
"$func_split_short_opt_arg" ${1+"$@"}
shift
;;
# Separate non-argument short options:
-\?*|-h*|-v*|-x*)
func_split_short_opt "$_G_opt"
set dummy "$func_split_short_opt_name" \
"-$func_split_short_opt_arg" ${1+"$@"}
shift
;;
--) break ;;
-*) func_fatal_help "unrecognised option: '$_G_opt'" ;;
*) set dummy "$_G_opt" ${1+"$@"}; shift; break ;;
esac
done
# save modified positional parameters for caller
func_quote_for_eval ${1+"$@"}
func_parse_options_result=$func_quote_for_eval_result
}
# func_validate_options [ARG]...
# ------------------------------
# Perform any sanity checks on option settings and/or unconsumed
# arguments.
func_hookable func_validate_options
func_validate_options ()
{
$debug_cmd
# Display all warnings if -W was not given.
test -n "$opt_warning_types" || opt_warning_types=" $warning_categories"
func_run_hooks func_validate_options ${1+"$@"}
# Bail if the options were screwed!
$exit_cmd $EXIT_FAILURE
# save modified positional parameters for caller
func_validate_options_result=$func_run_hooks_result
}
## ----------------- ##
## Helper functions. ##
## ----------------- ##
# This section contains the helper functions used by the rest of the
# hookable option parser framework in ascii-betical order.
# func_fatal_help ARG...
# ----------------------
# Echo program name prefixed message to standard error, followed by
# a help hint, and exit.
func_fatal_help ()
{
$debug_cmd
eval \$ECHO \""Usage: $usage"\"
eval \$ECHO \""$fatal_help"\"
func_error ${1+"$@"}
exit $EXIT_FAILURE
}
# func_help
# ---------
# Echo long help message to standard output and exit.
func_help ()
{
$debug_cmd
func_usage_message
$ECHO "$long_help_message"
exit 0
}
# func_missing_arg ARGNAME
# ------------------------
# Echo program name prefixed message to standard error and set global
# exit_cmd.
func_missing_arg ()
{
$debug_cmd
func_error "Missing argument for '$1'."
exit_cmd=exit
}
# func_split_equals STRING
# ------------------------
# Set func_split_equals_lhs and func_split_equals_rhs shell variables after
# splitting STRING at the '=' sign.
test -z "$_G_HAVE_XSI_OPS" \
&& (eval 'x=a/b/c;
test 5aa/bb/cc = "${#x}${x%%/*}${x%/*}${x#*/}${x##*/}"') 2>/dev/null \
&& _G_HAVE_XSI_OPS=yes
if test yes = "$_G_HAVE_XSI_OPS"
then
# This is an XSI compatible shell, allowing a faster implementation...
eval 'func_split_equals ()
{
$debug_cmd
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
-static)
build_libtool_libs=no
build_old_libs=yes
continue
;;
-prefer-pic)
pic_mode=yes
continue
;;
-prefer-non-pic)
pic_mode=no
continue
;;
esac
done
func_quote_for_eval "$libobj"
test "X$libobj" != "X$func_quote_for_eval_result" \
&& $ECHO "X$libobj" | $GREP '[]~#^*{};<>?"'"'"' &()|`$[]' \
&& func_warning "libobj name '$libobj' may not contain shell special characters."
func_dirname_and_basename "$obj" "/" ""
objname=$func_basename_result
xdir=$func_dirname_result
lobj=$xdir$objdir/$objname
test -z "$base_compile" && \
func_fatal_help "you must specify a compilation command"
# Delete any leftover library objects.
if test yes = "$build_old_libs"; then
removelist="$obj $lobj $libobj ${libobj}T"
else
removelist="$lobj $libobj ${libobj}T"
fi
# On Cygwin there's no "real" PIC flag so we must build both object types
case $host_os in
cygwin* | mingw* | pw32* | os2* | cegcc*)
pic_mode=default
;;
esac
if test no = "$pic_mode" && test pass_all != "$deplibs_check_method"; then
# non-PIC code in shared libraries is not supported
pic_mode=default
fi
# Calculate the filename of the output object if compiler does
# not support -o with -c
if test no = "$compiler_c_o"; then
output_obj=`$ECHO "$srcfile" | $SED 's%^.*/%%; s%\.[^.]*$%%'`.$objext
lockfile=$output_obj.lock
else
output_obj=
need_locks=no
lockfile=
fi
# Lock this critical section if it is needed
# We use this script file to make the link, it avoids creating a new file
if test yes = "$need_locks"; then
until $opt_dry_run || ln "$progpath" "$lockfile" 2>/dev/null; do
func_echo "Waiting for $lockfile to be removed"
sleep 2
done
elif test warn = "$need_locks"; then
if test -f "$lockfile"; then
$ECHO "\
*** ERROR, $lockfile exists and contains:
`cat $lockfile 2>/dev/null`
This indicates that another process is trying to use the same
temporary object file, and libtool could not work around it because
your compiler does not support '-c' and '-o' together. If you
repeat this compilation, it may succeed, by chance, but you had better
avoid parallel builds (make -j) in this platform, or get a better
compiler."
$opt_dry_run || $RM $removelist
exit $EXIT_FAILURE
fi
func_append removelist " $output_obj"
$ECHO "$srcfile" > "$lockfile"
fi
$opt_dry_run || $RM $removelist
func_append removelist " $lockfile"
trap '$opt_dry_run || $RM $removelist; exit $EXIT_FAILURE' 1 2 15
func_to_tool_file "$srcfile" func_convert_file_msys_to_w32
srcfile=$func_to_tool_file_result
func_quote_for_eval "$srcfile"
qsrcfile=$func_quote_for_eval_result
# Only build a PIC object if we are building libtool libraries.
if test yes = "$build_libtool_libs"; then
# Without this assignment, base_compile gets emptied.
fbsd_hideous_sh_bug=$base_compile
if test no != "$pic_mode"; then
command="$base_compile $qsrcfile $pic_flag"
else
# Don't build PIC code
command="$base_compile $qsrcfile"
fi
func_mkdir_p "$xdir$objdir"
if test -z "$output_obj"; then
# Place PIC objects in $objdir
func_append command " -o $lobj"
fi
func_show_eval_locale "$command" \
'test -n "$output_obj" && $RM $removelist; exit $EXIT_FAILURE'
if test warn = "$need_locks" &&
test "X`cat $lockfile 2>/dev/null`" != "X$srcfile"; then
$ECHO "\
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
# Just move the object if needed, then go on to compile the next one
if test -n "$output_obj" && test "X$output_obj" != "X$lobj"; then
func_show_eval '$MV "$output_obj" "$lobj"' \
'error=$?; $opt_dry_run || $RM $removelist; exit $error'
fi
# Allow error messages only from the first compilation.
if test yes = "$suppress_opt"; then
suppress_output=' >/dev/null 2>&1'
fi
fi
# Only build a position-dependent object if we build old libraries.
if test yes = "$build_old_libs"; then
if test yes != "$pic_mode"; then
# Don't build PIC code
command="$base_compile $qsrcfile$pie_flag"
else
command="$base_compile $qsrcfile $pic_flag"
fi
if test yes = "$compiler_c_o"; then
func_append command " -o $obj"
fi
# Suppress compiler output if we already did a PIC compilation.
func_append command "$suppress_output"
func_show_eval_locale "$command" \
'$opt_dry_run || $RM $removelist; exit $EXIT_FAILURE'
if test warn = "$need_locks" &&
test "X`cat $lockfile 2>/dev/null`" != "X$srcfile"; then
$ECHO "\
*** ERROR, $lockfile contains:
`cat $lockfile 2>/dev/null`
but it should contain:
$srcfile
This indicates that another process is trying to use the same
temporary object file, and libtool could not work around it because
your compiler does not support '-c' and '-o' together. If you
repeat this compilation, it may succeed, by chance, but you had better
avoid parallel builds (make -j) in this platform, or get a better
compiler."
$opt_dry_run || $RM $removelist
exit $EXIT_FAILURE
fi
# Just move the object if needed
if test -n "$output_obj" && test "X$output_obj" != "X$obj"; then
func_show_eval '$MV "$output_obj" "$obj"' \
'error=$?; $opt_dry_run || $RM $removelist; exit $error'
fi
fi
$opt_dry_run || {
func_write_libtool_object "$libobj" "$objdir/$objname" "$objname"
# Unlock the critical section if it was locked
if test no != "$need_locks"; then
removelist=$lockfile
$RM "$lockfile"
fi
}
exit $EXIT_SUCCESS
}
$opt_help || {
test compile = "$opt_mode" && func_mode_compile ${1+"$@"}
}
func_mode_help ()
{
# We need to display help for each of the modes.
case $opt_mode in
"")
# Generic help is extracted from the usage comments
# at the start of this file.
func_help
;;
clean)
$ECHO \
"Usage: $progname [OPTION]... --mode=clean RM [RM-OPTION]... FILE...
Remove files from the build directory.
RM is the name of the program to use to delete files associated with each FILE
(typically '/bin/rm'). RM-OPTIONS are options (such as '-f') to be passed
to RM.
If FILE is a libtool library, object or program, all the files associated
with it are deleted. Otherwise, only FILE itself is deleted using RM."
;;
compile)
$ECHO \
"Usage: $progname [OPTION]... --mode=compile COMPILE-COMMAND... SOURCEFILE
Compile a source file into a libtool library object.
This mode accepts the following additional options:
-o OUTPUT-FILE set the output file name to OUTPUT-FILE
-no-suppress do not suppress compiler output for multiple passes
-prefer-pic try to build PIC objects only
-prefer-non-pic try to build non-PIC objects only
-shared do not build a '.o' file suitable for static linking
-static only build a '.o' file suitable for static linking
-Wc,FLAG pass FLAG directly to the compiler
COMPILE-COMMAND is a command to be used in creating a 'standard' object file
from the given SOURCEFILE.
The output file name is determined by removing the directory component from
SOURCEFILE, then substituting the C source code suffix '.c' with the
library object suffix, '.lo'."
;;
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
/ I /{
s|.*|import|
p
q
}
}'`
;;
esac
case $win32_nmres in
import*) win32_libid_type="x86 archive import";;
*) win32_libid_type="x86 archive static";;
esac
fi
;;
*DLL*)
win32_libid_type="x86 DLL"
;;
*executable*) # but shell scripts are "executable" too...
case $win32_fileres in
*MS\ Windows\ PE\ Intel*)
win32_libid_type="x86 DLL"
;;
esac
;;
esac
$ECHO "$win32_libid_type"
}
# func_cygming_dll_for_implib ARG
#
# Platform-specific function to extract the
# name of the DLL associated with the specified
# import library ARG.
# Invoked by eval'ing the libtool variable
# $sharedlib_from_linklib_cmd
# Result is available in the variable
# $sharedlib_from_linklib_result
func_cygming_dll_for_implib ()
{
$debug_cmd
sharedlib_from_linklib_result=`$DLLTOOL --identify-strict --identify "$1"`
}
# func_cygming_dll_for_implib_fallback_core SECTION_NAME LIBNAMEs
#
# The is the core of a fallback implementation of a
# platform-specific function to extract the name of the
# DLL associated with the specified import library LIBNAME.
#
# SECTION_NAME is either .idata$6 or .idata$7, depending
# on the platform and compiler that created the implib.
#
# Echos the name of the DLL associated with the
# specified import library.
func_cygming_dll_for_implib_fallback_core ()
{
$debug_cmd
match_literal=`$ECHO "$1" | $SED "$sed_make_literal_regex"`
$OBJDUMP -s --section "$1" "$2" 2>/dev/null |
$SED '/^Contents of section '"$match_literal"':/{
# Place marker at beginning of archive member dllname section
s/.*/====MARK====/
p
d
}
# These lines can sometimes be longer than 43 characters, but
# are always uninteresting
/:[ ]*file format pe[i]\{,1\}-/d
/^In archive [^:]*:/d
# Ensure marker is printed
/^====MARK====/p
# Remove all lines with less than 43 characters
/^.\{43\}/!d
# From remaining lines, remove first 43 characters
s/^.\{43\}//' |
$SED -n '
# Join marker and all lines until next marker into a single line
/^====MARK====/ b para
H
$ b para
b
:para
x
s/\n//g
# Remove the marker
s/^====MARK====//
# Remove trailing dots and whitespace
s/[\. \t]*$//
# Print
/./p' |
# we now have a list, one entry per line, of the stringified
# contents of the appropriate section of all members of the
# archive that possess that section. Heuristic: eliminate
# all those that have a first or second character that is
# a '.' (that is, objdump's representation of an unprintable
# character.) This should work for all archives with less than
# 0x302f exports -- but will fail for DLLs whose name actually
# begins with a literal '.' or a single character followed by
# a '.'.
#
# Of those that remain, print the first one.
$SED -e '/^\./d;/^.\./d;q'
}
# func_cygming_dll_for_implib_fallback ARG
# Platform-specific function to extract the
# name of the DLL associated with the specified
# import library ARG.
#
# This fallback implementation is for use when $DLLTOOL
# does not support the --identify-strict option.
# Invoked by eval'ing the libtool variable
# $sharedlib_from_linklib_cmd
# Result is available in the variable
# $sharedlib_from_linklib_result
func_cygming_dll_for_implib_fallback ()
{
$debug_cmd
if func_cygming_gnu_implib_p "$1"; then
# binutils import library
sharedlib_from_linklib_result=`func_cygming_dll_for_implib_fallback_core '.idata$7' "$1"`
elif func_cygming_ms_implib_p "$1"; then
# ms-generated import library
sharedlib_from_linklib_result=`func_cygming_dll_for_implib_fallback_core '.idata$6' "$1"`
else
# unknown
sharedlib_from_linklib_result=
fi
}
# func_extract_an_archive dir oldlib
func_extract_an_archive ()
{
$debug_cmd
f_ex_an_ar_dir=$1; shift
f_ex_an_ar_oldlib=$1
if test yes = "$lock_old_archive_extraction"; then
lockfile=$f_ex_an_ar_oldlib.lock
until $opt_dry_run || ln "$progpath" "$lockfile" 2>/dev/null; do
func_echo "Waiting for $lockfile to be removed"
sleep 2
done
fi
func_show_eval "(cd \$f_ex_an_ar_dir && $AR x \"\$f_ex_an_ar_oldlib\")" \
'stat=$?; rm -f "$lockfile"; exit $stat'
if test yes = "$lock_old_archive_extraction"; then
$opt_dry_run || rm -f "$lockfile"
fi
if ($AR t "$f_ex_an_ar_oldlib" | sort | sort -uc >/dev/null 2>&1); then
:
else
corpus/libpalindrome/ltmain.sh view on Meta::CPAN
if test ! -f \"\$progdir/\$program\" ||
{ file=\`ls -1dt \"\$progdir/\$program\" \"\$progdir/../\$program\" 2>/dev/null | $SED 1q\`; \\
test \"X\$file\" != \"X\$progdir/\$program\"; }; then
file=\"\$\$-\$program\"
if test ! -d \"\$progdir\"; then
$MKDIR \"\$progdir\"
else
$RM \"\$progdir/\$file\"
fi"
$ECHO "\
# relink executable if necessary
if test -n \"\$relink_command\"; then
if relink_command_output=\`eval \$relink_command 2>&1\`; then :
else
\$ECHO \"\$relink_command_output\" >&2
$RM \"\$progdir/\$file\"
exit 1
fi
fi
$MV \"\$progdir/\$file\" \"\$progdir/\$program\" 2>/dev/null ||
{ $RM \"\$progdir/\$program\";
$MV \"\$progdir/\$file\" \"\$progdir/\$program\"; }
$RM \"\$progdir/\$file\"
fi"
else
$ECHO "\
program='$outputname'
progdir=\"\$thisdir/$objdir\"
"
fi
$ECHO "\
if test -f \"\$progdir/\$program\"; then"
# fixup the dll searchpath if we need to.
#
# Fix the DLL searchpath if we need to. Do this before prepending
# to shlibpath, because on Windows, both are PATH and uninstalled
# libraries must come first.
if test -n "$dllsearchpath"; then
$ECHO "\
# Add the dll search path components to the executable PATH
PATH=$dllsearchpath:\$PATH
"
fi
# Export our shlibpath_var if we have one.
if test yes = "$shlibpath_overrides_runpath" && test -n "$shlibpath_var" && test -n "$temp_rpath"; then
$ECHO "\
# Add our own library path to $shlibpath_var
$shlibpath_var=\"$temp_rpath\$$shlibpath_var\"
# Some systems cannot cope with colon-terminated $shlibpath_var
# The second colon is a workaround for a bug in BeOS R4 sed
$shlibpath_var=\`\$ECHO \"\$$shlibpath_var\" | $SED 's/::*\$//'\`
export $shlibpath_var
"
fi
$ECHO "\
if test \"\$libtool_execute_magic\" != \"$magic\"; then
# Run the actual program with our arguments.
func_exec_program \${1+\"\$@\"}
fi
else
# The program doesn't exist.
\$ECHO \"\$0: error: '\$progdir/\$program' does not exist\" 1>&2
\$ECHO \"This script is just a wrapper for \$program.\" 1>&2
\$ECHO \"See the $PACKAGE documentation for more information.\" 1>&2
exit 1
fi
fi\
"
}
# func_emit_cwrapperexe_src
# emit the source code for a wrapper executable on stdout
# Must ONLY be called from within func_mode_link because
# it depends on a number of variable set therein.
func_emit_cwrapperexe_src ()
{
cat <<EOF
/* $cwrappersource - temporary wrapper executable for $objdir/$outputname
Generated by $PROGRAM (GNU $PACKAGE) $VERSION
The $output program cannot be directly executed until all the libtool
libraries that it depends on are installed.
This wrapper executable should never be moved out of the build directory.
If it is, it will not operate correctly.
*/
EOF
cat <<"EOF"
#ifdef _MSC_VER
# define _CRT_SECURE_NO_DEPRECATE 1
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#ifdef _MSC_VER
# include <direct.h>
# include <process.h>
# include <io.h>
#else
# include <unistd.h>
# include <stdint.h>
# ifdef __CYGWIN__
# include <io.h>
# endif
#endif
#include <malloc.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
( run in 0.548 second using v1.01-cache-2.11-cpan-39bf76dae61 )