#!/usr/bin/env perl # # Copyright (C) 2022-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc. # Contributed by Arsen Arsenović. # # This script 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, or (at your option) # any later version. # This script reads program output on STDIN, and out of it produces a block of # dg-output lines that can be yanked at the end of a file. It will escape # special ARE and Tcl constructs automatically. # # Each argument passed on the standard input is treated as a string to be # replaced by ``.*'' in the final result. This is intended to mask out build # paths, filenames, etc. # # Usage example: # $ g++-13 -fcontracts -o test \ # 'g++.dg/contracts/contracts-access1.C' && \ # ./test |& dg-out-generator.pl 'g++.dg/contracts/contracts-access1.C' # // { dg-output {contract violation in function Base::b at .*:11: pub > 0(\n|\r\n|\r)} } # // { dg-output {\[level:default, role:default, continuation mode:never\](\n|\r\n|\r)} } # // { dg-output {terminate called without an active exception(\n|\r\n|\r)} } # You can now freely dump the above into your testcase. use strict; use warnings; use POSIX 'floor'; my $escapees = '(' . join ('|', map { quotemeta } @ARGV) . ')'; sub gboundary($) { my $str = shift; my $sz = 10.0; for (;;) { my $bnd = join '', (map chr 64 + rand 27, 1 .. floor $sz); return $bnd unless index ($str, $bnd) >= 0; $sz += 0.1; } } while () { # Escape our escapees. my $boundary; if (@ARGV) { # Checking this is necessary to avoid a spurious .* between all # characters if no arguments are passed. $boundary = gboundary $_; s/$escapees/$boundary/g; } # Quote stuff special in Tcl ARE. This step also effectively nulls any # concern about escaping. As long as all curly braces are escaped, the # string will, when passing through the braces rule of Tcl, be identical to # the input. s/([[\]*+?{}()\\])/\\$1/g; # Newlines should be more tolerant. s/\n$/(\\n|\\r\\n|\\r)/; # Then split out the boundary, replacing it with .*. s/$boundary/.*/g if defined $boundary; # Then, let's print it in a dg-output block. If you'd prefer /* keep in # mind that if your string contains */ it could terminate the comment # early. Maybe add an extra s!\*/!*()/!g or something. print "// { dg-output {$_} }\n"; } # File Local Vars: # indent-tabs-mode: nil # End: