#!/usr/bin/perl # Check that the various config.sh-clones have (at least) all the # same symbols as the top-level config_h.SH so that the (potentially) # needed symbols are not lagging after how Configure thinks the world # is laid out. # # VMS is probably not handled properly here, due to their own # rather elaborate DCL scripting. # use strict; use warnings; use autodie; sub usage { my $err = shift and select STDERR; print "usage: $0 [--list] [--regen] [--default=value]\n"; exit $err; } # usage use Getopt::Long; my $opt_l = 0; my $opt_r = 0; my $default; my $tap = 0; my $test; GetOptions ( "help|?" => sub { usage (0); }, "l|list!" => \$opt_l, "regen" => \$opt_r, "default=s" => \$default, "tap" => \$tap, ) or usage (1); $default and $default =~ s/^'(.*)'$/$1/; # Will be quoted on generation require './regen/regen_lib.pl' if $opt_r; my $MASTER_CFG = "config_h.SH"; # Inclusive bounds on the main part of the file, $section == 1 below: my $first = qr/^Author=/; my $last = qr/^zip=/; my @CFG = ( # we check from MANIFEST whether they are expected to be present. # We can't base our check on $], because that's the version of the # perl that we are running, not the version of the source tree. "Cross/config.sh-arm-linux", "Cross/config.sh-arm-linux-n770", "NetWare/config.wc", "symbian/config.sh", "uconfig.sh", "uconfig64.sh", "plan9/config_sh.sample", "win32/config.gc", "win32/config.vc", "configure.com", "Porting/config.sh", ); my @MASTER_CFG; { my %seen; open my $fh, '<', $MASTER_CFG; while (<$fh>) { while (/[^\\]\$([a-z]\w+)/g) { my $v = $1; next if $v =~ /^(CONFIG_H|CONFIG_SH)$/; $seen{$v}++; } } close $fh; @MASTER_CFG = sort keys %seen; } my %MANIFEST; { open my $fh, '<', 'MANIFEST'; while (<$fh>) { $MANIFEST{$1}++ if /^(.+?)\t/; } close $fh; } printf "1..%d\n", 2 * @CFG if $tap; for my $cfg (sort @CFG) { unless (exists $MANIFEST{$cfg}) { print STDERR "[skipping not-expected '$cfg']\n"; next; } my %cfg; my $section = 0; my @lines; open my $fh, '<', $cfg; if ($cfg eq 'configure.com') { ++$cfg{startperl}; # Cheat. while (<$fh>) { next if /^\#/ || /^\s*$/ || /^\:/; s/(\s*!.*|\s*)$//; # remove trailing comments or whitespace ++$cfg{$1} if /^\$\s+WC "(\w+)='(?:.*)'"$/; } } else { while (<$fh>) { if ($_ =~ $first) { die "$cfg:$.:section=$section:$_" unless $section == 0; $section = 1; } push @{$lines[$section]}, $_; next if /^\#/ || /^\s*$/ || /^\:/; if ($_ =~ $last) { die "$cfg:$.:section=$section:$_" unless $section == 1; $section = 2; } # foo='bar' # foo=bar # (optionally with a trailing comment) if (/^(\w+)=(?:'.*'|[^'].*)(?: #.*)?$/) { ++$cfg{$1}; } else { warn "$cfg:$.:$_"; } } } close $fh; ++$test; my $missing; if ($cfg eq 'configure.com') { print "ok $test # skip $cfg doesn't need to be sorted\n" if $tap; } elsif (join("", @{$lines[1]}) eq join("", sort @{$lines[1]})) { print "ok $test - $cfg sorted\n" if $tap; } elsif ($tap) { print "not ok $test - $cfg is not sorted\n"; } elsif ($opt_r || $opt_l) { # A reference to an empty array is true, hence this flags the # file for later attention by --regen and --list, even if # nothing is missing. Actual sort and output are done later. $missing = []; } else { print "$cfg: unsorted\n" } for my $v (@MASTER_CFG) { # This only creates a reference in $missing if something is missing: push @$missing, $v unless exists $cfg{$v}; } ++$test; if ($missing) { if ($tap) { print "not ok $test - $cfg missing keys @$missing\n"; } elsif ($opt_l) { # print the name once, however many problems print "$cfg\n"; } elsif ($opt_r && $cfg ne 'configure.com') { if (defined $default) { push @{$lines[1]}, map {"$_='$default'\n"} @$missing; } else { print "$cfg: missing '$_', use --default to add it\n" foreach @$missing; } @{$lines[1]} = sort @{$lines[1]}; my $fh = open_new($cfg); print $fh @{$_} foreach @lines; close_and_rename($fh); } else { print "$cfg: missing '$_'\n" foreach @$missing; } } elsif ($tap) { print "ok $test - $cfg has no missing keys\n"; } }