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case $CONFIG in
'')
if test -f config.sh; then TOP=.;
elif test -f ../config.sh; then TOP=..;
elif test -f ../../config.sh; then TOP=../..;
elif test -f ../../../config.sh; then TOP=../../..;
elif test -f ../../../../config.sh; then TOP=../../../..;
else
echo "Can't find config.sh."; exit 1
fi
. $TOP/config.sh
;;
esac
: This forces SH files to create target in same directory as SH file.
: This is so that make depend always knows where to find SH derivatives.
case "$0" in
*/*) cd `expr X$0 : 'X\(.*\)/'` ;;
esac
echo "Extracting writemain (with variable substitutions)"
: This section of the file will have variable substitutions done on it.
: Move anything that needs config subs from !NO!SUBS! section to !GROK!THIS!.
: Protect any dollar signs and backticks that you do not want interpreted
: by putting a backslash in front. You may delete these comments.
$spitshell >writemain <<!GROK!THIS!
$startsh
!GROK!THIS!
: In the following dollars and backticks do not need the extra backslash.
$spitshell >>writemain <<'!NO!SUBS!'
: This script takes the plain miniperlmain.c and writes out perlmain.c
: which includes all the extensions.
: The command line arguments name extensions to be used.
: E.g.: sh writemain SDBM_File POSIX > perlmain.c
:
args="$*"
if test X"$args" = "X" ; then
cat miniperlmain.c
else
sed '/Do not delete this line--writemain depends on it/q' miniperlmain.c
cat << 'EOP'
#ifdef USE_DYNAMIC_LOADING
boot_DynamicLoader();
#endif
EOP
for ext in $args; do
echo " newXSUB(\"${ext}::bootstrap\", 0, boot_${ext}, file);"
done
echo '}'
fi
!NO!SUBS!
chmod 755 writemain
$eunicefix writemain
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