libtool/config/general.m4sh
2004-10-22 07:58:24 +00:00

323 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext

m4_if([# general.m4sh -- general shell script boiler plate -*- Autoconf -*-
# Written by Gary V. Vaughan <gary@gnu.org>, 2004
# Copyright (C) 2004 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 2 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, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
#
# As a special exception to the GNU General Public License, if you
# distribute this file as part of a program that contains a
# configuration script generated by Autoconf, you may include it under
# the same distribution terms that you use for the rest of that program.
])dnl
: ${CP="cp -f"}
: ${ECHO="echo"}
: ${EGREP="@EGREP@"}
: ${FGREP="@FGREP@"}
: ${GREP="@GREP@"}
: ${LN_S="@LN_S@"}
: ${MAKE="make"}
: ${MKDIR="mkdir"}
: ${MV="mv -f"}
: ${RM="rm -f"}
: ${SED="@SED@"}
: ${Xsed="$SED -e s/^X//"}
# Global variables:
EXIT_SUCCESS=0
EXIT_FAILURE=1
EXIT_MISMATCH=63 # $? = 63 is used to indicate version mismatch to missing.
EXIT_SKIP=77 # $? = 77 is used to indicate a skipped test to automake.
exit_status=$EXIT_SUCCESS
# Make sure IFS has a sensible default
: ${IFS="
"}
dirname="s,/[[^/]]*$,,"
basename="s,^.*/,,g"
# 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:
# In the unlikely event $progname began with a '-', it would play havoc with
# func_echo (imagine progname=-n), so we prepend ./ in that case:
progname=`$ECHO "X$progpath" | $Xsed -e "$basename" -e 's,^-,./-,'`
# Make sure we have an absolute path for reexecution:
case $progpath in
[[\\/]]*|[[A-Za-z]]:\\*) ;;
*[[\\/]]*)
progdir=`$ECHO "X$progpath" | $Xsed -e "$dirname"`
progdir=`cd "$progdir" && pwd`
progpath="$progdir/$progname"
;;
*)
save_IFS="$IFS"
IFS=:
for progdir in $PATH; do
IFS="$save_IFS"
test -x "$progdir/$progname" && break
done
IFS="$save_IFS"
test -n "$progdir" || progdir=`pwd`
progpath="$progdir/$progname"
;;
esac
# Sed substitution that helps us do robust quoting. It backslashifies
# metacharacters that are still active within double-quoted strings.
Xsed="${SED}"' -e 1s/^X//'
sed_quote_subst='s/\([[`"$\\]]\)/\\\1/g'
# Same as above, but do not quote variable references.
double_quote_subst='s/\([["`\\]]\)/\\\1/g'
# Re-`\' parameter expansions in output of double_quote_subst that were
# `\'-ed in input to the same. If an odd number of `\' preceded a '$'
# in input to double_quote_subst, that '$' 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 '$'. `\' that '$'. Note
# that the embedded single quotes serve only to enhance readability.
sed_double_backslash='s/^\(\(''\\\\''\\\\''\)*''\\\\''\)\$/\1\\$/;
s/\([[^\\]]\(''\\\\''\\\\''\)*''\\\\''\)\$/\1\\$/g'
# test EBCDIC or ASCII
case `$ECHO A|tr A '\301'` in
A) # EBCDIC based system
SP2NL="tr '\100' '\n'"
NL2SP="tr '\r\n' '\100\100'"
;;
*) # Assume ASCII based system
SP2NL="tr '\040' '\012'"
NL2SP="tr '\015\012' '\040\040'"
;;
esac
# Standard options:
opt_dry_run=false
opt_help=false
opt_quiet=false
opt_verbose=false
# func_echo arg...
# Echo program name prefixed message, along with the current mode
# name if it has been set yet.
func_echo ()
{
$ECHO "$progname${mode+: }$mode: "${1+"$@"}
}
# func_verbose arg...
# Echo program name prefixed message in verbose mode only.
func_verbose ()
{
$opt_verbose && func_echo ${1+"$@"}
# A bug in bash halts the script if the last line of a function
# fails when set -e is in force, so we need another command to
# work around that:
:
}
# func_error arg...
# Echo program name prefixed message to standard error.
func_error ()
{
$ECHO "$progname${mode+: }$mode: "${1+"$@"} 1>&2
}
# func_warning arg...
# Echo program name prefixed warning message to standard error.
func_warning ()
{
$ECHO "$progname${mode+: }$mode: warning: "${1+"$@"} 1>&2
}
# func_fatal_error arg...
# Echo program name prefixed message to standard error, and exit.
func_fatal_error ()
{
func_error ${1+"$@"}
exit $EXIT_FAILURE
}
# func_fatal_help arg...
# Echo program name prefixed message to standard error, followed by
# a help hint, and exit.
func_fatal_help ()
{
func_error ${1+"$@"}
func_fatal_error "$help"
}
help="Try \`$progname --help' for more information." ## default
# func_grep expression filename
# Check whether EXPRESSION matches any line of FILENAME, without output.
func_grep ()
{
$GREP "$1" "$2" >/dev/null 2>&1
}
# func_mkdir_p directory-path
# Make sure the entire path to DIRECTORY-PATH is available.
func_mkdir_p ()
{
my_directory_path="$1"
my_dir_list=
if test -n "$my_directory_path" && test "$opt_dry_run" != ":"; then
# Protect directory names starting with `-'
case $my_directory_path in
-*) my_directory_path="./$my_directory_path" ;;
esac
# While some portion of DIR does not yet exist...
while test ! -d "$my_directory_path"; do
# ...make a list in topmost first order. Use a colon delimited
# list incase some portion of path contains whitespace.
my_dir_list="$my_directory_path:$my_dir_list"
# If the last portion added has no slash in it, the list is done
case $my_directory_path in */*) ;; *) break ;; esac
# ...otherwise throw away the child directory and loop
my_directory_path=`$ECHO "X$my_directory_path" | $Xsed -e "$dirname"`
done
my_dir_list=`$ECHO "X$my_dir_list" | $Xsed -e 's,:*$,,'`
save_mkdir_p_IFS="$IFS"; IFS=':'
for my_dir in $my_dir_list; do
IFS="$save_mkdir_p_IFS"
# mkdir can fail with a `File exist' error if two processes
# try to create one of the directories concurrently. Don't
# stop in that case!
$MKDIR "$my_dir" 2>/dev/null || :
done
IFS="$save_mkdir_p_IFS"
# Bail out if we (or some other process) failed to create a directory.
test -d "$my_directory_path" || \
func_fatal_error "Failed to create \`$1'"
fi
}
# func_mktempdir
# Make a temporary directory that won't clash with other running
# libtool processes, and avoids race conditions if possible
func_mktempdir ()
{
my_template="${TMPDIR-/tmp}/libtool"
if test "$opt_dry_run" = ":"; then
# Return a directory name, but don't create it in dry-run mode
my_tmpdir="${my_template}-$$"
else
# If mktemp works, use that first and foremost
my_tmpdir=`mktemp -d "${my_template}-XXXXXXXX" 2>/dev/null`
if test ! -d "$my_tmpdir"; then
# Failing that, at least try and use $RANDOM to avoid a race
my_tmpdir="${my_template}-${RANDOM-0}$$"
save_mktempdir_umask=`umask`
umask 0077
$MKDIR "$my_tmpdir"
umask $save_mktempdir_umask
fi
# If we're not in dry-run mode, bomb out on failure
test -d "$my_tmpdir" || \
func_fatal_error "cannot create temporary directory \`$my_tmpdir'"
fi
$ECHO "X$my_tmpdir" | $Xsed
}
# func_quote_for_eval arg
# Aesthetically quote ARG to be evaled later.
func_quote_for_eval ()
{
my_arg=`$ECHO "X$1" | $Xsed -e "$sed_quote_subst"`
case $my_arg in
# Double-quote args containing shell metacharacters to delay
# word splitting, command substitution and and variable
# expansion for a subsequent eval.
# Many Bourne shells cannot handle close brackets correctly
# in scan sets, so we specify it separately.
*[[\@<:@\~\#\^\&\*\(\)\{\}\|\;\<\>\?\'\ \ ]]*|*@:>@*|"")
my_arg="\"$my_arg\""
;;
esac
func_quote_for_eval_result="$my_arg"
}
# func_quote_for_expand arg
# Aesthetically quote ARG to be evaled later; same as above,
# but do not quote variable references.
func_quote_for_expand ()
{
my_arg=`$ECHO "X$1" | $Xsed \
-e "$double_quote_subst" -e "$sed_double_backslash"`
case $my_arg in
# Double-quote args containing shell metacharacters to delay
# word splitting and command substitution for a subsequent eval.
# Many Bourne shells cannot handle close brackets correctly
# in scan sets, so we specify it separately.
*[[\@<:@\~\#\^\&\*\(\)\{\}\|\;\<\>\?\'\ \ ]]*|*@:>@*|"")
my_arg="\"$my_arg\""
;;
esac
func_quote_for_expand_result="$my_arg"
}
# func_show_eval cmd [fail_exp]
# Unless opt_silent is true, then output CMD. Then, if opt_dryrun is
# not true, evaluate CMD. If the evaluation of CMD fails, and FAIL_EXP
# is given, then evaluate it.
func_show_eval ()
{
my_cmd="$1"
my_fail_exp="${2-:}"
${opt_silent-false} || {
func_quote_for_expand "$my_cmd"
eval "func_echo $func_quote_for_expand_result"
}
${opt_dry_run-false} || eval "$my_cmd" || eval "$my_fail_exp"
}