201 lines
7.2 KiB
Makefile
201 lines
7.2 KiB
Makefile
# $NetBSD: directive-for-escape.mk,v 1.15 2022/01/27 20:15:14 rillig Exp $
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#
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# Test escaping of special characters in the iteration values of a .for loop.
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# These values get expanded later using the :U variable modifier, and this
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# escaping and unescaping must pass all characters and strings effectively
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# unmodified.
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.MAKEFLAGS: -df
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# Even though the .for loops take quotes into account when splitting the
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# string into words, the quotes don't need to be balanced, as of 2020-12-31.
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# This could be considered a bug.
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ASCII= !"\#$$%&'()*+,-./0-9:;<=>?@A-Z[\]_^a-z{|}~
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# XXX: As of 2020-12-31, the '#' is not preserved in the expanded body of
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# the loop. Not only would it need the escaping for the variable modifier
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# ':U' but also the escaping for the line-end comment.
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.for chars in ${ASCII}
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. info ${chars}
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.endfor
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# As of 2020-12-31, using 2 backslashes before be '#' would treat the '#'
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# as comment character. Using 3 backslashes doesn't help either since
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# then the situation is essentially the same as with 1 backslash.
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# This means that a '#' sign cannot be passed in the value of a .for loop
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# at all.
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ASCII.2020-12-31= !"\\\#$$%&'()*+,-./0-9:;<=>?@A-Z[\]_^a-z{|}~
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.for chars in ${ASCII.2020-12-31}
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. info ${chars}
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.endfor
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# Cover the code in ExprLen.
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#
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# XXX: It is unexpected that the variable V gets expanded in the loop body.
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# The double '$$' should intuitively prevent exactly this. Probably nobody
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# was adventurous enough to use literal dollar signs in the values of a .for
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# loop, allowing this edge case to go unnoticed for years.
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#
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# See for.c, function ExprLen.
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V= value
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VALUES= $$ $${V} $${V:=-with-modifier} $$(V) $$(V:=-with-modifier)
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.for i in ${VALUES}
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. info $i
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.endfor
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# Try to cover the code for nested '{}' in ExprLen, without success.
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#
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# The value of the variable VALUES is not meant to be a variable expression.
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# Instead, it is meant to represent literal text, the only escaping mechanism
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# being that each '$' is written as '$$'.
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#
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# The .for loop splits ${VALUES} into 3 words, at the space characters, since
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# the '$$' is an ordinary character and the spaces are not escaped.
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# Word 1 is '${UNDEF:U\$\$'
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# Word 2 is '{{}}'
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# Word 3 is 'end}'
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# The first iteration expands the body of the .for loop to:
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# expect: . info ${:U\${UNDEF\:U\\$\\$}
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# The modifier ':U' unescapes the '\$' to a simple '$'.
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# The modifier ':U' unescapes the '\:' to a simple ':'.
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# The modifier ':U' unescapes the '\\' to a simple '\'.
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# The modifier ':U' resolves the expression '$\' to the word 'backslash', due
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# to the following variable definition.
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${:U\\}= backslash
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# FIXME: There was no expression '$\' in the original text of the previous
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# line, that's a surprise in the parser.
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# The modifier ':U' unescapes the '\$' to a simple '$'.
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# expect+4: ${UNDEF:U\backslash$
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VALUES= $${UNDEF:U\$$\$$ {{}} end}
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# XXX: Where in the code does the '\$\$' get converted into a single '\$'?
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.for i in ${VALUES}
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. info $i
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.endfor
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# Second try to cover the code for nested '{}' in ExprLen.
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#
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# XXX: It is wrong that ExprLen requires the braces to be balanced.
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# Each variable modifier has its own inconsistent way of parsing nested
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# variable expressions, braces and parentheses. (Compare ':M', ':S', and
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# ':D' for details.) The only sensible thing to do is therefore to let
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# Var_Parse do all the parsing work.
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VALUES= begin<$${UNDEF:Ufallback:N{{{}}}}>end
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.for i in ${VALUES}
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. info $i
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.endfor
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# A single trailing dollar doesn't happen in practice.
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# The dollar sign is correctly passed through to the body of the .for loop.
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# There, it is expanded by the .info directive, but even there a trailing
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# dollar sign is kept as-is.
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.for i in ${:U\$}
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. info ${i}
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.endfor
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# As of 2020-12-31, the name of the iteration variable can even contain
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# colons, which then affects variable expressions having this exact modifier.
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# This is clearly an unintended side effect of the implementation.
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NUMBERS= one two three
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.for NUMBERS:M*e in replaced
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. info ${NUMBERS} ${NUMBERS:M*e}
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.endfor
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# As of 2020-12-31, the name of the iteration variable can contain braces,
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# which gets even more surprising than colons, since it allows to replace
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# sequences of variable expressions. There is no practical use case for
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# this, though.
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BASENAME= one
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EXT= .c
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.for BASENAME}${EXT in replaced
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. info ${BASENAME}${EXT}
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.endfor
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# Demonstrate the various ways to refer to the iteration variable.
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i= outer
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i2= two
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i,= comma
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.for i in inner
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. info . $$i: $i
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. info . $${i}: ${i}
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. info . $${i:M*}: ${i:M*}
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. info . $$(i): $(i)
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. info . $$(i:M*): $(i:M*)
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. info . $${i$${:U}}: ${i${:U}}
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. info . $${i\}}: ${i\}} # XXX: unclear why ForLoop_SubstVarLong needs this
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. info . $${i2}: ${i2}
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. info . $${i,}: ${i,}
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. info . adjacent: $i${i}${i:M*}$i
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.endfor
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# The variable name can be a single '$' since there is no check on valid
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# variable names. ForLoop_SubstVarShort skips "stupid" variable names though,
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# but ForLoop_SubstVarLong naively parses the body of the loop, substituting
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# each '${$}' with an actual 'dollar'.
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.for $ in dollar
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. info eight $$$$$$$$ and no cents.
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. info eight ${$}${$}${$}${$} and no cents.
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.endfor
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# Outside a .for loop, '${$}' is interpreted differently. The outer '$' starts
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# a variable expression. The inner '$' is followed by a '}' and is thus a
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# silent syntax error, the '$' is skipped. The variable name is thus '', and
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# since since there is never a variable named '', the whole expression '${$}'
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# evaluates to an empty string.
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closing-brace= } # guard against an
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${closing-brace}= <closing-brace> # alternative interpretation
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.info eight ${$}${$}${$}${$} and no cents.
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# What happens if the values from the .for loop contain a literal newline?
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# Before for.c 1.144 from 2021-06-25, the newline was passed verbatim to the
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# body of the .for loop, where it was then interpreted as a literal newline,
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# leading to syntax errors such as "Unclosed variable expression" in the upper
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# line and "Invalid line type" in the lower line.
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.for i in "${.newline}"
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. info short: $i
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. info long: ${i}
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.endfor
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# No error since the newline character is not actually used.
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.for i in "${.newline}"
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.endfor
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# Between for.c 1.161 from 2022-01-08 and before for.c 1.163 from 2022-01-09,
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# a newline character in a .for loop led to a crash since at the point where
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# the error message including the stack trace is printed, the body of the .for
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# loop is assembled, and at that point, ForLoop.nextItem had already been
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# advanced.
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.MAKEFLAGS: -dp
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.for i in "${.newline}"
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: $i
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.endfor
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.MAKEFLAGS: -d0
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.MAKEFLAGS: -df
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.for i in \# \\\#
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# $i
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.endfor
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.for i in $$ $$i $$(i) $${i} $$$$ $$$$$$$$ $${:U\$$\$$}
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# $i
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.endfor
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# The expression '${.TARGET}' must be preserved as it is one of the 7 built-in
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# target-local variables. See for.c 1.45 from 2009-01-14.
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.for i in ${.TARGET} $${.TARGET} $$${.TARGET} $$$${.TARGET}
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# $i
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.endfor
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# expect: # ${:U${.TARGET}}
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# XXX: Why does '$' result in the same text as '$$'?
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# expect: # ${:U${.TARGET}}
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# XXX: Why does the '$$' before the '${.TARGET}' lead to an escaped '}'?
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# expect: # ${:U$${.TARGET\}}
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# XXX: Why does '$' result in the same text as '$$'?
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# XXX: Why does the '$$' before the '${.TARGET}' lead to an escaped '}'?
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# expect: # ${:U$${.TARGET\}}
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.for i in ((( {{{ ))) }}}
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# $i
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.endfor
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.MAKEFLAGS: -d0
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all:
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