freebsd-dev/usr.bin/unifdef/unifdefall.sh
Tony Finch 3f220dd51a Upgrade unifdef:
* It now knows about the existence of #elif which would have
    caused it to produce incorrect results in some situations.

  * It can now process #if and #elif lines according to the
    values of symbols that are specified on the command line.
    The expression parser is only a simple subset of what C
    allows but it should be sufficient for most real-world
    code (it can cope with everything it finds in xterm).

  * It has an option for printing all of the symbols that might
    control #if processing. The unifdefall script uses this
    option along with cpp -dM to strip all #ifs from a file.

  * It has much larger static limits.

  * It handles nested #ifs much more completely.

There have also been many style improvements: KNF; ANSI function
definitions; all global stuff moved to the top of the file; use
stdbool instead of h0h0bool; const-correctness; err(3) instead
of fprintf(stderr, ...); enum instead of #define; commentary.

I used NetBSD's unifdef as the basis of this since it has received
the most attention over the years.

PR:		37454
Reviewed by:	markm, dwmalone
Approved by:	dwmalone (mentor)
MFC after:	3 weeks
2002-05-15 16:30:28 +00:00

30 lines
793 B
Bash

#!/bin/sh
#
# remove all the #if's from a source file
#
# $dotat: things/unifdefall.sh,v 1.8 2002/05/15 10:31:20 fanf Exp $
# $FreeBSD$
set -e
basename=`basename $0`
tmp=`mktemp -d -t $basename` || exit 2
unifdef -s "$@" | sort | uniq > $tmp/ctrl
cpp -dM "$@" | sort |
sed -Ee 's/^#define[ ]+(.*[^ ])[ ]*$/\1/' > $tmp/hashdefs
sed -Ee 's/^([A-Za-z0-9_]+).*$/\1/' $tmp/hashdefs > $tmp/alldef
comm -23 $tmp/ctrl $tmp/alldef > $tmp/undef
comm -12 $tmp/ctrl $tmp/alldef > $tmp/def
echo unifdef \\ > $tmp/cmd
sed -Ee 's/^(.*)$/-U\1 \\/' $tmp/undef >> $tmp/cmd
while read sym
do sed -Ee '/^('"$sym"')([(][^)]*[)])?([ ]+(.*))?$/!d;s//-D\1=\4/' $tmp/hashdefs
done < $tmp/def |
sed -Ee 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/"/\\"/g;s/^/"/;s/$/" \\/' >> $tmp/cmd
echo '"$@"' >> $tmp/cmd
sh $tmp/cmd "$@"
rm -r $tmp