235 lines
9.3 KiB
Makefile
235 lines
9.3 KiB
Makefile
# $NetBSD: varmod-loop.mk,v 1.21 2022/08/23 21:13:46 rillig Exp $
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#
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# Tests for the :@var@...${var}...@ variable modifier.
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# Force the test results to be independent of the default value of this
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# setting, which is 'yes' for NetBSD's usr.bin/make but 'no' for the bmake
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# distribution and pkgsrc/devel/bmake.
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.MAKE.SAVE_DOLLARS= yes
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all: varname-overwriting-target
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all: mod-loop-dollar
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varname-overwriting-target:
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# Even "@" works as a variable name since the variable is installed
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# in the "current" scope, which in this case is the one from the
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# target. Because of this, after the loop has finished, '$@' is
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# undefined. This is something that make doesn't expect, this may
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# even trigger an assertion failure somewhere.
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@echo :$@: :${:U1 2 3:@\@@x${@}y@}: :$@:
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# Demonstrate that it is possible to generate dollar signs using the
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# :@ modifier.
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#
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# These are edge cases that could have resulted in a parse error as well
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# since the $@ at the end could have been interpreted as a variable, which
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# would mean a missing closing @ delimiter.
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mod-loop-dollar:
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@echo $@:${:U1:@word@${word}$@:Q}:
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@echo $@:${:U2:@word@$${word}$$@:Q}:
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@echo $@:${:U3:@word@$$${word}$$$@:Q}:
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@echo $@:${:U4:@word@$$$${word}$$$$@:Q}:
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@echo $@:${:U5:@word@$$$$${word}$$$$$@:Q}:
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@echo $@:${:U6:@word@$$$$$${word}$$$$$$@:Q}:
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# It may happen that there are nested :@ modifiers that use the same name for
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# for the loop variable. These modifiers influence each other.
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#
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# As of 2020-10-18, the :@ modifier is implemented by actually setting a
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# variable in the scope of the expression and deleting it again after the
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# loop. This is different from the .for loops, which substitute the variable
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# expression with ${:Uvalue}, leading to different unwanted side effects.
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#
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# To make the behavior more predictable, the :@ modifier should restore the
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# loop variable to the value it had before the loop. This would result in
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# the string "1a b c1 2a b c2 3a b c3", making the two loops independent.
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.if ${:U1 2 3:@i@$i${:Ua b c:@i@$i@}${i:Uu}@} != "1a b cu 2a b cu 3a b cu"
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. error
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.endif
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# During the loop, the variable is actually defined and nonempty.
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# If the loop were implemented in the same way as the .for loop, the variable
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# would be neither defined nor nonempty since all expressions of the form
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# ${var} would have been replaced with ${:Uword} before evaluating them.
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.if defined(var)
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. error
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.endif
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.if ${:Uword:@var@${defined(var):?def:undef} ${empty(var):?empty:nonempty}@} \
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!= "def nonempty"
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. error
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.endif
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.if defined(var)
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. error
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.endif
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# Assignment using the ':=' operator, combined with the :@var@ modifier
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#
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8_DOLLARS= $$$$$$$$
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# This string literal is written with 8 dollars, and this is saved as the
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# variable value. But as soon as this value is evaluated, it goes through
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# Var_Subst, which replaces each '$$' with a single '$'. This could be
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# prevented by VARE_EVAL_KEEP_DOLLAR, but that flag is usually removed
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# before expanding subexpressions. See ApplyModifier_Loop and
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# ParseModifierPart for examples.
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#
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.MAKEFLAGS: -dcp
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USE_8_DOLLARS= ${:U1:@var@${8_DOLLARS}@} ${8_DOLLARS} $$$$$$$$
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.if ${USE_8_DOLLARS} != "\$\$\$\$ \$\$\$\$ \$\$\$\$"
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. error
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.endif
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#
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SUBST_CONTAINING_LOOP:= ${USE_8_DOLLARS}
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# The ':=' assignment operator evaluates the variable value using the mode
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# VARE_KEEP_DOLLAR_UNDEF, which means that some dollar signs are preserved,
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# but not all. The dollar signs in the top-level expression and in the
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# indirect ${8_DOLLARS} are preserved.
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#
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# The variable modifier :@var@ does not preserve the dollar signs though, no
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# matter in which context it is evaluated. What happens in detail is:
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# First, the modifier part "${8_DOLLARS}" is parsed without expanding it.
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# Next, each word of the value is expanded on its own, and at this moment
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# in ApplyModifier_Loop, the flag keepDollar is not passed down to
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# ModifyWords, resulting in "$$$$" for the first word of USE_8_DOLLARS.
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#
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# The remaining words of USE_8_DOLLARS are not affected by any variable
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# modifier and are thus expanded with the flag keepDollar in action.
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# The variable SUBST_CONTAINING_LOOP therefore gets assigned the raw value
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# "$$$$ $$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$".
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#
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# The variable expression in the condition then expands this raw stored value
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# once, resulting in "$$ $$$$ $$$$". The effects from VARE_KEEP_DOLLAR no
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# longer take place since they had only been active during the evaluation of
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# the variable assignment.
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.if ${SUBST_CONTAINING_LOOP} != "\$\$ \$\$\$\$ \$\$\$\$"
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. error
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.endif
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.MAKEFLAGS: -d0
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# After looping over the words of the expression, the loop variable gets
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# undefined. The modifier ':@' uses an ordinary global variable for this,
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# which is different from the '.for' loop, which replaces ${var} with
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# ${:Uvalue} in the body of the loop. This choice of implementation detail
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# can be used for a nasty side effect. The expression ${:U:@VAR@@} evaluates
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# to an empty string, plus it undefines the variable 'VAR'. This is the only
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# possibility to undefine a global variable during evaluation.
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GLOBAL= before-global
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RESULT:= ${:U${GLOBAL} ${:U:@GLOBAL@@} ${GLOBAL:Uundefined}}
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.if ${RESULT} != "before-global undefined"
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. error
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.endif
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# The above side effect of undefining a variable from a certain scope can be
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# further combined with the otherwise undocumented implementation detail that
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# the argument of an '.if' directive is evaluated in cmdline scope. Putting
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# these together makes it possible to undefine variables from the cmdline
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# scope, something that is not possible in a straight-forward way.
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.MAKEFLAGS: CMDLINE=cmdline
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.if ${:U${CMDLINE}${:U:@CMDLINE@@}} != "cmdline"
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. error
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.endif
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# Now the cmdline variable got undefined.
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.if ${CMDLINE} != "cmdline"
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. error
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.endif
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# At this point, it still looks as if the cmdline variable were defined,
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# since the value of CMDLINE is still "cmdline". That impression is only
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# superficial though, the cmdline variable is actually deleted. To
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# demonstrate this, it is now possible to override its value using a global
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# variable, something that was not possible before:
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CMDLINE= global
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.if ${CMDLINE} != "global"
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. error
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.endif
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# Now undefine that global variable again, to get back to the original value.
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.undef CMDLINE
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.if ${CMDLINE} != "cmdline"
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. error
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.endif
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# What actually happened is that when CMDLINE was set by the '.MAKEFLAGS'
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# target in the cmdline scope, that same variable was exported to the
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# environment, see Var_SetWithFlags.
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.unexport CMDLINE
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.if ${CMDLINE} != "cmdline"
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. error
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.endif
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# The above '.unexport' has no effect since UnexportVar requires a global
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# variable of the same name to be defined, otherwise nothing is unexported.
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CMDLINE= global
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.unexport CMDLINE
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.undef CMDLINE
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.if ${CMDLINE} != "cmdline"
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. error
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.endif
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# This still didn't work since there must not only be a global variable, the
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# variable must be marked as exported as well, which it wasn't before.
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CMDLINE= global
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.export CMDLINE
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.unexport CMDLINE
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.undef CMDLINE
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.if ${CMDLINE:Uundefined} != "undefined"
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. error
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.endif
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# Finally the variable 'CMDLINE' from the cmdline scope is gone, and all its
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# traces from the environment are gone as well. To do that, a global variable
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# had to be defined and exported, something that is far from obvious. To
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# recap, here is the essence of the above story:
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.MAKEFLAGS: CMDLINE=cmdline # have a cmdline + environment variable
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.if ${:U:@CMDLINE@@}} # undefine cmdline, keep environment
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.endif
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CMDLINE= global # needed for deleting the environment
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.export CMDLINE # needed for deleting the environment
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.unexport CMDLINE # delete the environment
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.undef CMDLINE # delete the global helper variable
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.if ${CMDLINE:Uundefined} != "undefined"
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. error # 'CMDLINE' is gone now from all scopes
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.endif
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# In the loop body text of the ':@' modifier, a literal '$' is written as '$$',
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# not '\$'. In the following example, each '$$' turns into a single '$',
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# except for '$i', which is replaced with the then-current value '1' of the
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# iteration variable.
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#
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# XXX: was broken in var.c 1.1028 from 2022-08-08, reverted in var.c 1.1029
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# from 2022-08-23; see parse-var.mk, keyword 'BRACE_GROUP'.
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all: varmod-loop-literal-dollar
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varmod-loop-literal-dollar: .PHONY
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: ${:U1:@i@ t=$$(( $${t:-0} + $i ))@}
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# When parsing the loop body, each '\$', '\@' and '\\' is unescaped to '$',
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# '@' and '\'; all other backslashes are retained.
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#
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# In practice, the '$' is not escaped as '\$', as there is a second round of
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# unescaping '$$' to '$' later when the loop body is expanded after setting the
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# iteration variable.
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#
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# After the iteration variable has been set, the loop body is expanded with
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# this unescaping, regardless of whether .MAKE.SAVE_DOLLARS is set or not:
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# $$ a literal '$'
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# $x, ${var}, $(var) a nested expression
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# any other character itself
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all: escape-modifier
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escape-modifier: .PHONY
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# In the first round, '\$ ' is unescaped to '$ ', and since the
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# variable named ' ' is not defined, the expression '$ ' expands to an
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# empty string.
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# expect: : dollar=end
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: ${:U1:@i@ dollar=\$ end@}
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# Like in other modifiers, '\ ' is preserved, since ' ' is not one of
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# the characters that _must_ be escaped.
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# expect: : backslash=\ end
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: ${:U1:@i@ backslash=\ end@}
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# expect: : dollar=$ at=@ backslash=\ end
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: ${:U1:@i@ dollar=\$\$ at=\@ backslash=\\ end@}
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# expect: : dollar=$$ at=@@ backslash=\\ end
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: ${:U1:@i@ dollar=\$\$\$\$ at=\@\@ backslash=\\\\ end@}
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# expect: : dollar=$$ at=@@ backslash=\\ end
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: ${:U1:@i@ dollar=$$$$ at=\@\@ backslash=\\\\ end@}
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all: .PHONY
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