# $NetBSD: varmod-match.mk,v 1.5 2020/09/13 05:36:26 rillig Exp $ # # Tests for the :M variable modifier, which filters words that match the # given pattern. # # See ApplyModifier_Match and ModifyWord_Match for the implementation. .MAKEFLAGS: -dc NUMBERS= One Two Three Four five six seven # Only keep words that start with an uppercase letter. .if ${NUMBERS:M[A-Z]*} != "One Two Three Four" . error .endif # Only keep words that start with a character other than an uppercase letter. .if ${NUMBERS:M[^A-Z]*} != "five six seven" . error .endif # Only keep words that don't start with s and at the same time end with # either of [ex]. # # This test case ensures that the negation from the first character class # does not propagate to the second character class. .if ${NUMBERS:M[^s]*[ex]} != "One Three five" . error .endif # Before 2020-06-13, this expression took quite a long time in Str_Match, # calling itself 601080390 times for 16 asterisks. .if ${:U****************:M****************b} .endif # To match a dollar sign in a word, double it. # # This is different from the :S and :C variable modifiers, where a '$' # has to be escaped as '\$'. .if ${:Ua \$ sign:M*$$*} != "\$" . error .endif # In the :M modifier, '\$' does not escape a dollar. Instead it is # interpreted as a backslash followed by whatever expression the # '$' starts. # # This differs from the :S, :C and several other variable modifiers. ${:U*}= asterisk .if ${:Ua \$ sign any-asterisk:M*\$*} != "any-asterisk" . error .endif all: @:;