1# $NetBSD: varmod-sysv.mk,v 1.16 2023/11/19 21:47:52 rillig Exp $ 2# 3# Tests for the variable modifier ':from=to', which replaces the suffix 4# "from" with "to". It can also use '%' as a wildcard. 5# 6# This modifier is applied when the other modifiers don't match exactly. 7# 8# See ApplyModifier_SysV. 9 10# A typical use case for the modifier ':from=to' is conversion of filename 11# extensions. 12.if ${src.c:L:.c=.o} != "src.o" 13. error 14.endif 15 16# The modifier applies to each word on its own. 17.if ${one.c two.c three.c:L:.c=.o} != "one.o two.o three.o" 18. error 19.endif 20 21# Words that don't match the pattern are passed unmodified. 22.if ${src.c src.h:L:.c=.o} != "src.o src.h" 23. error 24.endif 25 26# The modifier ':from=to' is therefore often combined with the modifier ':M'. 27.if ${src.c src.h:L:M*.c:.c=.o} != "src.o" 28. error 29.endif 30 31# Another use case for the modifier ':from=to' is to append a suffix to each 32# word. In this case, the "from" string is empty, therefore it always 33# matches. The same effect can be achieved with the modifier ':S,$,teen,'. 34.if ${four six seven nine:L:=teen} != "fourteen sixteen seventeen nineteen" 35. error 36.endif 37 38# The modifier ':from=to' can also be used to surround each word by strings. 39# It might be tempting to use this for enclosing a string in quotes for the 40# shell, but that's the job of the modifier ':Q'. 41.if ${one two three:L:%=(%)} != "(one) (two) (three)" 42. error 43.endif 44 45# When the modifier ':from=to' is parsed, it lasts until the closing brace 46# or parenthesis. The ':Q' in the below expression may look like a modifier 47# but it isn't. It is part of the replacement string. 48.if ${a b c d e:L:%a=x:Q} != "x:Q b c d e" 49. error 50.endif 51 52# In the modifier ':from=to', both parts can contain expressions. 53.if ${one two:L:${:Uone}=${:U1}} != "1 two" 54. error 55.endif 56 57# In the modifier ':from=to', the "from" part is expanded exactly once. 58.if ${:U\$ \$\$ \$\$\$\$:${:U\$\$\$\$}=4} != "\$ \$\$ 4" 59. error 60.endif 61 62# In the modifier ':from=to', the "to" part is expanded exactly twice. 63# XXX: The right-hand side should be expanded only once. 64# XXX: It's hard to get the escaping correct here, and to read that. 65# XXX: It's not intuitive why the closing brace must be escaped but not 66# the opening brace. 67.if ${:U1 2 4:4=${:Uonce\${\:Utwice\}}} != "1 2 oncetwice" 68. error 69.endif 70 71# The replacement string can contain spaces, thereby changing the number 72# of words in the expression. 73.if ${In:L:%=% ${:Uthe Sun}} != "In the Sun" 74. error 75.endif 76 77# If the variable value is empty, it is debatable whether it consists of a 78# single empty word, or no word at all. The modifier ':from=to' treats it as 79# no word at all. 80# 81# See SysVMatch, which doesn't handle w_len == p_len specially. 82.if ${:L:=suffix} != "" 83. error 84.endif 85 86# If the variable value is empty, it is debatable whether it consists of a 87# single empty word (before 2020-05-06), or no word at all (since 2020-05-06). 88# 89# See SysVMatch, percent != NULL && w[0] == '\0'. 90.if ${:L:%=suffix} != "" 91. error 92.endif 93 94# Before 2020-07-19, an ampersand could be used in the replacement part 95# of a SysV substitution modifier, and it was replaced with the whole match, 96# just like in the modifier ':S'. 97# 98# This was probably a copy-and-paste mistake since the code for the SysV 99# modifier looked a lot like the code for the modifiers ':S' and ':C'. 100# The ampersand is not mentioned in the manual page. 101.if ${a.bcd.e:L:a.%=%} != "bcd.e" 102. error 103.endif 104# Before 2020-07-19, the result of the expression was "a.bcd.e". 105.if ${a.bcd.e:L:a.%=&} != "&" 106. error 107.endif 108 109# Before 2020-07-20, when a SysV modifier was parsed, a single dollar 110# before the '=' was parsed (but not interpreted) as an anchor. 111# Parsing something without then evaluating it accordingly doesn't make 112# sense, so this has been fixed. 113.if ${value:L:e$=x} != "value" 114. error 115.endif 116# Before 2020-07-20, the modifier ':e$=x' was parsed as having a left-hand 117# side 'e' and a right-hand side 'x'. The dollar was parsed (but not 118# interpreted) as 'anchor at the end'. Therefore the modifier was equivalent 119# to ':e=x', which doesn't match the string "value$". Therefore the whole 120# expression evaluated to "value$". 121.if ${${:Uvalue\$}:L:e$=x} != "valux" 122. error 123.endif 124.if ${value:L:e=x} != "valux" 125. error 126.endif 127 128# Words that don't match are copied unmodified. 129.if ${:Ufile.c file.h:%.c=%.cpp} != "file.cpp file.h" 130. error 131.endif 132 133# The % placeholder can be anywhere in the string, it doesn't have to be at 134# the beginning of the pattern. 135.if ${:Ufile.c other.c:file.%=renamed.%} != "renamed.c other.c" 136. error 137.endif 138 139# It's also possible to modify each word by replacing the prefix and adding 140# a suffix. 141.if ${one two:L:o%=a%w} != "anew two" 142. error 143.endif 144 145# Each word gets the suffix "X" appended. 146.if ${one two:L:=X} != "oneX twoX" 147. error 148.endif 149 150# The suffix "o" is replaced with "X". 151.if ${one two:L:o=X} != "one twX" 152. error 153.endif 154 155# The suffix "o" is replaced with nothing. 156.if ${one two:L:o=} != "one tw" 157. error 158.endif 159 160# The suffix "o" is replaced with a literal percent. The percent is only 161# a wildcard when it appears on the left-hand side. 162.if ${one two:L:o=%} != "one tw%" 163. error 164.endif 165 166# Each word with the suffix "o" is replaced with "X". The percent is a 167# wildcard even though the right-hand side does not contain another percent. 168.if ${one two:L:%o=X} != "one X" 169. error 170.endif 171 172# Each word with the prefix "o" is replaced with "X". The percent is a 173# wildcard even though the right-hand side does not contain another percent. 174.if ${one two:L:o%=X} != "X two" 175. error 176.endif 177 178# For each word with the prefix "o" and the suffix "e", the whole word is 179# replaced with "X". 180.if ${one two oe oxen:L:o%e=X} != "X two X oxen" 181. error 182.endif 183 184# Only the first '%' is the wildcard. 185.if ${one two o%e other%e:L:o%%e=X} != "one two X X" 186. error 187.endif 188 189# In the replacement, only the first '%' is the placeholder, all others 190# are literal percent characters. 191.if ${one two:L:%=%%} != "one% two%" 192. error 193.endif 194 195# In the word "one", only a prefix of the pattern suffix "nes" matches, 196# the whole word is too short. Therefore it doesn't match. 197.if ${one two:L:%nes=%xxx} != "one two" 198. error 199.endif 200 201# The modifier ':from=to' can be used to replace both the prefix and a suffix 202# of a word with other strings. This is not possible with a single :S 203# modifier, and using a :C modifier for the same task looks more complicated 204# in many cases. 205.if ${prefix-middle-suffix:L:prefix-%-suffix=p-%-s} != "p-middle-s" 206. error 207.endif 208 209# This is not a SysV modifier since the nested expression expands 210# to an empty string. The '=' in it should be irrelevant during parsing. 211# XXX: As of 2020-12-05, this expression generates an "Unfinished modifier" 212# error, while the correct error message would be "Unknown modifier" since 213# there is no modifier named "fromto". 214# expect+1: Malformed conditional (${word214:L:from${:D=}to}) 215.if ${word214:L:from${:D=}to} 216. error 217.endif 218 219# XXX: This specially constructed case demonstrates that the SysV modifier 220# lasts longer than expected. The whole expression initially has the value 221# "fromto}...". The next modifier is a SysV modifier. ApplyModifier_SysV 222# parses the modifier as "from${:D=}to", ending at the '}'. Next, the two 223# parts of the modifier are parsed using ParseModifierPart, which scans 224# differently, properly handling nested expressions. The two parts 225# are now "fromto}..." and "replaced". 226.if "${:Ufromto\}...:from${:D=}to}...=replaced}" != "replaced" 227. error 228.endif 229 230# As of 2020-10-06, the right-hand side of the SysV modifier is expanded 231# twice. The first expansion happens in ApplyModifier_SysV, where the 232# modifier is split into its two parts. The second expansion happens 233# when each word is replaced in ModifyWord_SYSVSubst. 234# XXX: This is unexpected. Add more test case to demonstrate the effects 235# of removing one of the expansions. 236VALUE= value 237INDIRECT= 1:${VALUE} 2:$${VALUE} 4:$$$${VALUE} 238.if ${x:L:x=${INDIRECT}} != "1:value 2:value 4:\${VALUE}" 239. error 240.endif 241 242# Test all relevant combinations of prefix, '%' and suffix in both the pattern 243# and the replacement. 244!=1>&2 printf '%-24s %-24s %-24s\n' 'word' 'modifier' 'result' 245.for from in '' ffix % pre% %ffix pre%ffix 246. for to in '' NS % %NS NPre% NPre%NS 247. for word in '' suffix prefix pre-middle-suffix 248. for mod in ${from:N''}=${to:N''} 249!=1>&2 printf '%-24s %-24s "%s"\n' ''${word:Q} ''${mod:Q} ''${word:N'':${mod}:Q} 250. endfor 251. endfor 252. endfor 253.endfor 254 255all: 256