xref: /titanic_44/usr/src/tools/scripts/onbld_elfmod.pm (revision f169c0eae91b2ee787cf8d6dcf8edd9159d4c9e2)
1package onbld_elfmod;
2
3#
4# CDDL HEADER START
5#
6# The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the
7# Common Development and Distribution License (the "License").
8# You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
9#
10# You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE
11# or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing.
12# See the License for the specific language governing permissions
13# and limitations under the License.
14#
15# When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each
16# file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE.
17# If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the
18# fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying
19# information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
20#
21# CDDL HEADER END
22#
23
24#
25# Copyright 2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc.  All rights reserved.
26# Use is subject to license terms.
27#
28
29#
30# This perl module contains code shared between the ELF analysis
31# tools found in this directory: find_elf, check_rtime, interface_check,
32# and interface_cmp.
33#
34
35use strict;
36use File::Basename;
37
38## GetLine(FileHandleRef, LineNumRef)
39#
40# Read the next non-empty line from the given file handle reference
41# and return it.
42#
43# entry:
44#	FileHandleRef - Reference to open file handle to read from
45#	LineNumRef - Reference to integer to increment as lines are input
46#
47sub GetLine {
48	my ($fh, $LineNum) = @_;
49	my $ret_line = '';
50	my $line;
51	my $cont = 1;
52
53	while ($cont && ($line = <$fh>)) {
54		$$LineNum++;
55		chomp $line;
56
57		# A backslash at the end of the line indicates that the
58		# following line is a continuation of this line if the
59		# backslash is the only character on the line, or if it is
60		# preceded by a space.
61		next if ($line eq '\\');
62		$cont = ($line =~ s/\s+\\$//);
63
64		# The # character starts a comment if it is the first
65		# character on the line, or if it is preceeded by a space.
66		if ($line =~ /^\#/) {
67			$cont = 1;
68			next;
69		}
70		$line =~ s/\s+\#.*$//;		# Strip Comments
71		$line =~ s/\s*$//;		# Trailing whitespace
72
73		if ($line !~ /^\s*$/) {		# Non-empty string
74			$line =~ s/^\s+//;	# Leading whitespace
75			if ($ret_line eq '') {
76				$ret_line = $line;
77			} else {
78				$ret_line = "$ret_line $line";
79			}
80		}
81
82		# If our result string is still null, act as if a
83		# continuation is present and read another line.
84		$cont = 1 if ($ret_line eq '');
85	}
86
87	# The above loop won't exit while $ret_line is a null string
88	# unless the read failed, so return undef() in that case.
89	# Otherwise, use the value in $ret_line.
90	return ($ret_line ne '') ? $ret_line : undef();
91}
92
93
94## LoadExceptionsToEXRE(name)
95#
96# Locate the exceptions file and process its contents. This function can be
97# used by any program with exception files that consist of a single
98# verb, followed by a single regular expression:
99#
100#	VERB regex
101#
102# For each such verb, the global level of the main:: namespace must
103# have a variable named $EXRE_verb. The $EXRE_ prefix must only be used
104# for these variables, and not for any other. The caller must define these
105# variables, but leave them undefined.
106#
107# entry:
108#	Any variables in the main:: global symbol table starting with
109#	the prefix 'EXRE_xxx' are taken to represent the regular expression
110#	for the exception named xxx.
111#
112#	name - Name of script (i.e. 'check_rtime')
113#	$main::opt{e} - Calling program must accept a '-e' option
114#		that allows the user to specify an exception file
115#		to use, and the value of that option must be found
116#		in $main::opt{e}.
117#
118# exit:
119#	The $main::EXRE_xxx variables are updated to contain any regular
120#	expressions specified by the exception file. If a given exception
121#	is not encountered, its variable is not modified.
122#
123# note:
124#	We expand strings of the form MACH(dir) to match the given
125#	directory as well as any 64-bit architecture subdirectory that
126#	might be present (i.e. amd64, sparcv9).
127#
128sub LoadExceptionsToEXRE {
129	my $name = $_[0];
130	my $file;
131	my $Line;
132	my $LineNum = 0;
133	my $err = 0;
134	my %except_names = ();
135	my %except_re = ();
136
137	# Examine the main global symbol table and find all variables
138	# named EXRE_xxx. By convention established for this program,
139	# all such variables contain the regular expression for the
140	# exception named xxx.
141	foreach my $entry (keys %main::) {
142		$except_names{$entry} = 1 if $entry =~ /^EXRE_/;
143	}
144
145	# Locate the exception file
146	FILE: {
147		# If -e is specified, that file must be used
148		if ($main::opt{e}) {
149			$file = $main::opt{e};
150			last FILE;
151		}
152
153		# If this is an activated workspace, use the exception
154		# file found in the exceptions_list directory.
155		if (defined($ENV{CODEMGR_WS})) {
156			$file = "$ENV{CODEMGR_WS}/exception_lists/$name";
157			last FILE if (-f $file);
158		}
159
160		# As a final backstop, the SUNWonbld package provides a
161		# copy of the exception file. This can be useful if we
162		# are being used with an older workspace.
163		#
164		# This script is installed in the SUNWonbld bin directory,
165		# while the exception file is in etc/exception_lists. Find
166		# it relative to the script location given by $0.
167		$file = dirname($0) . "/../etc/exception_lists/$name";
168		last FILE if (-f $file);
169
170		# No exception file was found.
171		return;
172	}
173
174	open (EFILE, $file) ||
175		die "$name: unable to open exceptions file: $file";
176	while ($Line = onbld_elfmod::GetLine(\*EFILE, \$LineNum)) {
177		# Expand MACH()
178		$Line =~ s/MACH\(([^)]+)\)/$1(\/amd64|\/sparcv9)?/;
179
180		# %except_re is a hash indexed by regular expression variable
181		# name, with a value that contains the corresponding regular
182		# expression string. If we recognize an exception verb, add
183		# it to %except_re.
184		if ($Line =~ /^\s*([^\s]+)\s+(.*)$/i) {
185			my $verb = $1;
186			my $re = $2;
187
188			$verb =~ tr/A-Z/a-z/;
189			$verb = "EXRE_$verb";
190			if ($except_names{$verb}) {
191				if (defined($except_re{$verb})) {
192					$except_re{$verb} .= '|' . $re;
193				} else {
194					$except_re{$verb} = $re;
195				}
196			}
197			next;
198		}
199
200		$err++;
201		printf(STDERR "$file: Unrecognized option: ".
202		    "line $LineNum: $Line\n");
203	}
204	close EFILE;
205
206	# Every exception that we encountered in the file exists
207	# in %except_re. Compile them and assign the results into the
208	# global symbol of the same name.
209	#
210	# Note that this leaves the global symbols for unused exceptions
211	# untouched, and therefore, undefined. All users of these variables
212	# are required to test them with defined() before using them.
213	foreach my $verb (sort keys %except_names) {
214		next if !defined($except_re{$verb});
215
216		# Turn off strict refs so that we can do a symbolic
217		# indirection to set the global variable of the name given
218		# by verb in the main namespace. 'strict' is lexically scoped,
219		# so its influence is limited to this enclosing block.
220		no strict 'refs';
221		${"main::$verb"} = qr/$except_re{$verb}/;
222	}
223
224	exit 1 if ($err != 0);
225}
226
227
228## OutMsg(FileHandleRef, Ttl, obj, msg)
229## OutMsg2(FileHandleRef, Ttl, old_obj, new_obj, msg)
230#
231# Create an output message, either a one-liner (under -o) or preceded by the
232# files relative pathname as a title.
233#
234# OutMsg() is used when issuing a message about a single object.
235#
236# OutMsg2() is for when the message involves an old and new instance
237# of the same object. If old_obj and new_obj are the same, as is usually
238# the case, then the output is the same as generated by OutMsg(). If they
239# differ, as can happen when the new object has changed names, and has been
240# found via an alias, both the old and new names are shown.
241#
242# entry:
243#	FileHandleRef - File handle to output file
244#	Ttl - Reference to variable containing the number of times
245#		this function has been called for the current object.
246#	obj - For OutMsg, the path for the current object
247#	old_obj, new_obj - For OutMsg2, the names of the "old" and "new"
248#		objects.
249#	msg - Message to output
250#
251#	$main::opt{o} - Calling program must accept a '-o' option
252#		that allows the user to specify "one-line-mode',
253#		and the value of that option must be found
254#		in $main::opt{o}.
255#
256sub OutMsg {
257	my($fh, $Ttl, $obj, $msg) = @_;
258
259	if ($main::opt{o}) {
260		print $fh "$obj: $msg\n";
261	} else {
262		print $fh "==== $obj ====\n" if ($$Ttl++ eq 0);
263		print $fh "\t$msg\n";
264	}
265}
266
267sub OutMsg2 {
268	my ($fh, $Ttl, $old_obj, $new_obj, $msg) = @_;
269
270	# If old and new are the same, give it to OutMsg()
271	if ($old_obj eq $new_obj) {
272		OutMsg($fh, $Ttl, $old_obj, $msg);
273		return;
274	}
275
276	if ($main::opt{o}) {
277		print "old $old_obj: new $new_obj: $msg\n";
278	} else {
279		print "==== old: $old_obj / new: $new_obj ====\n"
280		    if ($$Ttl++ eq 0);
281		print "\t$msg\n";
282	}
283}
284
285
286## header(FileHandleRef, ScriptPath, Argv)
287#
288# Generate a header for the top of generated output, including a copyright
289# and CDDL, such that the file will pass ON copyright/CDDL rules if it is
290# checked into the repository.
291#
292# entry:
293#	FileHandleRef - File handle reference to output text to
294#	ScriptPath - Value of $0 from caller, giving path to running script
295#	Argv - Reference to array containing @ARGV from caller.
296#
297# note:
298#	We assume that the calling script contains a value CDDL block.
299#
300sub Header {
301
302	my ($fh, $ScriptPath, $Argv) = @_;
303	my $year = 1900 + (localtime())[5];
304
305	print $fh "#\n";
306	print $fh "# Copyright $year Sun Microsystems, Inc.  ",
307	    "All rights reserved.\n";
308	print $fh "# Use is subject to license terms.\n#\n";
309
310	# The CDDL text is copied from this script, the path to which is
311	# assigned to $0 by the Perl interpreter.
312	if (open(CDDL, $ScriptPath)) {
313		my $out = 0;
314		my $Line;
315
316		while ($Line = <CDDL>) {
317			$out = 1 if ($Line =~ /^\# CDDL HEADER START/);
318
319			print $fh $Line if $out;
320			last if ($Line =~ /^\# CDDL HEADER END/);
321		}
322		print $fh "#\n\n";
323		close CDDL;
324	}
325
326	print $fh '# Date:    ', scalar(localtime()), "\n";
327	$ScriptPath =~ s/^.*\///;
328	$ScriptPath =~ s/\.pl$//;
329	print $fh "# Command: $ScriptPath ", join(' ', @$Argv), "\n\n";
330}
331
332# Perl modules pulled in via 'require' must return an exit status.
3331;
334