Hash :
3562e384
Author :
Date :
2017-09-16T13:03:36
Prefer https: URLs In Gnulib, Emacs, etc. we are changing ftp: and http: URLs to use https:, to discourage man-in-the-middle attacks when downloading software. The attached patch propagates these changes upstream to Automake. This patch does not affect files that Automake is downstream of, which I'll patch separately. Althouth the resources are not secret, plain HTTP is vulnerable to malicious routers that tamper with responses from GNU servers, and this sort of thing is all too common when people in some other countries browse US-based websites. See, for example: Aceto G, Botta A, Pescapé A, Awan MF, Ahmad T, Qaisar S. Analyzing internet censorship in Pakistan. RTSI 2016. https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/RTSI.2016.7740626 HTTPS is not a complete solution here, but it can be a significant help. The GNU project regularly serves up code to users, so we should take some care here.
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#! /bin/sh
# Copyright (C) 2003-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
# any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# Check whether double colon rules work. The Unix V7 make manual
# mentions double-colon rules, but POSIX does not. They seem to be
# supported by all Make implementation as far as we can tell. This test
# case is a spy: we want to detect if there exist implementations where
# these do not work. We might use these rules to simplify the rebuild
# rules (instead of the $? hack).
# Tom Tromey write:
# | In the distant past we used :: rules extensively.
# | Fran?ois convinced me to get rid of them:
# |
# | Thu Nov 23 18:02:38 1995 Tom Tromey <tromey@cambric>
# | [ ... ]
# | * subdirs.am: Removed "::" rules
# | * header.am, libraries.am, mans.am, texinfos.am, footer.am:
# | Removed "::" rules
# | * scripts.am, programs.am, libprograms.am: Removed "::" rules
# |
# |
# | I no longer remember the rationale for this. It may have only been a
# | belief that they were unportable.
# On a related topic, the Autoconf manual has the following text:
# | 'VPATH' and double-colon rules
# | Any assignment to 'VPATH' causes Sun 'make' to only execute
# | the first set of double-colon rules. (This comment has been
# | here since 1994 and the context has been lost. It's probably
# | about SunOS 4. If you can reproduce this, please send us a
# | test case for illustration.)
# We already know that overlapping ::-rule like
#
# a :: b
# echo rule1 >> $@
# a :: c
# echo rule2 >> $@
# a :: b c
# echo rule3 >> $@
#
# do not work equally on all platforms. It seems that in all cases
# Make attempts to run all matching rules. However at least GNU Make,
# NetBSD Make, and FreeBSD Make will detect that $@ was updated by the
# first matching rule and skip remaining matches (with the above
# example that means that unless 'a' was declared PHONY, only "rule1"
# will be appended to 'a' if both b and c have changed). Other
# implementations like OSF1 Make and HP-UX Make do not perform such a
# check and execute all matching rules whatever they do ("rule1",
# "rule2", abd "rule3" will all be appended to 'a' if b and c have
# changed).
# So it seems only non-overlapping ::-rule may be portable. This is
# what we check now.
. test-init.sh
cat >Makefile <<\EOF
a :: b
echo rule1 >> $@
a :: c
echo rule2 >> $@
EOF
touch b c
$sleep
: > a
$MAKE
test x"$(cat a)" = x
$sleep
touch b
$MAKE
test "$(cat a)" = "rule1"
# Ensure a is strictly newer than b, so HP-UX make does not execute rule2.
$sleep
: > a
$sleep
touch c
$MAKE
test "$(cat a)" = "rule2"
# Unfortunately, the following is not portable to FreeBSD/NetBSD/OpenBSD
# make, see explanation above.
#: > a
#$sleep
#touch b c
#$MAKE
#grep rule1 a
#grep rule2 a
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