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kc3-lang/automake/lib/Automake/ChannelDefs.pm

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  • Author : Mike Frysinger
    Date : 2023-01-04 02:00:14
    Hash : 34bdde96
    Message : maint: make update-copyright

  • lib/Automake/ChannelDefs.pm
  • # Copyright (C) 2002-2023 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/>.
    
    package Automake::ChannelDefs;
    
    =head1 NAME
    
    Automake::ChannelDefs - channel definitions for Automake and helper functions
    
    =head1 SYNOPSIS
    
      use Automake::ChannelDefs;
    
      print Automake::ChannelDefs::usage (), "\n";
      prog_error ($MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]);
      error ($WHERE, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]);
      error ($MESSAGE);
      fatal ($WHERE, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]);
      fatal ($MESSAGE);
      verb ($MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS]);
      switch_warning ($CATEGORY);
      parse_WARNINGS ();
      parse_warnings ($OPTION, @ARGUMENT);
      Automake::ChannelDefs::set_strictness ($STRICTNESS_NAME);
    
    =head1 DESCRIPTION
    
    This package defines channels that can be used in Automake to
    output diagnostics and other messages (via C<msg()>).  It also defines
    some helper function to enable or disable these channels, and some
    shorthand function to output on specific channels.
    
    =cut
    
    use 5.006;
    use strict;
    use warnings FATAL => 'all';
    
    use Exporter;
    
    use Automake::Channels;
    use Automake::Config;
    BEGIN
    {
      if ($perl_threads)
        {
          require threads;
          import threads;
        }
    }
    
    our @ISA = qw (Exporter);
    our @EXPORT = qw (&prog_error &error &fatal &verb
    		  &switch_warning &parse_WARNINGS &parse_warnings
    		  &merge_WARNINGS);
    
    =head2 CHANNELS
    
    The following channels can be used as the first argument of
    C<Automake::Channel::msg>.  For some of them we list a shorthand
    function that makes the code more readable.
    
    =over 4
    
    =item C<fatal>
    
    Fatal errors.  Use C<&fatal> to send messages over this channel.
    
    =item C<error>
    
    Common errors.  Use C<&error> to send messages over this channel.
    
    =item C<error-gnu>
    
    Errors related to GNU Standards.
    
    =item C<error-gnu/warn>
    
    Errors related to GNU Standards that should be warnings in 'foreign' mode.
    
    =item C<error-gnits>
    
    Errors related to GNITS Standards (silent by default).
    
    =item C<automake>
    
    Internal errors.  Use C<&prog_error> to send messages over this channel.
    
    =item C<cross>
    
    Constructs compromising the cross-compilation of the package.
    
    =item C<gnu>
    
    Warnings related to GNU Coding Standards.
    
    =item C<obsolete>
    
    Warnings about obsolete features.
    
    =item C<override>
    
    Warnings about user redefinitions of Automake rules or
    variables (silent by default).
    
    =item C<portability>
    
    Warnings about non-portable constructs.
    
    =item C<portability-recursive>
    
    Warnings about recursive variable expansions (C<$(foo$(x))>).
    These are not universally supported, but are more portable than
    the other non-portable constructs diagnosed by C<-Wportability>.
    These warnings are turned on by C<-Wportability> but can then be
    turned off separately by C<-Wno-portability-recursive>.
    
    =item C<extra-portability>
    
    Extra warnings about non-portable constructs covering obscure tools.
    
    =item C<syntax>
    
    Warnings about weird syntax, unused variables, typos...
    
    =item C<unsupported>
    
    Warnings about unsupported (or mis-supported) features.
    
    =item C<verb>
    
    Messages output in C<--verbose> mode.  Use C<&verb> to send such messages.
    
    =item C<note>
    
    Informative messages.
    
    =back
    
    =cut
    
    # Initialize our list of error/warning channels.
    # Do not forget to update &usage and the manual
    # if you add or change a warning channel.
    
    register_channel 'fatal', type => 'fatal', uniq_part => UP_NONE, ordered => 0;
    register_channel 'error', type => 'error';
    register_channel 'error-gnu', type => 'error';
    register_channel 'error-gnu/warn', type => 'error';
    register_channel 'error-gnits', type => 'error', silent => 1;
    register_channel 'automake', type => 'fatal', backtrace => 1,
      header => ("####################\n" .
    	     "## Internal Error ##\n" .
    	     "####################\n"),
      footer => "\nPlease contact <$PACKAGE_BUGREPORT>.",
      uniq_part => UP_NONE, ordered => 0;
    
    register_channel 'cross', type => 'warning', silent => 1;
    register_channel 'gnu', type => 'warning';
    register_channel 'obsolete', type => 'warning';
    register_channel 'override', type => 'warning', silent => 1;
    register_channel 'portability', type => 'warning', silent => 1;
    register_channel 'extra-portability', type => 'warning', silent => 1;
    register_channel 'portability-recursive', type => 'warning', silent => 1;
    register_channel 'syntax', type => 'warning';
    register_channel 'unsupported', type => 'warning';
    
    register_channel 'verb', type => 'debug', silent => 1, uniq_part => UP_NONE,
      ordered => 0;
    register_channel 'note', type => 'debug', silent => 0;
    
    setup_channel_type 'warning', header => 'warning: ';
    setup_channel_type 'error', header => 'error: ';
    setup_channel_type 'fatal', header => 'error: ';
    
    =head2 FUNCTIONS
    
    =over 4
    
    =item C<usage ()>
    
    Return the warning category descriptions.
    
    =cut
    
    sub usage ()
    {
      return "Warning categories include:
      cross                  cross compilation issues
      gnu                    GNU coding standards (default in gnu and gnits modes)
      obsolete               obsolete features or constructions (default)
      override               user redefinitions of Automake rules or variables
      portability            portability issues (default in gnu and gnits modes)
      portability-recursive  nested Make variables (default with -Wportability)
      extra-portability      extra portability issues related to obscure tools
      syntax                 dubious syntactic constructs (default)
      unsupported            unsupported or incomplete features (default)
      all                    all the warnings
      no-CATEGORY            turn off warnings in CATEGORY
      none                   turn off all the warnings
      error                  treat warnings as errors";
    }
    
    =item C<prog_error ($MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS])>
    
    Signal a programming error (on channel C<automake>),
    display C<$MESSAGE>, and exit 1.
    
    =cut
    
    sub prog_error ($;%)
    {
      my ($msg, %opts) = @_;
      msg 'automake', '', $msg, %opts;
    }
    
    =item C<error ($WHERE, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS])>
    
    =item C<error ($MESSAGE)>
    
    Uncategorized errors.
    
    =cut
    
    sub error ($;$%)
    {
      my ($where, $msg, %opts) = @_;
      msg ('error', $where, $msg, %opts);
    }
    
    =item C<fatal ($WHERE, $MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS])>
    
    =item C<fatal ($MESSAGE)>
    
    Fatal errors.
    
    =cut
    
    sub fatal ($;$%)
    {
      my ($where, $msg, %opts) = @_;
      msg ('fatal', $where, $msg, %opts);
    }
    
    =item C<verb ($MESSAGE, [%OPTIONS])>
    
    C<--verbose> messages.
    
    =cut
    
    sub verb ($;%)
    {
      my ($msg, %opts) = @_;
      $msg = "thread " . threads->tid . ": " . $msg
        if $perl_threads;
      msg 'verb', '', $msg, %opts;
    }
    
    =item C<switch_warning ($CATEGORY)>
    
    If C<$CATEGORY> is C<mumble>, turn on channel C<mumble>.
    If it is C<no-mumble>, turn C<mumble> off.
    Else handle C<all> and C<none> for completeness.
    
    =cut
    
    sub switch_warning ($)
    {
      my ($cat) = @_;
      my $has_no = 0;
    
      if ($cat =~ /^no-(.*)$/)
        {
          $cat = $1;
          $has_no = 1;
        }
    
      if ($cat eq 'all')
        {
          setup_channel_type 'warning', silent => $has_no;
        }
      elsif ($cat eq 'none')
        {
          setup_channel_type 'warning', silent => ! $has_no;
        }
      elsif ($cat eq 'error')
        {
          $warnings_are_errors = ! $has_no;
          # Set exit code if Perl warns about something
          # (like uninitialized variables).
          $SIG{"__WARN__"} =
    	$has_no ? 'DEFAULT' : sub { print STDERR @_; $exit_code = 1; };
        }
      elsif (channel_type ($cat) eq 'warning')
        {
          setup_channel $cat, silent => $has_no;
          #
          # Handling of portability warnings is trickier.  For relevant tests,
          # see 'dollarvar2', 'extra-portability' and 'extra-portability3'.
          #
          # -Wportability-recursive and -Wno-portability-recursive should not
          # have any effect on other 'portability' or 'extra-portability'
          # warnings, so there's no need to handle them separately or ad-hoc.
          #
          if ($cat eq 'extra-portability' && ! $has_no) # -Wextra-portability
            {
              # -Wextra-portability must enable 'portability' and
              # 'portability-recursive' warnings.
              setup_channel 'portability', silent => 0;
              setup_channel 'portability-recursive', silent => 0;
            }
          if ($cat eq 'portability') # -Wportability or -Wno-portability
            {
              if ($has_no) # -Wno-portability
                {
                  # -Wno-portability must disable 'extra-portability' and
                  # 'portability-recursive' warnings.
                  setup_channel 'portability-recursive', silent => 1;
                  setup_channel 'extra-portability', silent => 1;
                }
              else # -Wportability
                {
                  # -Wportability must enable 'portability-recursive'
                  # warnings.  But it should have no influence over the
                  # 'extra-portability' warnings.
                  setup_channel 'portability-recursive', silent => 0;
                }
            }
        }
      else
        {
          return 1;
        }
      return 0;
    }
    
    =item C<parse_WARNINGS ()>
    
    Parse the WARNINGS environment variable.
    
    =cut
    
    # Used to communicate from parse_WARNINGS to parse_warnings.
    our $_werror = 0;
    
    sub parse_WARNINGS ()
    {
      if (exists $ENV{'WARNINGS'})
        {
          # Ignore unknown categories.  This is required because WARNINGS
          # should be honored by many tools.
          # For the same reason, do not turn on -Werror at this point, just
          # record that we saw it; parse_warnings will turn on -Werror after
          # the command line has been processed.
          foreach (split (',', $ENV{'WARNINGS'}))
            {
              if (/^(no-)?error$/)
                {
                  $_werror = !defined $1;
                }
              else
                {
                  switch_warning $_;
                }
            }
        }
    }
    
    =item C<parse_warnings (@CATEGORIES)>
    
    Parse the argument of C<--warning=CATEGORY> or C<-WCATEGORY>.
    C<@CATEGORIES> is the accumulated set of warnings categories.
    Use like this:
    
        Automake::GetOpt::parse_options (
            # ...
            'W|warnings=s' => \@warnings,
        )
        # possibly call set_strictness here
        parse_warnings @warnings;
    
    =cut
    
    sub parse_warnings (@)
    {
      foreach my $cat (map { split ',' } @_)
        {
          if ($cat =~ /^(no-)?error$/)
            {
              $_werror = !defined $1;
            }
          elsif (switch_warning $cat)
            {
              msg 'unsupported', "unknown warning category '$cat'";
            }
        }
    
      switch_warning ($_werror ? 'error' : 'no-error');
    }
    
    =item C<merge_WARNINGS (@CATEGORIES)>
    
    Merge the warnings categories in the environment variable C<WARNINGS>
    with the warnings categories in C<@CATEGORIES>, and return a new
    value for C<WARNINGS>.  Values in C<@CATEGORIES> take precedence.
    Use like this:
    
        local $ENV{WARNINGS} = merge_WARNINGS @additional_warnings;
    
    =cut
    
    sub merge_WARNINGS (@)
    {
      my $werror = '';
      my $all_or_none = '';
      my %warnings;
    
      my @categories = split /,/, $ENV{WARNINGS} || '';
      push @categories, @_;
    
      foreach (@categories)
        {
          if (/^(?:no-)?error$/)
            {
              $werror = $_;
            }
          elsif (/^(?:all|none)$/)
            {
              $all_or_none = $_;
            }
          else
            {
              # The character class in the second match group is ASCII \S minus
              # comma.  We are generous with this because category values may come
              # from WARNINGS and we don't want to assume what other programs'
              # syntaxes for warnings categories are.
              /^(no-|)([\w\[\]\/\\!"#$%&'()*+-.:;<=>?@^`{|}~]+)$/
                or die "Invalid warnings category: $_";
              $warnings{$2} = $1;
            }
        }
    
      my @final_warnings;
      if ($all_or_none)
        {
          push @final_warnings, $all_or_none;
        }
      else
        {
          foreach (sort keys %warnings)
            {
              push @final_warnings, $warnings{$_} . $_;
            }
        }
      if ($werror)
        {
          push @final_warnings, $werror;
        }
    
      return join (',', @final_warnings);
    }
    
    =item C<set_strictness ($STRICTNESS_NAME)>
    
    Configure channels for strictness C<$STRICTNESS_NAME>.
    
    =cut
    
    sub set_strictness ($)
    {
      my ($name) = @_;
    
      if ($name eq 'gnu')
        {
          setup_channel 'error-gnu', silent => 0;
          setup_channel 'error-gnu/warn', silent => 0, type => 'error';
          setup_channel 'error-gnits', silent => 1;
          setup_channel 'portability', silent => 0;
          setup_channel 'extra-portability', silent => 1;
          setup_channel 'gnu', silent => 0;
        }
      elsif ($name eq 'gnits')
        {
          setup_channel 'error-gnu', silent => 0;
          setup_channel 'error-gnu/warn', silent => 0, type => 'error';
          setup_channel 'error-gnits', silent => 0;
          setup_channel 'portability', silent => 0;
          setup_channel 'extra-portability', silent => 1;
          setup_channel 'gnu', silent => 0;
        }
      elsif ($name eq 'foreign')
        {
          setup_channel 'error-gnu', silent => 1;
          setup_channel 'error-gnu/warn', silent => 0, type => 'warning';
          setup_channel 'error-gnits', silent => 1;
          setup_channel 'portability', silent => 1;
          setup_channel 'extra-portability', silent => 1;
          setup_channel 'gnu', silent => 1;
        }
      else
        {
          prog_error "level '$name' not recognized";
        }
    }
    
    =back
    
    =head1 SEE ALSO
    
    L<Automake::Channels>
    
    =head1 HISTORY
    
    Written by Alexandre Duret-Lutz E<lt>F<adl@gnu.org>E<gt>.
    
    =cut
    
    1;
    
    ### Setup "GNU" style for perl-mode and cperl-mode.
    ## Local Variables:
    ## perl-indent-level: 2
    ## perl-continued-statement-offset: 2
    ## perl-continued-brace-offset: 0
    ## perl-brace-offset: 0
    ## perl-brace-imaginary-offset: 0
    ## perl-label-offset: -2
    ## cperl-indent-level: 2
    ## cperl-brace-offset: 0
    ## cperl-continued-brace-offset: 0
    ## cperl-label-offset: -2
    ## cperl-extra-newline-before-brace: t
    ## cperl-merge-trailing-else: nil
    ## cperl-continued-statement-offset: 2
    ## End: