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1#!/bin/sh
2
3# Generate the cflags script, which is used to determine what cflags
4# to pass to the compiler for compiling the core perl.
5#
6# This does NOT affect the XS compilation (ext, dist, cpan)
7# since that uses %Config values directly.
8#
9# For example, since -Wall adds -Wunused-*, a bare -Wall (without
10# amending that with -Wno-unused-..., or with the PERL_UNUSED_...)
11# would be too much for XS code because there are too many generated
12# but often unused things.
13#
14# We create a temporary test C program and repeatedly compile it with
15# various candidate flags, and from the compiler output, determine what
16# flags are supported.
17#
18# From this we initialise the following variables in the cflags script:
19#
20# $myccflags (possibly edited version of $Config{ccflags})
21# $warn
22# $stdflags
23# $extra
24# $_exe
25
26case $PERL_CONFIG_SH in
27'')
28 if test -f config.sh; then TOP=.;
29 elif test -f ../config.sh; then TOP=..;
30 elif test -f ../../config.sh; then TOP=../..;
31 elif test -f ../../../config.sh; then TOP=../../..;
32 elif test -f ../../../../config.sh; then TOP=../../../..;
33 else
34 echo "Can't find config.sh."; exit 1
35 fi
36 . $TOP/config.sh
37 ;;
38esac
39# This forces SH files to create target in same directory as SH file.
40# This is so that make depend always knows where to find SH derivatives.
41case "$0" in
42*/*) cd `expr X$0 : 'X\(.*\)/'` ;;
43esac
44
45if test -f config_h.SH -a ! -f config.h; then
46 . ./config_h.SH
47 CONFIG_H=already-done
48fi
49
50warn=''
51
52# Add -Wall for the core modules iff gcc and not already -Wall
53case "$gccversion" in
54'') ;;
55Intel*) ;; # The Intel C++ plays gcc on TV but is not really it.
56*) case "$ccflags" in
57 *-Wall*) ;;
58 *) warn="$warn -Wall" ;;
59 esac
60 ;;
61esac
62
63# Create a test source file for testing what options can be fed to
64# gcc in this system; include a selection of most common and commonly
65# hairy include files.
66
67cat >_cflags.c <<__EOT__
68#include "EXTERN.h"
69#include "perl.h"
70/* The stdio.h, errno.h, and setjmp.h should be there in any ANSI C89. */
71#include <stdio.h>
72#include <errno.h>
73#include <setjmp.h>
74/* Just in case the inclusion of perl.h did not
75 * pull in enough system headers, let's try again. */
76#ifdef I_STDLIB
77#include <stdlib.h>
78#endif
79#ifdef I_STDDEF
80#include <stddef.h>
81#endif
82#ifdef I_STDARG
83#include <stdarg.h>
84#endif
85#ifdef I_LIMITS
86#include <limits.h>
87#endif
88#ifdef I_DIRENT
89#include <dirent.h>
90#endif
91#ifdef I_UNISTD
92#include <unistd.h>
93#endif
94#ifdef I_SYS_TYPES
95#include <sys/types.h>
96#endif
97#ifdef I_SYS_PARAM
98#include <sys/param.h>
99#endif
100#ifdef I_SYS_RESOURCE
101#include <sys/resource.h>
102#endif
103#ifdef I_SYS_SELECT
104#include <sys/select.h>
105#endif
106#if defined(HAS_SOCKET) && !defined(VMS) && !defined(WIN32) /* See perl.h. */
107#include <sys/socket.h>
108#endif
109#ifdef I_SYS_STAT
110#include <sys/stat.h>
111#endif
112#ifdef I_SYS_TIME
113#include <sys/time.h>
114#endif
115#ifdef I_SYS_TIMES
116#include <sys/times.h>
117#endif
118#ifdef I_SYS_WAIT
119#include <sys/wait.h>
120#endif
121/* The gcc -ansi can cause a lot of noise in Solaris because of:
122 /usr/include/sys/resource.h:148: warning: 'struct rlimit64' declared inside parameter list
123 */
124int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
125
126/* Add here test code found to be problematic in some gcc platform. */
127
128/* Off_t/off_t is a struct in Solaris with largefiles, and with gcc -ansi
129 * that struct cannot be compared in some gcc releases with a flat
130 * integer, such as a STRLEN. */
131
132 IV iv;
133 Off_t t0a = 2;
134 STRLEN t0b = 3;
135 int t0c = (STRLEN)t0a == t0b;
136
137 printf("%s: %d\n", argv[0], argc);
138
139/* In FreeBSD 6.2 (and probably other releases too), with -Duse64bitint,
140 perl will use atoll(3). However, that declaration is hidden in <stdlib.h>
141 if we force the compiler to use -std=c89 mode.
142*/
143 iv = Atol("42");
144
145 return (!t0c && (iv == 42)) ? 0 : -1; /* Try to avoid 'unused' warnings. */
146}
147__EOT__
148
149stdflags=''
150
151# Further gcc warning options. Build up a list of options that work.
152# Note that some problems may only show up with combinations of options,
153# e.g. a warning might show up only with -Wall -ansi, not with either
154# one individually.
155# TODO: Ponder whether to migrate this back to Configure so hints files can
156# tweak it. Also, be paranoid about whether results we've deduced in Configure
157# (especially about things like long long, which are not in C89) will still be
158# valid if we now add flags like -std=c89.
159
160pedantic=''
161case "$gccansipedantic" in
162define) pedantic='-pedantic' ;;
163esac
164
165case "$gccversion" in
166'') ;;
167[12]*) ;; # gcc versions 1 (gasp!) and 2 are not good for this.
168Intel*) ;; # # Is that you, Intel C++?
169#
170# NOTE 1: the -std=c89 without -pedantic is a bit pointless.
171# Just -std=c89 means "if there is room for interpretation,
172# interpret the C89 way." It does NOT mean "strict C89" on its own.
173# You need to add the -pedantic for that. To do this with Configure,
174# do -Dgccansipedantic (note that the -ansi is included in any case,
175# the option is a bit oddly named, for historical reasons.)
176#
177# NOTE 2: -pedantic necessitates adding a couple of flags:
178# * -PERL_GCC_PEDANTIC so that the perl code can adapt: there's nothing
179# added by gcc itself to indicate pedanticness.
180# * -Wno-overlength-strings under -DDEBUGGING because quite many of
181# the LEAVE_with_name() and assert() calls generate string literals
182# longer then the ANSI minimum of 509 bytes.
183#
184# NOTE 3: the relative order of these options matters:
185# -Wextra before -W, and -pedantic* before -Werror=d-a-s.
186#
187*) for opt in -ansi -std=c89 $pedantic \
188 -Werror=declaration-after-statement \
189 -Wextra -W \
190 -Wc++-compat -Wwrite-strings
191 do
192 case " $ccflags " in
193 *" $opt "*) ;; # Skip if already there.
194 *) rm -f _cflags$_exe
195 flags="-DPERL_NO_INLINE_FUNCTIONS $ccflags $warn $stdflags $opt"
196 case "$opt" in
197 *-pedantic*) flags="$flags -DPERL_GCC_PEDANTIC" ;;
198 esac
199 # echo "opt = $opt, flags = $flags"
200 cmd="$cc $flags _cflags.c -o _cflags$_exe"
201 out="`$cmd 2>&1`"
202 # echo "$cmd --> $out"
203 case "$out" in
204 *"unrecognized"*) ;;
205 *"unknown"*) ;;
206 *"implicit declaration"*) ;; # Was something useful hidden?
207 *"Invalid"*) ;;
208 *"is valid for C"*) ;;
209 *) if test -x _cflags$_exe
210 then
211 case "$opt" in
212 -std*)
213 echo "cflags.SH: Adding $opt."
214 stdflags="$stdflags $opt"
215 ;;
216 *) case "$opt" in
217 -W)
218 # -Wextra is the modern form of -W, so add
219 # -W only if -Wextra is not there already.
220 case " $warn " in
221 *-Wextra*) ;;
222 *)
223 echo "cflags.SH: Adding $opt."
224 warn="$warn $opt"
225 ;;
226 esac
227 ;;
228 -Werror=declaration-after-statement)
229 # -pedantic* (with -std=c89) covers -Werror=d-a-s.
230 case "$stdflags$warn" in
231 *-std=c89*-pedantic*|*-pedantic*-std=c89*) ;;
232 *)
233 echo "cflags.SH: Adding $opt."
234 warn="$warn $opt"
235 ;;
236 esac
237 ;;
238 *)
239 echo "cflags.SH: Adding $opt."
240 warn="$warn $opt"
241 ;;
242 esac
243 esac
244 fi
245 ;;
246 esac
247 ;;
248 esac
249 case "$ccflags$warn" in
250 *-pedantic*)
251 overlength=''
252 case "$ccflags$optimize" in
253 *-DDEBUGGING*) overlength='-Wno-overlength-strings' ;;
254 esac
255 for opt2 in -DPERL_GCC_PEDANTIC $overlength
256 do
257 case "$ccflags$warn" in
258 *"$opt2"*) ;;
259 *) echo "cflags.SH: Adding $opt2 because of -pedantic."
260 warn="$warn $opt2" ;;
261 esac
262 done
263 ;;
264 esac
265 done
266 ;;
267esac
268rm -f _cflags.c _cflags$_exe
269
270case "$gccversion" in
271'') ;;
272*)
273 case "$warn$ccflags" in
274 *-pedantic*)
275 # If we have -Duse64bitint (or equivalent) in effect and the quadtype
276 # has become 'long long', gcc -pedantic* becomes unbearable
277 # (moreso when combined with -Wall) because long long and LL and %lld|%Ld
278 # become warn-worthy. So let's drop the -pedantic in that case.
279 #
280 # Similarly, since 'long long' isn't part of C89, FreeBSD 6.2 headers
281 # don't declare atoll() under -std=c89, but we need it. In general,
282 # insisting on -std=c89 is inconsistent with insisting on using
283 # 'long long'. So drop -std=c89 and -ansi as well if we're using
284 # 'long long' as our main integral type.
285 #
286 # usedtrace (DTrace) uses unportable features (dollars in identifiers,
287 # and gcc statement expressions), it is just easier to turn off pedantic.
288 remove=''
289 case "$quadtype:$ivtype:$sPRId64:$usedtrace" in
290 *"long long"*|*lld*|*Ld*) remove='long long' ;;
291 *) case "$usedtrace" in
292 define) remove='usedtrace' ;;
293 esac
294 ;;
295 esac
296 case "$remove" in
297 '') ;;
298 *) echo "cflags.SH: Removing -pedantic*, -std=c89, and -ansi because of $remove."
299 ccflags=`echo $ccflags|sed -e 's/-pedantic-errors/ /' -e 's/-pedantic/ /' -e 's/-std=c89/ /' -e 's/-ansi/ /' -e 's/-DPERL_GCC_PEDANTIC/ /'`
300 warn=`echo $warn|sed -e 's/-pedantic-errors/ /' -e 's/-pedantic/ /' -e 's/-ansi/ /' -e 's/-DPERL_GCC_PEDANTIC/ /'`
301 stdflags=`echo $stdflags|sed -e 's/-std=c89/ /'`
302 ;;
303 esac
304 ;;
305 esac
306 ;;
307esac
308
309case "$cc" in
310*g++*)
311 # Extra paranoia in case people have bad canned ccflags:
312 # bad in the sense that the flags are accepted by g++,
313 # but then whined about.
314 #
315 # -Werror=d-a-s option is valid for g++, by definition,
316 # but we remove it just for cleanliness and shorter command lines.
317 for f in -Wdeclaration-after-statement \
318 -Werror=declaration-after-statement \
319 -Wc++-compat \
320 -std=c89
321 do
322 case "$ccflags$warn" in
323 *"$f"*)
324 echo "cflags.SH: Removing $f because of g++."
325 ccflags=`echo $ccflags|sed 's/$f/ /'`
326 warn=`echo $warn|sed 's/$f/ /'`
327 ;;
328 esac
329 done
330 ;;
331esac
332
333for f in -Wdeclaration-after-statement -Werror=declaration-after-statement
334do
335 case "$cppflags" in
336 *"$f"*)
337 echo "cflags.SH: Removing $f from cppflags."
338 cppflags=`echo $cppflags|sed 's/$f/ /'` ;;
339 esac
340done
341
342echo "cflags.SH: cc = $cc"
343echo "cflags.SH: ccflags = $ccflags"
344echo "cflags.SH: stdflags = $stdflags"
345echo "cflags.SH: optimize = $optimize"
346echo "cflags.SH: warn = $warn"
347
348# Code to set any extra flags here.
349extra=''
350
351echo "Extracting cflags (with variable substitutions)"
352# This section of the file will have variable substitutions done on it.
353# Move anything that needs config subs from !NO!SUBS! section to !GROK!THIS!.
354# Protect any dollar signs and backticks that you do not want interpreted
355# by putting a backslash in front. You may delete these comments.
356rm -f cflags
357$spitshell >cflags <<!GROK!THIS!
358$startsh
359
360# !!!!!!! DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE !!!!!!!
361
362# This file is generated by cflags.SH
363
364# Used to restore possible edits by cflags.SH.
365myccflags="$ccflags"
366# Extra warnings, used e.g. for gcc.
367warn="$warn"
368# Extra standardness.
369stdflags="$stdflags"
370# Extra extra.
371extra="$extra"
372# what do executables look like?
373_exe="$_exe"
374
375!GROK!THIS!
376
377# In the following dollars and backticks do not need the extra backslash.
378$spitshell >>cflags <<'!NO!SUBS!'
379case $PERL_CONFIG_SH in
380'')
381 if test -f config.sh; then TOP=.;
382 elif test -f ../config.sh; then TOP=..;
383 elif test -f ../../config.sh; then TOP=../..;
384 elif test -f ../../../config.sh; then TOP=../../..;
385 elif test -f ../../../../config.sh; then TOP=../../../..;
386 else
387 echo "Can't find config.sh."; exit 1
388 fi
389 . $TOP/config.sh
390 ccflags="$myccflags" # Restore possible edits by cflags.SH.
391 ;;
392esac
393
394# syntax: cflags [optimize=XXX] [file[.suffix]] ...
395# displays the proposed compiler command line for each 'file'
396#
397# with no file, dispalys it for all *.c files.
398# The optimise=XXX arg (if present) is evalled, setting the default
399# value of the $optimise variable, which is output on the command line
400# (but which may be overridden for specific files below)
401
402case "X$1" in
403Xoptimize=*|X"optimize=*")
404 eval "$1"
405 shift
406 ;;
407esac
408
409case $# in
4100) set *.c; echo "The current C flags are:" ;;
411esac
412
413set `echo "$* " | sed -e 's/\.[oc] / /g' -e 's/\.obj / /g' -e "s/\\$obj_ext / /g"`
414
415for file do
416
417 case "$#" in
418 1) ;;
419 *) echo $n " $file.c $c" ;;
420 esac
421
422 # allow variables like toke_cflags to be evaluated
423
424 if echo $file | grep -v / >/dev/null
425 then
426 eval 'eval ${'"${file}_cflags"'-""}'
427 fi
428
429 # or customize here
430
431 case "$file" in
432 *) ;;
433
434 # Customization examples follow.
435 #
436 # The examples are intentionally unreachable as the '*)' case above always
437 # matches. To use them, move before the '*)' and edit as appropriate.
438 # It is not a good idea to set ccflags to an absolute value here, as it
439 # often contains general -D defines which are needed for correct
440 # compilation. It is better to edit ccflags as shown, using interpolation
441 # to add flags, or sed to remove flags.
442
443 av) ccflags=`echo $ccflags | sed -e s/-pipe//` ;;
444 deb) ccflags="$ccflags -fno-jump-tables" ;;
445 hv) warn=`echo $warn | sed -e s/-Wextra//` ;;
446 toke) optimize=-O0 ;;
447 esac
448
449 # Can we perhaps use $ansi2knr here
450 echo "$cc -c -DPERL_CORE $ccflags $stdflags $optimize $warn $extra"
451
452 . $TOP/config.sh
453
454 # end per file behaviour
455done
456!NO!SUBS!
457chmod 755 cflags
458$eunicefix cflags