38c2e9960c
Also filter out all the C++-style comment lines (those that start with //), which we plan to use for implementation comments not to be copied over. |
||
---|---|---|
libbuild2-autoconf | ||
libbuild2-autoconf-tests | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
AUTHORS | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
packages.manifest | ||
README.md |
libbuild2-autoconf
GNU Autoconf emulation build system module for build2
.
Specifically, this module provides an in
-based rule for
processing config.h.in
files. Besides the Autoconf special line flavor
(#undef
), it also supports the CMake (#cmakedefine
) and Meson
(#mesondefine
) variants.
Similar to Autoconf, this module provides built-in support for a number of
common HAVE_*
configuration options. However, the values of these options
are not discovered by dynamic probing, such as trying to compile a test
program to check if the feature is present. Instead, they are set to static
expected values based on the platform/compiler macro checks (see note at the
beginning of Project Configuration for rationale).
See libbuild2/autoconf/checks/
for the list of available built-in
checks. Submit requests for new checks as issues. Submit implementations of
new checks (or any other improvements) as PRs or patches.
Using in your projects
This module is part of the standard pre-installed build2
modules and no
extra integration steps are required other than the using
directive in
your buildfile
. For example, for Autoconf config.h.in
:
using autoconf
h{config}: in{config}
Or for CMake config.h.cmake
:
using autoconf
h{config}: in{config.h.cmake}
The default flavor is autoconf
but if the input file has the .cmake
or
.meson
extension, then the cmake
or meson
flavors are selected
automatically. If, however, the standard config.h.in
file is re-used for
CMake/Meson, then the flavor must be specified explicitly with the
autoconf.flavor
variable, for example:
using autoconf
h{config}: in{config}
{
autoconf.flavor = meson
}
Besides the built-in configuration options, custom substitutions can be
specified as buildfile
variables or key-value pairs in the same way as with
the in
module. For example, as buildfile
variables:
/* config.h.in */
#define PACKAGE_NAME @PACKAGE_NAME@
#define PACKAGE_VERSION @PACKAGE_VERSION@
#undef HAVE_STRLCPY
#undef HAVE_STRLCAT
h{config}: in{config}
{
PACKAGE_NAME = $project
PACKAGE_VERSION = $version
}
Or as key-value pairs in the autoconf.substitutions
map (which is an alias
for the in.substitutions
variable; see the in
module for
details):
/* config.h.in */
#undef _GNU_SOURCE
#undef _POSIX_SOURCE
gnu_source = ($c.stdlib == 'glibc')
posix_source = ($c.target.class != 'windows' && !$gnu_source)
h{config}: in{config}
{
autoconf.substitutions = _GNU_SOURCE@$gnu_source
autoconf.substitutions += _POSIX_SOURCE@$posix_source
}
In particular, the autoconf.substitutions
mechanism is the only way to have
substitutions that cannot be specified as buildfile
variables because they
start with an underscore (and thus are reserved, as in the above example) or
refer to one of the predefined variables.
The custom substitutions can also be used to override the built-in checks, for example:
h{config}: in{config}
{
HAVE_STRLCPY = true
}
While this module provides widely used aliases for some checks, it doesn't
attempt to cover every project's idiosyncrasies. Instead, it provides a
mechanism for creating project-specific aliases for built-in
checks. Specifically, the desired aliases can be specified as key-value pairs
in the autoconf.aliases
map with the key being the new name and the value --
old/existing. For example:
/* config.h.in */
#undef HAVE_AF_UNIX_H
#undef MY_SSIZE_T
h{config}: in{config}
{
autoconf.aliases = HAVE_AF_UNIX_H@HAVE_AFUNIX_H
autoconf.aliases += MY_SSIZE_T@ssize_t
}
The built-in checks can be prefixed in order to avoid clashes with similarly
named macros in other headers. This is an especially good idea if the
resulting header is public. To enable this, we specify the prefix with
the autoconf.prefix
variable and then use the prefixed versions of
the options in the config.h.in
file. For example:
/* config.h.in */
#undef LIBFOO_HAVE_STRLCPY
#undef LIBFOO_HAVE_STRLCAT
h{config}: in{config}
{
autoconf.prefix = LIBFOO_
}
Note that autoconf.prefix
only affects the lookup of the built-in checks.
Custom substitutions and overrides of built-in checks must include the
prefix. Similarly, both names in autoconf.aliases
must be specified
with the prefix (unless unprefixable; see below). For example:
h{config}: in{config}
{
autoconf.prefix = LIBFOO_
LIBFOO_HAVE_STRLCPY = true
autoconf.aliases = LIBFOO_SSIZE_T@ssize_t
}
Note also that some built-in check names are unprefixable, usually because
they are standard macro names (for example, BYTE_ORDER
) that on some
platforms come from system headers (for example, <sys/endian.h>
on FreeBSD).
Such checks have !
after their names on the first line of their
implementation files (for example, // BYTE_ORDER!
).
An implementation of a check may depend on another check. As a result, substitutions should not be conditional at the preprocessor level (unless all the checks are part of the same condition). Nor should the results of checks be adjusted until after the last check. For example:
#ifndef _WIN32
# cmakedefine HAVE_EXPLICIT_BZERO // Conditional substitution.
#endif
#cmakedefine HAVE_EXPLICIT_MEMSET // Shares implementation with BZERO.
#cmakedefine BYTE_ORDER
#if BYTE_ORDER == LITTLE_ENDIAN
# undef BYTE_ORDER // Adjusting the result.
#endif
#cmakedefine WORDS_BIGENDIAN // Based on BYTE_ORDER.
Below is the correct way to achieve the above semantics:
#cmakedefine HAVE_EXPLICIT_BZERO
#cmakedefine HAVE_EXPLICIT_MEMSET
#cmakedefine BYTE_ORDER
#cmakedefine WORDS_BIGENDIAN
#ifdef _WIN32
# undef HAVE_EXPLICIT_BZERO
#endif
#if BYTE_ORDER == LITTLE_ENDIAN
# undef BYTE_ORDER
#endif
Adding new checks
To add a check for a new configuration option <NAME>
simply create the
<NAME>.h
header file (preserving the case) with the corresponding check and
place it into libbuild2/autoconf/checks/
(use existing checks for
inspiration).
The first line in this header file must be in the form:
// <NAME>[!] [: <BASE>...]
If the name is followed by the !
modifier, then it is unprefixable (see
the previous section for details). The name can also be followed by :
and a
list of base checks. Such checks are automatically inserted before the rest of
the lines in the resulting substitution. One notable check that you may want
to use as a base is BUILD2_AUTOCONF_LIBC_VERSION
(see
comments for details).
Subsequent lines should be C-style comments or preprocessor directives that
#define
or #undef
<NAME>
depending on whether the feature is available
(though there can be idiosyncrasies; see const.h
, for example). Note that
there should be no double-quotes or backslashes except for line
continuations. For example, to add a check for option HAVE_BAR
, we could
create the HAVE_BAR.h
header file with the following content:
// HAVE_BAR
#undef HAVE_BAR
/* No bar on Windows except with MinGW. */
#if !defined(_WIN32) || \
defined(__MINGW32__)
# define HAVE_BAR 1
#endif
Note also that the module implementation may need to replace <NAME>
with its
prefixed version (unless it is unprefixable) if the autoconf.prefix
functionality is in use (see above). This is done by textually substituting
every occurrence of <NAME>
that is separated on both left and right hand
sides (that is, both characters immediately before and after <NAME>
are not
[A-Za-z0-9_]
).
Within a file duplicate checks are automatically suppressed. And if multiple
files are involved, then the user is expected to employ the autoconf.prefix
functionality to avoid clashes across files. However, this does not help
unprefixable names and, as a result, such checks should be implemented in
ways that deal with duplication (for example, include guards).
The duplicate suppression is incompatible with conditional (at the
preprocessor level) checks, for example, assuming both HAVE_EXPLICIT_*
checks are based on BUILD2_AUTOCONF_LIBC_VERSION
:
#ifndef _WIN32
# undef HAVE_EXPLICIT_BZERO
#endif
#undef HAVE_EXPLICIT_MEMSET
In this example, the autoconf
module will omit the second copy of the
BUILD2_AUTOCONF_LIBC_VERSION
check as part of the HAVE_EXPLICIT_MEMSET
substitution because it was already inserted as part of the
HAVE_EXPLICIT_BZERO
substitution. But the first copy will not be
preprocessed on Windows.
While there is no bulletproof way to detect such situations (because the
unconditional check could be BUILD2_AUTOCONF_LIBC_VERSION
itself; perhaps
we should only have private bases that are only accessed by the user via
derived public checks), it is a good idea for checks that are based on
other checks to verify that the base macros are in fact defined, for example:
// HAVE_EXPLICIT_BZERO : BUILD2_AUTOCONF_LIBC_VERSION
#ifndef BUILD2_AUTOCONF_LIBC_VERSION
# error BUILD2_AUTOCONF_LIBC_VERSION appears to be conditionally included
#endif
...