diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/.gitignore | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/buildfile | 277 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | doc/cli.sh | 24 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/manual.cli | 912 |
4 files changed, 847 insertions, 370 deletions
diff --git a/doc/.gitignore b/doc/.gitignore index 9d45a89..d33dca5 100644 --- a/doc/.gitignore +++ b/doc/.gitignore @@ -3,3 +3,7 @@ b.1 build2-*-manual.xhtml *.ps *.pdf + +# Auto-extracted documentation. +# +functions-*.cli diff --git a/doc/buildfile b/doc/buildfile index c797761..633505b 100644 --- a/doc/buildfile +++ b/doc/buildfile @@ -11,8 +11,285 @@ xhtml{*}: extension = xhtml css{common pre-box man} \ file{man-*} +# @@ TODO: why no testscript manual? + ./: doc{build2-build-system-manual*} \ css{code-box common doc pre-box toc} \ file{manual.cli doc-* *.html2ps} ./: file{cli.sh} + +# The build2 function documentation format for auto-extraction. +# +# Each listed .cxx file is expected to provide functions for one function +# family. In order to plug a new family/file, perform the following steps: +# +# 1. List the corresponding functions-<family>.cxx file stem below. +# 2. Add a section and source the generated .cli file in manual.cli. +# +# The functions-<family>.cxx file is expected to contain one or more comments +# in the following form: +# +# // <synopsis-line>+ +# // <blank-line> +# // (<paragraph-line>+|<code-block-line>+ +# // <blank-line>)+ +# +# That is, the comment starts with one or more synopsis lines followed by a +# blank line followed by a mixture of text paragraphs and/or preformatted code +# blocks separated by blank lines. The comment must be terminated with a blank +# line. See functions-regex.cxx for comprehensive examples. +# +# The synopsis line should be in the form: +# +# // $[<family>.]<name>(...) +# +# Each synopsis line may or may not be be qualified with <family>. The rule is +# as follows: If the function can only be called qualified, then the synopsis +# should contains a single qualified line. If the function can be called +# unqualified, then the synopsis should contains a single unqualified line. +# If some signatures can be called unqualifed while some -- only qualified, +# then there should be both qualified and unqualified lines. Note that there +# can also be functions with different <name>s in a single synopsis block. +# +# The text paragraphs may contain `...` and <...> fragments which are +# translated to \c{} and \ci{}, respectively. Note that these fragments cannot +# span multiple lines. +# +# The preformatted code blocks must be indented four spaces (not counting +# the space after //). +# +# There is problem with distinguishing blanks within a code block and a blank +# that separates the code block from the subsequent paragraph (or another code +# block). Strictly speaking, such a blank should be indented with four spaces +# but trailing spaces at the end of the line are generally frowned upon and in +# our code should be automatically zapped on save. +# +# So what we are going to do is treat a single blank line between two code +# lines as belonging to the code block rather than separating two code +# blocks. The latter can be achieved with a double blank line. Note that this +# means we cannot have double blank lines within a code block. + +# @@ TODO: using file{.cli}, change to cli{} once switch to ad hoc recipes. +# @@ TODO: get rid of backlink below once switch to ad hoc recipes. + +for ff: functions-builtin \ + functions-string \ + functions-integer \ + functions-bool \ + functions-path \ + functions-name \ + functions-target \ + functions-regex \ + functions-process \ + functions-filesystem \ + functions-project-name \ + functions-process-path \ + functions-target-triplet +{ + alias{functions}: file{$(ff).cli}: $src_root/libbuild2/cxx{$ff} + file{$(ff).cli}: backlink = true # @@ TMP until migrate to recipe (see cli.sh) +} + +file{~'/(functions-.+)\.cli/'}: cxx{~'/\1/'} +{{ + diag doc $< -> $> + + i = $path($<) # Input. + o = $path($>) # Output. + + # Extract the family name. + # + family = $regex.replace($name($<), 'functions-(.+)', '\1') + family = $regex.replace($family, '-', '_') + + echo "// Auto-extracted from $leaf($i) for \$$(family).*\(\)" >$o + + # The overall plan is as follows: read the file line by line recognizing the + # function documentation comments and maintaining the parsing state. + # + # Parsing state, one of: + # + # none -- outside of a documentation comment + # syno -- inside synopsis + # para -- inside text + # code -- inside preformatted code block + # blnk -- blank line separating synopsis/para/code + # + s = none # Current state. + p = none # Previous state. + + ln = [uint64] 0 # Line number. + for -n l <=$i + ln += 1 + + # Look for a C++ comments and extract its text. + # + t = $regex.match($l, '\s*// ?(.*)', return_subs) + + # Note that when writing the output we use the "leading blank line" rather + # than trailing approach. That is, we write the blank before starting the + # next block rather than after. + + if ($t == [null]) + if ($s != 'none') + if ($s != 'blnk') + exit "$i:$ln: blank line expected after description" + end + + # Close delayed code block (see below for details). + # + if ($p == 'code') + echo "\\" >>$o # end code + end + + echo "\"" >>$o # end cli doc string + end + + p = $s + s = 'none' + else + # This is a comment. What we do next depends on which state we are in. + # + if ($s == 'none' || $s == 'syno') + p = $s + + # See if this is a synopsys line. + # + if $regex.match($t, '\$.+\(.+\)') + if ($s == 'none') + synopsis = [strings] # Accumulate synopsis lines. + s = 'syno' + end + + synopsis += $t + elif ($s == 'syno') + if ($t != '') + exit "$i:$ln: blank line expected after synopsis" + end + + echo "$\n\"" >>$o # start cli doc string + + # Write the heading. Use the first function name as id. + # + # Note that while the functions in the synopsis could be + # unqualified, in the heading we always write them qualified. We + # also have to suppress duplicates since the same function can be + # mentioned in the synopsis both qualified and unqualified. + # + id = [null] + hs = [strings] + for t: $synopsis + t = $regex.replace($t, '\$(.+)\(.+\)', '\1') # Extract func name. + f = $regex.match($t, '(.+)\..+', return_subs) # Extract family. + + if ($f == [null]) + t = "$(family).$t" # Qualify. + elif ($f != $family) + exit "$i:$ln: function family in $t does not match $family" + end + + if ($id == [null]) # First. + id = $regex.replace($t, '\.', '-') + end + + # Suppress duplicates. + # + if! $find($hs, $t) + hs += $t + end + end + + h = $regex.merge($hs, '(.+)', '\\c{$\1()}', ', ') + + echo "\\h2#functions-$id|$h|$\n" >>$o # heading + + echo "\\" >>$o # start synopsis + for t: $synopsis + echo $t >>$o # synopsis line + end + echo "\\" >>$o # end synopsis + + s = 'blnk' + end + else # para|code|blnk + # See if this is a code line. + # + c = $regex.match($t, ' (.+)', return_subs) + + if ($c != [null]) + # Code line. + # + if ($s == 'para') + exit "$i:$ln: blank line expected before code block" + end + + # Treat a single blank line between two code lines as belonging to + # the code block rather than separating two code blocks (see above + # for details). + # + if ($s == 'blnk') + if ($p == 'code') + echo '' >>$o # continue code, write preceding blank + s = 'code' + else + echo "$\n\\" >>$o # start code + end + end + + echo $regex.replace($c, '"', '\\"') >>$o # write code line + + p = $s + s = 'code' + elif ($t != '') + # Paragraph line. + # + if ($s == 'code') + exit "$i:$ln: blank line expected after code block" + end + + # Close delayed code block (see above for details). + # + if ($p == 'code') + echo "\\" >>$o # end code + end + + if ($s == 'blnk') + echo '' >>$o # start para + end + + t = $regex.replace($t, '\\', '\\\\') # Escape backslashed + t = $regex.replace($t, '"', '\\"') # Escape double quotes. + + # Convert `` to \c{} and <> to \ci{}. + # + t = $regex.replace($t, '`([^`]+)`', '\\c{\1}') + t = $regex.replace($t, '<([^\s<>]+)>', '\\ci{\1}') + + echo $t >>$o # write para line + + p = $s + s = 'para' + else + # Blank line. + # + + # Note that we delay closing the code block in case this blank line + # is followed by another code line (and is therefore treated as + # belonging to the code block; see above for details). + # + if ($s != 'code' && $p == 'code') + echo "\\" >>$o # end code + end + + #if ($s == 'para') + # end para + #end + + p = $s + s = 'blnk' + end + end + end + end +}} @@ -93,6 +93,13 @@ function xhtml_to_ps () # <from> <to> [<html2ps-options>] function compile_doc () # <file> <prefix> <suffix> { + local file="$1" + shift + local prefix="$1" + shift + local suffix="$1" + shift + cli -I .. \ -v version="$(echo "$version" | sed -e 's/^\([^.]*\.[^.]*\).*/\1/')" \ -v date="$date" \ @@ -106,11 +113,12 @@ function compile_doc () # <file> <prefix> <suffix> --link-regex '%bdep([-.].+)%../../bdep/doc/bdep$1%' \ --link-regex '%testscript(#.+)?%build2-testscript-manual.xhtml$1%' \ --link-regex '%build2(#.+)?%build2-build-system-manual.xhtml$1%' \ ---output-prefix "$2" \ ---output-suffix "$3" \ -"$1" +--output-prefix "$prefix" \ +--output-suffix "$suffix" \ +"${@}" \ +"$file" - local n="$2$(basename -s .cli $1)$3" + local n="$prefix$(basename -s .cli $file)$suffix" xhtml_to_ps "$n.xhtml" "$n-a4.ps" -f doc.html2ps:a4.html2ps ps2pdf14 -sPAPERSIZE=a4 -dOptimize=true -dEmbedAllFonts=true "$n-a4.ps" "$n-a4.pdf" @@ -119,7 +127,13 @@ function compile_doc () # <file> <prefix> <suffix> ps2pdf14 -sPAPERSIZE=letter -dOptimize=true -dEmbedAllFonts=true "$n-letter.ps" "$n-letter.pdf" } -compile_doc manual.cli 'build2-build-system-' +# @@ TODO: replace -I. with $out_base and get rid of backlinking once +# migrated to reciped. +# +# Note: we have to manually map \h to h2 since we break the doc string. +# +b update: alias{functions} +compile_doc manual.cli 'build2-build-system-' '' --html-heading-map h=h2 -I . compile_doc testscript.cli 'build2-' '-manual' # Generate INSTALL in ../ diff --git a/doc/manual.cli b/doc/manual.cli index 5ccf351..c07074e 100644 --- a/doc/manual.cli +++ b/doc/manual.cli @@ -3613,8 +3613,9 @@ info $path.directory($src_base) # $src_base info $path.base($path.leaf($src_base)) # foo \ -Note that functions in \c{build2} are \i{pure} in a sense that they do not -alter the build state in any way. +Note that the majority of functions in \c{build2} are \i{pure} in a sense that +they do not alter the build state in any way (see \l{#functions Functions} for +details). \N|Functions in \c{build2} are currently defined either by the build system core or build system modules and are implemented in C++. In the future it will @@ -5510,369 +5511,6 @@ configuration header into two, one public and installed while the other private.| - -\h1#attributes|Attributes| - -\N{This chapter is a work in progress and is incomplete.} - -The only currently recognized target attribute is \c{rule_hint} which -specifies the rule hint. Rule hints can be used to resolve ambiguity when -multiple rules match the same target as well as to override an unambiguous -match. For example, the following rule hint makes sure our executable is -linked with the C++ compiler even though it only has C sources: - -\ -[rule_hint=cxx] exe{hello}: c{hello} -\ - - -\h1#name-patterns|Name Patterns| - -For convenience, in certain contexts, names can be generated with shell-like -wildcard patterns. A name is a \i{name pattern} if its value contains one or -more unquoted wildcard characters or character sequences. For example: - -\ -./: */ # All (immediate) subdirectories -exe{hello}: {hxx cxx}{**} # All C++ header/source files. -pattern = '*.txt' # Literal '*.txt'. -\ - -Pattern-based name generation is not performed in certain contexts. -Specifically, it is not performed in target names where it is interpreted -as a pattern for target type/pattern-specific variable assignments. For -example. - -\ -s = *.txt # Variable assignment (performed). -./: cxx{*} # Prerequisite names (performed). -cxx{*}: dist = false # Target pattern (not performed). -\ - -In contexts where it is performed, it can be inhibited with quoting, for -example: - -\ -pat = 'foo*bar' -./: cxx{'foo*bar'} -\ - -The following wildcards are recognized: - -\ -* - match any number of characters (including zero) -? - match any single character -[...] - match a character with a bracket expression -\ - -\N|Currently only literal character and range bracket expressions are -supported. Specifically, no character or equivalence classes, etc., are -supported nor the special characters backslash-escaping. See the \"Pattern -Matching Notation\" section in the POSIX \"Shell Command Language\" -specification for details.| - -Note that some wildcard characters may have special meaning in certain -contexts. For instance, \c{[} at the beginning of a value will be interpreted -as the start of the attribute list while \c{?} and \c{[} in the eval context -are part of the ternary operator and value subscript, respectively. In such -cases the character will need to be escaped in order to be treated as a -wildcard, for example: - -\ -x = \[1-9]-foo.txt -y = (foo.\?xx) -z = ($foo\[123].txt) -\ - -If a pattern ends with a directory separator, then it only matches -directories. Otherwise, it only matches files. Matches that start with a dot -(\c{.}) are automatically ignored unless the pattern itself also starts with -this character. - -In addition to the above wildcards, \c{**} and \c{***} are recognized as -wildcard sequences. If a pattern contains \c{**}, then it is matched just like -\c{*} but in all the subdirectories, recursively, but excluding directories -that contain the \c{.buildignore} file. The \c{***} wildcard behaves like -\c{**} but also matches the start directory itself. For example: - -\ -exe{hello}: cxx{**} # All C++ source files recursively. -\ - -A group-enclosed (\c{{\}}) pattern value may be followed by -inclusion/exclusion patterns/matches. A subsequent value is treated as an -inclusion or exclusion if it starts with a literal, unquoted plus (\c{+}) or -minus (\c{-}) sign, respectively. In this case the remaining group values, if -any, must all be inclusions or exclusions. If the second value doesn't start -with a plus or minus, then all the group values are considered independent -with leading pluses and minuses not having any special meaning. For regularity -as well as to allow patterns without wildcards, the first pattern can also -start with the plus sign. For example: - -\ -exe{hello}: cxx{f* -foo} # Exclude foo if exists. -exe{hello}: cxx{f* +bar} # Include bar if exists. -exe{hello}: cxx{f* -fo?} # Exclude foo and fox if exist. -exe{hello}: cxx{f* +b* -foo -bar} # Exclude foo and bar if exist. -exe{hello}: cxx{+f* +b* -foo -bar} # Same as above. -exe{hello}: cxx{+foo} # Pattern without wildcards. -exe{hello}: cxx{f* b* -z*} # Names matching three patterns. -\ - -Inclusions and exclusions are applied in the order specified and only to the -result produced up to that point. The order of names in the result is -unspecified. However, it is guaranteed not to contain duplicates. The first -pattern and the following inclusions/exclusions must be consistent with -regards to the type of filesystem entry they match. That is, they should all -match either files or directories. For example: - -\ -exe{hello}: cxx{f* -foo +*oo} # Exclusion has no effect. -exe{hello}: cxx{f* +*oo} # Ok, no duplicates. -./: {*/ -build} # Error: exclusion not a directory. -\ - -As a more realistic example, let's say we want to exclude source files that -reside in the \c{test/} directories (and their subdirectories) anywhere in the -tree. This can be achieved with the following pattern: - -\ -exe{hello}: cxx{** -***/test/**} -\ - -Similarly, if we wanted to exclude all source files that have the \c{-test} -suffix: - -\ -exe{hello}: cxx{** -**-test} -\ - -In contrast, the following pattern only excludes such files from the top -directory: - -\ -exe{hello}: cxx{** -*-test} -\ - -If many inclusions or exclusions need to be specified, then an -inclusion/exclusion group can be used. For example: - -\ -exe{hello}: cxx{f* -{foo bar}} -exe{hello}: cxx{+{f* b*} -{foo bar}} -\ - -This is particularly useful if you would like to list the names to include or -exclude in a variable. For example, this is how we can exclude certain files -from compilation but still include them as ordinary file prerequisites (so -that they are still included into the source distribution): - -\ -exc = foo.cxx bar.cxx -exe{hello}: cxx{+{f* b*} -{$exc}} file{$exc} -\ - -If we want to specify our pattern in a variable, then we have to use the -explicit inclusion syntax, for example: - -\ -pat = 'f*' -exe{hello}: cxx{+$pat} # Pattern match. -exe{hello}: cxx{$pat} # Literal 'f*'. - -pat = '+f*' -exe{hello}: cxx{$pat} # Literal '+f*'. - -inc = 'f*' 'b*' -exc = 'f*o' 'b*r' -exe{hello}: cxx{+{$inc} -{$exc}} -\ - -One common situation that calls for exclusions is auto-generated source -code. Let's say we have auto-generated command line parser in \c{options.hxx} -and \c{options.cxx}. Because of the in/out of source builds, our name pattern -may or may not find these files. Note, however, that we cannot just include -them as non-pattern prerequisites. We also have to exclude them from the -pattern match since otherwise we may end up with duplicate prerequisites. As a -result, this is how we have to handle this case provided we want to continue -using patterns to find other, non-generated source files: - -\ -exe{hello}: {hxx cxx}{* -options} {hxx cxx}{options} -\ - -If all our auto-generated source files have a common prefix or suffix, then we -can exclude them wholesale with a pattern. For example, if all our generated -files end with the `-options` suffix: - -\ -exe{hello}: {hxx cxx}{** -**-options} {hxx cxx}{foo-options bar-options} -\ - -If the name pattern includes an absolute directory, then the pattern match is -performed in that directory and the generated names include absolute -directories as well. Otherwise, the pattern match is performed in the -\i{pattern base} directory. In buildfiles this is \c{src_base} while on the -command line \- the current working directory. In this case the generated -names are relative to the base directory. For example, assuming we have the -\c{foo.cxx} and \c{b/bar.cxx} source files: - -\ -exe{hello}: $src_base/cxx{**} # $src_base/cxx{foo} $src_base/b/cxx{bar} -exe{hello}: cxx{**} # cxx{foo} b/cxx{bar} -\ - -Pattern matching as well as inclusion/exclusion logic is target -type-specific. If the name pattern does not contain a type, then the -\c{dir{\}} type is assumed if the pattern ends with a directory separator and -\c{file{\}} otherwise. - -For the \c{dir{\}} target type the trailing directory separator is added to -the pattern and all the inclusion/exclusion patterns/matches that do not -already end with one. Then the filesystem search is performed for matching -directories. For example: - -\ -./: dir{* -build} # Search for */, exclude build/. -\ - -For the \c{file{\}} and \c{file{\}}-based target types the default extension -(if any) is added to the pattern and all the inclusion/exclusion -patterns/matches that do not already contain an extension. Then the filesystem -search is performed for matching files. - -For example, the \c{cxx{\}} target type obtains the default extension from the -\c{extension} variable (see \l{#targets-types Target Types} for background). -Assuming we have the following line in our \c{root.build}: - -\ -cxx{*}: extension = cxx -\ - -And the following in our \c{buildfile}: - -\ -exe{hello}: {cxx}{* -foo -bar.cxx} -\ - -The pattern match will first search for all the files matching the \c{*.cxx} -pattern in \c{src_base} and then exclude \c{foo.cxx} and \c{bar.cxx} from the -result. Note also that target type-specific decorations are removed from the -result. So in the above example if the pattern match produces \c{baz.cxx}, -then the prerequisite name is \c{cxx{baz\}}, not \c{cxx{baz.cxx\}}. - -If the name generation cannot be performed because the base directory is -unknown, target type is unknown, or the target type is not directory or -file-based, then the name pattern is returned as is (that is, as an ordinary -name). Project-qualified names are never considered to be patterns. - - -\h1#variables|Variables| - -\N{This chapter is a work in progress and is incomplete.} - -The following variable/value types can currently be used in \c{buildfiles}: - -\ -bool - -int64 -int64s - -uint64 -uint64s - -string -strings - -path -paths -dir_path -dir_paths - -name -names -name_pair - -project_name -target_triplet -\ - -Note that while expansions in the target and prerequisite-specific assignments -happen in the corresponding target and prerequisite contexts, respectively, -for type/pattern-specific assignments they happen in the scope context. Plus, -a type/pattern-specific prepend/append is applied at the time of expansion for -the actual target. For example: - -\ -x = s - -file{foo}: # target -{ - x += t # s t - y = $x y # s t y -} - -file{foo}: file{bar} # prerequisite -{ - x += p # x t p - y = $x y # x t p y -} - -file{b*}: # type/pattern -{ - x += w # <append w> - y = $x w # <assign s w> -} - -x = S - -info $(file{bar}: x) # S w -info $(file{bar}: y) # s w -\ - - -\h1#directives|Directives| - -\N{This chapter is a work in progress and is incomplete.} - -\h#directives-define|\c{define}| - -\ -define <derived>: <base> -\ - -Define a new target type \c{<derived>} by inheriting from existing target type -\c{<base>}. See \l{#targets-types Target Types} for details. - - -\h#directives-include|\c{include}| - -\ -include <file> -include <directory> -\ - -Load the specified file (the first form) or \c{buildfile} in the specified -directory (the second form). In both cases the file is loaded in the scope -corresponding to its directory. Subsequent inclusions of the same file are -automatically ignored. See also \l{#directives-source \c{source}}. - - -\h#directives-source|\c{source}| - - -\ -source <file> -\ - -Load the specified file in the current scope as if its contents were copied -and pasted in place of the \c{source} directive. Note that subsequent sourcing -of the same file in the same scope are not automatically ignored. See also -\l{#directives-include \c{include}}. - - - \h1#targets|Targets and Target Types| \N{This chapter is a work in progress and is incomplete.} @@ -6232,6 +5870,550 @@ Here, without the explicit extension, the \c{.exe} extension would have been used by default. +\h1#variables|Variables| + +\N{This chapter is a work in progress and is incomplete.} + +The following variable/value types can currently be used in \c{buildfiles}: + +\ +bool + +int64 +int64s + +uint64 +uint64s + +string +strings + +path +paths +dir_path +dir_paths + +name +names +name_pair + +project_name +target_triplet +\ + +Note that while expansions in the target and prerequisite-specific assignments +happen in the corresponding target and prerequisite contexts, respectively, +for type/pattern-specific assignments they happen in the scope context. Plus, +a type/pattern-specific prepend/append is applied at the time of expansion for +the actual target. For example: + +\ +x = s + +file{foo}: # target +{ + x += t # s t + y = $x y # s t y +} + +file{foo}: file{bar} # prerequisite +{ + x += p # x t p + y = $x y # x t p y +} + +file{b*}: # type/pattern +{ + x += w # <append w> + y = $x w # <assign s w> +} + +x = S + +info $(file{bar}: x) # S w +info $(file{bar}: y) # s w +\ + + +\h1#functions|Functions| + +\N{This chapter is a work in progress and is incomplete.} + + +Functions in \c{build2} are organized into families, such as the +\c{$string.*()} family for manipulating strings or \c{$regex.*()} for working +with regular expressions. Most functions are pure and those that are not, +such as \c{$builtin.getenv()}, are explicitly documented as such. + +Some functions, such as from the \c{$regex.*()} family, can only be called +fully qualified with their family name. For example: + +\ +if $regex.match($name, '(.+)-(.+)') + ... +\ + +While other functions can be called without explicit qualification. For +example: + +\ +path = $getenv('PATH') +\ + +There are also functions that can be called unqualified only for certain types +of arguments (this fact will be reflected in their synopsis and/or +documentation). Note, however, that every function can always be called +qualified. +" + +// $builtin.*() +// +" +\h#functions-builtin|Builtin Functions| + +The \c{$builtin.*()} function family contains fundamental \c{build2} +functions. +" +source <functions-builtin.cli>; + +// $string.*() +// +" +\h#functions-string|String Functions| +" +source <functions-string.cli>; + + +// $integer.*() +// +" +\h#functions-integer|Integer Functions| +" +source <functions-integer.cli>; + + +// $bool.*() +// +" +\h#functions-bool|Bool Functions| +" +source <functions-bool.cli>; + + +// $path.*() +// +" +\h#functions-path|Path Functions| + +The \c{$path.*()} function family contains function that manipulating +filesystem paths. +" +source <functions-path.cli>; + + +// $name.*() +// +" +\h#functions-name|Name Functions| + +The \c{$name.*()} function family contains function that operate on target and +prerequisite names. See also the \l{#functions-target \c{$target.*()} function +family} for functions that operate on actual targets. +" +source <functions-name.cli>; + + +// $target.*() +// +" +\h#functions-target|Target Functions| + +The \c{$target.*()} function family contains function that operate on +targets. See also the \l{#functions-name \c{$name.*()} function family} for +functions that operate on target (and prerequisite) names. +" +source <functions-target.cli>; + + +// $regex.*() +// +" +\h#functions-regex|Regex Functions| + +The \c{$regex.*()} function family contains function that provide +comprehensive regular expression matching and substitution facilities. The +supported regular expression flavor is ECMAScript (more specifically, +ECMA-262-based C++11 regular expressions). + +In the \c{$regex.*()} functions the substitution escape sequences in the +format string (the \ci{fmt} argument) are extended with a subset of the Perl +escape sequences: \c{\\n}, \c{\\u}, \c{\\l}, \c{\\U}, \c{\\L}, \c{\\E}, +\c{\\1} ... \c{\\9}, and \c{\\\\}. Note that the standard ECMAScript escape +sequences (\c{$1}, \c{$2}, \c{$&}, etc) are still supported. + +Note that functions from the \c{$regex.*()} family can only be called fully +qualified with their family name. For example: + +\ +if $regex.match($name, '(.+)-(.+)') + ... +\ + +" +source <functions-regex.cli>; + + +// $process.*() +// +" +\h#functions-process|Process Functions| +" +source <functions-process.cli>; + + +// $filesystem.*() +// +" +\h#functions-filesystem|Filesystem Functions| +" +source <functions-filesystem.cli>; + + +// $project_name.*() +// +" +\h#functions-project_name|Project Name Functions| + +The \c{$project_name.*()} function family contains function that operate on +the \c{project_name} type. +" +source <functions-project-name.cli>; + + +// $process_path.*() +// +" +\h#functions-process-path|Process Path Functions| + +The \c{$process_path.*()} function family contains function that operate on +the \c{process_path} type and its extended \c{process_path_ex} variant. These +types describe a path to an executable that, if necessary, has been found in +\c{PATH}, completed with an extension, etc. The \c{process_path_ex} variant +includes additional metadata, such as the stable process name for diagnostics +and the executable checksum for change tracking. +" +source <functions-process-path.cli>; + + +// $target_triplet.*() +// +" +\h#functions-target-triplet|Target Triplet Functions| + +The \c{$target_triplet.*()} function family contains function that operate on +the \c{target_triplet} type that represents the ubiquitous +\c{\i{cpu}-\i{vendor}-\i{os}} target platform triplet. +" +source <functions-target-triplet.cli>; + + +" +\h1#directives|Directives| + +\N{This chapter is a work in progress and is incomplete.} + +\h#directives-define|\c{define}| + +\ +define <derived>: <base> +\ + +Define a new target type \c{<derived>} by inheriting from existing target type +\c{<base>}. See \l{#targets-types Target Types} for details. + + +\h#directives-include|\c{include}| + +\ +include <file> +include <directory> +\ + +Load the specified file (the first form) or \c{buildfile} in the specified +directory (the second form). In both cases the file is loaded in the scope +corresponding to its directory. Subsequent inclusions of the same file are +automatically ignored. See also \l{#directives-source \c{source}}. + + +\h#directives-source|\c{source}| + + +\ +source <file> +\ + +Load the specified file in the current scope as if its contents were copied +and pasted in place of the \c{source} directive. Note that subsequent sourcing +of the same file in the same scope are not automatically ignored. See also +\l{#directives-include \c{include}}. + + +\h1#attributes|Attributes| + +\N{This chapter is a work in progress and is incomplete.} + +The only currently recognized target attribute is \c{rule_hint} which +specifies the rule hint. Rule hints can be used to resolve ambiguity when +multiple rules match the same target as well as to override an unambiguous +match. For example, the following rule hint makes sure our executable is +linked with the C++ compiler even though it only has C sources: + +\ +[rule_hint=cxx] exe{hello}: c{hello} +\ + + +\h1#name-patterns|Name Patterns| + +For convenience, in certain contexts, names can be generated with shell-like +wildcard patterns. A name is a \i{name pattern} if its value contains one or +more unquoted wildcard characters or character sequences. For example: + +\ +./: */ # All (immediate) subdirectories +exe{hello}: {hxx cxx}{**} # All C++ header/source files. +pattern = '*.txt' # Literal '*.txt'. +\ + +Pattern-based name generation is not performed in certain contexts. +Specifically, it is not performed in target names where it is interpreted +as a pattern for target type/pattern-specific variable assignments. For +example. + +\ +s = *.txt # Variable assignment (performed). +./: cxx{*} # Prerequisite names (performed). +cxx{*}: dist = false # Target pattern (not performed). +\ + +In contexts where it is performed, it can be inhibited with quoting, for +example: + +\ +pat = 'foo*bar' +./: cxx{'foo*bar'} +\ + +The following wildcards are recognized: + +\ +* - match any number of characters (including zero) +? - match any single character +[...] - match a character with a bracket expression +\ + +\N|Currently only literal character and range bracket expressions are +supported. Specifically, no character or equivalence classes, etc., are +supported nor the special characters backslash-escaping. See the \"Pattern +Matching Notation\" section in the POSIX \"Shell Command Language\" +specification for details.| + +Note that some wildcard characters may have special meaning in certain +contexts. For instance, \c{[} at the beginning of a value will be interpreted +as the start of the attribute list while \c{?} and \c{[} in the eval context +are part of the ternary operator and value subscript, respectively. In such +cases the character will need to be escaped in order to be treated as a +wildcard, for example: + +\ +x = \[1-9]-foo.txt +y = (foo.\?xx) +z = ($foo\[123].txt) +\ + +If a pattern ends with a directory separator, then it only matches +directories. Otherwise, it only matches files. Matches that start with a dot +(\c{.}) are automatically ignored unless the pattern itself also starts with +this character. + +In addition to the above wildcards, \c{**} and \c{***} are recognized as +wildcard sequences. If a pattern contains \c{**}, then it is matched just like +\c{*} but in all the subdirectories, recursively, but excluding directories +that contain the \c{.buildignore} file. The \c{***} wildcard behaves like +\c{**} but also matches the start directory itself. For example: + +\ +exe{hello}: cxx{**} # All C++ source files recursively. +\ + +A group-enclosed (\c{{\}}) pattern value may be followed by +inclusion/exclusion patterns/matches. A subsequent value is treated as an +inclusion or exclusion if it starts with a literal, unquoted plus (\c{+}) or +minus (\c{-}) sign, respectively. In this case the remaining group values, if +any, must all be inclusions or exclusions. If the second value doesn't start +with a plus or minus, then all the group values are considered independent +with leading pluses and minuses not having any special meaning. For regularity +as well as to allow patterns without wildcards, the first pattern can also +start with the plus sign. For example: + +\ +exe{hello}: cxx{f* -foo} # Exclude foo if exists. +exe{hello}: cxx{f* +bar} # Include bar if exists. +exe{hello}: cxx{f* -fo?} # Exclude foo and fox if exist. +exe{hello}: cxx{f* +b* -foo -bar} # Exclude foo and bar if exist. +exe{hello}: cxx{+f* +b* -foo -bar} # Same as above. +exe{hello}: cxx{+foo} # Pattern without wildcards. +exe{hello}: cxx{f* b* -z*} # Names matching three patterns. +\ + +Inclusions and exclusions are applied in the order specified and only to the +result produced up to that point. The order of names in the result is +unspecified. However, it is guaranteed not to contain duplicates. The first +pattern and the following inclusions/exclusions must be consistent with +regards to the type of filesystem entry they match. That is, they should all +match either files or directories. For example: + +\ +exe{hello}: cxx{f* -foo +*oo} # Exclusion has no effect. +exe{hello}: cxx{f* +*oo} # Ok, no duplicates. +./: {*/ -build} # Error: exclusion not a directory. +\ + +As a more realistic example, let's say we want to exclude source files that +reside in the \c{test/} directories (and their subdirectories) anywhere in the +tree. This can be achieved with the following pattern: + +\ +exe{hello}: cxx{** -***/test/**} +\ + +Similarly, if we wanted to exclude all source files that have the \c{-test} +suffix: + +\ +exe{hello}: cxx{** -**-test} +\ + +In contrast, the following pattern only excludes such files from the top +directory: + +\ +exe{hello}: cxx{** -*-test} +\ + +If many inclusions or exclusions need to be specified, then an +inclusion/exclusion group can be used. For example: + +\ +exe{hello}: cxx{f* -{foo bar}} +exe{hello}: cxx{+{f* b*} -{foo bar}} +\ + +This is particularly useful if you would like to list the names to include or +exclude in a variable. For example, this is how we can exclude certain files +from compilation but still include them as ordinary file prerequisites (so +that they are still included into the source distribution): + +\ +exc = foo.cxx bar.cxx +exe{hello}: cxx{+{f* b*} -{$exc}} file{$exc} +\ + +If we want to specify our pattern in a variable, then we have to use the +explicit inclusion syntax, for example: + +\ +pat = 'f*' +exe{hello}: cxx{+$pat} # Pattern match. +exe{hello}: cxx{$pat} # Literal 'f*'. + +pat = '+f*' +exe{hello}: cxx{$pat} # Literal '+f*'. + +inc = 'f*' 'b*' +exc = 'f*o' 'b*r' +exe{hello}: cxx{+{$inc} -{$exc}} +\ + +One common situation that calls for exclusions is auto-generated source +code. Let's say we have auto-generated command line parser in \c{options.hxx} +and \c{options.cxx}. Because of the in/out of source builds, our name pattern +may or may not find these files. Note, however, that we cannot just include +them as non-pattern prerequisites. We also have to exclude them from the +pattern match since otherwise we may end up with duplicate prerequisites. As a +result, this is how we have to handle this case provided we want to continue +using patterns to find other, non-generated source files: + +\ +exe{hello}: {hxx cxx}{* -options} {hxx cxx}{options} +\ + +If all our auto-generated source files have a common prefix or suffix, then we +can exclude them wholesale with a pattern. For example, if all our generated +files end with the `-options` suffix: + +\ +exe{hello}: {hxx cxx}{** -**-options} {hxx cxx}{foo-options bar-options} +\ + +If the name pattern includes an absolute directory, then the pattern match is +performed in that directory and the generated names include absolute +directories as well. Otherwise, the pattern match is performed in the +\i{pattern base} directory. In buildfiles this is \c{src_base} while on the +command line \- the current working directory. In this case the generated +names are relative to the base directory. For example, assuming we have the +\c{foo.cxx} and \c{b/bar.cxx} source files: + +\ +exe{hello}: $src_base/cxx{**} # $src_base/cxx{foo} $src_base/b/cxx{bar} +exe{hello}: cxx{**} # cxx{foo} b/cxx{bar} +\ + +Pattern matching as well as inclusion/exclusion logic is target +type-specific. If the name pattern does not contain a type, then the +\c{dir{\}} type is assumed if the pattern ends with a directory separator and +\c{file{\}} otherwise. + +For the \c{dir{\}} target type the trailing directory separator is added to +the pattern and all the inclusion/exclusion patterns/matches that do not +already end with one. Then the filesystem search is performed for matching +directories. For example: + +\ +./: dir{* -build} # Search for */, exclude build/. +\ + +For the \c{file{\}} and \c{file{\}}-based target types the default extension +(if any) is added to the pattern and all the inclusion/exclusion +patterns/matches that do not already contain an extension. Then the filesystem +search is performed for matching files. + +For example, the \c{cxx{\}} target type obtains the default extension from the +\c{extension} variable (see \l{#targets-types Target Types} for background). +Assuming we have the following line in our \c{root.build}: + +\ +cxx{*}: extension = cxx +\ + +And the following in our \c{buildfile}: + +\ +exe{hello}: {cxx}{* -foo -bar.cxx} +\ + +The pattern match will first search for all the files matching the \c{*.cxx} +pattern in \c{src_base} and then exclude \c{foo.cxx} and \c{bar.cxx} from the +result. Note also that target type-specific decorations are removed from the +result. So in the above example if the pattern match produces \c{baz.cxx}, +then the prerequisite name is \c{cxx{baz\}}, not \c{cxx{baz.cxx\}}. + +If the name generation cannot be performed because the base directory is +unknown, target type is unknown, or the target type is not directory or +file-based, then the name pattern is returned as is (that is, as an ordinary +name). Project-qualified names are never considered to be patterns. + + \h1#module-config|\c{config} Module| \N{This chapter is a work in progress and is incomplete.} |