// file : libbuild2/cc/compile-rule.cxx -*- C++ -*- // license : MIT; see accompanying LICENSE file #include #include // exit() #include // strlen(), strchr() #include #include #include #include #include #include #include // mtime() #include #include #include #include // h #include #include using std::exit; using std::strlen; using namespace butl; namespace build2 { namespace cc { using namespace bin; // Module type/info string serialization. // // The string representation is a space-separated list of module names // or quoted paths for header units with the following rules: // // 1. If this is a module unit, then the first name is the module name // intself following by either '!' for an interface or header unit and // by '+' for an implementation unit. // // 2. If an imported module is re-exported, then the module name is // followed by '*'. // // For example: // // foo! foo.core* foo.base* foo.impl // foo.base+ foo.impl // foo.base foo.impl // "/usr/include/stdio.h"! // "/usr/include/stdio.h"! "/usr/include/stddef.h" // // NOTE: currently we omit the imported header units since we have no need // for this information (everything is handled by the mapper). Plus, // resolving an import declaration to an absolute path would require // some effort. // static string to_string (unit_type ut, const module_info& mi) { string s; if (ut != unit_type::non_modular) { if (ut == unit_type::module_header) s += '"'; s += mi.name; if (ut == unit_type::module_header) s += '"'; s += (ut == unit_type::module_impl ? '+' : '!'); } for (const module_import& i: mi.imports) { if (!s.empty ()) s += ' '; if (i.type == unit_type::module_header) s += '"'; s += i.name; if (i.type == unit_type::module_header) s += '"'; if (i.exported) s += '*'; } return s; } static pair to_module_info (const string& s) { unit_type ut (unit_type::non_modular); module_info mi; for (size_t b (0), e (0), n (s.size ()), m; e < n; ) { // Let's handle paths with spaces seeing that we already quote them. // char d (s[b = e] == '"' ? '"' : ' '); if ((m = next_word (s, n, b, e, d)) == 0) break; char c (d == ' ' ? s[e - 1] : // Before delimiter. e + 1 < n ? s[e + 1] : // After delimiter. '\0'); switch (c) { case '!': case '+': case '*': break; default: c = '\0'; } string w (s, b, m - (d == ' ' && c != '\0' ? 1 : 0)); unit_type t (c == '+' ? unit_type::module_impl : d == ' ' ? unit_type::module_iface : unit_type::module_header); if (c == '!' || c == '+') { ut = t; mi.name = move (w); } else mi.imports.push_back (module_import {t, move (w), c == '*', 0}); // Skip to the next word (quote and space or just space). // e += (d == '"' ? 2 : 1); } return pair (move (ut), move (mi)); } // preprocessed // template inline bool operator< (preprocessed l, T r) // Template because of VC14 bug. { return static_cast (l) < static_cast (r); } preprocessed to_preprocessed (const string& s) { if (s == "none") return preprocessed::none; if (s == "includes") return preprocessed::includes; if (s == "modules") return preprocessed::modules; if (s == "all") return preprocessed::all; throw invalid_argument ("invalid preprocessed value '" + s + "'"); } struct compile_rule::match_data { explicit match_data (unit_type t, const prerequisite_member& s) : type (t), src (s) {} unit_type type; preprocessed pp = preprocessed::none; bool deferred_failure = false; // Failure deferred to compilation. bool symexport = false; // Target uses __symexport. bool touch = false; // Target needs to be touched. timestamp mt = timestamp_unknown; // Target timestamp. prerequisite_member src; auto_rmfile psrc; // Preprocessed source, if any. path dd; // Dependency database path. size_t headers = 0; // Number of imported header units. module_positions modules = {0, 0, 0}; // Positions of imported modules. }; compile_rule:: compile_rule (data&& d) : common (move (d)), rule_id (string (x) += ".compile 4") { static_assert (sizeof (match_data) <= target::data_size, "insufficient space"); } template void compile_rule:: append_sys_inc_options (T& args) const { assert (sys_inc_dirs_extra <= sys_inc_dirs.size ()); // Note that the mode options are added as part of cmode. // auto b (sys_inc_dirs.begin () + sys_inc_dirs_mode); auto m (sys_inc_dirs.begin () + sys_inc_dirs_extra); auto e (sys_inc_dirs.end ()); // Note: starting from 15.6, MSVC gained /external:I option though it // doesn't seem to affect the order, only "system-ness". // append_option_values ( args, cclass == compiler_class::gcc ? "-idirafter" : cclass == compiler_class::msvc ? "/I" : "-I", m, e, [] (const dir_path& d) {return d.string ().c_str ();}); // For MSVC if we have no INCLUDE environment variable set, then we // add all of them. But we want extras to come first. Note also that // clang-cl takes care of this itself. // if (ctype == compiler_type::msvc && cvariant != "clang") { if (!getenv ("INCLUDE")) { append_option_values ( args, "/I", b, m, [] (const dir_path& d) {return d.string ().c_str ();}); } } } size_t compile_rule:: append_lang_options (cstrings& args, const match_data& md) const { size_t r (args.size ()); // Normally there will be one or two options/arguments. // const char* o1 (nullptr); const char* o2 (nullptr); switch (cclass) { case compiler_class::msvc: { switch (x_lang) { case lang::c: o1 = "/TC"; break; case lang::cxx: o1 = "/TP"; break; } break; } case compiler_class::gcc: { // For GCC we ignore the preprocessed value since it is handled via // -fpreprocessed -fdirectives-only. // // Clang has *-cpp-output (but not c++-module-cpp-output) and they // handle comments and line continuations. However, currently this // is only by accident since these modes are essentially equivalent // to their cpp-output-less versions. // switch (md.type) { case unit_type::non_modular: case unit_type::module_impl: { o1 = "-x"; switch (x_lang) { case lang::c: o2 = "c"; break; case lang::cxx: o2 = "c++"; break; } break; } case unit_type::module_iface: case unit_type::module_header: { // Here things get rather compiler-specific. We also assume // the language is C++. // bool h (md.type == unit_type::module_header); //@@ MODHDR TODO: should we try to distinguish c-header vs // c++-header based on the source target type? switch (ctype) { case compiler_type::gcc: { // In GCC compiling a header unit required -fmodule-header // in addition to -x c/c++-header. Probably because relying // on just -x would be ambigous with its PCH support. // if (h) args.push_back ("-fmodule-header"); o1 = "-x"; o2 = h ? "c++-header" : "c++"; break; } case compiler_type::clang: { o1 = "-x"; o2 = h ? "c++-header" : "c++-module"; break; } default: assert (false); } break; } } break; } } if (o1 != nullptr) args.push_back (o1); if (o2 != nullptr) args.push_back (o2); return args.size () - r; } inline void compile_rule:: append_symexport_options (cstrings& args, const target& t) const { // With VC if a BMI is compiled with dllexport, then when such BMI is // imported, it is auto-magically treated as dllimport. Let's hope // other compilers follow suit. // args.push_back (t.is_a () && tclass == "windows" ? "-D__symexport=__declspec(dllexport)" : "-D__symexport="); } bool compile_rule:: match (action a, target& t, const string&) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::match"); // Note: unit type will be refined in apply(). // unit_type ut (t.is_a () ? unit_type::module_header : t.is_a () ? unit_type::module_iface : unit_type::non_modular); // Link-up to our group (this is the obj/bmi{} target group protocol // which means this can be done whether we match or not). // if (t.group == nullptr) t.group = &search (t, (ut == unit_type::module_header ? hbmi::static_type: ut == unit_type::module_iface ? bmi::static_type : obj::static_type), t.dir, t.out, t.name); // See if we have a source file. Iterate in reverse so that a source // file specified for a member overrides the one specified for the // group. Also "see through" groups. // for (prerequisite_member p: reverse_group_prerequisite_members (a, t)) { // If excluded or ad hoc, then don't factor it into our tests. // if (include (a, t, p) != include_type::normal) continue; // For a header unit we check the "real header" plus the C header. // if (ut == unit_type::module_header ? p.is_a (**x_hdr) || p.is_a () : ut == unit_type::module_iface ? p.is_a (*x_mod) : p.is_a (x_src)) { // Save in the target's auxiliary storage. // t.data (match_data (ut, p)); return true; } } l4 ([&]{trace << "no " << x_lang << " source file for target " << t;}); return false; } // Append or hash library options from a pair of *.export.* variables // (first is x.* then cc.*) recursively, prerequisite libraries first. // template void compile_rule:: append_library_options (appended_libraries& ls, T& args, const scope& bs, action a, const file& l, bool la, linfo li) const { struct data { appended_libraries& ls; T& args; } d {ls, args}; // See through utility libraries. // auto imp = [] (const file& l, bool la) {return la && l.is_a ();}; auto opt = [&d, this] (const file& l, const string& t, bool com, bool exp) { // Note that in our model *.export.poptions are always "interface", // even if set on liba{}/libs{}, unlike loptions. // if (!exp) // Ignore libux. return; // Suppress duplicates. // // Compilation is the simple case: we can add the options on the first // occurrence of the library and ignore all subsequent occurrences. // See GitHub issue #114 for details. // if (find (d.ls.begin (), d.ls.end (), &l) != d.ls.end ()) return; const variable& var ( com ? c_export_poptions : (t == x ? x_export_poptions : l.ctx.var_pool[t + ".export.poptions"])); append_options (d.args, l, var); // From the process_libraries() semantics we know that the final call // is always for the common options. // if (com) d.ls.push_back (&l); }; process_libraries (a, bs, li, sys_lib_dirs, l, la, 0, // Hack: lflags unused. imp, nullptr, opt); } void compile_rule:: append_library_options (appended_libraries& ls, strings& args, const scope& bs, action a, const file& l, bool la, linfo li) const { append_library_options (ls, args, bs, a, l, la, li); } template void compile_rule:: append_library_options (T& args, const scope& bs, action a, const target& t, linfo li) const { appended_libraries ls; for (prerequisite_member p: group_prerequisite_members (a, t)) { if (include (a, t, p) != include_type::normal) // Excluded/ad hoc. continue; // Should be already searched and matched for libraries. // if (const target* pt = p.load ()) { if (const libx* l = pt->is_a ()) pt = link_member (*l, a, li); bool la; const file* f; if ((la = (f = pt->is_a ())) || (la = (f = pt->is_a ())) || ( (f = pt->is_a ()))) { append_library_options (ls, args, bs, a, *f, la, li); } } } } // Append library prefixes based on the *.export.poptions variables // recursively, prerequisite libraries first. // void compile_rule:: append_library_prefixes (prefix_map& m, const scope& bs, action a, target& t, linfo li) const { auto imp = [] (const file& l, bool la) {return la && l.is_a ();}; auto opt = [&m, this] ( const file& l, const string& t, bool com, bool exp) { if (!exp) return; const variable& var ( com ? c_export_poptions : (t == x ? x_export_poptions : l.ctx.var_pool[t + ".export.poptions"])); append_prefixes (m, l, var); }; // The same logic as in append_library_options(). // const function impf (imp); const function optf (opt); for (prerequisite_member p: group_prerequisite_members (a, t)) { if (include (a, t, p) != include_type::normal) // Excluded/ad hoc. continue; if (const target* pt = p.load ()) { if (const libx* l = pt->is_a ()) pt = link_member (*l, a, li); bool la; if (!((la = pt->is_a ()) || (la = pt->is_a ()) || pt->is_a ())) continue; process_libraries (a, bs, li, sys_lib_dirs, pt->as (), la, 0, // Hack: lflags unused. impf, nullptr, optf); } } } // Update the target during the match phase. Return true if it has changed // or if the passed timestamp is not timestamp_unknown and is older than // the target. // // This function is used to make sure header dependencies are up to date. // // There would normally be a lot of headers for every source file (think // all the system headers) and just calling execute_direct() on all of // them can get expensive. At the same time, most of these headers are // existing files that we will never be updating (again, system headers, // for example) and the rule that will match them is the fallback // file_rule. That rule has an optimization: it returns noop_recipe (which // causes the target state to be automatically set to unchanged) if the // file is known to be up to date. So we do the update "smartly". // static bool update (tracer& trace, action a, const target& t, timestamp ts) { const path_target* pt (t.is_a ()); if (pt == nullptr) ts = timestamp_unknown; target_state os (t.matched_state (a)); if (os == target_state::unchanged) { if (ts == timestamp_unknown) return false; else { // We expect the timestamp to be known (i.e., existing file). // timestamp mt (pt->mtime ()); assert (mt != timestamp_unknown); return mt > ts; } } else { // We only want to return true if our call to execute() actually // caused an update. In particular, the target could already have been // in target_state::changed because of a dependency extraction run for // some other source file. // // @@ MT perf: so we are going to switch the phase and execute for // any generated header. // phase_switch ps (t.ctx, run_phase::execute); target_state ns (execute_direct (a, t)); if (ns != os && ns != target_state::unchanged) { l6 ([&]{trace << "updated " << t << "; old state " << os << "; new state " << ns;}); return true; } else return ts != timestamp_unknown ? pt->newer (ts, ns) : false; } } recipe compile_rule:: apply (action a, target& xt) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::apply"); file& t (xt.as ()); // Either obj*{} or bmi*{}. match_data& md (t.data ()); context& ctx (t.ctx); // Note: until refined below, non-BMI-generating translation unit is // assumed non-modular. // unit_type ut (md.type); const scope& bs (t.base_scope ()); const scope& rs (*bs.root_scope ()); otype ot (compile_type (t, ut)); linfo li (link_info (bs, ot)); // Link info for selecting libraries. compile_target_types tts (compile_types (ot)); // Derive file name from target name. // string e; // Primary target extension (module or object). { const char* o ("o"); // Object extension (.o or .obj). if (tsys == "win32-msvc") { switch (ot) { case otype::e: e = "exe."; break; case otype::a: e = "lib."; break; case otype::s: e = "dll."; break; } o = "obj"; } else if (tsys == "mingw32") { switch (ot) { case otype::e: e = "exe."; break; case otype::a: e = "a."; break; case otype::s: e = "dll."; break; } } else if (tsys == "darwin") { switch (ot) { case otype::e: e = ""; break; case otype::a: e = "a."; break; case otype::s: e = "dylib."; break; } } else { switch (ot) { case otype::e: e = ""; break; case otype::a: e = "a."; break; case otype::s: e = "so."; break; } } switch (ctype) { case compiler_type::gcc: { e += (ut != unit_type::non_modular ? "gcm" : o); break; } case compiler_type::clang: { e += (ut != unit_type::non_modular ? "pcm" : o); break; } case compiler_type::msvc: { e += (ut != unit_type::non_modular ? "ifc" : o); break; } case compiler_type::icc: { assert (ut == unit_type::non_modular); e += o; } } // If we are compiling a module, then the obj*{} is an ad hoc member // of bmi*{}. For now neither GCC nor Clang produce an object file // for a header unit (but something tells me this is going to change). // if (ut == unit_type::module_iface) { // The module interface unit can be the same as an implementation // (e.g., foo.mxx and foo.cxx) which means obj*{} targets could // collide. So we add the module extension to the target name. // file& obj (add_adhoc_member (t, tts.obj, e.c_str ())); if (obj.path ().empty ()) obj.derive_path (o); } } const path& tp (t.derive_path (e.c_str ())); // Inject dependency on the output directory. // const fsdir* dir (inject_fsdir (a, t)); // Match all the existing prerequisites. The injection code takes care // of the ones it is adding. // // When cleaning, ignore prerequisites that are not in the same or a // subdirectory of our project root. // auto& pts (t.prerequisite_targets[a]); optional usr_lib_dirs; // Extract lazily. // Start asynchronous matching of prerequisites. Wait with unlocked // phase to allow phase switching. // wait_guard wg (ctx, ctx.count_busy (), t[a].task_count, true); target_state src_ts1 (target_state::unknown), src_ts2 (src_ts1); size_t src_i (~0); // Index of src target. size_t start (pts.size ()); // Index of the first to be added. for (prerequisite_member p: group_prerequisite_members (a, t)) { const target* pt (nullptr); include_type pi (include (a, t, p)); if (!pi) continue; // A dependency on a library is there so that we can get its // *.export.poptions, modules, etc. This is the library metadata // protocol. See also append_library_options(). // if (pi == include_type::normal && (p.is_a () || p.is_a () || p.is_a () || p.is_a ())) { if (a.operation () == update_id) { // Handle (phase two) imported libraries. We know that for such // libraries we don't need to do match() in order to get options // (if any, they would be set by search_library()). // if (p.proj ()) { if (search_library (a, sys_lib_dirs, usr_lib_dirs, p.prerequisite) != nullptr) continue; } pt = &p.search (t); if (const libx* l = pt->is_a ()) pt = link_member (*l, a, li); } else continue; } // // For modules we pick only what we import which is done below so // skip it here. One corner case is clean: we assume that someone // else (normally library/executable) also depends on it and will // clean it up. // else if (pi == include_type::normal && (p.is_a () || p.is_a (tts.bmi) || p.is_a () || p.is_a (tts.hbmi))) { continue; } else { pt = &p.search (t); if (a.operation () == clean_id && !pt->dir.sub (rs.out_path ())) continue; } target_state ts ( match_async (a, *pt, ctx.count_busy (), t[a].task_count)); if (p == md.src) { src_i = pts.size (); src_ts1 = ts; } pts.push_back (prerequisite_target (pt, pi)); } size_t src_tc1 (t[a].task_count.load (memory_order_consume)); wg.wait (); size_t src_tc2 (t[a].task_count.load (memory_order_consume)); // Finish matching all the targets that we have started. // for (size_t i (start), n (pts.size ()); i != n; ++i) { const target*& pt (pts[i]); // Making sure a library is updated before us will only restrict // parallelism. But we do need to match it in order to get its imports // resolved and prerequisite_targets populated. So we match it but // then unmatch if it is safe. And thanks to the two-pass prerequisite // match in link::apply() it will be safe unless someone is building // an obj?{} target directory. // pair mr ( build2::match ( a, *pt, pt->is_a () || pt->is_a () || pt->is_a () ? unmatch::safe : unmatch::none)); if (mr.first) pt = nullptr; // Ignore in execute. else if (i == src_i) src_ts2 = mr.second; } // Inject additional prerequisites. We only do it when performing update // since chances are we will have to update some of our prerequisites in // the process (auto-generated source code, header units). // if (a == perform_update_id) { const file& src (pts[src_i]->as ()); // Figure out if __symexport is used. While normally it is specified // on the project root (which we cached), it can be overridden with // a target-specific value for installed modules (which we sidebuild // as part of our project). // // @@ MODHDR MSVC: are we going to do the same for header units? I // guess we will figure it out when MSVC supports header units. // Also see hashing below. // if (ut == unit_type::module_iface) { lookup l (src.vars[x_symexport]); md.symexport = l ? cast (l) : symexport; } // Make sure the output directory exists. // // Is this the right thing to do? It does smell a bit, but then we do // worse things in inject_prerequisites() below. There is also no way // to postpone this until update since we need to extract and inject // header dependencies now (we don't want to be calling search() and // match() in update), which means we need to cache them now as well. // So the only alternative, it seems, is to cache the updates to the // database until later which will sure complicate (and slow down) // things. // if (dir != nullptr) { // We can do it properly by using execute_direct(). But this means // we will be switching to the execute phase with all the associated // overheads. At the same time, in case of update, creation of a // directory is not going to change the external state in any way // that would affect any parallel efforts in building the internal // state. So we are just going to create the directory directly. // Note, however, that we cannot modify the fsdir{} target since // this can very well be happening in parallel. But that's not a // problem since fsdir{}'s update is idempotent. // fsdir_rule::perform_update_direct (a, t); } // Note: the leading '@' is reserved for the module map prefix (see // extract_modules()) and no other line must start with it. // depdb dd (tp + ".d"); // First should come the rule name/version. // if (dd.expect (rule_id) != nullptr) l4 ([&]{trace << "rule mismatch forcing update of " << t;}); // Then the compiler checksum. Note that here we assume it // incorporates the (default) target so that if the compiler changes // but only in what it targets, then the checksum will still change. // if (dd.expect (cast (rs[x_checksum])) != nullptr) l4 ([&]{trace << "compiler mismatch forcing update of " << t;}); // Then the options checksum. // // The idea is to keep them exactly as they are passed to the compiler // since the order may be significant. // { sha256 cs; // These flags affect how we compile the source and/or the format of // depdb so factor them in. // cs.append (&md.pp, sizeof (md.pp)); if (ut == unit_type::module_iface) cs.append (&md.symexport, sizeof (md.symexport)); if (xlate_hdr != nullptr) append_options (cs, *xlate_hdr); if (md.pp != preprocessed::all) { append_options (cs, t, x_poptions); append_options (cs, t, c_poptions); // Hash *.export.poptions from prerequisite libraries. // append_library_options (cs, bs, a, t, li); } append_options (cs, t, c_coptions); append_options (cs, t, x_coptions); if (ot == otype::s) { // On Darwin, Win32 -fPIC is the default. // if (tclass == "linux" || tclass == "bsd") cs.append ("-fPIC"); } append_options (cs, cmode); if (md.pp != preprocessed::all) append_sys_inc_options (cs); // Extra system header dirs (last). if (dd.expect (cs.string ()) != nullptr) l4 ([&]{trace << "options mismatch forcing update of " << t;}); } // Finally the source file. // { const path& p (src.path ()); // @@ TMP: we seem to have a race condition here but can't quite put // our finger on it. // // NOTE: remember to get rid of src_ts*, etc., once done. // #if 0 assert (!p.empty ()); // Sanity check. #else if (p.empty ()) { target_state src_ts3 (src.matched_state (a, false)); info << "unassigned path for target " << src << info << "is empty_path: " << (&p == &empty_path) << info << "target state 1: " << src_ts1 << info << "target state 2: " << src_ts2 << info << "target state 3: " << src_ts3 << info << "target count 1: " << src_tc1 << info << "target count 2: " << src_tc2 << info << "please report at " << "https://github.com/build2/build2/issues/89"; assert (!p.empty ()); } #endif if (dd.expect (p) != nullptr) l4 ([&]{trace << "source file mismatch forcing update of " << t;}); } // If any of the above checks resulted in a mismatch (different // compiler, options, or source file) or if the depdb is newer than // the target (interrupted update), then do unconditional update. // // Note that load_mtime() can only be used in the execute phase so we // have to check for a cached value manually. // bool u; timestamp mt; if (dd.writing ()) u = true; else { if ((mt = t.mtime ()) == timestamp_unknown) t.mtime (mt = mtime (tp)); // Cache. u = dd.mtime > mt; } // If updating for any of the above reasons, treat it as if doesn't // exist. // if (u) mt = timestamp_nonexistent; // Update prerequisite targets (normally just the source file). // // This is an unusual place and time to do it. But we have to do it // before extracting dependencies. The reasoning for source file is // pretty clear. What other prerequisites could we have? While // normally they will be some other sources (as in, static content // from src_root), it's possible they are some auto-generated stuff. // And it's possible they affect the preprocessor result. Say some ad // hoc/out-of-band compiler input file that is passed via the command // line. So, to be safe, we make sure everything is up to date. // for (const target* pt: pts) { if (pt == nullptr || pt == dir) continue; u = update (trace, a, *pt, u ? timestamp_unknown : mt) || u; } // Check if the source is already preprocessed to a certain degree. // This determines which of the following steps we perform and on // what source (original or preprocessed). // // Note: must be set on the src target. // if (const string* v = cast_null (src[x_preprocessed])) try { md.pp = to_preprocessed (*v); } catch (const invalid_argument& e) { fail << "invalid " << x_preprocessed.name << " variable value " << "for target " << src << ": " << e; } // If we have no #include directives (or header unit imports), then // skip header dependency extraction. // pair psrc (auto_rmfile (), false); if (md.pp < preprocessed::includes) { // Note: trace is used in a test. // l5 ([&]{trace << "extracting headers from " << src;}); psrc = extract_headers (a, bs, t, li, src, md, dd, u, mt); } // Next we "obtain" the translation unit information. What exactly // "obtain" entails is tricky: If things changed, then we re-parse the // translation unit. Otherwise, we re-create this information from // depdb. We, however, have to do it here and now in case the database // is invalid and we still have to fallback to re-parse. // // Store the translation unit's checksum to detect ignorable changes // (whitespaces, comments, etc). // // Note that we skip all of this if we have deferred a failure from // the header extraction phase (none of the module information should // be relevant). // if (!md.deferred_failure) { optional cs; if (string* l = dd.read ()) cs = move (*l); else u = true; // Database is invalid, force re-parse. unit tu; for (bool first (true);; first = false) { if (u) { // Flush depdb since it can be used (as a module map) by // parse_unit(). // if (dd.writing ()) dd.flush (); auto p (parse_unit (a, t, li, src, psrc.first, md, dd.path)); if (!cs || *cs != p.second) { assert (first); // Unchanged TU has a different checksum? dd.write (p.second); } // // Don't clear the update flag if it was forced or the checksum // should not be relied upon. // else if (first && !p.second.empty ()) { // Clear the update flag and set the touch flag. Unless there // is no (usable) object file, of course. See also the md.mt // logic below. // if (mt != timestamp_nonexistent) { u = false; md.touch = true; } } tu = move (p.first); } if (modules) { if (u || !first) { string s (to_string (tu.type, tu.module_info)); if (first) dd.expect (s); else dd.write (s); } else { if (string* l = dd.read ()) { auto p (to_module_info (*l)); tu.type = p.first; tu.module_info = move (p.second); } else { u = true; // Database is invalid, force re-parse. continue; } } } break; } // Make sure the translation unit type matches the resulting target // type. // switch (tu.type) { case unit_type::non_modular: case unit_type::module_impl: { if (ut != unit_type::non_modular) fail << "translation unit " << src << " is not a module interface" << info << "consider using " << x_src.name << "{} instead"; break; } case unit_type::module_iface: { if (ut != unit_type::module_iface) fail << "translation unit " << src << " is a module interface" << info << "consider using " << x_mod->name << "{} instead"; break; } case unit_type::module_header: { assert (ut == unit_type::module_header); break; } } // Refine the non-modular/module-impl decision from match(). // ut = md.type = tu.type; // Note: trace is used in a test. // l5 ([&]{trace << "extracting modules from " << src;}); // Extract the module dependency information in addition to header // dependencies. // // NOTE: assumes that no further targets will be added into // t.prerequisite_targets! // if (modules) { extract_modules (a, bs, t, li, tts, src, md, move (tu.module_info), dd, u); // Currently in VC module interface units must be compiled from // the original source (something to do with having to detect and // store header boundaries in the .ifc files). // // @@ MODHDR MSVC: should we do the same for header units? I guess // we will figure it out when MSVC supports header units. // if (ctype == compiler_type::msvc) { if (ut == unit_type::module_iface) psrc.second = false; } } } // If anything got updated, then we didn't rely on the cache. However, // the cached data could actually have been valid and the compiler run // in extract_headers() as well as the code above merely validated it. // // We do need to update the database timestamp, however. Failed that, // we will keep re-validating the cached data over and over again. // // @@ DRYRUN: note that for dry-run we would keep re-touching the // database on every run (because u is true). So for now we suppress // it (the file will be re-validated on the real run anyway). It feels // like support for reusing the (partially) preprocessed output (see // note below) should help solve this properly (i.e., we don't want // to keep re-validating the file on every subsequent dry-run as well // on the real run). // if (u && dd.reading () && !ctx.dry_run) dd.touch = true; dd.close (); md.dd = move (dd.path); // If the preprocessed output is suitable for compilation, then pass // it along. // if (psrc.second) { md.psrc = move (psrc.first); // Without modules keeping the (partially) preprocessed output // around doesn't buy us much: if the source/headers haven't changed // then neither will the object file. Modules make things more // interesting: now we may have to recompile an otherwise unchanged // translation unit because a BMI it depends on has changed. In this // case re-processing the translation unit would be a waste and // compiling the original source would break distributed // compilation. // // Note also that the long term trend will (hopefully) be for // modularized projects to get rid of #include's which means the // need for producing this partially preprocessed output will // (hopefully) gradually disappear. // if (modules) md.psrc.active = false; // Keep. } // Above we may have ignored changes to the translation unit. The // problem is, unless we also update the target's timestamp, we will // keep re-checking this on subsequent runs and it is not cheap. // Updating the target's timestamp is not without problems either: it // will cause a re-link on a subsequent run. So, essentially, we // somehow need to remember two timestamps: one for checking // "preprocessor prerequisites" above and one for checking other // prerequisites (like modules) below. So what we are going to do is // "store" the first in the target file (so we do touch it) and the // second in depdb (which is never newer that the target). // // Perhaps when we start keeping the partially preprocessed output // this will fall away? Yes, please. // md.mt = u ? timestamp_nonexistent : dd.mtime; } switch (a) { case perform_update_id: return [this] (action a, const target& t) { return perform_update (a, t); }; case perform_clean_id: return [this] (action a, const target& t) { return perform_clean (a, t); }; default: return noop_recipe; // Configure update. } } // Reverse-lookup target type(s) from extension. // small_vector compile_rule:: map_extension (const scope& s, const string& n, const string& e) const { // We will just have to try all of the possible ones, in the "most // likely to match" order. // auto test = [&s, &n, &e] (const target_type& tt) -> bool { // Call the extension derivation function. Here we know that it will // only use the target type and name from the target key so we can // pass bogus values for the rest. // target_key tk {&tt, nullptr, nullptr, &n, nullopt}; // This is like prerequisite search. // optional de (tt.default_extension (tk, s, nullptr, true)); return de && *de == e; }; small_vector r; for (const target_type* const* p (x_inc); *p != nullptr; ++p) if (test (**p)) r.push_back (*p); return r; } void compile_rule:: append_prefixes (prefix_map& m, const target& t, const variable& var) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::append_prefixes"); // If this target does not belong to any project (e.g, an "imported as // installed" library), then it can't possibly generate any headers for // us. // const scope& bs (t.base_scope ()); const scope* rs (bs.root_scope ()); if (rs == nullptr) return; const dir_path& out_base (t.dir); const dir_path& out_root (rs->out_path ()); if (auto l = t[var]) { const auto& v (cast (l)); for (auto i (v.begin ()), e (v.end ()); i != e; ++i) { // -I can either be in the "-Ifoo" or "-I foo" form. For VC it can // also be /I. // const string& o (*i); if (o.size () < 2 || (o[0] != '-' && o[0] != '/') || o[1] != 'I') continue; dir_path d; try { if (o.size () == 2) { if (++i == e) break; // Let the compiler complain. d = dir_path (*i); } else d = dir_path (*i, 2, string::npos); } catch (const invalid_path& e) { fail << "invalid directory '" << e.path << "'" << " in option '" << o << "'" << " in variable " << var << " for target " << t; } l6 ([&]{trace << "-I " << d;}); if (d.relative ()) fail << "relative directory " << d << " in option '" << o << "'" << " in variable " << var << " for target " << t; // If the directory is not normalized, we can complain or normalize // it. Let's go with normalizing to minimize questions/complaints. // if (!d.normalized (false)) // Allow non-canonical dir separators. d.normalize (); // If we are not inside our project root, then ignore. // if (!d.sub (out_root)) continue; // If the target directory is a sub-directory of the include // directory, then the prefix is the difference between the // two. Otherwise, leave it empty. // // The idea here is to make this "canonical" setup work auto- // magically: // // 1. We include all files with a prefix, e.g., . // 2. The library target is in the foo/ sub-directory, e.g., // /tmp/foo/. // 3. The poptions variable contains -I/tmp. // dir_path p (out_base.sub (d) ? out_base.leaf (d) : dir_path ()); // We use the target's directory as out_base but that doesn't work // well for targets that are stashed in subdirectories. So as a // heuristics we are going to also enter the outer directories of // the original prefix. It is, however, possible, that another -I // option after this one will produce one of these outer prefixes as // its original prefix in which case we should override it. // // So we are going to assign the original prefix priority value 0 // (highest) and then increment it for each outer prefix. // auto enter = [&trace, &m] (dir_path p, dir_path d, size_t prio) { auto j (m.find (p)); if (j != m.end ()) { prefix_value& v (j->second); // We used to reject duplicates but it seems this can be // reasonably expected to work according to the order of the // -I options. // // Seeing that we normally have more "specific" -I paths first, // (so that we don't pick up installed headers, etc), we ignore // it. // if (v.directory == d) { if (v.priority > prio) v.priority = prio; } else if (v.priority <= prio) { if (verb >= 4) trace << "ignoring mapping for prefix '" << p << "'\n" << " existing mapping to " << v.directory << " priority " << v.priority << '\n' << " another mapping to " << d << " priority " << prio; } else { if (verb >= 4) trace << "overriding mapping for prefix '" << p << "'\n" << " existing mapping to " << v.directory << " priority " << v.priority << '\n' << " new mapping to " << d << " priority " << prio; v.directory = move (d); v.priority = prio; } } else { l6 ([&]{trace << "'" << p << "' -> " << d << " priority " << prio;}); m.emplace (move (p), prefix_value {move (d), prio}); } }; #if 1 // Enter all outer prefixes, including prefixless. // // The prefixless part is fuzzy but seems to be doing the right // thing ignoring/overriding-wise, at least in cases where one of // the competing -I paths is a subdirectory of another. But the // proper solution will be to keep all the prefixless entries (by // changing prefix_map to a multimap) since for them we have an // extra check (target must be explicitly spelled out in a // buildfile). // for (size_t prio (0);; ++prio) { bool e (p.empty ()); enter ((e ? move (p) : p), (e ? move (d) : d), prio); if (e) break; p = p.directory (); } #else size_t prio (0); for (bool e (false); !e; ++prio) { dir_path n (p.directory ()); e = n.empty (); enter ((e ? move (p) : p), (e ? move (d) : d), prio); p = move (n); } #endif } } } auto compile_rule:: build_prefix_map (const scope& bs, action a, target& t, linfo li) const -> prefix_map { prefix_map m; // First process our own. // append_prefixes (m, t, x_poptions); append_prefixes (m, t, c_poptions); // Then process the include directories from prerequisite libraries. // append_library_prefixes (m, bs, a, t, li); return m; } // Return the next make prerequisite starting from the specified // position and update position to point to the start of the // following prerequisite or l.size() if there are none left. // static string next_make (const string& l, size_t& p) { size_t n (l.size ()); // Skip leading spaces. // for (; p != n && l[p] == ' '; p++) ; // Lines containing multiple prerequisites are 80 characters max. // string r; r.reserve (n); // Scan the next prerequisite while watching out for escape sequences. // for (; p != n && l[p] != ' '; p++) { char c (l[p]); if (p + 1 != n) { if (c == '$') { // Got to be another (escaped) '$'. // if (l[p + 1] == '$') ++p; } else if (c == '\\') { // This may or may not be an escape sequence depending on whether // what follows is "escapable". // switch (c = l[++p]) { case '\\': break; case ' ': break; default: c = '\\'; --p; // Restore. } } } r += c; } // Skip trailing spaces. // for (; p != n && l[p] == ' '; p++) ; // Skip final '\'. // if (p == n - 1 && l[p] == '\\') p++; return r; } // VC /showIncludes output. The first line is the file being compiled // (unless clang-cl; handled by our caller). Then we have the list of // headers, one per line, in this form (text can presumably be // translated): // // Note: including file: C:\Program Files (x86)\[...]\iostream // // Finally, if we hit a non-existent header, then we end with an error // line in this form: // // x.cpp(3): fatal error C1083: Cannot open include file: 'd/h.hpp': // No such file or directory // // @@ TODO: this is not the case for clang-cl: it issues completely // different diagnostics and before any /showIncludes lines. // // Distinguishing between the include note and the include error is // easy: we can just check for C1083. Distinguising between the note and // other errors/warnings is harder: an error could very well end with // what looks like a path so we cannot look for the note but rather have // to look for an error. Here we assume that a line containing ' CNNNN:' // is an error. Should be robust enough in the face of language // translation, etc. // // It turns out C1083 is also used when we are unable to open the main // source file and the error line (which is printed after the first line // containing the file name) looks like this: // // c1xx: fatal error C1083: Cannot open source file: 's.cpp': No such // file or directory // // And it turns out C1083 is also used when we are unable to open a type // library specified with #import. In this case the error looks like this // (at least in VC 14, 15, and 16): // // ...\comdef.h: fatal error C1083: Cannot open type library file: // 'l.tlb': Error loading type library/DLL. // pair msvc_sense_diag (const string&, char); // msvc.cxx static inline bool msvc_header_c1083 (const string& l, const pair& pr) { return l.compare (pr.second, 5, "c1xx:") != 0 && /* Not source file. */ l.compare (pr.second, 9, "comdef.h:") != 0; /* Not type library. */ } // Extract the include path from the VC /showIncludes output line. Return // empty string if the line is not an include note or include error. Set // the good_error flag if it is an include error (which means the process // will terminate with the error status that needs to be ignored). // static string next_show (const string& l, bool& good_error) { // The include error should be the last line that we handle. // assert (!good_error); pair pr (msvc_sense_diag (l, 'C')); size_t p (pr.first); if (p == string::npos) { // Include note. // // We assume the path is always at the end but need to handle both // absolute Windows and POSIX ones. // // Note that VC appears to always write the absolute path to the // included file even if it is ""-included and the source path is // relative. Aren't we lucky today? // p = l.rfind (':'); if (p != string::npos) { // See if this one is part of the Windows drive letter. // if (p > 1 && p + 1 < l.size () && // 2 chars before, 1 after. l[p - 2] == ' ' && alpha (l[p - 1]) && path::traits_type::is_separator (l[p + 1])) p = l.rfind (':', p - 2); } if (p != string::npos) { // VC uses indentation to indicate the include nesting so there // could be any number of spaces after ':'. Skip them. // p = l.find_first_not_of (' ', p + 1); } if (p == string::npos) fail << "unable to parse /showIncludes include note line \"" << l << '"'; return string (l, p); } else if (l.compare (p, 4, "1083") == 0 && msvc_header_c1083 (l, pr)) { // Include error. // // The path is conveniently quoted with ''. Or so we thought: turns // out different translations (e.g., Chinese) can use different quote // characters and some translations (e.g., Russian) don't use quotes // at all. But the overall structure seems to be stable: // // ...C1083: : [']d/h.hpp[']: // // Where `'` is some sort of a quote character which could to be // multi-byte (e.g., in Chinese). // // Plus, in some internal (debug?) builds the second part // may have the "No such file or directory (c:\...\p0prepro.c:1722)" // form (so it may contain `:`). #if 0 string l; //l = "...: fatal error C1083: ...: 'libhello/version.hxx': ..."; //en //l = "...: fatal error C1083: ...: libhello/version.hxx: ..."; //ru //l = "...: fatal error C1083: ...: '\xb0libhello/version.hxx\xa1': ..."; //zh //l = "...: fatal error C1083: ...: 'libhello/version.hxx': No such file or directory (c:\\...\\p0prepro.c:1722)"; p = l.find ("1083") + 1; text << l; #endif // Find first leading ':' that's followed by a space (after "C1083:"). // size_t p1 (p + 4); // 1083 while ((p1 = l.find (':', p1 + 1)) != string::npos && l[p1 + 1] != ' ') ; // Find first trailing ':' that's followed by a space. // size_t p2 (l.size ()); while ((p2 = l.rfind (':', p2 - 1)) != string::npos && l[p2 + 1] != ' ') ; if (p1 != string::npos && p2 != string::npos && (p2 - p1) > 3 ) // At least ": x:". { p1 += 2; // Skip leading ": ". // Now p1 is the first character of the potentially quoted path // while p2 -- one past the last character. // // We now skip any characters at the beginning and at the end that // could be quotes: single/double quotes plus, to handle the mutli- // byte case, non-printable ASCII characters (the latter is a bit // iffy: a multi-byte sequence could have one of the bytes // printable; in Chinese the sequences are \x27\xb0 and \xa1\x27 // where \x27 is `'`). // auto quote = [] (char c) { return c == '\'' || c == '"' || c < 0x20 || c > 0x7e; }; for (; p1 != p2 && quote (l[p1]); ++p1) ; for (; p2 != p1 && quote (l[p2 - 1]); --p2) ; if (p1 != p2) { good_error = true; return string (l, p1 , p2 - p1); } } fail << "unable to parse /showIncludes include error line \"" << l << '"' << endf; } else { // Some other error. // return string (); } } void msvc_sanitize_cl (cstrings&); // msvc.cxx // GCC module mapper handler. // // Note that the input stream is non-blocking while output is blocking // and this function should be prepared to handle closed input stream. // Any unhandled io_error is handled by the caller as a generic module // mapper io error. // struct compile_rule::module_mapper_state { size_t headers = 0; // Number of header units imported. size_t skip; // Number of depdb entries to skip. string data; // Auxiliary data. explicit module_mapper_state (size_t skip_count): skip (skip_count) {} }; void compile_rule:: gcc_module_mapper (module_mapper_state& st, action a, const scope& bs, file& t, linfo li, ifdstream& is, ofdstream& os, depdb& dd, bool& update, bool& bad_error, optional& pfx_map, srcout_map& so_map) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::gcc_module_mapper"); // Read in the request line. // // Because the dynamic mapper is only used during preprocessing, we // can assume there is no batching and expect to see one line at a // time. // string rq; #if 1 if (!eof (getline (is, rq))) { if (rq.empty ()) rq = ""; // Not to confuse with EOF. } #else for (char buf[4096]; !is.eof (); ) { streamsize n (is.readsome (buf, sizeof (buf) - 1)); buf[n] = '\0'; if (char* p = strchr (buf, '\n')) { *p = '\0'; if (++p != buf + n) fail << "batched module mapper request: '" << p << "'"; rq += buf; break; } else rq += buf; } #endif if (rq.empty ()) // EOF return; // @@ MODHDR: Should we print the pid we are talking to? It gets hard to // follow once things get nested. But if all our diag will // include some kind of id (chain, thread?), then this will // not be strictly necessary. // if (verb >= 3) text << " > " << rq; // Check for a command. If match, remove it and the following space from // the request string saving it in cmd (for diagnostics) unless the // second argument is false, and return true. // const char* cmd (nullptr); auto command = [&rq, &cmd] (const char* c, bool r = true) { size_t n (strlen (c)); bool m (rq.compare (0, n, c) == 0 && rq[n] == ' '); if (m && r) { cmd = c; rq.erase (0, n + 1); } return m; }; string rs; for (;;) // Breakout loop. { // Each command is reponsible for handling its auxiliary data while we // just clear it. // string data (move (st.data)); if (command ("HELLO")) { // HELLO // //@@ MODHDR TODO: check protocol version. // We don't use "repository path" (whatever it is) so we pass '.'. // rs = "HELLO 0 build2 ."; } // // Turns out it's easiest to handle IMPORT together with INCLUDE since // it can also trigger a re-search, etc. In a sense, IMPORT is all of // the INCLUDE logic (skipping translation) plus the BMI dependency // synthesis. // else if (command ("INCLUDE") || command ("IMPORT")) { // INCLUDE [<"'][>"'] // IMPORT [<"'][>"'] // IMPORT '' // // is the resolved path or empty if the header is not found. // It can be relative if it is derived from a relative path (either // via -I or includer). If is single-quoted, then it cannot // be re-searched (e.g., implicitly included stdc-predef.h) and in // this case is never empty. // // In case of re-search or include translation we may have to split // handling the same include or import across multiple commands. // Here are the scenarios in question: // // INCLUDE --> SEARCH -?-> INCLUDE // IMPORT --> SEARCH -?-> IMPORT // INCLUDE --> IMPORT -?-> IMPORT // // The problem is we may not necessarily get the "followup" command // (the question marks above). We may not get the followup after // SEARCH because, for example, the newly found header has already // been included/imported using a different style/path. Similarly, // the IMPORT response may not be followed up with the IMPORT // command because this header has already been imported, for // example, using an import declaration. Throw into this #pragma // once, include guards, and how exactly the compiler deals with // them and things become truly unpredictable and hard to reason // about. As a result, for each command we have to keep the build // state consistent, specifically, without any "dangling" matched // targets (which would lead to skew dependency counts). Note: the // include translation is no longer a problem since we respond with // an immediate BMI. // // To keep things simple we are going to always add a target that we // matched to our prerequisite_targets. This includes the header // target when building the BMI: while not ideal, this should be // harmless provided we don't take its state/mtime into account. // // One thing we do want to handle specially is the "maybe-followup" // case discussed above. It is hard to distinguish from an unrelated // INCLUDE/IMPORT (we could have saved and maybe correlated // based on that). But if we don't, then we will keep matching and // adding each target twice. What we can do, however, is check // whether this target is already in prerequisite_targets and skip // it if that's the case, which is a valid thing to do whether it is // a followup or an unrelated command. In fact, for a followup, we // only need to check the last element in prerequisite_targets. // // This approach strikes a reasonable balance between keeping things // simple and handling normal cases without too much overhead. Note // that we may still end up matching and adding the same targets // multiple times for pathological cases, like when the same header // is included using a different style/path, etc. We could, however, // take care of this by searching the entire prerequisite_targets, // which is always an option (and which would probably be required // if the compiler were to send the INCLUDE command before checking // for #pragma once or include guards, which GCC does not do). // // One thing that we cannot do without distinguishing followup and // unrelated commands is verify the remapped header found by the // compiler resolves to the expected target. So we will also do the // correlation via . // bool imp (cmd[1] == 'M'); path f; // or if doesn't exist string n; // [<"'][>"'] bool exists; // is not empty bool searchable; // is not single-quoted { char q (rq[0]); // Opening quote. q = (q == '<' ? '>' : q == '"' ? '"' : q == '\'' ? '\'' : '\0'); // Closing quote. size_t s (rq.size ()), qp; // Quote position. if (q == '\0' || (qp = rq.find (q, 1)) == string::npos) break; // Malformed command. n.assign (rq, 0, qp + 1); size_t p (qp + 1); if (imp && q == '\'' && p == s) // IMPORT '' { exists = true; // Leave f empty and fall through. } else { if (p != s && rq[p++] != ' ') // Skip following space, if any. break; exists = (p != s); if (exists) { rq.erase (0, p); f = path (move (rq)); assert (!f.empty ()); } //else // Leave f empty and fall through. } if (f.empty ()) { rq.erase (0, 1); // Opening quote. rq.erase (qp - 1); // Closing quote and trailing space, if any. f = path (move (rq)); } // Complete relative paths not to confuse with non-existent. // if (exists && !f.absolute ()) f.complete (); searchable = (q != '\''); } // The skip_count logic: in a nutshell (and similar to the non- // mapper case), we may have "processed" some portion of the headers // based on the depdb cache and we need to avoid re-processing them // here. See the skip_count discussion for details. // // Note also that we need to be careful not to decrementing the // count for re-searches and include translation. // bool skip (st.skip != 0); // The first part is the same for both INCLUDE and IMPORT: resolve // the header path to target, update it, and trigger re-search if // necessary. // const file* ht (nullptr); auto& pts (t.prerequisite_targets[a]); // If this is a followup command (or indistinguishable from one), // then as a sanity check verify the header found by the compiler // resolves to the expected target. // if (data == n) { assert (!skip); // We shouldn't be re-searching while skipping. if (exists) { pair r ( enter_header (a, bs, t, li, move (f), false /* cache */, pfx_map, so_map)); if (!r.second) // Shouldn't be remapped. ht = r.first; } if (ht != pts.back ()) { ht = static_cast (pts.back ().target); rs = "ERROR expected header '" + ht->path ().string () + "' to be found instead"; bad_error = true; // We expect an error from the compiler. break; } // Fall through. } else { // Enter, update, and see if we need to re-search this header. // bool updated (false), remapped; try { pair er ( enter_header (a, bs, t, li, move (f), false /* cache */, pfx_map, so_map)); ht = er.first; remapped = er.second; if (remapped && !searchable) { rs = "ERROR remapping non-re-searchable header " + n; bad_error = true; break; } // If we couldn't enter this header as a target or find a rule // to update it, then it most likely means a misspelled header // (rather than a broken generated header setup) and our // diagnostics won't really add anything to the compiler's. So // let's only print it at -V or higher. // if (ht == nullptr) { assert (!exists); // Sanity check. if (verb > 2) { diag_record dr; dr << error << "header '" << f << "' not found"; if (verb < 4) dr << info << "re-run with --verbose=4 for more information"; } throw failed (); } // Note that we explicitly update even for IMPORT (instead of, // say, letting the BMI rule do it implicitly) since we may need // to cause a re-search (see below). // if (!skip) { if (pts.empty () || pts.back () != ht) { optional ir (inject_header (a, t, *ht, timestamp_unknown, verb > 2 /* fail */)); if (!ir) throw failed (); updated = *ir; } else assert (exists); } else assert (exists && !remapped); // Maybe this should be an error. } catch (const failed&) { // If the header does not exist or could not be updated, do we // want our diagnostics, the compiler's, or both? We definitely // want the compiler's since it points to the exact location. // Ours could also be helpful. So while it will look a bit // messy, let's keep both (it would have been nicer to print // ours after the compiler's but that isn't easy). // rs = !exists ? string ("INCLUDE") : ("ERROR unable to update header '" + (ht != nullptr ? ht->path () : f).string () + "'"); bad_error = true; break; } if (!imp) // Indirect prerequisite (see above). update = updated || update; // A mere update is not enough to cause a re-search. It either had // to also not exist or be remapped. // if ((updated && !exists) || remapped) { rs = "SEARCH"; st.data = move (n); // Followup correlation. break; } // Fall through. } // Now handle INCLUDE and IMPORT differences. // const string& hp (ht->path ().string ()); // Reduce include translation to the import case. // if (!imp && xlate_hdr != nullptr) { auto i (lower_bound ( xlate_hdr->begin (), xlate_hdr->end (), hp, [] (const string& x, const string& y) { return path::traits_type::compare (x, y) < 0; })); imp = (i != xlate_hdr->end () && *i == hp); } if (imp) { try { // Synthesize the BMI dependency then update and add the BMI // target as a prerequisite. // const file& bt (make_header_sidebuild (a, bs, li, *ht)); if (!skip) { optional ir (inject_header (a, t, bt, timestamp_unknown, true /* fail */)); assert (ir); // Not from cache. update = *ir || update; } const string& bp (bt.path ().string ()); if (!skip) { // @@ MODHDR: we write normalized path while the compiler will // look for the original. In particular, this means // that paths with `..` won't work. Maybe write // original for mapping and normalized for our use? // st.headers++; dd.expect ("@ '" + hp + "' " + bp); } else st.skip--; rs = "IMPORT " + bp; } catch (const failed&) { rs = "ERROR unable to update header unit '" + hp + "'"; bad_error = true; break; } } else { if (!skip) dd.expect (hp); else st.skip--; rs = "INCLUDE"; } } break; } if (rs.empty ()) { rs = "ERROR unexpected command '"; if (cmd != nullptr) { rs += cmd; // Add the command back. rs += ' '; } rs += rq; rs += "'"; bad_error = true; } if (verb >= 3) text << " < " << rs; os << rs << endl; } // Enter as a target a header file. Depending on the cache flag, the file // is assumed to either have come from the depdb cache or from the // compiler run. // // Return the header target and an indication of whether it was remapped // or NULL if the header does not exist and cannot be generated. In the // latter case the passed header path is guaranteed to be still valid but // might have been adjusted (e.g., normalized, etc). // // Note: this used to be a lambda inside extract_headers() so refer to the // body of that function for the overall picture. // pair compile_rule:: enter_header (action a, const scope& bs, file& t, linfo li, path&& f, bool cache, optional& pfx_map, srcout_map& so_map) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::enter_header"); // Find or maybe insert the target. The directory is only moved from if // insert is true. Note that it must be normalized. // auto find = [&trace, &t, this] (dir_path&& d, path&& f, bool insert) -> const file* { // Split the file into its name part and extension. Here we can assume // the name part is a valid filesystem name. // // Note that if the file has no extension, we record an empty // extension rather than NULL (which would signify that the default // extension should be added). // string e (f.extension ()); string n (move (f).string ()); if (!e.empty ()) n.resize (n.size () - e.size () - 1); // One for the dot. // See if this directory is part of any project out_root hierarchy and // if so determine the target type. // // Note that this will miss all the headers that come from src_root // (so they will be treated as generic C headers below). Generally, we // don't have the ability to determine that some file belongs to // src_root of some project. But that's not a problem for our // purposes: it is only important for us to accurately determine // target types for headers that could be auto-generated. // // While at it also try to determine if this target is from the src or // out tree of said project. // dir_path out; // It's possible the extension-to-target type mapping is ambiguous // (usually because both C and X-language headers use the same .h // extension). In this case we will first try to find one that matches // an explicit target (similar logic to when insert is false). // small_vector tts; const scope& bs (t.ctx.scopes.find (d)); if (const scope* rs = bs.root_scope ()) { tts = map_extension (bs, n, e); if (bs.out_path () != bs.src_path () && d.sub (bs.src_path ())) out = out_src (d, *rs); } // If it is outside any project, or the project doesn't have such an // extension, assume it is a plain old C header. // if (tts.empty ()) { // If the project doesn't "know" this extension then we can't // possibly find an explicit target of this type. // if (!insert) return nullptr; tts.push_back (&h::static_type); } // Find or insert target. // // Note that in case of the target type ambiguity we first try to find // an explicit target that resolves this ambiguity. // const target* r (nullptr); if (!insert || tts.size () > 1) { // Note that we skip any target type-specific searches (like for an // existing file) and go straight for the target object since we // need to find the target explicitly spelled out. // // Also, it doesn't feel like we should be able to resolve an // absolute path with a spelled-out extension to multiple targets. // for (const target_type* tt: tts) if ((r = t.ctx.targets.find (*tt, d, out, n, e, trace)) != nullptr) break; // Note: we can't do this because of the in-source builds where // there won't be explicit targets for non-generated headers. // // This should be harmless, however, since in our world generated // headers are normally spelled-out as explicit targets. And if not, // we will still get an error, just a bit less specific. // #if 0 if (r == nullptr && insert) { f = d / n; if (!e.empty ()) { f += '.'; f += e; } diag_record dr (fail); dr << "mapping of header " << f << " to target type is ambiguous"; for (const target_type* tt: tts) dr << info << "could be " << tt->name << "{}"; dr << info << "spell-out its target to resolve this ambiguity"; } #endif } // @@ OPT: move d, out, n // if (r == nullptr && insert) r = &search (t, *tts[0], d, out, n, &e, nullptr); return static_cast (r); }; // If it's not absolute then it either does not (yet) exist or is a // relative ""-include (see init_args() for details). Reduce the second // case to absolute. // // Note: we now always use absolute path to the translation unit so this // no longer applies. But let's keep it for posterity. // #if 0 if (f.relative () && rels.relative ()) { // If the relative source path has a directory component, make sure // it matches since ""-include will always start with that (none of // the compilers we support try to normalize this path). Failed that // we may end up searching for a generated header in a random // (working) directory. // const string& fs (f.string ()); const string& ss (rels.string ()); size_t p (path::traits::rfind_separator (ss)); if (p == string::npos || // No directory. (fs.size () > p + 1 && path::traits::compare (fs.c_str (), p, ss.c_str (), p) == 0)) { path t (work / f); // The rels path is relative to work. if (exists (t)) f = move (t); } } #endif const file* pt (nullptr); bool remapped (false); // If still relative then it does not exist. // if (f.relative ()) { // This is probably as often an error as an auto-generated file, so // trace at level 4. // l4 ([&]{trace << "non-existent header '" << f << "'";}); f.normalize (); // The relative path might still contain '..' (e.g., ../foo.hxx; // presumably ""-include'ed). We don't attempt to support auto- // generated headers with such inclusion styles. // if (f.normalized ()) { if (!pfx_map) pfx_map = build_prefix_map (bs, a, t, li); // First try the whole file. Then just the directory. // // @@ Has to be a separate map since the prefix can be the same as // the file name. // // auto i (pfx_map->find (f)); // Find the most qualified prefix of which we are a sub-path. // if (!pfx_map->empty ()) { dir_path d (f.directory ()); auto i (pfx_map->find_sup (d)); if (i != pfx_map->end ()) { // Note: value in pfx_map is not necessarily canonical. // dir_path pd (i->second.directory); pd.canonicalize (); l4 ([&]{trace << "prefix '" << d << "' mapped to " << pd;}); // If this is a prefixless mapping, then only use it if we can // resolve it to an existing target (i.e., it is explicitly // spelled out in a buildfile). // // Note that at some point we will probably have a list of // directories. // pt = find (pd / d, f.leaf (), !i->first.empty ()); if (pt != nullptr) { f = pd / f; l4 ([&]{trace << "mapped as auto-generated " << f;}); } else l4 ([&]{trace << "no explicit target in " << pd;}); } else l4 ([&]{trace << "no prefix map entry for '" << d << "'";}); } else l4 ([&]{trace << "prefix map is empty";}); } } else { // We used to just normalize the path but that could result in an // invalid path (e.g., for some system/compiler headers on CentOS 7 // with Clang 3.4) because of the symlinks (if a directory component // is a symlink, then any following `..` are resolved relative to the // target; see path::normalize() for background). // // Initially, to fix this, we realized (i.e., realpath(3)) it instead. // But that turned out also not to be quite right since now we have // all the symlinks resolved: conceptually it feels correct to keep // the original header names since that's how the user chose to // arrange things and practically this is how the compilers see/report // them (e.g., the GCC module mapper). // // So now we have a pretty elaborate scheme where we try to use the // normalized path if possible and fallback to realized. Normalized // paths will work for situations where `..` does not cross symlink // boundaries, which is the sane case. And for the insane case we only // really care about out-of-project files (i.e., system/compiler // headers). In other words, if you have the insane case inside your // project, then you are on your own. // // All of this is unless the path comes from the depdb, in which case // we've already done that. This is also where we handle src-out remap // (again, not needed if cached). // if (!cache) { // Interestingly, on most paltforms and with most compilers (Clang // on Linux being a notable exception) most system/compiler headers // are already normalized. // path_abnormality a (f.abnormalities ()); if (a != path_abnormality::none) { // While we can reasonably expect this path to exit, things do go // south from time to time (like compiling under wine with file // wlantypes.h included as WlanTypes.h). // try { // If we have any parent components, then we have to verify the // normalized path matches realized. // path r; if ((a & path_abnormality::parent) == path_abnormality::parent) { r = f; r.realize (); } try { f.normalize (); // Note that we might still need to resolve symlinks in the // normalized path. // if (!r.empty () && f != r && path (f).realize () != r) f = move (r); } catch (const invalid_path&) { assert (!r.empty ()); // Shouldn't have failed if no `..`. f = move (r); // Fallback to realize. } } catch (const invalid_path&) { fail << "invalid header path '" << f.string () << "'"; } catch (const system_error& e) { fail << "invalid header path '" << f.string () << "': " << e; } } if (!so_map.empty ()) { // Find the most qualified prefix of which we are a sub-path. // auto i (so_map.find_sup (f)); if (i != so_map.end ()) { // Ok, there is an out tree for this headers. Remap to a path // from the out tree and see if there is a target for it. Note // that the value in so_map is not necessarily canonical. // dir_path d (i->second); d /= f.leaf (i->first).directory (); d.canonicalize (); pt = find (move (d), f.leaf (), false); // d is not moved from. if (pt != nullptr) { path p (d / f.leaf ()); l4 ([&]{trace << "remapping " << f << " to " << p;}); f = move (p); remapped = true; } } } } if (pt == nullptr) { l6 ([&]{trace << "entering " << f;}); pt = find (f.directory (), f.leaf (), true); } } return make_pair (pt, remapped); } // Update and add to the list of prerequisite targets a header or header // unit target. // // Return the indication of whether it has changed or, if the passed // timestamp is not timestamp_unknown, is older than the target. If the // header does not exists nor can be generated (no rule), then issue // diagnostics and fail if the fail argument is true and return nullopt // otherwise. // // Note: this used to be a lambda inside extract_headers() so refer to the // body of that function for the overall picture. // optional compile_rule:: inject_header (action a, file& t, const file& pt, timestamp mt, bool f /* fail */) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::inject_header"); // Even if failing we still use try_match() in order to issue consistent // (with extract_headers() below) diagnostics (rather than the generic // "not rule to update ..."). // if (!try_match (a, pt).first) { if (!f) return nullopt; diag_record dr; dr << fail << "header " << pt << " not found and no rule to " << "generate it"; if (verb < 4) dr << info << "re-run with --verbose=4 for more information"; } bool r (update (trace, a, pt, mt)); // Add to our prerequisite target list. // t.prerequisite_targets[a].push_back (&pt); return r; } // Extract and inject header dependencies. Return the preprocessed source // file as well as an indication if it is usable for compilation (see // below for details). // // This is also the place where we handle header units which are a lot // more like auto-generated headers than modules. In particular, if a // header unit BMI is out-of-date, then we have to re-preprocess this // translation unit. // pair compile_rule:: extract_headers (action a, const scope& bs, file& t, linfo li, const file& src, match_data& md, depdb& dd, bool& update, timestamp mt) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::extract_headers"); otype ot (li.type); bool reprocess (cast_false (t[c_reprocess])); auto_rmfile psrc; bool puse (true); // If things go wrong (and they often do in this area), give the user a // bit extra context. // auto df = make_diag_frame ( [&src](const diag_record& dr) { if (verb != 0) dr << info << "while extracting header dependencies from " << src; }); // Preprocesor mode that preserves as much information as possible while // still performing inclusions. Also serves as a flag indicating whether // this compiler uses the separate preprocess and compile setup. // const char* pp (nullptr); switch (ctype) { case compiler_type::gcc: { // -fdirectives-only is available since GCC 4.3.0. // if (cmaj > 4 || (cmaj == 4 && cmin >= 3)) pp = "-fdirectives-only"; break; } case compiler_type::clang: { // -frewrite-includes is available since Clang 3.2.0. // if (cmaj > 3 || (cmaj == 3 && cmin >= 2)) pp = "-frewrite-includes"; break; } case compiler_type::msvc: { // Asking MSVC to preserve comments doesn't really buy us anything // but does cause some extra buggy behavior. // //pp = "/C"; break; } case compiler_type::icc: break; } // Initialize lazily, only if required. // environment env; cstrings args; string out; // Storage. // Some compilers in certain modes (e.g., when also producing the // preprocessed output) are incapable of writing the dependecy // information to stdout. In this case we use a temporary file. // auto_rmfile drm; // Here is the problem: neither GCC nor Clang allow -MG (treat missing // header as generated) when we produce any kind of other output (-MD). // And that's probably for the best since otherwise the semantics gets // pretty hairy (e.g., what is the exit code and state of the output)? // // One thing to note about generated headers: if we detect one, then, // after generating it, we re-run the compiler since we need to get // this header's dependencies. // // So this is how we are going to work around this problem: we first run // with -E but without -MG. If there are any errors (maybe because of // generated headers maybe not), we restart with -MG and without -E. If // this fixes the error (so it was a generated header after all), then // we have to restart at which point we go back to -E and no -MG. And we // keep yo-yoing like this. Missing generated headers will probably be // fairly rare occurrence so this shouldn't be too expensive. // // Actually, there is another error case we would like to handle: an // outdated generated header that is now causing an error (e.g., because // of a check that is now triggering #error or some such). So there are // actually three error cases: outdated generated header, missing // generated header, and some other error. To handle the outdated case // we need the compiler to produce the dependency information even in // case of an error. Clang does it, for VC we parse diagnostics // ourselves, but GCC does not (but a patch has been submitted). // // So the final plan is then as follows: // // 1. Start wothout -MG and with suppressed diagnostics. // 2. If error but we've updated a header, then repeat step 1. // 3. Otherwise, restart with -MG and diagnostics. // // Note that below we don't even check if the compiler supports the // dependency info on error. We just try to use it and if it's not // there we ignore the io error since the compiler has failed. // bool args_gen; // Current state of args. size_t args_i (0); // Start of the -M/-MD "tail". // Ok, all good then? Not so fast, the rabbit hole is deeper than it // seems: When we run with -E we have to discard diagnostics. This is // not a problem for errors since they will be shown on the re-run but // it is for (preprocessor) warnings. // // Clang's -frewrite-includes is nice in that it preserves the warnings // so they will be shown during the compilation of the preprocessed // source. They are also shown during -E but that we discard. And unlike // GCC, in Clang -M does not imply -w (disable warnings) so it would // have been shown in -M -MG re-runs but we suppress that with explicit // -w. All is good in the Clang land then (even -Werror works nicely). // // GCC's -fdirective-only, on the other hand, processes all the // directives so they are gone from the preprocessed source. Here is // what we are going to do to work around this: we will detect if any // diagnostics has been written to stderr on the -E run. If that's the // case (but the compiler indicated success) then we assume they are // warnings and disable the use of the preprocessed output for // compilation. This in turn will result in compilation from source // which will display the warnings. Note that we may still use the // preprocessed output for other things (e.g., C++ module dependency // discovery). BTW, another option would be to collect all the // diagnostics and then dump it if the run is successful, similar to // the VC semantics (and drawbacks) described below. // // Finally, for VC, things are completely different: there is no -MG // equivalent and we handle generated headers by analyzing the // diagnostics. This means that unlike in the above two cases, the // preprocessor warnings are shown during dependency extraction, not // compilation. Not ideal but that's the best we can do. Or is it -- we // could implement ad hoc diagnostics sensing... It appears warnings are // in the C4000-C4999 code range though there can also be note lines // which don't have any C-code. // // BTW, triggering a warning in the VC preprocessor is not easy; there // is no #warning and pragmas are passed through to the compiler. One // way to do it is to redefine a macro, for example: // // hello.cxx(4): warning C4005: 'FOO': macro redefinition // hello.cxx(3): note: see previous definition of 'FOO' // // So seeing that it is hard to trigger a legitimate VC preprocessor // warning, for now, we will just treat them as errors by adding /WX. // // Finally, if we are using the module mapper, then all this mess falls // away: we only run the compiler once, we let the diagnostics through, // we get a compiler error (with location information) if a header is // not found, and there is no problem with outdated generated headers // since we update/remap them before the compiler has a chance to read // them. Overall, this "dependency mapper" approach is how it should // have been done from the beginning. // Note: diagnostics sensing is currently only supported if dependency // info is written to a file (see above). // bool sense_diag (false); // And here is another problem: if we have an already generated header // in src and the one in out does not yet exist, then the compiler will // pick the one in src and we won't even notice. Note that this is not // only an issue with mixing in- and out-of-tree builds (which does feel // wrong but is oh so convenient): this is also a problem with // pre-generated headers, a technique we use to make installing the // generator by end-users optional by shipping pre-generated headers. // // This is a nasty problem that doesn't seem to have a perfect solution // (except, perhaps, C++ modules). So what we are going to do is try to // rectify the situation by detecting and automatically remapping such // mis-inclusions. It works as follows. // // First we will build a map of src/out pairs that were specified with // -I. Here, for performance and simplicity, we will assume that they // always come in pairs with out first and src second. We build this // map lazily only if we are running the preprocessor and reuse it // between restarts. // // With the map in hand we can then check each included header for // potentially having a doppelganger in the out tree. If this is the // case, then we calculate a corresponding header in the out tree and, // (this is the most important part), check if there is a target for // this header in the out tree. This should be fairly accurate and not // require anything explicit from the user except perhaps for a case // where the header is generated out of nothing (so there is no need to // explicitly mention its target in the buildfile). But this probably // won't be very common. // // One tricky area in this setup are target groups: if the generated // sources are mentioned in the buildfile as a group, then there might // be no header target (yet). The way we solve this is by requiring code // generator rules to cooperate and create at least the header target as // part of the group creation. While not all members of the group may be // generated depending on the options (e.g., inline files might be // suppressed), headers are usually non-optional. // // Note that we use path_map instead of dir_path_map to allow searching // using path (file path). // srcout_map so_map; // path_map // Dynamic module mapper. // bool mod_mapper (false); // The gen argument to init_args() is in/out. The caller signals whether // to force the generated header support and on return it signals // whether this support is enabled. The first call to init_args is // expected to have gen false. // // Return NULL if the dependency information goes to stdout and a // pointer to the temporary file path otherwise. // auto init_args = [a, &t, ot, li, reprocess, &src, &md, &psrc, &sense_diag, &mod_mapper, &bs, pp, &env, &args, &args_gen, &args_i, &out, &drm, &so_map, this] (bool& gen) -> const path* { const path* r (nullptr); if (args.empty ()) // First call. { assert (!gen); // We use absolute/relative paths in the dependency output to // distinguish existing headers from (missing) generated. Which // means we have to (a) use absolute paths in -I and (b) pass // absolute source path (for ""-includes). That (b) is a problem: // if we use an absolute path, then all the #line directives will be // absolute and all the diagnostics will have long, noisy paths // (actually, we will still have long paths for diagnostics in // headers). // // To work around this we used to pass a relative path to the source // file and then check every relative path in the dependency output // for existence in the source file's directory. This is not without // issues: it is theoretically possible for a generated header that // is <>-included and found via -I to exist in the source file's // directory. Note, however, that this is a lot more likely to // happen with prefix-less inclusion (e.g., ) and in this case // we assume the file is in the project anyway. And if there is a // conflict with a prefixed include (e.g., ), then, well, // we will just have to get rid of quoted includes (which are // generally a bad idea, anyway). // // But then this approach (relative path) fell apart further when we // tried to implement precise changed detection: the preprocessed // output would change depending from where it was compiled because // of #line (which we could work around) and __FILE__/assert() // (which we can't really do anything about). So it looks like using // the absolute path is the lesser of all the evils (and there are // many). // // Note that we detect and diagnose relative -I directories lazily // when building the include prefix map. // args.push_back (cpath.recall_string ()); // If we are re-processing the translation unit, then allow the // translation unit to detect header/module dependency extraction. // This can be used to work around separate preprocessing bugs in // the compiler. // if (reprocess) args.push_back ("-D__build2_preprocess"); append_options (args, t, x_poptions); append_options (args, t, c_poptions); // Add *.export.poptions from prerequisite libraries. // append_library_options (args, bs, a, t, li); // Populate the src-out with the -I$out_base -I$src_base pairs. // { // Try to be fast and efficient by reusing buffers as much as // possible. // string ds; // Previous -I innermost scope if out_base plus the difference // between the scope path and the -I path (normally empty). // const scope* s (nullptr); dir_path p; for (auto i (args.begin ()), e (args.end ()); i != e; ++i) { // -I can either be in the "-Ifoo" or "-I foo" form. For VC it // can also be /I. // const char* o (*i); size_t n (strlen (o)); if (n < 2 || (o[0] != '-' && o[0] != '/') || o[1] != 'I') { s = nullptr; continue; } if (n == 2) { if (++i == e) break; // Let the compiler complain. ds = *i; } else ds.assign (o + 2, n - 2); if (!ds.empty ()) { // Note that we don't normalize the paths since it would be // quite expensive and normally the pairs we are inerested in // are already normalized (since they are usually specified as // -I$src/out_*). We just need to add a trailing directory // separator if it's not already there. // if (!dir_path::traits_type::is_separator (ds.back ())) ds += dir_path::traits_type::directory_separator; dir_path d (move (ds), dir_path::exact); // Move the buffer in. // Ignore invalid paths (buffer is not moved). // if (!d.empty ()) { // Ignore any paths containing '.', '..' components. Allow // any directory separators thought (think -I$src_root/foo // on Windows). // if (d.absolute () && d.normalized (false)) { // If we have a candidate out_base, see if this is its // src_base. // if (s != nullptr) { const dir_path& bp (s->src_path ()); if (d.sub (bp)) { if (p.empty () || d.leaf (bp) == p) { // We've got a pair. // so_map.emplace (move (d), s->out_path () / p); s = nullptr; // Taken. continue; } } // Not a pair. Fall through to consider as out_base. // s = nullptr; } // See if this path is inside a project with an out-of- // tree build and is in the out directory tree. // const scope& bs (t.ctx.scopes.find (d)); if (bs.root_scope () != nullptr) { const dir_path& bp (bs.out_path ()); if (bp != bs.src_path ()) { bool e; if ((e = (d == bp)) || d.sub (bp)) { s = &bs; if (e) p.clear (); else p = d.leaf (bp); } } } } else s = nullptr; ds = move (d).string (); // Move the buffer out. } else s = nullptr; } else s = nullptr; } } if (md.symexport) append_symexport_options (args, t); // Some compile options (e.g., -std, -m) affect the preprocessor. // // Currently Clang supports importing "header modules" even when in // the TS mode. And "header modules" support macros which means // imports have to be resolved during preprocessing. Which poses a // bit of a chicken and egg problem for us. For now, the workaround // is to remove the -fmodules-ts option when preprocessing. Hopefully // there will be a "pure modules" mode at some point. // // @@ MODHDR Clang: should be solved with the dynamic module mapper // if/when Clang supports it? // // Don't treat warnings as errors. // const char* werror (nullptr); switch (cclass) { case compiler_class::gcc: werror = "-Werror"; break; case compiler_class::msvc: werror = "/WX"; break; } bool clang (ctype == compiler_type::clang); append_options (args, t, c_coptions, werror); append_options (args, t, x_coptions, werror); switch (cclass) { case compiler_class::msvc: { // /F*: style option availability (see perform_update()). // bool fc (cmaj >= 18 && cvariant != "clang"); args.push_back ("/nologo"); append_options (args, cmode); append_sys_inc_options (args); // Extra system header dirs (last). // See perform_update() for details on overriding the default // exceptions and runtime. // if (x_lang == lang::cxx && !find_option_prefix ("/EH", args)) args.push_back ("/EHsc"); if (!find_option_prefixes ({"/MD", "/MT"}, args)) args.push_back ("/MD"); args.push_back ("/P"); // Preprocess to file. args.push_back ("/showIncludes"); // Goes to stdout (with diag). if (pp != nullptr) args.push_back (pp); // /C (preserve comments). args.push_back ("/WX"); // Warning as error (see above). msvc_sanitize_cl (args); psrc = auto_rmfile (t.path () + x_pext); if (fc) { args.push_back ("/Fi:"); args.push_back (psrc.path.string ().c_str ()); } else { out = "/Fi" + psrc.path.string (); args.push_back (out.c_str ()); } append_lang_options (args, md); // Compile as. gen = args_gen = true; break; } case compiler_class::gcc: { // See perform_update() for details on the choice of options. // if (ot == otype::s) { if (tclass == "linux" || tclass == "bsd") args.push_back ("-fPIC"); } if (ctype == compiler_type::clang && tsys == "win32-msvc") { initializer_list os {"-nostdlib", "-nostartfiles"}; if (!find_options (os, cmode) && !find_options (os, args)) { args.push_back ("-D_MT"); args.push_back ("-D_DLL"); } } if (ctype == compiler_type::clang && cvariant == "emscripten") { if (x_lang == lang::cxx) { if (!find_option_prefix ("DISABLE_EXCEPTION_CATCHING=", args)) { args.push_back ("-s"); args.push_back ("DISABLE_EXCEPTION_CATCHING=0"); } } } append_options (args, cmode, cmode.size () - (modules && clang ? 1 : 0)); append_sys_inc_options (args); // Extra system header dirs (last). // Setup the dynamic module mapper if needed. // // Note that it's plausible in the future we will use it even if // modules are disabled, for example, to implement better -MG. // In which case it will have probably be better called a // "dependency mapper". // if (modules) { if (ctype == compiler_type::gcc) { args.push_back ("-fmodule-mapper=<>"); mod_mapper = true; } } // Depending on the compiler, decide whether (and how) we can // produce preprocessed output as a side effect of dependency // extraction. // // Note: -MM -MG skips missing <>-included. // Clang's -M does not imply -w (disable warnings). We also // don't need them in the -MD case (see above) so disable for // both. // if (clang) args.push_back ("-w"); append_lang_options (args, md); if (pp != nullptr) { // With the GCC module mapper the dependency information is // written directly to depdb by the mapper. // if (ctype == compiler_type::gcc && mod_mapper) { // Note that in this mode we don't have -MG re-runs. In a // sense we are in the -MG mode (or, more precisely, the "no // -MG required" mode) right away. // args.push_back ("-E"); args.push_back (pp); gen = args_gen = true; r = &drm.path; // Bogus/hack to force desired process start. } else { // Previously we used '*' as a target name but it gets // expanded to the current directory file names by GCC (4.9) // that comes with MSYS2 (2.4). Yes, this is the (bizarre) // behavior of GCC being executed in the shell with -MQ '*' // option and not just -MQ *. // args.push_back ("-MQ"); // Quoted target name. args.push_back ("^"); // Old versions can't do empty. // Note that the options are carefully laid out to be easy // to override (see below). // args_i = args.size (); args.push_back ("-MD"); args.push_back ("-E"); args.push_back (pp); // Dependency output. // // GCC until version 8 was not capable of writing the // dependency information to stdout. We also either need to // sense the diagnostics on the -E runs (which we currently // can only do if we don't need to read stdout) or we could // be communicating with the module mapper via stdin/stdout. // if (ctype == compiler_type::gcc) { // Use the .t extension (for "temporary"; .d is taken). // r = &(drm = auto_rmfile (t.path () + ".t")).path; } args.push_back ("-MF"); args.push_back (r != nullptr ? r->string ().c_str () : "-"); sense_diag = (ctype == compiler_type::gcc); gen = args_gen = false; } // Preprocessor output. // psrc = auto_rmfile (t.path () + x_pext); args.push_back ("-o"); args.push_back (psrc.path.string ().c_str ()); } else { args.push_back ("-MQ"); args.push_back ("^"); args.push_back ("-M"); args.push_back ("-MG"); // Treat missing headers as generated. gen = args_gen = true; } break; } } args.push_back (src.path ().string ().c_str ()); args.push_back (nullptr); // Note: only doing it here. // if (!env.empty ()) env.push_back (nullptr); } else { assert (gen != args_gen && args_i != 0); size_t i (args_i); if (gen) { // Overwrite. // args[i++] = "-M"; args[i++] = "-MG"; args[i++] = src.path ().string ().c_str (); args[i] = nullptr; if (ctype == compiler_type::gcc) { sense_diag = false; } } else { // Restore. // args[i++] = "-MD"; args[i++] = "-E"; args[i++] = pp; args[i] = "-MF"; if (ctype == compiler_type::gcc) { r = &drm.path; sense_diag = true; } } args_gen = gen; } return r; }; // Build the prefix map lazily only if we have non-existent files. // Also reuse it over restarts since it doesn't change. // optional pfx_map; // If any prerequisites that we have extracted changed, then we have to // redo the whole thing. The reason for this is auto-generated headers: // the updated header may now include a yet-non-existent header. Unless // we discover this and generate it (which, BTW, will trigger another // restart since that header, in turn, can also include auto-generated // headers), we will end up with an error during compilation proper. // // One complication with this restart logic is that we will see a // "prefix" of prerequisites that we have already processed (i.e., they // are already in our prerequisite_targets list) and we don't want to // keep redoing this over and over again. One thing to note, however, is // that the prefix that we have seen on the previous run must appear // exactly the same in the subsequent run. The reason for this is that // none of the files that it can possibly be based on have changed and // thus it should be exactly the same. To put it another way, the // presence or absence of a file in the dependency output can only // depend on the previous files (assuming the compiler outputs them as // it encounters them and it is hard to think of a reason why would // someone do otherwise). And we have already made sure that all those // files are up to date. And here is the way we are going to exploit // this: we are going to keep track of how many prerequisites we have // processed so far and on restart skip right to the next one. // // And one more thing: most of the time this list of headers would stay // unchanged and extracting them by running the compiler every time is a // bit wasteful. So we are going to cache them in the depdb. If the db // hasn't been invalidated yet (e.g., because the compiler options have // changed), then we start by reading from it. If anything is out of // date then we use the same restart and skip logic to switch to the // compiler run. // size_t skip_count (0); // Enter as a target, update, and add to the list of prerequisite // targets a header file. Depending on the cache flag, the file is // assumed to either have come from the depdb cache or from the compiler // run. Return true if the extraction process should be restarted and // false otherwise. Return nullopt if the header is not found and cannot // be generated, the diagnostics has been issued, but the failure has // been deferred to the compiler run in order to get better diagnostics. // auto add = [a, &bs, &t, li, &pfx_map, &so_map, &dd, &skip_count, this] (path hp, bool cache, timestamp mt) -> optional { context& ctx (t.ctx); // We can only defer the failure if we will be running the compiler. // // We also used to only do it in the "keep going" mode but that proved // to be inconvenient: some users like to re-run a failed build with // -s not to get "swamped" with errors. // bool df (!ctx.match_only && !ctx.dry_run_option); const file* ht (enter_header (a, bs, t, li, move (hp), cache, pfx_map, so_map).first); if (ht == nullptr) { diag_record dr; dr << error << "header '" << hp << "' not found"; if (df) dr << info << "failure deferred to compiler diagnostics"; if (verb < 4) dr << info << "re-run with --verbose=4 for more information"; if (df) return nullopt; else dr << endf; } // If we are reading the cache, then it is possible the file has since // been removed (think of a header in /usr/local/include that has been // uninstalled and now we need to use one from /usr/include). This // will lead to the match failure which we translate to a restart. // if (optional u = inject_header (a, t, *ht, mt, false /* fail */)) { // Verify/add it to the dependency database. // if (!cache) dd.expect (ht->path ()); skip_count++; return *u; } else if (!cache) { diag_record dr; dr << error << "header " << *ht << " not found and no rule to " << "generate it"; if (df) dr << info << "failure deferred to compiler diagnostics"; if (verb < 4) dr << info << "re-run with --verbose=4 for more information"; if (df) return nullopt; else dr << endf; } dd.write (); // Invalidate this line. return true; }; // As above but for a header unit. Note that currently it is only used // for the cached case (the other case is handled by the mapper). // auto add_unit = [a, &bs, &t, li, &pfx_map, &so_map, &dd, &skip_count, &md, this] (path hp, path bp, timestamp mt) -> optional { context& ctx (t.ctx); bool df (!ctx.match_only && !ctx.dry_run_option); const file* ht (enter_header (a, bs, t, li, move (hp), true /* cache */, pfx_map, so_map).first); if (ht == nullptr) { diag_record dr; dr << error << "header '" << hp << "' not found"; if (df) dr << info << "failure deferred to compiler diagnostics"; if (verb < 4) dr << info << "re-run with --verbose=4 for more information"; if (df) return nullopt; else dr << endf; } // Again, looks like we have to update the header explicitly since // we want to restart rather than fail if it cannot be updated. // if (inject_header (a, t, *ht, mt, false /* fail */)) { const file& bt (make_header_sidebuild (a, bs, li, *ht)); // It doesn't look like we need the cache semantics here since given // the header, we should be able to build its BMI. In other words, a // restart is not going to change anything. // optional u (inject_header (a, t, bt, mt, true /* fail */)); assert (u); // Not from cache. if (bt.path () == bp) { md.headers++; skip_count++; return *u; } } dd.write (); // Invalidate this line. return true; }; // See init_args() above for details on generated header support. // bool gen (false); optional force_gen; optional force_gen_skip; // Skip count at last force_gen run. const path* drmp (nullptr); // Points to drm.path () if active. // If nothing so far has invalidated the dependency database, then try // the cached data before running the compiler. // bool cache (!update); for (bool restart (true); restart; cache = false) { restart = false; if (cache) { // If any, this is always the first run. // assert (skip_count == 0); // We should always end with a blank line. // for (;;) { string* l (dd.read ()); // If the line is invalid, run the compiler. // if (l == nullptr) { restart = true; break; } if (l->empty ()) // Done, nothing changed. { // If modules are enabled, then we keep the preprocessed output // around (see apply() for details). // return modules ? make_pair (auto_rmfile (t.path () + x_pext, false), true) : make_pair (auto_rmfile (), false); } // This can be a header or a header unit (mapping). The latter // is single-quoted. // // If this header (unit) came from the depdb, make sure it is no // older than the target (if it has changed since the target was // updated, then the cached data is stale). // optional r; if ((*l)[0] == '@') { size_t p (l->find ('\'', 3)); if (p != string::npos) { path h (*l, 3, p - 3); path b (move (l->erase (0, p + 2))); r = add_unit (move (h), move (b), mt); } else r = true; // Corrupt database? } else r = add (path (move (*l)), true /* cache */, mt); if (r) { restart = *r; if (restart) { update = true; l6 ([&]{trace << "restarting (cache)";}); break; } } else { // Trigger recompilation and mark as expected to fail. // update = true; md.deferred_failure = true; // Bail out early if we have deferred a failure. // return make_pair (auto_rmfile (), false); } } } else { try { if (force_gen) gen = *force_gen; if (args.empty () || gen != args_gen) drmp = init_args (gen); if (verb >= 3) print_process (args.data ()); // Disable pipe mode. process pr; try { // Assume the preprocessed output (if produced) is usable // until proven otherwise. // puse = true; // Save the timestamp just before we start preprocessing. If // we depend on any header that has been updated since, then // we should assume we've "seen" the old copy and re-process. // timestamp pmt (system_clock::now ()); // In some cases we may need to ignore the error return status. // The good_error flag keeps track of that. Similarly, sometimes // we expect the error return status based on the output that we // see. The bad_error flag is for that. // bool good_error (false), bad_error (false); // If we have no generated header support, then suppress all // diagnostics (if things go badly we will restart with this // support). // if (drmp == nullptr) // Dependency info goes to stdout. { assert (!sense_diag); // Note: could support with fdselect(). // For VC with /P the dependency info and diagnostics all go // to stderr so redirect it to stdout. // pr = process ( cpath, args.data (), 0, -1, cclass == compiler_class::msvc ? 1 : gen ? 2 : -2, nullptr, // CWD env.empty () ? nullptr : env.data ()); } else // Dependency info goes to a temporary file. { pr = process (cpath, args.data (), mod_mapper ? -1 : 0, mod_mapper ? -1 : 2, // Send stdout to stderr. gen ? 2 : sense_diag ? -1 : -2, nullptr, // CWD env.empty () ? nullptr : env.data ()); // Monitor for module mapper requests and/or diagnostics. If // diagnostics is detected, mark the preprocessed output as // unusable for compilation. // if (mod_mapper || sense_diag) { module_mapper_state mm_state (skip_count); const char* w (nullptr); try { // For now we don't need to do both so let's use a simpler // blocking implementation. Note that the module mapper // also needs to be adjusted when switching to the // non-blocking version. // #if 1 assert (mod_mapper != sense_diag); if (mod_mapper) { w = "module mapper request"; // Note: the order is important (see the non-blocking // verison for details). // ifdstream is (move (pr.in_ofd), fdstream_mode::skip, ifdstream::badbit); ofdstream os (move (pr.out_fd)); do { gcc_module_mapper (mm_state, a, bs, t, li, is, os, dd, update, bad_error, pfx_map, so_map); } while (!is.eof ()); os.close (); is.close (); } if (sense_diag) { w = "diagnostics"; ifdstream is (move (pr.in_efd), fdstream_mode::skip); puse = puse && (is.peek () == ifdstream::traits_type::eof ()); is.close (); } #else fdselect_set fds; auto add = [&fds] (const auto_fd& afd) -> fdselect_state* { int fd (afd.get ()); fdmode (fd, fdstream_mode::non_blocking); fds.push_back (fd); return &fds.back (); }; // Note that while we read both streams until eof in // normal circumstances, we cannot use fdstream_mode::skip // for the exception case on both of them: we may end up // being blocked trying to read one stream while the // process may be blocked writing to the other. So in case // of an exception we only skip the diagnostics and close // the mapper stream hard. The latter should happen first // so the order of the following variable is important. // ifdstream es; ofdstream os; ifdstream is; fdselect_state* ds (nullptr); if (sense_diag) { w = "diagnostics"; ds = add (pr.in_efd); es.open (move (pr.in_efd), fdstream_mode::skip); } fdselect_state* ms (nullptr); if (mod_mapper) { w = "module mapper request"; ms = add (pr.in_ofd); is.open (move (pr.in_ofd)); os.open (move (pr.out_fd)); // Note: blocking. } // Set each state pointer to NULL when the respective // stream reaches eof. // while (ds != nullptr || ms != nullptr) { w = "output"; ifdselect (fds); // First read out the diagnostics in case the mapper // interaction produces more. To make sure we don't get // blocked by full stderr, the mapper should only handle // one request at a time. // if (ds != nullptr && ds->ready) { w = "diagnostics"; for (char buf[4096];;) { streamsize c (sizeof (buf)); streamsize n (es.readsome (buf, c)); if (puse && n > 0) puse = false; if (n < c) break; } if (es.eof ()) { es.close (); ds->fd = nullfd; ds = nullptr; } } if (ms != nullptr && ms->ready) { w = "module mapper request"; gcc_module_mapper (mm_state, a, bs, t, li, is, os, dd, update, bad_error, pfx_map, so_map); if (is.eof ()) { os.close (); is.close (); ms->fd = nullfd; ms = nullptr; } } } #endif } catch (const io_error& e) { if (pr.wait ()) fail << "io error handling " << x_lang << " compiler " << w << ": " << e; // Fall through. } if (mod_mapper) md.headers += mm_state.headers; } // The idea is to reduce this to the stdout case. // pr.wait (); // With -MG we want to read dependency info even if there is // an error (in case an outdated header file caused it). But // with the GCC module mapper an error is non-negotiable, so // to speak, and so we want to skip all of that. In fact, we // now write directly to depdb without generating and then // parsing an intermadiate dependency makefile. // pr.in_ofd = (ctype == compiler_type::gcc && mod_mapper) ? auto_fd (nullfd) : fdopen (*drmp, fdopen_mode::in); } if (pr.in_ofd != nullfd) { // We may not read all the output (e.g., due to a restart). // Before we used to just close the file descriptor to signal // to the other end that we are not interested in the rest. // This works fine with GCC but Clang (3.7.0) finds this // impolite and complains, loudly (broken pipe). So now we are // going to skip until the end. // ifdstream is (move (pr.in_ofd), fdstream_mode::text | fdstream_mode::skip, ifdstream::badbit); size_t skip (skip_count); string l; // Reuse. for (bool first (true), second (false); !restart; ) { if (eof (getline (is, l))) break; l6 ([&]{trace << "header dependency line '" << l << "'";}); // Parse different dependency output formats. // switch (cclass) { case compiler_class::msvc: { // The first line should be the file we are compiling, // unless this is clang-cl. If it is not, then something // went wrong even before we could compile anything // (e.g., file does not exist). In this case the first // line (and everything after it) is presumably // diagnostics. // // It can, however, be a command line warning, for // example: // // cl : Command line warning D9025 : overriding '/W3' with '/W4' // // So we try to detect and skip them assuming they will // also show up during the compilation proper. // if (first) { if (cvariant != "clang") { if (l != src.path ().leaf ().string ()) { // D8XXX are errors while D9XXX are warnings. // size_t p (msvc_sense_diag (l, 'D').first); if (p != string::npos && l[p] == '9') continue; text << l; bad_error = true; break; } // Fall through. } first = false; continue; } string f (next_show (l, good_error)); if (f.empty ()) // Some other diagnostics. { text << l; bad_error = true; break; } // Skip until where we left off. // if (skip != 0) { // We can't be skipping over a non-existent header. // // @@ TMP: but this does seem to happen in some rare, // hard to reproduce situations. #if 0 assert (!good_error); #else if (good_error) { info << "previously existing header '" << f << "'" << " appears to have disappeared during build" << info << "line: " << l << info << "skip: " << skip << info << "please report at " << "https://github.com/build2/build2/issues/80"; assert (!good_error); } #endif skip--; } else { if (optional r = add (path (move (f)), false /* cache */, pmt)) { restart = *r; // If the header does not exist (good_error), then // restart must be true. Except that it is possible // that someone running in parallel has already // updated it. In this case we must force a restart // since we haven't yet seen what's after this // at-that-time-non-existent header. // // We also need to force the target update (normally // done by add()). // if (good_error) restart = true; // // And if we have updated the header (restart is // true), then we may end up in this situation: an // old header got included which caused the // preprocessor to fail down the line. So if we are // restarting, set the good error flag in case the // process fails because of something like this (and // if it is for a valid reason, then we will pick it // up on the next round). // else if (restart) good_error = true; if (restart) { update = true; l6 ([&]{trace << "restarting";}); } } else { // Trigger recompilation and mark as expected to // fail. // update = true; md.deferred_failure = true; } } break; } case compiler_class::gcc: { // Make dependency declaration. // size_t pos (0); if (first) { // Empty/invalid output should mean the wait() call // below will return false. // if (l.empty () || l[0] != '^' || l[1] != ':' || l[2] != ' ') { // @@ Hm, we don't seem to redirect stderr to stdout // for this class of compilers so I wonder why // we are doing this? // if (!l.empty ()) text << l; bad_error = true; break; } first = false; second = true; // While normally we would have the source file on the // first line, if too long, it will be moved to the // next line and all we will have on this line is: // "^: \". // if (l.size () == 4 && l[3] == '\\') continue; else pos = 3; // Skip "^: ". // Fall through to the 'second' block. } if (second) { second = false; next_make (l, pos); // Skip the source file. } while (pos != l.size ()) { string f (next_make (l, pos)); // Skip until where we left off. // if (skip != 0) { skip--; continue; } if (optional r = add (path (move (f)), false /* cache */, pmt)) { restart = *r; if (restart) { // The same "preprocessor may fail down the line" // logic as above. // good_error = true; update = true; l6 ([&]{trace << "restarting";}); break; } } else { // Trigger recompilation, mark as expected to fail, // and bail out. // update = true; md.deferred_failure = true; break; } } break; } } if (bad_error || md.deferred_failure) break; } // Bail out early if we have deferred a failure. // if (md.deferred_failure) { is.close (); return make_pair (auto_rmfile (), false); } // In case of VC, we are parsing stderr and if things go // south, we need to copy the diagnostics for the user to see. // if (bad_error && cclass == compiler_class::msvc) { // We used to just dump the whole rdbuf but it turns out VC // may continue writing include notes interleaved with the // diagnostics. So we have to filter them out. // for (; !eof (getline (is, l)); ) { pair p (msvc_sense_diag (l, 'C')); if (p.first != string::npos && l.compare (p.first, 4, "1083") != 0 && msvc_header_c1083 (l, p)) { diag_stream_lock () << l << endl; } } } is.close (); // This is tricky: it is possible that in parallel someone has // generated all our missing headers and we wouldn't restart // normally. // // In this case we also need to force the target update (which // is normally done by add()). // if (force_gen && *force_gen) { restart = update = true; force_gen = false; } } if (pr.wait ()) { if (!bad_error) // Ignore expected successes (we are done). continue; fail << "expected error exit status from " << x_lang << " compiler"; } else if (pr.exit->normal ()) { if (good_error) // Ignore expected errors (restart). continue; } // Fall through. } catch (const io_error& e) { if (pr.wait ()) fail << "unable to read " << x_lang << " compiler header " << "dependency output: " << e; // Fall through. } assert (pr.exit && !*pr.exit); const process_exit& e (*pr.exit); // For normal exit we assume the child process issued some // diagnostics. // if (e.normal ()) { // If this run was with the generated header support then we // have issued diagnostics and it's time to give up. // if (gen) throw failed (); // Just to recap, being here means something is wrong with the // source: it can be a missing generated header, it can be an // outdated generated header (e.g., some check triggered #error // which will go away if only we updated the generated header), // or it can be a real error that is not going away. // // So this is what we are going to do here: if anything got // updated on this run (i.e., the compiler has produced valid // dependency information even though there were errors and we // managed to find and update a header based on this // informaion), then we restart in the same mode hoping that // this fixes things. Otherwise, we force the generated header // support which will either uncover a missing generated header // or will issue diagnostics. // if (restart) l6 ([&]{trace << "trying again without generated headers";}); else { // In some pathological situations we may end up switching // back and forth indefinitely without making any headway. So // we use skip_count to track our progress. // // Examples that have been encountered so far: // // - Running out of disk space. // // - Using __COUNTER__ in #if which is incompatible with the // GCC's -fdirectives-only mode. // // - A Clang bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35580 // // So let's show the yo-yo'ing command lines and ask the user // to investigate. // // Note: we could restart one more time but this time without // suppressing diagnostics. This could be useful since, say, // running out of disk space may not reproduce on its own (for // example, because we have removed all the partially // preprocessed source files). // if (force_gen_skip && *force_gen_skip == skip_count) { diag_record dr (fail); dr << "inconsistent " << x_lang << " compiler behavior" << info << "run the following two commands to investigate"; dr << info; print_process (dr, args.data ()); // No pipes. init_args ((gen = true)); dr << info << ""; print_process (dr, args.data ()); // No pipes. } restart = true; force_gen = true; force_gen_skip = skip_count; l6 ([&]{trace << "restarting with forced generated headers";}); } continue; } else run_finish (args, pr); // Throws. } catch (const process_error& e) { error << "unable to execute " << args[0] << ": " << e; // In a multi-threaded program that fork()'ed but did not exec(), // it is unwise to try to do any kind of cleanup (like unwinding // the stack and running destructors). // if (e.child) { drm.cancel (); exit (1); } throw failed (); } } } // Add the terminating blank line (we are updating depdb). // dd.expect (""); puse = puse && !reprocess && !psrc.path.empty (); return make_pair (move (psrc), puse); } // Return the translation unit information (first) and its checksum // (second). If the checksum is empty, then it should not be used. // pair compile_rule:: parse_unit (action a, file& t, linfo li, const file& src, auto_rmfile& psrc, const match_data& md, const path& dd) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::parse_unit"); otype ot (li.type); // If things go wrong give the user a bit extra context. Let's call it // "scanning" instead of "parsing" since this has become an established // term. // auto df = make_diag_frame ( [&src](const diag_record& dr) { if (verb != 0) dr << info << "while scanning " << src; }); // For some compilers (GCC, Clang) the preporcessed output is only // partially preprocessed. For others (VC), it is already fully // preprocessed (well, almost: it still has comments but we can handle // that). Plus, the source file might already be (sufficiently) // preprocessed. // // So the plan is to start the compiler process that writes the fully // preprocessed output to stdout and reduce the already preprocessed // case to it. // environment env; cstrings args; small_vector header_args; // Header unit options storage. const path* sp; // Source path. // @@ MODHDR: If we are reprocessing, then will need module mapper for // include translation. Hairy... Can't we add support for // include translation in file mapper? // bool reprocess (cast_false (t[c_reprocess])); bool ps; // True if extracting from psrc. if (md.pp < preprocessed::modules) { // If we were instructed to reprocess the source during compilation, // then also reprocess it here. While the preprocessed output may be // usable for our needs, to be safe we assume it is not (and later we // may extend cc.reprocess to allow specifying where reprocessing is // needed). // ps = !psrc.path.empty () && !reprocess; sp = &(ps ? psrc.path : src.path ()); // VC's preprocessed output, if present, is fully preprocessed. // if (cclass != compiler_class::msvc || !ps) { // This should match with how we setup preprocessing and is pretty // similar to init_args() from extract_headers(). // args.push_back (cpath.recall_string ()); if (reprocess) args.push_back ("-D__build2_preprocess"); append_options (args, t, x_poptions); append_options (args, t, c_poptions); append_library_options (args, t.base_scope (), a, t, li); if (md.symexport) append_symexport_options (args, t); // Make sure we don't fail because of warnings. // // @@ Can be both -WX and /WX. // const char* werror (nullptr); switch (cclass) { case compiler_class::gcc: werror = "-Werror"; break; case compiler_class::msvc: werror = "/WX"; break; } bool clang (ctype == compiler_type::clang); append_options (args, t, c_coptions, werror); append_options (args, t, x_coptions, werror); append_header_options (env, args, header_args, a, t, md, dd); switch (cclass) { case compiler_class::msvc: { args.push_back ("/nologo"); append_options (args, cmode); append_sys_inc_options (args); if (x_lang == lang::cxx && !find_option_prefix ("/EH", args)) args.push_back ("/EHsc"); if (!find_option_prefixes ({"/MD", "/MT"}, args)) args.push_back ("/MD"); args.push_back ("/E"); // args.push_back ("/C"); // See above. msvc_sanitize_cl (args); append_lang_options (args, md); // Compile as. break; } case compiler_class::gcc: { if (ot == otype::s) { if (tclass == "linux" || tclass == "bsd") args.push_back ("-fPIC"); } if (ctype == compiler_type::clang && tsys == "win32-msvc") { initializer_list os {"-nostdlib", "-nostartfiles"}; if (!find_options (os, cmode) && !find_options (os, args)) { args.push_back ("-D_MT"); args.push_back ("-D_DLL"); } } if (ctype == compiler_type::clang && cvariant == "emscripten") { if (x_lang == lang::cxx) { if (!find_option_prefix ("DISABLE_EXCEPTION_CATCHING=", args)) { args.push_back ("-s"); args.push_back ("DISABLE_EXCEPTION_CATCHING=0"); } } } append_options (args, cmode, cmode.size () - (modules && clang ? 1 : 0)); append_sys_inc_options (args); args.push_back ("-E"); append_lang_options (args, md); // Options that trigger preprocessing of partially preprocessed // output are a bit of a compiler-specific voodoo. // if (ps) { if (ctype == compiler_type::gcc) { // Note that only these two *plus* -x do the trick. // args.push_back ("-fpreprocessed"); args.push_back ("-fdirectives-only"); } } break; } } args.push_back (sp->string ().c_str ()); args.push_back (nullptr); } if (!env.empty ()) env.push_back (nullptr); } else { // Extracting directly from source. // ps = false; sp = &src.path (); } // Preprocess and parse. // for (;;) // Breakout loop. try { // Disarm the removal of the preprocessed file in case of an error. // We re-arm it below. // if (ps) psrc.active = false; process pr; try { if (args.empty ()) { pr = process (process_exit (0)); // Successfully exited. pr.in_ofd = fdopen (*sp, fdopen_mode::in); } else { if (verb >= 3) print_process (args); // We don't want to see warnings multiple times so ignore all // diagnostics. // pr = process (cpath, args.data (), 0, -1, -2, nullptr, // CWD env.empty () ? nullptr : env.data ()); } // Use binary mode to obtain consistent positions. // ifdstream is (move (pr.in_ofd), fdstream_mode::binary | fdstream_mode::skip); parser p; unit tu (p.parse (is, path_name (*sp))); is.close (); if (pr.wait ()) { if (ps) psrc.active = true; // Re-arm. unit_type& ut (tu.type); module_info& mi (tu.module_info); if (!modules) { if (ut != unit_type::non_modular || !mi.imports.empty ()) fail << "modules support required by " << src; } else { // Sanity checks. // // If we are compiling a module interface, make sure the // translation unit has the necessary declarations. // if (ut != unit_type::module_iface && src.is_a (*x_mod)) fail << src << " is not a module interface unit"; // A header unit should look like a non-modular translation unit. // if (md.type == unit_type::module_header) { if (ut != unit_type::non_modular) fail << "module declaration in header unit " << src; ut = md.type; mi.name = src.path ().string (); } // Prior to 15.5 (19.12) VC was not using the 'export module M;' // syntax so we use the preprequisite type to distinguish // between interface and implementation units. // if (ctype == compiler_type::msvc && cmaj == 19 && cmin <= 11) { if (ut == unit_type::module_impl && src.is_a (*x_mod)) ut = unit_type::module_iface; } } // If we were forced to reprocess, assume the checksum is not // accurate (parts of the translation unit could have been // #ifdef'ed out; see __build2_preprocess). // return pair ( move (tu), reprocess ? string () : move (p.checksum)); } // Fall through. } catch (const io_error& e) { if (pr.wait ()) fail << "unable to read " << x_lang << " preprocessor output: " << e; // Fall through. } assert (pr.exit && !*pr.exit); const process_exit& e (*pr.exit); // What should we do with a normal error exit? Remember we suppressed // the compiler's diagnostics. We used to issue a warning and continue // with the assumption that the compilation step will fail with // diagnostics. The problem with this approach is that we may fail // before that because the information we return (e.g., module name) // is bogus. So looks like failing is the only option. // if (e.normal ()) { fail << "unable to preprocess " << src << info << "re-run with -s -V to display failing command" << info << "then run failing command to display compiler diagnostics"; } else run_finish (args, pr); // Throws. } catch (const process_error& e) { error << "unable to execute " << args[0] << ": " << e; if (e.child) exit (1); } throw failed (); } // Extract and inject module dependencies. // void compile_rule:: extract_modules (action a, const scope& bs, file& t, linfo li, const compile_target_types& tts, const file& src, match_data& md, module_info&& mi, depdb& dd, bool& update) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::extract_modules"); // If things go wrong, give the user a bit extra context. // auto df = make_diag_frame ( [&src](const diag_record& dr) { if (verb != 0) dr << info << "while extracting module dependencies from " << src; }); unit_type ut (md.type); module_imports& is (mi.imports); // Search and match all the modules we depend on. If this is a module // implementation unit, then treat the module itself as if it was // imported (we insert it first since for some compilers we have to // differentiate between this special module and real imports). Note: // move. // if (ut == unit_type::module_impl) is.insert ( is.begin (), module_import {unit_type::module_iface, move (mi.name), false, 0}); // The change to the set of imports would have required a change to // source code (or options). Changes to the bmi{}s themselves will be // detected via the normal prerequisite machinery. However, the same set // of imports could be resolved to a different set of bmi{}s (in a sense // similar to changing the source file). To detect this we calculate and // store a hash of all (not just direct) bmi{}'s paths. // sha256 cs; if (!is.empty ()) md.modules = search_modules (a, bs, t, li, tts.bmi, src, is, cs); if (dd.expect (cs.string ()) != nullptr) update = true; // Save the module map for compilers that use it. // switch (ctype) { case compiler_type::gcc: { // We don't need to redo this if the above hash hasn't changed and // the database is still valid. // if (dd.writing () || !dd.skip ()) { auto write = [&dd] (const string& name, const path& file, bool q) { dd.write ("@ ", false); if (q) dd.write ('\'', false); dd.write (name, false); if (q) dd.write ('\'', false); dd.write (' ', false); dd.write (file); }; // The output mapping is provided in the same way as input. // if (ut == unit_type::module_iface || ut == unit_type::module_header) write (mi.name, t.path (), ut == unit_type::module_header); if (size_t start = md.modules.start) { // Note that we map both direct and indirect imports to override // any module paths that might be stored in the BMIs (or // resolved relative to "repository path", whatever that is). // const auto& pts (t.prerequisite_targets[a]); for (size_t i (start); i != pts.size (); ++i) { if (const target* m = pts[i]) { // Save a variable lookup by getting the module name from // the import list (see search_modules()). // // Note: all real modules (not header units). // write (is[i - start].name, m->as ().path (), false); } } } } break; } default: break; } // Set the cc.module_name rule-specific variable if this is an interface // unit. Note that it may seem like a good idea to set it on the bmi{} // group to avoid duplication. We, however, cannot do it MT-safely since // we don't match the group. // // @@ MODHDR TODO: do we need this for header units? Currently we don't // see header units here. // if (ut == unit_type::module_iface /*|| ut == unit_type::module_header*/) { if (value& v = t.state[a].assign (c_module_name)) assert (cast (v) == mi.name); else v = move (mi.name); // Note: move. } } inline bool std_module (const string& m) { size_t n (m.size ()); return (n >= 3 && m[0] == 's' && m[1] == 't' && m[2] == 'd' && (n == 3 || m[3] == '.')); }; // Resolve imported modules to bmi*{} targets. // module_positions compile_rule:: search_modules (action a, const scope& bs, file& t, linfo li, const target_type& btt, const file& src, module_imports& imports, sha256& cs) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::search_modules"); // NOTE: currently we don't see header unit imports (they are // handled by extract_headers() and are not in imports). // So we have a list of imports and a list of "potential" module // prerequisites. They are potential in the sense that they may or may // not be required by this translation unit. In other words, they are // the pool where we can resolve actual imports. // // Because we may not need all of these prerequisites, we cannot just go // ahead and match all of them (and they can even have cycles; see rule // synthesis). This poses a bit of a problem: the only way to discover // the module's actual name (see cc.module_name) is by matching it. // // One way to solve this would be to make the user specify the module // name for each mxx{} explicitly. This will be a major pain, however. // Another would be to require encoding of the module name in the // interface unit file name. For example, hello.core -> hello-core.mxx. // This is better but still too restrictive: some will want to call it // hello_core.mxx or HelloCore.mxx (because that's their file naming // convention) or place it in a subdirectory, say, hello/core.mxx. // // In the above examples one common theme about all the file names is // that they contain, in one form or another, the "tail" of the module // name ('core'). So what we are going to do is require that the // interface file names contain enough of the module name tail to // unambiguously resolve all the module imports. On our side we are // going to implement a "fuzzy" module name to file name match. This // should be reliable enough since we will always verify our guesses // once we match the target and extract the actual module name. Plus, // the user will always have the option of resolving any impasses by // specifying the module name explicitly. // // So, the fuzzy match: the idea is that each match gets a score, the // number of characters in the module name that got matched. A match // with the highest score is used. And we use the (length + 1) for a // match against an actual module name. // // Actually, the scoring system is a bit more elaborate than that. // Consider module name core.window and two files, window.mxx and // abstract-window.mxx: which one is likely to define this module? // Clearly the first, but in the above-described scheme they will get // the same score. More generally, consider these "obvious" (to the // human) situations: // // window.mxx vs abstract-window.mxx // details/window.mxx vs abstract-window.mxx // gtk-window.mxx vs gtk-abstract-window.mxx // // To handle such cases we are going to combine the above primary score // with the following secondary scores (in that order): // // a) Strength of separation between matched and unmatched parts: // // '\0' > directory separator > other separator > unseparated // // Here '\0' signifies nothing to separate (unmatched part is empty). // // b) Shortness of the unmatched part. // // For std.* modules we only accept non-fuzzy matches (think std.core vs // some core.mxx). And if such a module is unresolved, then we assume it // is pre-built and will be found by some other means (e.g., VC's // IFCPATH). // auto match_max = [] (const string& m) -> size_t { // The primary and sub-scores are packed in the following decimal // representation: // // PPPPABBBB // // We use decimal instead of binary packing to make it easier to // separate fields in the trace messages, during debugging, etc. // return m.size () * 100000 + 99999; // Maximum match score. }; auto match = [] (const string& f, const string& m) -> size_t { auto file_sep = [] (char c) -> char { // Return the character (translating directory seperator to '/') if // it is a separator and '\0' otherwise (so can be used as bool). // return (c == '_' || c == '-' || c == '.' ? c : path::traits_type::is_separator (c) ? '/' : '\0'); }; auto case_sep = [] (char c1, char c2) { return (alpha (c1) && alpha (c2) && (ucase (c1) == c1) != (ucase (c2) == c2)); }; size_t fn (f.size ()), fi (fn); size_t mn (m.size ()), mi (mn); // True if the previous character was counted as a real (that is, // non-case changing) separator. // bool fsep (false); bool msep (false); // Scan backwards for as long as we match. Keep track of the previous // character for case change detection. // for (char fc, mc, fp ('\0'), mp ('\0'); fi != 0 && mi != 0; fp = fc, mp = mc, --fi, --mi) { fc = f[fi - 1]; mc = m[mi - 1]; if (icasecmp (fc, mc) == 0) { fsep = msep = false; continue; } // We consider all separators equal and character case change being // a separators. Some examples of the latter: // // foo.bar // fooBAR // FOObar // bool fs (file_sep (fc)); bool ms (mc == '_' || mc == '.'); if (fs && ms) { fsep = msep = true; continue; } // Only if one is a real separator do we consider case change. // if (fs || ms) { bool fa (false), ma (false); if ((fs || (fa = case_sep (fp, fc))) && (ms || (ma = case_sep (mp, mc)))) { // Stay on this character if imaginary punctuation (note: cannot // be both true). // if (fa) {++fi; msep = true;} if (ma) {++mi; fsep = true;} continue; } } break; // No match. } // "Uncount" real separators. // if (fsep) fi++; if (msep) mi++; // Use the number of characters matched in the module name and not // in the file (this may not be the same because of the imaginary // separators). // size_t ps (mn - mi); // The strength of separation sub-score. // // Check for case change between the last character that matched and // the first character that did not. // size_t as (0); if (fi == 0) as = 9; else if (char c = file_sep (f[fi - 1])) as = c == '/' ? 8 : 7; else if (fi != fn && case_sep (f[fi], f[fi - 1])) as = 7; // The length of the unmatched part sub-score. // size_t bs (9999 - fi); return ps * 100000 + as * 10000 + bs; }; auto& pts (t.prerequisite_targets[a]); size_t start (pts.size ()); // Index of the first to be added. // We have two parallel vectors: module names/scores in imports and // targets in prerequisite_targets (offset with start). Pre-allocate // NULL entries in the latter. // size_t n (imports.size ()); pts.resize (start + n, nullptr); // Oh, yes, there is one "minor" complication. It's the last one, I // promise. It has to do with module re-exporting (export import M;). // In this case (currently) all implementations simply treat it as a // shallow (from the BMI's point of view) reference to the module (or an // implicit import, if you will). Do you see where it's going? Nowever // good, that's right. This shallow reference means that the compiler // should be able to find BMIs for all the re-exported modules, // recursive. The good news is we are actually in a pretty good shape to // handle this: after match all our prerequisite BMIs will have their // prerequisite BMIs known, recursively. The only bit that is missing is // the re-export flag of some sorts. As well as deciding where to handle // it: here or in append_module_options(). After some meditation it // became clear handling it here will be simpler: we need to weed out // duplicates for which we can re-use the imports vector. And we may // also need to save this "flattened" list of modules in depdb. // // Ok, so, here is the plan: // // 1. There is no good place in prerequisite_targets to store the // exported flag (no, using the marking facility across match/execute // is a bad idea). So what we are going to do is put re-exported // bmi{}s at the back and store (in the target's data pad) the start // position. One bad aspect about this part is that we assume those // bmi{}s have been matched by the same rule. But let's not kid // ourselves, there will be no other rule that matches bmi{}s. // // 2. Once we have matched all the bmi{}s we are importing directly // (with all the re-exported by us at the back), we will go over them // and copy all of their re-exported bmi{}s (using the position we // saved on step #1). The end result will be a recursively-explored // list of imported bmi{}s that append_module_options() can simply // convert to the list of options. // // One issue with this approach is that these copied targets will be // executed which means we need to adjust their dependent counts // (which is normally done by match). While this seems conceptually // correct (especially if you view re-exports as implicit imports), // it's just extra overhead (we know they will be updated). So what // we are going to do is save another position, that of the start of // these copied-over targets, and will only execute up to this point. // // And after implementing this came the reality check: all the current // implementations require access to all the imported BMIs, not only // re-exported. Some (like Clang) store references to imported BMI files // so we actually don't need to pass any extra options (unless things // get moved) but they still need access to the BMIs (and things will // most likely have to be done differenly for distributed compilation). // // So the revised plan: on the off chance that some implementation will // do it differently we will continue maintaing the imported/re-exported // split and how much to copy-over can be made compiler specific. // // As a first sub-step of step #1, move all the re-exported imports to // the end of the vector. This will make sure they end up at the end // of prerequisite_targets. Note: the special first import, if any, // should be unaffected. // sort (imports.begin (), imports.end (), [] (const module_import& x, const module_import& y) { return !x.exported && y.exported; }); // Go over the prerequisites once. // // For (direct) library prerequisites, check their prerequisite bmi{}s // (which should be searched and matched with module names discovered; // see the library metadata protocol for details). // // For our own bmi{} prerequisites, checking if each (better) matches // any of the imports. // For fuzzy check if a file name (better) resolves any of our imports // and if so make it the new selection. For exact the name is the actual // module name and it can only resolve one import (there are no // duplicates). // // Set done to true if all the imports have now been resolved to actual // module names (which means we can stop searching). This will happens // if all the modules come from libraries. Which will be fairly common // (think of all the tests) so it's worth optimizing for. // bool done (false); auto check_fuzzy = [&trace, &imports, &pts, &match, &match_max, start, n] (const target* pt, const string& name) { for (size_t i (0); i != n; ++i) { module_import& m (imports[i]); if (std_module (m.name)) // No fuzzy std.* matches. continue; if (m.score > match_max (m.name)) // Resolved to module name. continue; size_t s (match (name, m.name)); l5 ([&]{trace << name << " ~ " << m.name << ": " << s;}); if (s > m.score) { pts[start + i] = pt; m.score = s; } } }; // If resolved, return the "slot" in pts (we don't want to create a // side build until we know we match; see below for details). // auto check_exact = [&trace, &imports, &pts, &match_max, start, n, &done] (const string& name) -> const target** { const target** r (nullptr); done = true; for (size_t i (0); i != n; ++i) { module_import& m (imports[i]); size_t ms (match_max (m.name)); if (m.score > ms) // Resolved to module name (no effect on done). continue; if (r == nullptr) { size_t s (name == m.name ? ms + 1 : 0); l5 ([&]{trace << name << " ~ " << m.name << ": " << s;}); if (s > m.score) { r = &pts[start + i].target; m.score = s; continue; // Scan the rest to detect if all done. } } done = false; } return r; }; for (prerequisite_member p: group_prerequisite_members (a, t)) { if (include (a, t, p) != include_type::normal) // Excluded/ad hoc. continue; const target* pt (p.load ()); // Should be cached for libraries. if (pt != nullptr) { const target* lt (nullptr); if (const libx* l = pt->is_a ()) lt = link_member (*l, a, li); else if (pt->is_a () || pt->is_a () || pt->is_a ()) lt = pt; // If this is a library, check its bmi{}s and mxx{}s. // if (lt != nullptr) { for (const target* bt: lt->prerequisite_targets[a]) { if (bt == nullptr) continue; // Note that here we (try) to use whatever flavor of bmi*{} is // available. // // @@ MOD: BMI compatibility check. // @@ UTL: we need to (recursively) see through libu*{} (and // also in pkgconfig_save()). // if (bt->is_a ()) { const string& n ( cast (bt->state[a].vars[c_module_name])); if (const target** p = check_exact (n)) *p = bt; } else if (bt->is_a (*x_mod)) { // This is an installed library with a list of module sources // (the source are specified as prerequisites but the fallback // file rule puts them into prerequisite_targets for us). // // The module names should be specified but if not assume // something else is going on and ignore. // const string* n (cast_null (bt->vars[c_module_name])); if (n == nullptr) continue; if (const target** p = check_exact (*n)) *p = &make_module_sidebuild (a, bs, *lt, *bt, *n); } else continue; if (done) break; } if (done) break; continue; } // Fall through. } // While it would have been even better not to search for a target, we // need to get hold of the corresponding mxx{} (unlikely but possible // for bmi{} to have a different name). // // While we want to use group_prerequisite_members() below, we cannot // call resolve_group() since we will be doing it "speculatively" for // modules that we may use but also for modules that may use us. This // quickly leads to deadlocks. So instead we are going to perform an // ad hoc group resolution. // const target* pg; if (p.is_a ()) { pg = pt != nullptr ? pt : &p.search (t); pt = &search (t, btt, p.key ()); // Same logic as in picking obj*{}. } else if (p.is_a (btt)) { pg = &search (t, bmi::static_type, p.key ()); if (pt == nullptr) pt = &p.search (t); } else continue; // Find the mxx{} prerequisite and extract its "file name" for the // fuzzy match unless the user specified the module name explicitly. // for (prerequisite_member p: prerequisite_members (a, t, group_prerequisites (*pt, pg))) { if (include (a, t, p) != include_type::normal) // Excluded/ad hoc. continue; if (p.is_a (*x_mod)) { // Check for an explicit module name. Only look for an existing // target (which means the name can only be specified on the // target itself, not target type/pattern-spec). // const target* t (p.search_existing ()); const string* n (t != nullptr ? cast_null (t->vars[c_module_name]) : nullptr); if (n != nullptr) { if (const target** p = check_exact (*n)) *p = pt; } else { // Fuzzy match. // string f; // Add the directory part if it is relative. The idea is to // include it into the module match, say hello.core vs // hello/mxx{core}. // // @@ MOD: Why not for absolute? Good question. What if it // contains special components, say, ../mxx{core}? // const dir_path& d (p.dir ()); if (!d.empty () && d.relative ()) f = d.representation (); // Includes trailing slash. f += p.name (); check_fuzzy (pt, f); } break; } } if (done) break; } // Diagnose unresolved modules. // if (!done) { for (size_t i (0); i != n; ++i) { if (pts[start + i] == nullptr && !std_module (imports[i].name)) { // It would have been nice to print the location of the import // declaration. And we could save it during parsing at the expense // of a few paths (that can be pooled). The question is what to do // when we re-create this information from depdb? We could have // saved the location information there but the relative paths // (e.g., from the #line directives) could end up being wrong if // the we re-run from a different working directory. // // It seems the only workable approach is to extract full location // info during parse, not save it in depdb, when re-creating, // fallback to just src path without any line/column information. // This will probably cover the majority of case (most of the time // it will be a misspelled module name, not a removal of module // from buildfile). // // But at this stage this doesn't seem worth the trouble. // fail (relative (src)) << "unable to resolve module " << imports[i].name; } } } // Match in parallel and wait for completion. // match_members (a, t, pts, start); // Post-process the list of our (direct) imports. While at it, calculate // the checksum of all (direct and indirect) bmi{} paths. // size_t exported (n); size_t copied (pts.size ()); for (size_t i (0); i != n; ++i) { const module_import& m (imports[i]); // Determine the position of the first re-exported bmi{}. // if (m.exported && exported == n) exported = i; const target* bt (pts[start + i]); if (bt == nullptr) continue; // Unresolved (std.*). // Verify our guesses against extracted module names but don't waste // time if it was a match against the actual module name. // const string& in (m.name); if (m.score <= match_max (in)) { const string& mn (cast (bt->state[a].vars[c_module_name])); if (in != mn) { // Note: matched, so the group should be resolved. // for (prerequisite_member p: group_prerequisite_members (a, *bt)) { if (include (a, t, p) != include_type::normal) // Excluded/ad hoc. continue; if (p.is_a (*x_mod)) // Got to be there. { fail (relative (src)) << "failed to correctly guess module name from " << p << info << "guessed: " << in << info << "actual: " << mn << info << "consider adjusting module interface file names or" << info << "consider specifying module name with " << x << ".module_name"; } } } } // Hash (we know it's a file). // cs.append (static_cast (*bt).path ().string ()); // Copy over bmi{}s from our prerequisites weeding out duplicates. // if (size_t j = bt->data ().modules.start) { // Hard to say whether we should reserve or not. We will probably // get quite a bit of duplications. // auto& bpts (bt->prerequisite_targets[a]); for (size_t m (bpts.size ()); j != m; ++j) { const target* et (bpts[j]); if (et == nullptr) continue; // Unresolved (std.*). const string& mn (cast (et->state[a].vars[c_module_name])); if (find_if (imports.begin (), imports.end (), [&mn] (const module_import& i) { return i.name == mn; }) == imports.end ()) { pts.push_back (et); cs.append (static_cast (*et).path ().string ()); // Add to the list of imports for further duplicate suppression. // We could have stored reference to the name (e.g., in score) // but it's probably not worth it if we have a small string // optimization. // imports.push_back ( module_import {unit_type::module_iface, mn, true, 0}); } } } } if (copied == pts.size ()) // No copied tail. copied = 0; if (exported == n) // No (own) re-exported imports. exported = copied; else exported += start; // Rebase. return module_positions {start, exported, copied}; } // Find or create a modules sidebuild subproject returning its root // directory. // dir_path compile_rule:: find_modules_sidebuild (const scope& rs) const { context& ctx (rs.ctx); // First figure out where we are going to build. We want to avoid // multiple sidebuilds so the outermost scope that has loaded the // cc.config module and that is within our amalgmantion seems like a // good place. // const scope* as (&rs); { const scope* ws (as->weak_scope ()); if (as != ws) { const scope* s (as); do { s = s->parent_scope ()->root_scope (); // Use cc.core.vars as a proxy for {c,cxx}.config (a bit smelly). // // This is also the module that registers the scope operation // callback that cleans up the subproject. // if (cast_false ((*s)["cc.core.vars.loaded"])) as = s; } while (s != ws); } } // We build modules in a subproject (since there might be no full // language support loaded in the amalgamation, only *.config). So the // first step is to check if the project has already been created and/or // loaded and if not, then to go ahead and do so. // dir_path pd (as->out_path () / as->root_extra->build_dir / module_build_modules_dir /= x); const scope* ps (&ctx.scopes.find (pd)); if (ps->out_path () != pd) { // Switch the phase to load then create and load the subproject. // phase_switch phs (ctx, run_phase::load); // Re-test again now that we are in exclusive phase (another thread // could have already created and loaded the subproject). // ps = &ctx.scopes.find (pd); if (ps->out_path () != pd) { // The project might already be created in which case we just need // to load it. // optional altn (false); // Standard naming scheme. if (!is_src_root (pd, altn)) { // Copy our standard and force modules. // string extra; if (const string* std = cast_null (rs[x_std])) extra += string (x) + ".std = " + *std + '\n'; extra += string (x) + ".features.modules = true"; create_project ( pd, as->out_path ().relative (pd), /* amalgamation */ {}, /* boot_modules */ extra, /* root_pre */ {string (x) + '.'}, /* root_modules */ "", /* root_post */ nullopt, /* config_module */ nullopt, /* config_file */ false, /* buildfile */ "the cc module", 2); /* verbosity */ } ps = &load_project (ctx, pd, pd, false /* forwarded */); } } // Some sanity checks. // #ifndef NDEBUG assert (ps->root ()); const module* m (ps->find_module (x)); assert (m != nullptr && m->modules); #endif return pd; } // Synthesize a dependency for building a module binary interface on // the side. // const file& compile_rule:: make_module_sidebuild (action a, const scope& bs, const target& lt, const target& mt, const string& mn) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::make_module_sidebuild"); // Note: see also make_header_sidebuild() below. dir_path pd (find_modules_sidebuild (*bs.root_scope ())); // We need to come up with a file/target name that will be unique enough // not to conflict with other modules. If we assume that within an // amalgamation there is only one "version" of each module, then the // module name itself seems like a good fit. We just replace '.' with // '-'. // string mf; transform (mn.begin (), mn.end (), back_inserter (mf), [] (char c) {return c == '.' ? '-' : c;}); // It seems natural to build a BMI type that corresponds to the library // type. After all, this is where the object file part of the BMI is // going to come from (though things will probably be different for // module-only libraries). // const target_type& tt (compile_types (link_type (lt).type).bmi); // Store the BMI target in the subproject root. If the target already // exists then we assume all this is already done (otherwise why would // someone have created such a target). // if (const file* bt = bs.ctx.targets.find ( tt, pd, dir_path (), // Always in the out tree. mf, nullopt, // Use default extension. trace)) return *bt; prerequisites ps; ps.push_back (prerequisite (mt)); // We've added the mxx{} but it may import other modules from this // library. Or from (direct) dependencies of this library. We add them // all as prerequisites so that the standard module search logic can // sort things out. This is pretty similar to what we do in link when // synthesizing dependencies for bmi{}'s. // // Note: lt is matched and so the group is resolved. // ps.push_back (prerequisite (lt)); for (prerequisite_member p: group_prerequisite_members (a, lt)) { if (include (a, lt, p) != include_type::normal) // Excluded/ad hoc. continue; // @@ TODO: will probably need revision if using sidebuild for // non-installed libraries (e.g., direct BMI dependencies // will probably have to be translated to mxx{} or some such). // if (p.is_a () || p.is_a () || p.is_a () || p.is_a ()) { ps.push_back (p.as_prerequisite ()); } } auto p (bs.ctx.targets.insert_locked ( tt, move (pd), dir_path (), // Always in the out tree. move (mf), nullopt, // Use default extension. target_decl::implied, trace)); file& bt (static_cast (p.first)); // Note that this is racy and someone might have created this target // while we were preparing the prerequisite list. // if (p.second.owns_lock ()) bt.prerequisites (move (ps)); return bt; } // Synthesize a dependency for building a header unit binary interface on // the side. // const file& compile_rule:: make_header_sidebuild (action, const scope& bs, linfo li, const file& ht) const { tracer trace (x, "compile_rule::make_header_sidebuild"); // Note: similar to make_module_sidebuild() above. dir_path pd (find_modules_sidebuild (*bs.root_scope ())); // What should we use as a file/target name? On one hand we want it // unique enough so that and don't end up // with the same BMI. On the other, we need the same headers resolving // to the same target, regardless of how they were imported. So it feels // like the name should be the absolute and normalized (actualized on // case-insensitive filesystems) header path. We could try to come up // with something by sanitizing certain characters, etc. But then the // names will be very long and ugly, they will run into path length // limits, etc. So instead we will use the file name plus an abbreviated // hash of the whole path, something like stdio-211321fe6de7. // string mf; { // @@ MODHDR: Can we assume the path is actualized since the header // target came from enter_header()? No, not anymore: it // is now normally just normalized. // const path& hp (ht.path ()); mf = hp.leaf ().make_base ().string (); mf += '-'; mf += sha256 (hp.string ()).abbreviated_string (12); } const target_type& tt (compile_types (li.type).hbmi); if (const file* bt = bs.ctx.targets.find ( tt, pd, dir_path (), // Always in the out tree. mf, nullopt, // Use default extension. trace)) return *bt; prerequisites ps; ps.push_back (prerequisite (ht)); auto p (bs.ctx.targets.insert_locked ( tt, move (pd), dir_path (), // Always in the out tree. move (mf), nullopt, // Use default extension. target_decl::implied, trace)); file& bt (static_cast (p.first)); // Note that this is racy and someone might have created this target // while we were preparing the prerequisite list. // if (p.second.owns_lock ()) bt.prerequisites (move (ps)); return bt; } // Filter cl.exe noise (msvc.cxx). // void msvc_filter_cl (ifdstream&, const path& src); // Append header unit-related options. // // Note that this function is called for both full preprocessing and // compilation proper and in the latter case it is followed by a call // to append_module_options(). // void compile_rule:: append_header_options (environment&, cstrings& args, small_vector& stor, action, const file&, const match_data& md, const path& dd) const { switch (ctype) { case compiler_type::gcc: { if (md.headers != 0) { string s (relative (dd).string ()); s.insert (0, "-fmodule-mapper="); s += "?@"; // Significant line prefix. stor.push_back (move (s)); } break; } case compiler_type::clang: case compiler_type::msvc: case compiler_type::icc: break; } // Shallow-copy storage to args. Why not do it as we go along pushing // into storage? Because of potential reallocations. // for (const string& a: stor) args.push_back (a.c_str ()); } // Append module-related options. // // Note that this function is only called for the compilation proper and // after a call to append_header_options() (so watch out for duplicate // options). // void compile_rule:: append_module_options (environment& env, cstrings& args, small_vector& stor, action a, const file& t, const match_data& md, const path& dd) const { unit_type ut (md.type); const module_positions& ms (md.modules); dir_path stdifc; // See the VC case below. switch (ctype) { case compiler_type::gcc: { // Use the module map stored in depdb. // // Note that it is also used to specify the output BMI file. // if (md.headers == 0 && // In append_header_options()? (ms.start != 0 || ut == unit_type::module_iface || ut == unit_type::module_header)) { string s (relative (dd).string ()); s.insert (0, "-fmodule-mapper="); s += "?@"; // Cookie (aka line prefix). stor.push_back (move (s)); } break; } case compiler_type::clang: { if (ms.start == 0) return; // Clang embeds module file references so we only need to specify // our direct imports. // // If/when we get the ability to specify the mapping in a file, we // will pass the whole list. // #if 0 // In Clang the module implementation's unit .pcm is special and // must be "loaded". // if (ut == unit_type::module_impl) { const file& f (pts[ms.start]->as ()); string s (relative (f.path ()).string ()); s.insert (0, "-fmodule-file="); stor.push_back (move (s)); } // Use the module map stored in depdb for others. // string s (relative (dd).string ()); s.insert (0, "-fmodule-file-map=@="); stor.push_back (move (s)); #else auto& pts (t.prerequisite_targets[a]); for (size_t i (ms.start), n (ms.copied != 0 ? ms.copied : pts.size ()); i != n; ++i) { const target* pt (pts[i]); if (pt == nullptr) continue; // Here we use whatever bmi type has been added. And we know all // of these are bmi's. // const file& f (pt->as ()); string s (relative (f.path ()).string ()); // In Clang the module implementation's unit .pcm is special and // must be "loaded". // if (ut == unit_type::module_impl && i == ms.start) s.insert (0, "-fmodule-file="); else { s.insert (0, 1, '='); s.insert (0, cast (f.state[a].vars[c_module_name])); s.insert (0, "-fmodule-file="); } stor.push_back (move (s)); } #endif break; } case compiler_type::msvc: { if (ms.start == 0) return; auto& pts (t.prerequisite_targets[a]); for (size_t i (ms.start), n (pts.size ()); i != n; ++i) { const target* pt (pts[i]); if (pt == nullptr) continue; // Here we use whatever bmi type has been added. And we know all // of these are bmi's. // const file& f (pt->as ()); // In VC std.* modules can only come from a single directory // specified with the IFCPATH environment variable or the // /module:stdIfcDir option. // if (std_module (cast (f.state[a].vars[c_module_name]))) { dir_path d (f.path ().directory ()); if (stdifc.empty ()) { // Go one directory up since /module:stdIfcDir will look in // either Release or Debug subdirectories. Keeping the result // absolute feels right. // stor.push_back ("/module:stdIfcDir"); stor.push_back (d.directory ().string ()); stdifc = move (d); } else if (d != stdifc) // Absolute and normalized. fail << "multiple std.* modules in different directories"; } else { stor.push_back ("/module:reference"); stor.push_back (relative (f.path ()).string ()); } } break; } case compiler_type::icc: break; } // Shallow-copy storage to args. Why not do it as we go along pushing // into storage? Because of potential reallocations. // for (const string& a: stor) args.push_back (a.c_str ()); if (getenv ("IFCPATH")) { // VC's IFCPATH takes precedence over /module:stdIfcDir so unset it if // we are using our own std modules. // if (!stdifc.empty ()) env.push_back ("IFCPATH"); } else if (stdifc.empty ()) { // Add the VC's default directory (should be only one). // if (sys_mod_dirs != nullptr && !sys_mod_dirs->empty ()) { args.push_back ("/module:stdIfcDir"); args.push_back (sys_mod_dirs->front ().string ().c_str ()); } } } target_state compile_rule:: perform_update (action a, const target& xt) const { const file& t (xt.as ()); const path& tp (t.path ()); match_data md (move (t.data ())); unit_type ut (md.type); context& ctx (t.ctx); // While all our prerequisites are already up-to-date, we still have to // execute them to keep the dependency counts straight. Actually, no, we // may also have to update the modules. // // Note that this also takes care of forcing update on any ad hoc // prerequisite change. // auto pr ( execute_prerequisites ( md.src.type (), a, t, md.mt, [s = md.modules.start] (const target&, size_t i) { return s != 0 && i >= s; // Only compare timestamps for modules. }, md.modules.copied)); // See search_modules() for details. const file& s (pr.second); const path* sp (&s.path ()); // Force recompilation in case of a deferred failure even if nothing // changed. // if (pr.first && !md.deferred_failure) { if (md.touch) { touch (ctx, tp, false, 2); t.mtime (system_clock::now ()); ctx.skip_count.fetch_add (1, memory_order_relaxed); } // Note: else mtime should be cached. return *pr.first; } // Make sure depdb is no older than any of our prerequisites (see md.mt // logic description above for details). Also save the sequence start // time if doing mtime checks (see the depdb::check_mtime() call below). // timestamp start (depdb::mtime_check () ? system_clock::now () : timestamp_unknown); touch (ctx, md.dd, false, verb_never); const scope& bs (t.base_scope ()); otype ot (compile_type (t, ut)); linfo li (link_info (bs, ot)); compile_target_types tts (compile_types (ot)); environment env; cstrings args {cpath.recall_string ()}; // If we are building a module interface, then the target is bmi*{} and // its ad hoc member is obj*{}. For header units there is no obj*{}. // path relm; path relo (ut == unit_type::module_header ? path () : relative (ut == unit_type::module_iface ? find_adhoc_member (t, tts.obj)->path () : tp)); // Build the command line. // if (md.pp != preprocessed::all) { // Note that these come in the reverse order of coptions since the // header search paths are examined in the order specified (in // contrast to the "last value wins" semantics that we assume for // coptions). // append_options (args, t, x_poptions); append_options (args, t, c_poptions); // Add *.export.poptions from prerequisite libraries. // append_library_options (args, bs, a, t, li); if (md.symexport) append_symexport_options (args, t); } append_options (args, t, c_coptions); append_options (args, t, x_coptions); string out, out1; // Output options storage. small_vector header_args; // Header unit options storage. small_vector module_args; // Module options storage. size_t out_i (0); // Index of the -o option. size_t lang_n (0); // Number of lang options. switch (cclass) { case compiler_class::msvc: { // The /F*: option variants with separate names only became // available in VS2013/12.0. Why do we bother? Because the command // line suddenly becomes readable. // // Also, clang-cl does not yet support them, at least not in 8 or 9. // bool fc (cmaj >= 18 && cvariant != "clang"); args.push_back ("/nologo"); append_options (args, cmode); if (md.pp != preprocessed::all) append_sys_inc_options (args); // Extra system header dirs (last). // While we want to keep the low-level build as "pure" as possible, // the two misguided defaults, C++ exceptions and runtime, just have // to be fixed. Otherwise the default build is pretty much unusable. // But we also make sure that the user can easily disable our // defaults: if we see any relevant options explicitly specified, we // take our hands off. // // For C looks like no /EH* (exceptions supported but no C++ objects // destroyed) is a reasonable default. // if (x_lang == lang::cxx && !find_option_prefix ("/EH", args)) args.push_back ("/EHsc"); // The runtime is a bit more interesting. At first it may seem like // a good idea to be a bit clever and use the static runtime if we // are building obja{}. And for obje{} we could decide which runtime // to use based on the library link order: if it is static-only, // then we could assume the static runtime. But it is indeed too // clever: when building liba{} we have no idea who is going to use // it. It could be an exe{} that links both static and shared // libraries (and is therefore built with the shared runtime). And // to safely use the static runtime, everything must be built with // /MT and there should be no DLLs in the picture. So we are going // to play it safe and always default to the shared runtime. // // In a similar vein, it would seem reasonable to use the debug // runtime if we are compiling with debug. But, again, there will be // fireworks if we have some projects built with debug and some // without and then we try to link them together (which is not an // unreasonable thing to do). So by default we will always use the // release runtime. // if (!find_option_prefixes ({"/MD", "/MT"}, args)) args.push_back ("/MD"); msvc_sanitize_cl (args); append_header_options (env, args, header_args, a, t, md, md.dd); append_module_options (env, args, module_args, a, t, md, md.dd); // The presence of /Zi or /ZI causes the compiler to write debug // info to the .pdb file. By default it is a shared file called // vcNN.pdb (where NN is the VC version) created (wait for it) in // the current working directory (and not the directory of the .obj // file). Also, because it is shared, there is a special Windows // service that serializes access. We, of course, want none of that // so we will create a .pdb per object file. // // Note that this also changes the name of the .idb file (used for // minimal rebuild and incremental compilation): cl.exe take the /Fd // value and replaces the .pdb extension with .idb. // // Note also that what we are doing here appears to be incompatible // with PCH (/Y* options) and /Gm (minimal rebuild). // if (find_options ({"/Zi", "/ZI"}, args)) { if (fc) args.push_back ("/Fd:"); else out1 = "/Fd"; out1 += relo.string (); out1 += ".pdb"; args.push_back (out1.c_str ()); } if (fc) { args.push_back ("/Fo:"); args.push_back (relo.string ().c_str ()); } else { out = "/Fo" + relo.string (); args.push_back (out.c_str ()); } // @@ MODHDR MSVC // if (ut == unit_type::module_iface) { relm = relative (tp); args.push_back ("/module:interface"); args.push_back ("/module:output"); args.push_back (relm.string ().c_str ()); } // Note: no way to indicate that the source if already preprocessed. args.push_back ("/c"); // Compile only. append_lang_options (args, md); // Compile as. args.push_back (sp->string ().c_str ()); // Note: relied on being last. break; } case compiler_class::gcc: { if (ot == otype::s) { // On Darwin, Win32 -fPIC is the default. // if (tclass == "linux" || tclass == "bsd") args.push_back ("-fPIC"); } if (tsys == "win32-msvc") { switch (ctype) { case compiler_type::clang: { // Default to the /EHsc exceptions support for C++, similar to // the the MSVC case above. // // Note that both vanilla clang++ and clang-cl drivers add // -fexceptions and -fcxx-exceptions by default. However, // clang-cl also adds -fexternc-nounwind, which implements the // 'c' part in /EHsc. Note that adding this option is not a // mere optimization, as we have discovered through some // painful experience; see Clang bug #45021. // // Let's also omit this option if -f[no]-exceptions is // specified explicitly. // if (x_lang == lang::cxx) { if (!find_options ({"-fexceptions", "-fno-exceptions"}, args)) { args.push_back ("-Xclang"); args.push_back ("-fexternc-nounwind"); } } // Default to the multi-threaded DLL runtime (/MD), similar to // the MSVC case above. // // Clang's MSVC.cpp will not link the default runtime if // either -nostdlib or -nostartfiles is specified. Let's do // the same. // initializer_list os {"-nostdlib", "-nostartfiles"}; if (!find_options (os, cmode) && !find_options (os, args)) { args.push_back ("-D_MT"); args.push_back ("-D_DLL"); // All these -Xclang --dependent-lib=... add quite a bit of // noise to the command line. The alternative is to use the // /DEFAULTLIB option during linking. The drawback of that // approach is that now we can theoretically build the // object file for one runtime but try to link it with // something else. // // For example, an installed static library was built for a // non-debug runtime while a project that links it uses // debug. With the --dependent-lib approach we will try to // link multiple runtimes while with /DEFAULTLIB we may end // up with unresolved symbols (but things might also work // out fine, unless the runtimes have incompatible ABIs). // // Let's start with /DEFAULTLIB and see how it goes (see the // link rule). // #if 0 args.push_back ("-Xclang"); args.push_back ("--dependent-lib=msvcrt"); // This provides POSIX compatibility (map open() to _open(), // etc). // args.push_back ("-Xclang"); args.push_back ("--dependent-lib=oldnames"); #endif } break; } case compiler_type::gcc: case compiler_type::msvc: case compiler_type::icc: assert (false); } } // For now Emscripten defaults to partial C++ exceptions support // (you can throw but not catch). We enable full support unless it // was explicitly disabled by the user. // if (ctype == compiler_type::clang && cvariant == "emscripten") { if (x_lang == lang::cxx) { if (!find_option_prefix ("DISABLE_EXCEPTION_CATCHING=", args)) { args.push_back ("-s"); args.push_back ("DISABLE_EXCEPTION_CATCHING=0"); } } } append_options (args, cmode); if (md.pp != preprocessed::all) append_sys_inc_options (args); // Extra system header dirs (last). append_header_options (env, args, header_args, a, t, md, md.dd); append_module_options (env, args, module_args, a, t, md, md.dd); // Note: the order of the following options is relied upon below. // out_i = args.size (); // Index of the -o option. if (ut == unit_type::module_iface || ut == unit_type::module_header) { switch (ctype) { case compiler_type::gcc: { // Output module file is specified in the mapping file, the // same as input. // if (ut != unit_type::module_header) // No object file. { args.push_back ("-o"); args.push_back (relo.string ().c_str ()); args.push_back ("-c"); } break; } case compiler_type::clang: { relm = relative (tp); args.push_back ("-o"); args.push_back (relm.string ().c_str ()); args.push_back ("--precompile"); // Without this option Clang's .pcm will reference source // files. In our case this file may be transient (.ii). Plus, // it won't play nice with distributed compilation. // args.push_back ("-Xclang"); args.push_back ("-fmodules-embed-all-files"); break; } case compiler_type::msvc: case compiler_type::icc: assert (false); } } else { args.push_back ("-o"); args.push_back (relo.string ().c_str ()); args.push_back ("-c"); } lang_n = append_lang_options (args, md); if (md.pp == preprocessed::all) { // Note that the mode we select must still handle comments and // line continuations. So some more compiler-specific voodoo. // switch (ctype) { case compiler_type::gcc: { // -fdirectives-only is available since GCC 4.3.0. // if (cmaj > 4 || (cmaj == 4 && cmin >= 3)) { args.push_back ("-fpreprocessed"); args.push_back ("-fdirectives-only"); } break; } case compiler_type::clang: { // Clang handles comments and line continuations in the // preprocessed source (it does not have -fpreprocessed). // break; } case compiler_type::icc: break; // Compile as normal source for now. case compiler_type::msvc: assert (false); } } args.push_back (sp->string ().c_str ()); break; } } args.push_back (nullptr); if (!env.empty ()) env.push_back (nullptr); // With verbosity level 2 print the command line as if we are compiling // the source file, not its preprocessed version (so that it's easy to // copy and re-run, etc). Only at level 3 and above print the real deal. // if (verb == 1) text << x_name << ' ' << s; else if (verb == 2) print_process (args); // If we have the (partially) preprocessed output, switch to that. // bool psrc (!md.psrc.path.empty ()); bool pact (md.psrc.active); if (psrc) { args.pop_back (); // nullptr args.pop_back (); // sp sp = &md.psrc.path; // This should match with how we setup preprocessing. // switch (ctype) { case compiler_type::gcc: { // The -fpreprocessed is implied by .i/.ii. But not when compiling // a header unit (there is no .hi/.hii). // if (ut == unit_type::module_header) args.push_back ("-fpreprocessed"); else // Pop -x since it takes precedence over the extension. // // @@ I wonder why bother and not just add -fpreprocessed? Are // we trying to save an option or does something break? // for (; lang_n != 0; --lang_n) args.pop_back (); args.push_back ("-fdirectives-only"); break; } case compiler_type::clang: { // Note that without -x Clang will treat .i/.ii as fully // preprocessed. // break; } case compiler_type::msvc: { // Nothing to do (/TP or /TC already there). // break; } case compiler_type::icc: assert (false); } args.push_back (sp->string ().c_str ()); args.push_back (nullptr); // Let's keep the preprocessed file in case of an error but only at // verbosity level 3 and up (when one actually sees it mentioned on // the command line). We also have to re-arm on success (see below). // if (pact && verb >= 3) md.psrc.active = false; } if (verb >= 3) print_process (args); // @@ DRYRUN: Currently we discard the (partially) preprocessed file on // dry-run which is a waste. Even if we keep the file around (like we do // for the error case; see above), we currently have no support for // re-using the previously preprocessed output. However, everything // points towards us needing this in the near future since with modules // we may be out of date but not needing to re-preprocess the // translation unit (i.e., one of the imported module's BMIs has // changed). // if (!ctx.dry_run) { try { // VC cl.exe sends diagnostics to stdout. It also prints the file // name being compiled as the first line. So for cl.exe we redirect // stdout to a pipe, filter that noise out, and send the rest to // stderr. // // For other compilers redirect stdout to stderr, in case any of // them tries to pull off something similar. For sane compilers this // should be harmless. // bool filter (ctype == compiler_type::msvc); process pr (cpath, args.data (), 0, (filter ? -1 : 2), 2, nullptr, // CWD env.empty () ? nullptr : env.data ()); if (filter) { try { ifdstream is ( move (pr.in_ofd), fdstream_mode::text, ifdstream::badbit); msvc_filter_cl (is, *sp); // If anything remains in the stream, send it all to stderr. // Note that the eof check is important: if the stream is at // eof, this and all subsequent writes to the diagnostics stream // will fail (and you won't see a thing). // if (is.peek () != ifdstream::traits_type::eof ()) diag_stream_lock () << is.rdbuf (); is.close (); } catch (const io_error&) {} // Assume exits with error. } run_finish (args, pr); } catch (const process_error& e) { error << "unable to execute " << args[0] << ": " << e; if (e.child) exit (1); throw failed (); } if (md.deferred_failure) fail << "expected error exit status from " << x_lang << " compiler"; } // Remove preprocessed file (see above). // if (pact && verb >= 3) md.psrc.active = true; // Clang's module compilation requires two separate compiler // invocations. // if (ctype == compiler_type::clang && ut == unit_type::module_iface) { // Adjust the command line. First discard everything after -o then // build the new "tail". // args.resize (out_i + 1); args.push_back (relo.string ().c_str ()); // Produce .o. args.push_back ("-c"); // By compiling .pcm. args.push_back ("-Wno-unused-command-line-argument"); args.push_back (relm.string ().c_str ()); args.push_back (nullptr); if (verb >= 2) print_process (args); if (!ctx.dry_run) { // Remove the target file if this fails. If we don't do that, we // will end up with a broken build that is up-to-date. // auto_rmfile rm (relm); try { process pr (cpath, args.data (), 0, 2, 2, nullptr, // CWD env.empty () ? nullptr : env.data ()); run_finish (args, pr); } catch (const process_error& e) { error << "unable to execute " << args[0] << ": " << e; if (e.child) exit (1); throw failed (); } rm.cancel (); } } timestamp now (system_clock::now ()); if (!ctx.dry_run) depdb::check_mtime (start, md.dd, tp, now); // Should we go to the filesystem and get the new mtime? We know the // file has been modified, so instead just use the current clock time. // It has the advantage of having the subseconds precision. Plus, in // case of dry-run, the file won't be modified. // t.mtime (now); return target_state::changed; } target_state compile_rule:: perform_clean (action a, const target& xt) const { const file& t (xt.as ()); clean_extras extras; switch (ctype) { case compiler_type::gcc: extras = {".d", x_pext, ".t"}; break; case compiler_type::clang: extras = {".d", x_pext}; break; case compiler_type::msvc: extras = {".d", x_pext, ".idb", ".pdb"};break; case compiler_type::icc: extras = {".d"}; break; } return perform_clean_extra (a, t, extras); } } }