directive-for.mk revision 1.28 1 1.28 rillig # $NetBSD: directive-for.mk,v 1.28 2024/08/29 20:20:36 rillig Exp $
2 1.1 rillig #
3 1.1 rillig # Tests for the .for directive.
4 1.9 rillig #
5 1.9 rillig # TODO: Describe naming conventions for the loop variables.
6 1.9 rillig # .for f in values
7 1.9 rillig # .for file in values
8 1.9 rillig # .for _FILE_ in values
9 1.9 rillig # .for .FILE. in values
10 1.9 rillig # .for _f_ in values
11 1.19 rillig #
12 1.19 rillig # See also:
13 1.19 rillig # varmod-loop.mk The ':@var (a] ...@' modifier
14 1.19 rillig
15 1.19 rillig # A typical use case for a .for loop is to populate a variable with a list of
16 1.19 rillig # values depending on other variables. In simple cases, the same effect can
17 1.19 rillig # be achieved using the ':@var@${var}@' modifier.
18 1.1 rillig .undef NUMBERS
19 1.1 rillig .for num in 1 2 3
20 1.1 rillig NUMBERS+= ${num}
21 1.1 rillig .endfor
22 1.1 rillig .if ${NUMBERS} != "1 2 3"
23 1.1 rillig . error
24 1.1 rillig .endif
25 1.1 rillig
26 1.19 rillig
27 1.1 rillig # The .for loop also works for multiple iteration variables.
28 1.24 rillig # This is something that the modifier :@ cannot do as easily.
29 1.1 rillig .for name value in VARNAME value NAME2 value2
30 1.1 rillig ${name}= ${value}
31 1.1 rillig .endfor
32 1.1 rillig .if ${VARNAME} != "value" || ${NAME2} != "value2"
33 1.1 rillig . error
34 1.1 rillig .endif
35 1.1 rillig
36 1.19 rillig
37 1.1 rillig # The .for loop splits the items at whitespace, taking quotes into account,
38 1.19 rillig # just like the :M or :S modifiers.
39 1.1 rillig #
40 1.19 rillig # Until 2012-06-03, the .for loop had split the items exactly at whitespace,
41 1.19 rillig # without taking the quotes into account. This had resulted in 10 words.
42 1.1 rillig .undef WORDS
43 1.1 rillig .for var in one t\ w\ o "three three" 'four four' `five six`
44 1.1 rillig WORDS+= counted
45 1.1 rillig .endfor
46 1.1 rillig .if ${WORDS:[#]} != 6
47 1.1 rillig . error
48 1.1 rillig .endif
49 1.1 rillig
50 1.19 rillig
51 1.1 rillig # In the body of the .for loop, the iteration variables can be accessed
52 1.1 rillig # like normal variables, even though they are not really variables.
53 1.1 rillig #
54 1.19 rillig # Instead, before interpreting the body of the .for loop, the body is
55 1.19 rillig # generated by replacing each expression ${var} with ${:U1}, ${:U2} and so
56 1.19 rillig # on.
57 1.1 rillig #
58 1.19 rillig # A noticeable effect of this implementation technique is that the .for
59 1.1 rillig # iteration variables and the normal global variables live in separate
60 1.19 rillig # namespaces and do not influence each other. The "scope" of the .for loop
61 1.20 rillig # variables is restricted to the current makefile, it does not reach over to
62 1.19 rillig # any included makefiles.
63 1.1 rillig var= value before
64 1.1 rillig var2= value before
65 1.1 rillig .for var var2 in 1 2 3 4
66 1.1 rillig .endfor
67 1.1 rillig .if ${var} != "value before"
68 1.2 rillig . warning After the .for loop, var must still have its original value.
69 1.1 rillig .endif
70 1.1 rillig .if ${var2} != "value before"
71 1.2 rillig . warning After the .for loop, var2 must still have its original value.
72 1.1 rillig .endif
73 1.1 rillig
74 1.1 rillig # Everything from the paragraph above also applies if the loop body is
75 1.19 rillig # empty. In this particular example, the items to be iterated are empty as
76 1.19 rillig # well.
77 1.1 rillig var= value before
78 1.1 rillig var2= value before
79 1.1 rillig .for var var2 in ${:U}
80 1.1 rillig .endfor
81 1.1 rillig .if ${var} != "value before"
82 1.2 rillig . warning After the .for loop, var must still have its original value.
83 1.1 rillig .endif
84 1.1 rillig .if ${var2} != "value before"
85 1.2 rillig . warning After the .for loop, var2 must still have its original value.
86 1.1 rillig .endif
87 1.1 rillig
88 1.21 rillig # Before for.c 1.39 from 2008-12-21, the values of the iteration variables
89 1.21 rillig # were simply inserted as plain text and then parsed as usual, which made it
90 1.21 rillig # possible to achieve all kinds of strange effects, such as generating '.if'
91 1.19 rillig # directives or inserting '$' characters in random places, thereby changing
92 1.19 rillig # how following '$' are interpreted.
93 1.1 rillig #
94 1.19 rillig # Before that date, the .for loop below expanded to:
95 1.1 rillig # EXPANSION+= value
96 1.19 rillig # Since that date, the .for loop below expands to:
97 1.1 rillig # EXPANSION${:U+}= value
98 1.1 rillig #
99 1.6 rillig EXPANSION= before
100 1.6 rillig EXPANSION+ = before
101 1.1 rillig .for plus in +
102 1.1 rillig EXPANSION${plus}= value
103 1.1 rillig .endfor
104 1.1 rillig .if ${EXPANSION} != "before"
105 1.1 rillig . error This must be a make from before 2009.
106 1.1 rillig .endif
107 1.1 rillig .if ${EXPANSION+} != "value"
108 1.1 rillig . error This must be a make from before 2009.
109 1.1 rillig .endif
110 1.1 rillig
111 1.3 rillig # When the outer .for loop is expanded, it sees the expression ${i} and
112 1.19 rillig # expands it. The inner loop then only sees the expression ${:Uouter} and
113 1.19 rillig # has nothing more to expand.
114 1.3 rillig .for i in outer
115 1.3 rillig . for i in inner
116 1.19 rillig # expect+1: outer
117 1.3 rillig . info ${i}
118 1.3 rillig . endfor
119 1.3 rillig .endfor
120 1.3 rillig
121 1.19 rillig
122 1.4 rillig # From https://gnats.netbsd.org/29985.
123 1.4 rillig #
124 1.4 rillig # Until 2008-12-21, the .for loop was expanded by replacing the variable
125 1.4 rillig # value literally in the body. This could lead to situations where the
126 1.4 rillig # characters from the variable value were interpreted as markup rather than
127 1.4 rillig # plain text.
128 1.4 rillig #
129 1.4 rillig # Until 2012-06-03, the .for loop had split the words at whitespace, without
130 1.4 rillig # taking quotes into account. This made it possible to have variable values
131 1.4 rillig # like "a:\ a:\file.txt" that ended in a single backslash. Since then, the
132 1.4 rillig # variable values have been replaced with expressions of the form ${:U...},
133 1.4 rillig # which are not interpreted as code anymore.
134 1.5 rillig .for path in a:\ a:\file.txt d:\\ d:\\file.txt
135 1.27 rillig # expect+3: a:\ a:\file.txt
136 1.27 rillig # expect+2: d:\\
137 1.27 rillig # expect+1: d:\\file.txt
138 1.4 rillig . info ${path}
139 1.4 rillig .endfor
140 1.19 rillig
141 1.4 rillig
142 1.7 rillig # Ensure that braces and parentheses are properly escaped by the .for loop.
143 1.7 rillig # Each line must print the same word 3 times.
144 1.11 rillig # See ForLoop_SubstBody.
145 1.7 rillig .for v in ( [ { ) ] } (()) [[]] {{}} )( ][ }{
146 1.27 rillig # expect+12: ( ( (
147 1.27 rillig # expect+11: [ [ [
148 1.27 rillig # expect+10: { { {
149 1.27 rillig # expect+9: ) ) )
150 1.27 rillig # expect+8: ] ] ]
151 1.27 rillig # expect+7: } } }
152 1.27 rillig # expect+6: (()) (()) (())
153 1.27 rillig # expect+5: [[]] [[]] [[]]
154 1.27 rillig # expect+4: {{}} {{}} {{}}
155 1.27 rillig # expect+3: )( )( )(
156 1.27 rillig # expect+2: ][ ][ ][
157 1.27 rillig # expect+1: }{ }{ }{
158 1.7 rillig . info $v ${v} $(v)
159 1.7 rillig .endfor
160 1.7 rillig
161 1.20 rillig # Before 2023-05-09, the variable names could contain arbitrary characters,
162 1.20 rillig # except for whitespace, allowing for creative side effects, as usual for
163 1.20 rillig # arbitrary code injection.
164 1.8 rillig var= outer
165 1.18 rillig # expect+1: invalid character ':' in .for loop variable name
166 1.8 rillig .for var:Q in value "quoted"
167 1.18 rillig . info <${var}> <${var:Q}> <${var:Q:Q}>
168 1.8 rillig .endfor
169 1.20 rillig
170 1.20 rillig # Before 2023-05-09, when variable names could contain '$', the short
171 1.20 rillig # expression '$$' was preserved, the long expressions were substituted.
172 1.18 rillig # expect+1: invalid character '$' in .for loop variable name
173 1.17 rillig .for $ in value
174 1.18 rillig . info <$$> <${$}> <$($)>
175 1.17 rillig .endfor
176 1.20 rillig
177 1.20 rillig
178 1.20 rillig # https://gnats.netbsd.org/53146 mentions the idea of using a dynamic
179 1.20 rillig # variable name in .for loops, based on some other variable. The .for loops
180 1.20 rillig # are already tricky enough to understand in detail, even without this
181 1.20 rillig # possibility, therefore the variable names are restricted to using harmless
182 1.20 rillig # characters only.
183 1.20 rillig INDIRECT= direct
184 1.18 rillig # expect+1: invalid character '$' in .for loop variable name
185 1.20 rillig .for $(INDIRECT) in value
186 1.20 rillig # If the variable name could be chosen dynamically, the iteration variable
187 1.20 rillig # might have been 'direct', thereby expanding the expression '${direct}'.
188 1.20 rillig . info <$(INDIRECT)> <$(direct)> <$($(INDIRECT))>
189 1.17 rillig .endfor
190 1.8 rillig
191 1.10 rillig
192 1.24 rillig # Regular global variables and the "variables" from the .for loop don't
193 1.24 rillig # interfere with each other. In the following snippet, the variable 'DIRECT'
194 1.24 rillig # is used both as a global variable, as well as an iteration variable in the
195 1.24 rillig # .for loop. The expression '${INDIRECT}' refers to the global variable, not
196 1.24 rillig # to the one from the .for loop.
197 1.24 rillig DIRECT= global
198 1.24 rillig INDIRECT= ${DIRECT}
199 1.24 rillig .for DIRECT in iteration
200 1.24 rillig . if "${DIRECT} ${INDIRECT}" != "iteration global"
201 1.24 rillig . error
202 1.24 rillig . endif
203 1.24 rillig .endfor
204 1.24 rillig
205 1.24 rillig
206 1.10 rillig # XXX: A parse error or evaluation error in the items of the .for loop
207 1.19 rillig # should skip the whole loop. As of 2023-05-09, the loop is expanded as
208 1.19 rillig # usual.
209 1.28 rillig # expect+1: Unknown modifier "Z"
210 1.23 rillig .for var in word1 before-${:Uword2:Z}-after word3
211 1.27 rillig # expect+3: XXX: Should not reach word1
212 1.27 rillig # expect+2: XXX: Should not reach before--after
213 1.27 rillig # expect+1: XXX: Should not reach word3
214 1.23 rillig . info XXX: Should not reach ${var}
215 1.10 rillig .endfor
216 1.10 rillig
217 1.11 rillig
218 1.11 rillig # An empty list of variables to the left of the 'in' is a parse error.
219 1.13 rillig .for in value # expect+0: no iteration variables in for
220 1.19 rillig . error
221 1.19 rillig .endfor
222 1.11 rillig
223 1.11 rillig # An empty list of iteration values to the right of the 'in' is accepted.
224 1.11 rillig # Unlike in the shell, it is not a parse error.
225 1.11 rillig .for var in
226 1.11 rillig . error
227 1.11 rillig .endfor
228 1.11 rillig
229 1.11 rillig # If the iteration values become empty after expanding the expressions, the
230 1.11 rillig # body of the loop is not evaluated. It is not a parse error.
231 1.11 rillig .for var in ${:U}
232 1.11 rillig . error
233 1.11 rillig .endfor
234 1.11 rillig
235 1.11 rillig
236 1.11 rillig # The loop body can be empty.
237 1.11 rillig .for var in 1 2 3
238 1.11 rillig .endfor
239 1.11 rillig
240 1.11 rillig
241 1.11 rillig # A mismatched .if inside a .for loop is detected each time when the loop body
242 1.11 rillig # is processed.
243 1.11 rillig .for var in value
244 1.11 rillig . if 0
245 1.13 rillig .endfor # expect+0: 1 open conditional
246 1.11 rillig
247 1.11 rillig # If there are no iteration values, the loop body is not processed, and the
248 1.11 rillig # check for mismatched conditionals is not performed.
249 1.11 rillig .for var in ${:U}
250 1.11 rillig . if 0
251 1.11 rillig .endfor
252 1.11 rillig
253 1.11 rillig
254 1.11 rillig # When a .for without the corresponding .endfor occurs in an inactive branch
255 1.11 rillig # of an .if, the .for directive is just skipped, it does not even need a
256 1.11 rillig # corresponding .endfor. In other words, the behavior of the parser depends
257 1.11 rillig # on the actual values of the conditions in the .if clauses.
258 1.11 rillig .if 0
259 1.11 rillig . for var in value # does not need a corresponding .endfor
260 1.11 rillig .endif
261 1.13 rillig .endfor # expect+0: for-less endfor
262 1.13 rillig .endif # expect+0: if-less endif
263 1.11 rillig
264 1.11 rillig
265 1.11 rillig # When a .for without the corresponding .endfor occurs in an active branch of
266 1.11 rillig # an .if, the parser just counts the number of .for and .endfor directives,
267 1.11 rillig # without looking at any other directives.
268 1.11 rillig .if 1
269 1.11 rillig . for var in value
270 1.13 rillig . endif # expect+0: if-less endif
271 1.11 rillig . endfor # no 'for-less endfor'
272 1.11 rillig .endif # no 'if-less endif'
273 1.12 rillig
274 1.12 rillig
275 1.16 rillig # Before for.c 1.172 from 2023-05-08, when make parsed a .for loop, it
276 1.16 rillig # assumed that there was no line continuation between the '.' and the 'for'
277 1.16 rillig # or 'endfor', as there is no practical reason to break the line at this
278 1.16 rillig # point.
279 1.16 rillig #
280 1.16 rillig # When make scanned the outer .for loop, it did not recognize the inner .for
281 1.16 rillig # loop as such and instead treated it as an unknown directive. The body of
282 1.16 rillig # the outer .for loop thus ended above the '.endfor'.
283 1.16 rillig #
284 1.16 rillig # When make scanned the inner .for loop, it did not recognize the inner
285 1.16 rillig # .endfor as such, which led to a parse error 'Unexpected end of file in .for
286 1.16 rillig # loop' from the '.endfor' line, followed by a second parse error 'for-less
287 1.16 rillig # .endfor' from the '.\\n endfor' line.
288 1.12 rillig .MAKEFLAGS: -df
289 1.12 rillig .for outer in o
290 1.12 rillig .\
291 1.12 rillig for inner in i
292 1.12 rillig .\
293 1.12 rillig endfor
294 1.12 rillig .endfor
295 1.12 rillig .MAKEFLAGS: -d0
296 1.14 rillig
297 1.14 rillig
298 1.14 rillig # When there is a variable definition 'scope=cmdline' from the command line
299 1.14 rillig # (which has higher precedence than global variables) and a .for loop iterates
300 1.14 rillig # over a variable of the same name, the expression '${scope}' expands to the
301 1.14 rillig # value from the .for loop. This is because when the body of the .for loop is
302 1.14 rillig # expanded, the expression '${scope}' is textually replaced with ${:Uloop}',
303 1.15 rillig # without resolving any other variable names (ForLoop_SubstBody). Later, when
304 1.15 rillig # the body of the .for loop is actually interpreted, the body text doesn't
305 1.15 rillig # contain the word 'scope' anymore.
306 1.14 rillig .MAKEFLAGS: scope=cmdline
307 1.14 rillig .for scope in loop
308 1.14 rillig . if ${scope} != "loop"
309 1.14 rillig . error
310 1.14 rillig . endif
311 1.14 rillig .endfor
312 1.20 rillig
313 1.20 rillig
314 1.20 rillig # Since at least 1993, iteration stops at the first newline.
315 1.20 rillig # Back then, the .newline variable didn't exist, therefore it was unlikely
316 1.20 rillig # that a newline ever occurred.
317 1.20 rillig .for var in a${.newline}b${.newline}c
318 1.27 rillig # expect+1: newline-item=(a)
319 1.20 rillig . info newline-item=(${var})
320 1.20 rillig .endfor
321