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varmod-assign.mk revision 1.7
      1  1.7  rillig # $NetBSD: varmod-assign.mk,v 1.7 2020/10/18 21:36:22 rillig Exp $
      2  1.1  rillig #
      3  1.2  rillig # Tests for the obscure ::= variable modifiers, which perform variable
      4  1.2  rillig # assignments during evaluation, just like the = operator in C.
      5  1.1  rillig 
      6  1.2  rillig all:	mod-assign
      7  1.2  rillig all:	mod-assign-nested
      8  1.4  rillig all:	mod-assign-empty
      9  1.4  rillig all:	mod-assign-parse
     10  1.5  rillig all:	mod-assign-shell-error
     11  1.1  rillig 
     12  1.2  rillig mod-assign:
     13  1.3  rillig 	# The ::?= modifier applies the ?= assignment operator 3 times.
     14  1.3  rillig 	# The ?= operator only has an effect for the first time, therefore
     15  1.3  rillig 	# the variable FIRST ends up with the value 1.
     16  1.2  rillig 	@echo $@: ${1 2 3:L:@i@${FIRST::?=$i}@} first=${FIRST}.
     17  1.3  rillig 
     18  1.3  rillig 	# The ::= modifier applies the = assignment operator 3 times.
     19  1.3  rillig 	# The = operator overwrites the previous value, therefore the
     20  1.3  rillig 	# variable LAST ends up with the value 3.
     21  1.2  rillig 	@echo $@: ${1 2 3:L:@i@${LAST::=$i}@} last=${LAST}.
     22  1.3  rillig 
     23  1.3  rillig 	# The ::+= modifier applies the += assignment operator 3 times.
     24  1.3  rillig 	# The += operator appends 3 times to the variable, therefore
     25  1.3  rillig 	# the variable APPENDED ends up with the value "1 2 3".
     26  1.2  rillig 	@echo $@: ${1 2 3:L:@i@${APPENDED::+=$i}@} appended=${APPENDED}.
     27  1.3  rillig 
     28  1.3  rillig 	# The ::!= modifier applies the != assignment operator 3 times.
     29  1.3  rillig 	# The side effects of the shell commands are visible in the output.
     30  1.3  rillig 	# Just as with the ::= modifier, the last value is stored in the
     31  1.3  rillig 	# RAN variable.
     32  1.2  rillig 	@echo $@: ${echo.1 echo.2 echo.3:L:@i@${RAN::!=${i:C,.*,&; & 1>\&2,:S,., ,g}}@} ran:${RAN}.
     33  1.3  rillig 
     34  1.2  rillig 	# The assignments happen in the global scope and thus are
     35  1.2  rillig 	# preserved even after the shell command has been run.
     36  1.2  rillig 	@echo $@: global: ${FIRST:Q}, ${LAST:Q}, ${APPENDED:Q}, ${RAN:Q}.
     37  1.2  rillig 
     38  1.2  rillig mod-assign-nested:
     39  1.3  rillig 	# The condition "1" is true, therefore THEN1 gets assigned a value,
     40  1.3  rillig 	# and IT1 as well.  Nothing surprising here.
     41  1.2  rillig 	@echo $@: ${1:?${THEN1::=then1${IT1::=t1}}:${ELSE1::=else1${IE1::=e1}}}${THEN1}${ELSE1}${IT1}${IE1}
     42  1.3  rillig 
     43  1.3  rillig 	# The condition "0" is false, therefore ELSE1 gets assigned a value,
     44  1.3  rillig 	# and IE1 as well.  Nothing surprising here as well.
     45  1.2  rillig 	@echo $@: ${0:?${THEN2::=then2${IT2::=t2}}:${ELSE2::=else2${IE2::=e2}}}${THEN2}${ELSE2}${IT2}${IE2}
     46  1.3  rillig 
     47  1.3  rillig 	# The same effects happen when the variables are defined elsewhere.
     48  1.2  rillig 	@echo $@: ${SINK3:Q}
     49  1.2  rillig 	@echo $@: ${SINK4:Q}
     50  1.2  rillig SINK3:=	${1:?${THEN3::=then3${IT3::=t3}}:${ELSE3::=else3${IE3::=e3}}}${THEN3}${ELSE3}${IT3}${IE3}
     51  1.2  rillig SINK4:=	${0:?${THEN4::=then4${IT4::=t4}}:${ELSE4::=else4${IE4::=e4}}}${THEN4}${ELSE4}${IT4}${IE4}
     52  1.4  rillig 
     53  1.4  rillig mod-assign-empty:
     54  1.7  rillig 	# Assigning to the empty variable would obviously not work since that
     55  1.7  rillig 	# variable is write-protected.  Therefore it is rejected early with a
     56  1.7  rillig 	# "Bad modifier" message.
     57  1.7  rillig 	#
     58  1.7  rillig 	# XXX: The error message is hard to read since the variable name is
     59  1.7  rillig 	# empty.  This leads to a trailing space in the error message.
     60  1.7  rillig 	@echo $@: ${::=value}
     61  1.7  rillig 
     62  1.7  rillig 	# In this variant, it is not as obvious that the name of the
     63  1.7  rillig 	# expression is empty.  Assigning to it is rejected as well, with the
     64  1.7  rillig 	# same "Bad modifier" message.
     65  1.7  rillig 	#
     66  1.7  rillig 	# XXX: The error message is hard to read since the variable name is
     67  1.7  rillig 	# empty.  This leads to a trailing space in the error message.
     68  1.4  rillig 	@echo $@: ${:Uvalue::=overwritten}
     69  1.4  rillig 
     70  1.7  rillig 	# The :L modifier sets the value of the expression to its variable
     71  1.7  rillig 	# name.  The name of the expression is "VAR", therefore assigning to
     72  1.7  rillig 	# that variable works.
     73  1.4  rillig 	@echo $@: ${VAR:L::=overwritten} VAR=${VAR}
     74  1.4  rillig 
     75  1.4  rillig mod-assign-parse:
     76  1.4  rillig 	# The modifier for assignment operators starts with a ':'.
     77  1.4  rillig 	# An 'x' after that is an invalid modifier.
     78  1.4  rillig 	@echo ${ASSIGN::x}	# 'x' is an unknown assignment operator
     79  1.4  rillig 
     80  1.4  rillig 	# When parsing an assignment operator fails because the operator is
     81  1.4  rillig 	# incomplete, make falls back to the SysV modifier.
     82  1.4  rillig 	@echo ${SYSV::=sysv\:x}${SYSV::x=:y}
     83  1.4  rillig 
     84  1.4  rillig 	@echo ${ASSIGN::=value	# missing closing brace
     85  1.5  rillig 
     86  1.5  rillig mod-assign-shell-error:
     87  1.5  rillig 	# If the command succeeds, the variable is assigned.
     88  1.6  rillig 	@${SH_OK::!= echo word; true } echo ok=${SH_OK}
     89  1.5  rillig 
     90  1.5  rillig 	# If the command fails, the variable keeps its previous value.
     91  1.5  rillig 	# FIXME: the error message says: "previous" returned non-zero status
     92  1.5  rillig 	@${SH_ERR::=previous}
     93  1.6  rillig 	@${SH_ERR::!= echo word; false } echo err=${SH_ERR}
     94