varmod-ifelse.mk revision 1.18 1 # $NetBSD: varmod-ifelse.mk,v 1.18 2022/01/15 20:16:55 rillig Exp $
2 #
3 # Tests for the ${cond:?then:else} variable modifier, which evaluates either
4 # the then-expression or the else-expression, depending on the condition.
5 #
6 # The modifier was added on 1998-04-01.
7 #
8 # Until 2015-10-11, the modifier always evaluated both the "then" and the
9 # "else" expressions.
10
11 # TODO: Implementation
12
13 # The variable name of the expression is expanded and then taken as the
14 # condition. In the below example it becomes:
15 #
16 # variable expression == "literal"
17 #
18 # This confuses the parser, which expects an operator instead of the bare
19 # word "expression". If the name were expanded lazily, everything would be
20 # fine since the condition would be:
21 #
22 # ${:Uvariable expression} == "literal"
23 #
24 # Evaluating the variable name lazily would require additional code in
25 # Var_Parse and ParseVarname, it would be more useful and predictable
26 # though.
27 .if ${${:Uvariable expression} == "literal":?bad:bad}
28 . error
29 .else
30 . error
31 .endif
32
33 # In a variable assignment, undefined variables are not an error.
34 # Because of the early expansion, the whole condition evaluates to
35 # ' == ""' though, which cannot be parsed because the left-hand side looks
36 # empty.
37 COND:= ${${UNDEF} == "":?bad-assign:bad-assign}
38
39 # In a condition, undefined variables generate a "Malformed conditional"
40 # error. That error message is wrong though. In lint mode, the correct
41 # "Undefined variable" error message is generated.
42 # The difference to the ':=' variable assignment is the additional
43 # "Malformed conditional" error message.
44 .if ${${UNDEF} == "":?bad-cond:bad-cond}
45 . error
46 .else
47 . error
48 .endif
49
50 # When the :? is parsed, it is greedy. The else branch spans all the
51 # text, up until the closing character '}', even if the text looks like
52 # another modifier.
53 .if ${1:?then:else:Q} != "then"
54 . error
55 .endif
56 .if ${0:?then:else:Q} != "else:Q"
57 . error
58 .endif
59
60 # This line generates 2 error messages. The first comes from evaluating the
61 # malformed conditional "1 == == 2", which is reported as "Bad conditional
62 # expression" by ApplyModifier_IfElse. The variable expression containing that
63 # conditional therefore returns a parse error from Var_Parse, and this parse
64 # error propagates to CondEvalExpression, where the "Malformed conditional"
65 # comes from.
66 .if ${1 == == 2:?yes:no} != ""
67 . error
68 .else
69 . error
70 .endif
71
72 # If the "Bad conditional expression" appears in a quoted string literal, the
73 # error message "Malformed conditional" is not printed, leaving only the "Bad
74 # conditional expression".
75 #
76 # XXX: The left-hand side is enclosed in quotes. This results in Var_Parse
77 # being called without VARE_UNDEFERR. When ApplyModifier_IfElse
78 # returns AMR_CLEANUP as result, Var_Parse returns varUndefined since the
79 # value of the variable expression is still undefined. CondParser_String is
80 # then supposed to do proper error handling, but since varUndefined is local
81 # to var.c, it cannot distinguish this return value from an ordinary empty
82 # string. The left-hand side of the comparison is therefore just an empty
83 # string, which is obviously equal to the empty string on the right-hand side.
84 #
85 # XXX: The debug log for -dc shows a comparison between 1.0 and 0.0. The
86 # condition should be detected as being malformed before any comparison is
87 # done since there is no well-formed comparison in the condition at all.
88 .MAKEFLAGS: -dc
89 .if "${1 == == 2:?yes:no}" != ""
90 . error
91 .else
92 . warning Oops, the parse error should have been propagated.
93 .endif
94 .MAKEFLAGS: -d0
95
96 # As of 2020-12-10, the variable "name" is first expanded, and the result of
97 # this expansion is then taken as the condition. To force the variable
98 # expression in the condition to be evaluated at exactly the right point,
99 # the '$' of the intended '${VAR}' escapes from the parser in form of the
100 # expression ${:U\$}. Because of this escaping, the variable "name" and thus
101 # the condition ends up as "${VAR} == value", just as intended.
102 #
103 # This hack does not work for variables from .for loops since these are
104 # expanded at parse time to their corresponding ${:Uvalue} expressions.
105 # Making the '$' of the '${VAR}' expression indirect hides this expression
106 # from the parser of the .for loop body. See ForLoop_SubstVarLong.
107 .MAKEFLAGS: -dc
108 VAR= value
109 .if ${ ${:U\$}{VAR} == value :?ok:bad} != "ok"
110 . error
111 .endif
112 .MAKEFLAGS: -d0
113
114 # On 2021-04-19, when building external/bsd/tmux with HAVE_LLVM=yes and
115 # HAVE_GCC=no, the following conditional generated this error message:
116 #
117 # make: Bad conditional expression 'string == "literal" && no >= 10'
118 # in 'string == "literal" && no >= 10?yes:no'
119 #
120 # Despite the error message (which was not clearly marked with "error:"),
121 # the build continued, for historical reasons, see main_Exit.
122 #
123 # The tricky detail here is that the condition that looks so obvious in the
124 # form written in the makefile becomes tricky when it is actually evaluated.
125 # This is because the condition is written in the place of the variable name
126 # of the expression, and in an expression, the variable name is always
127 # expanded first, before even looking at the modifiers. This happens for the
128 # modifier ':?' as well, so when CondEvalExpression gets to see the
129 # expression, it already looks like this:
130 #
131 # string == "literal" && no >= 10
132 #
133 # When parsing such an expression, the parser used to be strict. It first
134 # evaluated the left-hand side of the operator '&&' and then started parsing
135 # the right-hand side 'no >= 10'. The word 'no' is obviously a string
136 # literal, not enclosed in quotes, which is ok, even on the left-hand side of
137 # the comparison operator, but only because this is a condition in the
138 # modifier ':?'. In an ordinary directive '.if', this would be a parse error.
139 # For strings, only the comparison operators '==' and '!=' are defined,
140 # therefore parsing stopped at the '>', producing the 'Bad conditional
141 # expression'.
142 #
143 # Ideally, the conditional expression would not be expanded before parsing
144 # it. This would allow to write the conditions exactly as seen below. That
145 # change has a high chance of breaking _some_ existing code and would need
146 # to be thoroughly tested.
147 #
148 # Since cond.c 1.262 from 2021-04-20, make reports a more specific error
149 # message in situations like these, pointing directly to the specific problem
150 # instead of just saying that the whole condition is bad.
151 STRING= string
152 NUMBER= no # not really a number
153 .info ${${STRING} == "literal" && ${NUMBER} >= 10:?yes:no}.
154 .info ${${STRING} == "literal" || ${NUMBER} >= 10:?yes:no}.
155
156 # The following situation occasionally occurs with MKINET6 or similar
157 # variables.
158 NUMBER= # empty, not really a number either
159 .info ${${STRING} == "literal" && ${NUMBER} >= 10:?yes:no}.
160 .info ${${STRING} == "literal" || ${NUMBER} >= 10:?yes:no}.
161
162 # CondParser_LeafToken handles [0-9-+] specially, treating them as a number.
163 PLUS= +
164 ASTERISK= *
165 EMPTY= # empty
166 # "true" since "+" is not the empty string.
167 .info ${${PLUS} :?true:false}
168 # "false" since the variable named "*" is not defined.
169 .info ${${ASTERISK} :?true:false}
170 # syntax error since the condition is completely blank.
171 .info ${${EMPTY} :?true:false}
172