diff options
author | Theo de Raadt <deraadt@cvs.openbsd.org> | 2003-01-18 23:49:53 +0000 |
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committer | Theo de Raadt <deraadt@cvs.openbsd.org> | 2003-01-18 23:49:53 +0000 |
commit | 46ff6b272921b15bc0df982c467b575d17c674a6 (patch) | |
tree | c4dc2c2c808812cd3670b23cffe8b857b3d21be3 | |
parent | 74e80729fba2420c72514b0a8766a720f227ec0d (diff) |
protoize(1) man page, cobbled from various places by jmc@prioris.mini.pw.edu.pl
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/egcs/gcc/Makefile.bsd-wrapper | 7 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/egcs/gcc/protoize.1 | 366 |
2 files changed, 370 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/gnu/egcs/gcc/Makefile.bsd-wrapper b/gnu/egcs/gcc/Makefile.bsd-wrapper index bd0d1b67f42..d45fce4fe18 100644 --- a/gnu/egcs/gcc/Makefile.bsd-wrapper +++ b/gnu/egcs/gcc/Makefile.bsd-wrapper @@ -1,14 +1,15 @@ -# $OpenBSD: Makefile.bsd-wrapper,v 1.11 2003/01/14 20:04:44 marc Exp $ +# $OpenBSD: Makefile.bsd-wrapper,v 1.12 2003/01/18 23:49:50 deraadt Exp $ -MAN= cccp.1 gcc.1 gcc-local.1 +MAN= cccp.1 gcc.1 gcc-local.1 protoize.1 MLINKS+= gcc.1 cc.1 MLINKS+= cccp.1 cpp.1 +MLINKS+= protoize.1 unprotize.1 .if defined(BOOTSTRAP) LANGUAGES=--enable-languages=c .else LANGUAGES=--enable-languages='c,c++,objc,f77' -MAN+= cp/g++.1 f/g77.1 +MAN+= cp/g++.1 f/g77.1 MLINKS+= g++.1 c++.1 MLINKS+= g77.1 f77.1 .endif diff --git a/gnu/egcs/gcc/protoize.1 b/gnu/egcs/gcc/protoize.1 new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..3db5776efb1 --- /dev/null +++ b/gnu/egcs/gcc/protoize.1 @@ -0,0 +1,366 @@ +.\" Copyright (c) 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 Free Software Foundation +.\" See section COPYING for conditions for redistribution +.\" +.\" $OpenBSD: protoize.1,v 1.1 2003/01/18 23:49:52 deraadt Exp $ +.Dd January 14, 2003 +.Dt PROTOIZE 1 +.Os +.Sh NAME +.Nm protoize, unprotoize +.Nd automatically add or remove function prototypes +.Sh SYNOPSIS +.Nm protoize +.Bk -words +.Op Fl CfgklNnqv +.Op Fl B Ar directory +.Op Fl c Ar COMPILATION-OPTIONS +.Op Fl d Ar directory ... +.Op Fl i Ar string +.Op Fl p Ar program +.Op Fl x Ar +.Ar +.Ek +.Nm unprotoize +.Bk -words +.Op Fl fkNnqv +.Op Fl c Ar COMPILATION-OPTIONS +.Op Fl d Ar directory ... +.Op Fl i Ar string +.Op Fl p Ar program +.Op Fl x Ar +.Ar +.Ek +.Sh DESCRIPTION +.Nm protoize +is an optional part of GNU C. You can use it +to add prototypes to a program, thus converting the program to ANSI C +in one respect. The companion program +.Nm unprotoize +does the reverse: it removes argument types from any +prototypes that are found. +.Pp +When you run these programs, you must specify a set of source files +as command line arguments. The conversion programs start out by +compiling these files to see what functions they define. The +information gathered about a file +.Ar FOO +is saved in a file named +.Ar FOO.X . +.Pp +After scanning comes the actual conversion. The specified files are all +eligible to be converted; any files they include (whether sources or +just headers) are eligible as well. +.Pp +But not all the eligible files are converted. By default, +.Nm protoize +and +.Nm unprotoize +convert only source and header files in the +current directory. You can specify additional directories whose files +should be converted with the +.Sq Fl d Ar directory ... +option. You can also +specify particular files to exclude with the +.Sq Fl x Ar +option. A file +is converted if it is eligible, its directory name matches one of the +specified directory names, and its name within the directory has not +been excluded. +.Pp +Basic conversion with +.Nm protoize +consists of rewriting most function +definitions and function declarations to specify the types of the +arguments. The only ones not rewritten are those for varargs functions. +.Pp +.Nm protoize +optionally inserts prototype declarations at the +beginning of the source file, to make them available for any calls that +precede the function's definition. Or it can insert prototype +declarations with block scope in the blocks where undeclared functions +are called. +.Pp +Basic conversion with +.Nm unprotoize +consists of rewriting most +function declarations to remove any argument types, and rewriting +function definitions to the old-style pre-ANSI form. +.Pp +Both conversion programs print a warning for any function +declaration or definition that they can't convert. You can suppress +these warnings with the +.Fl q +option. +.Pp +The output from +.Nm protoize +or +.Nm unprotoize +replaces the original +source file. The original file is renamed to a name ending with +`.save'. If the `.save' file already exists, then the source file is +simply discarded. +.Pp +.Nm protoize +and +.Nm unprotoize +both depend on +.Xr gcc 1 +to scan the +program and collect information about the functions it uses. +.Pp +The options are as follows: +.Bl -tag -width Ds +.It Fl B Ar directory +Look for the file `SYSCALLS.c.X' in +.Ar directory , +instead of the +usual directory +.Pq normally Pa /usr/local/lib . +This file contains +prototype information about standard system functions. This option +applies only to +.Nm protoize . +.It Fl C +Rename files to end in `.C' instead of `.c'. This is convenient +if you are converting a C program to C++. This option applies +only to +.Nm protoize . +.It Fl c Ar COMPILATION-OPTIONS +Use +.Ar COMPILATION-OPTIONS +as the options when running `gcc' to +produce the `.X' files. The special option +.Fl aux-info +is always +passed in addition, to tell `gcc' to write a `.X' file. +.Pp +Note that the compilation options must be given as a single +argument to +.Nm protoize +or +.Nm unprotoize . +If you want to specify +several `gcc' options, you must quote the entire set of +compilation options to make them a single word in the shell. +.Pp +There are certain `gcc' arguments that you cannot use, because they +would produce the wrong kind of output. These include +.Fl g , +.Fl O , +.Fl c , +.Fl S , +and +.Fl o . +If you include these in the +.Ar COMPILATION-OPTIONS , +they are ignored. +.It Fl d Ar directory +Specify additional directories whose files should be converted. +.It Fl g +Add explicit global declarations. This means inserting explicit +declarations at the beginning of each source file for each function +that is called in the file and was not declared. These +declarations precede the first function definition that contains a +call to an undeclared function. This option applies only to +.Nm protoize . +.It Fl i Ar string +Indent old-style parameter declarations with the string +.Ar string . +This option applies only to +.Nm protoize . +.Pp +.Nm unprotoize +converts prototyped function definitions to old-style +function definitions, where the arguments are declared between the +argument list and the initial `{'. By default, +.Nm unprotoize +uses +five spaces as the indentation. If you want to indent with just +one space instead, use +.Fl i +" ". +.It Fl k +Keep the `.X' files. Normally, they are deleted after conversion +is finished. +.It Fl l +Add explicit local declarations. +.Nm protoize +with +.Fl l +inserts a +prototype declaration for each function in each block which calls +the function without any declaration. This option applies only to +.Nm protoize . +.It Fl N +Make no `.save' files. The original files are simply deleted. +Use this option with caution. +.It Fl n +Make no real changes. This mode just prints information about the +conversions that would have been done without +.Fl n . +.It Fl p Ar program +Use the program +.Ar program +as the compiler. Normally, the name `gcc' is used. +.It Fl q +Work quietly. Most warnings are suppressed. +.It Fl v +Print the version number, just like +.Fl v +for `gcc'. +.It Fl x Ar +List of files to exclude from the conversion process. +.El +.Pp +If you need special compiler options to compile one of your program's +source files, then you should generate that file's `.X' file specially, +by running `gcc' on that source file with the appropriate options and +the option +.Fl aux-info . +Then run +.Nm protoize +on the entire set of +files. +.Nm protoize +will use the existing `.X' file because it is newer +than the source file. For example: +.Pp +.Cm $ gcc -Dfoo=bar file1.c -aux-info +.br +.Cm $ protoize *.c +.Pp +You need to include the special files along with the rest in the +.Nm protoize +command, even though their `.X' files already exist, because +otherwise they won't get converted. +.Pp +.Sy "Note: most of this information is out of date and superceded by the" +.Sy "EGCS install procedures. It is provided for historical reference only." +.Sh SEE ALSO +.Xr gcc 1 +.Sh AUTHORS +See the GNU CC manual for the contributors to GNU CC. +.Sh HISTORY +Ron Guilmette implemented the +.Nm protoize +and +.Nm unprotoize +tools. +.Sh BUGS +For instructions on reporting bugs, see the GCC manual. +.Sh CAVEATS +The conversion programs +.Nm protoize +and +.Nm unprotoize +can sometimes +change a source file in a way that won't work unless you rearrange it. +.Pp +.Nm protoize +can insert references to a type name or type tag before +the definition, or in a file where they are not defined. +.Pp +If this happens, compiler error messages should indicate where the +new references are, so fixing the file by hand is straightforward. +.Pp +There are some C constructs which +.Nm protoize +cannot figure out. +For example, it can't determine argument types for declaring a +pointer-to-function variable; this must be done by hand. +.Nm protoize +inserts a comment containing `???' each time it finds such a +variable; all such variables can be found by searching for this +string. ANSI C does not require declaring the argument types of +pointer-to-function types. +.Pp +Using +.Nm unprotoize +can easily introduce bugs. If the program +relied on prototypes to bring about conversion of arguments, these +conversions will not take place in the program without prototypes. +One case in which you can be sure +.Nm unprotoize +is safe is when you +are removing prototypes that were made with +.Nm protoize ; +if the +program worked before without any prototypes, it will work again +without them. +.Pp +You can find all the places where this problem might occur by +compiling the program with the +.Fl Ar Wconversion +option. It prints a +warning whenever an argument is converted. +.Pp +Both conversion programs can be confused if there are macro calls +in and around the text to be converted. In other words, the +standard syntax for a declaration or definition must not result +from expanding a macro. This problem is inherent in the design of +C and cannot be fixed. If only a few functions have confusing +macro calls, you can easily convert them manually. +.Pp +.Nm protoize +cannot get the argument types for a function whose +definition was not actually compiled due to preprocessing +conditionals. When this happens, +.Nm protoize +changes nothing in +regard to such a function. +.Nm protoize +tries to detect such +instances and warn about them. +.Pp +You can generally work around this problem by using +.Nm protoize +step +by step, each time specifying a different set of +.Fl D +options for +compilation, until all of the functions have been converted. +There is no automatic way to verify that you have got them all, +however. +.Pp +Confusion may result if there is an occasion to convert a function +declaration or definition in a region of source code where there +is more than one formal parameter list present. Thus, attempts to +convert code containing multiple (conditionally compiled) versions +of a single function header (in the same vicinity) may not produce +the desired (or expected) results. +.Pp +If you plan on converting source files which contain such code, it +is recommended that you first make sure that each conditionally +compiled region of source code which contains an alternative +function header also contains at least one additional follower +token (past the final right parenthesis of the function header). +This should circumvent the problem. +.Pp +.Nm unprotoize +can become confused when trying to convert a function +definition or declaration which contains a declaration for a +pointer-to-function formal argument which has the same name as the +function being defined or declared. We recommand you avoid such +choices of formal parameter names. +.Pp +It might ne necessary to correct some of the indentation by hand and +break long lines. (The conversion programs don't write lines +longer than eighty characters in any case.) +.Sh COPYING +Copyright 1991, 1992, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +.Pp +Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of +this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice +are preserved on all copies. +.Pp +Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this +manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the +entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a +permission notice identical to this one. +.Pp +Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this +manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified +versions, except that this permission notice may be included in +translations approved by the Free Software Foundation instead of in +the original English. |