#!./miniperl -w # commonly used names to put first (and hence lookup fastest) my %Common = map {($_,$_)} qw(archname osname osvers prefix libs libpth dynamic_ext static_ext dlsrc so cc ccflags cppflags privlibexp archlibexp installprivlib installarchlib sharpbang startsh shsharp ); # names of things which may need to have slashes changed to double-colons my %Extensions = map {($_,$_)} qw(dynamic_ext static_ext extensions known_extensions); # libpaths that should be truncated after the first path element my %Libpathtrunc = map {($_,$_)} qw(archlib archlibexp privlib privlibexp sitearch sitearchexp sitelib sitelibexp); # allowed opts as well as specifies default and initial values my %Allowed_Opts = ( 'cross' => '', # --cross=PALTFORM - crosscompiling for PLATFORM 'glossary' => 1, # --no-glossary - no glossary file inclusion, # for compactness ); sub opts { # user specified options my %given_opts = ( # --opt=smth (map {/^--([\-_\w]+)=(.*)$/} @ARGV), # --opt --no-opt --noopt (map {/^no-?(.*)$/i?($1=>0):($_=>1)} map {/^--([\-_\w]+)$/} @ARGV), ); my %opts = (%Allowed_Opts, %given_opts); for my $opt (grep {!exists $Allowed_Opts{$_}} keys %given_opts) { die "option '$opt' is not recognized"; } @ARGV = grep {!/^--/} @ARGV; return %opts; } my %Opts = opts(); my $Config_PM; my $Glossary = $ARGV[1] || 'Porting/Glossary'; if ($Opts{cross}) { # creating cross-platform config file mkdir "xlib"; mkdir "xlib/$Opts{cross}"; $Config_PM = $ARGV[0] || "xlib/$Opts{cross}/Config.pm"; } else { $Config_PM = $ARGV[0] || 'lib/Config.pm'; } open CONFIG, ">$Config_PM" or die "Can't open $Config_PM: $!\n"; my $myver = sprintf "v%vd", $^V; printf CONFIG <<'ENDOFBEG', ($myver) x 3; # This file was created by configpm when Perl was built. Any changes # made to this file will be lost the next time perl is built. package Config; @EXPORT = qw(%%Config); @EXPORT_OK = qw(myconfig config_sh config_vars config_re); my %%Export_Cache = map {($_ => 1)} (@EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK); # Define our own import method to avoid pulling in the full Exporter: sub import { my $pkg = shift; @_ = @EXPORT unless @_; my @funcs = grep $_ ne '%%Config', @_; my $export_Config = @funcs < @_ ? 1 : 0; my $callpkg = caller(0); foreach my $func (@funcs) { die sprintf qq{"%%s" is not exported by the %%s module\n}, $func, __PACKAGE__ unless $Export_Cache{$func}; *{$callpkg.'::'.$func} = \&{$func}; } *{"$callpkg\::Config"} = \%%Config if $export_Config; return; } die "Perl lib version (%s) doesn't match executable version ($])" unless $^V; $^V eq %s or die "Perl lib version (%s) doesn't match executable version (" . sprintf("v%%vd",$^V) . ")"; ENDOFBEG my @non_v = (); my @v_fast = (); my %v_fast = (); my @v_others = (); my $in_v = 0; my %Data = (); # This is somewhat grim, but I want the code for parsing config.sh here and # now so that I can expand $Config{ivsize} and $Config{ivtype} my $fetch_string = <<'EOT'; # Search for it in the big string sub fetch_string { my($self, $key) = @_; my $quote_type = "'"; my $marker = "$key="; # Check for the common case, ' delimited my $start = index($Config_SH, "\n$marker$quote_type"); # If that failed, check for " delimited if ($start == -1) { $quote_type = '"'; $start = index($Config_SH, "\n$marker$quote_type"); } return undef if ( ($start == -1) && # in case it's first (substr($Config_SH, 0, length($marker)) ne $marker) ); if ($start == -1) { # It's the very first thing we found. Skip $start forward # and figure out the quote mark after the =. $start = length($marker) + 1; $quote_type = substr($Config_SH, $start - 1, 1); } else { $start += length($marker) + 2; } my $value = substr($Config_SH, $start, index($Config_SH, "$quote_type\n", $start) - $start); # If we had a double-quote, we'd better eval it so escape # sequences and such can be interpolated. Since the incoming # value is supposed to follow shell rules and not perl rules, # we escape any perl variable markers if ($quote_type eq '"') { $value =~ s/\$/\\\$/g; $value =~ s/\@/\\\@/g; eval "\$value = \"$value\""; } # So we can say "if $Config{'foo'}". $value = undef if $value eq 'undef'; $self->{$key} = $value; # cache it } EOT eval $fetch_string; die if $@; open(CONFIG_SH, 'config.sh') || die "Can't open config.sh: $!"; while () { next if m:^#!/bin/sh:; # Catch PERL_CONFIG_SH=true and PERL_VERSION=n line from Configure. s/^(\w+)=(true|\d+)\s*$/$1='$2'\n/ or m/^(\w+)='(.*)'$/; my($k, $v) = ($1, $2); # grandfather PATCHLEVEL and SUBVERSION and CONFIG if ($k) { if ($k eq 'PERL_VERSION') { push @v_others, "PATCHLEVEL='$v'\n"; } elsif ($k eq 'PERL_SUBVERSION') { push @v_others, "SUBVERSION='$v'\n"; } elsif ($k eq 'PERL_CONFIG_SH') { push @v_others, "CONFIG='$v'\n"; } } # We can delimit things in config.sh with either ' or ". unless ($in_v or m/^(\w+)=(['"])(.*\n)/){ push(@non_v, "#$_"); # not a name='value' line next; } $quote = $2; if ($in_v) { $val .= $_; } else { ($name,$val) = ($1,$3); } $in_v = $val !~ /$quote\n/; next if $in_v; # XXX - should use PERLLIB_SEP, not hard-code ':' $val =~ s/^([^:]+).*${quote}\w*$/$1${quote}/ if $Libpathtrunc{$name}; s,/,::,g if $Extensions{$name}; $val =~ s/$quote\n?\z//; my $line = "$name=$quote$val$quote\n"; if (!$Common{$name}){ push(@v_others, $line); } else { push(@v_fast, $line); $v_fast{$name} = "'$name' => $quote$val$quote"; } } close CONFIG_SH; # Calculation for the keys for byteorder # This is somewhat grim, but I need to run fetch_string here. our $Config_SH = join "\n", @v_fast, @v_others; my $t = fetch_string ({}, 'ivtype'); my $s = fetch_string ({}, 'ivsize'); # byteorder does exist on its own but we overlay a virtual # dynamically recomputed value. # However, ivtype and ivsize will not vary for sane fat binaries my $f = $t eq 'long' ? 'L!' : $s == 8 ? 'Q': 'I'; my $byteorder_code; if ($s == 4 || $s == 8) { my $list = join ',', reverse(2..$s); my $format = 'a'x$s; $byteorder_code = <<"EOT"; my \$i = 0; foreach my \$c ($list) { \$i |= ord(\$c); \$i <<= 8 } \$i |= ord(1); my \$byteorder = join('', unpack('$format', pack('$f', \$i))); EOT } else { $byteorder_code = "my \$byteorder = '?'x$s;\n"; } print CONFIG @non_v, "\n"; # copy config summary format from the myconfig.SH script print CONFIG "our \$summary : unique = <<'!END!';\n"; open(MYCONFIG,") && !/^Summary of/; do { print CONFIG $_ } until !defined($_ = ) || /^\s*$/; close(MYCONFIG); # NB. as $summary is unique, we need to copy it in a lexical variable # before expanding it, because may have been made readonly if a perl # interpreter has been cloned. print CONFIG "\n!END!\n", $byteorder_code, <<'EOT'; my $summary_expanded; sub myconfig { return $summary_expanded if $summary_expanded; ($summary_expanded = $summary) =~ s{\$(\w+)} { my $c = $Config{$1}; defined($c) ? $c : 'undef' }ge; $summary_expanded; } local *_ = \my $a; $_ = <<'!END!'; EOT print CONFIG join("", @v_fast, sort @v_others); print CONFIG <<'EOT'; !END! s/(byteorder=)(['"]).*?\2/$1$2$byteorder$2/m; our $Config_SH : unique = $_; EOT print CONFIG $fetch_string; print CONFIG <<'ENDOFEND'; sub fetch_virtual { my($self, $key) = @_; my $value; if ($key =~ /^((?:cc|ld)flags|libs(?:wanted)?)_nolargefiles/) { # These are purely virtual, they do not exist, but need to # be computed on demand for largefile-incapable extensions. my $new_key = "${1}_uselargefiles"; $value = $Config{$1}; my $withlargefiles = $Config{$new_key}; if ($new_key =~ /^(?:cc|ld)flags_/) { $value =~ s/\Q$withlargefiles\E\b//; } elsif ($new_key =~ /^libs/) { my @lflibswanted = split(' ', $Config{libswanted_uselargefiles}); if (@lflibswanted) { my %lflibswanted; @lflibswanted{@lflibswanted} = (); if ($new_key =~ /^libs_/) { my @libs = grep { /^-l(.+)/ && not exists $lflibswanted{$1} } split(' ', $Config{libs}); $Config{libs} = join(' ', @libs); } elsif ($new_key =~ /^libswanted_/) { my @libswanted = grep { not exists $lflibswanted{$_} } split(' ', $Config{libswanted}); $Config{libswanted} = join(' ', @libswanted); } } } } $self->{$key} = $value; } sub FETCH { my($self, $key) = @_; # check for cached value (which may be undef so we use exists not defined) return $self->{$key} if exists $self->{$key}; $self->fetch_string($key); return $self->{$key} if exists $self->{$key}; $self->fetch_virtual($key); # Might not exist, in which undef is correct. return $self->{$key}; } my $prevpos = 0; sub FIRSTKEY { $prevpos = 0; substr($Config_SH, 0, index($Config_SH, '=') ); } sub NEXTKEY { # Find out how the current key's quoted so we can skip to its end. my $quote = substr($Config_SH, index($Config_SH, "=", $prevpos)+1, 1); my $pos = index($Config_SH, qq($quote\n), $prevpos) + 2; my $len = index($Config_SH, "=", $pos) - $pos; $prevpos = $pos; $len > 0 ? substr($Config_SH, $pos, $len) : undef; } sub EXISTS { return 1 if exists($_[0]->{$_[1]}); return(index($Config_SH, "\n$_[1]='") != -1 or substr($Config_SH, 0, length($_[1])+2) eq "$_[1]='" or index($Config_SH, "\n$_[1]=\"") != -1 or substr($Config_SH, 0, length($_[1])+2) eq "$_[1]=\"" or $_[1] =~ /^(?:(?:cc|ld)flags|libs(?:wanted)?)_nolargefiles$/ ); } sub STORE { die "\%Config::Config is read-only\n" } *DELETE = \&STORE; *CLEAR = \&STORE; sub config_sh { $Config_SH } sub config_re { my $re = shift; return map { chomp; $_ } grep eval{ /^(?:$re)=/ }, split /^/, $Config_SH; } sub config_vars { # implements -V:cfgvar option (see perlrun -V:) foreach (@_) { # find optional leading, trailing colons; and query-spec my ($notag,$qry,$lncont) = m/^(:)?(.*?)(:)?$/; # flags fore and aft, # map colon-flags to print decorations my $prfx = $notag ? '': "$qry="; # tag-prefix for print my $lnend = $lncont ? ' ' : ";\n"; # line ending for print # all config-vars are by definition \w only, any \W means regex if ($qry =~ /\W/) { my @matches = config_re($qry); print map "$_$lnend", @matches ? @matches : "$qry: not found" if !$notag; print map { s/\w+=//; "$_$lnend" } @matches ? @matches : "$qry: not found" if $notag; } else { my $v = (exists $Config{$qry}) ? $Config{$qry} : 'UNKNOWN'; $v = 'undef' unless defined $v; print "${prfx}'${v}'$lnend"; } } } ENDOFEND if ($^O eq 'os2') { print CONFIG <<'ENDOFSET'; my %preconfig; if ($OS2::is_aout) { my ($value, $v) = $Config_SH =~ m/^used_aout='(.*)'\s*$/m; for (split ' ', $value) { ($v) = $Config_SH =~ m/^aout_$_='(.*)'\s*$/m; $preconfig{$_} = $v eq 'undef' ? undef : $v; } } $preconfig{d_fork} = undef unless $OS2::can_fork; # Some funny cases can't sub TIEHASH { bless {%preconfig} } ENDOFSET # Extract the name of the DLL from the makefile to avoid duplication my ($f) = grep -r, qw(GNUMakefile Makefile); my $dll; if (open my $fh, '<', $f) { while (<$fh>) { $dll = $1, last if /^PERL_DLL_BASE\s*=\s*(\S*)\s*$/; } } print CONFIG < $byteorder' ; print CONFIG sprintf <<'ENDOFTIE', $fast_config; # avoid Config..Exporter..UNIVERSAL search for DESTROY then AUTOLOAD sub DESTROY { } tie %%Config, 'Config', { %s }; 1; ENDOFTIE open(CONFIG_POD, ">lib/Config.pod") or die "Can't open lib/Config.pod: $!"; print CONFIG_POD <<'ENDOFTAIL'; =head1 NAME Config - access Perl configuration information =head1 SYNOPSIS use Config; if ($Config{usethreads}) { print "has thread support\n" } use Config qw(myconfig config_sh config_vars config_re); print myconfig(); print config_sh(); print config_re(); config_vars(qw(osname archname)); =head1 DESCRIPTION The Config module contains all the information that was available to the C program at Perl build time (over 900 values). Shell variables from the F file (written by Configure) are stored in the readonly-variable C<%Config>, indexed by their names. Values stored in config.sh as 'undef' are returned as undefined values. The perl C function can be used to check if a named variable exists. =over 4 =item myconfig() Returns a textual summary of the major perl configuration values. See also C<-V> in L. =item config_sh() Returns the entire perl configuration information in the form of the original config.sh shell variable assignment script. =item config_re($regex) Like config_sh() but returns, as a list, only the config entries who's names match the $regex. =item config_vars(@names) Prints to STDOUT the values of the named configuration variable. Each is printed on a separate line in the form: name='value'; Names which are unknown are output as C. See also C<-V:name> in L. =back =head1 EXAMPLE Here's a more sophisticated example of using %Config: use Config; use strict; my %sig_num; my @sig_name; unless($Config{sig_name} && $Config{sig_num}) { die "No sigs?"; } else { my @names = split ' ', $Config{sig_name}; @sig_num{@names} = split ' ', $Config{sig_num}; foreach (@names) { $sig_name[$sig_num{$_}] ||= $_; } } print "signal #17 = $sig_name[17]\n"; if ($sig_num{ALRM}) { print "SIGALRM is $sig_num{ALRM}\n"; } =head1 WARNING Because this information is not stored within the perl executable itself it is possible (but unlikely) that the information does not relate to the actual perl binary which is being used to access it. The Config module is installed into the architecture and version specific library directory ($Config{installarchlib}) and it checks the perl version number when loaded. The values stored in config.sh may be either single-quoted or double-quoted. Double-quoted strings are handy for those cases where you need to include escape sequences in the strings. To avoid runtime variable interpolation, any C<$> and C<@> characters are replaced by C<\$> and C<\@>, respectively. This isn't foolproof, of course, so don't embed C<\$> or C<\@> in double-quoted strings unless you're willing to deal with the consequences. (The slashes will end up escaped and the C<$> or C<@> will trigger variable interpolation) =head1 GLOSSARY Most C variables are determined by the C script on platforms supported by it (which is most UNIX platforms). Some platforms have custom-made C variables, and may thus not have some of the variables described below, or may have extraneous variables specific to that particular port. See the port specific documentation in such cases. ENDOFTAIL if ($Opts{glossary}) { open(GLOS, "<$Glossary") or die "Can't open $Glossary: $!"; } %seen = (); $text = 0; $/ = ''; sub process { if (s/\A(\w*)\s+\(([\w.]+)\):\s*\n(\t?)/=item C<$1>\n\nFrom F<$2>:\n\n/m) { my $c = substr $1, 0, 1; unless ($seen{$c}++) { print CONFIG_POD < new paragraph s/^(? text s{([\'\"])(?=[^\'\"\s]*[./][^\'\"\s]*\1)([^\'\"\s]+)\1}(F<$2>)g; # '.o' s{([\'\"])([^\'\"\s]+)\1}(C<$2>)g; # "date" command s{\'([A-Za-z_\- *=/]+)\'}(C<$1>)g; # 'ln -s' s{ (?)xg; # /usr/local s/((?<=\s)~\w*)/F<$1>/g; # ~name s/(?/g; # UNISTD s/(? macro/g; # FILE_cnt macro s/n[\0]t/n't/g; # undo can't, won't damage } if ($Opts{glossary}) { ; # Skip the "DO NOT EDIT" ; # Skip the preamble while () { process; print CONFIG_POD; } } print CONFIG_POD <<'ENDOFTAIL'; =back =head1 NOTE This module contains a good example of how to use tie to implement a cache and an example of how to make a tied variable readonly to those outside of it. =cut ENDOFTAIL close(CONFIG); close(GLOS); close(CONFIG_POD); # Now create Cross.pm if needed if ($Opts{cross}) { open CROSS, ">lib/Cross.pm" or die "Can not open >lib/Cross.pm: $!"; my $cross = <<'EOS'; # typical invocation: # perl -MCross Makefile.PL # perl -MCross=wince -V:cc package Cross; sub import { my ($package,$platform) = @_; unless (defined $platform) { # if $platform is not specified, then use last one when # 'configpm; was invoked with --cross option $platform = '***replace-marker***'; } @INC = map {/\blib\b/?(do{local $_=$_;s/\blib\b/xlib\/$platform/;$_},$_):($_)} @INC; $::Cross::platform = $platform; } 1; EOS $cross =~ s/\*\*\*replace-marker\*\*\*/$Opts{cross}/g; print CROSS $cross; close CROSS; } # Now do some simple tests on the Config.pm file we have created unshift(@INC,'lib'); require $Config_PM; import Config; die "$0: $Config_PM not valid" unless $Config{'PERL_CONFIG_SH'} eq 'true'; die "$0: error processing $Config_PM" if defined($Config{'an impossible name'}) or $Config{'PERL_CONFIG_SH'} ne 'true' # test cache ; die "$0: error processing $Config_PM" if eval '$Config{"cc"} = 1' or eval 'delete $Config{"cc"}' ; exit 0;