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emacs/autogen.sh
Paul Eggert f744797af1 Go back to "Maintainer: emacs-devel@gnu.org"
Restore lines saying "Maintainer: emacs-devel@gnu.org" when there is
no special maintainer for a file.  Although this wasn't documented
it was common practice and removing the lines didn't have consensus.
2019-05-25 14:25:18 -07:00

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#!/bin/sh
### autogen.sh - tool to help build Emacs from a repository checkout
## Copyright (C) 2011-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
## Author: Glenn Morris <rgm@gnu.org>
## Maintainer: emacs-devel@gnu.org
## This file is part of GNU Emacs.
## GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
## it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
## the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
## (at your option) any later version.
## GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
## but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
## MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
## GNU General Public License for more details.
## You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
## along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
### Commentary:
## The Emacs repository does not include the configure script (and
## associated helpers). The first time you fetch Emacs from the repo,
## run this script to generate the necessary files.
## For more details, see the file INSTALL.REPO.
### Code:
## Tools we need:
## Note that we respect the values of AUTOCONF etc, like autoreconf does.
progs="autoconf"
## Minimum versions we need:
autoconf_min=`sed -n 's/^ *AC_PREREQ(\([0-9\.]*\)).*/\1/p' configure.ac`
## $1 = program, eg "autoconf".
## Echo the version string, eg "2.59".
## FIXME does not handle things like "1.4a", but AFAIK those are
## all old versions, so it is OK to fail there.
## Also note that we do not handle micro versions.
get_version ()
{
vers=`($1 --version) 2> /dev/null` && expr "$vers" : '[^
]* \([0-9][0-9.]*\).*'
}
## $1 = version string, eg "2.59"
## Echo the major version, eg "2".
major_version ()
{
echo $1 | sed -e 's/\([0-9][0-9]*\)\..*/\1/'
}
## $1 = version string, eg "2.59"
## Echo the minor version, eg "59".
minor_version ()
{
echo $1 | sed -e 's/[0-9][0-9]*\.\([0-9][0-9]*\).*/\1/'
}
## $1 = program
## $2 = minimum version.
## Return 0 if program is present with version >= minimum version.
## Return 1 if program is missing.
## Return 2 if program is present but too old.
## Return 3 for unexpected error (eg failed to parse version).
check_version ()
{
## Respect, e.g., $AUTOCONF if it is set, like autoreconf does.
uprog0=`echo $1 | sed -e 's/-/_/g' -e 'y/abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz/ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ/'`
eval uprog=\$${uprog0}
if [ x"$uprog" = x ]; then
uprog=$1
else
printf '%s' "(using $uprog0=$uprog) "
fi
## /bin/sh should always define the "command" builtin, but
## sometimes it does not on hydra.nixos.org.
## /bin/sh = "BusyBox v1.27.2", "built-in shell (ash)".
## It seems to be an optional compile-time feature in that shell:
## see ASH_CMDCMD in <https://git.busybox.net/busybox/tree/shell/ash.c>.
if command -v command > /dev/null 2>&1; then
command -v $uprog > /dev/null || return 1
else
$uprog --version > /dev/null 2>&1 || return 1
fi
have_version=`get_version $uprog` || return 4
have_maj=`major_version $have_version`
need_maj=`major_version $2`
[ x"$have_maj" != x ] && [ x"$need_maj" != x ] || return 3
[ $have_maj -gt $need_maj ] && return 0
[ $have_maj -lt $need_maj ] && return 2
have_min=`minor_version $have_version`
need_min=`minor_version $2`
[ x"$have_min" != x ] && [ x"$need_min" != x ] || return 3
[ $have_min -ge $need_min ] && return 0
return 2
}
do_check=true
do_autoconf=false
do_git=false
for arg; do
case $arg in
--help)
exec echo "$0: usage: $0 [--no-check] [target...]
Targets are: all autoconf git";;
--no-check)
do_check=false;;
all)
do_autoconf=true
test -r .git && do_git=true;;
autoconf)
do_autoconf=true;;
git)
do_git=true;;
*)
echo >&2 "$0: $arg: unknown argument"; exit 1;;
esac
done
case $do_autoconf,$do_git in
false,false)
do_autoconf=true
test -r .git && do_git=true;;
esac
# Generate Autoconf-related files, if requested.
if $do_autoconf; then
if $do_check; then
echo 'Checking whether you have the necessary tools...
(Read INSTALL.REPO for more details on building Emacs)'
missing=
for prog in $progs; do
sprog=`echo "$prog" | sed 's/-/_/g'`
eval min=\$${sprog}_min
printf '%s' "Checking for $prog (need at least version $min) ... "
check_version $prog $min
retval=$?
case $retval in
0) stat="ok" ;;
1) stat="missing" ;;
2) stat="too old" ;;
4) stat="broken?" ;;
*) stat="unable to check" ;;
esac
echo $stat
if [ $retval -ne 0 ]; then
missing="$missing $prog"
eval ${sprog}_why=\""$stat"\"
fi
done
if [ x"$missing" != x ]; then
echo '
Building Emacs from the repository requires the following specialized programs:'
for prog in $progs; do
sprog=`echo "$prog" | sed 's/-/_/g'`
eval min=\$${sprog}_min
echo "$prog (minimum version $min)"
done
echo '
Your system seems to be missing the following tool(s):'
for prog in $missing; do
sprog=`echo "$prog" | sed 's/-/_/g'`
eval why=\$${sprog}_why
echo "$prog ($why)"
done
echo '
If you think you have the required tools, please add them to your PATH
and re-run this script.
Otherwise, please try installing them.
On systems using rpm and yum, try: "yum install PACKAGE"
On systems using dpkg and apt, try: "apt-get install PACKAGE"
Then re-run this script.
If you do not have permission to do this, or if the version provided
by your system is too old, it is normally straightforward to build
these packages from source. You can find the sources at:
https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/PACKAGE/
Download the package (make sure you get at least the minimum version
listed above), extract it using tar, then run configure, make,
make install. Add the installation directory to your PATH and re-run
this script.
If you know that the required versions are in your PATH, but this
script has made an error, then you can simply re-run this script with
the --no-check option.
Please report any problems with this script to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org .'
exit 1
fi
echo 'Your system has the required tools.'
fi # do_check
# Build aclocal.m4 here so that autoreconf need not use aclocal.
# aclocal is part of Automake and might not be installed, and
# autoreconf skips aclocal if aclocal.m4 is already supplied.
ls m4/*.m4 | LC_ALL=C sort | sed 's,.*\.m4$,m4_include([&]),' \
> aclocal.m4.tmp || exit
if cmp -s aclocal.m4.tmp aclocal.m4; then
rm -f aclocal.m4.tmp
else
echo "Building aclocal.m4 ..."
mv aclocal.m4.tmp aclocal.m4
fi || exit
echo "Running 'autoreconf -fi -I m4' ..."
## Let autoreconf figure out what, if anything, needs doing.
## Use autoreconf's -f option in case autoreconf itself has changed.
autoreconf -fi -I m4 || exit
fi
# True if the Git setup was OK before autogen.sh was run.
git_was_ok=true
if $do_git; then
case `cp --help 2>/dev/null` in
*--backup*--verbose*)
cp_options='--backup=numbered --verbose';;
*)
cp_options='-f';;
esac
fi
# Like 'git config NAME VALUE' but verbose on change and exiting on failure.
# Also, do not configure unless requested.
git_config ()
{
$do_git || return
name=$1
value=$2
ovalue=`git config --get "$name"` && test "$ovalue" = "$value" || {
if $git_was_ok; then
echo 'Configuring local git repository...'
case $cp_options in
--backup=*)
config=$git_common_dir/config
cp $cp_options --force -- "$config" "$config" || exit;;
esac
fi
echo "git config $name '$value'"
git config "$name" "$value" || exit
git_was_ok=false
}
}
## Configure Git, if requested.
# Get location of Git's common configuration directory. For older Git
# versions this is just '.git'. Newer Git versions support worktrees.
{ test -r .git &&
git_common_dir=`git rev-parse --no-flags --git-common-dir 2>/dev/null` &&
test -n "$git_common_dir"
} || git_common_dir=.git
hooks=$git_common_dir/hooks
# Check hashes when transferring objects among repositories.
git_config transfer.fsckObjects true
# Configure 'git diff' hunk header format.
# This xfuncname is based on Git's built-in 'cpp' pattern.
# The first line rejects jump targets and access declarations.
# The second line matches top-level functions and methods.
# The third line matches preprocessor and DEFUN macros.
git_config diff.cpp.xfuncname \
'!^[ \t]*[A-Za-z_][A-Za-z_0-9]*:[[:space:]]*($|/[/*])
^((::[[:space:]]*)?[A-Za-z_][A-Za-z_0-9]*[[:space:]]*\(.*)$
^((#define[[:space:]]|DEFUN).*)$'
git_config diff.elisp.xfuncname \
'^\([^[:space:]]*def[^[:space:]]+[[:space:]]+([^()[:space:]]+)'
git_config 'diff.m4.xfuncname' '^((m4_)?define|A._DEFUN(_ONCE)?)\([^),]*'
git_config 'diff.make.xfuncname' \
'^([$.[:alnum:]_].*:|[[:alnum:]_]+[[:space:]]*([*:+]?[:?]?|!?)=|define .*)'
git_config 'diff.shell.xfuncname' \
'^([[:space:]]*[[:alpha:]_][[:alnum:]_]*[[:space:]]*\(\)|[[:alpha:]_][[:alnum:]_]*=)'
git_config diff.texinfo.xfuncname \
'^@node[[:space:]]+([^,[:space:]][^,]+)'
# Install Git hooks.
tailored_hooks=
sample_hooks=
for hook in commit-msg pre-commit prepare-commit-msg; do
cmp -- build-aux/git-hooks/$hook "$hooks/$hook" >/dev/null 2>&1 ||
tailored_hooks="$tailored_hooks $hook"
done
git_sample_hook_src ()
{
hook=$1
src=$hooks/$hook.sample
if test ! -r "$src"; then
case $hook in
applypatch-msg) src=build-aux/git-hooks/commit-msg;;
pre-applypatch) src=build-aux/git-hooks/pre-commit;;
esac
fi
}
for hook in applypatch-msg pre-applypatch; do
git_sample_hook_src $hook
cmp -- "$src" "$hooks/$hook" >/dev/null 2>&1 ||
sample_hooks="$sample_hooks $hook"
done
if test -n "$tailored_hooks$sample_hooks"; then
if $do_git; then
echo "Installing git hooks..."
if test ! -d "$hooks"; then
printf "mkdir -p -- '%s'\\n" "$hooks"
mkdir -p -- "$hooks" || exit
fi
if test -n "$tailored_hooks"; then
for hook in $tailored_hooks; do
dst=$hooks/$hook
cp $cp_options -- build-aux/git-hooks/$hook "$dst" || exit
chmod -- a-w "$dst" || exit
done
fi
if test -n "$sample_hooks"; then
for hook in $sample_hooks; do
git_sample_hook_src $hook
dst=$hooks/$hook
cp $cp_options -- "$src" "$dst" || exit
chmod -- a-w "$dst" || exit
done
fi
else
git_was_ok=false
fi
fi
if test ! -f configure; then
echo "You can now run '$0 autoconf'."
elif test -r .git && test $git_was_ok = false && test $do_git = false; then
echo "You can now run '$0 git'."
elif test ! -f config.status ||
test -n "`find configure src/config.in -newer config.status`"; then
echo "You can now run './configure'."
fi
exit 0
### autogen.sh ends here