In normal operation, the Bourne Shell (better known as sh) is used to execute the commands to re-create targets. PMake also allows you to specify a different shell for it to use when executing these commands. There are several things PMake must know about the shell you wish to use. These things are specified as the sources for the .SHELL target by keyword, as follows:
PMake needs to know where the shell actually resides, so it can execute it. If you specify this and nothing else, PMake will use the last component of the path and look in its table of the shells it knows and use the specification it finds, if any. Use this if you just want to use a different version of the Bourne or C Shell (yes, PMake knows how to use the C Shell too).
This is the name by which the shell is to be known. It is a single word and, if no other keywords are specified (other than path), it is the name by which PMake attempts to find a specification for it (as mentioned above). You can use this if you would just rather use the C Shell than the Bourne Shell (.SHELL: name=csh will do it).
As mentioned before, PMake actually controls whether commands are printed by introducing commands into the shell's input stream. This keyword, and the next two, control what those commands are. The quiet keyword is the command used to turn echoing off. Once it is turned off, echoing is expected to remain off until the echo-on command is given.
The command PMake should give to turn echoing back on again.
Many shells will echo the echo-off command when it is given. This keyword tells PMake in what format the shell actually prints the echo-off command. Wherever PMake sees this string in the shell's output, it will delete it and any following whitespace, up to and including the next newline. See the example at the end of this section for more details.
Unless a target has been marked .SILENT, PMake wants to start the shell running with echoing on. To do this, it passes this flag to the shell as one of its arguments. If either this or the next flag begins with a -, the flags will be passed to the shell as separate arguments. Otherwise, the two will be concatenated (if they are used at the same time, of course).
Likewise, unless a target is marked .IGNORE, PMake wishes error-checking to be on from the very start. To this end, it will pass this flag to the shell as an argument. The same rules for an initial - apply as for the echoFlag.
Just as for echo-control, error-control is achieved by inserting commands into the shell's input stream. This is the command to make the shell check for errors. It also serves another purpose if the shell does not have error-control as commands, but I will get into that in a minute. Again, once error checking has been turned on, it is expected to remain on until it is turned off again.
This is the command PMake uses to turn error checking off. It has another use if the shell does not do errorcontrol, but I will tell you about that...now.
This takes a value that is either yes or no. Now you might think that the existence of the check and ignore keywords would be enough to tell PMake if the shell can do error-control, but you would be wrong. If hasErrCtl is yes, PMake uses the check and ignore commands in a straight-forward manner. If this is no, however, their use is rather different. In this case, the check command is used as a template, in which the string %s is replaced by the command that is about to be executed, to produce a command for the shell that will echo the command to be executed. The ignore command is also used as a template, again with %s replaced by the command to be executed, to produce a command that will execute the command to be executed and ignore any error it returns. When these strings are used as templates, you must provide newline(s) (\n) in the appropriate place(s).
The strings that follow these keywords may be enclosed in single or double quotes (the quotes will be stripped off) and may contain the usual C backslash-characters (\n is newline, \r is return, \b is backspace, \' escapes a single-quote inside single-quotes, \" escapes a double-quote inside double-quotes). Now for an example.
This is actually the contents of the <shx.mk> system makefile, and causes PMake to use the Bourne Shell in such a way that each command is printed as it is executed. That is, if more than one command is given on a line, each will be printed separately. Similarly, each time the body of a loop is executed, the commands within that loop will be printed, etc. The specification runs like this:
# # This is a shell specification to have the Bourne shell echo # the commands just before executing them, rather than when it reads # them. Useful if you want to see how variables are being expanded, etc. # .SHELL : path=/bin/sh \ quiet="set -" \ echo="set -x" \ filter="+ set - " \ echoFlag=x \ errFlag=e \ hasErrCtl=yes \ check="set -e" \ ignore="set +e"
It tells PMake the following:
The shell is located in the file /bin/sh. It need not tell PMake that the name of the shell is sh as PMake can figure that out for itself (it is the last component of the path).
The command to stop echoing is set -.
The command to start echoing is set -x
.
When the echo off command is executed, the shell will print +
set - (The + comes from using the -x
flag (rather than the -v
flag PMake usually uses)). PMake will
remove all occurrences of this string from the output, so you do not notice extra
commands you did not put there.
The flag the Bourne Shell will take to start echoing in
this way is the -x
flag. The Bourne
Shell will only take its flag arguments concatenated as its first argument, so
neither this nor the errFlag specification begins with a -.
The flag to use to turn error-checking on from the start is -e
.
The shell can turn error-checking on and off, and the commands to do so are set +e and set -e, respectively.
I should note that this specification is for Bourne Shells that are not part of Berkeley UNIX®, as shells from Berkeley do not do error control. You can get a similar effect, however, by changing the last three lines to be:
hasErrCtl=no \ check="echo \"+ %s\"\n" \ ignore="sh -c '%s || exit 0\n"
This will cause PMake to execute the two commands:
echo "+ cmd" sh -c 'cmd || true'
for each command for which errors are to be ignored. (In case you are wondering, the thing for ignore tells the shell to execute another shell without error checking on and always exit 0, since the || causes the exit 0 to be executed only if the first command exited non-zero, and if the first command exited zero, the shell will also exit zero, since that is the last command it executed).
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