glibc/scripts/gen-as-const.py

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Replace gen-as-const.awk by gen-as-const.py. This patch replaces gen-as-const.awk, and some fragments of the Makefile code that used it, by a Python script. The point is not such much that awk is problematic for this particular script, as that I'd like to build up a general Python infrastructure for extracting information from C headers, for use in writing tests of such headers. Thus, although this patch does not set up such infrastructure, the compute_c_consts function in gen-as-const.py might be moved to a separate Python module in a subsequent patch as a starting point for such infrastructure. The general idea of the code is the same as in the awk version, but no attempt is made to make the output files textually identical. When generating a header, a dict of constant names and values is generated internally then defines are printed in sorted order (rather than the order in the .sym file, which would have been used before). When generating a test that the values computed match those from a normal header inclusion, the test code is made into a compilation test using _Static_assert, where previously the comparisons were done only when the test was executed. One fragment of test generation (converting the previously generated header to use asconst_* prefixes on its macro names) is still in awk code in the makefiles; only the .sym processing and subsequent execution of the compiler to extract constants have moved to the Python script. Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py. * scripts/gen-as-const.py: New file. * scripts/gen-as-const.awk: Remove. * Makerules ($(common-objpfx)%.h $(common-objpfx)%.h.d): Use gen-as-const.py. ($(objpfx)test-as-const-%.c): Likewise.
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#!/usr/bin/python3
# Produce headers of assembly constants from C expressions.
# Copyright (C) 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# This file is part of the GNU C Library.
#
# The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
# modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
# License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
# version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
#
# The GNU C Library 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
# Lesser General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
# License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
# <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# The input to this script looks like:
# #cpp-directive ...
# NAME1
# NAME2 expression ...
# A line giving just a name implies an expression consisting of just that name.
import argparse
import os.path
import re
import subprocess
import tempfile
def compute_c_consts(sym_data, cc):
"""Compute the values of some C constants.
The first argument is a list whose elements are either strings
Make gen-as-const.py handle '--' consistently with awk script. It was reported in <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2018-12/msg00045.html> that gen-as-const.py fails to generate test code in the case where a .sym file has no symbols in it, so resulting in a test failing to link for Hurd. The relevant difference from the old awk script is that the old script treated '--' lines as indicating that the text to do at the start of the test (or file used to compute constants) should be output at that point if not already output, as well as treating lines with actual entries for constants like that. This patch changes gen-as-const.py accordingly, making it the sole responsibility of the code parsing .sym files to determine when such text should be output and ensuring it's always output at some point even if there are no symbols and no '--' lines, since not outputting it means the test fails to link. Handling '--' like that also avoids any problems that would arise if the first entry for a symbol were inside #ifdef (since the text in question must not be output inside #ifdef). Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py for i686-gnu. Note that there are still compilation test failures for i686-gnu (linknamespace tests, possibly arising from recent posix_spawn-related changes). * scripts/gen-as-const.py (compute_c_consts): Take an argument 'START' to indicate that start text should be output. (gen_test): Likewise. (main): Generate 'START' for first symbol or '--' line, or at end of input if not previously generated.
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(preprocessor directives, or the special string 'START' to
indicate this function should insert its initial boilerplate text
in the output there) or pairs of strings (a name and a C
Replace gen-as-const.awk by gen-as-const.py. This patch replaces gen-as-const.awk, and some fragments of the Makefile code that used it, by a Python script. The point is not such much that awk is problematic for this particular script, as that I'd like to build up a general Python infrastructure for extracting information from C headers, for use in writing tests of such headers. Thus, although this patch does not set up such infrastructure, the compute_c_consts function in gen-as-const.py might be moved to a separate Python module in a subsequent patch as a starting point for such infrastructure. The general idea of the code is the same as in the awk version, but no attempt is made to make the output files textually identical. When generating a header, a dict of constant names and values is generated internally then defines are printed in sorted order (rather than the order in the .sym file, which would have been used before). When generating a test that the values computed match those from a normal header inclusion, the test code is made into a compilation test using _Static_assert, where previously the comparisons were done only when the test was executed. One fragment of test generation (converting the previously generated header to use asconst_* prefixes on its macro names) is still in awk code in the makefiles; only the .sym processing and subsequent execution of the compiler to extract constants have moved to the Python script. Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py. * scripts/gen-as-const.py: New file. * scripts/gen-as-const.awk: Remove. * Makerules ($(common-objpfx)%.h $(common-objpfx)%.h.d): Use gen-as-const.py. ($(objpfx)test-as-const-%.c): Likewise.
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expression for the corresponding value). Preprocessor directives
in the middle of the list may be used to select which constants
end up being evaluated using which expressions.
"""
out_lines = []
for arg in sym_data:
if isinstance(arg, str):
Make gen-as-const.py handle '--' consistently with awk script. It was reported in <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2018-12/msg00045.html> that gen-as-const.py fails to generate test code in the case where a .sym file has no symbols in it, so resulting in a test failing to link for Hurd. The relevant difference from the old awk script is that the old script treated '--' lines as indicating that the text to do at the start of the test (or file used to compute constants) should be output at that point if not already output, as well as treating lines with actual entries for constants like that. This patch changes gen-as-const.py accordingly, making it the sole responsibility of the code parsing .sym files to determine when such text should be output and ensuring it's always output at some point even if there are no symbols and no '--' lines, since not outputting it means the test fails to link. Handling '--' like that also avoids any problems that would arise if the first entry for a symbol were inside #ifdef (since the text in question must not be output inside #ifdef). Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py for i686-gnu. Note that there are still compilation test failures for i686-gnu (linknamespace tests, possibly arising from recent posix_spawn-related changes). * scripts/gen-as-const.py (compute_c_consts): Take an argument 'START' to indicate that start text should be output. (gen_test): Likewise. (main): Generate 'START' for first symbol or '--' line, or at end of input if not previously generated.
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if arg == 'START':
out_lines.append('void\ndummy (void)\n{')
else:
out_lines.append(arg)
Replace gen-as-const.awk by gen-as-const.py. This patch replaces gen-as-const.awk, and some fragments of the Makefile code that used it, by a Python script. The point is not such much that awk is problematic for this particular script, as that I'd like to build up a general Python infrastructure for extracting information from C headers, for use in writing tests of such headers. Thus, although this patch does not set up such infrastructure, the compute_c_consts function in gen-as-const.py might be moved to a separate Python module in a subsequent patch as a starting point for such infrastructure. The general idea of the code is the same as in the awk version, but no attempt is made to make the output files textually identical. When generating a header, a dict of constant names and values is generated internally then defines are printed in sorted order (rather than the order in the .sym file, which would have been used before). When generating a test that the values computed match those from a normal header inclusion, the test code is made into a compilation test using _Static_assert, where previously the comparisons were done only when the test was executed. One fragment of test generation (converting the previously generated header to use asconst_* prefixes on its macro names) is still in awk code in the makefiles; only the .sym processing and subsequent execution of the compiler to extract constants have moved to the Python script. Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py. * scripts/gen-as-const.py: New file. * scripts/gen-as-const.awk: Remove. * Makerules ($(common-objpfx)%.h $(common-objpfx)%.h.d): Use gen-as-const.py. ($(objpfx)test-as-const-%.c): Likewise.
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continue
name = arg[0]
value = arg[1]
out_lines.append('asm ("@@@name@@@%s@@@value@@@%%0@@@end@@@" '
': : \"i\" ((long int) (%s)));'
% (name, value))
Make gen-as-const.py handle '--' consistently with awk script. It was reported in <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2018-12/msg00045.html> that gen-as-const.py fails to generate test code in the case where a .sym file has no symbols in it, so resulting in a test failing to link for Hurd. The relevant difference from the old awk script is that the old script treated '--' lines as indicating that the text to do at the start of the test (or file used to compute constants) should be output at that point if not already output, as well as treating lines with actual entries for constants like that. This patch changes gen-as-const.py accordingly, making it the sole responsibility of the code parsing .sym files to determine when such text should be output and ensuring it's always output at some point even if there are no symbols and no '--' lines, since not outputting it means the test fails to link. Handling '--' like that also avoids any problems that would arise if the first entry for a symbol were inside #ifdef (since the text in question must not be output inside #ifdef). Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py for i686-gnu. Note that there are still compilation test failures for i686-gnu (linknamespace tests, possibly arising from recent posix_spawn-related changes). * scripts/gen-as-const.py (compute_c_consts): Take an argument 'START' to indicate that start text should be output. (gen_test): Likewise. (main): Generate 'START' for first symbol or '--' line, or at end of input if not previously generated.
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out_lines.append('}')
Replace gen-as-const.awk by gen-as-const.py. This patch replaces gen-as-const.awk, and some fragments of the Makefile code that used it, by a Python script. The point is not such much that awk is problematic for this particular script, as that I'd like to build up a general Python infrastructure for extracting information from C headers, for use in writing tests of such headers. Thus, although this patch does not set up such infrastructure, the compute_c_consts function in gen-as-const.py might be moved to a separate Python module in a subsequent patch as a starting point for such infrastructure. The general idea of the code is the same as in the awk version, but no attempt is made to make the output files textually identical. When generating a header, a dict of constant names and values is generated internally then defines are printed in sorted order (rather than the order in the .sym file, which would have been used before). When generating a test that the values computed match those from a normal header inclusion, the test code is made into a compilation test using _Static_assert, where previously the comparisons were done only when the test was executed. One fragment of test generation (converting the previously generated header to use asconst_* prefixes on its macro names) is still in awk code in the makefiles; only the .sym processing and subsequent execution of the compiler to extract constants have moved to the Python script. Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py. * scripts/gen-as-const.py: New file. * scripts/gen-as-const.awk: Remove. * Makerules ($(common-objpfx)%.h $(common-objpfx)%.h.d): Use gen-as-const.py. ($(objpfx)test-as-const-%.c): Likewise.
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out_lines.append('')
out_text = '\n'.join(out_lines)
with tempfile.TemporaryDirectory() as temp_dir:
c_file_name = os.path.join(temp_dir, 'test.c')
s_file_name = os.path.join(temp_dir, 'test.s')
with open(c_file_name, 'w') as c_file:
c_file.write(out_text)
# Compilation has to be from stdin to avoid the temporary file
# name being written into the generated dependencies.
cmd = ('%s -S -o %s -x c - < %s' % (cc, s_file_name, c_file_name))
subprocess.check_call(cmd, shell=True)
consts = {}
with open(s_file_name, 'r') as s_file:
for line in s_file:
match = re.search('@@@name@@@([^@]*)'
'@@@value@@@[^0-9Xxa-fA-F-]*'
'([0-9Xxa-fA-F-]+).*@@@end@@@', line)
if match:
if (match.group(1) in consts
and match.group(2) != consts[match.group(1)]):
raise ValueError('duplicate constant %s'
% match.group(1))
consts[match.group(1)] = match.group(2)
return consts
def gen_test(sym_data):
"""Generate a test for the values of some C constants.
The first argument is as for compute_c_consts.
"""
out_lines = []
for arg in sym_data:
if isinstance(arg, str):
Make gen-as-const.py handle '--' consistently with awk script. It was reported in <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2018-12/msg00045.html> that gen-as-const.py fails to generate test code in the case where a .sym file has no symbols in it, so resulting in a test failing to link for Hurd. The relevant difference from the old awk script is that the old script treated '--' lines as indicating that the text to do at the start of the test (or file used to compute constants) should be output at that point if not already output, as well as treating lines with actual entries for constants like that. This patch changes gen-as-const.py accordingly, making it the sole responsibility of the code parsing .sym files to determine when such text should be output and ensuring it's always output at some point even if there are no symbols and no '--' lines, since not outputting it means the test fails to link. Handling '--' like that also avoids any problems that would arise if the first entry for a symbol were inside #ifdef (since the text in question must not be output inside #ifdef). Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py for i686-gnu. Note that there are still compilation test failures for i686-gnu (linknamespace tests, possibly arising from recent posix_spawn-related changes). * scripts/gen-as-const.py (compute_c_consts): Take an argument 'START' to indicate that start text should be output. (gen_test): Likewise. (main): Generate 'START' for first symbol or '--' line, or at end of input if not previously generated.
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if arg == 'START':
out_lines.append('#include <stdint.h>\n'
'#include <stdio.h>\n'
'#include <bits/wordsize.h>\n'
'#if __WORDSIZE == 64\n'
'typedef uint64_t c_t;\n'
'# define U(n) UINT64_C (n)\n'
'#else\n'
'typedef uint32_t c_t;\n'
'# define U(n) UINT32_C (n)\n'
'#endif\n'
'static int\n'
'do_test (void)\n'
'{\n'
# Compilation test only, using static
# assertions.
' return 0;\n'
'}\n'
'#include <support/test-driver.c>')
else:
out_lines.append(arg)
Replace gen-as-const.awk by gen-as-const.py. This patch replaces gen-as-const.awk, and some fragments of the Makefile code that used it, by a Python script. The point is not such much that awk is problematic for this particular script, as that I'd like to build up a general Python infrastructure for extracting information from C headers, for use in writing tests of such headers. Thus, although this patch does not set up such infrastructure, the compute_c_consts function in gen-as-const.py might be moved to a separate Python module in a subsequent patch as a starting point for such infrastructure. The general idea of the code is the same as in the awk version, but no attempt is made to make the output files textually identical. When generating a header, a dict of constant names and values is generated internally then defines are printed in sorted order (rather than the order in the .sym file, which would have been used before). When generating a test that the values computed match those from a normal header inclusion, the test code is made into a compilation test using _Static_assert, where previously the comparisons were done only when the test was executed. One fragment of test generation (converting the previously generated header to use asconst_* prefixes on its macro names) is still in awk code in the makefiles; only the .sym processing and subsequent execution of the compiler to extract constants have moved to the Python script. Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py. * scripts/gen-as-const.py: New file. * scripts/gen-as-const.awk: Remove. * Makerules ($(common-objpfx)%.h $(common-objpfx)%.h.d): Use gen-as-const.py. ($(objpfx)test-as-const-%.c): Likewise.
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continue
name = arg[0]
value = arg[1]
out_lines.append('_Static_assert (U (asconst_%s) == (c_t) (%s), '
'"value of %s");'
% (name, value, name))
return '\n'.join(out_lines)
def main():
"""The main entry point."""
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
description='Produce headers of assembly constants.')
parser.add_argument('--cc', metavar='CC',
help='C compiler (including options) to use')
parser.add_argument('--test', action='store_true',
help='Generate test case instead of header')
parser.add_argument('sym_file',
help='.sym file to process')
args = parser.parse_args()
sym_data = []
with open(args.sym_file, 'r') as sym_file:
Make gen-as-const.py handle '--' consistently with awk script. It was reported in <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2018-12/msg00045.html> that gen-as-const.py fails to generate test code in the case where a .sym file has no symbols in it, so resulting in a test failing to link for Hurd. The relevant difference from the old awk script is that the old script treated '--' lines as indicating that the text to do at the start of the test (or file used to compute constants) should be output at that point if not already output, as well as treating lines with actual entries for constants like that. This patch changes gen-as-const.py accordingly, making it the sole responsibility of the code parsing .sym files to determine when such text should be output and ensuring it's always output at some point even if there are no symbols and no '--' lines, since not outputting it means the test fails to link. Handling '--' like that also avoids any problems that would arise if the first entry for a symbol were inside #ifdef (since the text in question must not be output inside #ifdef). Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py for i686-gnu. Note that there are still compilation test failures for i686-gnu (linknamespace tests, possibly arising from recent posix_spawn-related changes). * scripts/gen-as-const.py (compute_c_consts): Take an argument 'START' to indicate that start text should be output. (gen_test): Likewise. (main): Generate 'START' for first symbol or '--' line, or at end of input if not previously generated.
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started = False
Replace gen-as-const.awk by gen-as-const.py. This patch replaces gen-as-const.awk, and some fragments of the Makefile code that used it, by a Python script. The point is not such much that awk is problematic for this particular script, as that I'd like to build up a general Python infrastructure for extracting information from C headers, for use in writing tests of such headers. Thus, although this patch does not set up such infrastructure, the compute_c_consts function in gen-as-const.py might be moved to a separate Python module in a subsequent patch as a starting point for such infrastructure. The general idea of the code is the same as in the awk version, but no attempt is made to make the output files textually identical. When generating a header, a dict of constant names and values is generated internally then defines are printed in sorted order (rather than the order in the .sym file, which would have been used before). When generating a test that the values computed match those from a normal header inclusion, the test code is made into a compilation test using _Static_assert, where previously the comparisons were done only when the test was executed. One fragment of test generation (converting the previously generated header to use asconst_* prefixes on its macro names) is still in awk code in the makefiles; only the .sym processing and subsequent execution of the compiler to extract constants have moved to the Python script. Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py. * scripts/gen-as-const.py: New file. * scripts/gen-as-const.awk: Remove. * Makerules ($(common-objpfx)%.h $(common-objpfx)%.h.d): Use gen-as-const.py. ($(objpfx)test-as-const-%.c): Likewise.
2018-11-30 16:20:41 +01:00
for line in sym_file:
line = line.strip()
if line == '':
continue
# Pass preprocessor directives through.
if line.startswith('#'):
sym_data.append(line)
continue
words = line.split(maxsplit=1)
Make gen-as-const.py handle '--' consistently with awk script. It was reported in <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2018-12/msg00045.html> that gen-as-const.py fails to generate test code in the case where a .sym file has no symbols in it, so resulting in a test failing to link for Hurd. The relevant difference from the old awk script is that the old script treated '--' lines as indicating that the text to do at the start of the test (or file used to compute constants) should be output at that point if not already output, as well as treating lines with actual entries for constants like that. This patch changes gen-as-const.py accordingly, making it the sole responsibility of the code parsing .sym files to determine when such text should be output and ensuring it's always output at some point even if there are no symbols and no '--' lines, since not outputting it means the test fails to link. Handling '--' like that also avoids any problems that would arise if the first entry for a symbol were inside #ifdef (since the text in question must not be output inside #ifdef). Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py for i686-gnu. Note that there are still compilation test failures for i686-gnu (linknamespace tests, possibly arising from recent posix_spawn-related changes). * scripts/gen-as-const.py (compute_c_consts): Take an argument 'START' to indicate that start text should be output. (gen_test): Likewise. (main): Generate 'START' for first symbol or '--' line, or at end of input if not previously generated.
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if not started:
sym_data.append('START')
started = True
Replace gen-as-const.awk by gen-as-const.py. This patch replaces gen-as-const.awk, and some fragments of the Makefile code that used it, by a Python script. The point is not such much that awk is problematic for this particular script, as that I'd like to build up a general Python infrastructure for extracting information from C headers, for use in writing tests of such headers. Thus, although this patch does not set up such infrastructure, the compute_c_consts function in gen-as-const.py might be moved to a separate Python module in a subsequent patch as a starting point for such infrastructure. The general idea of the code is the same as in the awk version, but no attempt is made to make the output files textually identical. When generating a header, a dict of constant names and values is generated internally then defines are printed in sorted order (rather than the order in the .sym file, which would have been used before). When generating a test that the values computed match those from a normal header inclusion, the test code is made into a compilation test using _Static_assert, where previously the comparisons were done only when the test was executed. One fragment of test generation (converting the previously generated header to use asconst_* prefixes on its macro names) is still in awk code in the makefiles; only the .sym processing and subsequent execution of the compiler to extract constants have moved to the Python script. Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py. * scripts/gen-as-const.py: New file. * scripts/gen-as-const.awk: Remove. * Makerules ($(common-objpfx)%.h $(common-objpfx)%.h.d): Use gen-as-const.py. ($(objpfx)test-as-const-%.c): Likewise.
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# Separator.
if words[0] == '--':
continue
name = words[0]
value = words[1] if len(words) > 1 else words[0]
sym_data.append((name, value))
Make gen-as-const.py handle '--' consistently with awk script. It was reported in <https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2018-12/msg00045.html> that gen-as-const.py fails to generate test code in the case where a .sym file has no symbols in it, so resulting in a test failing to link for Hurd. The relevant difference from the old awk script is that the old script treated '--' lines as indicating that the text to do at the start of the test (or file used to compute constants) should be output at that point if not already output, as well as treating lines with actual entries for constants like that. This patch changes gen-as-const.py accordingly, making it the sole responsibility of the code parsing .sym files to determine when such text should be output and ensuring it's always output at some point even if there are no symbols and no '--' lines, since not outputting it means the test fails to link. Handling '--' like that also avoids any problems that would arise if the first entry for a symbol were inside #ifdef (since the text in question must not be output inside #ifdef). Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py for i686-gnu. Note that there are still compilation test failures for i686-gnu (linknamespace tests, possibly arising from recent posix_spawn-related changes). * scripts/gen-as-const.py (compute_c_consts): Take an argument 'START' to indicate that start text should be output. (gen_test): Likewise. (main): Generate 'START' for first symbol or '--' line, or at end of input if not previously generated.
2018-12-03 23:08:50 +01:00
if not started:
sym_data.append('START')
Replace gen-as-const.awk by gen-as-const.py. This patch replaces gen-as-const.awk, and some fragments of the Makefile code that used it, by a Python script. The point is not such much that awk is problematic for this particular script, as that I'd like to build up a general Python infrastructure for extracting information from C headers, for use in writing tests of such headers. Thus, although this patch does not set up such infrastructure, the compute_c_consts function in gen-as-const.py might be moved to a separate Python module in a subsequent patch as a starting point for such infrastructure. The general idea of the code is the same as in the awk version, but no attempt is made to make the output files textually identical. When generating a header, a dict of constant names and values is generated internally then defines are printed in sorted order (rather than the order in the .sym file, which would have been used before). When generating a test that the values computed match those from a normal header inclusion, the test code is made into a compilation test using _Static_assert, where previously the comparisons were done only when the test was executed. One fragment of test generation (converting the previously generated header to use asconst_* prefixes on its macro names) is still in awk code in the makefiles; only the .sym processing and subsequent execution of the compiler to extract constants have moved to the Python script. Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py. * scripts/gen-as-const.py: New file. * scripts/gen-as-const.awk: Remove. * Makerules ($(common-objpfx)%.h $(common-objpfx)%.h.d): Use gen-as-const.py. ($(objpfx)test-as-const-%.c): Likewise.
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if args.test:
print(gen_test(sym_data))
else:
consts = compute_c_consts(sym_data, args.cc)
print(''.join('#define %s %s\n' % c for c in sorted(consts.items())), end='')
Replace gen-as-const.awk by gen-as-const.py. This patch replaces gen-as-const.awk, and some fragments of the Makefile code that used it, by a Python script. The point is not such much that awk is problematic for this particular script, as that I'd like to build up a general Python infrastructure for extracting information from C headers, for use in writing tests of such headers. Thus, although this patch does not set up such infrastructure, the compute_c_consts function in gen-as-const.py might be moved to a separate Python module in a subsequent patch as a starting point for such infrastructure. The general idea of the code is the same as in the awk version, but no attempt is made to make the output files textually identical. When generating a header, a dict of constant names and values is generated internally then defines are printed in sorted order (rather than the order in the .sym file, which would have been used before). When generating a test that the values computed match those from a normal header inclusion, the test code is made into a compilation test using _Static_assert, where previously the comparisons were done only when the test was executed. One fragment of test generation (converting the previously generated header to use asconst_* prefixes on its macro names) is still in awk code in the makefiles; only the .sym processing and subsequent execution of the compiler to extract constants have moved to the Python script. Tested for x86_64, and with build-many-glibcs.py. * scripts/gen-as-const.py: New file. * scripts/gen-as-const.awk: Remove. * Makerules ($(common-objpfx)%.h $(common-objpfx)%.h.d): Use gen-as-const.py. ($(objpfx)test-as-const-%.c): Likewise.
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if __name__ == '__main__':
main()