linux/scripts/gcc-version.sh
Jesper Juhl de47062a17 kbuild: improve scripts/gcc-version.sh output a bit when called without args
Currently, if you call scripts/gcc-version.sh without arguments it will
generate this output :

$ sh scripts/gcc-version.sh
scripts/gcc-version.sh: line 12: [: =: unary operator expected
scripts/gcc-version.sh: line 16: -E: command not found
scripts/gcc-version.sh: line 17: -E: command not found
0000

Not too pretty. I believe this is an improvement :

$ sh scripts/gcc-version.sh
Error: No compiler specified.
Usage:
        scripts/gcc-version.sh <gcc-command>

Signed-off-by: Jesper Juhl <jesper.juhl@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Sam Ravnborg <sam@ravnborg.org>
2007-10-12 21:15:30 +02:00

30 lines
816 B
Bash

#!/bin/sh
#
# gcc-version [-p] gcc-command
#
# Prints the gcc version of `gcc-command' in a canonical 4-digit form
# such as `0295' for gcc-2.95, `0303' for gcc-3.3, etc.
#
# With the -p option, prints the patchlevel as well, for example `029503' for
# gcc-2.95.3, `030301' for gcc-3.3.1, etc.
#
if [[ $1 = "-p" ]] ; then with_patchlevel=1; shift; fi
compiler="$*"
if [ ${#compiler} -eq 0 ]; then
echo "Error: No compiler specified."
echo -e "Usage:\n\t$0 <gcc-command>"
exit 1
fi
MAJOR=$(echo __GNUC__ | $compiler -E -xc - | tail -n 1)
MINOR=$(echo __GNUC_MINOR__ | $compiler -E -xc - | tail -n 1)
if [ "x$with_patchlevel" != "x" ] ; then
PATCHLEVEL=$(echo __GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__ | $compiler -E -xc - | tail -n 1)
printf "%02d%02d%02d\\n" $MAJOR $MINOR $PATCHLEVEL
else
printf "%02d%02d\\n" $MAJOR $MINOR
fi