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185 lines
6.0 KiB
Python
Executable File
185 lines
6.0 KiB
Python
Executable File
#!/usr/bin/python
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# Copyright (c) 2017-2019, The Tor Project, Inc.
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# See LICENSE for licensing information
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# This script iterates over a list of C files. For each file, it looks at the
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# #if/#else C macros, and annotates them with comments explaining what they
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# match.
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#
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# For example, it replaces this:
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#
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# #ifdef HAVE_OCELOT
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# // 500 lines of ocelot code
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# #endif
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#
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# with this:
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#
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# #ifdef HAVE_OCELOT
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# // 500 lines of ocelot code
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# #endif /* defined(HAVE_OCELOT) */
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#
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# Note that only #else and #endif lines are annotated. Existing comments
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# on those lines are removed.
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import re
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# Any block with fewer than this many lines does not need annotations.
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LINE_OBVIOUSNESS_LIMIT = 4
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# Maximum line width. This includes a terminating newline character.
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#
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# (This is the maximum before encoding, so that if the the operating system
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# uses multiple characers to encode newline, that's still okay.)
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LINE_WIDTH=80
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class Problem(Exception):
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pass
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def commented_line(fmt, argument, maxwidth=LINE_WIDTH):
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"""
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Return fmt%argument, for use as a commented line. If the line would
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be longer than maxwidth, truncate argument.
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Requires that fmt%"..." will fit into maxwidth characters.
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Requires that fmt ends with a newline.
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"""
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assert fmt.endswith("\n")
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result = fmt % argument
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if len(result) <= maxwidth:
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return result
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else:
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# figure out how much we need to truncate by to fit the argument,
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# plus an ellipsis.
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ellipsis = "..."
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result = fmt % (argument + ellipsis)
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overrun = len(result) - maxwidth
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truncated_argument = argument[:-overrun] + ellipsis
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result = fmt % truncated_argument
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assert len(result) <= maxwidth
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return result
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def negate(expr):
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"""Return a negated version of expr; try to avoid double-negation.
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We usually wrap expressions in parentheses and add a "!".
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>>> negate("A && B")
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'!(A && B)'
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But if we recognize the expression as negated, we can restore it.
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>>> negate(negate("A && B"))
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'A && B'
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The same applies for defined(FOO).
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>>> negate("defined(FOO)")
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'!defined(FOO)'
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>>> negate(negate("defined(FOO)"))
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'defined(FOO)'
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Internal parentheses don't confuse us:
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>>> negate("!(FOO) && !(BAR)")
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'!(!(FOO) && !(BAR))'
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"""
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expr = expr.strip()
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# See whether we match !(...), with no intervening close-parens.
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m = re.match(r'^!\s*\(([^\)]*)\)$', expr)
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if m:
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return m.group(1)
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# See whether we match !?defined(...), with no intervening close-parens.
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m = re.match(r'^(!?)\s*(defined\([^\)]*\))$', expr)
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if m:
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if m.group(1) == "!":
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prefix = ""
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else:
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prefix = "!"
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return prefix + m.group(2)
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return "!(%s)" % expr
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def uncomment(s):
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"""
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Remove existing trailing comments from an #else or #endif line.
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"""
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s = re.sub(r'//.*','',s)
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s = re.sub(r'/\*.*','',s)
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return s.strip()
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def translate(f_in, f_out):
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"""
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Read a file from f_in, and write its annotated version to f_out.
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"""
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# A stack listing our current if/else state. Each member of the stack
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# is a list of directives. Each directive is a 3-tuple of
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# (command, rest, lineno)
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# where "command" is one of if/ifdef/ifndef/else/elif, and where
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# "rest" is an expression in a format suitable for use with #if, and where
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# lineno is the line number where the directive occurred.
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stack = []
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# the stack element corresponding to the top level of the file.
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whole_file = []
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cur_level = whole_file
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lineno = 0
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for line in f_in:
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lineno += 1
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m = re.match(r'\s*#\s*(if|ifdef|ifndef|else|endif|elif)\b\s*(.*)',
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line)
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if not m:
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# no directive, so we can just write it out.
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f_out.write(line)
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continue
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command,rest = m.groups()
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if command in ("if", "ifdef", "ifndef"):
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# The #if directive pushes us one level lower on the stack.
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if command == 'ifdef':
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rest = "defined(%s)"%uncomment(rest)
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elif command == 'ifndef':
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rest = "!defined(%s)"%uncomment(rest)
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elif rest.endswith("\\"):
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rest = rest[:-1]+"..."
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rest = uncomment(rest)
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new_level = [ (command, rest, lineno) ]
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stack.append(cur_level)
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cur_level = new_level
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f_out.write(line)
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elif command in ("else", "elif"):
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# We stay at the same level on the stack. If we have an #else,
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# we comment it.
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if len(cur_level) == 0 or cur_level[-1][0] == 'else':
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raise Problem("Unexpected #%s on %d"% (command,lineno))
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if (len(cur_level) == 1 and command == 'else' and
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lineno > cur_level[0][2] + LINE_OBVIOUSNESS_LIMIT):
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f_out.write(commented_line("#else /* %s */\n",
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negate(cur_level[0][1])))
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else:
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f_out.write(line)
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cur_level.append((command, rest, lineno))
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else:
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# We pop one element on the stack, and comment an endif.
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assert command == 'endif'
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if len(stack) == 0:
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raise Problem("Unmatched #%s on %s"% (command,lineno))
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if lineno <= cur_level[0][2] + LINE_OBVIOUSNESS_LIMIT:
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f_out.write(line)
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elif len(cur_level) == 1 or (
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len(cur_level) == 2 and cur_level[1][0] == 'else'):
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f_out.write(commented_line("#endif /* %s */\n",
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cur_level[0][1]))
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else:
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f_out.write(commented_line("#endif /* %s || ... */\n",
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cur_level[0][1]))
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cur_level = stack.pop()
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if len(stack) or cur_level != whole_file:
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raise Problem("Missing #endif")
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import sys,os
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for fn in sys.argv[1:]:
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with open(fn+"_OUT", 'w') as output_file:
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translate(open(fn, 'r'), output_file)
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os.rename(fn+"_OUT", fn)
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