#!/bin/sh
#
# CCDEPS-GCC (C) 2002 Emile van Bergen. Distribution of this file is allowed
# under the conditions detailed in the GNU General Public License (GPL). See
# the file COPYING for more information.
#
# This script compiles and/or links one or more source or object files into a
# object file or executable target, and outputs all extra dependencies found
# while doing so in a file named target.d, which can be used by GNU Make.
#
# The script should be invoked the same way as your C compiler, that is,
# specifying the target using a -o option and the source or object files as
# non-option arguments. It will generate dependencies in the form
#
# target target.d: dir/file1.c dir/file2.c header1.h header2.h
# dir/file1.c dir/file2.c header1.h header2.h:
#
# This version is intended for GCC, which can do compilation and dependency
# generation in one step. The name of the GCC version (default gcc) can be
# overridden using the CC environment variable.
#
# CHANGELOG
#
# 2003/1/8: EvB: adapted for gcc 3.2, still handles 2.95 as well.
#
# This was necessary because gcc 3.2 handles -MD differently than gcc 2.95:
# where the old version generated a .d file for each source, in the current
# directory, the new one does almost completely what this script intended to
# do: generate one .d file in the same directory and with the same file name
# as the target.
#
# The only fixups 3.2's .d files still need are:
#
# - changing the file name; gcc 3.2 strips the suffix of the target before
# appending the .d, so targets x and x.o will both produce x.d, which is
# not what we want;
#
# - adding the implicit dependencies as prerequisiteless targets, so that
# make will just consider the target out of date if one does not exist
# anymore;
#
# - adding the .d file as depending on the same prerequisites as our real
# target so that it will be considered out of date if one of the files
# mentioned in it are updated or missing.
#
# Basically, this version does all that by simply including the file
# <strippedtarget>.d file in the list of .d files we look for. We may end
# up generating the same file name, but that already was handled correctly.
# Otherwise we perform the normal routine, so that we /know/ the targets will
# be correct, directories and all, regardless of variations in gcc behaviour.
cmdline="$*"
while [ x"$1" != x ]
do
case "$1" in
-o) tgt="$2" ; shift ;; # target specifier option
-x|-u|-b|-V) shift ;; # options with arg after space
-*) ;; # standard options
*) fil="$fil $1" ;; # source or object files
esac
shift
done
if [ x"$CC" = x ]
then
CC=gcc
export CC
fi
# If we're not processing any .c files (link only), run gcc as-is and we're done
expr "$fil" : ".*\.c" >/dev/null || exec $CC $cmdline
# Otherwise, run the gcc with the -MD option, which generates a .d file
# in the current directory for each .c or .cc source file processed.
#
# These files are post-processed (replacing the incorrectly named target
# with the real target specified with -o, and adding the .d file), concatenated
# into one .d file that is named based on the target name, and put in the
# correct directory. Further, all prerequisites are added as bare targets,
# preventing errors when files are missing due to renaming or restructuring
# headers, but causing the files dependent on them to be considered out of
# date. (GNU Make feature).
#
# Makefiles must include the .d files like this: -include $(OBJS_$(d):.o=.d)
# or, when compiling and linking in one step: -include $(TGTS_$(d):%=%.d)
dep=$tgt.d
rm -f $dep
$CC -MD $cmdline
res=$?
dgcc3=`echo $tgt | sed -e 's/\.[^.]*$//'`.d
dgcc=`echo $fil | sed -e 's/[^ ]*\.[^c]//' -e 's/\.c/\.d/g' -e 's%.*/%%g'`
if [ $res != 0 ]
then
rm -f $dgcc3 $dgcc
exit $res
fi
for tf in $dgcc3 $dgcc
do
if [ -f $tf ] && mv $tf $dep.tmp
then
sed -e "s%.*:%$tgt $dep:%" < $dep.tmp >> $dep
sed -e 's%^.*:%%' -e 's%^ *%%' -e 's% *\\$%%' -e 's%$%:%' \
< $dep.tmp >> $dep
rm -f $dep.tmp
found=1
fi
done
[ "$found" = "1" ] && exit 0
echo ERROR: $0: Cannot find any compiler-generated dependency files\!
exit 1
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