nixpkgs/pkgs/build-support/cc-wrapper/cc-wrapper.sh

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#! @shell@
set -eu -o pipefail +o posix
shopt -s nullglob
if (( "${NIX_DEBUG:-0}" >= 7 )); then
set -x
fi
2016-01-25 08:54:10 +00:00
path_backup="$PATH"
# That @-vars are substituted separately from bash evaluation makes
# shellcheck think this, and others like it, are useless conditionals.
# shellcheck disable=SC2157
if [[ -n "@coreutils_bin@" && -n "@gnugrep_bin@" ]]; then
PATH="@coreutils_bin@/bin:@gnugrep_bin@/bin"
fi
source @out@/nix-support/utils.bash
source @out@/nix-support/darwin-sdk-setup.bash
# Parse command line options and set several variables.
# For instance, figure out if linker flags should be passed.
# GCC prints annoying warnings when they are not needed.
dontLink=0
nonFlagArgs=0
cc1=0
# shellcheck disable=SC2193
[[ "@prog@" = *++ ]] && isCxx=1 || isCxx=0
cxxInclude=1
cxxLibrary=1
cInclude=1
expandResponseParams "$@"
declare -ag positionalArgs=()
declare -i n=0
nParams=${#params[@]}
while (( "$n" < "$nParams" )); do
p=${params[n]}
p2=${params[n+1]:-} # handle `p` being last one
n+=1
cc-wrapper: Use case statements instead of bunch of if/elif checks Makes for easier to read code imo, case-in-point there was a duplicate test for `$p = -E` before. While doing this little bit of refactor I changed rest -> kept because that makes more sense, rest sounds like its the rest of params while kept says these are the params that we've kept. I tested for no change in behavior using the following bash script: ``` reset() { cInclude=1 cxxInclude=1 cxxLibrary=1 dontLink=0 isCxx=0 nonFlagArgs=0 params=() } parseParams() { declare -i n=0 nParams=${#params[@]} while (("$n" < "$nParams")); do p=${params[n]} p2=${params[n + 1]:-} # handle `p` being last one case "$p" in -[cSEM] | -MM) dontLink=1 ;; -cc1) cc1=1 ;; -nostdinc) cInclude=0 cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdinc++) cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdlib) cxxLibrary=0 ;; -x) case "$p2" in *-header) dontLink=1 ;; c++*) isCxx=1 ;; esac ;; -?*) ;; *) nonFlagArgs=1 ;; # Includes a solitary dash (`-`) which signifies standard input; it is not a flag esac n+=1 done } for p in c S E M MM; do reset params=-$p parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 done reset params=(-x foo-header) parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=(-x c++-foo) parseParams [[ $isCxx != 1 ]] && echo "expected isCxx=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdlib parseParams [[ $cxxLibrary != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxLibrary=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc parseParams [[ $cInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc++ parseParams [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-cc1 parseParams [[ $cc1 != 1 ]] && echo "expected cc1=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=- parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=bleh parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-? parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 0 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 exit 0 ```
2022-06-07 17:14:38 +00:00
case "$p" in
-[cSEM] | -MM) dontLink=1 ;;
-cc1) cc1=1 ;;
-nostdinc) cInclude=0 cxxInclude=0 ;;
-nostdinc++) cxxInclude=0 ;;
-nostdlib) cxxLibrary=0 ;;
-x*-header) dontLink=1 ;; # both `-x c-header` and `-xc-header` are accepted by clang
-xc++*) isCxx=1 ;; # both `-xc++` and `-x c++` are accepted by clang
cc-wrapper: Use case statements instead of bunch of if/elif checks Makes for easier to read code imo, case-in-point there was a duplicate test for `$p = -E` before. While doing this little bit of refactor I changed rest -> kept because that makes more sense, rest sounds like its the rest of params while kept says these are the params that we've kept. I tested for no change in behavior using the following bash script: ``` reset() { cInclude=1 cxxInclude=1 cxxLibrary=1 dontLink=0 isCxx=0 nonFlagArgs=0 params=() } parseParams() { declare -i n=0 nParams=${#params[@]} while (("$n" < "$nParams")); do p=${params[n]} p2=${params[n + 1]:-} # handle `p` being last one case "$p" in -[cSEM] | -MM) dontLink=1 ;; -cc1) cc1=1 ;; -nostdinc) cInclude=0 cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdinc++) cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdlib) cxxLibrary=0 ;; -x) case "$p2" in *-header) dontLink=1 ;; c++*) isCxx=1 ;; esac ;; -?*) ;; *) nonFlagArgs=1 ;; # Includes a solitary dash (`-`) which signifies standard input; it is not a flag esac n+=1 done } for p in c S E M MM; do reset params=-$p parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 done reset params=(-x foo-header) parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=(-x c++-foo) parseParams [[ $isCxx != 1 ]] && echo "expected isCxx=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdlib parseParams [[ $cxxLibrary != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxLibrary=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc parseParams [[ $cInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc++ parseParams [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-cc1 parseParams [[ $cc1 != 1 ]] && echo "expected cc1=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=- parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=bleh parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-? parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 0 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 exit 0 ```
2022-06-07 17:14:38 +00:00
-x)
case "$p2" in
*-header) dontLink=1 ;;
c++*) isCxx=1 ;;
esac
;;
--) # Everything else is positional args!
# See: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/commit/ed1d07282cc9d8e4c25d585e03e5c8a1b6f63a74
# Any positional arg (i.e. any argument after `--`) will be
# interpreted as a "non flag" arg:
if [[ -v "params[$n]" ]]; then nonFlagArgs=1; fi
positionalArgs=("${params[@]:$n}")
params=("${params[@]:0:$((n - 1))}")
break;
;;
cc-wrapper: Use case statements instead of bunch of if/elif checks Makes for easier to read code imo, case-in-point there was a duplicate test for `$p = -E` before. While doing this little bit of refactor I changed rest -> kept because that makes more sense, rest sounds like its the rest of params while kept says these are the params that we've kept. I tested for no change in behavior using the following bash script: ``` reset() { cInclude=1 cxxInclude=1 cxxLibrary=1 dontLink=0 isCxx=0 nonFlagArgs=0 params=() } parseParams() { declare -i n=0 nParams=${#params[@]} while (("$n" < "$nParams")); do p=${params[n]} p2=${params[n + 1]:-} # handle `p` being last one case "$p" in -[cSEM] | -MM) dontLink=1 ;; -cc1) cc1=1 ;; -nostdinc) cInclude=0 cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdinc++) cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdlib) cxxLibrary=0 ;; -x) case "$p2" in *-header) dontLink=1 ;; c++*) isCxx=1 ;; esac ;; -?*) ;; *) nonFlagArgs=1 ;; # Includes a solitary dash (`-`) which signifies standard input; it is not a flag esac n+=1 done } for p in c S E M MM; do reset params=-$p parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 done reset params=(-x foo-header) parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=(-x c++-foo) parseParams [[ $isCxx != 1 ]] && echo "expected isCxx=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdlib parseParams [[ $cxxLibrary != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxLibrary=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc parseParams [[ $cInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc++ parseParams [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-cc1 parseParams [[ $cc1 != 1 ]] && echo "expected cc1=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=- parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=bleh parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-? parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 0 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 exit 0 ```
2022-06-07 17:14:38 +00:00
-?*) ;;
*) nonFlagArgs=1 ;; # Includes a solitary dash (`-`) which signifies standard input; it is not a flag
esac
done
# If we pass a flag like -Wl, then gcc will call the linker unless it
# can figure out that it has to do something else (e.g., because of a
# "-c" flag). So if no non-flag arguments are given, don't pass any
# linker flags. This catches cases like "gcc" (should just print
# "gcc: no input files") and "gcc -v" (should print the version).
2014-10-10 12:25:23 +00:00
if [ "$nonFlagArgs" = 0 ]; then
dontLink=1
fi
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# Arocc does not link
if [ "@isArocc@" = 1 ]; then
dontLink=1
fi
# Optionally filter out paths not refering to the store.
if [[ "${NIX_ENFORCE_PURITY:-}" = 1 && -n "$NIX_STORE" ]]; then
cc-wrapper: Use case statements instead of bunch of if/elif checks Makes for easier to read code imo, case-in-point there was a duplicate test for `$p = -E` before. While doing this little bit of refactor I changed rest -> kept because that makes more sense, rest sounds like its the rest of params while kept says these are the params that we've kept. I tested for no change in behavior using the following bash script: ``` reset() { cInclude=1 cxxInclude=1 cxxLibrary=1 dontLink=0 isCxx=0 nonFlagArgs=0 params=() } parseParams() { declare -i n=0 nParams=${#params[@]} while (("$n" < "$nParams")); do p=${params[n]} p2=${params[n + 1]:-} # handle `p` being last one case "$p" in -[cSEM] | -MM) dontLink=1 ;; -cc1) cc1=1 ;; -nostdinc) cInclude=0 cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdinc++) cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdlib) cxxLibrary=0 ;; -x) case "$p2" in *-header) dontLink=1 ;; c++*) isCxx=1 ;; esac ;; -?*) ;; *) nonFlagArgs=1 ;; # Includes a solitary dash (`-`) which signifies standard input; it is not a flag esac n+=1 done } for p in c S E M MM; do reset params=-$p parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 done reset params=(-x foo-header) parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=(-x c++-foo) parseParams [[ $isCxx != 1 ]] && echo "expected isCxx=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdlib parseParams [[ $cxxLibrary != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxLibrary=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc parseParams [[ $cInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc++ parseParams [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-cc1 parseParams [[ $cc1 != 1 ]] && echo "expected cc1=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=- parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=bleh parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-? parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 0 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 exit 0 ```
2022-06-07 17:14:38 +00:00
kept=()
nParams=${#params[@]}
declare -i n=0
while (( "$n" < "$nParams" )); do
p=${params[n]}
p2=${params[n+1]:-} # handle `p` being last one
n+=1
cc-wrapper: Use case statements instead of bunch of if/elif checks Makes for easier to read code imo, case-in-point there was a duplicate test for `$p = -E` before. While doing this little bit of refactor I changed rest -> kept because that makes more sense, rest sounds like its the rest of params while kept says these are the params that we've kept. I tested for no change in behavior using the following bash script: ``` reset() { cInclude=1 cxxInclude=1 cxxLibrary=1 dontLink=0 isCxx=0 nonFlagArgs=0 params=() } parseParams() { declare -i n=0 nParams=${#params[@]} while (("$n" < "$nParams")); do p=${params[n]} p2=${params[n + 1]:-} # handle `p` being last one case "$p" in -[cSEM] | -MM) dontLink=1 ;; -cc1) cc1=1 ;; -nostdinc) cInclude=0 cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdinc++) cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdlib) cxxLibrary=0 ;; -x) case "$p2" in *-header) dontLink=1 ;; c++*) isCxx=1 ;; esac ;; -?*) ;; *) nonFlagArgs=1 ;; # Includes a solitary dash (`-`) which signifies standard input; it is not a flag esac n+=1 done } for p in c S E M MM; do reset params=-$p parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 done reset params=(-x foo-header) parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=(-x c++-foo) parseParams [[ $isCxx != 1 ]] && echo "expected isCxx=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdlib parseParams [[ $cxxLibrary != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxLibrary=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc parseParams [[ $cInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc++ parseParams [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-cc1 parseParams [[ $cc1 != 1 ]] && echo "expected cc1=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=- parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=bleh parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-? parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 0 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 exit 0 ```
2022-06-07 17:14:38 +00:00
skipNext=false
path=""
case "$p" in
-[IL]/*) path=${p:2} ;;
-[IL] | -isystem) path=$p2 skipNext=true ;;
esac
if [[ -n $path ]] && badPathWithDarwinSdk "$path"; then
cc-wrapper: Use case statements instead of bunch of if/elif checks Makes for easier to read code imo, case-in-point there was a duplicate test for `$p = -E` before. While doing this little bit of refactor I changed rest -> kept because that makes more sense, rest sounds like its the rest of params while kept says these are the params that we've kept. I tested for no change in behavior using the following bash script: ``` reset() { cInclude=1 cxxInclude=1 cxxLibrary=1 dontLink=0 isCxx=0 nonFlagArgs=0 params=() } parseParams() { declare -i n=0 nParams=${#params[@]} while (("$n" < "$nParams")); do p=${params[n]} p2=${params[n + 1]:-} # handle `p` being last one case "$p" in -[cSEM] | -MM) dontLink=1 ;; -cc1) cc1=1 ;; -nostdinc) cInclude=0 cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdinc++) cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdlib) cxxLibrary=0 ;; -x) case "$p2" in *-header) dontLink=1 ;; c++*) isCxx=1 ;; esac ;; -?*) ;; *) nonFlagArgs=1 ;; # Includes a solitary dash (`-`) which signifies standard input; it is not a flag esac n+=1 done } for p in c S E M MM; do reset params=-$p parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 done reset params=(-x foo-header) parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=(-x c++-foo) parseParams [[ $isCxx != 1 ]] && echo "expected isCxx=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdlib parseParams [[ $cxxLibrary != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxLibrary=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc parseParams [[ $cInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc++ parseParams [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-cc1 parseParams [[ $cc1 != 1 ]] && echo "expected cc1=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=- parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=bleh parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-? parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 0 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 exit 0 ```
2022-06-07 17:14:38 +00:00
skip "$path"
$skipNext && n+=1
continue
fi
kept+=("$p")
done
# Old bash empty array hack
cc-wrapper: Use case statements instead of bunch of if/elif checks Makes for easier to read code imo, case-in-point there was a duplicate test for `$p = -E` before. While doing this little bit of refactor I changed rest -> kept because that makes more sense, rest sounds like its the rest of params while kept says these are the params that we've kept. I tested for no change in behavior using the following bash script: ``` reset() { cInclude=1 cxxInclude=1 cxxLibrary=1 dontLink=0 isCxx=0 nonFlagArgs=0 params=() } parseParams() { declare -i n=0 nParams=${#params[@]} while (("$n" < "$nParams")); do p=${params[n]} p2=${params[n + 1]:-} # handle `p` being last one case "$p" in -[cSEM] | -MM) dontLink=1 ;; -cc1) cc1=1 ;; -nostdinc) cInclude=0 cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdinc++) cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdlib) cxxLibrary=0 ;; -x) case "$p2" in *-header) dontLink=1 ;; c++*) isCxx=1 ;; esac ;; -?*) ;; *) nonFlagArgs=1 ;; # Includes a solitary dash (`-`) which signifies standard input; it is not a flag esac n+=1 done } for p in c S E M MM; do reset params=-$p parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 done reset params=(-x foo-header) parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=(-x c++-foo) parseParams [[ $isCxx != 1 ]] && echo "expected isCxx=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdlib parseParams [[ $cxxLibrary != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxLibrary=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc parseParams [[ $cInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc++ parseParams [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-cc1 parseParams [[ $cc1 != 1 ]] && echo "expected cc1=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=- parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=bleh parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-? parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 0 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 exit 0 ```
2022-06-07 17:14:38 +00:00
params=(${kept+"${kept[@]}"})
fi
# Flirting with a layer violation here.
if [ -z "${NIX_BINTOOLS_WRAPPER_FLAGS_SET_@suffixSalt@:-}" ]; then
source @bintools@/nix-support/add-flags.sh
fi
# Put this one second so libc ldflags take priority.
if [ -z "${NIX_CC_WRAPPER_FLAGS_SET_@suffixSalt@:-}" ]; then
source @out@/nix-support/add-flags.sh
fi
# Clear march/mtune=native -- they bring impurity.
if [ "$NIX_ENFORCE_NO_NATIVE_@suffixSalt@" = 1 ]; then
cc-wrapper: Use case statements instead of bunch of if/elif checks Makes for easier to read code imo, case-in-point there was a duplicate test for `$p = -E` before. While doing this little bit of refactor I changed rest -> kept because that makes more sense, rest sounds like its the rest of params while kept says these are the params that we've kept. I tested for no change in behavior using the following bash script: ``` reset() { cInclude=1 cxxInclude=1 cxxLibrary=1 dontLink=0 isCxx=0 nonFlagArgs=0 params=() } parseParams() { declare -i n=0 nParams=${#params[@]} while (("$n" < "$nParams")); do p=${params[n]} p2=${params[n + 1]:-} # handle `p` being last one case "$p" in -[cSEM] | -MM) dontLink=1 ;; -cc1) cc1=1 ;; -nostdinc) cInclude=0 cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdinc++) cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdlib) cxxLibrary=0 ;; -x) case "$p2" in *-header) dontLink=1 ;; c++*) isCxx=1 ;; esac ;; -?*) ;; *) nonFlagArgs=1 ;; # Includes a solitary dash (`-`) which signifies standard input; it is not a flag esac n+=1 done } for p in c S E M MM; do reset params=-$p parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 done reset params=(-x foo-header) parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=(-x c++-foo) parseParams [[ $isCxx != 1 ]] && echo "expected isCxx=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdlib parseParams [[ $cxxLibrary != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxLibrary=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc parseParams [[ $cInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc++ parseParams [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-cc1 parseParams [[ $cc1 != 1 ]] && echo "expected cc1=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=- parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=bleh parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-? parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 0 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 exit 0 ```
2022-06-07 17:14:38 +00:00
kept=()
# Old bash empty array hack
for p in ${params+"${params[@]}"}; do
if [[ "$p" = -m*=native ]]; then
skip "$p"
else
cc-wrapper: Use case statements instead of bunch of if/elif checks Makes for easier to read code imo, case-in-point there was a duplicate test for `$p = -E` before. While doing this little bit of refactor I changed rest -> kept because that makes more sense, rest sounds like its the rest of params while kept says these are the params that we've kept. I tested for no change in behavior using the following bash script: ``` reset() { cInclude=1 cxxInclude=1 cxxLibrary=1 dontLink=0 isCxx=0 nonFlagArgs=0 params=() } parseParams() { declare -i n=0 nParams=${#params[@]} while (("$n" < "$nParams")); do p=${params[n]} p2=${params[n + 1]:-} # handle `p` being last one case "$p" in -[cSEM] | -MM) dontLink=1 ;; -cc1) cc1=1 ;; -nostdinc) cInclude=0 cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdinc++) cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdlib) cxxLibrary=0 ;; -x) case "$p2" in *-header) dontLink=1 ;; c++*) isCxx=1 ;; esac ;; -?*) ;; *) nonFlagArgs=1 ;; # Includes a solitary dash (`-`) which signifies standard input; it is not a flag esac n+=1 done } for p in c S E M MM; do reset params=-$p parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 done reset params=(-x foo-header) parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=(-x c++-foo) parseParams [[ $isCxx != 1 ]] && echo "expected isCxx=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdlib parseParams [[ $cxxLibrary != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxLibrary=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc parseParams [[ $cInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc++ parseParams [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-cc1 parseParams [[ $cc1 != 1 ]] && echo "expected cc1=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=- parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=bleh parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-? parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 0 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 exit 0 ```
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kept+=("$p")
fi
done
# Old bash empty array hack
cc-wrapper: Use case statements instead of bunch of if/elif checks Makes for easier to read code imo, case-in-point there was a duplicate test for `$p = -E` before. While doing this little bit of refactor I changed rest -> kept because that makes more sense, rest sounds like its the rest of params while kept says these are the params that we've kept. I tested for no change in behavior using the following bash script: ``` reset() { cInclude=1 cxxInclude=1 cxxLibrary=1 dontLink=0 isCxx=0 nonFlagArgs=0 params=() } parseParams() { declare -i n=0 nParams=${#params[@]} while (("$n" < "$nParams")); do p=${params[n]} p2=${params[n + 1]:-} # handle `p` being last one case "$p" in -[cSEM] | -MM) dontLink=1 ;; -cc1) cc1=1 ;; -nostdinc) cInclude=0 cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdinc++) cxxInclude=0 ;; -nostdlib) cxxLibrary=0 ;; -x) case "$p2" in *-header) dontLink=1 ;; c++*) isCxx=1 ;; esac ;; -?*) ;; *) nonFlagArgs=1 ;; # Includes a solitary dash (`-`) which signifies standard input; it is not a flag esac n+=1 done } for p in c S E M MM; do reset params=-$p parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 done reset params=(-x foo-header) parseParams [[ $dontLink != 1 ]] && echo "expected dontLink=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=(-x c++-foo) parseParams [[ $isCxx != 1 ]] && echo "expected isCxx=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdlib parseParams [[ $cxxLibrary != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxLibrary=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc parseParams [[ $cInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-nostdinc++ parseParams [[ $cxxInclude != 0 ]] && echo "expected cxxInclude=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-cc1 parseParams [[ $cc1 != 1 ]] && echo "expected cc1=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=- parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=bleh parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 1 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=1 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 reset params=-? parseParams [[ $nonFlagArgs != 0 ]] && echo "expected nonFlagArgs=0 for params:${params[@]}" >&2 && exit 1 exit 0 ```
2022-06-07 17:14:38 +00:00
params=(${kept+"${kept[@]}"})
fi
if [[ "$isCxx" = 1 ]]; then
if [[ "$cxxInclude" = 1 ]]; then
#
# The motivation for this comment is to explain the reason for appending
# the C++ stdlib to NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE, which I initially thought should
# change and later realized it shouldn't in:
#
# https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/185569#issuecomment-1234959249
#
# NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE contains dependencies added using "-isystem", and
# NIX_CXXSTDLIB_COMPILE adds the C++ stdlib using "-isystem". Appending
# NIX_CXXSTDLIB_COMPILE to NIX_CLAGS_COMPILE emulates this part of the
# include lookup order from GCC/Clang:
#
# > 4. Directories specified with -isystem options are scanned in
# > left-to-right order.
# > 5. Standard system directories are scanned.
# > 6. Directories specified with -idirafter options are scanned
# > in left-to-right order.
#
# NIX_CXX_STDLIB_COMPILE acts as the "standard system directories" that
# are otherwise missing from CC in nixpkgs, so should be added last.
#
# This means that the C standard library should never be present inside
# NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE, because it MUST come after the C++ stdlib. It is
# added automatically by cc-wrapper later using "-idirafter".
#
NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE_@suffixSalt@+=" $NIX_CXXSTDLIB_COMPILE_@suffixSalt@"
fi
if [[ "$cxxLibrary" = 1 ]]; then
NIX_CFLAGS_LINK_@suffixSalt@+=" $NIX_CXXSTDLIB_LINK_@suffixSalt@"
fi
fi
source @out@/nix-support/add-hardening.sh
# Add the flags for the C compiler proper.
extraAfter=(${hardeningCFlagsAfter[@]+"${hardeningCFlagsAfter[@]}"} $NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE_@suffixSalt@)
extraBefore=(${hardeningCFlagsBefore[@]+"${hardeningCFlagsBefore[@]}"} $NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE_BEFORE_@suffixSalt@)
2014-10-10 12:25:23 +00:00
if [ "$dontLink" != 1 ]; then
linkType=$(checkLinkType $NIX_LDFLAGS_BEFORE_@suffixSalt@ "${params[@]}" ${NIX_CFLAGS_LINK_@suffixSalt@:-} $NIX_LDFLAGS_@suffixSalt@)
# Add the flags that should only be passed to the compiler when
# linking.
extraAfter+=($(filterRpathFlags "$linkType" $NIX_CFLAGS_LINK_@suffixSalt@))
# Add the flags that should be passed to the linker (and prevent
# `ld-wrapper' from adding NIX_LDFLAGS_@suffixSalt@ again).
for i in $(filterRpathFlags "$linkType" $NIX_LDFLAGS_BEFORE_@suffixSalt@); do
extraBefore+=("-Wl,$i")
done
if [[ "$linkType" == dynamic && -n "$NIX_DYNAMIC_LINKER_@suffixSalt@" ]]; then
extraBefore+=("-Wl,-dynamic-linker=$NIX_DYNAMIC_LINKER_@suffixSalt@")
fi
for i in $(filterRpathFlags "$linkType" $NIX_LDFLAGS_@suffixSalt@); do
2014-10-10 12:25:23 +00:00
if [ "${i:0:3}" = -L/ ]; then
extraAfter+=("$i")
else
extraAfter+=("-Wl,$i")
fi
done
export NIX_LINK_TYPE_@suffixSalt@=$linkType
fi
if [[ -e @out@/nix-support/add-local-cc-cflags-before.sh ]]; then
source @out@/nix-support/add-local-cc-cflags-before.sh
fi
# As a very special hack, if the arguments are just `-v', then don't
# add anything. This is to prevent `gcc -v' (which normally prints
# out the version number and returns exit code 0) from printing out
# `No input files specified' and returning exit code 1.
2014-10-10 12:25:23 +00:00
if [ "$*" = -v ]; then
extraAfter=()
extraBefore=()
2014-10-10 12:25:23 +00:00
fi
# clang's -cc1 mode is not compatible with most options
# that we would pass. Rather than trying to pass only
# options that would work, let's just remove all of them.
if [ "$cc1" = 1 ]; then
extraAfter=()
extraBefore=()
fi
# Finally, if we got any positional args, append them to `extraAfter`
# now:
if [[ "${#positionalArgs[@]}" -gt 0 ]]; then
extraAfter+=(-- "${positionalArgs[@]}")
fi
# Optionally print debug info.
if (( "${NIX_DEBUG:-0}" >= 1 )); then
# Old bash workaround, see ld-wrapper for explanation.
echo "extra flags before to @prog@:" >&2
printf " %q\n" ${extraBefore+"${extraBefore[@]}"} >&2
echo "original flags to @prog@:" >&2
printf " %q\n" ${params+"${params[@]}"} >&2
echo "extra flags after to @prog@:" >&2
printf " %q\n" ${extraAfter+"${extraAfter[@]}"} >&2
fi
2016-01-25 08:54:10 +00:00
PATH="$path_backup"
# Old bash workaround, see above.
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# if a cc-wrapper-hook exists, run it.
if [[ -e @out@/nix-support/cc-wrapper-hook ]]; then
compiler=@prog@
source @out@/nix-support/cc-wrapper-hook
fi
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if (( "${NIX_CC_USE_RESPONSE_FILE:-@use_response_file_by_default@}" >= 1 )); then
responseFile=$(@mktemp@ "${TMPDIR:-/tmp}/cc-params.XXXXXX")
trap '@rm@ -f -- "$responseFile"' EXIT
printf "%q\n" \
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${extraBefore+"${extraBefore[@]}"} \
${params+"${params[@]}"} \
${extraAfter+"${extraAfter[@]}"} > "$responseFile"
@prog@ "@$responseFile"
2021-02-09 01:46:47 +00:00
else
exec @prog@ \
${extraBefore+"${extraBefore[@]}"} \
${params+"${params[@]}"} \
${extraAfter+"${extraAfter[@]}"}
fi