#!/bin/bash # # ***** BEGIN LICENSE BLOCK ***** # Version: MPL 1.1/GPL 2.0/LGPL 2.1 # # The contents of this file are subject to the Mozilla Public License Version # 1.1 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with # the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at # http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/ # # Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, # WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License # for the specific language governing rights and limitations under the # License. # # The Original Code is uuidgrep.bash code, released # Nov 26, 2002. # # The Initial Developer of the Original Code is # Netscape Communications Corporation. # Portions created by the Initial Developer are Copyright (C) 2002 # the Initial Developer. All Rights Reserved. # # Contributor(s): # Garrett Arch Blythe, 26-November-2002 # # Alternatively, the contents of this file may be used under the terms of # either the GNU General Public License Version 2 or later (the "GPL"), or # the GNU Lesser General Public License Version 2.1 or later (the "LGPL"), # in which case the provisions of the GPL or the LGPL are applicable instead # of those above. If you wish to allow use of your version of this file only # under the terms of either the GPL or the LGPL, and not to allow others to # use your version of this file under the terms of the MPL, indicate your # decision by deleting the provisions above and replace them with the notice # and other provisions required by the GPL or the LGPL. If you do not delete # the provisions above, a recipient may use your version of this file under # the terms of any one of the MPL, the GPL or the LGPL. # # ***** END LICENSE BLOCK ***** # # This file is meant to be run from the parent directory of the # source tree. # It does some fairly brain dead grepping to determine where # uuids are defined, and where they may be refereced. # # A report is generated in the end, which could be saved. # There are two sections to the report, on one usage and one on # definitions. # # One day a stronger tool will likely be written, but this is a start # on reporting source dependencies on uuids. # # Place to store stuff. MYTMPDIR=`mktemp -d /tmp/deps.tmp.XXXXXXXX` # What we are matching on. # If you want only CIDs, or IIDs, change. SEARCHING4="[~#]*NS_DEFINE_[CI]ID[:space:]*(.*,.*)[:space:]*;" # Find the source files. # Exclude the dist directory to find the headers in their natural dirs. ALLSOURCEFILES=$MYTMPDIR/allsources.txt find . -type f -and \( -name \*.cpp -or -name \*.c -or -name \*.h \) > $ALLSOURCEFILES # Go through the sources and find what we want. # Assuming it is all on one line.... export IDMATCHFILE=$MYTMPDIR/idmatches.txt xargs -l grep -Hn $SEARCHING4 < $ALLSOURCEFILES > $IDMATCHFILE # Separate the variable names out of the matches. # We have the possibility here of having duplicates with differing names # or of having different CIDs with the same names here, but this is as # good as it gets for now. VARNAMESFILE=$MYTMPDIR/varnames.txt sed "{ s/.*://; s/\/\/.*//; s/\/\*.*\*\///; s/.*(//; s/[#,].*//; s/ *//; }" < $IDMATCHFILE | grep -v \^\$ | sort | uniq > $VARNAMESFILE # Create a file that has states which variable were defined where. # This also helps with identification of duplicate names export DEFINITIONFILE=$MYTMPDIR/definevars.txt testdefinition () { FILENAMES=`grep $0 $IDMATCHFILE | sed s/:.*//` if [ "" != "$FILENAMES" ]; then echo $0:$FILENAMES fi } export -f testdefinition xargs -l bash -c testdefinition < $VARNAMESFILE > $DEFINITIONFILE export -n testdefinition # Find all sources which use variable names. # This will imply which libraries use the IDs, subsequently linking with said # library would cause a dependency. # This is an inferior matching method compared to actually looking at the # symbols in resultant binaries. export GREPVARMATCHFILE=$MYTMPDIR/grepvarmatches.txt xargs -l grep -F -Hn --file=$VARNAMESFILE < $ALLSOURCEFILES > $GREPVARMATCHFILE # Make a variable match file that is more readable. # Basically, remove the actual code and leave only varaible to file mapping. export VARMATCHFILE=$MYTMPDIR/usevars.txt testvarname () { grep $0 $GREPVARMATCHFILE | sed s/:.*$0.*/:$0/ } export -f testvarname xargs -l bash -c testvarname < $VARNAMESFILE | sort | uniq > $VARMATCHFILE export -n testvarname # Make a file which only contains filenames that use variables. LISTUSERFILES=$MYTMPDIR/listuserfiles.txt stripfname() { THEFNAME=`echo $0 | sed s/:.*//` echo $THEFNAME } export -f stripfname xargs -l bash -c stripfname < $VARMATCHFILE | sort | uniq > $LISTUSERFILES export -n stripfname # Output a delimiter. # Output a list of files that use the vars. # With each file, output the variable names. echo -e \*\*\* DELIMITER \*\*\* FILE depends on ID\\n listusers() { echo -e $0 depends on: SYMBOLS=`grep $0 $VARMATCHFILE | sed s/.*://` for symbol in $SYMBOLS; do echo -e \\t$symbol done echo -e \\n } export -f listusers xargs -l bash -c listusers < $LISTUSERFILES export -n listusers # Output a delimiter. # Output a list of variables. # With each variable, output the files which defined them. echo -e \*\*\* DELIMITER \*\*\* ID defined in FILE\\n listdefs() { echo -e $0 defined in: DEFINES=`grep $0 $DEFINITIONFILE | sed s/.*://` for define in $DEFINES; do echo -e \\t$define done echo -e \\n } export -f listdefs xargs -l bash -c listdefs < $VARNAMESFILE export -n listdefs # Done with the temporary stuff. rm -rf $MYTMPDIR