On Fri, 2010-12-03 at 15:52 -0500, Matt Turner wrote:

> From: Matthieu Herrb <[email protected]>
> 
> GNU cpp is predefining a number of symbols, depending on the host and target
> architecture. This can produce some unexpected results: for example, the
> expansion of CLIENTHOST if the host name is i386.my.domain.
> 
> The attached patch creates a new -undef option to xrdb that is passed to
> cpp.
> ---
> Should it be on by default?
> 
> Matthieu, please give your Signed-off-by.
> 
>  xrdb.c   |   12 +++++++++++-
>  xrdb.man |    4 ++++
>  2 files changed, 15 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)
> 
> diff --git a/xrdb.c b/xrdb.c
> index 21005c0..68accf8 100644
> --- a/xrdb.c
> +++ b/xrdb.c
> @@ -479,8 +479,11 @@ DoCmdDefines(String *buff)
>               *val = '=';
>           } else
>               AddSimpleDef(buff, arg + 2);
> -     } else
> +     } else if (arg[1] == 'U') {
>           AddUndef(buff, arg + 2);
> +     } else if (!strcmp(arg, "-undef") && oper != OPSYMBOLS) {
> +         addstring(buff, " -undef");
> +     }
>      }
>  }
>  
> @@ -867,6 +870,13 @@ main(int argc, char *argv[])
>                   fatal("%s: Too many -U/-D arguments\n", ProgramName);
>               }
>               continue;
> +         } else if (!strcmp ("-undef", arg)) {
> +             if (num_cmd_defines < MAX_CMD_DEFINES) {
> +                 cmd_defines[num_cmd_defines++] = "-undef";
> +             } else {
> +                 fatal("%s: Too many cpp arguments\n", ProgramName);
> +             }
> +             continue;
>           }
>           Syntax ();
>       } else if (arg[0] == '=') 
> diff --git a/xrdb.man b/xrdb.man
> index d0d45ad..ddf1a73 100644
> --- a/xrdb.man
> +++ b/xrdb.man
> @@ -223,6 +223,10 @@ This option indicates that
>  should not run the input file through a preprocessor before loading it
>  into properties.
>  .TP 8
> +.B -undef
> +This option is passed to the C preprocessor if used. It prevents it from
> +predefining any system specific macros.
> +.TP 8
>  .B \-symbols
>  This option indicates that the symbols that are defined for the preprocessor
>  should be printed onto the standard output.


If I understand, strings like CLIENTHOST were not meant to be
substituted.

What if the pre-processor is not a GNU cpp? Solaris  or something else.

You might want to look at this link, it looks like -undef does not work
properly on CYGWIN gcc 2.95.
http://www.cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2002-05/msg01613.html

The gcc doc is pretty vague as to what will not be substituted. It would
be nice to have a list of such symbols in the commit to help
investigation if something is not expected.

Acked-by: Gaetan Nadon <[email protected]>







Attachment: signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part

_______________________________________________
[email protected]: X.Org development
Archives: http://lists.x.org/archives/xorg-devel
Info: http://lists.x.org/mailman/listinfo/xorg-devel

Reply via email to