#!/bin/sh ##xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx## ## This file is part of ANTLR. See LICENSE.txt for licence ## ## details. Written by W. Haefelinger. ## ## ## ## Copyright (C) Wolfgang Haefelinger, 2004 ## ## ## ##xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx## ## This script shall wrap/hide how we are going to pack Java class ## files. We need to wrap this as SUN's jar does not understand ## UNIX filename notation on Cygwin. test -z "${verbose}" && { verbose=@VERBOSE@ } ## check whether we have something to do .. test -z "$1" && exit 0 case @build_os@ in cygwin) ARGV="`cygpath -m $*`" ;; *) ARGV="$*" ;; esac ## Command JAR is precomputed but user may override. if test -z "${JAR}" ; then JAR="@JAR@" jar="@jar@" else jar="`basename $JAR`" jar="`echo $jar|sed 's,\..*$,,'`" fi test -z "${DEBUG}" && { DEBUG="@DEBUG@" } ##xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx## ## Here we set flags for well know programs ## ##xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx## ## ## Do not set variable JARFLAGS here, just use it's sister ## variable 'jarflags'. This allows the call to override ## this settings - see handling of JARFLAGS below. case "${jar}" in jar) jarflags="cf" ;; *) jarflags="cf" ;; esac ##xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx## ## **NO CHANGE NECESSARY BELOW THIS LINE - EXPERTS ONLY** ## ##xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx## ## If specific flags have been configured then they overrule ## our precomputed flags. Still a user can override by using ## environment variable $JARFLAGS - see below. test -n "@JARFLAGS@" && { set x @JARFLAGS@ ; shift case $1 in +) shift JARFLAGS="${jarflags} $*" ;; -) shift jarflags="$* ${jarflags}" ;; =) shift jarflags="$*" ;; *) if test -z "$1" ; then jarflags="${jarflags}" else jarflags="$*" fi ;; esac } ## Regardless what has been configured, a user should always ## be able to override without the need to reconfigure or ## change this file. Therefore we check variable $JARFLAGS. ## In almost all cases the precomputed flags are just ok but ## some additional flags are needed. To support this in an ## easy way, we check for the very first value. If this val- ## ue is ## '+' -> append content of JARFLAGS to precomputed flags ## '-' -> prepend content -*- ## '=' -> do not use precomputed flags ## If none of these characters are given, the behaviour will ## be the same as if "=" would have been given. set x ${JARFLAGS} ; shift case $1 in +) shift JARFLAGS="${jarflags} $*" ;; -) shift JARFLAGS="$* ${jarflags}" ;; =) shift JARFLAGS="$*" ;; *) if test -z "$1" ; then JARFLAGS="${jarflags}" else JARFLAGS="$*" fi ;; esac ## Any special treatment goes here .. case "${jar}" in jar) ;; *) ;; esac ##xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx## ## This shall be the command to be excuted below ## ##xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx## cmd="${JAR} ${JARFLAGS} ${ARGV}" ##xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx## ## standard template to execute a command ## ##xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx## case "${verbose}" in 0|no|nein|non) set x ${ARGV} echo "*** creating $2 .." ;; *) echo $cmd ;; esac $cmd || { rc=$? cat <> E R R O R << ============================================================ $cmd ============================================================ Got an error while trying to execute command above. Error messages (if any) must have shown before. The exit code was: exit($rc) xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx EOF exit $rc } exit 0