1# $NetBSD: cond-short.mk,v 1.23 2023/11/19 22:32:44 rillig Exp $
2#
3# Demonstrates that in conditions, the right-hand side of an && or ||
4# is only evaluated if it can actually influence the result.
5# This is called 'short-circuit evaluation' and is the usual evaluation
6# mode in most programming languages.  A notable exception is Ada, which
7# distinguishes between the operators 'And', 'And Then', 'Or', 'Or Else'.
8#
9# Before 2020-06-28, the right-hand side of an && or || operator was always
10# evaluated, which was wrong.  In cond.c 1.69 and var.c 1.197 on 2015-10-11,
11# Var_Parse got a new parameter named 'wantit'.  Since then it would have been
12# possible to skip evaluation of irrelevant expressions and only
13# parse them.  They were still evaluated though, the only difference to
14# relevant expressions was that in the irrelevant
15# expressions, undefined variables were allowed.  This allowed for conditions
16# like 'defined(VAR) && ${VAR:S,from,to,} != ""', which no longer produced an
17# error message 'Malformed conditional', but the irrelevant expression was
18# still evaluated.
19#
20# Since the initial commit on 1993-03-21, the manual page has been saying that
21# make 'will only evaluate a conditional as far as is necessary to determine',
22# but that was wrong.  The code in cond.c 1.1 from 1993-03-21 looks good since
23# it calls Var_Parse(condExpr, VAR_CMD, doEval,&varSpecLen,&doFree), but the
24# definition of Var_Parse did not call the third parameter 'doEval', as would
25# be expected, but instead 'err', accompanied by the comment 'TRUE if
26# undefined variables are an error'.  This subtle difference between 'do not
27# evaluate at all' and 'allow undefined variables' led to the unexpected
28# evaluation.
29#
30# See also:
31#	var-eval-short.mk, for short-circuited variable modifiers
32
33# The && operator:
34
35.if 0 && ${echo "unexpected and" 1>&2 :L:sh}
36.endif
37
38.if 1 && ${echo "expected and" 1>&2 :L:sh}
39.endif
40
41.if 0 && exists(nonexistent${echo "unexpected and exists" 1>&2 :L:sh})
42.endif
43
44.if 1 && exists(nonexistent${echo "expected and exists" 1>&2 :L:sh})
45.endif
46
47.if 0 && empty(${echo "unexpected and empty" 1>&2 :L:sh})
48.endif
49
50.if 1 && empty(${echo "expected and empty" 1>&2 :L:sh})
51.endif
52
53# "VAR U11" is not evaluated; it was evaluated before 2020-07-02.
54# The whole !empty condition is only parsed and then discarded.
55VAR=	${VAR${:U11${echo "unexpected VAR U11" 1>&2 :L:sh}}}
56VAR13=	${VAR${:U12${echo "unexpected VAR13" 1>&2 :L:sh}}}
57.if 0 && !empty(VAR${:U13${echo "unexpected U13 condition" 1>&2 :L:sh}})
58.endif
59
60VAR=	${VAR${:U21${echo "unexpected VAR U21" 1>&2 :L:sh}}}
61VAR23=	${VAR${:U22${echo   "expected VAR23" 1>&2 :L:sh}}}
62.if 1 && !empty(VAR${:U23${echo   "expected U23 condition" 1>&2 :L:sh}})
63.endif
64VAR=	# empty again, for the following tests
65
66# The :M modifier is only parsed, not evaluated.
67# Before 2020-07-02, it was wrongly evaluated.
68.if 0 && !empty(VAR:M${:U${echo "unexpected M pattern" 1>&2 :L:sh}})
69.endif
70
71.if 1 && !empty(VAR:M${:U${echo   "expected M pattern" 1>&2 :L:sh}})
72.endif
73
74.if 0 && !empty(VAR:S,from,${:U${echo "unexpected S modifier" 1>&2 :L:sh}},)
75.endif
76
77.if 0 && !empty(VAR:C,from,${:U${echo "unexpected C modifier" 1>&2 :L:sh}},)
78.endif
79
80.if 0 && !empty("" == "" :? ${:U${echo "unexpected ? modifier" 1>&2 :L:sh}} :)
81.endif
82
83.if 0 && !empty(VAR:old=${:U${echo "unexpected = modifier" 1>&2 :L:sh}})
84.endif
85
86.if 0 && !empty(1 2 3:L:@var@${:U${echo "unexpected @ modifier" 1>&2 :L:sh}}@)
87.endif
88
89.if 0 && !empty(:U${:!echo "unexpected exclam modifier" 1>&2 !})
90.endif
91
92# Irrelevant assignment modifiers are skipped as well.
93.if 0 && ${1 2 3:L:@i@${FIRST::?=$i}@}
94.endif
95.if 0 && ${1 2 3:L:@i@${LAST::=$i}@}
96.endif
97.if 0 && ${1 2 3:L:@i@${APPENDED::+=$i}@}
98.endif
99.if 0 && ${echo.1 echo.2 echo.3:L:@i@${RAN::!=${i:C,.*,&; & 1>\&2,:S,., ,g}}@}
100.endif
101.if defined(FIRST) || defined(LAST) || defined(APPENDED) || defined(RAN)
102.  warning first=${FIRST} last=${LAST} appended=${APPENDED} ran=${RAN}
103.endif
104
105# The || operator:
106
107.if 1 || ${echo "unexpected or" 1>&2 :L:sh}
108.endif
109
110.if 0 || ${echo "expected or" 1>&2 :L:sh}
111.endif
112
113.if 1 || exists(nonexistent${echo "unexpected or exists" 1>&2 :L:sh})
114.endif
115
116.if 0 || exists(nonexistent${echo "expected or exists" 1>&2 :L:sh})
117.endif
118
119.if 1 || empty(${echo "unexpected or empty" 1>&2 :L:sh})
120.endif
121
122.if 0 || empty(${echo "expected or empty" 1>&2 :L:sh})
123.endif
124
125# Unreachable nested conditions are skipped completely as well.  These skipped
126# lines may even contain syntax errors.  This allows to skip syntactically
127# incompatible new features in older versions of make.
128
129.if 0
130.  if ${echo "unexpected nested and" 1>&2 :L:sh}
131.  endif
132.endif
133
134.if 1
135.elif ${echo "unexpected nested or" 1>&2 :L:sh}
136.endif
137
138
139NUMBER=		42
140INDIR_NUMBER=	${NUMBER}
141INDIR_UNDEF=	${UNDEF}
142
143.if defined(NUMBER) && ${NUMBER} > 0
144.else
145.  error
146.endif
147
148# Starting with var.c 1.226 from from 2020-07-02, the following condition
149# triggered a warning: "String comparison operator should be either == or !=".
150#
151# The left-hand side of the '&&' evaluated to false, which should have made
152# the right-hand side irrelevant.
153#
154# On the right-hand side of the '&&', the expression ${INDIR_UNDEF} was
155# defined and had the value '${UNDEF}', but the nested variable UNDEF was
156# undefined.  The right hand side "${INDIR_UNDEF}" still needed to be parsed,
157# and in parse-only mode, the "value" of the parsed expression was the
158# uninterpreted variable value, in this case '${UNDEF}'.  And even though the
159# right hand side of the '&&' should have been irrelevant, the two sides of
160# the comparison were still parsed and evaluated.  Comparing these two values
161# numerically was not possible since the string '${UNDEF}' is not a number,
162# so the comparison fell back to string comparison, which then complained
163# about the '>' operator.
164#
165# This was fixed in cond.c 1.79 from 2020-07-09 by not evaluating irrelevant
166# comparisons.  Instead, they are only parsed and then discarded.
167#
168# At that time, there was not enough debug logging to see the details in the
169# -dA log.  To actually see it, add debug logging at the beginning and end of
170# Var_Parse.
171.if defined(UNDEF) && ${INDIR_UNDEF} < ${NUMBER}
172.  error
173.endif
174# Adding a ':U' modifier to the irrelevant expression didn't help, as that
175# expression was only parsed, not evaluated.  The resulting literal string
176# '${INDIR_UNDEF:U2}' was not numeric either, for the same reason as above.
177.if defined(UNDEF) && ${INDIR_UNDEF:U2} < ${NUMBER}
178.  error
179.endif
180
181
182# Since cond.c 1.76 from 2020.06.28 and before var.c 1.225 from 2020.07.01,
183# the following snippet resulted in the error message 'Variable VAR is
184# recursive'.  The condition '0' evaluated to false, which made the right-hand
185# side of the '&&' irrelevant.  Back then, irrelevant condition parts were
186# still evaluated, but in "irrelevant mode", which allowed undefined variables
187# to occur in expressions.  In this mode, the variable name 'VAR' was
188# unnecessarily evaluated, resulting in the expression '${VAR${:U1}}'.  In
189# this expression, the variable name was 'VAR${:U1}', and of this variable
190# name, only the fixed part 'VAR' was evaluated, without the part '${:U1}'.
191# This partial evaluation led to the wrong error message about 'VAR' being
192# recursive.
193VAR=	${VAR${:U1}}
194.if 0 && !empty(VAR)
195.endif
196
197
198# Enclosing the expression in double quotes changes how that expression is
199# evaluated.  In irrelevant expressions that are enclosed in double quotes,
200# expressions based on undefined variables are allowed and evaluate to an
201# empty string.
202#
203# The manual page stated from at least 1993 on that irrelevant conditions were
204# not evaluated, but that was wrong.  These conditions were evaluated, the
205# only difference was that undefined variables in them didn't trigger an
206# error.  Since numeric conditions are quite rare, this subtle difference
207# didn't catch much attention, as most other conditions such as pattern
208# matches or equality comparisons worked fine and never produced error
209# messages.
210.if defined(UNDEF) && "${INDIR_UNDEF}" < ${NUMBER}
211.  error
212.endif
213
214# Since the condition is relevant, the indirect undefined variable is
215# evaluated as usual, resolving nested undefined expressions to an empty
216# string.
217#
218# Comparing an empty string numerically is not possible, however, make has an
219# ugly hack in TryParseNumber that treats an empty string as a valid numerical
220# value, thus hiding bugs in the makefile.
221.if ${INDIR_UNDEF} < ${NUMBER}
222#  only due to the ugly hack
223.else
224.  error
225.endif
226
227# Due to the quotes around the left-hand side of the '<', the operand is
228# marked as a string, thus preventing a numerical comparison.
229#
230# expect+1: Comparison with '<' requires both operands '' and '42' to be numeric
231.if "${INDIR_UNDEF}" < ${NUMBER}
232.  info yes
233.else
234.  info no
235.endif
236
237# The right-hand side of '||' is irrelevant and thus not evaluated.
238.if 1 || ${INDIR_NUMBER} < ${NUMBER}
239.else
240.  error
241.endif
242
243# The right-hand side of '||' is relevant and thus evaluated normally.
244.if 0 || ${INDIR_NUMBER} < ${NUMBER}
245.  error
246.endif
247
248# The right-hand side of '||' evaluates to an empty string, as the variable
249# 'INDIR_UNDEF' is defined, therefore the modifier ':U2' has no effect.
250# Comparing an empty string numerically is not possible, however, make has an
251# ugly hack in TryParseNumber that treats an empty string as a valid numerical
252# value, thus hiding bugs in the makefile.
253.if 0 || ${INDIR_UNDEF:U2} < ${NUMBER}
254#  only due to the ugly hack
255.else
256.  error
257.endif
258
259
260# The right-hand side of the '&&' is irrelevant since the left-hand side
261# already evaluates to false.  Before cond.c 1.79 from 2020-07-09, it was
262# expanded nevertheless, although with a small modification:  undefined
263# variables may be used in these expressions without generating an error.
264.if defined(UNDEF) && ${UNDEF} != "undefined"
265.  error
266.endif
267
268
269# Ensure that irrelevant conditions do not influence the result of the whole
270# condition.  As of cond.c 1.302 from 2021-12-11, an irrelevant function call
271# evaluated to true (see CondParser_FuncCall and CondParser_FuncCallEmpty), an
272# irrelevant comparison evaluated to false (see CondParser_Comparison).
273#
274# An irrelevant true bubbles up to the outermost CondParser_And, where it is
275# ignored.  An irrelevant false bubbles up to the outermost CondParser_Or,
276# where it is ignored.
277#
278# If the condition parser should ever be restructured, the bubbling up of the
279# irrelevant evaluation results might show up accidentally.  Prevent this.
280DEF=	defined
281.undef UNDEF
282
283.if 0 && defined(DEF)
284.  error
285.endif
286
287.if 1 && defined(DEF)
288.else
289.  error
290.endif
291
292.if 0 && defined(UNDEF)
293.  error
294.endif
295
296.if 1 && defined(UNDEF)
297.  error
298.endif
299
300.if 0 || defined(DEF)
301.else
302.  error
303.endif
304
305.if 1 || defined(DEF)
306.else
307.  error
308.endif
309
310.if 0 || defined(UNDEF)
311.  error
312.endif
313
314.if 1 || defined(UNDEF)
315.else
316.  error
317.endif
318
319
320all:
321