1# $NetBSD: var-scope-local.mk,v 1.5 2022/02/09 21:09:24 rillig Exp $
2#
3# Tests for target-local variables, such as ${.TARGET} or $@.  These variables
4# are relatively short-lived as they are created just before making the
5# target.  In contrast, global variables are typically created when the
6# makefiles are read in.
7#
8# The 7 built-in target-local variables are listed in the manual page.  They
9# are defined just before the target is actually made.  Additional
10# target-local variables can be defined in dependency lines like
11# 'target: VAR=value', one at a time.
12
13.MAIN: all
14
15# The target-local variables can be used in expressions, just like other
16# variables.  When these expressions are evaluated outside of a target, these
17# expressions are not yet expanded, instead their text is preserved, to allow
18# these expressions to expand right in time when the target-local variables
19# are actually set.
20#
21# Conditions from .if directives are evaluated in the scope of the command
22# line, which means that variables from the command line, from the global
23# scope and from the environment are resolved, in this order (but see the
24# command line option '-e').  In that phase, expressions involving
25# target-local variables need to be preserved, including the exact names of
26# the variables.
27#
28# Each of the built-in target-local variables has two equivalent names, for
29# example '@' is equivalent to '.TARGET'.  The implementation might
30# canonicalize these aliases at some point, and that might be surprising.
31# This aliasing happens for single-character variable names like $@ or $<
32# (see VarFind, CanonicalVarname), but not for braced or parenthesized
33# expressions like ${@}, ${.TARGET} ${VAR:Mpattern} (see Var_Parse,
34# ParseVarname).
35#
36# In the following condition, make expands '$@' to the long-format alias
37# '$(.TARGET)'; note that the alias is not written with braces, as would be
38# common in BSD makefiles, but with parentheses.  This alternative spelling
39# behaves the same though.
40.if $@ != "\$\(.TARGET)"
41.  error
42.endif
43# In the long form of writing a target-local variable, the text of the
44# expression is preserved exactly as written, no matter whether it is written
45# with '{' or '('.
46.if ${@} != "\$\{@}"
47.  error
48.endif
49.if $(@) != "\$\(@)"
50.  error
51.endif
52# If the variable expression contains modifiers, the behavior depends on the
53# actual modifiers.  The modifier ':M' keeps the expression in the state
54# 'undefined'.  Since the expression is still undefined after evaluating all
55# the modifiers, the value of the expression is discarded and the expression
56# text is used instead.  This preserves the expressions based on target-local
57# variables as long as possible.
58.if ${@:M*} != "\$\{@:M*}"
59.  error
60.endif
61# In the following examples, the expressions are based on target-local
62# variables but use the modifier ':L', which turns an undefined expression
63# into a defined one.  At the end of evaluating the expression, the state of
64# the expression is not 'undefined' anymore.  The value of the expression
65# is the name of the variable, since that's what the modifier ':L' does.
66.if ${@:L} != "@"
67.  error
68.endif
69.if ${.TARGET:L} != ".TARGET"
70.  error
71.endif
72.if ${@F:L} != "@F"
73.  error
74.endif
75.if ${@D:L} != "@D"
76.  error
77.endif
78
79
80# Additional target-local variables may be defined in dependency lines.
81.MAKEFLAGS: -dv
82# In the following line, the ':=' may either be interpreted as an assignment
83# operator or as the dependency operator ':', followed by an empty variable
84# name and the assignment operator '='.  It is the latter since in an
85# assignment, the left-hand side must be at most a single word.  The empty
86# variable name is expanded twice, once for 'one' and once for 'two'.
87# expect: Var_SetExpand: variable name "" expands to empty string, with value "three" - ignored
88# expect: Var_SetExpand: variable name "" expands to empty string, with value "three" - ignored
89one two:=three
90# If the two targets to the left are generated by a variable expression, the
91# line is parsed as a variable assignment since its left-hand side is a single
92# word.
93# expect: Global: one two = three
94${:Uone two}:=three
95.MAKEFLAGS: -d0
96
97
98.SUFFIXES: .c .o
99
100# One of the dynamic target-local variables is '.TARGET'.  Since this is not
101# a suffix transformation rule, the variable '.IMPSRC' is not defined.
102# expect: : Making var-scope-local.c out of nothing.
103var-scope-local.c:
104	: Making ${.TARGET} ${.IMPSRC:Dfrom ${.IMPSRC}:Uout of nothing}.
105
106# This is a suffix transformation rule, so both '.TARGET' and '.IMPSRC' are
107# defined.
108# expect: : Making var-scope-local.o from var-scope-local.c.
109# expect: : Making basename "var-scope-local.o" in "." from "var-scope-local.c" in ".".
110.c.o:
111	: Making ${.TARGET} from ${.IMPSRC}.
112
113	# The local variables @F, @D, <F, <D are legacy forms.
114	# See the manual page for details.
115	: Making basename "${@F}" in "${@D}" from "${<F}" in "${<D}".
116
117# expect: : all overwritten
118all: var-scope-local.o
119	# The ::= modifier overwrites the .TARGET variable in the node
120	# 'all', not in the global scope.  This can be seen with the -dv
121	# option, looking for "all: @ = overwritten".
122	: ${.TARGET} ${.TARGET::=overwritten}${.TARGET}
123
124
125# Begin tests for custom target-local variables, for all 5 variable assignment
126# operators.
127all: var-scope-local-assign.o
128all: var-scope-local-append.o
129all: var-scope-local-append-global.o
130all: var-scope-local-default.o
131all: var-scope-local-subst.o
132all: var-scope-local-shell.o
133
134var-scope-local-assign.o \
135var-scope-local-append.o \
136var-scope-local-append-global.o \
137var-scope-local-default.o \
138var-scope-local-subst.o \
139var-scope-local-shell.o:
140	: Making ${.TARGET} with VAR="${VAR}".
141
142# Target-local variables are enabled by default.  Force them to be enabled
143# just in case a test above has disabled them.
144.MAKE.TARGET_LOCAL_VARIABLES= yes
145
146VAR=	global
147
148# If the sources of a dependency line look like a variable assignment, make
149# treats them as such.  There is only a single variable assignment per
150# dependency line, which makes whitespace around the assignment operator
151# irrelevant.
152#
153# expect-reset
154# expect: : Making var-scope-local-assign.o with VAR="local".
155var-scope-local-assign.o: VAR= local
156
157# Assignments using '+=' do *not* look up the global value, instead they only
158# look up the variable in the target's own scope.
159var-scope-local-append.o: VAR+= local
160# Once a variable is defined in the target-local scope, appending using '+='
161# behaves as expected.  Note that the expression '${.TARGET}' is not resolved
162# when parsing the dependency line, its evaluation is deferred until the
163# target is actually made.
164# expect: : Making var-scope-local-append.o with VAR="local to var-scope-local-append.o".
165var-scope-local-append.o: VAR += to ${.TARGET}
166# To access the value of a global variable, use a variable expression.  This
167# expression is expanded before parsing the whole dependency line.  Since the
168# expansion happens to the right of the dependency operator ':', the expanded
169# text does not influence parsing of the dependency line.  Since the expansion
170# happens to the right of the assignment operator '=', the expanded text does
171# not influence the parsing of the variable assignment.  The effective
172# variable assignment, after expanding the whole line first, is thus
173# 'VAR= global+local'.
174# expect: : Making var-scope-local-append-global.o with VAR="global+local".
175var-scope-local-append-global.o: VAR= ${VAR}+local
176
177var-scope-local-default.o: VAR ?= first
178var-scope-local-default.o: VAR ?= second
179# XXX: '?=' does look at the global variable.  That's a long-standing
180# inconsistency between the assignment operators '+=' and '?='.  See
181# Var_AppendExpand and VarAssign_Eval.
182# expect: : Making var-scope-local-default.o with VAR="global".
183
184# Using the variable assignment operator ':=' provides another way of
185# accessing a global variable and extending it with local modifications.  The
186# '$' has to be written as '$$' though to survive the expansion of the
187# dependency line as a whole.  After that, the parser sees the variable
188# assignment as 'VAR := ${VAR}+local' and searches for the variable 'VAR' in
189# the usual scopes, picking up the variable from the global scope.
190# expect: : Making var-scope-local-subst.o with VAR="global+local".
191var-scope-local-subst.o: VAR := $${VAR}+local
192
193# The variable assignment operator '!=' assigns the output of the shell
194# command, as everywhere else.  The shell command is run when the dependency
195# line is parsed.
196var-scope-local-shell.o: VAR != echo output
197
198
199# While VAR=use will be set for a .USE node, it will never be seen since only
200# the ultimate target's context is searched; the variable assignments from the
201# .USE target are not copied to the ultimate target's.
202# expect: : var-scope-local-use.o uses .USE VAR="global"
203a_use: .USE VAR=use
204	: ${.TARGET} uses .USE VAR="${VAR}"
205
206all: var-scope-local-use.o
207var-scope-local-use.o: a_use
208
209
210# Since parse.c 1.656 from 2022-01-27 and before parse.c 1.662 from
211# 2022-02-05, there was an out-of-bounds read in Parse_IsVar when looking for
212# a variable assignment in a dependency line with trailing whitespace.  Lines
213# without trailing whitespace were not affected.  Global variable assignments
214# were guaranteed to have no trailing whitespace and were thus not affected.
215#
216# Try to reproduce some variants that may lead to a crash, depending on the
217# memory allocator.  To get a crash, the terminating '\0' of the line must be
218# the last byte of a memory page.  The expression '${:U}' forces this trailing
219# whitespace.
220
221# On FreeBSD x86_64, a crash could in some cases be forced using the following
222# line, which has length 47, so the terminating '\0' may end up at an address
223# of the form 0xXXXX_XXXX_XXXX_Xfff:
224Try_to_crash_FreeBSD.xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx: 12345 ${:U}
225
226# The following line has length 4095, so line[4095] == '\0'.  If the line is
227# allocated on a page boundary and the following page is not mapped, this line
228# leads to a segmentation fault.
229${:U:range=511:@_@1234567@:ts.}: 12345 ${:U}
230
231# The following line has length 8191, so line[8191] == '\0'.  If the line is
232# allocated on a page boundary and the following page is not mapped, this line
233# leads to a segmentation fault.
234${:U:range=1023:@_@1234567@:ts.}: 12345 ${:U}
235
23612345:
237