1# $NetBSD: varmod-assign.mk,v 1.19 2024/01/07 11:42:22 rillig Exp $
2#
3# Tests for the obscure ::= variable modifiers, which perform variable
4# assignments during evaluation, just like the = operator in C.
5
6.if !make(target)
7
8all:	mod-assign-empty
9all:	mod-assign-parse
10all:	mod-assign-shell-error
11
12# In the following loop expression,
13# the '::?=' modifier applies the assignment operator '?=' 3 times. The
14# operator '?=' only has an effect for the first time, therefore the variable
15# FIRST ends up with the value 1.
16.if "${1 2 3:L:@i@${FIRST::?=$i}@} first=${FIRST}" != " first=1"
17.  error
18.endif
19
20# In the following loop expression,
21# the modifier '::=' applies the assignment operator '=' 3 times. The
22# operator '=' overwrites the previous value, therefore the variable LAST ends
23# up with the value 3.
24.if "${1 2 3:L:@i@${LAST::=$i}@} last=${LAST}" != " last=3"
25.  error
26.endif
27
28# In the following loop expression,
29# the modifier '::+=' applies the assignment operator '+=' 3 times. The
30# operator '+=' appends 3 times to the variable, therefore the variable
31# APPENDED ends up with the value "1 2 3".
32.if "${1 2 3:L:@i@${APPENDED::+=$i}@} appended=${APPENDED}" != " appended=1 2 3"
33.  error
34.endif
35
36# In the following loop expression,
37# the modifier '::!=' applies the assignment operator '!=' 3 times. Just as
38# with the modifier '::=', the last value is stored in the RAN variable.
39.if "${1 2 3:L:@i@${RAN::!=${i:%=echo '<%>';}}@} ran=${RAN}" != " ran=<3>"
40.  error
41.endif
42
43# When a '::=' modifier is evaluated as part of an .if condition, it happens
44# in the command line scope.
45.if "${FIRST}, ${LAST}, ${APPENDED}, ${RAN}" != "1, 3, 1 2 3, <3>"
46.  error
47.endif
48
49# Tests for nested assignments, which are hard to read and therefore seldom
50# used in practice.
51
52# The condition "1" is true, therefore THEN1 gets assigned a value,
53# and the inner IT1 as well.  Nothing surprising here.
54.if "${1:?${THEN1::=then1${IT1::=t1}}:${ELSE1::=else1${IE1::=e1}}} ${THEN1}${ELSE1}${IT1}${IE1}" != " then1t1"
55.  error
56.endif
57
58# The condition "0" is false, therefore ELSE2 gets assigned a value,
59# and the inner IE2 as well.  Nothing surprising here as well.
60.if "${0:?${THEN2::=then2${IT2::=t2}}:${ELSE2::=else2${IE2::=e2}}} ${THEN2}${ELSE2}${IT2}${IE2}" != " else2e2"
61.  error
62.endif
63
64# The same effects happen when the variables are defined elsewhere.
65SINK3:=	${1:?${THEN3::=then3${IT3::=t3}}:${ELSE3::=else3${IE3::=e3}}} ${THEN3}${ELSE3}${IT3}${IE3}
66SINK4:=	${0:?${THEN4::=then4${IT4::=t4}}:${ELSE4::=else4${IE4::=e4}}} ${THEN4}${ELSE4}${IT4}${IE4}
67.if ${SINK3} != " then3t3"
68.  error
69.endif
70.if ${SINK4} != " else4e4"
71.  error
72.endif
73
74mod-assign-empty:
75	# Assigning to the empty variable would obviously not work since that
76	# variable is write-protected.  Therefore it is rejected early with a
77	# "Bad modifier" message.
78	@echo $@: ${::=value}
79
80	# In this variant, it is not as obvious that the name of the
81	# expression is empty.  Assigning to it is rejected as well, with the
82	# same "Bad modifier" message.
83	@echo $@: ${:Uvalue::=overwritten}
84
85	# The :L modifier sets the value of the expression to its variable
86	# name.  The name of the expression is "VAR", therefore assigning to
87	# that variable works.
88	@echo $@: ${VAR:L::=overwritten} VAR=${VAR}
89
90mod-assign-parse:
91	# The modifier for assignment operators starts with a ':'.
92	# An 'x' after that is an invalid modifier.
93	# expect: make: Unknown modifier ":x"
94	@echo ${ASSIGN::x}
95
96	# When parsing an assignment operator fails because the operator is
97	# incomplete, make falls back to the SysV modifier.
98	@echo ${SYSV::=sysv\:x}${SYSV::x=:y}
99
100	@echo ${ASSIGN::=value	# missing closing brace
101
102mod-assign-shell-error:
103	# If the command succeeds, the variable is assigned.
104	@${SH_OK::!= echo word; true } echo ok=${SH_OK}
105
106	# If the command fails, the variable keeps its previous value.
107	@${SH_ERR::=previous}
108	@${SH_ERR::!= echo word; false } echo err=${SH_ERR}
109
110# XXX: The ::= modifier expands its right-hand side exactly once.
111# This differs subtly from normal assignments such as '+=' or '=', which copy
112# their right-hand side literally.
113APPEND.prev=		previous
114APPEND.var=		${APPEND.prev}
115APPEND.indirect=	indirect $${:Unot expanded}
116APPEND.dollar=		$${APPEND.indirect}
117.if ${APPEND.var::+=${APPEND.dollar}} != ""
118.  error
119.endif
120.if ${APPEND.var} != "previous indirect \${:Unot expanded}"
121.  error
122.endif
123
124
125# The assignment modifier can be used in an expression that is
126# enclosed in parentheses.  In such a case, parsing stops at the first ')',
127# not at the first '}'.
128VAR=	previous
129_:=	$(VAR::=current})
130.if ${VAR} != "current}"
131.  error
132.endif
133
134
135# Before var.c 1.888 from 2021-03-15, an expression using the modifier '::='
136# expanded its variable name once too often during evaluation.  This was only
137# relevant for variable names containing a '$' sign in their actual name, not
138# the usual VAR.${param}.
139.MAKEFLAGS: -dv
140param=		twice
141VARNAME=	VAR.$${param}	# Indirect variable name because of the '$',
142				# to avoid difficult escaping rules.
143
144${VARNAME}=	initial-value	# Sets 'VAR.${param}' to 'expanded'.
145.if defined(VAR.twice)		# At this point, the '$$' is not expanded.
146.  error
147.endif
148.if ${${VARNAME}::=assigned-value} # Here the variable name gets expanded once
149.  error			# too often.
150.endif
151.if defined(VAR.twice)
152.  error The variable name in the '::=' modifier is expanded once too often.
153.endif
154.if ${${VARNAME}} != "assigned-value"
155.  error
156.endif
157.MAKEFLAGS: -d0
158
159
160# Conditional directives are evaluated in command line scope.  An assignment
161# modifier that creates a new variable creates it in the command line scope.
162# Existing variables are updated in their previous scope, and environment
163# variables are created in the global scope, as in other situations.
164.MAKEFLAGS: CMD_CMD_VAR=cmd-value
165CMD_GLOBAL_VAR=global-value
166export CMD_ENV_VAR=env-value
167.MAKEFLAGS: -dv
168# expect-reset
169# expect: Command: CMD_CMD_VAR = new-value
170# expect: Global: CMD_GLOBAL_VAR = new-value
171# expect: Global: CMD_ENV_VAR = new-value
172# expect: Global: ignoring delete 'CMD_NEW_VAR' as it is not found
173# expect: Command: CMD_NEW_VAR = new-value
174.if ${CMD_CMD_VAR::=new-value} \
175  || ${CMD_GLOBAL_VAR::=new-value} \
176  || ${CMD_ENV_VAR::=new-value} \
177  || "${CMD_NEW_VAR::=new-value}"
178.  error
179.endif
180.MAKEFLAGS: -d0
181
182# Run the 'target' test in a separate sub-make, with reduced debug logging.
183all: run-target
184run-target: .PHONY
185	@${MAKE} -r -f ${MAKEFILE} -dv target 2>&1 | grep ': TARGET_'
186
187.else # make(target)
188
189# The commands of a target are evaluated in target scope.  An assignment
190# modifier that creates a new variable creates it in the target scope.
191# Existing variables are updated in their previous scope, and environment
192# variables are created in the global scope, as in other situations.
193#
194# expect: target: TARGET_TARGET_VAR = new-value
195# expect: Global: TARGET_GLOBAL_VAR = new-value
196# expect: Global: TARGET_ENV_VAR = new-value
197# expect: target: TARGET_NEW_VAR = new-value
198.MAKEFLAGS: TARGET_CMD_VAR=cmd-value
199TARGET_GLOBAL_VAR=global-value
200export TARGET_ENV_VAR=env-value
201target: .PHONY TARGET_TARGET_VAR=target-value
202	: ${TARGET_TARGET_VAR::=new-value}
203	: ${TARGET_CMD_VAR::=new-value}
204	: ${TARGET_GLOBAL_VAR::=new-value}
205	: ${TARGET_ENV_VAR::=new-value}
206	: ${TARGET_NEW_VAR::=new-value}
207
208.endif
209