Mercurial > vim
view src/tee/tee.c @ 33566:e1e3805fcd96 v9.0.2028
patch 9.0.2028: confusing build dependencies
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/5d03525cdef5db1b1cedfa26c6f8a21aaa207ec0
Author: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Oct 15 09:50:53 2023 +0200
patch 9.0.2028: confusing build dependencies
Problem: confusing build dependencies
Solution: clean them up, make them parallelizable
Separate vim binary and unittest dependencies, make them parallelizable
Clean up make dependencies so Vim and unit test binaries only depend on
the object files they need. This fixes an existing issue where after
running unit tests, the Vim binary would be invalidated, which results
in it having to be linked again when running script tests, even though
Vim was already previously built.
Make link.sh (script we use to link those binaries) generate namespaced
temporary files for each app to avoid them colliding with each other.
This allows `unittesttargets` to be built in parallel.
These fixes are useful when using link-time-optimization as the link
phase could now take minutes rather than a few seconds.
closes: #13344
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Co-authored-by: Yee Cheng Chin <ychin.git@gmail.com>
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 15 Oct 2023 10:00:03 +0200 |
parents | 1fe2d79f7309 |
children |
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/* vim:set ts=4 sw=4: * * Copyright (c) 1996, Paul Slootman * * Author: Paul Slootman * (paul@wurtel.hobby.nl, paul@murphy.nl, paulS@toecompst.nl) * Modifications for MSVC: Yasuhiro Matsumoto * * This source code is released into the public domain. It is provided on an * as-is basis and no responsibility is accepted for its failure to perform * as expected. It is worth at least as much as you paid for it! * * tee.c - pipe fitting * * tee reads stdin, and writes what it reads to each of the specified * files. The primary reason of existence for this version is a quick * and dirty implementation to distribute with Vim, to make one of the * most useful features of Vim possible on OS/2: quickfix. * * Of course, not using tee but instead redirecting make's output directly * into a temp file and then processing that is possible, but if we have a * system capable of correctly piping (unlike DOS, for example), why not * use it as well as possible? This tee should also work on other systems, * but it's not been tested there, only on OS/2. * * tee is also available in the GNU shellutils package, which is available * precompiled for OS/2. That one probably works better. */ #ifndef _MSC_VER # include <unistd.h> #endif #include <malloc.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> #include <fcntl.h> #ifdef _WIN32 # define sysconf(x) -1 #endif void usage(void) { fprintf(stderr, "tee usage:\n\ \ttee [-a] file ... file_n\n\ \n\ \t-a\tappend to files instead of truncating\n\ \nTee reads its input, and writes to each of the specified files,\n\ as well as to the standard output.\n\ \n\ This version supplied with Vim 4.2 to make ':make' possible.\n\ For a more complete and stable version, consider getting\n\ [a port of] the GNU shellutils package.\n\ "); } /* * fread only returns when count is read or at EOF. * We could use fgets, but I want to be able to handle binary blubber. */ int myfread(char *buf, int elsize /*ignored*/, int max, FILE *fp) { int c; int n = 0; while ((n < max) && ((c = getchar()) != EOF)) { *(buf++) = c; n++; if (c == '\n' || c == '\r') break; } return n; } int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { int append = 0; size_t numfiles; int maxfiles; FILE **filepointers; int i; char buf[BUFSIZ]; int n; int optind = 1; for (i = 1; i < argc; i++) { if (argv[i][0] != '-') break; if (!strcmp(argv[i], "-a")) append++; else usage(); optind++; } numfiles = argc - optind; if (numfiles == 0) { fprintf(stderr, "doesn't make much sense using tee without any file name arguments...\n"); usage(); exit(2); } maxfiles = sysconf(_SC_OPEN_MAX); /* or fill in 10 or so */ if (maxfiles < 0) maxfiles = 10; if (numfiles + 3 > maxfiles) /* +3 accounts for stdin, out, err */ { fprintf(stderr, "Sorry, there is a limit of max %d files.\n", maxfiles - 3); exit(1); } filepointers = calloc(numfiles, sizeof(FILE *)); if (filepointers == NULL) { fprintf(stderr, "Error allocating memory for %ld files\n", (long)numfiles); exit(1); } for (i = 0; i < numfiles; i++) { filepointers[i] = fopen(argv[i+optind], append ? "ab" : "wb"); if (filepointers[i] == NULL) { fprintf(stderr, "Can't open \"%s\"\n", argv[i+optind]); exit(1); } } #ifdef _WIN32 setmode(fileno(stdin), O_BINARY); fflush(stdout); /* needed for _fsetmode(stdout) */ setmode(fileno(stdout), O_BINARY); #endif while ((n = myfread(buf, sizeof(char), sizeof(buf), stdin)) > 0) { fwrite(buf, sizeof(char), n, stdout); fflush(stdout); for (i = 0; i < numfiles; i++) { if (filepointers[i] && fwrite(buf, sizeof(char), n, filepointers[i]) != n) { fprintf(stderr, "Error writing to file \"%s\"\n", argv[i+optind]); fclose(filepointers[i]); filepointers[i] = NULL; } } } for (i = 0; i < numfiles; i++) { if (filepointers[i]) fclose(filepointers[i]); } exit(0); }