#!/usr/bin/perl # RPM (and it's source code) is covered under two separate licenses. # The entire code base may be distributed under the terms of the GNU # General Public License (GPL), which appears immediately below. # Alternatively, all of the source code in the lib subdirectory of the # RPM source code distribution as well as any code derived from that # code may instead be distributed under the GNU Library General Public # License (LGPL), at the choice of the distributor. The complete text # of the LGPL appears at the bottom of this file. # This alternative is allowed to enable applications to be linked # against the RPM library (commonly called librpm) without forcing # such applications to be distributed under the GPL. # Any questions regarding the licensing of RPM should be addressed to # Erik Troan . # a simple script to print the proper name for perl libraries. # To save development time I do not parse the perl grammar but # instead just lex it looking for what I want. I take special care to # ignore comments and pod's. # it would be much better if perl could tell us the proper name of a # given script. # The filenames to scan are either passed on the command line or if # that is empty they are passed via stdin. # If there are lines in the file which match the pattern # (m/^\s*\$VERSION\s*=\s+/) # then these are taken to be the version numbers of the modules. # Special care is taken with a few known idioms for specifying version # numbers of files under rcs/cvs control. # If there are strings in the file which match the pattern # m/^\s*\$RPM_Provides\s*=\s*["'](.*)['"]/i # then these are treated as additional names which are provided by the # file and are printed as well. # I plan to rewrite this in C so that perl is not required by RPM at # build time. # by Ken Estes Mail.com kestes@staff.mail.com if ("@ARGV") { foreach (@ARGV) { next if !/\.pm$/; process_file($_); } } else { # notice we are passed a list of filenames NOT as common in unix the # contents of the file. foreach (<>) { chomp $_; next if !/\.pm$/; process_file($_) if -f $_; } } foreach $module (sort keys %require) { if (length($require{$module}) == 0) { print "perl($module)\n"; } else { # I am not using rpm3.0 so I do not want spaces around my # operators. Also I will need to change the processing of the # $RPM_* variable when I upgrade. my $v = qx{ rpm --eval '%perl_convert_version $require{$module}' }; print "perl($module) = $v\n"; } } exit 0; sub process_file { my ($file) = @_; if (!open(FILE, $file)) { warn("$0: Warning: Could not open file '$file' for reading: $!\n"); return; } my ($package, $version, $incomment, $inover) = (); while () { # skip the documentation # we should not need to have item in this if statement (it # properly belongs in the over/back section) but people do not # read the perldoc. if (m/^=(head[1-4]|pod|for|item)/) { $incomment = 1; } if (m/^=(cut)/) { $incomment = 0; $inover = 0; } if (m/^=(over)/) { $inover = 1; } if (m/^=(back)/) { $inover = 0; } if ($incomment || $inover || m/^\s*#/) { next; } # skip the data section if (m/^__(DATA|END)__$/) { last; } # not everyone puts the package name of the file as the first # package name so we report all namespaces except some common # false positives as if they were provided packages (really ugly). if (m/^\s*package\s+([_:a-zA-Z0-9]+)\s*;/) { # some internal packages, like DB, might be temporarily redefined inside a module. if (!($package && $1 eq 'DB')) { $package = $1; undef $version; if ($package eq 'main') { undef $package; } else { # If $package already exists in the $require hash, it means # the package definition is broken up over multiple blocks. # In that case, don't stomp a previous $VERSION we might have # found. (See BZ#214496.) $require{$package} = undef unless (exists $require{$package}); } } } # after we found the package name take the first assignment to # $VERSION as the version number. Exporter requires that the # variable be called VERSION so we are safe. # here are examples of VERSION lines from the perl distribution #FindBin.pm:$VERSION = $VERSION = sprintf("%d.%02d", q$Revision: 1.9 $ =~ /(\d+)\.(\d+)/); #ExtUtils/Install.pm:$VERSION = substr q$Revision: 1.9 $, 10; #CGI/Apache.pm:$VERSION = (qw$Revision: 1.9 $)[1]; #DynaLoader.pm:$VERSION = $VERSION = "1.03"; # avoid typo warning #General.pm:$Config::General::VERSION = 2.33; # # or with the new "our" pragma you could (read will) see: # # our $VERSION = '1.00' if ( $package && (m/^(.*;)?\s*((my|our)\s+)?\$(${package}::)?VERSION\s*=\s+/) ) { # first see if the version string contains the string # '$Revision' this often causes bizarre strings and is the most # common method of non static numbering. if (m/\$Revision: (\d+[.0-9]+)/) { $version = $1; } elsif (m/VERSION.*?['"]?(\d+[._0-9]+)['"]?/) { # look for a static number hard coded in the script $version= $1; } $require{$package} = $version; } # Allow someone to have a variable that defines virtual packages # The variable is called $RPM_Provides. It must be scoped with # "our", but not "local" or "my" (just would not make sense). # # For instance: # # $RPM_Provides = "blah bleah" # # Will generate provides for "blah" and "bleah". # # Each keyword can appear multiple times. Don't # bother with datastructures to store these strings, # if we need to print it print it now. if (m/^\s*\$RPM_Provides\s*=\s*["'](.*)['"]/i) { foreach $_ (split(/\s+/, $1)) { print "$_\n"; } } } close(FILE) || die("$0: Could not close file: '$file' : $!\n"); return; }