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-rw-r--r--ChangeLog12
-rw-r--r--doc/make.texi56
-rw-r--r--main.c43
-rw-r--r--make.h2
-rw-r--r--tests/ChangeLog5
-rw-r--r--tests/scripts/variables/MAKELEVEL3
-rw-r--r--tests/scripts/variables/SHELL49
-rw-r--r--variable.c26
8 files changed, 150 insertions, 46 deletions
diff --git a/ChangeLog b/ChangeLog
index 6ec8a1d..b1dcefd 100644
--- a/ChangeLog
+++ b/ChangeLog
@@ -1,5 +1,17 @@
2004-11-28 Paul D. Smith <psmith@gnu.org>
+ Fix for bug #1276: Handle SHELL according to POSIX requirements.
+
+ * main.c (main): Set SHELL to v_noexport by default. Remember the
+ original environment setting of SHELL in the env_shell variable.
+ * main.h: Export new env_shell variable.
+ * variable.c (target_environment): If we find a v_noexport
+ variable for SHELL, add a SHELL variable with the env_shell value.
+ * doc/make.texi (Quick Reference): Document the POSIX behavior.
+ * doc/make.texi (Variables/Recursion): Ditto.
+
+2004-11-28 Paul D. Smith <psmith@gnu.org>
+
* main.c (find_and_set_default_shell) [WINDOWS32]: check for
equality of "cmd"/"cmd.exe", not inequality. Fixes bug #11155.
Patch by Alessandro Vesely.
diff --git a/doc/make.texi b/doc/make.texi
index a31c3ad..14d7278 100644
--- a/doc/make.texi
+++ b/doc/make.texi
@@ -3732,9 +3732,15 @@ line, and if its name consists only of letters, numbers, and underscores.
Some shells cannot cope with environment variable names consisting of
characters other than letters, numbers, and underscores.
-The special variables @code{SHELL} and @code{MAKEFLAGS} are always
-exported (unless you unexport them).
-@code{MAKEFILES} is exported if you set it to anything.
+@cindex SHELL, exported value
+The value of the @code{make} variable @code{SHELL} is not exported.
+Instead, the value of the @code{SHELL} variable from the invoking
+environment is passed to the sub-@code{make}. You can force
+@code{make} to export its value for @code{SHELL} by using the
+@code{export} directive, described below.
+
+The special variable @code{MAKEFLAGS} is always exported (unless you
+unexport it). @code{MAKEFILES} is exported if you set it to anything.
@code{make} automatically passes down variable values that were defined
on the command line, by putting them in the @code{MAKEFLAGS} variable.
@@ -5137,28 +5143,28 @@ endef
@cindex variables, environment
@cindex environment
Variables in @code{make} can come from the environment in which
-@code{make} is run. Every environment variable that @code{make} sees when
-it starts up is transformed into a @code{make} variable with the same name
-and value. But an explicit assignment in the makefile, or with a command
-argument, overrides the environment. (If the @samp{-e} flag is specified,
-then values from the environment override assignments in the makefile.
-@xref{Options Summary, ,Summary of Options}.
-But this is not recommended practice.)
+@code{make} is run. Every environment variable that @code{make} sees
+when it starts up is transformed into a @code{make} variable with the
+same name and value. However, an explicit assignment in the makefile,
+or with a command argument, overrides the environment. (If the
+@samp{-e} flag is specified, then values from the environment override
+assignments in the makefile. @xref{Options Summary, ,Summary of
+Options}. But this is not recommended practice.)
Thus, by setting the variable @code{CFLAGS} in your environment, you can
cause all C compilations in most makefiles to use the compiler switches you
prefer. This is safe for variables with standard or conventional meanings
-because you know that no makefile will use them for other things. (But
+because you know that no makefile will use them for other things. (Note
this is not totally reliable; some makefiles set @code{CFLAGS} explicitly
and therefore are not affected by the value in the environment.)
-When @code{make} is invoked recursively, variables defined in the
-outer invocation can be passed to inner invocations through the
-environment (@pxref{Recursion, ,Recursive Use of @code{make}}). By
-default, only variables that came from the environment or the command
-line are passed to recursive invocations. You can use the
-@code{export} directive to pass other variables.
-@xref{Variables/Recursion, , Communicating Variables to a
+When @code{make} runs a command script, variables defined in the
+makefile are placed into the environment of that command. This allows
+you to pass values to sub-@code{make} invocations. (@pxref{Recursion,
+,Recursive Use of @code{make}}). By default, only variables that came
+from the environment or the command line are passed to recursive
+invocations. You can use the @code{export} directive to pass other
+variables. @xref{Variables/Recursion, , Communicating Variables to a
Sub-@code{make}}, for full details.
Other use of variables from the environment is not recommended. It is not
@@ -5167,6 +5173,7 @@ set up outside their control, since this would cause different users to get
different results from the same makefile. This is against the whole
purpose of most makefiles.
+@cindex SHELL, import from environment
Such problems would be especially likely with the variable @code{SHELL},
which is normally present in the environment to specify the user's choice
of interactive shell. It would be very undesirable for this choice to
@@ -5175,6 +5182,15 @@ affect @code{make}. So @code{make} ignores the environment value of
usually not set. @xref{Execution, ,Special handling of SHELL on
MS-DOS}.)@refill
+@cindex SHELL, export to environment
+The @code{SHELL} variable is special in another way: just as the value
+of the @code{make} variable @code{SHELL} is not taken from the
+environment, so also it is not placed into the environment of commands
+that @code{make} invokes. Instead, the value of @code{SHELL} from the
+invoking environment is provided to the command. You can use
+@code{export SHELL} to force the value of the @code{make} variable
+@code{SHELL} to be placed in the environment of commands.
+
@node Target-specific, Pattern-specific, Environment, Using Variables
@section Target-specific Variable Values
@cindex target-specific variables
@@ -9865,7 +9881,9 @@ Directory search path for files not found in the current directory.@*
The name of the system default command interpreter, usually @file{/bin/sh}.
You can set @code{SHELL} in the makefile to change the shell used to run
-commands. @xref{Execution, ,Command Execution}.
+commands. @xref{Execution, ,Command Execution}. The @code{SHELL}
+variable is handled specially when importing from and exporting to the
+environment. @xref{Environment, ,Using Variable from the Environment}.
@item MAKESHELL
diff --git a/main.c b/main.c
index ca6318b..f0229ee 100644
--- a/main.c
+++ b/main.c
@@ -264,6 +264,10 @@ int always_make_flag = 0;
int rebuilding_makefiles = 0;
+/* Remember the original value of the SHELL variable, from the environment. */
+
+const char *env_shell = 0;
+
/* The usage output. We write it this way to make life easier for the
translators, especially those trying to translate to right-to-left
@@ -1045,11 +1049,8 @@ main (int argc, char **argv, char **envp)
#ifndef _AMIGA
for (i = 0; envp[i] != 0; ++i)
{
- int do_not_define;
- register char *ep = envp[i];
-
- /* by default, everything gets defined and exported */
- do_not_define = 0;
+ int do_not_define = 0;
+ char *ep = envp[i];
while (*ep != '=')
++ep;
@@ -1065,17 +1066,27 @@ main (int argc, char **argv, char **envp)
machines where ptrdiff_t is a different size that doesn't widen
the same. */
if (!do_not_define)
- define_variable (envp[i], (unsigned int) (ep - envp[i]),
- ep + 1, o_env, 1)
- /* Force exportation of every variable culled from the environment.
- We used to rely on target_environment's v_default code to do this.
- But that does not work for the case where an environment variable
- is redefined in a makefile with `override'; it should then still
- be exported, because it was originally in the environment.
- Another wrinkle is that POSIX says the value of SHELL set in the
- makefile should not change the value of SHELL given to
- subprocesses, which seems silly to me but... */
- ->export = strncmp(envp[i], "SHELL=", 6) ? v_noexport : v_export;
+ {
+ struct variable *v;
+
+ v = define_variable (envp[i], (unsigned int) (ep - envp[i]),
+ ep + 1, o_env, 1);
+ /* Force exportation of every variable culled from the environment.
+ We used to rely on target_environment's v_default code to do this.
+ But that does not work for the case where an environment variable
+ is redefined in a makefile with `override'; it should then still
+ be exported, because it was originally in the environment. */
+ v->export = v_export;
+
+ /* Another wrinkle is that POSIX says the value of SHELL set in the
+ makefile should not change the value of SHELL given to
+ subprocesses, which seems silly to me but... */
+ if (strncmp (envp[i], "SHELL=", 6) == 0)
+ {
+ v->export = v_noexport;
+ env_shell = xstrdup (ep + 1);
+ }
+ }
}
#ifdef WINDOWS32
/*
diff --git a/make.h b/make.h
index ad46e1f..55dcc21 100644
--- a/make.h
+++ b/make.h
@@ -496,6 +496,8 @@ extern int print_version_flag, print_directory_flag;
extern int warn_undefined_variables_flag, posix_pedantic, not_parallel;
extern int clock_skew_detected, rebuilding_makefiles;
+extern const char *env_shell;
+
/* can we run commands via 'sh -c xxx' or must we use batch files? */
extern int batch_mode_shell;
diff --git a/tests/ChangeLog b/tests/ChangeLog
index 8cc25db..a6423b0 100644
--- a/tests/ChangeLog
+++ b/tests/ChangeLog
@@ -1,3 +1,8 @@
+2004-11-28 Paul D. Smith <psmith@gnu.org>
+
+ * scripts/variables/SHELL: New file: test proper handling of SHELL
+ according to POSIX rules. Fixes bug #1276.
+
2004-10-21 Boris Kolpackov <boris@kolpackov.net>
* scripts/functions/word: Test $(firstword ) and $(lastword ).
diff --git a/tests/scripts/variables/MAKELEVEL b/tests/scripts/variables/MAKELEVEL
index 79a184e..96a4e74 100644
--- a/tests/scripts/variables/MAKELEVEL
+++ b/tests/scripts/variables/MAKELEVEL
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-# -*-perl-mode-*-
+# -*-perl-*-
$description = "The following test creates a makefile to test
makelevels in Make. It prints \$(MAKELEVEL) and then
@@ -9,7 +9,6 @@ open(MAKEFILE,"> $makefile");
# The Contents of the MAKEFILE ...
print MAKEFILE <<EOF;
-SHELL = /bin/sh
all:
\t\@echo MAKELEVEL is \$(MAKELEVEL)
\techo \$\$MAKELEVEL
diff --git a/tests/scripts/variables/SHELL b/tests/scripts/variables/SHELL
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9ff5c4b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/tests/scripts/variables/SHELL
@@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
+# -*-perl-*-
+
+$description = "Test proper handling of SHELL.";
+
+# Find the default value when SHELL is not set. On UNIX it will be /bin/sh,
+# but on other platforms who knows?
+$oshell = $ENV{SHELL};
+delete $ENV{SHELL};
+$mshell = `echo 'all:;\@echo \$(SHELL)' | $make_name -f-`;
+chop $mshell;
+
+# According to POSIX, the value of SHELL in the environment has no impact on
+# the value in the makefile.
+
+$ENV{SHELL} = '/dev/null';
+run_make_test('all:;@echo "$(SHELL)"', '', $mshell);
+
+# According to POSIX, any value of SHELL set in the makefile should _NOT_ be
+# exported to the subshell! I wanted to set SHELL to be $^X (perl) in the
+# makefile, but make runs $(SHELL) -c 'commandline' and that doesn't work at
+# all when $(SHELL) is perl :-/. So, we just add an extra initial / and hope
+# for the best on non-UNIX platforms :-/.
+
+$ENV{SHELL} = $mshell;
+
+run_make_test("SHELL := /$mshell\n".'
+all:;@echo "$(SHELL) $$SHELL"
+', '', "/$mshell $mshell");
+
+# As a GNU make extension, if make's SHELL variable is explicitly exported,
+# then we really _DO_ export it.
+
+run_make_test("export SHELL := /$mshell\n".'
+all:;@echo "$(SHELL) $$SHELL"
+', '', "/$mshell /$mshell");
+
+
+# Test out setting of SHELL, both exported and not, as a target-specific
+# variable.
+
+run_make_test("all: SHELL := /$mshell\n".'
+all:;@echo "$(SHELL) $$SHELL"
+', '', "/$mshell $mshell");
+
+run_make_test("all: export SHELL := /$mshell\n".'
+all:;@echo "$(SHELL) $$SHELL"
+', '', "/$mshell $mshell");
+
+1;
diff --git a/variable.c b/variable.c
index 31b84a4..8398d18 100644
--- a/variable.c
+++ b/variable.c
@@ -739,16 +739,14 @@ define_automatic_variables (void)
#endif
- /* This won't override any definition, but it
- will provide one if there isn't one there. */
+ /* This won't override any definition, but it will provide one if there
+ isn't one there. */
v = define_variable ("SHELL", 5, default_shell, o_default, 0);
- v->export = v_export; /* Always export SHELL. */
- /* On MSDOS we do use SHELL from environment, since
- it isn't a standard environment variable on MSDOS,
- so whoever sets it, does that on purpose.
- On OS/2 we do not use SHELL from environment but
- we have already handled that problem above. */
+ /* On MSDOS we do use SHELL from environment, since it isn't a standard
+ environment variable on MSDOS, so whoever sets it, does that on purpose.
+ On OS/2 we do not use SHELL from environment but we have already handled
+ that problem above. */
#if !defined(__MSDOS__) && !defined(__EMX__)
/* Don't let SHELL come from the environment. */
if (*v->value == '\0' || v->origin == o_env || v->origin == o_env_override)
@@ -809,6 +807,11 @@ target_environment (struct file *file)
struct variable makelevel_key;
char **result_0;
char **result;
+ struct variable ev;
+
+ /* Set up a fake variable struct for the original SHELL value. */
+ ev.name = "SHELL";
+ ev.value = env_shell;
if (file == 0)
set_list = current_variable_set_list;
@@ -865,7 +868,12 @@ target_environment (struct file *file)
break;
case v_noexport:
- continue;
+ if (!streq (v->name, "SHELL"))
+ continue;
+ /* If this is the SHELL variable and it's not exported, then
+ add the value from our original environment. */
+ v = &ev;
+ break;
case v_ifset:
if (v->origin == o_default)