bionic (1) icmake.1.gz

Provided by: icmake_9.02.06-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       icmake - A program maintenance (make) utility using a C-like grammar

SYNOPSIS

       icmake [options] source[.im] [dest[.bim]] [-- [args]]

       icmun bimfile

DESCRIPTION

       Icmake(1)  was designed as a generic tool that can be used as an alternative to make(1), handling program
       maintenance. It’s a generic tool in that icmake-scripts, written in a language closely resembling  the  C
       programming language, can perform tasks that are traditionally the domain of scripting languages.

       Icmake  allows programmers to use a programming language (closely resembling the well-known C-programming
       language) to define the actions that are required for (complex) program  maintenance.  For  this,  icmake
       offers  various  special operators as well as a set of support functions that have shown their usefulness
       in program maintenance.

       Although icmake-scripts can be written from scratch for handling program maintenance, often the  required
       activities  are  highly  comparable. This observation resulted in the construction of two icmake-scripts:
       icmstart(1), initializing a directory for  program  development  and  icmbuild(1),  handling  the  actual
       program  maintenance.  Both  come  predefined  as  scripts  tailored  to initializing and maintaining C++
       programs (or, after minimal adaptation, C programs), but can  easily  be  adapted  to  other  programming
       languages. Both icmstart and icmbuild can be run without explicitly calling icmake.

       This  man-page covers icmake (the program), its support programs and the syntax and facilities offered by
       icmake’s scripting language. Refer to the icmstart(1)) man-page for information about how a directory can
       be  initialized  (created)  in  which  (by  default) a C++ or C program can be developed and refer to the
       icmbuild(1) man-page for information about how icmbuild can be used to handle program maintenance.

       It should be stressed that icmake and its support  programs  and  scripts  do  not  offer  an  Integrated
       Development  Environment  (IDE). It merely performs tasks for which scripts can be written, and it offers
       just a few pre-defined scripts (icmstart and icmbuild) that repeatedly have shown to be extremely  useful
       when developing and maintaining programs.

       In its standard operation mode, icmake calls the following programs:

       o      icm-pp  to preprocess the icmake file

       o      icm-comp   to byte-code compile the icmake  s

       o      icm-dep  to  handle  class-dependencies  (see  section  ICM-DEP in icmbuild(1)’s man-page for more
              information about icm-dep).

       o      icm-exec   to execute the byte-code file

       The program icmun(1) can be used to disassemble the compiled byte-code (.bim) file. Icmun is mainly  used
       for  illustration,  education,  and  debugging.  As  it  is not required for icmake’s daily use it is not
       installed in a standard PATH directory but (since icmake’s version 9.02.00) in  icmake’s  lib  directory,
       commonly /usr/lib/icmake.

       Traditional make-utilities recompile sources once header files are modified. When developing C++ programs
       this is often a bad idea, as adding a new member to a class does not normally require  you  to  recompile
       all  of the class’s source files. To handle class dependencies icmbuld(1) may inspect class dependencies,
       (re)compiling sources of dependent classes whenever necessary.  By default,  class-dependencies  are  not
       interpreted,  but this can easily be changed by activating the PRECOMP and/or USE_ALL defines in icmconf.
       Refer to the icmconf(7) man-page for further details.

       Precompiled header files can also easily be used. Precompiled header files dramatically reduce  the  time
       that is required for compiling classes’ source files. Refer to the icmconf(7) man-page (in particular the
       description of the PRECOMP define) for further details.

       Icmake’s  C-like scripting language is described in the upcoming sections of this man-page:

       o      PREPROCESSOR DIRECTIVES
              - supported preprocessor directives, like #include and #define;

       o      DATA TYPES
              - int, list, string, and void (for functions);

       o      PREDEFINED CONSTANTS
              - like O_FILE, OFF, and S_IFREG;

       o      OPERATORS
              - like +, younger, and casts

       o      FLOW CONTROL
              - if, for, while, etc. (the switch is not available);

       o      PREDEFINED FUNCTIONS
              - executing programs, changing directories, operations on string and list type variables, etc.;

       o      USER DEFINED FUNCTIONS
              - at least main, with or without its common parameters argc, argv, and envp.

OPTIONS

       Where available, single letter options are listed between parentheses beyond their associated long-option
       variants.

       The -- option is special:

       o      --:  icmake  arguments  separator  separating  icmake  arguments from arguments passed to the .bim
              filenl(). Those arguments are passed to the .bim file as-is, and are available from the list  argv
              parameter  available  from  the  icmake  script’s  main  function’s second parameter (see below at
              section USER DEFINED FUNCTIONS). For some options (see below) the -- separator is not required.

       Icmake supports various options, and only one of these can be specified when icmake is invocated.

       o      --about (-a)
              Show information about icmake and terminate.

       o      --compile (-c)
              The icmake source file is compiled, generating a .bim file.

       o      --execute (-e)
              Execute the icmake .bim file, given as icmake’s first file argument. Any additional arguments  are
              passed to the .bim file as-is, and -- should not be specified.

       o      --force (-f)
              The  icmake  source  file is recompiled (even if the .bim file is up-to-date) either when no other
              options are specified, or when in combination with options --source and --tmpbin.

       o      --help (-h)
              Provide usage info and terminate.

       o      --icm-dep (-d)
              Calls /usr/lib/icmake/icm-dep, passing it all remaining arguments. If no additional arguments  are
              specified  icm-dep’s  short  usage  information  is  shown  to the std. output stream. See section
              ICM-DEP in icbuild(1)’s man-page for more  information  about  the  icm-dep  support  program.  An
              overview of icm-dep’s option follows below, next to this overview of icmake’s options.

       o      --preprocess (-p)
              The  icmake  source  file  is  only preprocessed, and the preprocessed file is written to icmake’s
              second file argument (by default `source’.pim).

       o      --source (-i)
              The first argument is the icmake source file, the default binary file is constructed if necessary.
              Any additional arguments are passed to the .bim file as-is, and -- should not be specified.

       o      --summary (-F)
              The  filenames and flags as well as an overview of all actions to be performed by icmake are shown
              on the standard output stream.

       o      -t tmpbim
              The tmpbim argument following -t is the name of a temporary .bim  file,  which  is  removed  after
              icmake’s  call.  When  . is specified for tmpbim then the default temporary directory, followed by
              icmake’s process-id, followed by .bim is used.

              Following the name of the temporary .bim file the  name  of  the  icmake  source  script  must  be
              specified.  Any  additional  arguments  are  passed  to  the .bim file as-is, and -- should not be
              specified; After setting the source script file’s executable flag (chmod +x script), and providing
              it with an initial line like this:

                  #!/usr/bin/icmake -t.

              the icmake script can directly be called:

                  script arg1 arg2

              in  which  case the icmake script `script’ is executed while it receives the arguments script arg1
              arg2.

       o      -T directory
              The specified directory is used to store temporary files. E.g., when compiling an  icmake  script,
              the  output of icmake’s preprocessor is a temporary file which is removed on exit. By default /tmp
              is used, unless /tmp is not a writable directory, in which case the current user’s $HOME directory
              is  used.  Implicit  temporary  filenames  always  start with the process id of the current icmake
              process.

       o      --version (-v)
              Displays icmake’s version number, and terminates.

       Icmun:

       bimfile:  binary icmake script file.

ICM-DEP invocation and options

       To start its work, the dependencies-analyzer icm_dep needs  one  command-line  argument:  go.  Any  other
       argument  results in icm_dep performing a `dry run’: it will perform all its duties (and verbose messages
       are displayed as if go had been specified), but no files (precompiled headers or USE_ALL files)  will  be
       touched  or  removed.  If neither options nor arguments are specified icm_dep writes its usage summary to
       the standard output.

       Options of icm-dep can be specified  immediately  following  icmake’s  --icm-dep  option.  The  following
       options are recognized by icm-dep:

       o      --classes=filename (-c)
              By  default,  icm-dep  inspects dependencies of the classes whose directories are mentioned in the
              file CLASSES. If specified in the icmconf(7) file, it  will  also  consider  dependencies  of  the
              classes  Parser  (directory parser) and Scanner (directory scanner), or it uses their actual names
              as defined in the icmconf(7) file. Use this option if instead of CLASSES another  file  should  be
              inspected.

       o      --help (-h)
              Icm-dep writes a summary of its usage to the standard output and terminates.

       o      --icmconf=filename (-i)
              By  default  icm-dep inspects the contents of an icmconf file, looking for the USE_ALL and PRECOMP
              specifications. Use this option if instead of icmconf another file should be inspected.

       o      --mainih=mainheader (-m)
              The icmconf file uses the #define IH parameter to specify the suffix of class  header  files  that
              should  be  precompiled,  their filenames being equal to the names of the classes mentioned in the
              CLASSES file. CLASSES does not specify a top-level directory. The name  of  the  top-level  header
              file to precompile can be specified using this option. By default it is main.ih.

       o      --gch
              By  default  precompiled  header  files  are  inspected  if  icmconf  contains  a  #define PRECOMP
              specification. If it does not, but precompiled headers should nonetheless be inspected, the option
              --gch can be specified.

       o      --no-gch
              By  default  precompiled  header  files  are  inspected  if  icmconf  contains  a  #define PRECOMP
              specification. If so, but precompiled headers should not be inspected, the option --no-gch can  be
              specified.

       o      --no-use-all
              By default files named at the #define USE_ALL specification are inspected if icmconf contains such
              a specification. If it does, but the `USE_ALL’ files should not be inspected, this option  can  be
              specified.

       o      --use-all=filename
              By default files named at the #define USE_ALL specification are inspected if icmconf contains such
              a specification. If it does not, but `USE_ALL’ files should nonetheless be inspected, this  option
              can  be  specified,  together  with  the  name  of files (existing in one or more directories that
              indicate that all the directory’s source files must be recompiled).

       o      --verbose (-V)
              This option can be specified multiple times. The number of times it is specified defines icm_dep’s
              verbosity.  If  none  is  specified, icm_dep silently performs its duties. If specified once, then
              icm_dep reports to the standard output what actions it performs; if specified twice it reports the
              options  it  encountered;  if  specified  three  times  it also reports the class dependencies; if
              specified more often it reports what files it encountered and what situations caused  it  to  make
              its decisions.

       o      --version (-v)
              Icm_dep reports  its version number to the standard output and terminates.

PREPROCESSOR DIRECTIVES

       The following preprocessor directives are available:

       o      comment:
              standard  C  comment  (all between /* and */) as well as comment-to-end-of-line (all line contents
              following //) are ignored.

       o      Shell startup: The first line of the icmake-script may start with #!path, where path  defines  the
              absolute location of the icmake program. By making the script executable, it can be called without
              explicitly calling icmake.

              E.g., if the first line of an (executable) icmakefile ’icm’ (without extension) contains

                          #!/usr/bin/icmake -i

              then icm may be issued as a command, thus executing

                          /usr/bin/icmake -i icm ...

              Alternatively,

                          #!/usr/bin/icmake -t /tmp/icm

              may be used, resulting in the execution of

                          #!/usr/bin/icmake -t /tmp/icm icm ...

              In this case the binary file is removed on exit.

       o      #include "filename"
              The file filename is included at the location of the directive

       o      #include <filename>
              The file filename is included at the location of the #include directive; filename is  searched  in
              the  colon-separated directories specified by the IM environment variable. The first occurrence of
              filename in the directories specified by the IM environment variable is used.

       o      #define identifier [definition]
              The text identifier will be replaced by definition.  The  definition  may  contain  references  to
              already  defined  identifiers,  using  the  ${identifier} format. If the ${identifier} hasn’t been
              defined (yet), the text ${identifier} is literally kept. To prevent infinite recursion at most 100
              ${identifier} replacements are allowed.

              Definitions  continue at the next line if the last character on a line is a backslash (\).  (which
              is not included in the definition).  The  preprocessor  concatenates  double-quuted  strings,  and
              double  quoted  strings  may  not  span  multiple lines. Multiple blanks (outside of double quoted
              strings) in definitions are contracted to a single blank space.

              The definition following the #define’s identifier is optional. If omitted, the macro  is  defined,
              so  it  can  be used in #if(n)def directives (see below), but they are not replaced by any text in
              icmake code statements.

       o      #ifdef identifier
              If the identifier macro was defined the next block of code  (until  a  matching  #else  or  #endif
              directive was read) is byte-compiled. Otherwise, the block of code is ignored.

       o      #ifndef identifier
              If  the  identifier macro was not defined the next block of code (until a matching #else or #endif
              directive was detected) is byte-compiled. Otherwise, the block of code is ignored.

       o      #else
              Terminates a #ifdef and #ifndef directive, reversing the acceptance decision about  the  following
              code. Only one #else directive can be associated with #if(n)def directives.

       o      #endif
              Terminates the preprocessor block starting at the matching #ifdef, #ifndef or #else directive. The
              #endif directory and its matching #if(n)def directive must be specified in the same file.

       o      #undef identifier
              Remove identifier from the set of defined symbols. This does not affect the specification  of  any
              previously  defined  symbols  in which identifier’s definition has been used. If identifier hasn’t
              been defined a warning is issued.

DATA TYPES

       Icmake supports these data types:

       o      ASCII character constants
              ASCII character constants consist of one character, surrounded by single or double quotes.  Single
              characters  (e.g., ’a’) represent the character itself. Standard escape sequences (e.g., ’\n’) are
              supported and represent their standard converted value  (e.g.,  ’\n’  represents  ascii  value  10
              (decimal)). Non-standard escape sequences (e.g., ’\x’) represent the ascii character following the
              escape character (so ’\x’ equals ’x’). Escape sequences consisting of three octal digits represent
              the  ascii  character corresponding to the octal value modulo 256 (e.g., ’\123’). Escape sequences
              consisting of an x followed by two hexadecimal digits represent the ascii character  corresponding
              to the hexadecimal value (e.g., ’\xa4’).

       o      int
              Integral  values,  ranging  from -0x8000 through 0x7fff. int constants may be specified as decimal
              numbers (starting with digits 1 through 9), octal numbers (starting with 0,  followed  by  one  or
              more  octal  digits)  hexadecimal  numbers  (starting with 0x, followed by one or more hexadecimal
              digits) or as ASCII character constants.

       o      string
              Text variables. String constants are delimited by double quotes. Multiple string constants may  be
              concatenated, but a single string constant may not span multiple lines. String constants separated
              by white space only (i.e., blanks, newlines, comment) are concatenated and  represent  one  single
              string constant. To indicate an end-of-line in a string constant use the \n escape sequence.

              ASCII  character  constants surrounded by double quotes can also be used in arithmetic expressions
              if one of the operands is an int. The single character string constant must  be  a  constant,  and
              cannot be a string variable.

              Likewise,  ASCII character constants surrounded by single quotes may be used in situations where a
              string operand is expected.

       o      list
              A data structure containing a series  of  individually  accessible  string  values.  When  a  list
              contains elements, its first element is indicated by index 0.

       o      void
              Used with function definitions to indicate that the function does not return a value.

       Variables can be defined at the global level as well as at any local level inside functions. When defined
       inside functions, the standard C scoping and visibility rules apply. E.g., local variables  can  only  be
       used  in  their  own  or  in  more deeply nested blocks, their visibility is masked in more deeply nested
       blocks by defining an identically named variable inside those more deeply nested  blocks.  Variables  are
       strongly typed, and cannot have type void.

       Variables may be initialized when they are defined. Initializations are expressions, that can use pre- or
       user-defined functions, constant values, and values of  variables  that  are  visible  at  the  point  of
       definition.

PREDEFINED CONSTANTS

       The following constants are predefined by icmake. All are constant int values:

       ─────────────────────────────────
       symbol      value   intended for
       ─────────────────────────────────
       O_ALL       8       makelist
       O_DIR       2       makelist
       O_FILE      1       makelist
       O_SUBDIR    4       makelist
       ─────────────────────────────────
       OFF         0       echo
       ON          1       echo
       ─────────────────────────────────
       P_CHECK     0       system calls
       P_NOCHECK   1       system calls
       ─────────────────────────────────
       S_IEXEC     32      stat
       S_IFCHR     1       stat
       S_IFDIR     2       stat
       S_IFREG     4       stat
       S_IREAD     8       stat
       S_IWRITE    16      stat
       ─────────────────────────────────

       The following constants are architecture dependent:

       ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       symbol           1 when defined on the platform, otherwise 0
       ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       unix             Unix, usually with GNU’s gcc compiler
       UNIX             may alternatively be available

       linux            x86 running Linux (usually with gcc)
       LINUX            may alternatively be available
       M_SYSV, M_UNIX   x86 running SCO/Unix
       _POSIX           _SOURCE   Unix with Posix compliant compiler
       __hpux           HP-UX, with the native HP compiler
       ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

OPERATORS

       int-typed operand(s):

       All  C  operators are available (except for pointer operators, as icmake does not support pointers). They
       operate like their C-programming language counterparts.

       string-typed operand(s):

       For string type variables and/or constants the following operators  are  available  (a  and  b  represent
       string variables or constants):

       o      a + b: returns a new string value containing the concatenation of string values a and b. Note that
              string constants may be directly concatetated (without using the + operator), e.g., the  following
              two lines both define the string "hello world":

              "hello "   "world"
              "hello " + "world"

       o      a += b: a must be a  string variable, to which the string variable or value b is appended.

       o      string  comparisons:  operators  ==  !=  <=  >=  <  > != and == may be applied to string values or
              variables, returning 1 if the comparison succeeds, otherwise 0. Comparison  is  case  sensitively,
              and follows the ordering or characters as defined in the ASCII character set.

       o      !a: the boolean ! (not) operator returns 1 if the string a is empty, otherwise 0 is returned.

       o      a  younger  b,  a newer b: returns 1 if file a is more recent than file b. E.g., "source.cc" newer
              "source.o". The files a and b do not have to exist: if both  don’t  exist  0  is  returned;  if  b
              doesn’t  exist,  1  is  returned;  if  a doesn’t exist 0 is returned; if they are equally old 0 is
              returned. (the exists() predefined function (see below, section PREDEFINED FUNCTIONS) can be  used
              to test explicitly whether a file exists).

       o      a older b: turns 1 if file a is older than file b. E.g., "libprog.a" older "source.o". The files a
              and b do not have to exist: if both don’t exist 0 is returned; if a doesn’t exist, 1 is  returned;
              if b doesn’t exist 0 is returned; if they are equally old 0 is returned.

       o      []:  the  index  operator  retrieves  a character from a string variable or constant: it returns a
              string as an rvalue. Therefore, the following statement compiles OK:

                  // assume str1 and str2 are strings
              str1 = str2[3];

              but the following statement won’t compile:

              str2[3] = "a";

              An empty string is returned if an invalid index value is provided.

       o      The `backtick` operator (`string cmd`)
              A string placed between two backticks is executed by the popen(3) function.  The  standard  output
              gererated  by  the  command  that is stored in the string argument is returned as a list. An empty
              list indicates that the command could not be executed. A command that could be  executed  but  did
              not  produce  any output returns a list containing one empty element. The command’s standard error
              stream output is not collected by the backtick operator. However, standard shell redirection could
              be used to collect the standard error stream’s output. Example:

              printf(`"ls"`);     // prints the elements in
                                  // the current directory

              The  predefined  function  eval(string  cmd)  behaves exactly like the backtick operator: they are
              synonyms.

       list-typed operand(s):

       For list type variables and/or values the following operators are available:

       o      a + b: returns a new list value containing the concatenation of list values a and b. This is not a
              set  operation:  if an element appears both in a and in b, they will appear twice in the resulting
              list (set-addition is provided by the built-in function listunion).

       o      a - b: returns a new list value containing the elements in a that are not present in b. This is  a
              set-difference operation: the returned list contains all elements in a that are not elements of b.

       o      a += b: elements in b are added to the elements in a, which must be a  list variable.  This is not
              a set operation.

       o      a -= b: elements in b are removed from the elements in a, which must be a list variable.  This  is
              a set operation: all elements of a that are found in b are removed from a.

       o      list  equality  comparisons:  operators  !=  and  ==  may  be applied to list values or variables.
              Operator == returns 1 if both lists have element-by-element identical  elements,  otherwise  0  is
              returned. Operator != reverses the result of ==.

       o      !a: the boolean ! operator returns 1 if the list a is empty, otherwise 0 is returned.

       o      []:  the  index  operator retrieves a list element from a list variable: it returns a string as an
              rvalue. Therefore, the following statement compiles OK:

                  // assume lst is a list, str is a string
              str = lst[3];

              but the following statement won’t compile:

              lst[3] = str;

              An empty string is returned if an invalid index value is provided.

       Casting:

       Type-casts may be performed using the standard C cast-operator to cast:

       o      Strings to ints and vice versa ((int)"123", (string)55)

       o      Strings to lists (list lst = (list)"hello")

FLOW CONTROL

       Icmake offers the following subset of C’s statements. They can be used as in the C programming language.

       o      expression ;
              The plain expression statement;

       o      The compound statement
              Variables of any type may be defined and initialized anywhere inside any compound  statement.  The
              visibility of a variable starts at its point of definition.

       o      if (condition) statement
              Inside the condition a variable may be defined and initialized. E.g,

                  if (string str = getText())
                      process(str);

              In this example, process is not called if getText() returns an empty string. The variable str does
              not exist either before or after the if statement.

       o      if (condition) statement else statement
              As with the previous statement, inside the condition a variable may be defined and initialized.

       o      for (init; condition; increment) statement
              Variables (of a single type) may be initialized (and optionally be defined) in the  init  section.
              The  init,  condition  and  increment  sections  may  remain empty. The empty condition section is
              interpreted as `always true’.

       o      while (condition) statement
              Inside the condition a variable may be defined and initialized.
              A complementary  do ... while() statement is not available. Note that defining a  variable,  using
              an  initialization  expression  means  that  the  initialization  expressing  is  executed at each
              iteration of the while statement. So the following statement will never end, and  will  display  a
              never ending stream of values 10:

              while (int x = 10)
                  printf(x--, "\n");

       o      return;, and return expression;
              Plain  return  statements can be used in void functions, and return expression statements are used
              in other type of functions. The function main has return type void  and  so  in  main  only  plain
              return  statements  can  be  used.   By  default  an  icmake script’s exit value equals 0. Use the
              built-in function exit (see below) to specify any other exit value.

              Be advised:  the behavior of non-void functions not returning values is undefined.

       o      break
              Leaves for and while statements, overruling the statement’s condition.

       o      continue
              Continues with the next iteration of a for or while statement.

       o      exit(expression)
              Ends the execution of an icmake-script. The expression  must  evaluate  to  an  int  value,  which
              becomes the script’s exit value.

PREDEFINED FUNCTIONS

       Icmake  offers  the  following  predefined  functions,  which can be used anywhere in icmake scripts. The
       following overview is ordered alphabetically by function name.

       o      void arghead(string h)
              Helper function of exec() (see also below at exec()): defines the `argument head’, to be used with
              exec(). By default, the `argument head’ is an empty string.

       o      void argtail (string t)
              Helper function of exec() (see also below at exec()): defines the `argument tail’, to be used with
              exec(). By default, the `argument tail’ is an empty string.

       o      int ascii(string s)
              Returns the first character of s as an int; e.g., ascii("A") returns 65;

       o      string ascii(int i)
              Returns i as a string, e.g., ascii(65) returns the string "A";

       o      string change_base(string file, string newbase)
              Changes the basename of file, returns the changed name. E.g,  change_base("/path/demo.im",  "out")
              returns "/path/out.im";

       o      string change_ext(string file, string newext)
              Changes  the  extension  of  file,  returns the changed name. E.g, rss_changeExt("source.cc", "o")
              returns "source.o";

       o      string change_path(string file, string newpath)
              Changes the path specification of file, returns the changed name.  E.g,  change_path("tmp/binary",
              "/usr/bin") returns "/usr/bin/binary". Note that the /-separator is inserted if required.

       o      string chdir(string newdir)
              Changes the script’s working directory, returns the previous dir as an absolute path.

              Use  chdir(".")  to  obtain  the  current  working  directory, chdir("") may be used to obtain the
              startup working directory (this functionality was broken in releases before than 7.00, but is  now
              operational). The function terminates the icmake-script if the specified newdir does not exist.

       o      string chdir(int checking, string newdir)
              Same functionality as the previous function, but by specifying checking as P_NOCHECK. the function
              won’t terminate the script. Rather, it will return the script’s current working directory.

       o      cmdhead(string h)
              Helper function of exec() (see also below at exec()): Defines a `command head’, to  be  used  with
              exec(). By default, the `command head’ is an empty string.

       o      cmdtail(string t)
              Helper  function  of  exec() (see also below at exec()): Defines a `command tail’, to be used with
              exec(). By default, the `command tail’ is an empty string.

       o      echo(int opt)
              Controls echoing of called  programs  (and  their  arguments),  specify  OFF  if  echoing  is  not
              requested. By default echo(ON) is used.

       o      string element(int index, list (or string) var)
              Acts identical to the index operator: refer to the index ([]) operator in the section OPERATORS.

       o      list eval(string str)
              This  function  acts  identically to the backtick operator. The example provided with the backtick
              operator could therefore also have been written like this:

              printf(eval("ls")); // prints the elements in the current
                                  // directory

       o      exec(string cmd, ...)
              Executes command with arguments. Each argument  will  be  prefixed  by  arghead()’s  argument  and
              postfixed  by argtail()’s argument. Note that no blanks are inserted between arghead()’s contents,
              the argument proper, and argtail()’s argument. All thus modified arguments are concatenated,  this
              time  separated  by  single blanks, and then cmdhead()’s contents are inserted between the command
              and the first argument (on either side delimited by single blanks) and  cmdtail()’s  contents  are
              appended  to the arguments (again, separated by a single blank). PATH is searched to locate cmd. 0
              is returned.

       o      exec(int checkcmd, string cmd, ...)
              Same functionality as the previous  function,  but  by  specifying  checking  as  NOT_CHECKED  the
              function  won’t  terminate the script. Rather, it will return the called command’s exit status, or
              0x7f00 if the command wasn’t found.

       o      execute(string cmd, string cmdhd, string arghd, ..., string argtl, string cmdtl)
              Same as exec(), but command head/tail and argument head/tail must be specified.

              The actually executed command starts with cmd, followed by cmdhd. Next is a  series  of  arguments
              follows, each enclosed by arghd and argtl. The command terminates with cmdtl. 0 is returned

       o      execute(int checking, string cmd, string cmdhd, string arghd, ..., string argtl, string cmdtl)
              Same  functionality  as  the  previous  function,  but  by  specifying checking as NOT_CHECKED the
              function won’t terminate the script. Rather, it will return the called command’s exit  status,  or
              0x7f00 if the command wasn’t found.

       o      int exists(string file)
              Returns a non-zero value if file exists, otherwise 0 is returned.

       o      list fgets(string file, list offset)
              NOTE:  in icmake version 8.00.00 the prototype of this function was changed from list fgets(string
              file, int offset) to list fgets(string file, list offset).

              The next line found at the offset contained in offset is read from file. Pass  an  empty  list  to
              fgets to read file from its beginning.

              It  returns  a  list containing as its first element the contents of the read line (without the \n
              line terminator), as its second element the line’s terminator `\n’ (if encountered),  and  as  its
              third  element  the  string  OK if a line was successfully read, FAIL if reading from file failed.
              When reading at EOF an empty list is returned. The returned list may contain additional  elements,
              which are internally used by fgets when reading the next line.

              To  read  multiple  lines,  start  by  passing  an  empty  list as gets’s second argument. To read
              subsequent lines, pass the previously returned list to fgets’s second argument.

              Here is an example showing how to read a complete file:

              list ret;
              while (1)
              {
                  ret = fgets("filename", ret);
                  if (!ret)
                      break;
                  process(ret[0], ret[1]);
              }

       o      int fprintf(string filename, ...)
              Appends all (comma separated) arguments to the  file  filename.  Returns  the  number  of  printed
              arguments.

       o      int fprintf(string filename, string format, ...)
              Appends  all  (comma  separated)  arguments  to  the  file filename. Returns the number of printed
              arguments.

              If format contains placeholders %1 .. %n the output is formatted (see also strformat).  Note  that
              in  this  case  argument  counting  (also)  starts  beyond  the  format string: the first argument
              following format is referred to as %1.

       o      string get_base(string file)
              Returns the base name of file. The base name is the file without its path prefix and  without  its
              extension. The extension is all information starting at the final dot in the filename. If no final
              dot is found, the file name is the base name. E.g., the base name of a.b equals a, the  base  name
              of a.b.c equals a.b, the base name of a/b/c equals c.

       o      string getch()
              Returns the next pressed key as a string (pressing `Enter’ is not required).

       o      string get_dext(string file)
              Returns  the  extension  of  file,  including the separating dot. The extension is all information
              starting at the filename’s final dot.

              If no final dot is found, an empty string is returned.

       o      list getenv(string envvar)
              Returns the value of environment variable envvar in a list containing two elements:

              the first element indicates whether the environment variable was defined (value "1") or not (value
              "0");
              the second element indicates the value of the environment variable.

              Enivironment  variables  are  of the form variable=value, and if defined the list’s second element
              contains value. If the value is empty, the variable is defined, but has no  text  associated  with
              it.

       o      string get_ext(string file)
              Returns  the  extension  of  file, except for the separating dot. The extension is all information
              starting at the final dot in the filename.

              If no final dot is found, an empty string is returned.

       o      int getpid()
              Returns the process-id of the icmake byte code interpreter icm-exec.

       o      string gets()
              Returns the next line read from the keyboard as a string. The line entered on the keyboard must be
              terminated by an `Enter’ key, which is not stored in the returned string.

       o      string get_path(string file)
              Returns  the  path-prefix  of  file.  The path prefix is all information up to (and including) the
              final directory separator (which is, depending on the operating system, a forward- or backslash).

              If no path is found, an empty strring is returned.

       o      int listfind(list lst, string str)
              Returns the first index in lst where the string str is found, or -1 if lst does not contain str.

       o      int listlen(list l)
              Returns the number of elements in list.

       o      list listunion(list lhs, list rhs)
              Returns a list containing the union of the elements in lhs and rhs.

       o      list listunion(list lst, string str)
              Returns a list containing the union of the elements in lst and str.

       o      list makelist(string mask)
              Returns a list of all files matching mask. E.g., makelist("*.c") returns  a  list  containing  all
              files ending in .c.

       o      list makelist(type, string mask)
              Same  as  the  previous  function,  but the type of the directory elements may be specified as its
              first argument:

              symbol     meaning
              O_ALL      obtain all directory entries
              O_DIR      obtain all directories, including . and ..
              O_FILE     obtain a list of files
              O_SUBDIR   obtain all subdirectories

              Note that the pattern * will not match hidden entries under Unix-type operating  systems.  Use  .*
              for that.

       o      list makelist(string mask, newer, string comparefile)
              Returns  list  of  all  files  matching mask which are newer than a provided comparefile. Operator
              younger may be used instead of newer. Note that newer and younger are operators, not strings.

       o      list makelist([int = IS_FILE,] string mask, newer, string comparefile)
              Same as the previous function, but type may be specified as in list makelist(type, string mask).

       o      makelist(string mask, older, string comparefile)
              See above; returns a list of files that are older than the comparefile.

       o      makelist(type, string mask, older, string comparefile)
              Same as the previous function, but type may be specified as in list makelist(type, string mask).

       o      int printf(...)
              Shows all (comma separated) arguments to screen (i.e., the standard output  stream).  Returns  the
              number of printed arguments.

       o      int printf(string format, ...)
              Shows  all  (comma  separated) arguments to screen (i.e., the standard output stream). Returns the
              number of printed arguments (the format string counts as one argument).

              If format contains placeholders %1 .. %n the output is formatted (see also strformat).

       o      int putenv(string envvar)
              Adds envvar to the current (icmake) environment Use the format: "VAR=value". Returns 0.

       o      string resize(string str, int newlength) Returns a  copy  of  string  str,  resized  to  newlength
              characters.  If newlength is negative then an empty string is returned, if newlength exceeds str’s
              length then the newly added characters are initialized to blank spaces.

       o      int sizeof(list l)
              Deprecated: use listlen.

       o      int sizeoflist(list l)
              Deprecated: use listlen.

       o      list stat(string entry)
              Returns stat(2) information of directory entry  entry  as  a  list.  The  returned  list  has  two
              elements: element 0 is the attribute value, element 1 contains the size of the file.

              Attributes are  returned as bit-flags, composed from the following predefined constants:

              S_IFCHR     S_IFDIR     S_IFREG
              S_IREAD     S_IWRITE    S_IEXEC

              See the stat(2) manual page for the meanings of these constants.

       o      list stat(checking, string entry)
              Same  as  the  previous  function,  but  by  specifying  checking  as P_NOCHECK the function won’t
              terminate the script. Rather, it returns stat(2)’s return value.

       o      int strchr(string str, string chars)
              Returns the first index in str where any of the characters in chars is found, or -1  if  str  does
              not contain any of the characters in chars.

       o      int strlen(string str)
              Returns the number of characters in str (not counting the final 0).

       o      int strfind(string haystack, string needle)
              Returns index in haystack where needle is found, or -1 if needle is not contained in haystack.
              This function was called strstr() in versions before 7.00.

       o      int strformat(string format,...)
              Returns a formatted string using placeholders %1 .. %2 to address arguments following format.
              Example:

              void main()
              {
                  int i = 10;
                  int j = 20;
                  string s1;
                  string s2;
                                                  // traditional approach:
                  s1 = (string)i + " " + (string)j + " " + (string)i;
                                                  // using strformat:
                  s2 = strformat("%1 %2 %1", i, j);
                  printf("s1 = %1, s2 = %2\n", s1, s2);
              }

       o      string strlwr(string s)
              Returns a lower-case duplicate of s.

       o      list strtok(string str, string separators)
              Returns  a list containing all substrings of str separated by one or more (consecutive) characters
              in separators. E.g., strtok("hello icmake’s+world", " +") returns the list  containing  the  three
              strings "hello", "icmake’s", and "world".

       o      string strupr(string s)
              Returns an upper-case duplicate of s.

       o      string substr(string text, int offset, int count)
              Returns a substring of text, starting at offset, consisting of count characters. If offset exceeds
              (or equals) the string’s size or if count <= 0, then an empty string is  returned.  If  offset  is
              less than 0 then offset = 0 is used.

       o      int system(string command)
              Executes command. The return value indicates the executed command’s exit value. The string command
              may contain redirection and/or piping characters.

       o      int system(int checking, string command)
              Same functionality as the previous  function,  but  by  specifying  checking  as  NOT_CHECKED  the
              function  won’t  terminate the script. Rather, it will return the called command’s exit status, or
              0x7f00 if the command wasn’t found.

       o      string trim(string s)
              Returns a copy of s without leading and trailing white spaces.

       o      string trimleft(string str)
              Returns a copy of s without leading white spaces.

       o      string trim(string s)
              Returns a copy of s without trailing white spaces.

USER DEFINED FUNCTIONS

       void main

       Icmake scripts must be provided with a user-defined function main. The function main has  three  optional
       parameters,  which  may  be  omitted  from  the  last one (envp) to the first (argc), like in C. Its full
       prototype is (note: void return type):

           void main(int argc, list argv, list envp)

       In main(),

       o      argc represents the number of elements in argv;

       o      argv contains the arguments, with element 0 being equal to the name of the .bim file;

       o      envp contains the `environment’ variables. The function listlen  can  be  used  to  determine  the
              number of its elements. Elements in envp have the form variable=value. Alternatively, the function
              getenv can be used to retrieve a specific environment variable immediately.  Example:

                  void main(int argc, list argv)
                  {
                      list toCompile;
                      int idx;

                      if (argc == 1)
                          usage(element(0, argv));

                      if (toCompile = altered("*.cc"))
                      {
                          for (idx = length(toCompile); idx--; )
                              compile(element(idx, toCompile));

                          if (getenv("dryrun")[0] == "0")
                              linking(element(2, argv));
                      }
                  }

       Having initialized all global variables in order of their definitions main is called by icmake’s run-time
       support system to perform additional tasks.

       Additionally defined user functions

       Additional  functions may be defined. Once defined, these functions can be called. Forward referencing of
       either variables or functions is not  supported,  but  recursively  calling  functions  is.  As  function
       declarations are not supported indirect recursion is not supported either.

       User-defined functions must have the following elements:

       o      The  function’s  return type, which must be one of void, int, string or list.  There is no default
              type.

       o      The function’s name, e.g., compile.

       o      A parameter list, defining zero or more  comma-separated  parameters.  The  parameters  themselves
              consist  of  a  type  name  (int,  string,  or list) followed by the parameter’s identifier. E.g.,
              (string outfile, string source).

       o      A body surrounded by a pair of curly braces ({ and }).

       Function bodies may contain (optionally initialized) variable  definitions.  Variable  definitions  start
       with  a type name, followed by one or more comma separated (optionally initialized) variable identifiers.
       If a variable is not explicitly initialized it is initialized by default. By default an int  variable  is
       initialized  to 0, a string is initialized to an empty string ("") and a list is initialized to a list of
       zero elements.

       In addition to variable definitions, bodies may  contain  zero  or  more  statements  (cf.  section  FLOW
       CONTROL).  Note that variables may be defined (and optionally initialized) anywhere inside functions, and
       also in if, for and while statements.

       The behavior of icmake-scripts using non-void functions that do not return values is not defined.

FILES

       The mentioned paths are sugestive only and may vary over different icmake-installations:

       o      /usr/bin/icmake: the main icmake program;

       o      /usr/bin/icmun: the icmake unassembler;

       o      /usr/lib/icmake/icm-dep: the support program handling class- and precompiled header dependencies;

       o      /usr/lib/icmake/icm-pp: the preprocessor called by icmake;

       o      /usr/lib/icmake/icm-comp: the compiler called by icmake;

       o      /usr/lib/icmake/icm-exec: the byte-code interpreter called by icmake;

EXAMPLES

       The distribution (usually in /usr/share/doc/icmake) contains  a  directory  examples  containing  various
       examples  of  icmake  script.  Note in particular the examples/icmbuild subdirectory containing a general
       script for C++ and C program maintenance.

SEE ALSO

       icmbuild(1), icmconf(7), icmstart(1), icmstart.rc(7), make(1)

BUGS

       Standard comment starting  on lines containing preprocessor  directives  may  not  extend  over  multiple
       lines.

       This is free software, distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).

AUTHOR

       Frank B. Brokken (f.b.brokken@rug.nl).