Provided by: dist_3.5-236-0.1build1_all bug

NAME

       metalint - a metaconfig unit consistency checker

SYNOPSIS

       metalint [ -hklsV ] [ -L dir ]

DESCRIPTION

       Metalint  parses  the units and performs some extensive consistency checks, to make sure the whole set is
       sound. Due to the relatively huge amount of units available, it is becoming very  difficult  to  maintain
       the units manually, and an automated process can be of real help, although not perfect.

       Metalint  operates from within your top level package directory and is used to make sure your own private
       units are correctly relying on the publicly available units.  If you intensively develop new  units,  you
       should run metalint on them before making them publicly available.

OPTIONS

       Metalint recognizes the following set of options:

       -h             Print a short usage description and exit.

       -k             Keep temporary .MT directory.

       -l             (not  implemented  yet)  By  default,  metalint  only reports problems related to your own
                      private units. This switch directs metalint to also report problems in publicly  available
                      units.

       -s             Silent mode.

       -L dir         Override  default  library  location.  Normally  only useful for metaconfig maintainers to
                      locally check the units being developed instead of the publicly available  ones.  The  dir
                      specified is the one containing the units U directory.

       -V             Print version number and exit.

DIAGNOSTICS

       The following diagnostics may be emitted by metalint:

       "(?MAKE) command line must start with a leading TAB character."
            Self explanatory.

       "(?MAKE) fourth pick argument is missing."
            Self explanatory.

       "(?MAKE) fourth pick argument should probably be the %< macro."
            When  the  fourth argument is not a relative path, it is expected to be the current unit name, which
            is best described using the "%<" string, a macro handled by metaconfig and which is substituted with
            the current unit name.

       "(?MAKE) ignoring duplicate dependency listing line."
            More  than  one  ?MAKE:  line bearing dependencies was found in the unit. There may be only one such
            line, although multiple ?MAKE action lines may occur.

       "(?MAKE) special unit 'Xxx' should not be listed as made."
            A special unit symbol (first letter capitalized) may only be listed as  made  in  the  special  unit
            itself.  To  suppress  this  warning in legitimate cases, add a '+' in front of the offending symbol
            (note that for non-special units, the '+' in this position indicates an internal symbol which should
            not appear in the config.sh file).

       "(?MAKE) '+xxx' is listed x times."
            A conditional dependency is listed more than once. This is harmless though.

       "(?MAKE) 'xxx' is listed x times."
            A normal depdendency is listed more than once. Again, an harmless error.

       "(?MAKE) 'xxx' listed as both conditional and full dependency."
            Symbol  is listed as a normal dependency and as a conditional one.  Metaconfig will consider this as
            being a full dependency, but that may not be what you initially wanted...

       "(?MAKE) pick needs a command argument."
            There is no command name after the special "pick" directive, which is invalid.

       "(?MAKE) third pick argument must be $@.
            The third argument to the special "pick" directive must be $@, litterally.

       "(?MAKE) unknown pick command 'xxx'.
            The command argument listed for the special "pick" directive is unknown.

       "(?MAKE) weird fourth argument 'xxx' to pick.
            The fourth argument for pick, the target file, should be a unit name, a file path introduced by "./"
            or the special "%<" token.

       "(?Y) unknown layout directive 'xxx'."
            Layout  directives  may  only be one of top, default or bottom, but case does not matter. An unknown
            directive is just ignored and handled as if default had been specified.

       "(?S) duplicate description for variable '$xxx'."
            Shell symbol is described more than once, and that will produce two entries in the Glossary.

       "(?S) variable '$xxx' is not listed on ?MAKE: line."
            The unit describes a shell symbol entry which cannot be  used  externally  since  not  listed  as  a
            dependency.

       "(?S) syntax error in ?S: construct."
            Self explanatory.

       "(?C) duplicate description for symbol 'XXX'."
            C symbol is described more than once, and that will produce two entries for it in the Glossary.

       "(?C) syntax error in ?C: construct."
            Self explanatory.

       "(?H) symbol 'XXX' was already defined."
            Apparently, two ?H: lines are defining the same C symbol.

       "(?H) variable '$xxx' not even listed on ?MAKE: line."
            A variable is used, but not listed on the dependency line.

       "(?H) section was already terminated by '?H:.'."
            There can be no more ?H: lines after the first '?H:.' marking the end of that section.

       "(?H) uncommon cpp line should be protected with '?%<:'."
            All  ?H:  lines that are recognized by metaconfig and thus metalint have their inclusion in config.h
            automatically protected by a suitable symbol if none is provided.  However, unrecognized lines  must
            be  protected  with  the  '?%<:'  sequence to avoid their inclusion should the unit not be loaded in
            Configure.

       "(?H) line should not be listed here but in '?C:'."
            Only cpp lines should appear in the ?H: section.  If you have a comment to put regarding the symbol,
            use ?C:.  If you want to comment a particular generation sequence, put them into ?X: comment so that
            they don't make it into config.h.

       "(?H) constraint 'xxx' is an unknown symbol."
            All the leading ?sym: constraints on the ?H: lines should be a valid shell or C symbol,  defined  in
            the unit.

       "(?M) syntax error in ?M: construct."
            Self explanatory.

       "(?M) symbol 'xxx' already listed on a ?M: line in 'yyy'."
            A magic definition for symbol xxx is attempted, but another one was already provided in unit yyy.

       "(?V) visible declaration in non-special unit ignored."
            Visible declarations (?V: lines) may only appear in special units. Otherwise, they are meaningless.

       "(?V) wanted variable '$xxx' made visible."
            A  wanted  variable (described as a dependency on the ?MAKE: line) cannot be made visible since that
            does not make any sense: the unit cannot depend on  it  and  then  advertise  it  as  being  locally
            defined.

       "(?V) defined variable '$xxx' made visible."
            A  defined  variable  (listed  as made on the ?MAKE: line) cannot be made visible, since it could as
            well be directly wanted in another unit.

       "(?V) variable '$xxx' already made visible by unit yyy."
            Inconsistent declaration: two units are making one single symbol visible...

       "(?V) variable '$xxx' already read-write visible in yyy."
            The variable was already made visible as read-write by another unit.

       "(?V) variable '$xxx' already read-only visible in yyy."
            The variable was already made visible as read-only by another unit.

       "(?W) variable '$xxx' already wanted."
            Variable is already wanted, there is no need to explicitly ask for it here.

       "(?W) variable '$xxx' also locally defined."
            A wanted variable would conflict with a locally defined variable  and  could  result  in  getting  a
            garbage value.

       "(?W) variable '$xxx' already listed on a ?W: line in 'yyy'."
            The variable in the shell symbol section of a ?W: line can only appear in one unit.

       "(?F) produced file 'xxx' mutiply declared."
            The  file  is listed more than once on the ?F: line, under the same name.  This does not appear when
            declaring both a private UU file and a public file with the same name, for instance.

       "(?F) UU file  in non-special unit ignored."
            Private UU files (i.e. files like the myread script created for later perusal by Configure) may only
            be  created  in  special  units.   Exceptions allowed if the ?F: line is preceded by a proper ?LINT:
            hint.

       "(?T) temporary symbol '$xxx' multiply declared."
            Self explanatory.

       "directive should come after ?MAKE declarations."
            The directive listed between () at the beginning of this message should really come after the ?MAKE:
            lines.  You must reorder the unit or metalint will not be able to properly diagnose problems.

       "control sequence '?XXX:' ignored within body."
            Attempt  to use a control line other than ?X: or ?LINT: in the unit body, which should be only shell
            code

       "variable '$xxx' is changed."
            A variable listed as wanted in the dependency line is changed. Such a variable should  be  read-only
            for the unit. Use the change lint hint to suppress this message in pathological cases.

       "no ?MAKE: line describing dependencies."
            Every unit should have a dependency line, or it will be silently ignored by metaconfig. This message
            is suppressed by a ?LINT: empty hint.

       "first body line should be a general ': description'."
            The very first shell line of the unit that will be added to the generated  Configure  script  should
            hold a description of the unit's purpose, on a ':' line.  There must be a space after the ':', since
            it is interpreted by the shell, and the description should avoid meta-characters  like  '('  or  '>'
            unless the whole string is quoted.  This message is suppressed by a ?LINT: nocomment hint.

       "missing space after ':' to make it a comment."
            A line starting by ':' is interpreted by the shell but will be ignored.  There must be a space after
            the ':' though, or the shell will try to execute an unknown command...

       "found unquoted meta-character > on comment line."
            A line starting by ':' is interpreted by the shell but will be ignored.  This means that  meaningful
            meta-characters such as '(' or '>' must be quoted or escaped with a leading backslash.

       "found dangling quote on ':' comment line."
            An  unclosed  single  or  double  quote  was  spotted  on a ':' comment line.  Since those lines are
            interpreted by the shell, albeit ignored, all quotes must match perfectly.

       "not ending with a blank line."
            Since all units are gathered together to form one big script, it is recommended (hence  enforced  by
            metalint) that every unit file end with an empty line.

       "last line not ending with a new-line character."
            This  is  merely intended to users whose editor does not always append a new-line at the end of text
            files. Should not happen when you use vi.

       "symbol '$xxx' was not described."
            The shell symbol defined by this unit was not documented. Use the describe  lint  hint  to  suppress
            this message.

       "C symbol 'XXX' was not described."
            The  C  symbol  defined  by  this  unit was not documented. Use the known lint hint to suppress this
            message.

       "C symbol 'XXX' was not defined by any ?H: line."
            A C symbol was advertised by never defined, hence it cannot appear  in  the  config.h  file  and  is
            therefore useless...

       "variable '$xxx' should have been set."
            A  variable  listed on the make line as made by the unit was not set by the shell code body. Use the
            set lint hint to suppress this message in pathological cases.

       "unused dependency variable '$xxx'."
            Apparently no usage is made from a shell variable. Use the change or use lint  hints  (depending  on
            the situation) to suppress this message.

       "unused conditional variable '$xxx'.
            Apparently  no  usage  is made from this conditional dependency. The change or use lint hints can be
            used to suppress this message.

       "unused temporary variable '$xxx'."
            A variable declared as temporary in a ?T: line is not used. The use lint  hint  will  fool  metalint
            into thinking it's indeed used.

       "unknown control sequence '?XXX:'."
            Attempt to use an unknown control sequence.

       "unknown LINT request 'false' ignored."
            An unknown ?LINT: tag was used. All such tags must be spelled out in lowercase.

       "symbol '$xxx' has no default value."
            A symbol used as a conditional dependency in some unit has no default value set by a ?D: line.

       "stale ?MAKE: dependency 'xxx'."
            Unit  lists  a  symbol as a dependency, but that symbol is otherwise unknown, i.e.  never appears as
            made by any other unit.

       "symbol '$xxx' missing from ?MAKE."
            A symbol used or defined was not listed as a dependency in the ?MAKE: line.

       "missing xxx from ?MAKE for visible '$yyy'."
            A symbol defined as visible by a special unit is used, but that special unit  is  not  part  of  the
            dependency line.

       "stale ?M: dependency 'xxx'."
            Magic line lists a C symbol as a dependency but that symbol is not known by any unit.

       "unknown symbol '$xxx'."
            I  have no idea about what this symbol is. If the variable is externally define, this warning can be
            suppresed via a proper ?LINT: extern.

       "read-only symbol '$xxx' is set."
            A symbol that should be read-only is set by the unit's shell code body.

       "obsolete symbol 'xxx' is used."
            An obsolete symbol is used in the unit's shell code.

       "undeclared symbol '$xxx' is set."
            The unit tries to set a shell variable which has not  been  otherwise  declared  as  made  or  as  a
            temporary variable, or whatever.

       "unclosed ?H: section."
            The  ?H: section was not terminated by a single '?H:.' line before the body of the unit or the start
            of another ?C: section.

       "C symbol 'xxx' is defined in the following units:"
            The C symbol is defined in more that one unit. Offending units are listed.

       "Shell symbol 'xxx' is defined in the following units:"
            A shell symbol is defined in more than one unit. Offending units folllow.

       "Shell symbol 'xxx' is altogether:"
            A shell symbol is defined by some units, obsoleted by others and used as a temporary.

       "Shell symbol 'xxx' is both defined and obsoleted:"
            Self explanatory.

       "Shell symbol 'xxx' is both defined and used as temporary:"
            Self explanatory.

       "Shell symbol 'xxx' obsoleted also used as temporary:"
            Self explanatory.

       "definition of '$xxx' not closed by '?S:.'."
            Self explanatory.

       "definition of 'XXX' not closed by '?C:.'."
            Self explanatory.

       "magic definition of 'xxx' not closed by '?M:.'."
            Self explanatory.

       "variable '$xxx' is defined externally."
            A variable defined externally (i.e. in another unit) is used, without proper dependency information.
            Use the extern lint hint to suppress this message.

       "file 'xxx' was not created."
            A  file  listed  as  a  private UU file is not created by the special unit.  Creation is detected by
            seing an explicit shell redirection to  the  file,  not  by  an  implicit  creation  (such  as  a  C
            compilation  would  for  instance).   All  special units should create only shell scripts explicitly
            anyway so this message cannot be suppressed via a lint hint.

       "local file 'xxx' may override the one set by 'unit.U'."
            You are attempting to create a local file, but the special unit creates one bearing the  exact  same
            name  and should it be loaded before within Configure, you would override that file. Change the name
            of your local file.

       "unused temporary file 'xxx'.
            The file was declared on the ?F: line but does not appear to be used anywhere.

       "mis-used temporary file 'xxx'.
            A local temporary file has been declared on the ?F: line and is used in a way that may  not  be  the
            proper  one.  Indeed, all such local files should be called with an explicit relative path, to avoid
            PATH lookups which could get you another file.

       "you might not always get file 'xxx' from 'unit.U'."
            You seem to be calling the specified file, but not by using an explicit relative  pathname.  Relying
            on  the PATH to find this file is not safe.  To fix this problem, call your file using somthing like
            ./xxx.

       "missing Unit from ?MAKE for private file 'xxx'."
            You are using a private UU file without listing the special unit that produces it in your dependency
            line. Add the unit to your dependency list.

       "unknown private file 'xxx'."
            The file does not appear on any ?F: line; however it should.

       "File 'xxx' is defined in the following units:"
            The listed units cannot seem to agree on who is defining the file.

       "empty here-document name discouraged."
            You should refrain from using empty names for here documents, as metalint will not monitor those.

       "unclosed here-document xxx started line x."
            The opened here-document at line x was never closed in this unit.  This generally mean that when the
            unit is used, the generated script will not work!

       "spurious 'LINT xxx' directive."
            You have inserted a ?LINT: directive that is not used to shut-up warnings.

       "Cycle found for:"
            There is a dependency cycle found for the symbols listed. Only the symbols involved in the cycle are
            listed.

       "Cycle involves:"
            An exerpt of the dependencies where the cycle was found is listed. This may involve far more symbols
            than the previous message, because metalint actually rescans the rules to emphasize  the  cycle  and
            stops  whenever  it  has  found  one,  i.e. it does not try to minimize it (the cycle is found using
            another algorithm, which unfortunately cannot spit it out but only say for sure there is one).

REFERENCE

       Metalint uses the following control lines, which are otherwise ignored by metaconfig:

       ?V:read-only symbols:read-write symbols
            This line should be used only in special units. It lists all the shell variable defined by the  unit
            which  should  not  be  used directly as dependencies by other units: they must include this special
            unit in their dependency list if they make use of any of the symbols described here.  Those  can  be
            viewed  as  exported  symbols  which  you inherit from when depending from the unit.  Symbols may be
            exported read-only or read-write.

       ?F:files created
            This line serves two purposes: it is a metalint hint, and also a placeholder for future  jmake  use.
            It  must  list  three  kind of files: the temporary one which are created for a test, the private UU
            ones created in the UU directory for later perusal, and the public ones left in the  root  directory
            of  the package. Temporary files must be listed with a preceding '!' character (meaning "no! they're
            not re-used later!"), private UU files should be preceded by a  './'  (meaning:  to  use  them,  say
            ./file, not just file), and public ones should be named as-is.

       ?T:shell temporaries
            This  line should list all the shell variables used as temporaries within the unit's body. This line
            should be kept accurate, and prevents you from writing a unit defining a symbol which would be  used
            as a scratch variable in another unit...

       ?LINT:keyword symbol_list
            Specifies a lint hint. The following keywords are available:

                 change         shell variable ok to be changed
                 create         persistent file ok to be created by non-special unit
                 define         shell variables listed are defined in this unit
                 describe       listed shell variables are described by ?S:
                 extern         variable known to be externally defined
                 empty          unit file is empty and kept only as a placeholder.
                 known          listed C variables are described
                 nocomment      unit file is special and may miss a leading ': description' line.
                 nothere        listed names are not here documents (e.g. "1 << foo" in a C program)
                 set            listed variables are set
                 use            variables listed are used by this unit
                 unclosed       listed names of here-documents are not closed in this unit
                 usefile        listed file is used (do not prepend name with '!' for temporary ones)

AUTHORS

       Harlan  Stenn <harlan@mumps.pfcs.com> wrote the first version, based on Larry Wall's metaconfig from dist
       2.0.
       Raphael Manfredi <Raphael.Manfredi@pobox.com> rewrote it from scratch for 3.0 with a few enhancements.

FILES

       LIB/dist/mcon/U/*.U
                 Public unit files
       U/*.U     Private unit files

                      where LIB is /usr/share/dist.

BUGS

       Maybe.

SEE ALSO

       metaconfig(1), metaxref(1)

                                                 Version 3.5 PL0                                     METALINT(1)