# $NetBSD: varmod-undefined.mk,v 1.6 2020/10/24 08:46:08 rillig Exp $ # # Tests for the :U variable modifier, which returns the given string # if the variable is undefined. # # See also: # varmod-defined.mk # The pattern ${:Uword} is heavily used when expanding .for loops. # # This is how an expanded .for loop looks like. # .for word in one # . if ${word} != one .if ${:Uone} != one # . error ${word} . error ${:Uone} # . endif .endif # .endfor # The variable expressions in the text of the :U modifier may be arbitrarily # nested. .if ${:U${:Unested}${${${:Udeeply}}}} != nested . error .endif # The nested variable expressions may contain braces, and these braces don't # need to match pairwise. In the following example, the :S modifier uses '{' # as delimiter, which confuses both editors and humans because the opening # and # closing braces don't match anymore. It's syntactically valid though. # For more similar examples, see varmod-subst.mk, mod-subst-delimiter. .if ${:U${:Uvalue:S{a{X{}} != vXlue . error .endif # The escaping rules for the :U modifier (left-hand side) and condition # string literals (right-hand side) are completely different. # # In the :U modifier, the backslash only escapes very few characters, all # other backslashes are retained. # # In condition string literals, the backslash always escapes the following # character, no matter whether it would be necessary or not. # # In both contexts, \n is an escaped letter n, not a newline; that's what # the .newline variable is for. # # Whitespace at the edges is preserved, on both sides of the comparison. # .if ${:U \: \} \$ \\ \a \b \n } != " : } \$ \\ \\a \\b \\n " . error .endif # Even after the :U modifier has been applied, the expression still remembers # that it originated from an undefined variable, and the :U modifier can # be used to overwrite the value of the expression. # .if ${UNDEF:Uvalue:S,a,X,} != "vXlue" . error .elif ${UNDEF:Uvalue:S,a,X,:Uwas undefined} != "was undefined" . error .endif all: @:; |