table of contents
| UNIFDEF(1) | General Commands Manual (prm) | UNIFDEF(1) |
NAME¶
unifdef,
unifdefall — remove
preprocessor conditionals from code
SYNOPSIS¶
unifdef |
[-bBcdehKkmnsStV]
[-Ipath]
[-[i]Dsym[=val]]
[-[i]Usym]
... [-f
defile] [-x
{012}] [-M
backext] [-o
outfile] [infile ...] |
unifdefall |
[-Ipath]
... file |
DESCRIPTION¶
The unifdef utility selectively processes
conditional cpp(1) directives. It removes from a file both
the directives and any additional text that they specify should be removed,
while otherwise leaving the file alone.
The unifdef utility acts on
#if, #ifdef,
#ifndef, #elif,
#else, and #endif lines,
using macros specified in -D and
-U command line options or in
-f definitions files. A directive is processed if
the macro specifications are sufficient to provide a definite value for its
control expression. If the result is false, the directive and the following
lines under its control are removed. If the result is true, only the
directive is removed. An #ifdef or
#ifndef directive is passed through unchanged if its
controlling macro is not specified. Any #if or
#elif control expression that has an unknown value
or that unifdef cannot parse is passed through
unchanged. By default, unifdef ignores
#if and #elif lines with
constant expressions; it can be told to process them by specifying the
-k flag on the command line.
It understands a commonly-used subset of the
expression syntax for #if and
#elif lines: integer constants, integer values of
macros defined on the command line, the
defined()
operator, the operators !,
~, - (unary),
*, /,
%, +,
-, <,
<=, >,
>=, ==,
!=, &,
^, |,
&&, ||, and
parenthesized expressions. Division by zero is treated as an unknown value.
A kind of “short circuit” evaluation is used for the
&& operator: if either operand is definitely
false then the result is false, even if the value of the other operand is
unknown. Similarly, if either operand of || is
definitely true then the result is true.
When evaluating an expression, unifdef
does not expand macros first. The value of a macro must be a simple number,
not an expression. A limited form of indirection is allowed, where one
macro's value is the name of another.
In most cases, unifdef does not
distinguish between object-like macros (without arguments) and function-like
macros (with arguments). A function-like macro invocation can appear in
#if and #elif control
expressions. If the macro is not explicitly defined, or is defined with the
-D flag on the command-line, or with
#define in a -f definitions
file, its arguments are ignored. If a macro is explicitly undefined on the
command line with the -U flag, or with
#undef in a -f definitions
file, it may not have any arguments since this leads to a syntax error.
The unifdef utility understands just
enough about C to know when one of the directives is inactive because it is
inside a comment, or cannot be evaluated because it is split by a
backslash-continued line. It spots unusually-formatted preprocessor
directives and passes them through unchanged when the layout is too odd for
it to handle. (See the BUGS section
below.)
A script called unifdefall can be used to
remove all conditional cpp(1) directives from a file. It
uses unifdef -s and
cpp -dM to get lists of all
the controlling macros and their definitions (or lack thereof), then invokes
unifdef with appropriate arguments to process the
file.
OPTIONS¶
-Dsym=val- Specify that a macro is defined to a given value.
-Dsym- Specify that a macro is defined to the value 1.
-Usym- Specify that a macro is undefined.
If the same macro appears in more than one argument, the last occurrence dominates.
-iDsym[=val]-iUsym- C strings, comments, and line continuations are ignored within
#ifdefand#ifndefblocks controlled by macros specified with these options. -fdefile- The file defile contains
#defineand#undefpreprocessor directives, which have the same effect as the corresponding-Dand-Ucommand-line arguments. You can have multiple-farguments and mix them with-Dand-Uarguments; later options override earlier ones.Each directive must be on a single line. Object-like macro definitions (without arguments) are set to the given value. Function-like macro definitions (with arguments) are treated as if they are set to 1.
Warning: string literals and character constants are not parsed correctly in
-ffiles. -b- Replace removed lines with blank lines instead of deleting them. Mutually
exclusive with the
-Boption. -B- Compress blank lines around a deleted section. Mutually exclusive with the
-boption. -c- Complement, i.e., lines that would have been removed or blanked are retained and vice versa.
-d- Turn on printing of debugging messages.
-e- By default,
unifdefwill report an error if it needs to remove a preprocessor directive that spans more than one line, for example, if it has a multi-line comment hanging off its right hand end. The-eflag makes it ignore the line instead. -h- Print help.
-Ipath- Specifies to
unifdefallan additional place to look for#includefiles. This option is ignored byunifdeffor compatibility with cpp(1) and to simplify the implementation ofunifdefall. -K- Always treat the result of
&&and||operators as unknown if either operand is unknown, instead of short-circuiting when unknown operands can't affect the result. This option is for compatibility with older versions ofunifdef. -k- Process
#ifand#eliflines with constant expressions. By default, sections controlled by such lines are passed through unchanged because they typically start “#if 0” and are used as a kind of comment to sketch out future or past development. It would be rude to strip them out, just as it would be for normal comments. -m- Modify one or more input files in place. If an input file is not modified, the original is preserved instead of being overwritten with an identical copy.
-Mbackext- Modify input files in place, and keep backups of the original files by
appending the backext to the input filenames. A zero
length backext behaves the same as the
-moption. -n- Add
#linedirectives to the output following any deleted lines, so that errors produced when compiling the output file correspond to line numbers in the input file. -ooutfile- Write output to the file outfile instead of the standard output when processing a single file.
-s- Instead of processing an input file as usual, this option causes
unifdefto produce a list of macros that are used in preprocessor directive controlling expressions. -S- Like the
-soption, but the nesting depth of each macro is also printed. This is useful for working out the number of possible combinations of interdependent defined/undefined macros. -t- Disables parsing for C strings, comments, and line continuations, which is
useful for plain text. This is a blanket version of the
-iDand-iUflags. -V- Print version details.
-x{012}- Set exit status mode to zero, one, or two. See the EXIT STATUS section below for details.
The unifdef utility takes its
input from stdin if
there are no file arguments. You must use the
-m or -M options if there
are multiple input files. You can specify inut from stdin or output to
stdout with ‘-’.
The unifdef utility works nicely with the
-Dsym option of
diff(1).
EXIT STATUS¶
In normal usage the unifdef utility's exit
status depends on the mode set using the -x
option.
If the exit mode is zero (the default) then
unifdef exits with status 0 if the output is an
exact copy of the input, or with status 1 if the output differs.
If the exit mode is one, unifdef exits
with status 1 if the output is unmodified or 0 if it differs.
If the exit mode is two, unifdef exits
with status zero in both cases.
In all exit modes, unifdef exits with
status 2 if there is an error.
The exit status is 0 if the -h or
-V command line options are given.
DIAGNOSTICS¶
- EOF in comment
- Inappropriate
#elif,#elseor#endif - Missing macro name in #define or #undef
- Obfuscated preprocessor control line
- Premature EOF (with the line number of the most recent unterminated
#if) - Too many levels of nesting
- Unrecognized preprocessor directive
- Unterminated char or string literal
SEE ALSO¶
The unifdef home page is http://dotat.at/prog/unifdef
HISTORY¶
The unifdef command appeared in
2.9BSD. ANSI C support was added in
FreeBSD 4.7.
AUTHORS¶
The original implementation was written by Dave Yost <Dave@Yost.com>. Tony Finch <dot@dotat.at> rewrote it to support ANSI C.
BUGS¶
- Expression evaluation is very limited.
- Character constants are not evaluated. String literals and character
constants in
-fdefinition files are ignored rather than parsed as part of a macro's replacement tokens. - Only the basic form of C++ raw string literals is recognized, like
R"(string)"without delimiters as inR"delimiter(string)delimiter". - Source files are processed one line at a time, so preprocessor directives split across more than one physical line (because of comments or backslash-newline) cannot be handled in every situation.
- Trigraphs are not recognized.
- There is no support for macros with different definitions at different points in the source file.
- The text-mode and ignore functionality does not correspond to modern cpp(1) behaviour.
Please send bug reports by email to <dot@dotat.at>.
| December 3, 2015 | Debian |