#!/bin/sh # SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause # Copyright(c) 2018 Neil Horman build_map_changes() { local fname="$1" local mapdb="$2" cat "$fname" | awk ' # Initialize our variables BEGIN {map="";sym="";ar="";sec=""; in_sec=0; in_map=0} # Anything that starts with + or -, followed by an a # and ends in the string .map is the name of our map file # This may appear multiple times in a patch if multiple # map files are altered, and all section/symbol names # appearing between a triggering of this rule and the # next trigger of this rule are associated with this file /[-+] a\/.*\.map/ {map=$2; in_map=1} # Same pattern as above, only it matches on anything that # does not end in 'map', indicating we have left the map chunk. # When we hit this, turn off the in_map variable, which # supresses the subordonate rules below /[-+] a\/.*\.[^map]/ {in_map=0} # Triggering this rule, which starts a line and ends it # with a { identifies a versioned section. The section name is # the rest of the line with the + and { symbols remvoed. # Triggering this rule sets in_sec to 1, which actives the # symbol rule below /^.*{/ { gsub("+", ""); if (in_map == 1) { sec=$(NF-1); in_sec=1; } } # This rule idenfies the end of a section, and disables the # symbol rule /.*}/ {in_sec=0} # This rule matches on a + followed by any characters except a : # (which denotes a global vs local segment), and ends with a ;. # The semicolon is removed and the symbol is printed with its # association file name and version section, along with an # indicator that the symbol is a new addition. Note this rule # only works if we have found a version section in the rule # above (hence the in_sec check) And found a map file (the # in_map check). If we are not in a map chunk, do nothing. If # we are in a map chunk but not a section chunk, record it as # unknown. /^+[^}].*[^:*];/ {gsub(";","");sym=$2; if (in_map == 1) { if (in_sec == 1) { print map " " sym " " sec " add" } else { print map " " sym " unknown add" } } } # This is the same rule as above, but the rule matches on a # leading - rather than a +, denoting that the symbol is being # removed. /^-[^}].*[^:*];/ {gsub(";","");sym=$2; if (in_map == 1) { if (in_sec == 1) { print map " " sym " " sec " del" } else { print map " " sym " unknown del" } } }' > "$mapdb" sort -u "$mapdb" > "$mapdb.2" mv -f "$mapdb.2" "$mapdb" } check_for_rule_violations() { local mapdb="$1" local mname local symname local secname local ar local ret=0 while read mname symname secname ar do if [ "$ar" = "add" ] then if [ "$secname" = "unknown" ] then # Just inform the user of this occurrence, but # don't flag it as an error echo -n "INFO: symbol $symname is added but " echo -n "patch has insuficient context " echo -n "to determine the section name " echo -n "please ensure the version is " echo "EXPERIMENTAL" continue fi oldsecname=$(sed -n \ "s#$mname $symname \(.*\) del#\1#p" "$mapdb") # A symbol can not enter a non experimental # section directly if [ -z "$oldsecname" ] then if [ "$secname" = 'EXPERIMENTAL' ] then echo -n "INFO: symbol $symname has " echo -n "been added to the " echo -n "EXPERIMENTAL section of the " echo "version map" continue else echo -n "ERROR: symbol $symname " echo -n "is added in the $secname " echo -n "section, but is expected to " echo -n "be added in the EXPERIMENTAL " echo "section of the version map" ret=1 continue fi fi # This symbol is moving between two sections (the # original section is not experimental). # This can be legit, just warn. if [ "$oldsecname" != 'EXPERIMENTAL' ] then echo -n "INFO: symbol $symname is being " echo -n "moved from $oldsecname to $secname. " echo -n "Ensure that it has gone through the " echo "deprecation process" continue fi else if ! grep -q "$mname $symname .* add" "$mapdb" && \ [ "$secname" != "EXPERIMENTAL" ] then # Just inform users that non-experimenal # symbols need to go through a deprecation # process echo -n "INFO: symbol $symname is being " echo -n "removed, ensure that it has " echo "gone through the deprecation process" fi fi done < "$mapdb" return $ret } trap clean_and_exit_on_sig EXIT mapfile=`mktemp -t dpdk.mapdb.XXXXXX` patch=$1 exit_code=1 clean_and_exit_on_sig() { rm -f "$mapfile" exit $exit_code } build_map_changes "$patch" "$mapfile" check_for_rule_violations "$mapfile" exit_code=$? rm -f "$mapfile" exit $exit_code