# $NetBSD: vardebug.mk,v 1.6 2020/10/31 13:15:10 rillig Exp $ # # Demonstrates the debugging output for var.c. .MAKEFLAGS: -dv FROM_CMDLINE= VAR= added # VarAdd VAR= overwritten # Var_Set .undef VAR # Var_Delete (found) .undef VAR # Var_Delete (not found) # The variable with the empty name cannot be set at all. ${:U}= empty name # Var_Set ${:U}+= empty name # Var_Append FROM_CMDLINE= overwritten # Var_Set (ignored) VAR= 1 VAR+= 2 VAR+= 3 .if ${VAR:M[2]} # ModifyWord_Match .endif .if ${VAR:N[2]} # ModifyWord_NoMatch (no debug output) .endif .if ${VAR:S,2,two,} # ParseModifierPart .endif .if ${VAR:Q} # VarQuote .endif .if ${VAR:tu:tl:Q} # ApplyModifiers .endif # ApplyModifiers, "Got ..." .if ${:Uvalue:${:UM*e}:Mvalu[e]} .endif .undef ${:UVAR} # Var_Delete # When ApplyModifiers results in an error, this appears in the debug log # as "is error", without surrounding quotes. .if ${:Uvariable:unknown} .endif # XXX: The error message is "Malformed conditional", which is wrong. # The condition is syntactically fine, it just contains an undefined variable. # # There is a specialized error message for "Undefined variable", but as of # 2020-08-08, that is not covered by any unit tests. It might even be # unreachable. .if ${UNDEFINED} .endif # By default, .SHELL is not defined and thus can be set. As soon as it is # accessed, it is initialized in the command line context (during VarFind), # where it is set to read-only. Assigning to it is ignored. .MAKEFLAGS: .SHELL=overwritten .MAKEFLAGS: -d0 all: @: