scripts/patch-renumber.sh
author "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
Tue Dec 13 23:32:39 2011 +0100 (2011-12-13)
branch1.13
changeset 2847 c0bf2319af08
parent 1622 9ad2a3fd1fcc
child 2838 822af73497bf
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
scripts: fix dumping execution backtrace

Dumping the backtrace has been broken since changeset #652e56d6d35a:
scripts: execute each steps in a subshell

We can spawn sub-sub-shells in some cases.

The way the fault handler works is to dump the backtrace, but to avoid
printing it once for every sub-shell (which could get quite confusing),
it simply exits when it detects that it is being run in a sub-shell,
leaving to the top-level shell the work to dump the backtrace.

Because each step is executed in its own sub-shell, the variable arrays
that contain the step name, the source file and line number, are lost
when exiting the per-step sub-shell.

Hence, the backtrace is currently limited to printing only the top-level
main procedure of the shell.

Fix this thus:
- when dumping the bckatraces for the steps & the functions, remember
it was dumped, and only dump it if it was not already dumped
- at the top-level shell, print the hints

Also, rename the top-level step label.

Reported-by: Benoît Thébaudeau <benoit.thebaudeau@advansee.com>
Signed-off-by: "Yann E. MORIN" <yann.morin.1998@anciens.enib.fr>
(transplanted from 4193d6e6a17430a177fa88c287879c2c35e319f3)
     1 #!/bin/sh
     2 # Yes, this intends to be a true POSIX script file.
     3 set -e
     4 
     5 myname="$0"
     6 
     7 # Parse the tools' paths configuration
     8 # It is expected that this script is only to be run from the
     9 # source directory of crosstool-NG, so it is trivial to find
    10 # paths.mk (we can't use  ". paths.mk", as POSIX states that
    11 # $PATH should be searched for, and $PATH most probably doe
    12 # not include "."), hence the "./".
    13 . "./paths.mk"
    14 
    15 doUsage() {
    16   cat <<_EOF_
    17 Usage: ${myname} <src_dir> <dst_dir> <base> <inc> [sed_re]
    18     Renumbers all patches found in 'src_dir', starting at 'base', with an
    19     increment of 'inc', and puts the renumbered patches in 'dst_dir'.
    20     Leading digits are replaced with the new indexes, and a subsequent '_'
    21     is replaced with a '-'.
    22     If 'sed_re' is given, it is interpreted as a valid sed expression, and
    23     is be applied to the patch name.
    24     If the environment variable FAKE is set to 'y', then nothing gets done,
    25     the command to run is only be printed, and not executed (so you can
    26     check beforehand).
    27     'dst_dir' must not yet exist.
    28     Eg.:
    29       patch-renumber.sh patches/gcc/4.2.3 patches/gcc/4.2.4 100 10
    30       patch-renumber.sh /some/dir/my-patches patches/gcc/4.3.1 100 10 's/(all[_-])*(gcc[-_])*//;'
    31 _EOF_
    32 }
    33 
    34 [ $# -lt 4 -o $# -gt 5 ] && { doUsage; exit 1; }
    35 
    36 src="${1}"
    37 dst="${2}"
    38 cpt="${3}"
    39 inc="${4}"
    40 sed_re="${5}"
    41 if [ ! -d "${src}" ]; then
    42     printf "%s: '%s': not a directory\n" "${myname}" "${src}"
    43     exit 1
    44 fi
    45 if [ -d "${dst}" ]; then
    46     printf "%s: '%s': directory already exists\n" "${myname}" "${dst}"
    47     exit 1
    48 fi
    49 
    50 Q=
    51 if [ -n "${FAKE}" ]; then
    52     printf "%s: won't do anything: FAKE='%s'\n" "${myname}" "${FAKE}"
    53     Q="echo"
    54 fi
    55 
    56 ${Q} mkdir -pv "${dst}"
    57 for p in "${src}/"*.patch*; do
    58     [ -e "${p}" ] || { echo "No such file '${p}'"; exit 1; }
    59     newname="$(printf "%03d-%s"                                     \
    60                       "${cpt}"                                      \
    61                       "$( basename "${p}"                           \
    62                           |"${sed}" -r -e 's/^[[:digit:]]+[-_]//'   \
    63                                        -e "${sed_re}"               \
    64                         )"                                          \
    65               )"
    66     ${Q} cp -v "${p}" "${dst}/${newname}"
    67     cpt=$((cpt+inc))
    68 done