view nt/make-build-dir @ 5096:e0587c615e8b

Updates to internals.texi -------------------- ChangeLog entries follow: -------------------- man/ChangeLog addition: 2010-03-04 Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org> * internals/internals.texi (Top): * internals/internals.texi (list-to-texinfo): Removed. * internals/internals.texi (convert-list-to-texinfo): New. * internals/internals.texi (table-to-texinfo): Removed. * internals/internals.texi (convert-table-to-texinfo): New. Update Lisp functions at top to newest versions. * internals/internals.texi (A History of Emacs): * internals/internals.texi (Through Version 18): * internals/internals.texi (Lucid Emacs): * internals/internals.texi (XEmacs): * internals/internals.texi (The XEmacs Split): * internals/internals.texi (Modules for Other Aspects of the Lisp Interpreter and Object System): * internals/internals.texi (Introduction to Writing C Code): * internals/internals.texi (Writing Good Comments): * internals/internals.texi (Writing Macros): * internals/internals.texi (Major Textual Changes): * internals/internals.texi (Great Integral Type Renaming): * internals/internals.texi (How to Regression-Test): * internals/internals.texi (Creating a Branch): * internals/internals.texi (Dynamic Arrays): * internals/internals.texi (Allocation by Blocks): * internals/internals.texi (mark_object): * internals/internals.texi (gc_sweep): * internals/internals.texi (Byte-Char Position Conversion): * internals/internals.texi (Searching and Matching): * internals/internals.texi (Introduction to Multilingual Issues #3): * internals/internals.texi (Byte Types): * internals/internals.texi (Different Ways of Seeing Internal Text): * internals/internals.texi (Buffer Positions): * internals/internals.texi (Basic internal-format APIs): * internals/internals.texi (The DFC API): * internals/internals.texi (General Guidelines for Writing Mule-Aware Code): * internals/internals.texi (Mule-izing Code): * internals/internals.texi (Locales): * internals/internals.texi (More about code pages): * internals/internals.texi (More about locales): * internals/internals.texi (Unicode support under Windows): * internals/internals.texi (The Frame): * internals/internals.texi (The Non-Client Area): * internals/internals.texi (The Client Area): * internals/internals.texi (The Paned Area): * internals/internals.texi (Text Areas): * internals/internals.texi (The Displayable Area): * internals/internals.texi (Event Queues): * internals/internals.texi (Event Stream Callback Routines): * internals/internals.texi (Focus Handling): * internals/internals.texi (Future Work -- Autodetection): Replace " with ``, '' (not complete, maybe about halfway through).
author Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
date Thu, 04 Mar 2010 07:19:03 -0600
parents 4542b72c005e
children 308d34e9f07d
line wrap: on
line source

: #-*- Perl -*-

# Create skeleton build tree
#
# Copyright (C) 2003 Ben Wing.
#
# This file is part of XEmacs.
#
# XEmacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
# under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
# Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any
# later version.
#
# XEmacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
# ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License
# for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with XEmacs; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to
# the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
# Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
#
# Author: Ben Wing <ben@xemacs.org>
#
# Synched up with: Not in FSF.

eval 'exec perl -w -S $0 ${1+"$@"}'
    if 0;

use File::Copy;
use File::Basename;
use Cwd;

die "Creates a skeleton build tree for use with SOURCE_DIR in config.inc.

Usage: $0 PATH
" if ($#ARGV);

my $path = $ARGV[0];
# Sometimes perl sucks, too.  To get the equivalent of expand-file-name
# in a reliable way, you have to do really weird shit, it seems.
my $cwd = cwd ();
$0 =~ s|\\|/|g;
chdir (dirname ($0));
my $srcroot = dirname (cwd ());

# Convert the path to MS Windows format if we're running Cygwin Perl.
chomp ($srcroot = `cygpath -w $srcroot`) if ($^O eq "cygwin");
$srcroot =~ s|/|\\|g;

chdir ($cwd);

print "Creating skeleton build tree in $path\n";
mkdir $path if ! -e $path;
mkdir "$path/nt" if ! -e "$path/nt";
copy("$srcroot/nt/xemacs.mak", "$path/nt/xemacs.mak") if ! -e "$path/nt/xemacs.mak";

&HackFile ("config.inc.samp");
&HackFile ("config.inc") if -e "$srcroot/nt/config.inc";

sub HackFile
{
  my $file = $_[0];
  if (! -e "$path/nt/$file")
    {	
      open IN, "<$srcroot/nt/$file";
      open OUT, ">$path/nt/$file";

      while (<IN>)
	{
	  # Must hack away CRLF junk.  Perl sucks again.  Wouldn't it be
	  # nice if perl handled this right??  Really can't be that hard!!!
	  s/\r\n/\n/g;

	  # hack the SOURCE_DIR line to point back to the source.
	  s!^# SOURCE_DIR=.*!SOURCE_DIR=$srcroot!;

	  print OUT;
	}

      close IN;
      close OUT;
    }
}