# This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public # License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this # file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. import buildconfig import subprocess import os import sys def relativize(path, base=None): # For absolute path in Unix builds, we need relative paths because # Windows programs run via Wine don't like these Unix absolute paths # (they look like command line arguments). if path.startswith("/"): return os.path.relpath(path, base) # For Windows absolute paths, we can just use the unmodified path. # And if the path starts with '-', it's a command line argument. if os.path.isabs(path) or path.startswith("-"): return path # Remaining case is relative paths, which may be relative to a different # directory (os.getcwd()) than the needed `base`, so we "rebase" it. return os.path.relpath(path, base) def midl(out, input, *flags): out.avoid_writing_to_file() midl = buildconfig.substs["MIDL"] wine = buildconfig.substs.get("WINE") base = os.path.dirname(out.name) or "." if midl.lower().endswith(".exe") and wine: command = [wine, midl] else: command = [midl] command.extend(buildconfig.substs["MIDL_FLAGS"]) command.extend([relativize(f, base) for f in flags]) command.append("-Oicf") command.append(relativize(input, base)) print("Executing:", " ".join(command)) result = subprocess.run(command, cwd=base) return result.returncode # midl outputs dlldata to a single dlldata.c file by default. This prevents running # midl in parallel in the same directory for idl files that would generate dlldata.c # because of race conditions updating the file. Instead, we ask midl to create # separate files, and we merge them manually. def merge_dlldata(out, *inputs): inputs = [open(i) for i in inputs] read_a_line = [True] * len(inputs) while True: lines = [ f.readline() if read_a_line[n] else lines[n] for n, f in enumerate(inputs) ] unique_lines = set(lines) if len(unique_lines) == 1: # All the lines are identical if not lines[0]: break out.write(lines[0]) read_a_line = [True] * len(inputs) elif ( len(unique_lines) == 2 and len([l for l in unique_lines if "#define" in l]) == 1 ): # Most lines are identical. When they aren't, it's typically because some # files have an extra #define that others don't. When that happens, we # print out the #define, and get a new input line from the files that had # a #define on the next iteration. We expect that next line to match what # the other files had on this iteration. # Note: we explicitly don't support the case where there are different # defines across different files, except when there's a different one # for each file, in which case it's handled further below. a = unique_lines.pop() if "#define" in a: out.write(a) else: out.write(unique_lines.pop()) read_a_line = ["#define" in l for l in lines] elif len(unique_lines) != len(lines): # If for some reason, we don't get lines that are entirely different # from each other, we have some unexpected input. print( "Error while merging dlldata. Last lines read: {}".format(lines), file=sys.stderr, ) return 1 else: for line in lines: out.write(line) read_a_line = [True] * len(inputs) return 0