gecko-dev/webtools/bonsai/perlifyconfig.tcl

96 строки
3.2 KiB
Tcl
Executable File

#!/usr/bonsaitools/bin/mysqltcl
# -*- Mode: tcl; indent-tabs-mode: nil -*-
#
# The contents of this file are subject to the Netscape Public License
# Version 1.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in
# compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
# http://www.mozilla.org/NPL/
#
# Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS"
# basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
# License for the specific language governing rights and limitations
# under the License.
#
# The Original Code is the Bonsai CVS tool.
#
# The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Netscape Communications
# Corporation. Portions created by Netscape are Copyright (C) 1998
# Netscape Communications Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
# Oy, what a hack.
#
# Bonsai has a split heritage, and so some of it is written in Perl, and
# some of it is written in TCL. The perl half wants to be able to look
# at the basic configuration, kept in data/configdata. But that file is
# designed to be quickly read by TCL. And I don't feel like writing perl
# code to parse it. So, instead, we have this hack which will read the
# file and push it out in a form friendlier to perl. Gross, gross, gross.
source globals.tcl
proc haschar {str char} {
return [string match "*$char*" $str]
}
proc PerlStringify {str} {
if {![haschar $str "'"]} {
return "'$str'"
}
foreach i [list "/" ":" "@" "#" "%" "^"] {
if {![haschar $str $i]} {
return "q$i$str$i"
}
}
}
Lock
LoadTreeConfig
set outfilename "data/configdata.pl"
set fid [open $outfilename "w"]
puts $fid "\# WARNING! Do not edit this file! Automatically generated!"
puts $fid "\# You want to instead edit the 'configdata' file. This file"
puts $fid "\# gets automatically generated from that one."
puts $fid ""
regsub -all {(^|[^\])&} $BUGSYSTEMEXPR {\1$\&} BUGSYSTEMEXPR
puts $fid "\$BUGSYSTEMEXPR = [PerlStringify $BUGSYSTEMEXPR];"
puts $fid "\$cvscommand = [PerlStringify $cvscommand];"
puts $fid "\$rlogcommand = [PerlStringify $rlogcommand];"
puts $fid "\$rcsdiffcommand = [PerlStringify $rcsdiffcommand];"
puts $fid "\$cocommand = [PerlStringify $cocommand];"
puts $fid "\$lxr_base = [PerlStringify $lxr_base];"
puts $fid "\$mozilla_lxr_kludge = [PerlStringify $mozilla_lxr_kludge];"
puts $fid "\$tinderbox_base = [PerlStringify $tinderbox_base];"
puts $fid "\$mysqluser = [PerlStringify $mysqluser];"
puts $fid "\$mysqlpassword = [PerlStringify $mysqlpassword];"
puts $fid "\$cvsadmin = [PerlStringify $cvsadmin];"
puts $fid "\$userdomain = [PerlStringify $userdomain];"
# perl scripts don't use the LDAP config variables
set list ""
foreach i $treelist {
append list [PerlStringify $i]
append list ", "
}
puts $fid "@treelist = ($list);"
foreach i [lsort [array names treeinfo]] {
lassign [split $i ","] a b
if {![info exists done($a)]} {
set done($a) 1
puts $fid "\$treeinfo{[PerlStringify $a]} = {};"
}
puts $fid "\$treeinfo{[PerlStringify $a]}->{[PerlStringify $b]} = [PerlStringify $treeinfo($i)];"
}
close $fid
catch {chmod 0666 $outfilename}
Unlock