protoize - Unix, Linux Command
NAME
protoize, unprotoize - automatically add or remove function prototypes
SYNOPSIS
Tag | Description |
protoize [-CfgklNnqv] [-B DIRECTORY] [-c COMPILATION-OPTIONS] [-d DIRECTORY] [-i STRING] [-p PROGRAM] [-x FILE] [FILE...]
unprotoize [-fkNnqv] [-c COMPILATION-OPTIONS] [-d DIRECTORY] [-i STRING] [-p PROGRAM] [-x FILE] [FILE...]
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DESCRIPTION
protoize is an optional part of GCC.
You can use it to add prototypes to a program,
thus converting the program to ANSI C in one respect.
The companion program
unprotoize does the reverse: it removes argument types from any prototypes that are found.
When you run these programs, you must specify a set of source files
as command line arguments.
The conversion programs start out by compiling these files
to see what functions they define.
The information gathered about a file
FOO is saved in a file named FOO.X.
After scanning comes the actual conversion.
The specified files are all eligible to be converted;
any files they include (whether sources or just headers) are eligible as well.
But not all the eligible files are converted.
By default,
protoize and unprotoize
convert only source and header files in the current directory.
You can specify additional directories whose files
should be converted with the
-d DIRECTORY option.
You can also specify particular files to exclude with the
-x FILE option.
A file is converted if it is eligible, its directory name matches one of the
specified directory names, and its name within the directory has not
been excluded.
Basic conversion with
protoize consists of rewriting most function definitions and function declarations
to specify the types of the arguments.
The only ones not rewritten are those for varargs functions.
protoize optionally inserts prototype declarations at the beginning of the source file,
to make them available for any calls that precede the functions definition.
Or it can insert prototype declarations with block scope
in the blocks where undeclared functions are called.
Basic conversion with
unprotoize
consists of rewriting most function declarations to remove any argument types,
and rewriting function definitions to the old-style pre-ANSI form.
Both conversion programs print a warning for any function
declaration or definition that they cant convert.
You can suppress these warnings with the
-q option.
The output from
protoize or unprotoize
replaces the original source file.
The original file is renamed to a name ending with
.save.
If the .save file already exists, then the source file is simply discarded.
protoize and unprotoize both depend on
gcc(1) to scan the program and collect information about the functions it uses.
The options are as follows:
Tag | Description |
-B DIRECTORY
| |
Look for the file
SYSCALLS.c.X in directory,
instead of the usual directory (normally /usr/local/lib).
This file contains prototype information about standard system functions.
This option applies only to protoize.
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-C
|
Rename files to end in
.C instead of .c.
This is convenient if you are converting a C program to C++.
This option applies only to
protoize.
|
-c COMPILATION-OPTIONS
| |
Use COMPILATION-OPTIONS as the options when running gcc(1) to produce the
.X files.
The special option -aux-info is always passed in addition, to tell gcc to write a
.X file.
Note that the compilation options must be given as a single argument to
protoize or unprotoize.
If you want to specify several gcc options, you must quote the entire set of
compilation options to make them a single word in the shell.
There are certain gcc arguments that you cannot use, because they
would produce the wrong kind of output.
These include
-g, -O, -c, -S,-o.
If you include these in the COMPILATION-OPTIONS, they are ignored.
|
-d DIRECTORY
| |
Specify additional directories whose files should be converted.
|
-g
|
Add explicit global declarations.
This means inserting explicit declarations at the beginning of each
source file for each function that is called in the file and was not declared.
These declarations precede the first function definition that contains a
call to an undeclared function.
This option applies only to
.protoize.
|
-i STRING
| |
Indent old-style parameter declarations with the string
STRING.
This option applies only to
protoize.
unprotoize converts prototyped function definitions to old-style
function definitions, where the arguments are declared between the
argument list and the initial
{.
By default,
unprotoize uses five spaces as the indentation.
If you want to indent with just one space instead, use
-i " ".
|
-k
|
Keep the
.X files.
Normally, they are deleted after conversion is finished.
|
-l
|
Add explicit local declarations.
protoize with
-l inserts a prototype declaration for each function in each block which calls
the function without any declaration.
This option applies only to
protoize.
|
-N
|
Make no .save files.
The original files are simply deleted.
Use this option with caution.
|
-n
|
Make no real changes.
This mode just prints information about the conversions
that would have been done without
-n.
|
-p PROGRAM
| |
Use the program
PROGRAM as the compiler.
Normally, the name
gcc is used.
|
-q
|
Work quietly.
Most warnings are suppressed.
|
-v
|
Print the version number, just like
-v for gcc.
|
-x FILE
|
List of files to exclude from the conversion process.
|
If you need special compiler options to compile one of your programs
source files, then you should generate that files
.X file specially, by running gcc on that source file with
the appropriate options and the option
-aux-info.
Then run
protoize on the entire set of files.
protoize will use the existing
.X file because it is newer than the source file.
For example:
You need to include the special files along with the rest in the
protoize command, even though their
.X files already exist, because otherwise they wont get converted.
SEE ALSO
Running protoize section.
HISTORY
Ron Guilmette implemented the
protoize and unprotoize tools.
AUTHORS
See the GCC manual for the contributors to GCC.
CAVEATS
The conversion programs protoize and unprotoize
can sometimes change a source file in a way that wont work
unless you rearrange it.
protoize can insert references to a type name or type tag before
the definition, or in a file where they are not defined.
If this happens, compiler error messages should indicate where the
new references are, so fixing the file by hand is straightforward.
There are some C constructs which protoize
cannot figure out.
For example, it cant determine argument types for declaring a
pointer-to-function variable; this must be done by hand. protoize
inserts a comment containing ??? each time it finds such a variable;
all such variables can be found by searching for this string.
ANSI C does not require declaring the argument types of
pointer-to-function types.
Using unprotoize can easily introduce bugs.
If the program relied on prototypes to bring about conversion of arguments,
these conversions will not take place in the program without prototypes.
One case in which you can be sure unprotoize
is safe is when you are removing prototypes that were made with
protoize; if the program worked before without any prototypes,
it will work again without them.
You can find all the places where this problem might occur by
compiling the program with the -Wconversion option.
It prints a warning whenever an argument is converted.
Both conversion programs can be confused if there are macro calls
in and around the text to be converted.
In other words, the standard syntax for a declaration or definition
must not result from expanding a macro.
This problem is inherent in the design of C and cannot be fixed.
If only a few functions have confusing macro calls,
you can easily convert them manually.
protoize cannot get the argument types for a function whose definition was not
actually compiled due to preprocessing conditionals.
When this happens, protoize changes nothing in regard to such a function.
protoize tries to detect such instances and warn about them.
You can generally work around this problem by using
protoize step by step, each time specifying a different set of
-D options for compilation, until all of the functions have been converted.
There is no automatic way to verify that you have got them all, however.
Confusion may result if there is an occasion to convert a function
declaration or definition in a region of source code where there
is more than one formal parameter list present.
Thus, attempts to convert code containing multiple (conditionally compiled)
versions of a single function header (in the same vicinity)
may not produce the desired (or expected) results.
If you plan on converting source files which contain such code,
it is recommended that you first make sure that each conditionally
compiled region of source code which contains an alternative
function header also contains at least one additional follower
token (past the final right parenthesis of the function header).
This should circumvent the problem.
unprotoize can become confused when trying to convert a function
definition or declaration which contains a declaration for a
pointer-to-function formal argument which has the same name as the
function being defined or declared.
We recommand you avoid such choices of formal parameter names.
It might be necessary to correct some of the indentation by hand and
break long lines.
(The conversion programs dont write lines longer than eighty characters
in any case.)
BUGS
For instructions on reporting bugs, see the GCC manual.
COPYING
Copyright 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999,
2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
are preserved on all copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the
entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
permission notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified
versions, except that this permission notice may be included in
translations approved by the Free Software Foundation instead of in
the original English.
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