# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only ######################################################################## # # (C) Copyright 2020, 2021, Alejandro Colomar # These functions are free software; you can redistribute them and/or # modify them under the terms of the GNU General Public License # as published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2. # # These functions are distributed in the hope that they 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 # (http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.html). # ######################################################################## ######################################################################## # Exit status EX_OK=0; EX_USAGE=64; ######################################################################## # C # sed_rm_ccomments() removes C comments. # It can't handle multiple comments in a single line correctly, # nor mixed or embedded //... and /*...*/ comments. # Use as a filter (see man_lsfunc() in this file). function sed_rm_ccomments() { sed 's%/\*.*\*/%%' \ |sed -E '\%/\*%,\%\*/%{\%(\*/|/\*)%!d; s%/\*.*%%; s%.*\*/%%;}' \ |sed 's%//.*%%'; } ######################################################################## # Linux kernel # grep_syscall() finds the prototype of a syscall in the kernel sources, # printing the filename, line number, and the prototype. # It should be run from the root of the linux kernel source tree. # Usage example: .../linux$ grep_syscall openat2; function grep_syscall() { if (($# != 1)); then >&2 echo "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]} "; return ${EX_USAGE}; fi find * -type f \ |grep '\.c$' \ |sort \ |xargs pcregrep -Mn "(?s)^\w*SYSCALL_DEFINE.\(${1},.*?\)" \ |sed -E 's/^[^:]+:[0-9]+:/&\n/'; find * -type f \ |grep '\.[ch]$' \ |sort \ |xargs pcregrep -Mn "(?s)^asmlinkage\s+[\w\s]+\**sys_${1}\s*\(.*?\)" \ |sed -E 's/^[^:]+:[0-9]+:/&\n/'; } # grep_syscall_def() finds the definition of a syscall in the kernel sources, # printing the filename, line number, and the function definition. # It should be run from the root of the linux kernel source tree. # Usage example: .../linux$ grep_syscall_def openat2; function grep_syscall_def() { if (($# != 1)); then >&2 echo "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]} "; return ${EX_USAGE}; fi find * -type f \ |grep '\.c$' \ |sort \ |xargs pcregrep -Mn "(?s)^\w*SYSCALL_DEFINE.\(${1},.*?^}" \ |sed -E 's/^[^:]+:[0-9]+:/&\n/'; } ######################################################################## # Linux man-pages # man_section() prints specific manual page sections (DESCRIPTION, SYNOPSIS, # ...) of all manual pages in a directory (or in a single manual page file). # Usage example: .../man-pages$ man_section man2 SYNOPSIS 'CONFORMING TO'; function man_section() { if (($# < 2)); then >&2 echo "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]}
..."; return ${EX_USAGE}; fi local page="$1"; shift; local sect="$@"; find "${page}" -type f \ |xargs wc -l \ |grep -v -e '\b1 ' -e '\btotal\b' \ |awk '{ print $2 }' \ |sort \ |while read -r manpage; do cat \ <(<${manpage} sed -n '/^\.TH/,/^\.SH/{/^\.SH/!p}') \ <(for s in ${sect}; do <${manpage} \ sed -n \ -e "/^\.SH ${s}/p" \ -e "/^\.SH ${s}/,/^\.SH/{/^\.SH/!p}"; \ done;) \ |man -P cat -l - 2>/dev/null; done; } # man_lsfunc() prints the name of all C functions declared in the SYNOPSIS # of all manual pages in a directory (or in a single manual page file). # Each name is printed in a separate line # Usage example: .../man-pages$ man_lsfunc man2; function man_lsfunc() { if (($# < 1)); then >&2 echo "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]} ..."; return ${EX_USAGE}; fi for arg in "$@"; do man_section "${arg}" 'SYNOPSIS'; done \ |sed_rm_ccomments \ |pcregrep -Mn '(?s)^ [\w ]+ \**\w+\([\w\s(,)[\]*]+?(...)?\s*\); *$' \ |grep '^[0-9]' \ |sed 's/syscall(SYS_\(\w*\),/\1(/' \ |sed -E 's/^[^(]+ \**(\w+)\(.*/\1/' \ |uniq; } # man_lsvar() prints the name of all C variables declared in the SYNOPSIS # of all manual pages in a directory (or in a single manual page file). # Each name is printed in a separate line # Usage example: .../man-pages$ man_lsvar man3; function man_lsvar() { if (($# < 1)); then >&2 echo "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]} ..."; return ${EX_USAGE}; fi for arg in "$@"; do man_section "${arg}" 'SYNOPSIS'; done \ |sed_rm_ccomments \ |pcregrep -Mv '(?s)^ [\w ]+ \**\w+\([\w\s(,)[\]*]+?(...)?\s*\); *$' \ |pcregrep -Mn \ -e '(?s)^ +extern [\w ]+ \**\(\*+[\w ]+\)\([\w\s(,)[\]*]+?\s*\); *$' \ -e '^ +extern [\w ]+ \**[\w ]+; *$' \ |grep '^[0-9]' \ |grep -v 'typedef' \ |sed -E 's/^[0-9]+: +extern [^(]+ \**\(\*+(\w* )?(\w+)\)\(.*/\2/' \ |sed 's/^[0-9]\+: \+extern .* \**\(\w\+\); */\1/' \ |uniq; } # pdfman() renders a manual page in PDF # Usage example: .../man-pages$ pdfman man2/membarrier.2; function pdfman() { if (($# != 1)); then >&2 echo "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]} "; return ${EX_USAGE}; fi; local tmp="$(mktemp -t "${1##*/}.XXXXXX")"; <${1} \ man -Tps -l - \ |ps2pdf - - \ >${tmp}; xdg-open ${tmp}; } # man_gitstaged prints a list of all files with changes staged for commit # (basename only if the files are within ), separated by ", ". # Usage example: .../man-pages$ git commit -m "$(man_gitstaged): msg"; function man_gitstaged() { git diff --staged --name-only \ |sed "s/$/, /" \ |sed "s%man[1-9]/%%" \ |tr -d '\n' \ |sed "s/, $//" } ######################################################################## # Glibc # grep_glibc_prototype() finds a function prototype in the glibc sources, # printing the filename, line number, and the prototype. # It should be run from the root of the glibc source tree. # Usage example: .../glibc$ grep_glibc_prototype printf; function grep_glibc_prototype() { if (($# != 1)); then >&2 echo "Usage: ${FUNCNAME[0]} "; return ${EX_USAGE}; fi find * -type f \ |grep '\.h$' \ |sort \ |xargs pcregrep -Mn \ "(?s)^[\w[][\w\s(,)[:\]]+\s+\**${1}\s*\([\w\s(,)[\]*]+?(...)?\)[\w\s(,)[:\]]*;" \ |sed -E 's/^[^:]+:[0-9]+:/&\n/'; }