#!/bin/sh # src/tools/find_typedef # This script attempts to find all typedef's in the postgres binaries # by using 'objdump' or local equivalent to print typedef debugging symbols. # We need this because pgindent needs a list of typedef names. # # For this program to work, you must have compiled all code with # debugging symbols. # # We intentionally examine all files in the targeted directories so as to # find both .o files and executables. Therefore, ignore error messages about # unsuitable files being fed to objdump. # # This is known to work on Linux and on some BSDen, including macOS. # # Caution: on the platforms we use, this only prints typedefs that are used # to declare at least one variable or struct field. If you have say # "typedef struct foo { ... } foo;", and then the structure is only ever # referenced as "struct foo", "foo" will not be reported as a typedef, # causing pgindent to indent the typedef definition oddly. This is not a # huge problem, since by definition there's just the one misindented line. # # We get typedefs by reading "STABS": # http://www.informatik.uni-frankfurt.de/doc/texi/stabs_toc.html if [ "$#" -eq 0 -o ! -d "$1" ] then echo "Usage: $0 postgres_binary_directory [...]" 1>&2 exit 1 fi for DIR do # if objdump -W is recognized, only one line of error should appear if [ `objdump -W 2>&1 | wc -l` -eq 1 ] then # Linux objdump -W "$DIR"/* | egrep -A3 '\(DW_TAG_typedef\)' | awk ' $2 == "DW_AT_name" {print $NF}' elif [ `readelf -w 2>&1 | wc -l` -gt 1 ] then # FreeBSD, similar output to Linux readelf -w "$DIR"/* | egrep -A3 '\(DW_TAG_typedef\)' | awk ' $1 == "DW_AT_name" {print $NF}' fi done | grep -v ' ' | # some typedefs have spaces, remove them sort | uniq | # these are used both for typedefs and variable names # so do not include them egrep -v '^(date|interval|timestamp|ANY)$'