postgresql/src/tools/pginclude
Peter Eisentraut 9b1a6f50b9 Generate syscache info from catalog files
Add a new genbki macros MAKE_SYSCACHE that specifies the syscache ID
macro, the underlying index, and the number of buckets.  From that, we
can generate the existing tables in syscache.h and syscache.c via
genbki.pl.

Reviewed-by: John Naylor <johncnaylorls@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/75ae5875-3abc-dafc-8aec-73247ed41cde@eisentraut.org
2024-01-23 07:31:06 +01:00
..
README Doc: update src/tools/pginclude/README. 2023-05-23 18:51:43 -04:00
cpluspluscheck Generate syscache info from catalog files 2024-01-23 07:31:06 +01:00
headerscheck Generate syscache info from catalog files 2024-01-23 07:31:06 +01:00
pgcheckdefines Update copyright for 2024 2024-01-03 20:49:05 -05:00
pgcompinclude Lots of doc corrections. 2012-04-23 22:43:09 -04:00
pgdefine Improve method of avoiding fcinfo compile errors. 2011-09-01 14:16:13 -04:00
pgfixinclude Change references of CVS to .git. 2011-08-26 21:43:34 -04:00
pgrminclude Remove whitespace from end of lines 2012-05-15 22:19:41 +03:00

README

src/tools/pginclude/README

NOTE: headerscheck and cpluspluscheck are in current use, and any
problems they find should generally get fixed.  The other scripts
in this directory have not been used in some time, and have issues.
pgrminclude in particular has a history of creating more problems
than it fixes.  Be very wary of applying their results blindly.


pginclude
=========

These utilities help clean up #include file usage.  They should be run
in this order so that the include files have the proper includes before
the C files are tested.

pgfixinclude	change #include's to <> or ""

pgcompinclude [-v]
		report which #include files can not compile on their own

pgrminclude [-v]
		remove extra #include's

pgcheckdefines
		check for #ifdef tests on symbols defined in files that
		weren't included --- this is a necessary sanity check on
		pgrminclude

pgdefine	create macro calls for all defines in the file (used by
		the above routines)

It is also a good idea to sort the pg-specific include files in
alphabetic order.  This is best done with a text editor. Typical usage
order would be:

	pgfixinclude
	sort include references
	run multiple times:
		pgcompinclude
		pgrminclude /src/include
	pgrminclude /
	pgcheckdefines

There is a complexity when modifying /src/include.  If include file 1
includes file 2, and file 2 includes file 3, then when file 1 is
processed, it needs only file 2, not file 3.  However, if later, include
file 2 is processed, and file 3 is not needed by file 2 and is removed,
file 1 might then need to include file 3.  For this reason, the
pgcompinclude and pgrminclude /src/include steps must be run several
times until all includes compile cleanly.

Also, tests should be done with configure settings of --enable-cassert
and EXEC_BACKEND on and off.  It is also wise to test a WIN32 compile.

Another tools that does a similar task is at:

	http://code.google.com/p/include-what-you-use/

An include file visualizer script is available at:

	http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2011-09/msg00311.php


headerscheck
============

This script can be run to verify that all Postgres include files meet
the project convention that they will compile "standalone", that is
with no prerequisite headers other than postgres.h (or postgres_fe.h
or c.h, as appropriate).

A small number of header files are exempted from this requirement,
and are skipped by the headerscheck script.

The easy way to run the script is to say "make -s headerscheck" in
the top-level build directory after completing a build.  You should
have included "--with-perl --with-python" in your configure options,
else you're likely to get errors about related headers not being found.

A limitation of the current script is that it doesn't know exactly which
headers are for frontend or backend; when in doubt it uses postgres.h as
prerequisite, even if postgres_fe.h or c.h would be more appropriate.
Also note that the contents of macros are not checked; this is intentional.


cpluspluscheck
==============

This script can be run to verify that all Postgres include files meet
the project convention that they will compile as C++ code.  Although
the project's coding language is C, some people write extensions in C++,
so it's helpful for include files to be C++-clean.

A small number of header files are exempted from this requirement,
and are skipped by the cpluspluscheck script.

The easy way to run the script is to say "make -s cpluspluscheck" in
the top-level build directory after completing a build.  You should
have included "--with-perl --with-python" in your configure options,
else you're likely to get errors about related headers not being found.

If you are using a non-g++-compatible C++ compiler, you may need to
override the script's CXXFLAGS setting by setting a suitable environment
value.

A limitation of the current script is that it doesn't know exactly which
headers are for frontend or backend; when in doubt it uses postgres.h as
prerequisite, even if postgres_fe.h or c.h would be more appropriate.
Also note that the contents of macros are not checked; this is intentional.