#!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; use Getopt::Long; # collect lines continued with a '\' into an array sub continuation { my $fh = shift; my @line; while (<$fh>) { my $s = $_; $s =~ s/\\\s*$//; #$s =~ s/#.*$//; push @line, $s; last unless (/\\\s*$/); } return @line; } # regex && eval away unwanted strings from documentation sub beautify { my $text = shift; for (;;) { my $text2 = $text; $text =~ s/SKIP_\w+\(.*?"\s*\)//sxg; $text =~ s/USE_\w+\(\s*?(.*?)"\s*\)/$1"/sxg; $text =~ s/USAGE_\w+\(\s*?(.*?)"\s*\)/$1"/sxg; last if ( $text2 eq $text ); } $text =~ s/"\s*"//sg; my @line = split("\n", $text); $text = join('', map { s/^\s*"//; s/"\s*$//; s/%/%%/g; s/\$/\\\$/g; eval qq[ sprintf(qq{$_}) ] } @line ); return $text; } # generate POD for an applet sub pod_for_usage { my $name = shift; my $usage = shift; # Sigh. Fixup the known odd-name applets. $name =~ s/dpkg_deb/dpkg-deb/g; $name =~ s/fsck_minix/fsck.minix/g; $name =~ s/mkfs_minix/mkfs.minix/g; $name =~ s/run_parts/run-parts/g; $name =~ s/start_stop_daemon/start-stop-daemon/g; # make options bold my $trivial = $usage->{trivial}; if (!defined $usage->{trivial}) { $trivial = ""; } else { $trivial =~ s/(?/sxg; } my @f0 = map { $_ !~ /^\s/ && s/(?/g; $_ } split("\n", (defined $usage->{full} ? $usage->{full} : "")); # add "\n" prior to certain lines to make indented # lines look right my @f1; my $len = @f0; for (my $i = 0; $i < $len; $i++) { push @f1, $f0[$i]; if (($i+1) != $len && $f0[$i] !~ /^\s/ && $f0[$i+1] =~ /^\s/) { next if ($f0[$i] =~ /^$/); push(@f1, "") unless ($f0[$i+1] =~ /^\s*$/s); } } my $full = join("\n", @f1); # prepare notes if they exist my $notes = (defined $usage->{notes}) ? "$usage->{notes}\n\n" : ""; # prepare examples if they exist my $example = (defined $usage->{example}) ? "Example:\n\n" . join ("\n", map { "\t$_" } split("\n", $usage->{example})) . "\n\n" : ""; # Pad the name so that the applet name gets a line # by itself in BusyBox.txt my $spaces = 10 - length($name); if ($spaces > 0) { $name .= " " x $spaces; } return "=item B<$name>". "\n\n$name $trivial\n\n". "$full\n\n" . "$notes" . "$example" . "\n\n" ; } # the keys are applet names, and # the values will contain hashrefs of the form: # # { # trivial => "...", # full => "...", # notes => "...", # example => "...", # } my %docs; # get command-line options my %opt; GetOptions( \%opt, "help|h", "pod|p", "verbose|v", ); if (defined $opt{help}) { print "$0 [OPTION]... [FILE]...\n", "\t--help\n", "\t--pod\n", "\t--verbose\n", ; exit 1; } # collect documenation into %docs foreach (@ARGV) { open(USAGE, $_) || die("$0: $_: $!"); my $fh = *USAGE; my ($applet, $type, @line); while (<$fh>) { if (/^#define (\w+)_(\w+)_usage/) { $applet = $1; $type = $2; @line = continuation($fh); my $doc = $docs{$applet} ||= { }; my $text = join("\n", @line); $doc->{$type} = beautify($text); } } } # generate structured documentation my $generator = \&pod_for_usage; my @names = sort keys %docs; my $line = "\t[, [[, "; for (my $i = 0; $i < $#names; $i++) { if (length ($line.$names[$i]) >= 65) { print "$line\n\t"; $line = ""; } $line .= "$names[$i], "; } print $line . $names[-1]; print "\n\n=head1 COMMAND DESCRIPTIONS\n"; print "\n=over 4\n\n"; foreach my $applet (@names) { print $generator->($applet, $docs{$applet}); } exit 0; __END__ =head1 NAME autodocifier.pl - generate docs for busybox based on usage.h =head1 SYNOPSIS autodocifier.pl [OPTION]... [FILE]... Example: ( cat docs/busybox_header.pod; \ docs/autodocifier.pl usage.h; \ cat docs/busybox_footer.pod ) > docs/busybox.pod =head1 DESCRIPTION The purpose of this script is to automagically generate documentation for busybox using its usage.h as the original source for content. It used to be that same content has to be duplicated in 3 places in slightly different formats -- F, F. This was tedious and error-prone, so it was decided that F would contain all the text in a machine-readable form, and scripts could be used to transform this text into other forms if necessary. F is one such script. It is based on a script by Erik Andersen which was in turn based on a script by Mark Whitley =head1 OPTIONS =over 4 =item B<--help> This displays the help message. =item B<--pod> Generate POD (this is the default) =item B<--verbose> Be verbose (not implemented) =back =head1 FORMAT The following is an example of some data this script might parse. #define length_trivial_usage \ "STRING" #define length_full_usage \ "Prints out the length of the specified STRING." #define length_example_usage \ "$ length Hello\n" \ "5\n" Each entry is a cpp macro that defines a string. The macros are named systematically in the form: $name_$type_usage $name is the name of the applet. $type can be "trivial", "full", "notes", or "example". Every documentation macro must end with "_usage". The definition of the types is as follows: =over 4 =item B This should be a brief, one-line description of parameters that the command expects. This will be displayed when B<-h> is issued to a command. I =item B This should contain descriptions of each option. This will also be displayed along with the trivial help if CONFIG_FEATURE_TRIVIAL_HELP is disabled. I =item B This is documentation that is intended to go in the POD or SGML, but not be printed when a B<-h> is given to a command. To see an example of notes being used, see init_notes_usage in F. I =item B This should be an example of how the command is actually used. This will not be printed when a B<-h> is given to a command -- it will only be included in the POD or SGML documentation. I =back =head1 FILES F =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (c) 2001 John BEPPU. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 AUTHOR John BEPPU =cut