pkgsrc/mk/find-prefix.mk
2007-09-29 10:56:34 +00:00

58 lines
1.7 KiB
Makefile

# $NetBSD: find-prefix.mk,v 1.5 2007/09/29 10:56:34 rillig Exp $
#
# This is a "subroutine" that can be included to find the installation
# prefix of an installed package.
#
# Parameters:
#
# FIND_PREFIX
# A list of <VARNAME>=<pattern> pairs, where
#
# * <pattern> is a package wildcard pattern (see pkg_info(8)),
# * <VARNAME> is the variable that will be set to the
# installation prefix for the package.
#
# Returns:
#
# <VARNAME>
# The prefix of the corresponding package, or ${LOCALBASE}
# if the package is not installed.
#
# Example:
#
# FIND_PREFIX:= M4DIR=gm4
# .include "../../mk/find-prefix.mk"
# # ${M4DIR} now contains the installation prefix for the "gm4" package.
#
# The input variable is FIND_PREFIX, which is a list of VARNAME=<pattern>
# pairs, where "VARNAME" is the variable that will be set to the
# installation prefix for the package, and <pattern> is a package
# wildcard pattern used to match the installed package (see pkg_info(8)).
#
# An example use is:
#
# FIND_PREFIX:= M4DIR=gm4
# .include "../../mk/find-prefix.mk"
# # ${M4DIR} now contains the installation prefix for the "gm4" package
#
.for _def_ in ${FIND_PREFIX}
. if !defined(${_def_:C/=.*$//})
# XXX: Is this *_DEFAULT variable really necessary? The default value
# can be easily embedded in the shell code. What if VARNAME is set to
# PKG_APACHE, for example?
#
${_def_:C/=.*$//}_DEFAULT?= ${LOCALBASE}
_${_def_:C/=.*$//}_cmd= \
${PKG_INFO} -qp ${_def_:C/^[^=]*=//:Q} 2>/dev/null | \
{ read cmd arg; \
case "$$arg" in \
"") ${ECHO} ${${_def_:C/=.*$//}_DEFAULT:Q} ;; \
*) ${ECHO} "$$arg" ;; \
esac; }
${_def_:C/=.*$//}= ${_${_def_:C/=.*$//}_cmd:sh}
. endif
MAKEVARS+= ${_def_:C/=.*$//}
.endfor
.undef _def_