-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
colorgcc
executable file
·249 lines (218 loc) · 6.5 KB
/
colorgcc
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
#! /usr/bin/perl -w
#
# colorgcc
#
# Version: 1.3.2
#
# $Id: colorgcc,v 1.10 1999/04/29 17:15:52 jamoyers Exp
#
# A wrapper to colorize the output from compilers whose messages
# match the "gcc" format.
#
# Requires the ANSIColor module from CPAN.
#
# Usage:
#
# In a directory that occurs in your PATH _before_ the directory
# where the compiler lives, create a softlink to colorgcc for
# each compiler you want to colorize:
#
# g++ -> colorgcc
# gcc -> colorgcc
# cc -> colorgcc
# etc.
#
# That's it. When "g++" is invoked, colorgcc is run instead.
# colorgcc looks at the program name to figure out which compiler to run.
#
# The default settings can be overridden with ~/.colorgccrc.
# See the comments in the sample .colorgccrc for more information.
#
# Note:
#
# colorgcc will only emit color codes if:
#
# (1) Its STDOUT is a tty and
# (2) the value of $TERM is not listed in the "nocolor" option.
#
# If colorgcc colorizes the output, the compiler's STDERR will be
# combined with STDOUT. Otherwise, colorgcc just passes the output from
# the compiler through without modification.
#
# Author: Jamie Moyers <jmoyers@geeks.com>
# Started: April 20, 1999
# Licence: GNU Public License
#
# Credits:
#
# I got the idea for this from a script called "color_cvs":
# color_cvs .03 Adrian Likins <adrian@gimp.org> <adrian@redhat.com>
#
# <seh4@ix.netcom.com> (Scott Harrington)
# Much improved handling of compiler command line arguments.
# exec compiler when not colorizing to preserve STDOUT, STDERR.
# Fixed my STDIN kludge.
#
# <ecarotti@athena.polito.it> (Elias S. G. Carotti)
# Corrected handling of text like -DPACKAGE=\"Package\"
# Spotted return code bug.
#
# <erwin@erwin.andreasen.org> (Erwin S. Andreasen)
# <schurchi@ucsd.edu> (Steve Churchill)
# Return code bug fixes.
#
# <rik@kde.org> (Rik Hemsley)
# Found STDIN bug.
#
# Changes:
#
# 1.3.2 Better handling of command line arguments to compiler.
#
# If we aren't colorizing output, we just exec the compiler which
# preserves the original STDOUT and STDERR.
#
# Removed STDIN kludge. STDIN being passed correctly now.
#
# 1.3.1 Added kludge to copy STDIN to the compiler's STDIN.
#
# 1.3.0 Now correctly returns (I hope) the return code of the compiler
# process as its own.
#
# 1.2.1 Applied patch to handle text similar to -DPACKAGE=\"Package\".
#
# 1.2.0 Added tty check. If STDOUT is not a tty, don't do color.
#
# 1.1.0 Added the "nocolor" option to turn off the color if the terminal type
# ($TERM) is listed.
#
# 1.0.0 Initial Version
use Term::ANSIColor;
use IPC::Open3;
sub initDefaults
{
$compilerPaths{"gcc"} = "/usr/bin/gcc";
$compilerPaths{"g++"} = "/usr/bin/g++";
$compilerPaths{"cc"} = "/usr/bin/cc";
$compilerPaths{"c++"} = "/usr/bin/c++";
$nocolor{"dumb"} = "true";
$colors{"srcColor"} = color("cyan");
$colors{"introColor"} = color("blue");
$colors{"warningFileNameColor"} = color("yellow");
$colors{"warningNumberColor"} = color("yellow");
$colors{"warningMessageColor"} = color("yellow");
$colors{"errorFileNameColor"} = color("bold red");
$colors{"errorNumberColor"} = color("bold red");
$colors{"errorMessageColor"} = color("bold red");
}
sub loadPreferences
{
# Usage: loadPreferences("filename");
my($filename) = @_;
open(PREFS, "<$filename") || return;
while(<PREFS>)
{
next if (m/^\#.*/); # It's a comment.
next if (!m/(.*):\s*(.*)/); # It's not of the form "foo: bar".
$option = $1;
$value = $2;
if ($option =~ m/cc|c\+\+|gcc|g\+\+/)
{
$compilerPaths{$option} = $value;
}
elsif ($option eq "nocolor")
{
# The nocolor option lists terminal types, separated by
# spaces, not to do color on.
foreach $termtype (split(/\s+/, $value))
{
$nocolor{$termtype} = "true";
}
}
else
{
$colors{$option} = color($value);
}
}
close(PREFS);
}
sub srcscan
{
# Usage: srcscan($text, $normalColor)
# $text -- the text to colorize
# $normalColor -- The escape sequence to use for non-source text.
# Looks for text between ` and ', and colors it srcColor.
my($line, $normalColor) = @_;
my($srcon) = color("reset") . $colors{"srcColor"};
my($srcoff) = color("reset") . $normalColor;
$line = $normalColor . $line;
# This substitute replaces `foo' with `AfooB' where A is the escape
# sequence that turns on the the desired source color, and B is the
# escape sequence that returns to $normalColor.
$line =~ s/\`(.*?)\'/\`$srcon$1$srcoff\'/g;
print($line, color("reset"));
}
#
# Main program
#
# Set up default values for colors and compilers.
initDefaults();
# Read the configuration file, if there is one.
$configFile = $ENV{"HOME"} . "/.colorgccrc";
if (-f $configFile)
{
loadPreferences($configFile);
}
# Figure out which compiler to invoke based on our program name.
$0 =~ m%.*/(.*)$%;
$progName = $1 || $0;
$compiler = $compilerPaths{$progName} || $compilerPaths{"gcc"};
# Get the terminal type.
$terminal = $ENV{"TERM"} || "dumb";
# If it's in the list of terminal types not to color, or if
# we're writing to something that's not a tty, don't do color.
if (! -t STDOUT || $nocolor{$terminal})
{
exec $compiler, @ARGV
or die("Couldn't exec");
}
# Keep the pid of the compiler process so we can get its return
# code and use that as our return code.
$compiler_pid = open3('<&STDIN', \*GCCOUT, '', $compiler, @ARGV);
# Colorize the output from the compiler.
while(<GCCOUT>)
{
if (m/^(.*?):([0-9]+):(.*)$/) # filename:lineno:message
{
$field1 = $1 || "";
$field2 = $2 || "";
$field3 = $3 || "";
if ($field3 =~ m/\s+warning:.*/)
{
# Warning
print($colors{"warningFileNameColor"}, "$field1:", color("reset"));
print($colors{"warningNumberColor"}, "$field2:", color("reset"));
srcscan($field3, $colors{"warningMessageColor"});
}
else
{
# Error
print($colors{"errorFileNameColor"}, "$field1:", color("reset"));
print($colors{"errorNumberColor"}, "$field2:", color("reset"));
srcscan($field3, $colors{"errorMessageColor"});
}
print("\n");
}
elsif (m/^(.*?):(.+):$/) # filename:message:
{
# No line number, treat as an "introductory" line of text.
srcscan($_, $colors{"introColor"});
}
else # Anything else.
{
# Doesn't seem to be a warning or an error. Print normally.
print(color("reset"), $_);
}
}
# Get the return code of the compiler and exit with that.
waitpid($compiler_pid, 0);
exit ($? >> 8);