blob: 14142c7b74254f0ebb8dc6bef5d38745ee6310e5 [file] [log] [blame]
kelvin.zhangac22e652021-10-18 15:09:21 +08001# Copyright (c) 2011-2019, Ulf Magnusson
2# SPDX-License-Identifier: ISC
3
4"""
5Overview
6========
7
8Kconfiglib is a Python 2/3 library for scripting and extracting information
9from Kconfig (https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/kbuild/kconfig-language.txt)
10configuration systems.
11
12See the homepage at https://github.com/ulfalizer/Kconfiglib for a longer
13overview.
14
15Since Kconfiglib 12.0.0, the library version is available in
16kconfiglib.VERSION, which is a (<major>, <minor>, <patch>) tuple, e.g.
17(12, 0, 0).
18
19
20Using Kconfiglib on the Linux kernel with the Makefile targets
21==============================================================
22
23For the Linux kernel, a handy interface is provided by the
24scripts/kconfig/Makefile patch, which can be applied with either 'git am' or
25the 'patch' utility:
26
27 $ wget -qO- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ulfalizer/Kconfiglib/master/makefile.patch | git am
28 $ wget -qO- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ulfalizer/Kconfiglib/master/makefile.patch | patch -p1
29
30Warning: Not passing -p1 to patch will cause the wrong file to be patched.
31
32Please tell me if the patch does not apply. It should be trivial to apply
33manually, as it's just a block of text that needs to be inserted near the other
34*conf: targets in scripts/kconfig/Makefile.
35
36Look further down for a motivation for the Makefile patch and for instructions
37on how you can use Kconfiglib without it.
38
39If you do not wish to install Kconfiglib via pip, the Makefile patch is set up
40so that you can also just clone Kconfiglib into the kernel root:
41
42 $ git clone git://github.com/ulfalizer/Kconfiglib.git
43 $ git am Kconfiglib/makefile.patch (or 'patch -p1 < Kconfiglib/makefile.patch')
44
45Warning: The directory name Kconfiglib/ is significant in this case, because
46it's added to PYTHONPATH by the new targets in makefile.patch.
47
48The targets added by the Makefile patch are described in the following
49sections.
50
51
52make kmenuconfig
53----------------
54
55This target runs the curses menuconfig interface with Python 3. As of
56Kconfiglib 12.2.0, both Python 2 and Python 3 are supported (previously, only
57Python 3 was supported, so this was a backport).
58
59
60make guiconfig
61--------------
62
63This target runs the Tkinter menuconfig interface. Both Python 2 and Python 3
64are supported. To change the Python interpreter used, pass
65PYTHONCMD=<executable> to 'make'. The default is 'python'.
66
67
68make [ARCH=<arch>] iscriptconfig
69--------------------------------
70
71This target gives an interactive Python prompt where a Kconfig instance has
72been preloaded and is available in 'kconf'. To change the Python interpreter
73used, pass PYTHONCMD=<executable> to 'make'. The default is 'python'.
74
75To get a feel for the API, try evaluating and printing the symbols in
76kconf.defined_syms, and explore the MenuNode menu tree starting at
77kconf.top_node by following 'next' and 'list' pointers.
78
79The item contained in a menu node is found in MenuNode.item (note that this can
80be one of the constants kconfiglib.MENU and kconfiglib.COMMENT), and all
81symbols and choices have a 'nodes' attribute containing their menu nodes
82(usually only one). Printing a menu node will print its item, in Kconfig
83format.
84
85If you want to look up a symbol by name, use the kconf.syms dictionary.
86
87
88make scriptconfig SCRIPT=<script> [SCRIPT_ARG=<arg>]
89----------------------------------------------------
90
91This target runs the Python script given by the SCRIPT parameter on the
92configuration. sys.argv[1] holds the name of the top-level Kconfig file
93(currently always "Kconfig" in practice), and sys.argv[2] holds the SCRIPT_ARG
94argument, if given.
95
96See the examples/ subdirectory for example scripts.
97
98
99make dumpvarsconfig
100-------------------
101
102This target prints a list of all environment variables referenced from the
103Kconfig files, together with their values. See the
104Kconfiglib/examples/dumpvars.py script.
105
106Only environment variables that are referenced via the Kconfig preprocessor
107$(FOO) syntax are included. The preprocessor was added in Linux 4.18.
108
109
110Using Kconfiglib without the Makefile targets
111=============================================
112
113The make targets are only needed to pick up environment variables exported from
114the Kbuild makefiles and referenced inside Kconfig files, via e.g.
115'source "arch/$(SRCARCH)/Kconfig" and commands run via '$(shell,...)'.
116
117These variables are referenced as of writing (Linux 4.18), together with sample
118values:
119
120 srctree (.)
121 ARCH (x86)
122 SRCARCH (x86)
123 KERNELVERSION (4.18.0)
124 CC (gcc)
125 HOSTCC (gcc)
126 HOSTCXX (g++)
127 CC_VERSION_TEXT (gcc (Ubuntu 7.3.0-16ubuntu3) 7.3.0)
128
129Older kernels only reference ARCH, SRCARCH, and KERNELVERSION.
130
131If your kernel is recent enough (4.18+), you can get a list of referenced
132environment variables via 'make dumpvarsconfig' (see above). Note that this
133command is added by the Makefile patch.
134
135To run Kconfiglib without the Makefile patch, set the environment variables
136manually:
137
138 $ srctree=. ARCH=x86 SRCARCH=x86 KERNELVERSION=`make kernelversion` ... python(3)
139 >>> import kconfiglib
140 >>> kconf = kconfiglib.Kconfig() # filename defaults to "Kconfig"
141
142Search the top-level Makefile for "Additional ARCH settings" to see other
143possibilities for ARCH and SRCARCH.
144
145
146Intro to symbol values
147======================
148
149Kconfiglib has the same assignment semantics as the C implementation.
150
151Any symbol can be assigned a value by the user (via Kconfig.load_config() or
152Symbol.set_value()), but this user value is only respected if the symbol is
153visible, which corresponds to it (currently) being visible in the menuconfig
154interface.
155
156For symbols with prompts, the visibility of the symbol is determined by the
157condition on the prompt. Symbols without prompts are never visible, so setting
158a user value on them is pointless. A warning will be printed by default if
159Symbol.set_value() is called on a promptless symbol. Assignments to promptless
160symbols are normal within a .config file, so no similar warning will be printed
161by load_config().
162
163Dependencies from parents and 'if'/'depends on' are propagated to properties,
164including prompts, so these two configurations are logically equivalent:
165
166(1)
167
168 menu "menu"
169 depends on A
170
171 if B
172
173 config FOO
174 tristate "foo" if D
175 default y
176 depends on C
177
178 endif
179
180 endmenu
181
182(2)
183
184 menu "menu"
185 depends on A
186
187 config FOO
188 tristate "foo" if A && B && C && D
189 default y if A && B && C
190
191 endmenu
192
193In this example, A && B && C && D (the prompt condition) needs to be non-n for
194FOO to be visible (assignable). If its value is m, the symbol can only be
195assigned the value m: The visibility sets an upper bound on the value that can
196be assigned by the user, and any higher user value will be truncated down.
197
198'default' properties are independent of the visibility, though a 'default' will
199often get the same condition as the prompt due to dependency propagation.
200'default' properties are used if the symbol is not visible or has no user
201value.
202
203Symbols with no user value (or that have a user value but are not visible) and
204no (active) 'default' default to n for bool/tristate symbols, and to the empty
205string for other symbol types.
206
207'select' works similarly to symbol visibility, but sets a lower bound on the
208value of the symbol. The lower bound is determined by the value of the
209select*ing* symbol. 'select' does not respect visibility, so non-visible
210symbols can be forced to a particular (minimum) value by a select as well.
211
212For non-bool/tristate symbols, it only matters whether the visibility is n or
213non-n: m visibility acts the same as y visibility.
214
215Conditions on 'default' and 'select' work in mostly intuitive ways. If the
216condition is n, the 'default' or 'select' is disabled. If it is m, the
217'default' or 'select' value (the value of the selecting symbol) is truncated
218down to m.
219
220When writing a configuration with Kconfig.write_config(), only symbols that are
221visible, have an (active) default, or are selected will get written out (note
222that this includes all symbols that would accept user values). Kconfiglib
223matches the .config format produced by the C implementations down to the
224character. This eases testing.
225
226For a visible bool/tristate symbol FOO with value n, this line is written to
227.config:
228
229 # CONFIG_FOO is not set
230
231The point is to remember the user n selection (which might differ from the
232default value the symbol would get), while at the same sticking to the rule
233that undefined corresponds to n (.config uses Makefile format, making the line
234above a comment). When the .config file is read back in, this line will be
235treated the same as the following assignment:
236
237 CONFIG_FOO=n
238
239In Kconfiglib, the set of (currently) assignable values for a bool/tristate
240symbol appear in Symbol.assignable. For other symbol types, just check if
241sym.visibility is non-0 (non-n) to see whether the user value will have an
242effect.
243
244
245Intro to the menu tree
246======================
247
248The menu structure, as seen in e.g. menuconfig, is represented by a tree of
249MenuNode objects. The top node of the configuration corresponds to an implicit
250top-level menu, the title of which is shown at the top in the standard
251menuconfig interface. (The title is also available in Kconfig.mainmenu_text in
252Kconfiglib.)
253
254The top node is found in Kconfig.top_node. From there, you can visit child menu
255nodes by following the 'list' pointer, and any following menu nodes by
256following the 'next' pointer. Usually, a non-None 'list' pointer indicates a
257menu or Choice, but menu nodes for symbols can sometimes have a non-None 'list'
258pointer too due to submenus created implicitly from dependencies.
259
260MenuNode.item is either a Symbol or a Choice object, or one of the constants
261MENU and COMMENT. The prompt of the menu node can be found in MenuNode.prompt,
262which also holds the title for menus and comments. For Symbol and Choice,
263MenuNode.help holds the help text (if any, otherwise None).
264
265Most symbols will only have a single menu node. A symbol defined in multiple
266locations will have one menu node for each location. The list of menu nodes for
267a Symbol or Choice can be found in the Symbol/Choice.nodes attribute.
268
269Note that prompts and help texts for symbols and choices are stored in their
270menu node(s) rather than in the Symbol or Choice objects themselves. This makes
271it possible to define a symbol in multiple locations with a different prompt or
272help text in each location. To get the help text or prompt for a symbol with a
273single menu node, do sym.nodes[0].help and sym.nodes[0].prompt, respectively.
274The prompt is a (text, condition) tuple, where condition determines the
275visibility (see 'Intro to expressions' below).
276
277This organization mirrors the C implementation. MenuNode is called
278'struct menu' there, but I thought "menu" was a confusing name.
279
280It is possible to give a Choice a name and define it in multiple locations,
281hence why Choice.nodes is also a list.
282
283As a convenience, the properties added at a particular definition location are
284available on the MenuNode itself, in e.g. MenuNode.defaults. This is helpful
285when generating documentation, so that symbols/choices defined in multiple
286locations can be shown with the correct properties at each location.
287
288
289Intro to expressions
290====================
291
292Expressions can be evaluated with the expr_value() function and printed with
293the expr_str() function (these are used internally as well). Evaluating an
294expression always yields a tristate value, where n, m, and y are represented as
2950, 1, and 2, respectively.
296
297The following table should help you figure out how expressions are represented.
298A, B, C, ... are symbols (Symbol instances), NOT is the kconfiglib.NOT
299constant, etc.
300
301Expression Representation
302---------- --------------
303A A
304"A" A (constant symbol)
305!A (NOT, A)
306A && B (AND, A, B)
307A && B && C (AND, A, (AND, B, C))
308A || B (OR, A, B)
309A || (B && C && D) (OR, A, (AND, B, (AND, C, D)))
310A = B (EQUAL, A, B)
311A != "foo" (UNEQUAL, A, foo (constant symbol))
312A && B = C && D (AND, A, (AND, (EQUAL, B, C), D))
313n Kconfig.n (constant symbol)
314m Kconfig.m (constant symbol)
315y Kconfig.y (constant symbol)
316"y" Kconfig.y (constant symbol)
317
318Strings like "foo" in 'default "foo"' or 'depends on SYM = "foo"' are
319represented as constant symbols, so the only values that appear in expressions
320are symbols***. This mirrors the C implementation.
321
322***For choice symbols, the parent Choice will appear in expressions as well,
323but it's usually invisible as the value interfaces of Symbol and Choice are
324identical. This mirrors the C implementation and makes different choice modes
325"just work".
326
327Manual evaluation examples:
328
329 - The value of A && B is min(A.tri_value, B.tri_value)
330
331 - The value of A || B is max(A.tri_value, B.tri_value)
332
333 - The value of !A is 2 - A.tri_value
334
335 - The value of A = B is 2 (y) if A.str_value == B.str_value, and 0 (n)
336 otherwise. Note that str_value is used here instead of tri_value.
337
338 For constant (as well as undefined) symbols, str_value matches the name of
339 the symbol. This mirrors the C implementation and explains why
340 'depends on SYM = "foo"' above works as expected.
341
342n/m/y are automatically converted to the corresponding constant symbols
343"n"/"m"/"y" (Kconfig.n/m/y) during parsing.
344
345Kconfig.const_syms is a dictionary like Kconfig.syms but for constant symbols.
346
347If a condition is missing (e.g., <cond> when the 'if <cond>' is removed from
348'default A if <cond>'), it is actually Kconfig.y. The standard __str__()
349functions just avoid printing 'if y' conditions to give cleaner output.
350
351
352Kconfig extensions
353==================
354
355Kconfiglib includes a couple of Kconfig extensions:
356
357'source' with relative path
358---------------------------
359
360The 'rsource' statement sources Kconfig files with a path relative to directory
361of the Kconfig file containing the 'rsource' statement, instead of relative to
362the project root.
363
364Consider following directory tree:
365
366 Project
367 +--Kconfig
368 |
369 +--src
370 +--Kconfig
371 |
372 +--SubSystem1
373 +--Kconfig
374 |
375 +--ModuleA
376 +--Kconfig
377
378In this example, assume that src/SubSystem1/Kconfig wants to source
379src/SubSystem1/ModuleA/Kconfig.
380
381With 'source', this statement would be used:
382
383 source "src/SubSystem1/ModuleA/Kconfig"
384
385With 'rsource', this turns into
386
387 rsource "ModuleA/Kconfig"
388
389If an absolute path is given to 'rsource', it acts the same as 'source'.
390
391'rsource' can be used to create "position-independent" Kconfig trees that can
392be moved around freely.
393
394
395Globbing 'source'
396-----------------
397
398'source' and 'rsource' accept glob patterns, sourcing all matching Kconfig
399files. They require at least one matching file, raising a KconfigError
400otherwise.
401
402For example, the following statement might source sub1/foofoofoo and
403sub2/foobarfoo:
404
405 source "sub[12]/foo*foo"
406
407The glob patterns accepted are the same as for the standard glob.glob()
408function.
409
410Two additional statements are provided for cases where it's acceptable for a
411pattern to match no files: 'osource' and 'orsource' (the o is for "optional").
412
413For example, the following statements will be no-ops if neither "foo" nor any
414files matching "bar*" exist:
415
416 osource "foo"
417 osource "bar*"
418
419'orsource' does a relative optional source.
420
421'source' and 'osource' are analogous to 'include' and '-include' in Make.
422
423
424Generalized def_* keywords
425--------------------------
426
427def_int, def_hex, and def_string are available in addition to def_bool and
428def_tristate, allowing int, hex, and string symbols to be given a type and a
429default at the same time.
430
431
432Extra optional warnings
433-----------------------
434
435Some optional warnings can be controlled via environment variables:
436
437 - KCONFIG_WARN_UNDEF: If set to 'y', warnings will be generated for all
438 references to undefined symbols within Kconfig files. The only gotcha is
439 that all hex literals must be prefixed with "0x" or "0X", to make it
440 possible to distinguish them from symbol references.
441
442 Some projects (e.g. the Linux kernel) use multiple Kconfig trees with many
443 shared Kconfig files, leading to some safe undefined symbol references.
444 KCONFIG_WARN_UNDEF is useful in projects that only have a single Kconfig
445 tree though.
446
447 KCONFIG_STRICT is an older alias for this environment variable, supported
448 for backwards compatibility.
449
450 - KCONFIG_WARN_UNDEF_ASSIGN: If set to 'y', warnings will be generated for
451 all assignments to undefined symbols within .config files. By default, no
452 such warnings are generated.
453
454 This warning can also be enabled/disabled via the Kconfig.warn_assign_undef
455 variable.
456
457
458Preprocessor user functions defined in Python
459---------------------------------------------
460
461Preprocessor functions can be defined in Python, which makes it simple to
462integrate information from existing Python tools into Kconfig (e.g. to have
463Kconfig symbols depend on hardware information stored in some other format).
464
465Putting a Python module named kconfigfunctions(.py) anywhere in sys.path will
466cause it to be imported by Kconfiglib (in Kconfig.__init__()). Note that
467sys.path can be customized via PYTHONPATH, and includes the directory of the
468module being run by default, as well as installation directories.
469
470If the KCONFIG_FUNCTIONS environment variable is set, it gives a different
471module name to use instead of 'kconfigfunctions'.
472
473The imported module is expected to define a global dictionary named 'functions'
474that maps function names to Python functions, as follows:
475
476 def my_fn(kconf, name, arg_1, arg_2, ...):
477 # kconf:
478 # Kconfig instance
479 #
480 # name:
481 # Name of the user-defined function ("my-fn"). Think argv[0].
482 #
483 # arg_1, arg_2, ...:
484 # Arguments passed to the function from Kconfig (strings)
485 #
486 # Returns a string to be substituted as the result of calling the
487 # function
488 ...
489
490 def my_other_fn(kconf, name, arg_1, arg_2, ...):
491 ...
492
493 functions = {
494 "my-fn": (my_fn, <min.args>, <max.args>/None),
495 "my-other-fn": (my_other_fn, <min.args>, <max.args>/None),
496 ...
497 }
498
499 ...
500
501<min.args> and <max.args> are the minimum and maximum number of arguments
502expected by the function (excluding the implicit 'name' argument). If
503<max.args> is None, there is no upper limit to the number of arguments. Passing
504an invalid number of arguments will generate a KconfigError exception.
505
506Functions can access the current parsing location as kconf.filename/linenr.
507Accessing other fields of the Kconfig object is not safe. See the warning
508below.
509
510Keep in mind that for a variable defined like 'foo = $(fn)', 'fn' will be
511called only when 'foo' is expanded. If 'fn' uses the parsing location and the
512intent is to use the location of the assignment, you want 'foo := $(fn)'
513instead, which calls the function immediately.
514
515Once defined, user functions can be called from Kconfig in the same way as
516other preprocessor functions:
517
518 config FOO
519 ...
520 depends on $(my-fn,arg1,arg2)
521
522If my_fn() returns "n", this will result in
523
524 config FOO
525 ...
526 depends on n
527
528Warning
529*******
530
531User-defined preprocessor functions are called as they're encountered at parse
532time, before all Kconfig files have been processed, and before the menu tree
533has been finalized. There are no guarantees that accessing Kconfig symbols or
534the menu tree via the 'kconf' parameter will work, and it could potentially
535lead to a crash.
536
537Preferably, user-defined functions should be stateless.
538
539
540Feedback
541========
542
543Send bug reports, suggestions, and questions to ulfalizer a.t Google's email
544service, or open a ticket on the GitHub page.
545"""
546import errno
547import importlib
548import os
549import re
550import sys
551
552# Get rid of some attribute lookups. These are obvious in context.
553from glob import iglob
554from os.path import dirname, exists, expandvars, islink, join, realpath
555
556
557VERSION = (14, 1, 0)
558
559
560# File layout:
561#
562# Public classes
563# Public functions
564# Internal functions
565# Global constants
566
567# Line length: 79 columns
568
569
570#
571# Public classes
572#
573
574
575class Kconfig(object):
576 """
577 Represents a Kconfig configuration, e.g. for x86 or ARM. This is the set of
578 symbols, choices, and menu nodes appearing in the configuration. Creating
579 any number of Kconfig objects (including for different architectures) is
580 safe. Kconfiglib doesn't keep any global state.
581
582 The following attributes are available. They should be treated as
583 read-only, and some are implemented through @property magic.
584
585 syms:
586 A dictionary with all symbols in the configuration, indexed by name. Also
587 includes all symbols that are referenced in expressions but never
588 defined, except for constant (quoted) symbols.
589
590 Undefined symbols can be recognized by Symbol.nodes being empty -- see
591 the 'Intro to the menu tree' section in the module docstring.
592
593 const_syms:
594 A dictionary like 'syms' for constant (quoted) symbols
595
596 named_choices:
597 A dictionary like 'syms' for named choices (choice FOO)
598
599 defined_syms:
600 A list with all defined symbols, in the same order as they appear in the
601 Kconfig files. Symbols defined in multiple locations appear multiple
602 times.
603
604 Note: You probably want to use 'unique_defined_syms' instead. This
605 attribute is mostly maintained for backwards compatibility.
606
607 unique_defined_syms:
608 A list like 'defined_syms', but with duplicates removed. Just the first
609 instance is kept for symbols defined in multiple locations. Kconfig order
610 is preserved otherwise.
611
612 Using this attribute instead of 'defined_syms' can save work, and
613 automatically gives reasonable behavior when writing configuration output
614 (symbols defined in multiple locations only generate output once, while
615 still preserving Kconfig order for readability).
616
617 choices:
618 A list with all choices, in the same order as they appear in the Kconfig
619 files.
620
621 Note: You probably want to use 'unique_choices' instead. This attribute
622 is mostly maintained for backwards compatibility.
623
624 unique_choices:
625 Analogous to 'unique_defined_syms', for choices. Named choices can have
626 multiple definition locations.
627
628 menus:
629 A list with all menus, in the same order as they appear in the Kconfig
630 files
631
632 comments:
633 A list with all comments, in the same order as they appear in the Kconfig
634 files
635
636 kconfig_filenames:
637 A list with the filenames of all Kconfig files included in the
638 configuration, relative to $srctree (or relative to the current directory
639 if $srctree isn't set), except absolute paths (e.g.
640 'source "/foo/Kconfig"') are kept as-is.
641
642 The files are listed in the order they are source'd, starting with the
643 top-level Kconfig file. If a file is source'd multiple times, it will
644 appear multiple times. Use set() to get unique filenames.
645
646 Note that Kconfig.sync_deps() already indirectly catches any file
647 modifications that change configuration output.
648
649 env_vars:
650 A set() with the names of all environment variables referenced in the
651 Kconfig files.
652
653 Only environment variables referenced with the preprocessor $(FOO) syntax
654 will be registered. The older $FOO syntax is only supported for backwards
655 compatibility.
656
657 Also note that $(FOO) won't be registered unless the environment variable
658 $FOO is actually set. If it isn't, $(FOO) is an expansion of an unset
659 preprocessor variable (which gives the empty string).
660
661 Another gotcha is that environment variables referenced in the values of
662 recursively expanded preprocessor variables (those defined with =) will
663 only be registered if the variable is actually used (expanded) somewhere.
664
665 The note from the 'kconfig_filenames' documentation applies here too.
666
667 n/m/y:
668 The predefined constant symbols n/m/y. Also available in const_syms.
669
670 modules:
671 The Symbol instance for the modules symbol. Currently hardcoded to
672 MODULES, which is backwards compatible. Kconfiglib will warn if
673 'option modules' is set on some other symbol. Tell me if you need proper
674 'option modules' support.
675
676 'modules' is never None. If the MODULES symbol is not explicitly defined,
677 its tri_value will be 0 (n), as expected.
678
679 A simple way to enable modules is to do 'kconf.modules.set_value(2)'
680 (provided the MODULES symbol is defined and visible). Modules are
681 disabled by default in the kernel Kconfig files as of writing, though
682 nearly all defconfig files enable them (with 'CONFIG_MODULES=y').
683
684 defconfig_list:
685 The Symbol instance for the 'option defconfig_list' symbol, or None if no
686 defconfig_list symbol exists. The defconfig filename derived from this
687 symbol can be found in Kconfig.defconfig_filename.
688
689 defconfig_filename:
690 The filename given by the defconfig_list symbol. This is taken from the
691 first 'default' with a satisfied condition where the specified file
692 exists (can be opened for reading). If a defconfig file foo/defconfig is
693 not found and $srctree was set when the Kconfig was created,
694 $srctree/foo/defconfig is looked up as well.
695
696 'defconfig_filename' is None if either no defconfig_list symbol exists,
697 or if the defconfig_list symbol has no 'default' with a satisfied
698 condition that specifies a file that exists.
699
700 Gotcha: scripts/kconfig/Makefile might pass --defconfig=<defconfig> to
701 scripts/kconfig/conf when running e.g. 'make defconfig'. This option
702 overrides the defconfig_list symbol, meaning defconfig_filename might not
703 always match what 'make defconfig' would use.
704
705 top_node:
706 The menu node (see the MenuNode class) of the implicit top-level menu.
707 Acts as the root of the menu tree.
708
709 mainmenu_text:
710 The prompt (title) of the top menu (top_node). Defaults to "Main menu".
711 Can be changed with the 'mainmenu' statement (see kconfig-language.txt).
712
713 variables:
714 A dictionary with all preprocessor variables, indexed by name. See the
715 Variable class.
716
717 warn:
718 Set this variable to True/False to enable/disable warnings. See
719 Kconfig.__init__().
720
721 When 'warn' is False, the values of the other warning-related variables
722 are ignored.
723
724 This variable as well as the other warn* variables can be read to check
725 the current warning settings.
726
727 warn_to_stderr:
728 Set this variable to True/False to enable/disable warnings on stderr. See
729 Kconfig.__init__().
730
731 warn_assign_undef:
732 Set this variable to True to generate warnings for assignments to
733 undefined symbols in configuration files.
734
735 This variable is False by default unless the KCONFIG_WARN_UNDEF_ASSIGN
736 environment variable was set to 'y' when the Kconfig instance was
737 created.
738
739 warn_assign_override:
740 Set this variable to True to generate warnings for multiple assignments
741 to the same symbol in configuration files, where the assignments set
742 different values (e.g. CONFIG_FOO=m followed by CONFIG_FOO=y, where the
743 last value would get used).
744
745 This variable is True by default. Disabling it might be useful when
746 merging configurations.
747
748 warn_assign_redun:
749 Like warn_assign_override, but for multiple assignments setting a symbol
750 to the same value.
751
752 This variable is True by default. Disabling it might be useful when
753 merging configurations.
754
755 warnings:
756 A list of strings containing all warnings that have been generated, for
757 cases where more flexibility is needed.
758
759 See the 'warn_to_stderr' parameter to Kconfig.__init__() and the
760 Kconfig.warn_to_stderr variable as well. Note that warnings still get
761 added to Kconfig.warnings when 'warn_to_stderr' is True.
762
763 Just as for warnings printed to stderr, only warnings that are enabled
764 will get added to Kconfig.warnings. See the various Kconfig.warn*
765 variables.
766
767 missing_syms:
768 A list with (name, value) tuples for all assignments to undefined symbols
769 within the most recently loaded .config file(s). 'name' is the symbol
770 name without the 'CONFIG_' prefix. 'value' is a string that gives the
771 right-hand side of the assignment verbatim.
772
773 See Kconfig.load_config() as well.
774
775 srctree:
776 The value the $srctree environment variable had when the Kconfig instance
777 was created, or the empty string if $srctree wasn't set. This gives nice
778 behavior with os.path.join(), which treats "" as the current directory,
779 without adding "./".
780
781 Kconfig files are looked up relative to $srctree (unless absolute paths
782 are used), and .config files are looked up relative to $srctree if they
783 are not found in the current directory. This is used to support
784 out-of-tree builds. The C tools use this environment variable in the same
785 way.
786
787 Changing $srctree after creating the Kconfig instance has no effect. Only
788 the value when the configuration is loaded matters. This avoids surprises
789 if multiple configurations are loaded with different values for $srctree.
790
791 config_prefix:
792 The value the CONFIG_ environment variable had when the Kconfig instance
793 was created, or "CONFIG_" if CONFIG_ wasn't set. This is the prefix used
794 (and expected) on symbol names in .config files and C headers. Used in
795 the same way in the C tools.
796
797 config_header:
798 The value the KCONFIG_CONFIG_HEADER environment variable had when the
799 Kconfig instance was created, or the empty string if
800 KCONFIG_CONFIG_HEADER wasn't set. This string is inserted verbatim at the
801 beginning of configuration files. See write_config().
802
803 header_header:
804 The value the KCONFIG_AUTOHEADER_HEADER environment variable had when the
805 Kconfig instance was created, or the empty string if
806 KCONFIG_AUTOHEADER_HEADER wasn't set. This string is inserted verbatim at
807 the beginning of header files. See write_autoconf().
808
809 filename/linenr:
810 The current parsing location, for use in Python preprocessor functions.
811 See the module docstring.
812 """
813 __slots__ = (
814 "_encoding",
815 "_functions",
816 "_set_match",
817 "_srctree_prefix",
818 "_unset_match",
819 "_warn_assign_no_prompt",
820 "choices",
821 "comments",
822 "config_header",
823 "config_prefix",
824 "const_syms",
825 "defconfig_list",
826 "defined_syms",
827 "env_vars",
828 "header_header",
829 "kconfig_filenames",
830 "m",
831 "menus",
832 "missing_syms",
833 "modules",
834 "n",
835 "named_choices",
836 "srctree",
837 "syms",
838 "top_node",
839 "unique_choices",
840 "unique_defined_syms",
841 "variables",
842 "warn",
843 "warn_assign_override",
844 "warn_assign_redun",
845 "warn_assign_undef",
846 "warn_to_stderr",
847 "warnings",
848 "y",
849
850 # Parsing-related
851 "_parsing_kconfigs",
852 "_readline",
853 "filename",
854 "linenr",
855 "_include_path",
856 "_filestack",
857 "_line",
858 "_tokens",
859 "_tokens_i",
860 "_reuse_tokens",
861 )
862
863 #
864 # Public interface
865 #
866
867 def __init__(self, filename="Kconfig", warn=True, warn_to_stderr=True,
868 encoding="utf-8", suppress_traceback=False):
869 """
870 Creates a new Kconfig object by parsing Kconfig files.
871 Note that Kconfig files are not the same as .config files (which store
872 configuration symbol values).
873
874 See the module docstring for some environment variables that influence
875 default warning settings (KCONFIG_WARN_UNDEF and
876 KCONFIG_WARN_UNDEF_ASSIGN).
877
878 Raises KconfigError on syntax/semantic errors, and OSError or (possibly
879 a subclass of) IOError on IO errors ('errno', 'strerror', and
880 'filename' are available). Note that IOError is an alias for OSError on
881 Python 3, so it's enough to catch OSError there. If you need Python 2/3
882 compatibility, it's easiest to catch EnvironmentError, which is a
883 common base class of OSError/IOError on Python 2 and an alias for
884 OSError on Python 3.
885
886 filename (default: "Kconfig"):
887 The Kconfig file to load. For the Linux kernel, you'll want "Kconfig"
888 from the top-level directory, as environment variables will make sure
889 the right Kconfig is included from there (arch/$SRCARCH/Kconfig as of
890 writing).
891
892 If $srctree is set, 'filename' will be looked up relative to it.
893 $srctree is also used to look up source'd files within Kconfig files.
894 See the class documentation.
895
896 If you are using Kconfiglib via 'make scriptconfig', the filename of
897 the base base Kconfig file will be in sys.argv[1]. It's currently
898 always "Kconfig" in practice.
899
900 warn (default: True):
901 True if warnings related to this configuration should be generated.
902 This can be changed later by setting Kconfig.warn to True/False. It
903 is provided as a constructor argument since warnings might be
904 generated during parsing.
905
906 See the other Kconfig.warn_* variables as well, which enable or
907 suppress certain warnings when warnings are enabled.
908
909 All generated warnings are added to the Kconfig.warnings list. See
910 the class documentation.
911
912 warn_to_stderr (default: True):
913 True if warnings should be printed to stderr in addition to being
914 added to Kconfig.warnings.
915
916 This can be changed later by setting Kconfig.warn_to_stderr to
917 True/False.
918
919 encoding (default: "utf-8"):
920 The encoding to use when reading and writing files, and when decoding
921 output from commands run via $(shell). If None, the encoding
922 specified in the current locale will be used.
923
924 The "utf-8" default avoids exceptions on systems that are configured
925 to use the C locale, which implies an ASCII encoding.
926
927 This parameter has no effect on Python 2, due to implementation
928 issues (regular strings turning into Unicode strings, which are
929 distinct in Python 2). Python 2 doesn't decode regular strings
930 anyway.
931
932 Related PEP: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0538/
933
934 suppress_traceback (default: False):
935 Helper for tools. When True, any EnvironmentError or KconfigError
936 generated during parsing is caught, the exception message is printed
937 to stderr together with the command name, and sys.exit(1) is called
938 (which generates SystemExit).
939
940 This hides the Python traceback for "expected" errors like syntax
941 errors in Kconfig files.
942
943 Other exceptions besides EnvironmentError and KconfigError are still
944 propagated when suppress_traceback is True.
945 """
946 try:
947 self._init(filename, warn, warn_to_stderr, encoding)
948 except (EnvironmentError, KconfigError) as e:
949 if suppress_traceback:
950 cmd = sys.argv[0] # Empty string if missing
951 if cmd:
952 cmd += ": "
953 # Some long exception messages have extra newlines for better
954 # formatting when reported as an unhandled exception. Strip
955 # them here.
956 sys.exit(cmd + str(e).strip())
957 raise
958
959 def _init(self, filename, warn, warn_to_stderr, encoding):
960 # See __init__()
961
962 self._encoding = encoding
963
964 self.srctree = os.getenv("srctree", "")
965 # A prefix we can reliably strip from glob() results to get a filename
966 # relative to $srctree. relpath() can cause issues for symlinks,
967 # because it assumes symlink/../foo is the same as foo/.
968 self._srctree_prefix = realpath(self.srctree) + os.sep
969
970 self.warn = warn
971 self.warn_to_stderr = warn_to_stderr
972 self.warn_assign_undef = os.getenv("KCONFIG_WARN_UNDEF_ASSIGN") == "y"
973 self.warn_assign_override = True
974 self.warn_assign_redun = True
975 self._warn_assign_no_prompt = True
976
977 self.warnings = []
978
979 self.config_prefix = os.getenv("CONFIG_", "CONFIG_")
980 # Regular expressions for parsing .config files
981 self._set_match = _re_match(self.config_prefix + r"([^=]+)=(.*)")
982 self._unset_match = _re_match(r"# {}([^ ]+) is not set".format(
983 self.config_prefix))
984
985 self.config_header = os.getenv("KCONFIG_CONFIG_HEADER", "")
986 self.header_header = os.getenv("KCONFIG_AUTOHEADER_HEADER", "")
987
988 self.syms = {}
989 self.const_syms = {}
990 self.defined_syms = []
991 self.missing_syms = []
992 self.named_choices = {}
993 self.choices = []
994 self.menus = []
995 self.comments = []
996
997 for nmy in "n", "m", "y":
998 sym = Symbol()
999 sym.kconfig = self
1000 sym.name = nmy
1001 sym.is_constant = True
1002 sym.orig_type = TRISTATE
1003 sym._cached_tri_val = STR_TO_TRI[nmy]
1004
1005 self.const_syms[nmy] = sym
1006
1007 self.n = self.const_syms["n"]
1008 self.m = self.const_syms["m"]
1009 self.y = self.const_syms["y"]
1010
1011 # Make n/m/y well-formed symbols
1012 for nmy in "n", "m", "y":
1013 sym = self.const_syms[nmy]
1014 sym.rev_dep = sym.weak_rev_dep = sym.direct_dep = self.n
1015
1016 # Maps preprocessor variables names to Variable instances
1017 self.variables = {}
1018
1019 # Predefined preprocessor functions, with min/max number of arguments
1020 self._functions = {
1021 "info": (_info_fn, 1, 1),
1022 "error-if": (_error_if_fn, 2, 2),
1023 "filename": (_filename_fn, 0, 0),
1024 "lineno": (_lineno_fn, 0, 0),
1025 "shell": (_shell_fn, 1, 1),
1026 "warning-if": (_warning_if_fn, 2, 2),
1027 }
1028
1029 # Add any user-defined preprocessor functions
1030 try:
1031 self._functions.update(
1032 importlib.import_module(
1033 os.getenv("KCONFIG_FUNCTIONS", "kconfigfunctions")
1034 ).functions)
1035 except ImportError:
1036 pass
1037
1038 # This determines whether previously unseen symbols are registered.
1039 # They shouldn't be if we parse expressions after parsing, as part of
1040 # Kconfig.eval_string().
1041 self._parsing_kconfigs = True
1042
1043 self.modules = self._lookup_sym("MODULES")
1044 self.defconfig_list = None
1045
1046 self.top_node = MenuNode()
1047 self.top_node.kconfig = self
1048 self.top_node.item = MENU
1049 self.top_node.is_menuconfig = True
1050 self.top_node.visibility = self.y
1051 self.top_node.prompt = ("Main menu", self.y)
1052 self.top_node.parent = None
1053 self.top_node.dep = self.y
1054 self.top_node.filename = filename
1055 self.top_node.linenr = 1
1056 self.top_node.include_path = ()
1057
1058 # Parse the Kconfig files
1059
1060 # Not used internally. Provided as a convenience.
1061 self.kconfig_filenames = [filename]
1062 self.env_vars = set()
1063
1064 # Keeps track of the location in the parent Kconfig files. Kconfig
1065 # files usually source other Kconfig files. See _enter_file().
1066 self._filestack = []
1067 self._include_path = ()
1068
1069 # The current parsing location
1070 self.filename = filename
1071 self.linenr = 0
1072
1073 # Used to avoid retokenizing lines when we discover that they're not
1074 # part of the construct currently being parsed. This is kinda like an
1075 # unget operation.
1076 self._reuse_tokens = False
1077
1078 # Open the top-level Kconfig file. Store the readline() method directly
1079 # as a small optimization.
1080 self._readline = self._open(join(self.srctree, filename), "r").readline
1081
1082 try:
1083 # Parse the Kconfig files. Returns the last node, which we
1084 # terminate with '.next = None'.
1085 self._parse_block(None, self.top_node, self.top_node).next = None
1086 self.top_node.list = self.top_node.next
1087 self.top_node.next = None
1088 except UnicodeDecodeError as e:
1089 _decoding_error(e, self.filename)
1090
1091 # Close the top-level Kconfig file. __self__ fetches the 'file' object
1092 # for the method.
1093 self._readline.__self__.close()
1094
1095 self._parsing_kconfigs = False
1096
1097 # Do various menu tree post-processing
1098 self._finalize_node(self.top_node, self.y)
1099
1100 self.unique_defined_syms = _ordered_unique(self.defined_syms)
1101 self.unique_choices = _ordered_unique(self.choices)
1102
1103 # Do sanity checks. Some of these depend on everything being finalized.
1104 self._check_sym_sanity()
1105 self._check_choice_sanity()
1106
1107 # KCONFIG_STRICT is an older alias for KCONFIG_WARN_UNDEF, supported
1108 # for backwards compatibility
1109 if os.getenv("KCONFIG_WARN_UNDEF") == "y" or \
1110 os.getenv("KCONFIG_STRICT") == "y":
1111
1112 self._check_undef_syms()
1113
1114 # Build Symbol._dependents for all symbols and choices
1115 self._build_dep()
1116
1117 # Check for dependency loops
1118 check_dep_loop_sym = _check_dep_loop_sym # Micro-optimization
1119 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
1120 check_dep_loop_sym(sym, False)
1121
1122 # Add extra dependencies from choices to choice symbols that get
1123 # awkward during dependency loop detection
1124 self._add_choice_deps()
1125
1126 @property
1127 def mainmenu_text(self):
1128 """
1129 See the class documentation.
1130 """
1131 return self.top_node.prompt[0]
1132
1133 @property
1134 def defconfig_filename(self):
1135 """
1136 See the class documentation.
1137 """
1138 if self.defconfig_list:
1139 for filename, cond in self.defconfig_list.defaults:
1140 if expr_value(cond):
1141 try:
1142 with self._open_config(filename.str_value) as f:
1143 return f.name
1144 except EnvironmentError:
1145 continue
1146
1147 return None
1148
1149 def load_config(self, filename=None, replace=True, verbose=None):
1150 """
1151 Loads symbol values from a file in the .config format. Equivalent to
1152 calling Symbol.set_value() to set each of the values.
1153
1154 "# CONFIG_FOO is not set" within a .config file sets the user value of
1155 FOO to n. The C tools work the same way.
1156
1157 For each symbol, the Symbol.user_value attribute holds the value the
1158 symbol was assigned in the .config file (if any). The user value might
1159 differ from Symbol.str/tri_value if there are unsatisfied dependencies.
1160
1161 Calling this function also updates the Kconfig.missing_syms attribute
1162 with a list of all assignments to undefined symbols within the
1163 configuration file. Kconfig.missing_syms is cleared if 'replace' is
1164 True, and appended to otherwise. See the documentation for
1165 Kconfig.missing_syms as well.
1166
1167 See the Kconfig.__init__() docstring for raised exceptions
1168 (OSError/IOError). KconfigError is never raised here.
1169
1170 filename (default: None):
1171 Path to load configuration from (a string). Respects $srctree if set
1172 (see the class documentation).
1173
1174 If 'filename' is None (the default), the configuration file to load
1175 (if any) is calculated automatically, giving the behavior you'd
1176 usually want:
1177
1178 1. If the KCONFIG_CONFIG environment variable is set, it gives the
1179 path to the configuration file to load. Otherwise, ".config" is
1180 used. See standard_config_filename().
1181
1182 2. If the path from (1.) doesn't exist, the configuration file
1183 given by kconf.defconfig_filename is loaded instead, which is
1184 derived from the 'option defconfig_list' symbol.
1185
1186 3. If (1.) and (2.) fail to find a configuration file to load, no
1187 configuration file is loaded, and symbols retain their current
1188 values (e.g., their default values). This is not an error.
1189
1190 See the return value as well.
1191
1192 replace (default: True):
1193 If True, all existing user values will be cleared before loading the
1194 .config. Pass False to merge configurations.
1195
1196 verbose (default: None):
1197 Limited backwards compatibility to prevent crashes. A warning is
1198 printed if anything but None is passed.
1199
1200 Prior to Kconfiglib 12.0.0, this option enabled printing of messages
1201 to stdout when 'filename' was None. A message is (always) returned
1202 now instead, which is more flexible.
1203
1204 Will probably be removed in some future version.
1205
1206 Returns a string with a message saying which file got loaded (or
1207 possibly that no file got loaded, when 'filename' is None). This is
1208 meant to reduce boilerplate in tools, which can do e.g.
1209 print(kconf.load_config()). The returned message distinguishes between
1210 loading (replace == True) and merging (replace == False).
1211 """
1212 if verbose is not None:
1213 _warn_verbose_deprecated("load_config")
1214
1215 msg = None
1216 if filename is None:
1217 filename = standard_config_filename()
1218 if not exists(filename) and \
1219 not exists(join(self.srctree, filename)):
1220 defconfig = self.defconfig_filename
1221 if defconfig is None:
1222 return "Using default symbol values (no '{}')" \
1223 .format(filename)
1224
1225 msg = " default configuration '{}' (no '{}')" \
1226 .format(defconfig, filename)
1227 filename = defconfig
1228
1229 if not msg:
1230 msg = " configuration '{}'".format(filename)
1231
1232 # Disable the warning about assigning to symbols without prompts. This
1233 # is normal and expected within a .config file.
1234 self._warn_assign_no_prompt = False
1235
1236 # This stub only exists to make sure _warn_assign_no_prompt gets
1237 # reenabled
1238 try:
1239 self._load_config(filename, replace)
1240 except UnicodeDecodeError as e:
1241 _decoding_error(e, filename)
1242 finally:
1243 self._warn_assign_no_prompt = True
1244
1245 return ("Loaded" if replace else "Merged") + msg
1246
1247 def _load_config(self, filename, replace):
1248 with self._open_config(filename) as f:
1249 if replace:
1250 self.missing_syms = []
1251
1252 # If we're replacing the configuration, keep track of which
1253 # symbols and choices got set so that we can unset the rest
1254 # later. This avoids invalidating everything and is faster.
1255 # Another benefit is that invalidation must be rock solid for
1256 # it to work, making it a good test.
1257
1258 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
1259 sym._was_set = False
1260
1261 for choice in self.unique_choices:
1262 choice._was_set = False
1263
1264 # Small optimizations
1265 set_match = self._set_match
1266 unset_match = self._unset_match
1267 get_sym = self.syms.get
1268
1269 for linenr, line in enumerate(f, 1):
1270 # The C tools ignore trailing whitespace
1271 line = line.rstrip()
1272
1273 match = set_match(line)
1274 if match:
1275 name, val = match.groups()
1276 sym = get_sym(name)
1277 if not sym or not sym.nodes:
1278 self._undef_assign(name, val, filename, linenr)
1279 continue
1280
1281 if sym.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE:
1282 # The C implementation only checks the first character
1283 # to the right of '=', for whatever reason
1284 if not (sym.orig_type is BOOL
1285 and val.startswith(("y", "n")) or
1286 sym.orig_type is TRISTATE
1287 and val.startswith(("y", "m", "n"))):
1288 self._warn("'{}' is not a valid value for the {} "
1289 "symbol {}. Assignment ignored."
1290 .format(val, TYPE_TO_STR[sym.orig_type],
1291 sym.name_and_loc),
1292 filename, linenr)
1293 continue
1294
1295 val = val[0]
1296
1297 if sym.choice and val != "n":
1298 # During .config loading, we infer the mode of the
1299 # choice from the kind of values that are assigned
1300 # to the choice symbols
1301
1302 prev_mode = sym.choice.user_value
1303 if prev_mode is not None and \
1304 TRI_TO_STR[prev_mode] != val:
1305
1306 self._warn("both m and y assigned to symbols "
1307 "within the same choice",
1308 filename, linenr)
1309
1310 # Set the choice's mode
1311 sym.choice.set_value(val)
1312
1313 elif sym.orig_type is STRING:
1314 match = _conf_string_match(val)
1315 if not match:
1316 self._warn("malformed string literal in "
1317 "assignment to {}. Assignment ignored."
1318 .format(sym.name_and_loc),
1319 filename, linenr)
1320 continue
1321
1322 val = unescape(match.group(1))
1323
1324 else:
1325 match = unset_match(line)
1326 if not match:
1327 # Print a warning for lines that match neither
1328 # set_match() nor unset_match() and that are not blank
1329 # lines or comments. 'line' has already been
1330 # rstrip()'d, so blank lines show up as "" here.
1331 if line and not line.lstrip().startswith("#"):
1332 self._warn("ignoring malformed line '{}'"
1333 .format(line),
1334 filename, linenr)
1335
1336 continue
1337
1338 name = match.group(1)
1339 sym = get_sym(name)
1340 if not sym or not sym.nodes:
1341 self._undef_assign(name, "n", filename, linenr)
1342 continue
1343
1344 if sym.orig_type not in _BOOL_TRISTATE:
1345 continue
1346
1347 val = "n"
1348
1349 # Done parsing the assignment. Set the value.
1350
1351 if sym._was_set:
1352 self._assigned_twice(sym, val, filename, linenr)
1353
1354 sym.set_value(val)
1355
1356 if replace:
1357 # If we're replacing the configuration, unset the symbols that
1358 # didn't get set
1359
1360 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
1361 if not sym._was_set:
1362 sym.unset_value()
1363
1364 for choice in self.unique_choices:
1365 if not choice._was_set:
1366 choice.unset_value()
1367
1368 def _undef_assign(self, name, val, filename, linenr):
1369 # Called for assignments to undefined symbols during .config loading
1370
1371 self.missing_syms.append((name, val))
1372 if self.warn_assign_undef:
1373 self._warn(
1374 "attempt to assign the value '{}' to the undefined symbol {}"
1375 .format(val, name), filename, linenr)
1376
1377 def _assigned_twice(self, sym, new_val, filename, linenr):
1378 # Called when a symbol is assigned more than once in a .config file
1379
1380 # Use strings for bool/tristate user values in the warning
1381 if sym.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE:
1382 user_val = TRI_TO_STR[sym.user_value]
1383 else:
1384 user_val = sym.user_value
1385
1386 msg = '{} set more than once. Old value "{}", new value "{}".'.format(
1387 sym.name_and_loc, user_val, new_val)
1388
1389 if user_val == new_val:
1390 if self.warn_assign_redun:
1391 self._warn(msg, filename, linenr)
1392 elif self.warn_assign_override:
1393 self._warn(msg, filename, linenr)
1394
1395 def load_allconfig(self, filename):
1396 """
1397 Helper for all*config. Loads (merges) the configuration file specified
1398 by KCONFIG_ALLCONFIG, if any. See Documentation/kbuild/kconfig.txt in
1399 the Linux kernel.
1400
1401 Disables warnings for duplicated assignments within configuration files
1402 for the duration of the call
1403 (kconf.warn_assign_override/warn_assign_redun = False), and restores
1404 the previous warning settings at the end. The KCONFIG_ALLCONFIG
1405 configuration file is expected to override symbols.
1406
1407 Exits with sys.exit() (which raises a SystemExit exception) and prints
1408 an error to stderr if KCONFIG_ALLCONFIG is set but the configuration
1409 file can't be opened.
1410
1411 filename:
1412 Command-specific configuration filename - "allyes.config",
1413 "allno.config", etc.
1414 """
1415 load_allconfig(self, filename)
1416
1417 def write_autoconf(self, filename=None, header=None):
1418 r"""
1419 Writes out symbol values as a C header file, matching the format used
1420 by include/generated/autoconf.h in the kernel.
1421
1422 The ordering of the #defines matches the one generated by
1423 write_config(). The order in the C implementation depends on the hash
1424 table implementation as of writing, and so won't match.
1425
1426 If 'filename' exists and its contents is identical to what would get
1427 written out, it is left untouched. This avoids updating file metadata
1428 like the modification time and possibly triggering redundant work in
1429 build tools.
1430
1431 filename (default: None):
1432 Path to write header to.
1433
1434 If None (the default), the path in the environment variable
1435 KCONFIG_AUTOHEADER is used if set, and "include/generated/autoconf.h"
1436 otherwise. This is compatible with the C tools.
1437
1438 header (default: None):
1439 Text inserted verbatim at the beginning of the file. You would
1440 usually want it enclosed in '/* */' to make it a C comment, and
1441 include a trailing newline.
1442
1443 If None (the default), the value of the environment variable
1444 KCONFIG_AUTOHEADER_HEADER had when the Kconfig instance was created
1445 will be used if it was set, and no header otherwise. See the
1446 Kconfig.header_header attribute.
1447
1448 Returns a string with a message saying that the header got saved, or
1449 that there were no changes to it. This is meant to reduce boilerplate
1450 in tools, which can do e.g. print(kconf.write_autoconf()).
1451 """
1452 if filename is None:
1453 filename = os.getenv("KCONFIG_AUTOHEADER",
1454 "include/generated/autoconf.h")
1455
1456 if self._write_if_changed(filename, self._autoconf_contents(header)):
1457 return "Kconfig header saved to '{}'".format(filename)
1458 return "No change to Kconfig header in '{}'".format(filename)
1459
1460 def _autoconf_contents(self, header):
1461 # write_autoconf() helper. Returns the contents to write as a string,
1462 # with 'header' or KCONFIG_AUTOHEADER_HEADER at the beginning.
1463
1464 if header is None:
1465 header = self.header_header
1466
1467 chunks = [header] # "".join()ed later
1468 add = chunks.append
1469
1470 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
1471 # _write_to_conf is determined when the value is calculated. This
1472 # is a hidden function call due to property magic.
1473 #
1474 # Note: In client code, you can check if sym.config_string is empty
1475 # instead, to avoid accessing the internal _write_to_conf variable
1476 # (though it's likely to keep working).
1477 val = sym.str_value
1478 if not sym._write_to_conf:
1479 continue
1480
1481 if sym.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE:
1482 if val == "y":
1483 add("#define {}{} 1\n"
1484 .format(self.config_prefix, sym.name))
1485 elif val == "m":
1486 add("#define {}{}_MODULE 1\n"
1487 .format(self.config_prefix, sym.name))
1488
1489 elif sym.orig_type is STRING:
1490 add('#define {}{} "{}"\n'
1491 .format(self.config_prefix, sym.name, escape(val)))
1492
1493 else: # sym.orig_type in _INT_HEX:
1494 if sym.orig_type is HEX and \
1495 not val.startswith(("0x", "0X")):
1496 val = "0x" + val
1497
1498 add("#define {}{} {}\n"
1499 .format(self.config_prefix, sym.name, val))
1500
1501 return "".join(chunks)
1502
1503 def write_config(self, filename=None, header=None, save_old=True,
1504 verbose=None):
1505 r"""
1506 Writes out symbol values in the .config format. The format matches the
1507 C implementation, including ordering.
1508
1509 Symbols appear in the same order in generated .config files as they do
1510 in the Kconfig files. For symbols defined in multiple locations, a
1511 single assignment is written out corresponding to the first location
1512 where the symbol is defined.
1513
1514 See the 'Intro to symbol values' section in the module docstring to
1515 understand which symbols get written out.
1516
1517 If 'filename' exists and its contents is identical to what would get
1518 written out, it is left untouched. This avoids updating file metadata
1519 like the modification time and possibly triggering redundant work in
1520 build tools.
1521
1522 See the Kconfig.__init__() docstring for raised exceptions
1523 (OSError/IOError). KconfigError is never raised here.
1524
1525 filename (default: None):
1526 Path to write configuration to (a string).
1527
1528 If None (the default), the path in the environment variable
1529 KCONFIG_CONFIG is used if set, and ".config" otherwise. See
1530 standard_config_filename().
1531
1532 header (default: None):
1533 Text inserted verbatim at the beginning of the file. You would
1534 usually want each line to start with '#' to make it a comment, and
1535 include a trailing newline.
1536
1537 if None (the default), the value of the environment variable
1538 KCONFIG_CONFIG_HEADER had when the Kconfig instance was created will
1539 be used if it was set, and no header otherwise. See the
1540 Kconfig.config_header attribute.
1541
1542 save_old (default: True):
1543 If True and <filename> already exists, a copy of it will be saved to
1544 <filename>.old in the same directory before the new configuration is
1545 written.
1546
1547 Errors are silently ignored if <filename>.old cannot be written (e.g.
1548 due to permissions errors).
1549
1550 verbose (default: None):
1551 Limited backwards compatibility to prevent crashes. A warning is
1552 printed if anything but None is passed.
1553
1554 Prior to Kconfiglib 12.0.0, this option enabled printing of messages
1555 to stdout when 'filename' was None. A message is (always) returned
1556 now instead, which is more flexible.
1557
1558 Will probably be removed in some future version.
1559
1560 Returns a string with a message saying which file got saved. This is
1561 meant to reduce boilerplate in tools, which can do e.g.
1562 print(kconf.write_config()).
1563 """
1564 if verbose is not None:
1565 _warn_verbose_deprecated("write_config")
1566
1567 if filename is None:
1568 filename = standard_config_filename()
1569
1570 contents = self._config_contents(header)
1571 if self._contents_eq(filename, contents):
1572 return "No change to configuration in '{}'".format(filename)
1573
1574 if save_old:
1575 _save_old(filename)
1576
1577 with self._open(filename, "w") as f:
1578 f.write(contents)
1579
1580 return "Configuration saved to '{}'".format(filename)
1581
1582 def _config_contents(self, header):
1583 # write_config() helper. Returns the contents to write as a string,
1584 # with 'header' or KCONFIG_CONFIG_HEADER at the beginning.
1585 #
1586 # More memory friendly would be to 'yield' the strings and
1587 # "".join(_config_contents()), but it was a bit slower on my system.
1588
1589 # node_iter() was used here before commit 3aea9f7 ("Add '# end of
1590 # <menu>' after menus in .config"). Those comments get tricky to
1591 # implement with it.
1592
1593 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
1594 sym._visited = False
1595
1596 if header is None:
1597 header = self.config_header
1598
1599 chunks = [header] # "".join()ed later
1600 add = chunks.append
1601
1602 # Did we just print an '# end of ...' comment?
1603 after_end_comment = False
1604
1605 node = self.top_node
1606 while 1:
1607 # Jump to the next node with an iterative tree walk
1608 if node.list:
1609 node = node.list
1610 elif node.next:
1611 node = node.next
1612 else:
1613 while node.parent:
1614 node = node.parent
1615
1616 # Add a comment when leaving visible menus
1617 if node.item is MENU and expr_value(node.dep) and \
1618 expr_value(node.visibility) and \
1619 node is not self.top_node:
1620 add("# end of {}\n".format(node.prompt[0]))
1621 after_end_comment = True
1622
1623 if node.next:
1624 node = node.next
1625 break
1626 else:
1627 # No more nodes
1628 return "".join(chunks)
1629
1630 # Generate configuration output for the node
1631
1632 item = node.item
1633
1634 if item.__class__ is Symbol:
1635 if item._visited:
1636 continue
1637 item._visited = True
1638
1639 conf_string = item.config_string
1640 if not conf_string:
1641 continue
1642
1643 if after_end_comment:
1644 # Add a blank line before the first symbol printed after an
1645 # '# end of ...' comment
1646 after_end_comment = False
1647 add("\n")
1648 add(conf_string)
1649
1650 elif expr_value(node.dep) and \
1651 ((item is MENU and expr_value(node.visibility)) or
1652 item is COMMENT):
1653
1654 add("\n#\n# {}\n#\n".format(node.prompt[0]))
1655 after_end_comment = False
1656
1657 def write_min_config(self, filename, header=None):
1658 """
1659 Writes out a "minimal" configuration file, omitting symbols whose value
1660 matches their default value. The format matches the one produced by
1661 'make savedefconfig'.
1662
1663 The resulting configuration file is incomplete, but a complete
1664 configuration can be derived from it by loading it. Minimal
1665 configuration files can serve as a more manageable configuration format
1666 compared to a "full" .config file, especially when configurations files
1667 are merged or edited by hand.
1668
1669 See the Kconfig.__init__() docstring for raised exceptions
1670 (OSError/IOError). KconfigError is never raised here.
1671
1672 filename:
1673 Path to write minimal configuration to.
1674
1675 header (default: None):
1676 Text inserted verbatim at the beginning of the file. You would
1677 usually want each line to start with '#' to make it a comment, and
1678 include a final terminating newline.
1679
1680 if None (the default), the value of the environment variable
1681 KCONFIG_CONFIG_HEADER had when the Kconfig instance was created will
1682 be used if it was set, and no header otherwise. See the
1683 Kconfig.config_header attribute.
1684
1685 Returns a string with a message saying the minimal configuration got
1686 saved, or that there were no changes to it. This is meant to reduce
1687 boilerplate in tools, which can do e.g.
1688 print(kconf.write_min_config()).
1689 """
1690 if self._write_if_changed(filename, self._min_config_contents(header)):
1691 return "Minimal configuration saved to '{}'".format(filename)
1692 return "No change to minimal configuration in '{}'".format(filename)
1693
1694 def _min_config_contents(self, header):
1695 # write_min_config() helper. Returns the contents to write as a string,
1696 # with 'header' or KCONFIG_CONFIG_HEADER at the beginning.
1697
1698 if header is None:
1699 header = self.config_header
1700
1701 chunks = [header] # "".join()ed later
1702 add = chunks.append
1703
1704 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
1705 # Skip symbols that cannot be changed. Only check
1706 # non-choice symbols, as selects don't affect choice
1707 # symbols.
1708 if not sym.choice and \
1709 sym.visibility <= expr_value(sym.rev_dep):
1710 continue
1711
1712 # Skip symbols whose value matches their default
1713 if sym.str_value == sym._str_default():
1714 continue
1715
1716 # Skip symbols that would be selected by default in a
1717 # choice, unless the choice is optional or the symbol type
1718 # isn't bool (it might be possible to set the choice mode
1719 # to n or the symbol to m in those cases).
1720 if sym.choice and \
1721 not sym.choice.is_optional and \
1722 sym.choice._selection_from_defaults() is sym and \
1723 sym.orig_type is BOOL and \
1724 sym.tri_value == 2:
1725 continue
1726
1727 add(sym.config_string)
1728
1729 return "".join(chunks)
1730
1731 def sync_deps(self, path):
1732 """
1733 Creates or updates a directory structure that can be used to avoid
1734 doing a full rebuild whenever the configuration is changed, mirroring
1735 include/config/ in the kernel.
1736
1737 This function is intended to be called during each build, before
1738 compiling source files that depend on configuration symbols.
1739
1740 See the Kconfig.__init__() docstring for raised exceptions
1741 (OSError/IOError). KconfigError is never raised here.
1742
1743 path:
1744 Path to directory
1745
1746 sync_deps(path) does the following:
1747
1748 1. If the directory <path> does not exist, it is created.
1749
1750 2. If <path>/auto.conf exists, old symbol values are loaded from it,
1751 which are then compared against the current symbol values. If a
1752 symbol has changed value (would generate different output in
1753 autoconf.h compared to before), the change is signaled by
1754 touch'ing a file corresponding to the symbol.
1755
1756 The first time sync_deps() is run on a directory, <path>/auto.conf
1757 won't exist, and no old symbol values will be available. This
1758 logically has the same effect as updating the entire
1759 configuration.
1760
1761 The path to a symbol's file is calculated from the symbol's name
1762 by replacing all '_' with '/' and appending '.h'. For example, the
1763 symbol FOO_BAR_BAZ gets the file <path>/foo/bar/baz.h, and FOO
1764 gets the file <path>/foo.h.
1765
1766 This scheme matches the C tools. The point is to avoid having a
1767 single directory with a huge number of files, which the underlying
1768 filesystem might not handle well.
1769
1770 3. A new auto.conf with the current symbol values is written, to keep
1771 track of them for the next build.
1772
1773 If auto.conf exists and its contents is identical to what would
1774 get written out, it is left untouched. This avoids updating file
1775 metadata like the modification time and possibly triggering
1776 redundant work in build tools.
1777
1778
1779 The last piece of the puzzle is knowing what symbols each source file
1780 depends on. Knowing that, dependencies can be added from source files
1781 to the files corresponding to the symbols they depends on. The source
1782 file will then get recompiled (only) when the symbol value changes
1783 (provided sync_deps() is run first during each build).
1784
1785 The tool in the kernel that extracts symbol dependencies from source
1786 files is scripts/basic/fixdep.c. Missing symbol files also correspond
1787 to "not changed", which fixdep deals with by using the $(wildcard) Make
1788 function when adding symbol prerequisites to source files.
1789
1790 In case you need a different scheme for your project, the sync_deps()
1791 implementation can be used as a template.
1792 """
1793 if not exists(path):
1794 os.mkdir(path, 0o755)
1795
1796 # Load old values from auto.conf, if any
1797 self._load_old_vals(path)
1798
1799 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
1800 # _write_to_conf is determined when the value is calculated. This
1801 # is a hidden function call due to property magic.
1802 #
1803 # Note: In client code, you can check if sym.config_string is empty
1804 # instead, to avoid accessing the internal _write_to_conf variable
1805 # (though it's likely to keep working).
1806 val = sym.str_value
1807
1808 # n tristate values do not get written to auto.conf and autoconf.h,
1809 # making a missing symbol logically equivalent to n
1810
1811 if sym._write_to_conf:
1812 if sym._old_val is None and \
1813 sym.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE and \
1814 val == "n":
1815 # No old value (the symbol was missing or n), new value n.
1816 # No change.
1817 continue
1818
1819 if val == sym._old_val:
1820 # New value matches old. No change.
1821 continue
1822
1823 elif sym._old_val is None:
1824 # The symbol wouldn't appear in autoconf.h (because
1825 # _write_to_conf is false), and it wouldn't have appeared in
1826 # autoconf.h previously either (because it didn't appear in
1827 # auto.conf). No change.
1828 continue
1829
1830 # 'sym' has a new value. Flag it.
1831 _touch_dep_file(path, sym.name)
1832
1833 # Remember the current values as the "new old" values.
1834 #
1835 # This call could go anywhere after the call to _load_old_vals(), but
1836 # putting it last means _sync_deps() can be safely rerun if it fails
1837 # before this point.
1838 self._write_old_vals(path)
1839
1840 def _load_old_vals(self, path):
1841 # Loads old symbol values from auto.conf into a dedicated
1842 # Symbol._old_val field. Mirrors load_config().
1843 #
1844 # The extra field could be avoided with some trickery involving dumping
1845 # symbol values and restoring them later, but this is simpler and
1846 # faster. The C tools also use a dedicated field for this purpose.
1847
1848 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
1849 sym._old_val = None
1850
1851 try:
1852 auto_conf = self._open(join(path, "auto.conf"), "r")
1853 except EnvironmentError as e:
1854 if e.errno == errno.ENOENT:
1855 # No old values
1856 return
1857 raise
1858
1859 with auto_conf as f:
1860 for line in f:
1861 match = self._set_match(line)
1862 if not match:
1863 # We only expect CONFIG_FOO=... (and possibly a header
1864 # comment) in auto.conf
1865 continue
1866
1867 name, val = match.groups()
1868 if name in self.syms:
1869 sym = self.syms[name]
1870
1871 if sym.orig_type is STRING:
1872 match = _conf_string_match(val)
1873 if not match:
1874 continue
1875 val = unescape(match.group(1))
1876
1877 self.syms[name]._old_val = val
1878 else:
1879 # Flag that the symbol no longer exists, in
1880 # case something still depends on it
1881 _touch_dep_file(path, name)
1882
1883 def _write_old_vals(self, path):
1884 # Helper for writing auto.conf. Basically just a simplified
1885 # write_config() that doesn't write any comments (including
1886 # '# CONFIG_FOO is not set' comments). The format matches the C
1887 # implementation, though the ordering is arbitrary there (depends on
1888 # the hash table implementation).
1889 #
1890 # A separate helper function is neater than complicating write_config()
1891 # by passing a flag to it, plus we only need to look at symbols here.
1892
1893 self._write_if_changed(
1894 os.path.join(path, "auto.conf"),
1895 self._old_vals_contents())
1896
1897 def _old_vals_contents(self):
1898 # _write_old_vals() helper. Returns the contents to write as a string.
1899
1900 # Temporary list instead of generator makes this a bit faster
1901 return "".join([
1902 sym.config_string for sym in self.unique_defined_syms
1903 if not (sym.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE and not sym.tri_value)
1904 ])
1905
1906 def node_iter(self, unique_syms=False):
1907 """
1908 Returns a generator for iterating through all MenuNode's in the Kconfig
1909 tree. The iteration is done in Kconfig definition order (each node is
1910 visited before its children, and the children of a node are visited
1911 before the next node).
1912
1913 The Kconfig.top_node menu node is skipped. It contains an implicit menu
1914 that holds the top-level items.
1915
1916 As an example, the following code will produce a list equal to
1917 Kconfig.defined_syms:
1918
1919 defined_syms = [node.item for node in kconf.node_iter()
1920 if isinstance(node.item, Symbol)]
1921
1922 unique_syms (default: False):
1923 If True, only the first MenuNode will be included for symbols defined
1924 in multiple locations.
1925
1926 Using kconf.node_iter(True) in the example above would give a list
1927 equal to unique_defined_syms.
1928 """
1929 if unique_syms:
1930 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
1931 sym._visited = False
1932
1933 node = self.top_node
1934 while 1:
1935 # Jump to the next node with an iterative tree walk
1936 if node.list:
1937 node = node.list
1938 elif node.next:
1939 node = node.next
1940 else:
1941 while node.parent:
1942 node = node.parent
1943 if node.next:
1944 node = node.next
1945 break
1946 else:
1947 # No more nodes
1948 return
1949
1950 if unique_syms and node.item.__class__ is Symbol:
1951 if node.item._visited:
1952 continue
1953 node.item._visited = True
1954
1955 yield node
1956
1957 def eval_string(self, s):
1958 """
1959 Returns the tristate value of the expression 's', represented as 0, 1,
1960 and 2 for n, m, and y, respectively. Raises KconfigError on syntax
1961 errors. Warns if undefined symbols are referenced.
1962
1963 As an example, if FOO and BAR are tristate symbols at least one of
1964 which has the value y, then eval_string("y && (FOO || BAR)") returns
1965 2 (y).
1966
1967 To get the string value of non-bool/tristate symbols, use
1968 Symbol.str_value. eval_string() always returns a tristate value, and
1969 all non-bool/tristate symbols have the tristate value 0 (n).
1970
1971 The expression parsing is consistent with how parsing works for
1972 conditional ('if ...') expressions in the configuration, and matches
1973 the C implementation. m is rewritten to 'm && MODULES', so
1974 eval_string("m") will return 0 (n) unless modules are enabled.
1975 """
1976 # The parser is optimized to be fast when parsing Kconfig files (where
1977 # an expression can never appear at the beginning of a line). We have
1978 # to monkey-patch things a bit here to reuse it.
1979
1980 self.filename = None
1981
1982 self._tokens = self._tokenize("if " + s)
1983 # Strip "if " to avoid giving confusing error messages
1984 self._line = s
1985 self._tokens_i = 1 # Skip the 'if' token
1986
1987 return expr_value(self._expect_expr_and_eol())
1988
1989 def unset_values(self):
1990 """
1991 Removes any user values from all symbols, as if Kconfig.load_config()
1992 or Symbol.set_value() had never been called.
1993 """
1994 self._warn_assign_no_prompt = False
1995 try:
1996 # set_value() already rejects undefined symbols, and they don't
1997 # need to be invalidated (because their value never changes), so we
1998 # can just iterate over defined symbols
1999 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
2000 sym.unset_value()
2001
2002 for choice in self.unique_choices:
2003 choice.unset_value()
2004 finally:
2005 self._warn_assign_no_prompt = True
2006
2007 def enable_warnings(self):
2008 """
2009 Do 'Kconfig.warn = True' instead. Maintained for backwards
2010 compatibility.
2011 """
2012 self.warn = True
2013
2014 def disable_warnings(self):
2015 """
2016 Do 'Kconfig.warn = False' instead. Maintained for backwards
2017 compatibility.
2018 """
2019 self.warn = False
2020
2021 def enable_stderr_warnings(self):
2022 """
2023 Do 'Kconfig.warn_to_stderr = True' instead. Maintained for backwards
2024 compatibility.
2025 """
2026 self.warn_to_stderr = True
2027
2028 def disable_stderr_warnings(self):
2029 """
2030 Do 'Kconfig.warn_to_stderr = False' instead. Maintained for backwards
2031 compatibility.
2032 """
2033 self.warn_to_stderr = False
2034
2035 def enable_undef_warnings(self):
2036 """
2037 Do 'Kconfig.warn_assign_undef = True' instead. Maintained for backwards
2038 compatibility.
2039 """
2040 self.warn_assign_undef = True
2041
2042 def disable_undef_warnings(self):
2043 """
2044 Do 'Kconfig.warn_assign_undef = False' instead. Maintained for
2045 backwards compatibility.
2046 """
2047 self.warn_assign_undef = False
2048
2049 def enable_override_warnings(self):
2050 """
2051 Do 'Kconfig.warn_assign_override = True' instead. Maintained for
2052 backwards compatibility.
2053 """
2054 self.warn_assign_override = True
2055
2056 def disable_override_warnings(self):
2057 """
2058 Do 'Kconfig.warn_assign_override = False' instead. Maintained for
2059 backwards compatibility.
2060 """
2061 self.warn_assign_override = False
2062
2063 def enable_redun_warnings(self):
2064 """
2065 Do 'Kconfig.warn_assign_redun = True' instead. Maintained for backwards
2066 compatibility.
2067 """
2068 self.warn_assign_redun = True
2069
2070 def disable_redun_warnings(self):
2071 """
2072 Do 'Kconfig.warn_assign_redun = False' instead. Maintained for
2073 backwards compatibility.
2074 """
2075 self.warn_assign_redun = False
2076
2077 def __repr__(self):
2078 """
2079 Returns a string with information about the Kconfig object when it is
2080 evaluated on e.g. the interactive Python prompt.
2081 """
2082 def status(flag):
2083 return "enabled" if flag else "disabled"
2084
2085 return "<{}>".format(", ".join((
2086 "configuration with {} symbols".format(len(self.syms)),
2087 'main menu prompt "{}"'.format(self.mainmenu_text),
2088 "srctree is current directory" if not self.srctree else
2089 'srctree "{}"'.format(self.srctree),
2090 'config symbol prefix "{}"'.format(self.config_prefix),
2091 "warnings " + status(self.warn),
2092 "printing of warnings to stderr " + status(self.warn_to_stderr),
2093 "undef. symbol assignment warnings " +
2094 status(self.warn_assign_undef),
2095 "overriding symbol assignment warnings " +
2096 status(self.warn_assign_override),
2097 "redundant symbol assignment warnings " +
2098 status(self.warn_assign_redun)
2099 )))
2100
2101 #
2102 # Private methods
2103 #
2104
2105
2106 #
2107 # File reading
2108 #
2109
2110 def _open_config(self, filename):
2111 # Opens a .config file. First tries to open 'filename', then
2112 # '$srctree/filename' if $srctree was set when the configuration was
2113 # loaded.
2114
2115 try:
2116 return self._open(filename, "r")
2117 except EnvironmentError as e:
2118 # This will try opening the same file twice if $srctree is unset,
2119 # but it's not a big deal
2120 try:
2121 return self._open(join(self.srctree, filename), "r")
2122 except EnvironmentError as e2:
2123 # This is needed for Python 3, because e2 is deleted after
2124 # the try block:
2125 #
2126 # https://docs.python.org/3/reference/compound_stmts.html#the-try-statement
2127 e = e2
2128
2129 raise _KconfigIOError(
2130 e, "Could not open '{}' ({}: {}). Check that the $srctree "
2131 "environment variable ({}) is set correctly."
2132 .format(filename, errno.errorcode[e.errno], e.strerror,
2133 "set to '{}'".format(self.srctree) if self.srctree
2134 else "unset or blank"))
2135
2136 def _enter_file(self, filename):
2137 # Jumps to the beginning of a sourced Kconfig file, saving the previous
2138 # position and file object.
2139 #
2140 # filename:
2141 # Absolute path to file
2142
2143 # Path relative to $srctree, stored in e.g. self.filename (which makes
2144 # it indirectly show up in MenuNode.filename). Equals 'filename' for
2145 # absolute paths passed to 'source'.
2146 if filename.startswith(self._srctree_prefix):
2147 # Relative path (or a redundant absolute path to within $srctree,
2148 # but it's probably fine to reduce those too)
2149 rel_filename = filename[len(self._srctree_prefix):]
2150 else:
2151 # Absolute path
2152 rel_filename = filename
2153
2154 self.kconfig_filenames.append(rel_filename)
2155
2156 # The parent Kconfig files are represented as a list of
2157 # (<include path>, <Python 'file' object for Kconfig file>) tuples.
2158 #
2159 # <include path> is immutable and holds a *tuple* of
2160 # (<filename>, <linenr>) tuples, giving the locations of the 'source'
2161 # statements in the parent Kconfig files. The current include path is
2162 # also available in Kconfig._include_path.
2163 #
2164 # The point of this redundant setup is to allow Kconfig._include_path
2165 # to be assigned directly to MenuNode.include_path without having to
2166 # copy it, sharing it wherever possible.
2167
2168 # Save include path and 'file' object (via its 'readline' function)
2169 # before entering the file
2170 self._filestack.append((self._include_path, self._readline))
2171
2172 # _include_path is a tuple, so this rebinds the variable instead of
2173 # doing in-place modification
2174 self._include_path += ((self.filename, self.linenr),)
2175
2176 # Check for recursive 'source'
2177 for name, _ in self._include_path:
2178 if name == rel_filename:
2179 raise KconfigError(
2180 "\n{}:{}: recursive 'source' of '{}' detected. Check that "
2181 "environment variables are set correctly.\n"
2182 "Include path:\n{}"
2183 .format(self.filename, self.linenr, rel_filename,
2184 "\n".join("{}:{}".format(name, linenr)
2185 for name, linenr in self._include_path)))
2186
2187 try:
2188 self._readline = self._open(filename, "r").readline
2189 except EnvironmentError as e:
2190 # We already know that the file exists
2191 raise _KconfigIOError(
2192 e, "{}:{}: Could not open '{}' (in '{}') ({}: {})"
2193 .format(self.filename, self.linenr, filename,
2194 self._line.strip(),
2195 errno.errorcode[e.errno], e.strerror))
2196
2197 self.filename = rel_filename
2198 self.linenr = 0
2199
2200 def _leave_file(self):
2201 # Returns from a Kconfig file to the file that sourced it. See
2202 # _enter_file().
2203
2204 # Restore location from parent Kconfig file
2205 self.filename, self.linenr = self._include_path[-1]
2206 # Restore include path and 'file' object
2207 self._readline.__self__.close() # __self__ fetches the 'file' object
2208 self._include_path, self._readline = self._filestack.pop()
2209
2210 def _next_line(self):
2211 # Fetches and tokenizes the next line from the current Kconfig file.
2212 # Returns False at EOF and True otherwise.
2213
2214 # We might already have tokens from parsing a line and discovering that
2215 # it's part of a different construct
2216 if self._reuse_tokens:
2217 self._reuse_tokens = False
2218 # self._tokens_i is known to be 1 here, because _parse_props()
2219 # leaves it like that when it can't recognize a line (or parses a
2220 # help text)
2221 return True
2222
2223 # readline() returns '' over and over at EOF, which we rely on for help
2224 # texts at the end of files (see _line_after_help())
2225 line = self._readline()
2226 if not line:
2227 return False
2228 self.linenr += 1
2229
2230 # Handle line joining
2231 while line.endswith("\\\n"):
2232 line = line[:-2] + self._readline()
2233 self.linenr += 1
2234
2235 self._tokens = self._tokenize(line)
2236 # Initialize to 1 instead of 0 to factor out code from _parse_block()
2237 # and _parse_props(). They immediately fetch self._tokens[0].
2238 self._tokens_i = 1
2239
2240 return True
2241
2242 def _line_after_help(self, line):
2243 # Tokenizes a line after a help text. This case is special in that the
2244 # line has already been fetched (to discover that it isn't part of the
2245 # help text).
2246 #
2247 # An earlier version used a _saved_line variable instead that was
2248 # checked in _next_line(). This special-casing gets rid of it and makes
2249 # _reuse_tokens alone sufficient to handle unget.
2250
2251 # Handle line joining
2252 while line.endswith("\\\n"):
2253 line = line[:-2] + self._readline()
2254 self.linenr += 1
2255
2256 self._tokens = self._tokenize(line)
2257 self._reuse_tokens = True
2258
2259 def _write_if_changed(self, filename, contents):
2260 # Writes 'contents' into 'filename', but only if it differs from the
2261 # current contents of the file.
2262 #
2263 # Another variant would be write a temporary file on the same
2264 # filesystem, compare the files, and rename() the temporary file if it
2265 # differs, but it breaks stuff like write_config("/dev/null"), which is
2266 # used out there to force evaluation-related warnings to be generated.
2267 # This simple version is pretty failsafe and portable.
2268 #
2269 # Returns True if the file has changed and is updated, and False
2270 # otherwise.
2271
2272 if self._contents_eq(filename, contents):
2273 return False
2274 with self._open(filename, "w") as f:
2275 f.write(contents)
2276 return True
2277
2278 def _contents_eq(self, filename, contents):
2279 # Returns True if the contents of 'filename' is 'contents' (a string),
2280 # and False otherwise (including if 'filename' can't be opened/read)
2281
2282 try:
2283 with self._open(filename, "r") as f:
2284 # Robust re. things like encoding and line endings (mmap()
2285 # trickery isn't)
2286 return f.read(len(contents) + 1) == contents
2287 except EnvironmentError:
2288 # If the error here would prevent writing the file as well, we'll
2289 # notice it later
2290 return False
2291
2292 #
2293 # Tokenization
2294 #
2295
2296 def _lookup_sym(self, name):
2297 # Fetches the symbol 'name' from the symbol table, creating and
2298 # registering it if it does not exist. If '_parsing_kconfigs' is False,
2299 # it means we're in eval_string(), and new symbols won't be registered.
2300
2301 if name in self.syms:
2302 return self.syms[name]
2303
2304 sym = Symbol()
2305 sym.kconfig = self
2306 sym.name = name
2307 sym.is_constant = False
2308 sym.rev_dep = sym.weak_rev_dep = sym.direct_dep = self.n
2309
2310 if self._parsing_kconfigs:
2311 self.syms[name] = sym
2312 else:
2313 self._warn("no symbol {} in configuration".format(name))
2314
2315 return sym
2316
2317 def _lookup_const_sym(self, name):
2318 # Like _lookup_sym(), for constant (quoted) symbols
2319
2320 if name in self.const_syms:
2321 return self.const_syms[name]
2322
2323 sym = Symbol()
2324 sym.kconfig = self
2325 sym.name = name
2326 sym.is_constant = True
2327 sym.rev_dep = sym.weak_rev_dep = sym.direct_dep = self.n
2328
2329 if self._parsing_kconfigs:
2330 self.const_syms[name] = sym
2331
2332 return sym
2333
2334 def _tokenize(self, s):
2335 # Parses 's', returning a None-terminated list of tokens. Registers any
2336 # new symbols encountered with _lookup(_const)_sym().
2337 #
2338 # Tries to be reasonably speedy by processing chunks of text via
2339 # regexes and string operations where possible. This is the biggest
2340 # hotspot during parsing.
2341 #
2342 # It might be possible to rewrite this to 'yield' tokens instead,
2343 # working across multiple lines. Lookback and compatibility with old
2344 # janky versions of the C tools complicate things though.
2345
2346 self._line = s # Used for error reporting
2347
2348 # Initial token on the line
2349 match = _command_match(s)
2350 if not match:
2351 if s.isspace() or s.lstrip().startswith("#"):
2352 return (None,)
2353 self._parse_error("unknown token at start of line")
2354
2355 # Tricky implementation detail: While parsing a token, 'token' refers
2356 # to the previous token. See _STRING_LEX for why this is needed.
2357 token = _get_keyword(match.group(1))
2358 if not token:
2359 # Backwards compatibility with old versions of the C tools, which
2360 # (accidentally) accepted stuff like "--help--" and "-help---".
2361 # This was fixed in the C tools by commit c2264564 ("kconfig: warn
2362 # of unhandled characters in Kconfig commands"), committed in July
2363 # 2015, but it seems people still run Kconfiglib on older kernels.
2364 if s.strip(" \t\n-") == "help":
2365 return (_T_HELP, None)
2366
2367 # If the first token is not a keyword (and not a weird help token),
2368 # we have a preprocessor variable assignment (or a bare macro on a
2369 # line)
2370 self._parse_assignment(s)
2371 return (None,)
2372
2373 tokens = [token]
2374 # The current index in the string being tokenized
2375 i = match.end()
2376
2377 # Main tokenization loop (for tokens past the first one)
2378 while i < len(s):
2379 # Test for an identifier/keyword first. This is the most common
2380 # case.
2381 match = _id_keyword_match(s, i)
2382 if match:
2383 # We have an identifier or keyword
2384
2385 # Check what it is. lookup_sym() will take care of allocating
2386 # new symbols for us the first time we see them. Note that
2387 # 'token' still refers to the previous token.
2388
2389 name = match.group(1)
2390 keyword = _get_keyword(name)
2391 if keyword:
2392 # It's a keyword
2393 token = keyword
2394 # Jump past it
2395 i = match.end()
2396
2397 elif token not in _STRING_LEX:
2398 # It's a non-const symbol, except we translate n, m, and y
2399 # into the corresponding constant symbols, like the C
2400 # implementation
2401
2402 if "$" in name:
2403 # Macro expansion within symbol name
2404 name, s, i = self._expand_name(s, i)
2405 else:
2406 i = match.end()
2407
2408 token = self.const_syms[name] if name in STR_TO_TRI else \
2409 self._lookup_sym(name)
2410
2411 else:
2412 # It's a case of missing quotes. For example, the
2413 # following is accepted:
2414 #
2415 # menu unquoted_title
2416 #
2417 # config A
2418 # tristate unquoted_prompt
2419 #
2420 # endmenu
2421 #
2422 # Named choices ('choice FOO') also end up here.
2423
2424 if token is not _T_CHOICE:
2425 self._warn("style: quotes recommended around '{}' in '{}'"
2426 .format(name, self._line.strip()),
2427 self.filename, self.linenr)
2428
2429 token = name
2430 i = match.end()
2431
2432 else:
2433 # Neither a keyword nor a non-const symbol
2434
2435 # We always strip whitespace after tokens, so it is safe to
2436 # assume that s[i] is the start of a token here.
2437 c = s[i]
2438
2439 if c in "\"'":
2440 if "$" not in s and "\\" not in s:
2441 # Fast path for lines without $ and \. Find the
2442 # matching quote.
2443 end_i = s.find(c, i + 1) + 1
2444 if not end_i:
2445 self._parse_error("unterminated string")
2446 val = s[i + 1:end_i - 1]
2447 i = end_i
2448 else:
2449 # Slow path
2450 s, end_i = self._expand_str(s, i)
2451
2452 # os.path.expandvars() and the $UNAME_RELEASE replace()
2453 # is a backwards compatibility hack, which should be
2454 # reasonably safe as expandvars() leaves references to
2455 # undefined env. vars. as is.
2456 #
2457 # The preprocessor functionality changed how
2458 # environment variables are referenced, to $(FOO).
2459 val = expandvars(s[i + 1:end_i - 1]
2460 .replace("$UNAME_RELEASE",
2461 _UNAME_RELEASE))
2462
2463 i = end_i
2464
2465 # This is the only place where we don't survive with a
2466 # single token of lookback: 'option env="FOO"' does not
2467 # refer to a constant symbol named "FOO".
2468 token = \
2469 val if token in _STRING_LEX or tokens[0] is _T_OPTION \
2470 else self._lookup_const_sym(val)
2471
2472 elif s.startswith("&&", i):
2473 token = _T_AND
2474 i += 2
2475
2476 elif s.startswith("||", i):
2477 token = _T_OR
2478 i += 2
2479
2480 elif c == "=":
2481 token = _T_EQUAL
2482 i += 1
2483
2484 elif s.startswith("!=", i):
2485 token = _T_UNEQUAL
2486 i += 2
2487
2488 elif c == "!":
2489 token = _T_NOT
2490 i += 1
2491
2492 elif c == "(":
2493 token = _T_OPEN_PAREN
2494 i += 1
2495
2496 elif c == ")":
2497 token = _T_CLOSE_PAREN
2498 i += 1
2499
2500 elif c == "#":
2501 break
2502
2503
2504 # Very rare
2505
2506 elif s.startswith("<=", i):
2507 token = _T_LESS_EQUAL
2508 i += 2
2509
2510 elif c == "<":
2511 token = _T_LESS
2512 i += 1
2513
2514 elif s.startswith(">=", i):
2515 token = _T_GREATER_EQUAL
2516 i += 2
2517
2518 elif c == ">":
2519 token = _T_GREATER
2520 i += 1
2521
2522
2523 else:
2524 self._parse_error("unknown tokens in line")
2525
2526
2527 # Skip trailing whitespace
2528 while i < len(s) and s[i].isspace():
2529 i += 1
2530
2531
2532 # Add the token
2533 tokens.append(token)
2534
2535 # None-terminating the token list makes token fetching simpler/faster
2536 tokens.append(None)
2537
2538 return tokens
2539
2540 # Helpers for syntax checking and token fetching. See the
2541 # 'Intro to expressions' section for what a constant symbol is.
2542 #
2543 # More of these could be added, but the single-use cases are inlined as an
2544 # optimization.
2545
2546 def _expect_sym(self):
2547 token = self._tokens[self._tokens_i]
2548 self._tokens_i += 1
2549
2550 if token.__class__ is not Symbol:
2551 self._parse_error("expected symbol")
2552
2553 return token
2554
2555 def _expect_nonconst_sym(self):
2556 # Used for 'select' and 'imply' only. We know the token indices.
2557
2558 token = self._tokens[1]
2559 self._tokens_i = 2
2560
2561 if token.__class__ is not Symbol or token.is_constant:
2562 self._parse_error("expected nonconstant symbol")
2563
2564 return token
2565
2566 def _expect_str_and_eol(self):
2567 token = self._tokens[self._tokens_i]
2568 self._tokens_i += 1
2569
2570 if token.__class__ is not str:
2571 self._parse_error("expected string")
2572
2573 if self._tokens[self._tokens_i] is not None:
2574 self._trailing_tokens_error()
2575
2576 return token
2577
2578 def _expect_expr_and_eol(self):
2579 expr = self._parse_expr(True)
2580
2581 if self._tokens[self._tokens_i] is not None:
2582 self._trailing_tokens_error()
2583
2584 return expr
2585
2586 def _check_token(self, token):
2587 # If the next token is 'token', removes it and returns True
2588
2589 if self._tokens[self._tokens_i] is token:
2590 self._tokens_i += 1
2591 return True
2592 return False
2593
2594 #
2595 # Preprocessor logic
2596 #
2597
2598 def _parse_assignment(self, s):
2599 # Parses a preprocessor variable assignment, registering the variable
2600 # if it doesn't already exist. Also takes care of bare macros on lines
2601 # (which are allowed, and can be useful for their side effects).
2602
2603 # Expand any macros in the left-hand side of the assignment (the
2604 # variable name)
2605 s = s.lstrip()
2606 i = 0
2607 while 1:
2608 i = _assignment_lhs_fragment_match(s, i).end()
2609 if s.startswith("$(", i):
2610 s, i = self._expand_macro(s, i, ())
2611 else:
2612 break
2613
2614 if s.isspace():
2615 # We also accept a bare macro on a line (e.g.
2616 # $(warning-if,$(foo),ops)), provided it expands to a blank string
2617 return
2618
2619 # Assigned variable
2620 name = s[:i]
2621
2622
2623 # Extract assignment operator (=, :=, or +=) and value
2624 rhs_match = _assignment_rhs_match(s, i)
2625 if not rhs_match:
2626 self._parse_error("syntax error")
2627
2628 op, val = rhs_match.groups()
2629
2630
2631 if name in self.variables:
2632 # Already seen variable
2633 var = self.variables[name]
2634 else:
2635 # New variable
2636 var = Variable()
2637 var.kconfig = self
2638 var.name = name
2639 var._n_expansions = 0
2640 self.variables[name] = var
2641
2642 # += acts like = on undefined variables (defines a recursive
2643 # variable)
2644 if op == "+=":
2645 op = "="
2646
2647 if op == "=":
2648 var.is_recursive = True
2649 var.value = val
2650 elif op == ":=":
2651 var.is_recursive = False
2652 var.value = self._expand_whole(val, ())
2653 else: # op == "+="
2654 # += does immediate expansion if the variable was last set
2655 # with :=
2656 var.value += " " + (val if var.is_recursive else
2657 self._expand_whole(val, ()))
2658
2659 def _expand_whole(self, s, args):
2660 # Expands preprocessor macros in all of 's'. Used whenever we don't
2661 # have to worry about delimiters. See _expand_macro() re. the 'args'
2662 # parameter.
2663 #
2664 # Returns the expanded string.
2665
2666 i = 0
2667 while 1:
2668 i = s.find("$(", i)
2669 if i == -1:
2670 break
2671 s, i = self._expand_macro(s, i, args)
2672 return s
2673
2674 def _expand_name(self, s, i):
2675 # Expands a symbol name starting at index 'i' in 's'.
2676 #
2677 # Returns the expanded name, the expanded 's' (including the part
2678 # before the name), and the index of the first character in the next
2679 # token after the name.
2680
2681 s, end_i = self._expand_name_iter(s, i)
2682 name = s[i:end_i]
2683 # isspace() is False for empty strings
2684 if not name.strip():
2685 # Avoid creating a Kconfig symbol with a blank name. It's almost
2686 # guaranteed to be an error.
2687 self._parse_error("macro expanded to blank string")
2688
2689 # Skip trailing whitespace
2690 while end_i < len(s) and s[end_i].isspace():
2691 end_i += 1
2692
2693 return name, s, end_i
2694
2695 def _expand_name_iter(self, s, i):
2696 # Expands a symbol name starting at index 'i' in 's'.
2697 #
2698 # Returns the expanded 's' (including the part before the name) and the
2699 # index of the first character after the expanded name in 's'.
2700
2701 while 1:
2702 match = _name_special_search(s, i)
2703
2704 if match.group() != "$(":
2705 return (s, match.start())
2706 s, i = self._expand_macro(s, match.start(), ())
2707
2708 def _expand_str(self, s, i):
2709 # Expands a quoted string starting at index 'i' in 's'. Handles both
2710 # backslash escapes and macro expansion.
2711 #
2712 # Returns the expanded 's' (including the part before the string) and
2713 # the index of the first character after the expanded string in 's'.
2714
2715 quote = s[i]
2716 i += 1 # Skip over initial "/'
2717 while 1:
2718 match = _string_special_search(s, i)
2719 if not match:
2720 self._parse_error("unterminated string")
2721
2722
2723 if match.group() == quote:
2724 # Found the end of the string
2725 return (s, match.end())
2726
2727 elif match.group() == "\\":
2728 # Replace '\x' with 'x'. 'i' ends up pointing to the character
2729 # after 'x', which allows macros to be canceled with '\$(foo)'.
2730 i = match.end()
2731 s = s[:match.start()] + s[i:]
2732
2733 elif match.group() == "$(":
2734 # A macro call within the string
2735 s, i = self._expand_macro(s, match.start(), ())
2736
2737 else:
2738 # A ' quote within " quotes or vice versa
2739 i += 1
2740
2741 def _expand_macro(self, s, i, args):
2742 # Expands a macro starting at index 'i' in 's'. If this macro resulted
2743 # from the expansion of another macro, 'args' holds the arguments
2744 # passed to that macro.
2745 #
2746 # Returns the expanded 's' (including the part before the macro) and
2747 # the index of the first character after the expanded macro in 's'.
2748
2749 res = s[:i]
2750 i += 2 # Skip over "$("
2751
2752 arg_start = i # Start of current macro argument
2753 new_args = [] # Arguments of this macro call
2754 nesting = 0 # Current parentheses nesting level
2755
2756 while 1:
2757 match = _macro_special_search(s, i)
2758 if not match:
2759 self._parse_error("missing end parenthesis in macro expansion")
2760
2761
2762 if match.group() == "(":
2763 nesting += 1
2764 i = match.end()
2765
2766 elif match.group() == ")":
2767 if nesting:
2768 nesting -= 1
2769 i = match.end()
2770 continue
2771
2772 # Found the end of the macro
2773
2774 new_args.append(s[arg_start:match.start()])
2775
2776 # $(1) is replaced by the first argument to the function, etc.,
2777 # provided at least that many arguments were passed
2778
2779 try:
2780 # Does the macro look like an integer, with a corresponding
2781 # argument? If so, expand it to the value of the argument.
2782 res += args[int(new_args[0])]
2783 except (ValueError, IndexError):
2784 # Regular variables are just functions without arguments,
2785 # and also go through the function value path
2786 res += self._fn_val(new_args)
2787
2788 return (res + s[match.end():], len(res))
2789
2790 elif match.group() == ",":
2791 i = match.end()
2792 if nesting:
2793 continue
2794
2795 # Found the end of a macro argument
2796 new_args.append(s[arg_start:match.start()])
2797 arg_start = i
2798
2799 else: # match.group() == "$("
2800 # A nested macro call within the macro
2801 s, i = self._expand_macro(s, match.start(), args)
2802
2803 def _fn_val(self, args):
2804 # Returns the result of calling the function args[0] with the arguments
2805 # args[1..len(args)-1]. Plain variables are treated as functions
2806 # without arguments.
2807
2808 fn = args[0]
2809
2810 if fn in self.variables:
2811 var = self.variables[fn]
2812
2813 if len(args) == 1:
2814 # Plain variable
2815 if var._n_expansions:
2816 self._parse_error("Preprocessor variable {} recursively "
2817 "references itself".format(var.name))
2818 elif var._n_expansions > 100:
2819 # Allow functions to call themselves, but guess that functions
2820 # that are overly recursive are stuck
2821 self._parse_error("Preprocessor function {} seems stuck "
2822 "in infinite recursion".format(var.name))
2823
2824 var._n_expansions += 1
2825 res = self._expand_whole(self.variables[fn].value, args)
2826 var._n_expansions -= 1
2827 return res
2828
2829 if fn in self._functions:
2830 # Built-in or user-defined function
2831
2832 py_fn, min_arg, max_arg = self._functions[fn]
2833
2834 if len(args) - 1 < min_arg or \
2835 (max_arg is not None and len(args) - 1 > max_arg):
2836
2837 if min_arg == max_arg:
2838 expected_args = min_arg
2839 elif max_arg is None:
2840 expected_args = "{} or more".format(min_arg)
2841 else:
2842 expected_args = "{}-{}".format(min_arg, max_arg)
2843
2844 raise KconfigError("{}:{}: bad number of arguments in call "
2845 "to {}, expected {}, got {}"
2846 .format(self.filename, self.linenr, fn,
2847 expected_args, len(args) - 1))
2848
2849 return py_fn(self, *args)
2850
2851 # Environment variables are tried last
2852 if fn in os.environ:
2853 self.env_vars.add(fn)
2854 return os.environ[fn]
2855
2856 return ""
2857
2858 #
2859 # Parsing
2860 #
2861
2862 def _make_and(self, e1, e2):
2863 # Constructs an AND (&&) expression. Performs trivial simplification.
2864
2865 if e1 is self.y:
2866 return e2
2867
2868 if e2 is self.y:
2869 return e1
2870
2871 if e1 is self.n or e2 is self.n:
2872 return self.n
2873
2874 return (AND, e1, e2)
2875
2876 def _make_or(self, e1, e2):
2877 # Constructs an OR (||) expression. Performs trivial simplification.
2878
2879 if e1 is self.n:
2880 return e2
2881
2882 if e2 is self.n:
2883 return e1
2884
2885 if e1 is self.y or e2 is self.y:
2886 return self.y
2887
2888 return (OR, e1, e2)
2889
2890 def _parse_block(self, end_token, parent, prev):
2891 # Parses a block, which is the contents of either a file or an if,
2892 # menu, or choice statement.
2893 #
2894 # end_token:
2895 # The token that ends the block, e.g. _T_ENDIF ("endif") for ifs.
2896 # None for files.
2897 #
2898 # parent:
2899 # The parent menu node, corresponding to a menu, Choice, or 'if'.
2900 # 'if's are flattened after parsing.
2901 #
2902 # prev:
2903 # The previous menu node. New nodes will be added after this one (by
2904 # modifying 'next' pointers).
2905 #
2906 # 'prev' is reused to parse a list of child menu nodes (for a menu or
2907 # Choice): After parsing the children, the 'next' pointer is assigned
2908 # to the 'list' pointer to "tilt up" the children above the node.
2909 #
2910 # Returns the final menu node in the block (or 'prev' if the block is
2911 # empty). This allows chaining.
2912
2913 while self._next_line():
2914 t0 = self._tokens[0]
2915
2916 if t0 is _T_CONFIG or t0 is _T_MENUCONFIG:
2917 # The tokenizer allocates Symbol objects for us
2918 sym = self._tokens[1]
2919
2920 if sym.__class__ is not Symbol or sym.is_constant:
2921 self._parse_error("missing or bad symbol name")
2922
2923 if self._tokens[2] is not None:
2924 self._trailing_tokens_error()
2925
2926 self.defined_syms.append(sym)
2927
2928 node = MenuNode()
2929 node.kconfig = self
2930 node.item = sym
2931 node.is_menuconfig = (t0 is _T_MENUCONFIG)
2932 node.prompt = node.help = node.list = None
2933 node.parent = parent
2934 node.filename = self.filename
2935 node.linenr = self.linenr
2936 node.include_path = self._include_path
2937
2938 sym.nodes.append(node)
2939
2940 self._parse_props(node)
2941
2942 if node.is_menuconfig and not node.prompt:
2943 self._warn("the menuconfig symbol {} has no prompt"
2944 .format(sym.name_and_loc))
2945
2946 # Equivalent to
2947 #
2948 # prev.next = node
2949 # prev = node
2950 #
2951 # due to tricky Python semantics. The order matters.
2952 prev.next = prev = node
2953
2954 elif t0 is None:
2955 # Blank line
2956 continue
2957
2958 elif t0 in _SOURCE_TOKENS:
2959 pattern = self._expect_str_and_eol()
2960
2961 if t0 in _REL_SOURCE_TOKENS:
2962 # Relative source
2963 pattern = join(dirname(self.filename), pattern)
2964
2965 # - glob() doesn't support globbing relative to a directory, so
2966 # we need to prepend $srctree to 'pattern'. Use join()
2967 # instead of '+' so that an absolute path in 'pattern' is
2968 # preserved.
2969 #
2970 # - Sort the glob results to ensure a consistent ordering of
2971 # Kconfig symbols, which indirectly ensures a consistent
2972 # ordering in e.g. .config files
2973 filenames = sorted(iglob(join(self._srctree_prefix, pattern)))
2974
2975 if not filenames and t0 in _OBL_SOURCE_TOKENS:
2976 raise KconfigError(
2977 "{}:{}: '{}' not found (in '{}'). Check that "
2978 "environment variables are set correctly (e.g. "
2979 "$srctree, which is {}). Also note that unset "
2980 "environment variables expand to the empty string."
2981 .format(self.filename, self.linenr, pattern,
2982 self._line.strip(),
2983 "set to '{}'".format(self.srctree)
2984 if self.srctree else "unset or blank"))
2985
2986 for filename in filenames:
2987 self._enter_file(filename)
2988 prev = self._parse_block(None, parent, prev)
2989 self._leave_file()
2990
2991 elif t0 is end_token:
2992 # Reached the end of the block. Terminate the final node and
2993 # return it.
2994
2995 if self._tokens[1] is not None:
2996 self._trailing_tokens_error()
2997
2998 prev.next = None
2999 return prev
3000
3001 elif t0 is _T_IF:
3002 node = MenuNode()
3003 node.item = node.prompt = None
3004 node.parent = parent
3005 node.dep = self._expect_expr_and_eol()
3006
3007 self._parse_block(_T_ENDIF, node, node)
3008 node.list = node.next
3009
3010 prev.next = prev = node
3011
3012 elif t0 is _T_MENU:
3013 node = MenuNode()
3014 node.kconfig = self
3015 node.item = t0 # _T_MENU == MENU
3016 node.is_menuconfig = True
3017 node.prompt = (self._expect_str_and_eol(), self.y)
3018 node.visibility = self.y
3019 node.parent = parent
3020 node.filename = self.filename
3021 node.linenr = self.linenr
3022 node.include_path = self._include_path
3023
3024 self.menus.append(node)
3025
3026 self._parse_props(node)
3027 self._parse_block(_T_ENDMENU, node, node)
3028 node.list = node.next
3029
3030 prev.next = prev = node
3031
3032 elif t0 is _T_COMMENT:
3033 node = MenuNode()
3034 node.kconfig = self
3035 node.item = t0 # _T_COMMENT == COMMENT
3036 node.is_menuconfig = False
3037 node.prompt = (self._expect_str_and_eol(), self.y)
3038 node.list = None
3039 node.parent = parent
3040 node.filename = self.filename
3041 node.linenr = self.linenr
3042 node.include_path = self._include_path
3043
3044 self.comments.append(node)
3045
3046 self._parse_props(node)
3047
3048 prev.next = prev = node
3049
3050 elif t0 is _T_CHOICE:
3051 if self._tokens[1] is None:
3052 choice = Choice()
3053 choice.direct_dep = self.n
3054 else:
3055 # Named choice
3056 name = self._expect_str_and_eol()
3057 choice = self.named_choices.get(name)
3058 if not choice:
3059 choice = Choice()
3060 choice.name = name
3061 choice.direct_dep = self.n
3062 self.named_choices[name] = choice
3063
3064 self.choices.append(choice)
3065
3066 node = MenuNode()
3067 node.kconfig = choice.kconfig = self
3068 node.item = choice
3069 node.is_menuconfig = True
3070 node.prompt = node.help = None
3071 node.parent = parent
3072 node.filename = self.filename
3073 node.linenr = self.linenr
3074 node.include_path = self._include_path
3075
3076 choice.nodes.append(node)
3077
3078 self._parse_props(node)
3079 self._parse_block(_T_ENDCHOICE, node, node)
3080 node.list = node.next
3081
3082 prev.next = prev = node
3083
3084 elif t0 is _T_MAINMENU:
3085 self.top_node.prompt = (self._expect_str_and_eol(), self.y)
3086
3087 else:
3088 # A valid endchoice/endif/endmenu is caught by the 'end_token'
3089 # check above
3090 self._parse_error(
3091 "no corresponding 'choice'" if t0 is _T_ENDCHOICE else
3092 "no corresponding 'if'" if t0 is _T_ENDIF else
3093 "no corresponding 'menu'" if t0 is _T_ENDMENU else
3094 "unrecognized construct")
3095
3096 # End of file reached. Return the last node.
3097
3098 if end_token:
3099 raise KconfigError(
3100 "error: expected '{}' at end of '{}'"
3101 .format("endchoice" if end_token is _T_ENDCHOICE else
3102 "endif" if end_token is _T_ENDIF else
3103 "endmenu",
3104 self.filename))
3105
3106 return prev
3107
3108 def _parse_cond(self):
3109 # Parses an optional 'if <expr>' construct and returns the parsed
3110 # <expr>, or self.y if the next token is not _T_IF
3111
3112 expr = self._parse_expr(True) if self._check_token(_T_IF) else self.y
3113
3114 if self._tokens[self._tokens_i] is not None:
3115 self._trailing_tokens_error()
3116
3117 return expr
3118
3119 def _parse_props(self, node):
3120 # Parses and adds properties to the MenuNode 'node' (type, 'prompt',
3121 # 'default's, etc.) Properties are later copied up to symbols and
3122 # choices in a separate pass after parsing, in e.g.
3123 # _add_props_to_sym().
3124 #
3125 # An older version of this code added properties directly to symbols
3126 # and choices instead of to their menu nodes (and handled dependency
3127 # propagation simultaneously), but that loses information on where a
3128 # property is added when a symbol or choice is defined in multiple
3129 # locations. Some Kconfig configuration systems rely heavily on such
3130 # symbols, and better docs can be generated by keeping track of where
3131 # properties are added.
3132 #
3133 # node:
3134 # The menu node we're parsing properties on
3135
3136 # Dependencies from 'depends on'. Will get propagated to the properties
3137 # below.
3138 node.dep = self.y
3139
3140 while self._next_line():
3141 t0 = self._tokens[0]
3142
3143 if t0 in _TYPE_TOKENS:
3144 # Relies on '_T_BOOL is BOOL', etc., to save a conversion
3145 self._set_type(node.item, t0)
3146 if self._tokens[1] is not None:
3147 self._parse_prompt(node)
3148
3149 elif t0 is _T_DEPENDS:
3150 if not self._check_token(_T_ON):
3151 self._parse_error("expected 'on' after 'depends'")
3152
3153 node.dep = self._make_and(node.dep,
3154 self._expect_expr_and_eol())
3155
3156 elif t0 is _T_HELP:
3157 self._parse_help(node)
3158
3159 elif t0 is _T_SELECT:
3160 if node.item.__class__ is not Symbol:
3161 self._parse_error("only symbols can select")
3162
3163 node.selects.append((self._expect_nonconst_sym(),
3164 self._parse_cond()))
3165
3166 elif t0 is None:
3167 # Blank line
3168 continue
3169
3170 elif t0 is _T_DEFAULT:
3171 node.defaults.append((self._parse_expr(False),
3172 self._parse_cond()))
3173
3174 elif t0 in _DEF_TOKEN_TO_TYPE:
3175 self._set_type(node.item, _DEF_TOKEN_TO_TYPE[t0])
3176 node.defaults.append((self._parse_expr(False),
3177 self._parse_cond()))
3178
3179 elif t0 is _T_PROMPT:
3180 self._parse_prompt(node)
3181
3182 elif t0 is _T_RANGE:
3183 node.ranges.append((self._expect_sym(), self._expect_sym(),
3184 self._parse_cond()))
3185
3186 elif t0 is _T_IMPLY:
3187 if node.item.__class__ is not Symbol:
3188 self._parse_error("only symbols can imply")
3189
3190 node.implies.append((self._expect_nonconst_sym(),
3191 self._parse_cond()))
3192
3193 elif t0 is _T_VISIBLE:
3194 if not self._check_token(_T_IF):
3195 self._parse_error("expected 'if' after 'visible'")
3196
3197 node.visibility = self._make_and(node.visibility,
3198 self._expect_expr_and_eol())
3199
3200 elif t0 is _T_OPTION:
3201 if self._check_token(_T_ENV):
3202 if not self._check_token(_T_EQUAL):
3203 self._parse_error("expected '=' after 'env'")
3204
3205 env_var = self._expect_str_and_eol()
3206 node.item.env_var = env_var
3207
3208 if env_var in os.environ:
3209 node.defaults.append(
3210 (self._lookup_const_sym(os.environ[env_var]),
3211 self.y))
3212 else:
3213 self._warn("{1} has 'option env=\"{0}\"', "
3214 "but the environment variable {0} is not "
3215 "set".format(node.item.name, env_var),
3216 self.filename, self.linenr)
3217
3218 if env_var != node.item.name:
3219 self._warn("Kconfiglib expands environment variables "
3220 "in strings directly, meaning you do not "
3221 "need 'option env=...' \"bounce\" symbols. "
3222 "For compatibility with the C tools, "
3223 "rename {} to {} (so that the symbol name "
3224 "matches the environment variable name)."
3225 .format(node.item.name, env_var),
3226 self.filename, self.linenr)
3227
3228 elif self._check_token(_T_DEFCONFIG_LIST):
3229 if not self.defconfig_list:
3230 self.defconfig_list = node.item
3231 else:
3232 self._warn("'option defconfig_list' set on multiple "
3233 "symbols ({0} and {1}). Only {0} will be "
3234 "used.".format(self.defconfig_list.name,
3235 node.item.name),
3236 self.filename, self.linenr)
3237
3238 elif self._check_token(_T_MODULES):
3239 # To reduce warning spam, only warn if 'option modules' is
3240 # set on some symbol that isn't MODULES, which should be
3241 # safe. I haven't run into any projects that make use
3242 # modules besides the kernel yet, and there it's likely to
3243 # keep being called "MODULES".
3244 if node.item is not self.modules:
3245 self._warn("the 'modules' option is not supported. "
3246 "Let me know if this is a problem for you, "
3247 "as it wouldn't be that hard to implement. "
3248 "Note that modules are supported -- "
3249 "Kconfiglib just assumes the symbol name "
3250 "MODULES, like older versions of the C "
3251 "implementation did when 'option modules' "
3252 "wasn't used.",
3253 self.filename, self.linenr)
3254
3255 elif self._check_token(_T_ALLNOCONFIG_Y):
3256 if node.item.__class__ is not Symbol:
3257 self._parse_error("the 'allnoconfig_y' option is only "
3258 "valid for symbols")
3259
3260 node.item.is_allnoconfig_y = True
3261
3262 else:
3263 self._parse_error("unrecognized option")
3264
3265 elif t0 is _T_OPTIONAL:
3266 if node.item.__class__ is not Choice:
3267 self._parse_error('"optional" is only valid for choices')
3268
3269 node.item.is_optional = True
3270
3271 else:
3272 # Reuse the tokens for the non-property line later
3273 self._reuse_tokens = True
3274 return
3275
3276 def _set_type(self, sc, new_type):
3277 # Sets the type of 'sc' (symbol or choice) to 'new_type'
3278
3279 # UNKNOWN is falsy
3280 if sc.orig_type and sc.orig_type is not new_type:
3281 self._warn("{} defined with multiple types, {} will be used"
3282 .format(sc.name_and_loc, TYPE_TO_STR[new_type]))
3283
3284 sc.orig_type = new_type
3285
3286 def _parse_prompt(self, node):
3287 # 'prompt' properties override each other within a single definition of
3288 # a symbol, but additional prompts can be added by defining the symbol
3289 # multiple times
3290
3291 if node.prompt:
3292 self._warn(node.item.name_and_loc +
3293 " defined with multiple prompts in single location")
3294
3295 prompt = self._tokens[1]
3296 self._tokens_i = 2
3297
3298 if prompt.__class__ is not str:
3299 self._parse_error("expected prompt string")
3300
3301 if prompt != prompt.strip():
3302 self._warn(node.item.name_and_loc +
3303 " has leading or trailing whitespace in its prompt")
3304
3305 # This avoid issues for e.g. reStructuredText documentation, where
3306 # '*prompt *' is invalid
3307 prompt = prompt.strip()
3308
3309 node.prompt = (prompt, self._parse_cond())
3310
3311 def _parse_help(self, node):
3312 if node.help is not None:
3313 self._warn(node.item.name_and_loc + " defined with more than "
3314 "one help text -- only the last one will be used")
3315
3316 # Micro-optimization. This code is pretty hot.
3317 readline = self._readline
3318
3319 # Find first non-blank (not all-space) line and get its
3320 # indentation
3321
3322 while 1:
3323 line = readline()
3324 self.linenr += 1
3325 if not line:
3326 self._empty_help(node, line)
3327 return
3328 if not line.isspace():
3329 break
3330
3331 len_ = len # Micro-optimization
3332
3333 # Use a separate 'expline' variable here and below to avoid stomping on
3334 # any tabs people might've put deliberately into the first line after
3335 # the help text
3336 expline = line.expandtabs()
3337 indent = len_(expline) - len_(expline.lstrip())
3338 if not indent:
3339 self._empty_help(node, line)
3340 return
3341
3342 # The help text goes on till the first non-blank line with less indent
3343 # than the first line
3344
3345 # Add the first line
3346 lines = [expline[indent:]]
3347 add_line = lines.append # Micro-optimization
3348
3349 while 1:
3350 line = readline()
3351 if line.isspace():
3352 # No need to preserve the exact whitespace in these
3353 add_line("\n")
3354 elif not line:
3355 # End of file
3356 break
3357 else:
3358 expline = line.expandtabs()
3359 if len_(expline) - len_(expline.lstrip()) < indent:
3360 break
3361 add_line(expline[indent:])
3362
3363 self.linenr += len_(lines)
3364 node.help = "".join(lines).rstrip()
3365 if line:
3366 self._line_after_help(line)
3367
3368 def _empty_help(self, node, line):
3369 self._warn(node.item.name_and_loc +
3370 " has 'help' but empty help text")
3371 node.help = ""
3372 if line:
3373 self._line_after_help(line)
3374
3375 def _parse_expr(self, transform_m):
3376 # Parses an expression from the tokens in Kconfig._tokens using a
3377 # simple top-down approach. See the module docstring for the expression
3378 # format.
3379 #
3380 # transform_m:
3381 # True if m should be rewritten to m && MODULES. See the
3382 # Kconfig.eval_string() documentation.
3383
3384 # Grammar:
3385 #
3386 # expr: and_expr ['||' expr]
3387 # and_expr: factor ['&&' and_expr]
3388 # factor: <symbol> ['='/'!='/'<'/... <symbol>]
3389 # '!' factor
3390 # '(' expr ')'
3391 #
3392 # It helps to think of the 'expr: and_expr' case as a single-operand OR
3393 # (no ||), and of the 'and_expr: factor' case as a single-operand AND
3394 # (no &&). Parsing code is always a bit tricky.
3395
3396 # Mind dump: parse_factor() and two nested loops for OR and AND would
3397 # work as well. The straightforward implementation there gives a
3398 # (op, (op, (op, A, B), C), D) parse for A op B op C op D. Representing
3399 # expressions as (op, [list of operands]) instead goes nicely with that
3400 # version, but is wasteful for short expressions and complicates
3401 # expression evaluation and other code that works on expressions (more
3402 # complicated code likely offsets any performance gain from less
3403 # recursion too). If we also try to optimize the list representation by
3404 # merging lists when possible (e.g. when ANDing two AND expressions),
3405 # we end up allocating a ton of lists instead of reusing expressions,
3406 # which is bad.
3407
3408 and_expr = self._parse_and_expr(transform_m)
3409
3410 # Return 'and_expr' directly if we have a "single-operand" OR.
3411 # Otherwise, parse the expression on the right and make an OR node.
3412 # This turns A || B || C || D into (OR, A, (OR, B, (OR, C, D))).
3413 return and_expr if not self._check_token(_T_OR) else \
3414 (OR, and_expr, self._parse_expr(transform_m))
3415
3416 def _parse_and_expr(self, transform_m):
3417 factor = self._parse_factor(transform_m)
3418
3419 # Return 'factor' directly if we have a "single-operand" AND.
3420 # Otherwise, parse the right operand and make an AND node. This turns
3421 # A && B && C && D into (AND, A, (AND, B, (AND, C, D))).
3422 return factor if not self._check_token(_T_AND) else \
3423 (AND, factor, self._parse_and_expr(transform_m))
3424
3425 def _parse_factor(self, transform_m):
3426 token = self._tokens[self._tokens_i]
3427 self._tokens_i += 1
3428
3429 if token.__class__ is Symbol:
3430 # Plain symbol or relation
3431
3432 if self._tokens[self._tokens_i] not in _RELATIONS:
3433 # Plain symbol
3434
3435 # For conditional expressions ('depends on <expr>',
3436 # '... if <expr>', etc.), m is rewritten to m && MODULES.
3437 if transform_m and token is self.m:
3438 return (AND, self.m, self.modules)
3439
3440 return token
3441
3442 # Relation
3443 #
3444 # _T_EQUAL, _T_UNEQUAL, etc., deliberately have the same values as
3445 # EQUAL, UNEQUAL, etc., so we can just use the token directly
3446 self._tokens_i += 1
3447 return (self._tokens[self._tokens_i - 1], token,
3448 self._expect_sym())
3449
3450 if token is _T_NOT:
3451 # token == _T_NOT == NOT
3452 return (token, self._parse_factor(transform_m))
3453
3454 if token is _T_OPEN_PAREN:
3455 expr_parse = self._parse_expr(transform_m)
3456 if self._check_token(_T_CLOSE_PAREN):
3457 return expr_parse
3458
3459 self._parse_error("malformed expression")
3460
3461 #
3462 # Caching and invalidation
3463 #
3464
3465 def _build_dep(self):
3466 # Populates the Symbol/Choice._dependents sets, which contain all other
3467 # items (symbols and choices) that immediately depend on the item in
3468 # the sense that changing the value of the item might affect the value
3469 # of the dependent items. This is used for caching/invalidation.
3470 #
3471 # The calculated sets might be larger than necessary as we don't do any
3472 # complex analysis of the expressions.
3473
3474 depend_on = _depend_on # Micro-optimization
3475
3476 # Only calculate _dependents for defined symbols. Constant and
3477 # undefined symbols could theoretically be selected/implied, but it
3478 # wouldn't change their value, so it's not a true dependency.
3479 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
3480 # Symbols depend on the following:
3481
3482 # The prompt conditions
3483 for node in sym.nodes:
3484 if node.prompt:
3485 depend_on(sym, node.prompt[1])
3486
3487 # The default values and their conditions
3488 for value, cond in sym.defaults:
3489 depend_on(sym, value)
3490 depend_on(sym, cond)
3491
3492 # The reverse and weak reverse dependencies
3493 depend_on(sym, sym.rev_dep)
3494 depend_on(sym, sym.weak_rev_dep)
3495
3496 # The ranges along with their conditions
3497 for low, high, cond in sym.ranges:
3498 depend_on(sym, low)
3499 depend_on(sym, high)
3500 depend_on(sym, cond)
3501
3502 # The direct dependencies. This is usually redundant, as the direct
3503 # dependencies get propagated to properties, but it's needed to get
3504 # invalidation solid for 'imply', which only checks the direct
3505 # dependencies (even if there are no properties to propagate it
3506 # to).
3507 depend_on(sym, sym.direct_dep)
3508
3509 # In addition to the above, choice symbols depend on the choice
3510 # they're in, but that's handled automatically since the Choice is
3511 # propagated to the conditions of the properties before
3512 # _build_dep() runs.
3513
3514 for choice in self.unique_choices:
3515 # Choices depend on the following:
3516
3517 # The prompt conditions
3518 for node in choice.nodes:
3519 if node.prompt:
3520 depend_on(choice, node.prompt[1])
3521
3522 # The default symbol conditions
3523 for _, cond in choice.defaults:
3524 depend_on(choice, cond)
3525
3526 def _add_choice_deps(self):
3527 # Choices also depend on the choice symbols themselves, because the
3528 # y-mode selection of the choice might change if a choice symbol's
3529 # visibility changes.
3530 #
3531 # We add these dependencies separately after dependency loop detection.
3532 # The invalidation algorithm can handle the resulting
3533 # <choice symbol> <-> <choice> dependency loops, but they make loop
3534 # detection awkward.
3535
3536 for choice in self.unique_choices:
3537 for sym in choice.syms:
3538 sym._dependents.add(choice)
3539
3540 def _invalidate_all(self):
3541 # Undefined symbols never change value and don't need to be
3542 # invalidated, so we can just iterate over defined symbols.
3543 # Invalidating constant symbols would break things horribly.
3544 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
3545 sym._invalidate()
3546
3547 for choice in self.unique_choices:
3548 choice._invalidate()
3549
3550 #
3551 # Post-parsing menu tree processing, including dependency propagation and
3552 # implicit submenu creation
3553 #
3554
3555 def _finalize_node(self, node, visible_if):
3556 # Finalizes a menu node and its children:
3557 #
3558 # - Copies properties from menu nodes up to their contained
3559 # symbols/choices
3560 #
3561 # - Propagates dependencies from parent to child nodes
3562 #
3563 # - Creates implicit menus (see kconfig-language.txt)
3564 #
3565 # - Removes 'if' nodes
3566 #
3567 # - Sets 'choice' types and registers choice symbols
3568 #
3569 # menu_finalize() in the C implementation is similar.
3570 #
3571 # node:
3572 # The menu node to finalize. This node and its children will have
3573 # been finalized when the function returns, and any implicit menus
3574 # will have been created.
3575 #
3576 # visible_if:
3577 # Dependencies from 'visible if' on parent menus. These are added to
3578 # the prompts of symbols and choices.
3579
3580 if node.item.__class__ is Symbol:
3581 # Copy defaults, ranges, selects, and implies to the Symbol
3582 self._add_props_to_sym(node)
3583
3584 # Find any items that should go in an implicit menu rooted at the
3585 # symbol
3586 cur = node
3587 while cur.next and _auto_menu_dep(node, cur.next):
3588 # This makes implicit submenu creation work recursively, with
3589 # implicit menus inside implicit menus
3590 self._finalize_node(cur.next, visible_if)
3591 cur = cur.next
3592 cur.parent = node
3593
3594 if cur is not node:
3595 # Found symbols that should go in an implicit submenu. Tilt
3596 # them up above us.
3597 node.list = node.next
3598 node.next = cur.next
3599 cur.next = None
3600
3601 elif node.list:
3602 # The menu node is a choice, menu, or if. Finalize each child node.
3603
3604 if node.item is MENU:
3605 visible_if = self._make_and(visible_if, node.visibility)
3606
3607 # Propagate the menu node's dependencies to each child menu node.
3608 #
3609 # This needs to go before the recursive _finalize_node() call so
3610 # that implicit submenu creation can look ahead at dependencies.
3611 self._propagate_deps(node, visible_if)
3612
3613 # Finalize the children
3614 cur = node.list
3615 while cur:
3616 self._finalize_node(cur, visible_if)
3617 cur = cur.next
3618
3619 if node.list:
3620 # node's children have been individually finalized. Do final steps
3621 # to finalize this "level" in the menu tree.
3622 _flatten(node.list)
3623 _remove_ifs(node)
3624
3625 # Empty choices (node.list None) are possible, so this needs to go
3626 # outside
3627 if node.item.__class__ is Choice:
3628 # Add the node's non-node-specific properties to the choice, like
3629 # _add_props_to_sym() does
3630 choice = node.item
3631 choice.direct_dep = self._make_or(choice.direct_dep, node.dep)
3632 choice.defaults += node.defaults
3633
3634 _finalize_choice(node)
3635
3636 def _propagate_deps(self, node, visible_if):
3637 # Propagates 'node's dependencies to its child menu nodes
3638
3639 # If the parent node holds a Choice, we use the Choice itself as the
3640 # parent dependency. This makes sense as the value (mode) of the choice
3641 # limits the visibility of the contained choice symbols. The C
3642 # implementation works the same way.
3643 #
3644 # Due to the similar interface, Choice works as a drop-in replacement
3645 # for Symbol here.
3646 basedep = node.item if node.item.__class__ is Choice else node.dep
3647
3648 cur = node.list
3649 while cur:
3650 dep = cur.dep = self._make_and(cur.dep, basedep)
3651
3652 if cur.item.__class__ in _SYMBOL_CHOICE:
3653 # Propagate 'visible if' and dependencies to the prompt
3654 if cur.prompt:
3655 cur.prompt = (cur.prompt[0],
3656 self._make_and(
3657 cur.prompt[1],
3658 self._make_and(visible_if, dep)))
3659
3660 # Propagate dependencies to defaults
3661 if cur.defaults:
3662 cur.defaults = [(default, self._make_and(cond, dep))
3663 for default, cond in cur.defaults]
3664
3665 # Propagate dependencies to ranges
3666 if cur.ranges:
3667 cur.ranges = [(low, high, self._make_and(cond, dep))
3668 for low, high, cond in cur.ranges]
3669
3670 # Propagate dependencies to selects
3671 if cur.selects:
3672 cur.selects = [(target, self._make_and(cond, dep))
3673 for target, cond in cur.selects]
3674
3675 # Propagate dependencies to implies
3676 if cur.implies:
3677 cur.implies = [(target, self._make_and(cond, dep))
3678 for target, cond in cur.implies]
3679
3680 elif cur.prompt: # Not a symbol/choice
3681 # Propagate dependencies to the prompt. 'visible if' is only
3682 # propagated to symbols/choices.
3683 cur.prompt = (cur.prompt[0],
3684 self._make_and(cur.prompt[1], dep))
3685
3686 cur = cur.next
3687
3688 def _add_props_to_sym(self, node):
3689 # Copies properties from the menu node 'node' up to its contained
3690 # symbol, and adds (weak) reverse dependencies to selected/implied
3691 # symbols.
3692 #
3693 # This can't be rolled into _propagate_deps(), because that function
3694 # traverses the menu tree roughly breadth-first, meaning properties on
3695 # symbols defined in multiple locations could end up in the wrong
3696 # order.
3697
3698 sym = node.item
3699
3700 # See the Symbol class docstring
3701 sym.direct_dep = self._make_or(sym.direct_dep, node.dep)
3702
3703 sym.defaults += node.defaults
3704 sym.ranges += node.ranges
3705 sym.selects += node.selects
3706 sym.implies += node.implies
3707
3708 # Modify the reverse dependencies of the selected symbol
3709 for target, cond in node.selects:
3710 target.rev_dep = self._make_or(
3711 target.rev_dep,
3712 self._make_and(sym, cond))
3713
3714 # Modify the weak reverse dependencies of the implied
3715 # symbol
3716 for target, cond in node.implies:
3717 target.weak_rev_dep = self._make_or(
3718 target.weak_rev_dep,
3719 self._make_and(sym, cond))
3720
3721 #
3722 # Misc.
3723 #
3724
3725 def _check_sym_sanity(self):
3726 # Checks various symbol properties that are handiest to check after
3727 # parsing. Only generates errors and warnings.
3728
3729 def num_ok(sym, type_):
3730 # Returns True if the (possibly constant) symbol 'sym' is valid as a value
3731 # for a symbol of type type_ (INT or HEX)
3732
3733 # 'not sym.nodes' implies a constant or undefined symbol, e.g. a plain
3734 # "123"
3735 if not sym.nodes:
3736 return _is_base_n(sym.name, _TYPE_TO_BASE[type_])
3737
3738 return sym.orig_type is type_
3739
3740 for sym in self.unique_defined_syms:
3741 if sym.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE:
3742 # A helper function could be factored out here, but keep it
3743 # speedy/straightforward
3744
3745 for target_sym, _ in sym.selects:
3746 if target_sym.orig_type not in _BOOL_TRISTATE_UNKNOWN:
3747 self._warn("{} selects the {} symbol {}, which is not "
3748 "bool or tristate"
3749 .format(sym.name_and_loc,
3750 TYPE_TO_STR[target_sym.orig_type],
3751 target_sym.name_and_loc))
3752
3753 for target_sym, _ in sym.implies:
3754 if target_sym.orig_type not in _BOOL_TRISTATE_UNKNOWN:
3755 self._warn("{} implies the {} symbol {}, which is not "
3756 "bool or tristate"
3757 .format(sym.name_and_loc,
3758 TYPE_TO_STR[target_sym.orig_type],
3759 target_sym.name_and_loc))
3760
3761 elif sym.orig_type: # STRING/INT/HEX
3762 for default, _ in sym.defaults:
3763 if default.__class__ is not Symbol:
3764 raise KconfigError(
3765 "the {} symbol {} has a malformed default {} -- "
3766 "expected a single symbol"
3767 .format(TYPE_TO_STR[sym.orig_type],
3768 sym.name_and_loc, expr_str(default)))
3769
3770 if sym.orig_type is STRING:
3771 if not default.is_constant and not default.nodes and \
3772 not default.name.isupper():
3773 # 'default foo' on a string symbol could be either a symbol
3774 # reference or someone leaving out the quotes. Guess that
3775 # the quotes were left out if 'foo' isn't all-uppercase
3776 # (and no symbol named 'foo' exists).
3777 self._warn("style: quotes recommended around "
3778 "default value for string symbol "
3779 + sym.name_and_loc)
3780
3781 elif not num_ok(default, sym.orig_type): # INT/HEX
3782 self._warn("the {0} symbol {1} has a non-{0} default {2}"
3783 .format(TYPE_TO_STR[sym.orig_type],
3784 sym.name_and_loc,
3785 default.name_and_loc))
3786
3787 if sym.selects or sym.implies:
3788 self._warn("the {} symbol {} has selects or implies"
3789 .format(TYPE_TO_STR[sym.orig_type],
3790 sym.name_and_loc))
3791
3792 else: # UNKNOWN
3793 self._warn("{} defined without a type"
3794 .format(sym.name_and_loc))
3795
3796
3797 if sym.ranges:
3798 if sym.orig_type not in _INT_HEX:
3799 self._warn(
3800 "the {} symbol {} has ranges, but is not int or hex"
3801 .format(TYPE_TO_STR[sym.orig_type],
3802 sym.name_and_loc))
3803 else:
3804 for low, high, _ in sym.ranges:
3805 if not num_ok(low, sym.orig_type) or \
3806 not num_ok(high, sym.orig_type):
3807
3808 self._warn("the {0} symbol {1} has a non-{0} "
3809 "range [{2}, {3}]"
3810 .format(TYPE_TO_STR[sym.orig_type],
3811 sym.name_and_loc,
3812 low.name_and_loc,
3813 high.name_and_loc))
3814
3815 def _check_choice_sanity(self):
3816 # Checks various choice properties that are handiest to check after
3817 # parsing. Only generates errors and warnings.
3818
3819 def warn_select_imply(sym, expr, expr_type):
3820 msg = "the choice symbol {} is {} by the following symbols, but " \
3821 "select/imply has no effect on choice symbols" \
3822 .format(sym.name_and_loc, expr_type)
3823
3824 # si = select/imply
3825 for si in split_expr(expr, OR):
3826 msg += "\n - " + split_expr(si, AND)[0].name_and_loc
3827
3828 self._warn(msg)
3829
3830 for choice in self.unique_choices:
3831 if choice.orig_type not in _BOOL_TRISTATE:
3832 self._warn("{} defined with type {}"
3833 .format(choice.name_and_loc,
3834 TYPE_TO_STR[choice.orig_type]))
3835
3836 for node in choice.nodes:
3837 if node.prompt:
3838 break
3839 else:
3840 self._warn(choice.name_and_loc + " defined without a prompt")
3841
3842 for default, _ in choice.defaults:
3843 if default.__class__ is not Symbol:
3844 raise KconfigError(
3845 "{} has a malformed default {}"
3846 .format(choice.name_and_loc, expr_str(default)))
3847
3848 if default.choice is not choice:
3849 self._warn("the default selection {} of {} is not "
3850 "contained in the choice"
3851 .format(default.name_and_loc,
3852 choice.name_and_loc))
3853
3854 for sym in choice.syms:
3855 if sym.defaults:
3856 self._warn("default on the choice symbol {} will have "
3857 "no effect, as defaults do not affect choice "
3858 "symbols".format(sym.name_and_loc))
3859
3860 if sym.rev_dep is not sym.kconfig.n:
3861 warn_select_imply(sym, sym.rev_dep, "selected")
3862
3863 if sym.weak_rev_dep is not sym.kconfig.n:
3864 warn_select_imply(sym, sym.weak_rev_dep, "implied")
3865
3866 for node in sym.nodes:
3867 if node.parent.item is choice:
3868 if not node.prompt:
3869 self._warn("the choice symbol {} has no prompt"
3870 .format(sym.name_and_loc))
3871
3872 elif node.prompt:
3873 self._warn("the choice symbol {} is defined with a "
3874 "prompt outside the choice"
3875 .format(sym.name_and_loc))
3876
3877 def _parse_error(self, msg):
3878 raise KconfigError("{}error: couldn't parse '{}': {}".format(
3879 "" if self.filename is None else
3880 "{}:{}: ".format(self.filename, self.linenr),
3881 self._line.strip(), msg))
3882
3883 def _trailing_tokens_error(self):
3884 self._parse_error("extra tokens at end of line")
3885
3886 def _open(self, filename, mode):
3887 # open() wrapper:
3888 #
3889 # - Enable universal newlines mode on Python 2 to ease
3890 # interoperability between Linux and Windows. It's already the
3891 # default on Python 3.
3892 #
3893 # The "U" flag would currently work for both Python 2 and 3, but it's
3894 # deprecated on Python 3, so play it future-safe.
3895 #
3896 # io.open() defaults to universal newlines on Python 2 (and is an
3897 # alias for open() on Python 3), but it returns 'unicode' strings and
3898 # slows things down:
3899 #
3900 # Parsing x86 Kconfigs on Python 2
3901 #
3902 # with open(..., "rU"):
3903 #
3904 # real 0m0.930s
3905 # user 0m0.905s
3906 # sys 0m0.025s
3907 #
3908 # with io.open():
3909 #
3910 # real 0m1.069s
3911 # user 0m1.040s
3912 # sys 0m0.029s
3913 #
3914 # There's no appreciable performance difference between "r" and
3915 # "rU" for parsing performance on Python 2.
3916 #
3917 # - For Python 3, force the encoding. Forcing the encoding on Python 2
3918 # turns strings into Unicode strings, which gets messy. Python 2
3919 # doesn't decode regular strings anyway.
3920 return open(filename, "rU" if mode == "r" else mode) if _IS_PY2 else \
3921 open(filename, mode, encoding=self._encoding)
3922
3923 def _check_undef_syms(self):
3924 # Prints warnings for all references to undefined symbols within the
3925 # Kconfig files
3926
3927 def is_num(s):
3928 # Returns True if the string 's' looks like a number.
3929 #
3930 # Internally, all operands in Kconfig are symbols, only undefined symbols
3931 # (which numbers usually are) get their name as their value.
3932 #
3933 # Only hex numbers that start with 0x/0X are classified as numbers.
3934 # Otherwise, symbols whose names happen to contain only the letters A-F
3935 # would trigger false positives.
3936
3937 try:
3938 int(s)
3939 except ValueError:
3940 if not s.startswith(("0x", "0X")):
3941 return False
3942
3943 try:
3944 int(s, 16)
3945 except ValueError:
3946 return False
3947
3948 return True
3949
3950 for sym in (self.syms.viewvalues if _IS_PY2 else self.syms.values)():
3951 # - sym.nodes empty means the symbol is undefined (has no
3952 # definition locations)
3953 #
3954 # - Due to Kconfig internals, numbers show up as undefined Kconfig
3955 # symbols, but shouldn't be flagged
3956 #
3957 # - The MODULES symbol always exists
3958 if not sym.nodes and not is_num(sym.name) and \
3959 sym.name != "MODULES":
3960
3961 msg = "undefined symbol {}:".format(sym.name)
3962 for node in self.node_iter():
3963 if sym in node.referenced:
3964 msg += "\n\n- Referenced at {}:{}:\n\n{}" \
3965 .format(node.filename, node.linenr, node)
3966 self._warn(msg)
3967
3968 def _warn(self, msg, filename=None, linenr=None):
3969 # For printing general warnings
3970
3971 if not self.warn:
3972 return
3973
3974 msg = "warning: " + msg
3975 if filename is not None:
3976 msg = "{}:{}: {}".format(filename, linenr, msg)
3977
3978 self.warnings.append(msg)
3979 if self.warn_to_stderr:
3980 sys.stderr.write(msg + "\n")
3981
3982
3983class Symbol(object):
3984 """
3985 Represents a configuration symbol:
3986
3987 (menu)config FOO
3988 ...
3989
3990 The following attributes are available. They should be viewed as read-only,
3991 and some are implemented through @property magic (but are still efficient
3992 to access due to internal caching).
3993
3994 Note: Prompts, help texts, and locations are stored in the Symbol's
3995 MenuNode(s) rather than in the Symbol itself. Check the MenuNode class and
3996 the Symbol.nodes attribute. This organization matches the C tools.
3997
3998 name:
3999 The name of the symbol, e.g. "FOO" for 'config FOO'.
4000
4001 type:
4002 The type of the symbol. One of BOOL, TRISTATE, STRING, INT, HEX, UNKNOWN.
4003 UNKNOWN is for undefined symbols, (non-special) constant symbols, and
4004 symbols defined without a type.
4005
4006 When running without modules (MODULES having the value n), TRISTATE
4007 symbols magically change type to BOOL. This also happens for symbols
4008 within choices in "y" mode. This matches the C tools, and makes sense for
4009 menuconfig-like functionality.
4010
4011 orig_type:
4012 The type as given in the Kconfig file, without any magic applied. Used
4013 when printing the symbol.
4014
4015 tri_value:
4016 The tristate value of the symbol as an integer. One of 0, 1, 2,
4017 representing n, m, y. Always 0 (n) for non-bool/tristate symbols.
4018
4019 This is the symbol value that's used outside of relation expressions
4020 (A, !A, A && B, A || B).
4021
4022 str_value:
4023 The value of the symbol as a string. Gives the value for string/int/hex
4024 symbols. For bool/tristate symbols, gives "n", "m", or "y".
4025
4026 This is the symbol value that's used in relational expressions
4027 (A = B, A != B, etc.)
4028
4029 Gotcha: For int/hex symbols, the exact format of the value is often
4030 preserved (e.g. when writing a .config file), hence why you can't get it
4031 directly as an int. Do int(int_sym.str_value) or
4032 int(hex_sym.str_value, 16) to get the integer value.
4033
4034 user_value:
4035 The user value of the symbol. None if no user value has been assigned
4036 (via Kconfig.load_config() or Symbol.set_value()).
4037
4038 Holds 0, 1, or 2 for bool/tristate symbols, and a string for the other
4039 symbol types.
4040
4041 WARNING: Do not assign directly to this. It will break things. Use
4042 Symbol.set_value().
4043
4044 assignable:
4045 A tuple containing the tristate user values that can currently be
4046 assigned to the symbol (that would be respected), ordered from lowest (0,
4047 representing n) to highest (2, representing y). This corresponds to the
4048 selections available in the menuconfig interface. The set of assignable
4049 values is calculated from the symbol's visibility and selects/implies.
4050
4051 Returns the empty set for non-bool/tristate symbols and for symbols with
4052 visibility n. The other possible values are (0, 2), (0, 1, 2), (1, 2),
4053 (1,), and (2,). A (1,) or (2,) result means the symbol is visible but
4054 "locked" to m or y through a select, perhaps in combination with the
4055 visibility. menuconfig represents this as -M- and -*-, respectively.
4056
4057 For string/hex/int symbols, check if Symbol.visibility is non-0 (non-n)
4058 instead to determine if the value can be changed.
4059
4060 Some handy 'assignable' idioms:
4061
4062 # Is 'sym' an assignable (visible) bool/tristate symbol?
4063 if sym.assignable:
4064 # What's the highest value it can be assigned? [-1] in Python
4065 # gives the last element.
4066 sym_high = sym.assignable[-1]
4067
4068 # The lowest?
4069 sym_low = sym.assignable[0]
4070
4071 # Can the symbol be set to at least m?
4072 if sym.assignable[-1] >= 1:
4073 ...
4074
4075 # Can the symbol be set to m?
4076 if 1 in sym.assignable:
4077 ...
4078
4079 visibility:
4080 The visibility of the symbol. One of 0, 1, 2, representing n, m, y. See
4081 the module documentation for an overview of symbol values and visibility.
4082
4083 config_string:
4084 The .config assignment string that would get written out for the symbol
4085 by Kconfig.write_config(). Returns the empty string if no .config
4086 assignment would get written out.
4087
4088 In general, visible symbols, symbols with (active) defaults, and selected
4089 symbols get written out. This includes all non-n-valued bool/tristate
4090 symbols, and all visible string/int/hex symbols.
4091
4092 Symbols with the (no longer needed) 'option env=...' option generate no
4093 configuration output, and neither does the special
4094 'option defconfig_list' symbol.
4095
4096 Tip: This field is useful when generating custom configuration output,
4097 even for non-.config-like formats. To write just the symbols that would
4098 get written out to .config files, do this:
4099
4100 if sym.config_string:
4101 *Write symbol, e.g. by looking sym.str_value*
4102
4103 This is a superset of the symbols written out by write_autoconf().
4104 That function skips all n-valued symbols.
4105
4106 There usually won't be any great harm in just writing all symbols either,
4107 though you might get some special symbols and possibly some "redundant"
4108 n-valued symbol entries in there.
4109
4110 name_and_loc:
4111 Holds a string like
4112
4113 "MY_SYMBOL (defined at foo/Kconfig:12, bar/Kconfig:14)"
4114
4115 , giving the name of the symbol and its definition location(s).
4116
4117 If the symbol is undefined, the location is given as "(undefined)".
4118
4119 nodes:
4120 A list of MenuNodes for this symbol. Will contain a single MenuNode for
4121 most symbols. Undefined and constant symbols have an empty nodes list.
4122 Symbols defined in multiple locations get one node for each location.
4123
4124 choice:
4125 Holds the parent Choice for choice symbols, and None for non-choice
4126 symbols. Doubles as a flag for whether a symbol is a choice symbol.
4127
4128 defaults:
4129 List of (default, cond) tuples for the symbol's 'default' properties. For
4130 example, 'default A && B if C || D' is represented as
4131 ((AND, A, B), (OR, C, D)). If no condition was given, 'cond' is
4132 self.kconfig.y.
4133
4134 Note that 'depends on' and parent dependencies are propagated to
4135 'default' conditions.
4136
4137 selects:
4138 List of (symbol, cond) tuples for the symbol's 'select' properties. For
4139 example, 'select A if B && C' is represented as (A, (AND, B, C)). If no
4140 condition was given, 'cond' is self.kconfig.y.
4141
4142 Note that 'depends on' and parent dependencies are propagated to 'select'
4143 conditions.
4144
4145 implies:
4146 Like 'selects', for imply.
4147
4148 ranges:
4149 List of (low, high, cond) tuples for the symbol's 'range' properties. For
4150 example, 'range 1 2 if A' is represented as (1, 2, A). If there is no
4151 condition, 'cond' is self.kconfig.y.
4152
4153 Note that 'depends on' and parent dependencies are propagated to 'range'
4154 conditions.
4155
4156 Gotcha: 1 and 2 above will be represented as (undefined) Symbols rather
4157 than plain integers. Undefined symbols get their name as their string
4158 value, so this works out. The C tools work the same way.
4159
4160 orig_defaults:
4161 orig_selects:
4162 orig_implies:
4163 orig_ranges:
4164 See the corresponding attributes on the MenuNode class.
4165
4166 rev_dep:
4167 Reverse dependency expression from other symbols selecting this symbol.
4168 Multiple selections get ORed together. A condition on a select is ANDed
4169 with the selecting symbol.
4170
4171 For example, if A has 'select FOO' and B has 'select FOO if C', then
4172 FOO's rev_dep will be (OR, A, (AND, B, C)).
4173
4174 weak_rev_dep:
4175 Like rev_dep, for imply.
4176
4177 direct_dep:
4178 The direct ('depends on') dependencies for the symbol, or self.kconfig.y
4179 if there are no direct dependencies.
4180
4181 This attribute includes any dependencies from surrounding menus and ifs.
4182 Those get propagated to the direct dependencies, and the resulting direct
4183 dependencies in turn get propagated to the conditions of all properties.
4184
4185 If the symbol is defined in multiple locations, the dependencies from the
4186 different locations get ORed together.
4187
4188 referenced:
4189 A set() with all symbols and choices referenced in the properties and
4190 property conditions of the symbol.
4191
4192 Also includes dependencies from surrounding menus and ifs, because those
4193 get propagated to the symbol (see the 'Intro to symbol values' section in
4194 the module docstring).
4195
4196 Choices appear in the dependencies of choice symbols.
4197
4198 For the following definitions, only B and not C appears in A's
4199 'referenced'. To get transitive references, you'll have to recursively
4200 expand 'references' until no new items appear.
4201
4202 config A
4203 bool
4204 depends on B
4205
4206 config B
4207 bool
4208 depends on C
4209
4210 config C
4211 bool
4212
4213 See the Symbol.direct_dep attribute if you're only interested in the
4214 direct dependencies of the symbol (its 'depends on'). You can extract the
4215 symbols in it with the global expr_items() function.
4216
4217 env_var:
4218 If the Symbol has an 'option env="FOO"' option, this contains the name
4219 ("FOO") of the environment variable. None for symbols without no
4220 'option env'.
4221
4222 'option env="FOO"' acts like a 'default' property whose value is the
4223 value of $FOO.
4224
4225 Symbols with 'option env' are never written out to .config files, even if
4226 they are visible. env_var corresponds to a flag called SYMBOL_AUTO in the
4227 C implementation.
4228
4229 is_allnoconfig_y:
4230 True if the symbol has 'option allnoconfig_y' set on it. This has no
4231 effect internally (except when printing symbols), but can be checked by
4232 scripts.
4233
4234 is_constant:
4235 True if the symbol is a constant (quoted) symbol.
4236
4237 kconfig:
4238 The Kconfig instance this symbol is from.
4239 """
4240 __slots__ = (
4241 "_cached_assignable",
4242 "_cached_str_val",
4243 "_cached_tri_val",
4244 "_cached_vis",
4245 "_dependents",
4246 "_old_val",
4247 "_visited",
4248 "_was_set",
4249 "_write_to_conf",
4250 "choice",
4251 "defaults",
4252 "direct_dep",
4253 "env_var",
4254 "implies",
4255 "is_allnoconfig_y",
4256 "is_constant",
4257 "kconfig",
4258 "name",
4259 "nodes",
4260 "orig_type",
4261 "ranges",
4262 "rev_dep",
4263 "selects",
4264 "user_value",
4265 "weak_rev_dep",
4266 )
4267
4268 #
4269 # Public interface
4270 #
4271
4272 @property
4273 def type(self):
4274 """
4275 See the class documentation.
4276 """
4277 if self.orig_type is TRISTATE and \
4278 (self.choice and self.choice.tri_value == 2 or
4279 not self.kconfig.modules.tri_value):
4280
4281 return BOOL
4282
4283 return self.orig_type
4284
4285 @property
4286 def str_value(self):
4287 """
4288 See the class documentation.
4289 """
4290 if self._cached_str_val is not None:
4291 return self._cached_str_val
4292
4293 if self.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE:
4294 # Also calculates the visibility, so invalidation safe
4295 self._cached_str_val = TRI_TO_STR[self.tri_value]
4296 return self._cached_str_val
4297
4298 # As a quirk of Kconfig, undefined symbols get their name as their
4299 # string value. This is why things like "FOO = bar" work for seeing if
4300 # FOO has the value "bar".
4301 if not self.orig_type: # UNKNOWN
4302 self._cached_str_val = self.name
4303 return self.name
4304
4305 val = ""
4306 # Warning: See Symbol._rec_invalidate(), and note that this is a hidden
4307 # function call (property magic)
4308 vis = self.visibility
4309
4310 self._write_to_conf = (vis != 0)
4311
4312 if self.orig_type in _INT_HEX:
4313 # The C implementation checks the user value against the range in a
4314 # separate code path (post-processing after loading a .config).
4315 # Checking all values here instead makes more sense for us. It
4316 # requires that we check for a range first.
4317
4318 base = _TYPE_TO_BASE[self.orig_type]
4319
4320 # Check if a range is in effect
4321 for low_expr, high_expr, cond in self.ranges:
4322 if expr_value(cond):
4323 has_active_range = True
4324
4325 # The zeros are from the C implementation running strtoll()
4326 # on empty strings
4327 low = int(low_expr.str_value, base) if \
4328 _is_base_n(low_expr.str_value, base) else 0
4329 high = int(high_expr.str_value, base) if \
4330 _is_base_n(high_expr.str_value, base) else 0
4331
4332 break
4333 else:
4334 has_active_range = False
4335
4336 # Defaults are used if the symbol is invisible, lacks a user value,
4337 # or has an out-of-range user value
4338 use_defaults = True
4339
4340 if vis and self.user_value:
4341 user_val = int(self.user_value, base)
4342 if has_active_range and not low <= user_val <= high:
4343 num2str = str if base == 10 else hex
4344 self.kconfig._warn(
4345 "user value {} on the {} symbol {} ignored due to "
4346 "being outside the active range ([{}, {}]) -- falling "
4347 "back on defaults"
4348 .format(num2str(user_val), TYPE_TO_STR[self.orig_type],
4349 self.name_and_loc,
4350 num2str(low), num2str(high)))
4351 else:
4352 # If the user value is well-formed and satisfies range
4353 # contraints, it is stored in exactly the same form as
4354 # specified in the assignment (with or without "0x", etc.)
4355 val = self.user_value
4356 use_defaults = False
4357
4358 if use_defaults:
4359 # No user value or invalid user value. Look at defaults.
4360
4361 # Used to implement the warning below
4362 has_default = False
4363
4364 for sym, cond in self.defaults:
4365 if expr_value(cond):
4366 has_default = self._write_to_conf = True
4367
4368 val = sym.str_value
4369
4370 if _is_base_n(val, base):
4371 val_num = int(val, base)
4372 else:
4373 val_num = 0 # strtoll() on empty string
4374
4375 break
4376 else:
4377 val_num = 0 # strtoll() on empty string
4378
4379 # This clamping procedure runs even if there's no default
4380 if has_active_range:
4381 clamp = None
4382 if val_num < low:
4383 clamp = low
4384 elif val_num > high:
4385 clamp = high
4386
4387 if clamp is not None:
4388 # The value is rewritten to a standard form if it is
4389 # clamped
4390 val = str(clamp) \
4391 if self.orig_type is INT else \
4392 hex(clamp)
4393
4394 if has_default:
4395 num2str = str if base == 10 else hex
4396 self.kconfig._warn(
4397 "default value {} on {} clamped to {} due to "
4398 "being outside the active range ([{}, {}])"
4399 .format(val_num, self.name_and_loc,
4400 num2str(clamp), num2str(low),
4401 num2str(high)))
4402
4403 elif self.orig_type is STRING:
4404 if vis and self.user_value is not None:
4405 # If the symbol is visible and has a user value, use that
4406 val = self.user_value
4407 else:
4408 # Otherwise, look at defaults
4409 for sym, cond in self.defaults:
4410 if expr_value(cond):
4411 val = sym.str_value
4412 self._write_to_conf = True
4413 break
4414
4415 # env_var corresponds to SYMBOL_AUTO in the C implementation, and is
4416 # also set on the defconfig_list symbol there. Test for the
4417 # defconfig_list symbol explicitly instead here, to avoid a nonsensical
4418 # env_var setting and the defconfig_list symbol being printed
4419 # incorrectly. This code is pretty cold anyway.
4420 if self.env_var is not None or self is self.kconfig.defconfig_list:
4421 self._write_to_conf = False
4422
4423 self._cached_str_val = val
4424 return val
4425
4426 @property
4427 def tri_value(self):
4428 """
4429 See the class documentation.
4430 """
4431 if self._cached_tri_val is not None:
4432 return self._cached_tri_val
4433
4434 if self.orig_type not in _BOOL_TRISTATE:
4435 if self.orig_type: # != UNKNOWN
4436 # Would take some work to give the location here
4437 self.kconfig._warn(
4438 "The {} symbol {} is being evaluated in a logical context "
4439 "somewhere. It will always evaluate to n."
4440 .format(TYPE_TO_STR[self.orig_type], self.name_and_loc))
4441
4442 self._cached_tri_val = 0
4443 return 0
4444
4445 # Warning: See Symbol._rec_invalidate(), and note that this is a hidden
4446 # function call (property magic)
4447 vis = self.visibility
4448 self._write_to_conf = (vis != 0)
4449
4450 val = 0
4451
4452 if not self.choice:
4453 # Non-choice symbol
4454
4455 if vis and self.user_value is not None:
4456 # If the symbol is visible and has a user value, use that
4457 val = min(self.user_value, vis)
4458
4459 else:
4460 # Otherwise, look at defaults and weak reverse dependencies
4461 # (implies)
4462
4463 for default, cond in self.defaults:
4464 dep_val = expr_value(cond)
4465 if dep_val:
4466 val = min(expr_value(default), dep_val)
4467 if val:
4468 self._write_to_conf = True
4469 break
4470
4471 # Weak reverse dependencies are only considered if our
4472 # direct dependencies are met
4473 dep_val = expr_value(self.weak_rev_dep)
4474 if dep_val and expr_value(self.direct_dep):
4475 val = max(dep_val, val)
4476 self._write_to_conf = True
4477
4478 # Reverse (select-related) dependencies take precedence
4479 dep_val = expr_value(self.rev_dep)
4480 if dep_val:
4481 if expr_value(self.direct_dep) < dep_val:
4482 self._warn_select_unsatisfied_deps()
4483
4484 val = max(dep_val, val)
4485 self._write_to_conf = True
4486
4487 # m is promoted to y for (1) bool symbols and (2) symbols with a
4488 # weak_rev_dep (from imply) of y
4489 if val == 1 and \
4490 (self.type is BOOL or expr_value(self.weak_rev_dep) == 2):
4491 val = 2
4492
4493 elif vis == 2:
4494 # Visible choice symbol in y-mode choice. The choice mode limits
4495 # the visibility of choice symbols, so it's sufficient to just
4496 # check the visibility of the choice symbols themselves.
4497 val = 2 if self.choice.selection is self else 0
4498
4499 elif vis and self.user_value:
4500 # Visible choice symbol in m-mode choice, with set non-0 user value
4501 val = 1
4502
4503 self._cached_tri_val = val
4504 return val
4505
4506 @property
4507 def assignable(self):
4508 """
4509 See the class documentation.
4510 """
4511 if self._cached_assignable is None:
4512 self._cached_assignable = self._assignable()
4513 return self._cached_assignable
4514
4515 @property
4516 def visibility(self):
4517 """
4518 See the class documentation.
4519 """
4520 if self._cached_vis is None:
4521 self._cached_vis = _visibility(self)
4522 return self._cached_vis
4523
4524 @property
4525 def config_string(self):
4526 """
4527 See the class documentation.
4528 """
4529 # _write_to_conf is determined when the value is calculated. This is a
4530 # hidden function call due to property magic.
4531 val = self.str_value
4532 if not self._write_to_conf:
4533 return ""
4534
4535 if self.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE:
4536 return "{}{}={}\n" \
4537 .format(self.kconfig.config_prefix, self.name, val) \
4538 if val != "n" else \
4539 "# {}{} is not set\n" \
4540 .format(self.kconfig.config_prefix, self.name)
4541
4542 if self.orig_type in _INT_HEX:
4543 return "{}{}={}\n" \
4544 .format(self.kconfig.config_prefix, self.name, val)
4545
4546 # sym.orig_type is STRING
4547 return '{}{}="{}"\n' \
4548 .format(self.kconfig.config_prefix, self.name, escape(val))
4549
4550 @property
4551 def name_and_loc(self):
4552 """
4553 See the class documentation.
4554 """
4555 return self.name + " " + _locs(self)
4556
4557 def set_value(self, value):
4558 """
4559 Sets the user value of the symbol.
4560
4561 Equal in effect to assigning the value to the symbol within a .config
4562 file. For bool and tristate symbols, use the 'assignable' attribute to
4563 check which values can currently be assigned. Setting values outside
4564 'assignable' will cause Symbol.user_value to differ from
4565 Symbol.str/tri_value (be truncated down or up).
4566
4567 Setting a choice symbol to 2 (y) sets Choice.user_selection to the
4568 choice symbol in addition to setting Symbol.user_value.
4569 Choice.user_selection is considered when the choice is in y mode (the
4570 "normal" mode).
4571
4572 Other symbols that depend (possibly indirectly) on this symbol are
4573 automatically recalculated to reflect the assigned value.
4574
4575 value:
4576 The user value to give to the symbol. For bool and tristate symbols,
4577 n/m/y can be specified either as 0/1/2 (the usual format for tristate
4578 values in Kconfiglib) or as one of the strings "n", "m", or "y". For
4579 other symbol types, pass a string.
4580
4581 Note that the value for an int/hex symbol is passed as a string, e.g.
4582 "123" or "0x0123". The format of this string is preserved in the
4583 output.
4584
4585 Values that are invalid for the type (such as "foo" or 1 (m) for a
4586 BOOL or "0x123" for an INT) are ignored and won't be stored in
4587 Symbol.user_value. Kconfiglib will print a warning by default for
4588 invalid assignments, and set_value() will return False.
4589
4590 Returns True if the value is valid for the type of the symbol, and
4591 False otherwise. This only looks at the form of the value. For BOOL and
4592 TRISTATE symbols, check the Symbol.assignable attribute to see what
4593 values are currently in range and would actually be reflected in the
4594 value of the symbol. For other symbol types, check whether the
4595 visibility is non-n.
4596 """
4597 if self.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE and value in STR_TO_TRI:
4598 value = STR_TO_TRI[value]
4599
4600 # If the new user value matches the old, nothing changes, and we can
4601 # avoid invalidating cached values.
4602 #
4603 # This optimization is skipped for choice symbols: Setting a choice
4604 # symbol's user value to y might change the state of the choice, so it
4605 # wouldn't be safe (symbol user values always match the values set in a
4606 # .config file or via set_value(), and are never implicitly updated).
4607 if value == self.user_value and not self.choice:
4608 self._was_set = True
4609 return True
4610
4611 # Check if the value is valid for our type
4612 if not (self.orig_type is BOOL and value in (2, 0) or
4613 self.orig_type is TRISTATE and value in TRI_TO_STR or
4614 value.__class__ is str and
4615 (self.orig_type is STRING or
4616 self.orig_type is INT and _is_base_n(value, 10) or
4617 self.orig_type is HEX and _is_base_n(value, 16)
4618 and int(value, 16) >= 0)):
4619
4620 # Display tristate values as n, m, y in the warning
4621 self.kconfig._warn(
4622 "the value {} is invalid for {}, which has type {} -- "
4623 "assignment ignored"
4624 .format(TRI_TO_STR[value] if value in TRI_TO_STR else
4625 "'{}'".format(value),
4626 self.name_and_loc, TYPE_TO_STR[self.orig_type]))
4627
4628 return False
4629
4630 self.user_value = value
4631 self._was_set = True
4632
4633 if self.choice and value == 2:
4634 # Setting a choice symbol to y makes it the user selection of the
4635 # choice. Like for symbol user values, the user selection is not
4636 # guaranteed to match the actual selection of the choice, as
4637 # dependencies come into play.
4638 self.choice.user_selection = self
4639 self.choice._was_set = True
4640 self.choice._rec_invalidate()
4641 else:
4642 self._rec_invalidate_if_has_prompt()
4643
4644 return True
4645
4646 def unset_value(self):
4647 """
4648 Removes any user value from the symbol, as if the symbol had never
4649 gotten a user value via Kconfig.load_config() or Symbol.set_value().
4650 """
4651 if self.user_value is not None:
4652 self.user_value = None
4653 self._rec_invalidate_if_has_prompt()
4654
4655 @property
4656 def referenced(self):
4657 """
4658 See the class documentation.
4659 """
4660 return {item for node in self.nodes for item in node.referenced}
4661
4662 @property
4663 def orig_defaults(self):
4664 """
4665 See the class documentation.
4666 """
4667 return [d for node in self.nodes for d in node.orig_defaults]
4668
4669 @property
4670 def orig_selects(self):
4671 """
4672 See the class documentation.
4673 """
4674 return [s for node in self.nodes for s in node.orig_selects]
4675
4676 @property
4677 def orig_implies(self):
4678 """
4679 See the class documentation.
4680 """
4681 return [i for node in self.nodes for i in node.orig_implies]
4682
4683 @property
4684 def orig_ranges(self):
4685 """
4686 See the class documentation.
4687 """
4688 return [r for node in self.nodes for r in node.orig_ranges]
4689
4690 def __repr__(self):
4691 """
4692 Returns a string with information about the symbol (including its name,
4693 value, visibility, and location(s)) when it is evaluated on e.g. the
4694 interactive Python prompt.
4695 """
4696 fields = ["symbol " + self.name, TYPE_TO_STR[self.type]]
4697 add = fields.append
4698
4699 for node in self.nodes:
4700 if node.prompt:
4701 add('"{}"'.format(node.prompt[0]))
4702
4703 # Only add quotes for non-bool/tristate symbols
4704 add("value " + (self.str_value if self.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE
4705 else '"{}"'.format(self.str_value)))
4706
4707 if not self.is_constant:
4708 # These aren't helpful to show for constant symbols
4709
4710 if self.user_value is not None:
4711 # Only add quotes for non-bool/tristate symbols
4712 add("user value " + (TRI_TO_STR[self.user_value]
4713 if self.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE
4714 else '"{}"'.format(self.user_value)))
4715
4716 add("visibility " + TRI_TO_STR[self.visibility])
4717
4718 if self.choice:
4719 add("choice symbol")
4720
4721 if self.is_allnoconfig_y:
4722 add("allnoconfig_y")
4723
4724 if self is self.kconfig.defconfig_list:
4725 add("is the defconfig_list symbol")
4726
4727 if self.env_var is not None:
4728 add("from environment variable " + self.env_var)
4729
4730 if self is self.kconfig.modules:
4731 add("is the modules symbol")
4732
4733 add("direct deps " + TRI_TO_STR[expr_value(self.direct_dep)])
4734
4735 if self.nodes:
4736 for node in self.nodes:
4737 add("{}:{}".format(node.filename, node.linenr))
4738 else:
4739 add("constant" if self.is_constant else "undefined")
4740
4741 return "<{}>".format(", ".join(fields))
4742
4743 def __str__(self):
4744 """
4745 Returns a string representation of the symbol when it is printed.
4746 Matches the Kconfig format, with any parent dependencies propagated to
4747 the 'depends on' condition.
4748
4749 The string is constructed by joining the strings returned by
4750 MenuNode.__str__() for each of the symbol's menu nodes, so symbols
4751 defined in multiple locations will return a string with all
4752 definitions.
4753
4754 The returned string does not end in a newline. An empty string is
4755 returned for undefined and constant symbols.
4756 """
4757 return self.custom_str(standard_sc_expr_str)
4758
4759 def custom_str(self, sc_expr_str_fn):
4760 """
4761 Works like Symbol.__str__(), but allows a custom format to be used for
4762 all symbol/choice references. See expr_str().
4763 """
4764 return "\n\n".join(node.custom_str(sc_expr_str_fn)
4765 for node in self.nodes)
4766
4767 #
4768 # Private methods
4769 #
4770
4771 def __init__(self):
4772 """
4773 Symbol constructor -- not intended to be called directly by Kconfiglib
4774 clients.
4775 """
4776 # These attributes are always set on the instance from outside and
4777 # don't need defaults:
4778 # kconfig
4779 # direct_dep
4780 # is_constant
4781 # name
4782 # rev_dep
4783 # weak_rev_dep
4784
4785 # - UNKNOWN == 0
4786 # - _visited is used during tree iteration and dep. loop detection
4787 self.orig_type = self._visited = 0
4788
4789 self.nodes = []
4790
4791 self.defaults = []
4792 self.selects = []
4793 self.implies = []
4794 self.ranges = []
4795
4796 self.user_value = \
4797 self.choice = \
4798 self.env_var = \
4799 self._cached_str_val = self._cached_tri_val = self._cached_vis = \
4800 self._cached_assignable = None
4801
4802 # _write_to_conf is calculated along with the value. If True, the
4803 # Symbol gets a .config entry.
4804
4805 self.is_allnoconfig_y = \
4806 self._was_set = \
4807 self._write_to_conf = False
4808
4809 # See Kconfig._build_dep()
4810 self._dependents = set()
4811
4812 def _assignable(self):
4813 # Worker function for the 'assignable' attribute
4814
4815 if self.orig_type not in _BOOL_TRISTATE:
4816 return ()
4817
4818 # Warning: See Symbol._rec_invalidate(), and note that this is a hidden
4819 # function call (property magic)
4820 vis = self.visibility
4821 if not vis:
4822 return ()
4823
4824 rev_dep_val = expr_value(self.rev_dep)
4825
4826 if vis == 2:
4827 if self.choice:
4828 return (2,)
4829
4830 if not rev_dep_val:
4831 if self.type is BOOL or expr_value(self.weak_rev_dep) == 2:
4832 return (0, 2)
4833 return (0, 1, 2)
4834
4835 if rev_dep_val == 2:
4836 return (2,)
4837
4838 # rev_dep_val == 1
4839
4840 if self.type is BOOL or expr_value(self.weak_rev_dep) == 2:
4841 return (2,)
4842 return (1, 2)
4843
4844 # vis == 1
4845
4846 # Must be a tristate here, because bool m visibility gets promoted to y
4847
4848 if not rev_dep_val:
4849 return (0, 1) if expr_value(self.weak_rev_dep) != 2 else (0, 2)
4850
4851 if rev_dep_val == 2:
4852 return (2,)
4853
4854 # vis == rev_dep_val == 1
4855
4856 return (1,)
4857
4858 def _invalidate(self):
4859 # Marks the symbol as needing to be recalculated
4860
4861 self._cached_str_val = self._cached_tri_val = self._cached_vis = \
4862 self._cached_assignable = None
4863
4864 def _rec_invalidate(self):
4865 # Invalidates the symbol and all items that (possibly) depend on it
4866
4867 if self is self.kconfig.modules:
4868 # Invalidating MODULES has wide-ranging effects
4869 self.kconfig._invalidate_all()
4870 else:
4871 self._invalidate()
4872
4873 for item in self._dependents:
4874 # _cached_vis doubles as a flag that tells us whether 'item'
4875 # has cached values, because it's calculated as a side effect
4876 # of calculating all other (non-constant) cached values.
4877 #
4878 # If item._cached_vis is None, it means there can't be cached
4879 # values on other items that depend on 'item', because if there
4880 # were, some value on 'item' would have been calculated and
4881 # item._cached_vis set as a side effect. It's therefore safe to
4882 # stop the invalidation at symbols with _cached_vis None.
4883 #
4884 # This approach massively speeds up scripts that set a lot of
4885 # values, vs simply invalidating all possibly dependent symbols
4886 # (even when you already have a list of all the dependent
4887 # symbols, because some symbols get huge dependency trees).
4888 #
4889 # This gracefully handles dependency loops too, which is nice
4890 # for choices, where the choice depends on the choice symbols
4891 # and vice versa.
4892 if item._cached_vis is not None:
4893 item._rec_invalidate()
4894
4895 def _rec_invalidate_if_has_prompt(self):
4896 # Invalidates the symbol and its dependent symbols, but only if the
4897 # symbol has a prompt. User values never have an effect on promptless
4898 # symbols, so we skip invalidation for them as an optimization.
4899 #
4900 # This also prevents constant (quoted) symbols from being invalidated
4901 # if set_value() is called on them, which would make them lose their
4902 # value and break things.
4903 #
4904 # Prints a warning if the symbol has no prompt. In some contexts (e.g.
4905 # when loading a .config files) assignments to promptless symbols are
4906 # normal and expected, so the warning can be disabled.
4907
4908 for node in self.nodes:
4909 if node.prompt:
4910 self._rec_invalidate()
4911 return
4912
4913 if self.kconfig._warn_assign_no_prompt:
4914 self.kconfig._warn(self.name_and_loc + " has no prompt, meaning "
4915 "user values have no effect on it")
4916
4917 def _str_default(self):
4918 # write_min_config() helper function. Returns the value the symbol
4919 # would get from defaults if it didn't have a user value. Uses exactly
4920 # the same algorithm as the C implementation (though a bit cleaned up),
4921 # for compatibility.
4922
4923 if self.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE:
4924 val = 0
4925
4926 # Defaults, selects, and implies do not affect choice symbols
4927 if not self.choice:
4928 for default, cond in self.defaults:
4929 cond_val = expr_value(cond)
4930 if cond_val:
4931 val = min(expr_value(default), cond_val)
4932 break
4933
4934 val = max(expr_value(self.rev_dep),
4935 expr_value(self.weak_rev_dep),
4936 val)
4937
4938 # Transpose mod to yes if type is bool (possibly due to modules
4939 # being disabled)
4940 if val == 1 and self.type is BOOL:
4941 val = 2
4942
4943 return TRI_TO_STR[val]
4944
4945 if self.orig_type: # STRING/INT/HEX
4946 for default, cond in self.defaults:
4947 if expr_value(cond):
4948 return default.str_value
4949
4950 return ""
4951
4952 def _warn_select_unsatisfied_deps(self):
4953 # Helper for printing an informative warning when a symbol with
4954 # unsatisfied direct dependencies (dependencies from 'depends on', ifs,
4955 # and menus) is selected by some other symbol. Also warn if a symbol
4956 # whose direct dependencies evaluate to m is selected to y.
4957
4958 msg = "{} has direct dependencies {} with value {}, but is " \
4959 "currently being {}-selected by the following symbols:" \
4960 .format(self.name_and_loc, expr_str(self.direct_dep),
4961 TRI_TO_STR[expr_value(self.direct_dep)],
4962 TRI_TO_STR[expr_value(self.rev_dep)])
4963
4964 # The reverse dependencies from each select are ORed together
4965 for select in split_expr(self.rev_dep, OR):
4966 if expr_value(select) <= expr_value(self.direct_dep):
4967 # Only include selects that exceed the direct dependencies
4968 continue
4969
4970 # - 'select A if B' turns into A && B
4971 # - 'select A' just turns into A
4972 #
4973 # In both cases, we can split on AND and pick the first operand
4974 selecting_sym = split_expr(select, AND)[0]
4975
4976 msg += "\n - {}, with value {}, direct dependencies {} " \
4977 "(value: {})" \
4978 .format(selecting_sym.name_and_loc,
4979 selecting_sym.str_value,
4980 expr_str(selecting_sym.direct_dep),
4981 TRI_TO_STR[expr_value(selecting_sym.direct_dep)])
4982
4983 if select.__class__ is tuple:
4984 msg += ", and select condition {} (value: {})" \
4985 .format(expr_str(select[2]),
4986 TRI_TO_STR[expr_value(select[2])])
4987
4988 self.kconfig._warn(msg)
4989
4990
4991class Choice(object):
4992 """
4993 Represents a choice statement:
4994
4995 choice
4996 ...
4997 endchoice
4998
4999 The following attributes are available on Choice instances. They should be
5000 treated as read-only, and some are implemented through @property magic (but
5001 are still efficient to access due to internal caching).
5002
5003 Note: Prompts, help texts, and locations are stored in the Choice's
5004 MenuNode(s) rather than in the Choice itself. Check the MenuNode class and
5005 the Choice.nodes attribute. This organization matches the C tools.
5006
5007 name:
5008 The name of the choice, e.g. "FOO" for 'choice FOO', or None if the
5009 Choice has no name.
5010
5011 type:
5012 The type of the choice. One of BOOL, TRISTATE, UNKNOWN. UNKNOWN is for
5013 choices defined without a type where none of the contained symbols have a
5014 type either (otherwise the choice inherits the type of the first symbol
5015 defined with a type).
5016
5017 When running without modules (CONFIG_MODULES=n), TRISTATE choices
5018 magically change type to BOOL. This matches the C tools, and makes sense
5019 for menuconfig-like functionality.
5020
5021 orig_type:
5022 The type as given in the Kconfig file, without any magic applied. Used
5023 when printing the choice.
5024
5025 tri_value:
5026 The tristate value (mode) of the choice. A choice can be in one of three
5027 modes:
5028
5029 0 (n) - The choice is disabled and no symbols can be selected. For
5030 visible choices, this mode is only possible for choices with
5031 the 'optional' flag set (see kconfig-language.txt).
5032
5033 1 (m) - Any number of choice symbols can be set to m, the rest will
5034 be n.
5035
5036 2 (y) - One symbol will be y, the rest n.
5037
5038 Only tristate choices can be in m mode. The visibility of the choice is
5039 an upper bound on the mode, and the mode in turn is an upper bound on the
5040 visibility of the choice symbols.
5041
5042 To change the mode, use Choice.set_value().
5043
5044 Implementation note:
5045 The C tools internally represent choices as a type of symbol, with
5046 special-casing in many code paths. This is why there is a lot of
5047 similarity to Symbol. The value (mode) of a choice is really just a
5048 normal symbol value, and an implicit reverse dependency forces its
5049 lower bound to m for visible non-optional choices (the reverse
5050 dependency is 'm && <visibility>').
5051
5052 Symbols within choices get the choice propagated as a dependency to
5053 their properties. This turns the mode of the choice into an upper bound
5054 on e.g. the visibility of choice symbols, and explains the gotcha
5055 related to printing choice symbols mentioned in the module docstring.
5056
5057 Kconfiglib uses a separate Choice class only because it makes the code
5058 and interface less confusing (especially in a user-facing interface).
5059 Corresponding attributes have the same name in the Symbol and Choice
5060 classes, for consistency and compatibility.
5061
5062 str_value:
5063 Like choice.tri_value, but gives the value as one of the strings
5064 "n", "m", or "y"
5065
5066 user_value:
5067 The value (mode) selected by the user through Choice.set_value(). Either
5068 0, 1, or 2, or None if the user hasn't selected a mode. See
5069 Symbol.user_value.
5070
5071 WARNING: Do not assign directly to this. It will break things. Use
5072 Choice.set_value() instead.
5073
5074 assignable:
5075 See the symbol class documentation. Gives the assignable values (modes).
5076
5077 selection:
5078 The Symbol instance of the currently selected symbol. None if the Choice
5079 is not in y mode or has no selected symbol (due to unsatisfied
5080 dependencies on choice symbols).
5081
5082 WARNING: Do not assign directly to this. It will break things. Call
5083 sym.set_value(2) on the choice symbol you want to select instead.
5084
5085 user_selection:
5086 The symbol selected by the user (by setting it to y). Ignored if the
5087 choice is not in y mode, but still remembered so that the choice "snaps
5088 back" to the user selection if the mode is changed back to y. This might
5089 differ from 'selection' due to unsatisfied dependencies.
5090
5091 WARNING: Do not assign directly to this. It will break things. Call
5092 sym.set_value(2) on the choice symbol to be selected instead.
5093
5094 visibility:
5095 See the Symbol class documentation. Acts on the value (mode).
5096
5097 name_and_loc:
5098 Holds a string like
5099
5100 "<choice MY_CHOICE> (defined at foo/Kconfig:12)"
5101
5102 , giving the name of the choice and its definition location(s). If the
5103 choice has no name (isn't defined with 'choice MY_CHOICE'), then it will
5104 be shown as "<choice>" before the list of locations (always a single one
5105 in that case).
5106
5107 syms:
5108 List of symbols contained in the choice.
5109
5110 Obscure gotcha: If a symbol depends on the previous symbol within a
5111 choice so that an implicit menu is created, it won't be a choice symbol,
5112 and won't be included in 'syms'.
5113
5114 nodes:
5115 A list of MenuNodes for this choice. In practice, the list will probably
5116 always contain a single MenuNode, but it is possible to give a choice a
5117 name and define it in multiple locations.
5118
5119 defaults:
5120 List of (symbol, cond) tuples for the choice's 'defaults' properties. For
5121 example, 'default A if B && C' is represented as (A, (AND, B, C)). If
5122 there is no condition, 'cond' is self.kconfig.y.
5123
5124 Note that 'depends on' and parent dependencies are propagated to
5125 'default' conditions.
5126
5127 orig_defaults:
5128 See the corresponding attribute on the MenuNode class.
5129
5130 direct_dep:
5131 See Symbol.direct_dep.
5132
5133 referenced:
5134 A set() with all symbols referenced in the properties and property
5135 conditions of the choice.
5136
5137 Also includes dependencies from surrounding menus and ifs, because those
5138 get propagated to the choice (see the 'Intro to symbol values' section in
5139 the module docstring).
5140
5141 is_optional:
5142 True if the choice has the 'optional' flag set on it and can be in
5143 n mode.
5144
5145 kconfig:
5146 The Kconfig instance this choice is from.
5147 """
5148 __slots__ = (
5149 "_cached_assignable",
5150 "_cached_selection",
5151 "_cached_vis",
5152 "_dependents",
5153 "_visited",
5154 "_was_set",
5155 "defaults",
5156 "direct_dep",
5157 "is_constant",
5158 "is_optional",
5159 "kconfig",
5160 "name",
5161 "nodes",
5162 "orig_type",
5163 "syms",
5164 "user_selection",
5165 "user_value",
5166 )
5167
5168 #
5169 # Public interface
5170 #
5171
5172 @property
5173 def type(self):
5174 """
5175 Returns the type of the choice. See Symbol.type.
5176 """
5177 if self.orig_type is TRISTATE and not self.kconfig.modules.tri_value:
5178 return BOOL
5179 return self.orig_type
5180
5181 @property
5182 def str_value(self):
5183 """
5184 See the class documentation.
5185 """
5186 return TRI_TO_STR[self.tri_value]
5187
5188 @property
5189 def tri_value(self):
5190 """
5191 See the class documentation.
5192 """
5193 # This emulates a reverse dependency of 'm && visibility' for
5194 # non-optional choices, which is how the C implementation does it
5195
5196 val = 0 if self.is_optional else 1
5197
5198 if self.user_value is not None:
5199 val = max(val, self.user_value)
5200
5201 # Warning: See Symbol._rec_invalidate(), and note that this is a hidden
5202 # function call (property magic)
5203 val = min(val, self.visibility)
5204
5205 # Promote m to y for boolean choices
5206 return 2 if val == 1 and self.type is BOOL else val
5207
5208 @property
5209 def assignable(self):
5210 """
5211 See the class documentation.
5212 """
5213 if self._cached_assignable is None:
5214 self._cached_assignable = self._assignable()
5215 return self._cached_assignable
5216
5217 @property
5218 def visibility(self):
5219 """
5220 See the class documentation.
5221 """
5222 if self._cached_vis is None:
5223 self._cached_vis = _visibility(self)
5224 return self._cached_vis
5225
5226 @property
5227 def name_and_loc(self):
5228 """
5229 See the class documentation.
5230 """
5231 # Reuse the expression format, which is '<choice (name, if any)>'.
5232 return standard_sc_expr_str(self) + " " + _locs(self)
5233
5234 @property
5235 def selection(self):
5236 """
5237 See the class documentation.
5238 """
5239 if self._cached_selection is _NO_CACHED_SELECTION:
5240 self._cached_selection = self._selection()
5241 return self._cached_selection
5242
5243 def set_value(self, value):
5244 """
5245 Sets the user value (mode) of the choice. Like for Symbol.set_value(),
5246 the visibility might truncate the value. Choices without the 'optional'
5247 attribute (is_optional) can never be in n mode, but 0/"n" is still
5248 accepted since it's not a malformed value (though it will have no
5249 effect).
5250
5251 Returns True if the value is valid for the type of the choice, and
5252 False otherwise. This only looks at the form of the value. Check the
5253 Choice.assignable attribute to see what values are currently in range
5254 and would actually be reflected in the mode of the choice.
5255 """
5256 if value in STR_TO_TRI:
5257 value = STR_TO_TRI[value]
5258
5259 if value == self.user_value:
5260 # We know the value must be valid if it was successfully set
5261 # previously
5262 self._was_set = True
5263 return True
5264
5265 if not (self.orig_type is BOOL and value in (2, 0) or
5266 self.orig_type is TRISTATE and value in TRI_TO_STR):
5267
5268 # Display tristate values as n, m, y in the warning
5269 self.kconfig._warn(
5270 "the value {} is invalid for {}, which has type {} -- "
5271 "assignment ignored"
5272 .format(TRI_TO_STR[value] if value in TRI_TO_STR else
5273 "'{}'".format(value),
5274 self.name_and_loc, TYPE_TO_STR[self.orig_type]))
5275
5276 return False
5277
5278 self.user_value = value
5279 self._was_set = True
5280 self._rec_invalidate()
5281
5282 return True
5283
5284 def unset_value(self):
5285 """
5286 Resets the user value (mode) and user selection of the Choice, as if
5287 the user had never touched the mode or any of the choice symbols.
5288 """
5289 if self.user_value is not None or self.user_selection:
5290 self.user_value = self.user_selection = None
5291 self._rec_invalidate()
5292
5293 @property
5294 def referenced(self):
5295 """
5296 See the class documentation.
5297 """
5298 return {item for node in self.nodes for item in node.referenced}
5299
5300 @property
5301 def orig_defaults(self):
5302 """
5303 See the class documentation.
5304 """
5305 return [d for node in self.nodes for d in node.orig_defaults]
5306
5307 def __repr__(self):
5308 """
5309 Returns a string with information about the choice when it is evaluated
5310 on e.g. the interactive Python prompt.
5311 """
5312 fields = ["choice " + self.name if self.name else "choice",
5313 TYPE_TO_STR[self.type]]
5314 add = fields.append
5315
5316 for node in self.nodes:
5317 if node.prompt:
5318 add('"{}"'.format(node.prompt[0]))
5319
5320 add("mode " + self.str_value)
5321
5322 if self.user_value is not None:
5323 add('user mode {}'.format(TRI_TO_STR[self.user_value]))
5324
5325 if self.selection:
5326 add("{} selected".format(self.selection.name))
5327
5328 if self.user_selection:
5329 user_sel_str = "{} selected by user" \
5330 .format(self.user_selection.name)
5331
5332 if self.selection is not self.user_selection:
5333 user_sel_str += " (overridden)"
5334
5335 add(user_sel_str)
5336
5337 add("visibility " + TRI_TO_STR[self.visibility])
5338
5339 if self.is_optional:
5340 add("optional")
5341
5342 for node in self.nodes:
5343 add("{}:{}".format(node.filename, node.linenr))
5344
5345 return "<{}>".format(", ".join(fields))
5346
5347 def __str__(self):
5348 """
5349 Returns a string representation of the choice when it is printed.
5350 Matches the Kconfig format (though without the contained choice
5351 symbols), with any parent dependencies propagated to the 'depends on'
5352 condition.
5353
5354 The returned string does not end in a newline.
5355
5356 See Symbol.__str__() as well.
5357 """
5358 return self.custom_str(standard_sc_expr_str)
5359
5360 def custom_str(self, sc_expr_str_fn):
5361 """
5362 Works like Choice.__str__(), but allows a custom format to be used for
5363 all symbol/choice references. See expr_str().
5364 """
5365 return "\n\n".join(node.custom_str(sc_expr_str_fn)
5366 for node in self.nodes)
5367
5368 #
5369 # Private methods
5370 #
5371
5372 def __init__(self):
5373 """
5374 Choice constructor -- not intended to be called directly by Kconfiglib
5375 clients.
5376 """
5377 # These attributes are always set on the instance from outside and
5378 # don't need defaults:
5379 # direct_dep
5380 # kconfig
5381
5382 # - UNKNOWN == 0
5383 # - _visited is used during dep. loop detection
5384 self.orig_type = self._visited = 0
5385
5386 self.nodes = []
5387
5388 self.syms = []
5389 self.defaults = []
5390
5391 self.name = \
5392 self.user_value = self.user_selection = \
5393 self._cached_vis = self._cached_assignable = None
5394
5395 self._cached_selection = _NO_CACHED_SELECTION
5396
5397 # is_constant is checked by _depend_on(). Just set it to avoid having
5398 # to special-case choices.
5399 self.is_constant = self.is_optional = False
5400
5401 # See Kconfig._build_dep()
5402 self._dependents = set()
5403
5404 def _assignable(self):
5405 # Worker function for the 'assignable' attribute
5406
5407 # Warning: See Symbol._rec_invalidate(), and note that this is a hidden
5408 # function call (property magic)
5409 vis = self.visibility
5410
5411 if not vis:
5412 return ()
5413
5414 if vis == 2:
5415 if not self.is_optional:
5416 return (2,) if self.type is BOOL else (1, 2)
5417 return (0, 2) if self.type is BOOL else (0, 1, 2)
5418
5419 # vis == 1
5420
5421 return (0, 1) if self.is_optional else (1,)
5422
5423 def _selection(self):
5424 # Worker function for the 'selection' attribute
5425
5426 # Warning: See Symbol._rec_invalidate(), and note that this is a hidden
5427 # function call (property magic)
5428 if self.tri_value != 2:
5429 # Not in y mode, so no selection
5430 return None
5431
5432 # Use the user selection if it's visible
5433 if self.user_selection and self.user_selection.visibility:
5434 return self.user_selection
5435
5436 # Otherwise, check if we have a default
5437 return self._selection_from_defaults()
5438
5439 def _selection_from_defaults(self):
5440 # Check if we have a default
5441 for sym, cond in self.defaults:
5442 # The default symbol must be visible too
5443 if expr_value(cond) and sym.visibility:
5444 return sym
5445
5446 # Otherwise, pick the first visible symbol, if any
5447 for sym in self.syms:
5448 if sym.visibility:
5449 return sym
5450
5451 # Couldn't find a selection
5452 return None
5453
5454 def _invalidate(self):
5455 self._cached_vis = self._cached_assignable = None
5456 self._cached_selection = _NO_CACHED_SELECTION
5457
5458 def _rec_invalidate(self):
5459 # See Symbol._rec_invalidate()
5460
5461 self._invalidate()
5462
5463 for item in self._dependents:
5464 if item._cached_vis is not None:
5465 item._rec_invalidate()
5466
5467
5468class MenuNode(object):
5469 """
5470 Represents a menu node in the configuration. This corresponds to an entry
5471 in e.g. the 'make menuconfig' interface, though non-visible choices, menus,
5472 and comments also get menu nodes. If a symbol or choice is defined in
5473 multiple locations, it gets one menu node for each location.
5474
5475 The top-level menu node, corresponding to the implicit top-level menu, is
5476 available in Kconfig.top_node.
5477
5478 The menu nodes for a Symbol or Choice can be found in the
5479 Symbol/Choice.nodes attribute. Menus and comments are represented as plain
5480 menu nodes, with their text stored in the prompt attribute (prompt[0]).
5481 This mirrors the C implementation.
5482
5483 The following attributes are available on MenuNode instances. They should
5484 be viewed as read-only.
5485
5486 item:
5487 Either a Symbol, a Choice, or one of the constants MENU and COMMENT.
5488 Menus and comments are represented as plain menu nodes. Ifs are collapsed
5489 (matching the C implementation) and do not appear in the final menu tree.
5490
5491 next:
5492 The following menu node. None if there is no following node.
5493
5494 list:
5495 The first child menu node. None if there are no children.
5496
5497 Choices and menus naturally have children, but Symbols can also have
5498 children because of menus created automatically from dependencies (see
5499 kconfig-language.txt).
5500
5501 parent:
5502 The parent menu node. None if there is no parent.
5503
5504 prompt:
5505 A (string, cond) tuple with the prompt for the menu node and its
5506 conditional expression (which is self.kconfig.y if there is no
5507 condition). None if there is no prompt.
5508
5509 For symbols and choices, the prompt is stored in the MenuNode rather than
5510 the Symbol or Choice instance. For menus and comments, the prompt holds
5511 the text.
5512
5513 defaults:
5514 The 'default' properties for this particular menu node. See
5515 symbol.defaults.
5516
5517 When evaluating defaults, you should use Symbol/Choice.defaults instead,
5518 as it include properties from all menu nodes (a symbol/choice can have
5519 multiple definition locations/menu nodes). MenuNode.defaults is meant for
5520 documentation generation.
5521
5522 selects:
5523 Like MenuNode.defaults, for selects.
5524
5525 implies:
5526 Like MenuNode.defaults, for implies.
5527
5528 ranges:
5529 Like MenuNode.defaults, for ranges.
5530
5531 orig_prompt:
5532 orig_defaults:
5533 orig_selects:
5534 orig_implies:
5535 orig_ranges:
5536 These work the like the corresponding attributes without orig_*, but omit
5537 any dependencies propagated from 'depends on' and surrounding 'if's (the
5538 direct dependencies, stored in MenuNode.dep).
5539
5540 One use for this is generating less cluttered documentation, by only
5541 showing the direct dependencies in one place.
5542
5543 help:
5544 The help text for the menu node for Symbols and Choices. None if there is
5545 no help text. Always stored in the node rather than the Symbol or Choice.
5546 It is possible to have a separate help text at each location if a symbol
5547 is defined in multiple locations.
5548
5549 Trailing whitespace (including a final newline) is stripped from the help
5550 text. This was not the case before Kconfiglib 10.21.0, where the format
5551 was undocumented.
5552
5553 dep:
5554 The direct ('depends on') dependencies for the menu node, or
5555 self.kconfig.y if there are no direct dependencies.
5556
5557 This attribute includes any dependencies from surrounding menus and ifs.
5558 Those get propagated to the direct dependencies, and the resulting direct
5559 dependencies in turn get propagated to the conditions of all properties.
5560
5561 If a symbol or choice is defined in multiple locations, only the
5562 properties defined at a particular location get the corresponding
5563 MenuNode.dep dependencies propagated to them.
5564
5565 visibility:
5566 The 'visible if' dependencies for the menu node (which must represent a
5567 menu), or self.kconfig.y if there are no 'visible if' dependencies.
5568 'visible if' dependencies are recursively propagated to the prompts of
5569 symbols and choices within the menu.
5570
5571 referenced:
5572 A set() with all symbols and choices referenced in the properties and
5573 property conditions of the menu node.
5574
5575 Also includes dependencies inherited from surrounding menus and ifs.
5576 Choices appear in the dependencies of choice symbols.
5577
5578 is_menuconfig:
5579 Set to True if the children of the menu node should be displayed in a
5580 separate menu. This is the case for the following items:
5581
5582 - Menus (node.item == MENU)
5583
5584 - Choices
5585
5586 - Symbols defined with the 'menuconfig' keyword. The children come from
5587 implicitly created submenus, and should be displayed in a separate
5588 menu rather than being indented.
5589
5590 'is_menuconfig' is just a hint on how to display the menu node. It's
5591 ignored internally by Kconfiglib, except when printing symbols.
5592
5593 filename/linenr:
5594 The location where the menu node appears. The filename is relative to
5595 $srctree (or to the current directory if $srctree isn't set), except
5596 absolute paths are used for paths outside $srctree.
5597
5598 include_path:
5599 A tuple of (filename, linenr) tuples, giving the locations of the
5600 'source' statements via which the Kconfig file containing this menu node
5601 was included. The first element is the location of the 'source' statement
5602 in the top-level Kconfig file passed to Kconfig.__init__(), etc.
5603
5604 Note that the Kconfig file of the menu node itself isn't included. Check
5605 'filename' and 'linenr' for that.
5606
5607 kconfig:
5608 The Kconfig instance the menu node is from.
5609 """
5610 __slots__ = (
5611 "dep",
5612 "filename",
5613 "help",
5614 "include_path",
5615 "is_menuconfig",
5616 "item",
5617 "kconfig",
5618 "linenr",
5619 "list",
5620 "next",
5621 "parent",
5622 "prompt",
5623 "visibility",
5624
5625 # Properties
5626 "defaults",
5627 "selects",
5628 "implies",
5629 "ranges",
5630 )
5631
5632 def __init__(self):
5633 # Properties defined on this particular menu node. A local 'depends on'
5634 # only applies to these, in case a symbol is defined in multiple
5635 # locations.
5636 self.defaults = []
5637 self.selects = []
5638 self.implies = []
5639 self.ranges = []
5640
5641 @property
5642 def orig_prompt(self):
5643 """
5644 See the class documentation.
5645 """
5646 if not self.prompt:
5647 return None
5648 return (self.prompt[0], self._strip_dep(self.prompt[1]))
5649
5650 @property
5651 def orig_defaults(self):
5652 """
5653 See the class documentation.
5654 """
5655 return [(default, self._strip_dep(cond))
5656 for default, cond in self.defaults]
5657
5658 @property
5659 def orig_selects(self):
5660 """
5661 See the class documentation.
5662 """
5663 return [(select, self._strip_dep(cond))
5664 for select, cond in self.selects]
5665
5666 @property
5667 def orig_implies(self):
5668 """
5669 See the class documentation.
5670 """
5671 return [(imply, self._strip_dep(cond))
5672 for imply, cond in self.implies]
5673
5674 @property
5675 def orig_ranges(self):
5676 """
5677 See the class documentation.
5678 """
5679 return [(low, high, self._strip_dep(cond))
5680 for low, high, cond in self.ranges]
5681
5682 @property
5683 def referenced(self):
5684 """
5685 See the class documentation.
5686 """
5687 # self.dep is included to catch dependencies from a lone 'depends on'
5688 # when there are no properties to propagate it to
5689 res = expr_items(self.dep)
5690
5691 if self.prompt:
5692 res |= expr_items(self.prompt[1])
5693
5694 if self.item is MENU:
5695 res |= expr_items(self.visibility)
5696
5697 for value, cond in self.defaults:
5698 res |= expr_items(value)
5699 res |= expr_items(cond)
5700
5701 for value, cond in self.selects:
5702 res.add(value)
5703 res |= expr_items(cond)
5704
5705 for value, cond in self.implies:
5706 res.add(value)
5707 res |= expr_items(cond)
5708
5709 for low, high, cond in self.ranges:
5710 res.add(low)
5711 res.add(high)
5712 res |= expr_items(cond)
5713
5714 return res
5715
5716 def __repr__(self):
5717 """
5718 Returns a string with information about the menu node when it is
5719 evaluated on e.g. the interactive Python prompt.
5720 """
5721 fields = []
5722 add = fields.append
5723
5724 if self.item.__class__ is Symbol:
5725 add("menu node for symbol " + self.item.name)
5726
5727 elif self.item.__class__ is Choice:
5728 s = "menu node for choice"
5729 if self.item.name is not None:
5730 s += " " + self.item.name
5731 add(s)
5732
5733 elif self.item is MENU:
5734 add("menu node for menu")
5735
5736 else: # self.item is COMMENT
5737 add("menu node for comment")
5738
5739 if self.prompt:
5740 add('prompt "{}" (visibility {})'.format(
5741 self.prompt[0], TRI_TO_STR[expr_value(self.prompt[1])]))
5742
5743 if self.item.__class__ is Symbol and self.is_menuconfig:
5744 add("is menuconfig")
5745
5746 add("deps " + TRI_TO_STR[expr_value(self.dep)])
5747
5748 if self.item is MENU:
5749 add("'visible if' deps " + TRI_TO_STR[expr_value(self.visibility)])
5750
5751 if self.item.__class__ in _SYMBOL_CHOICE and self.help is not None:
5752 add("has help")
5753
5754 if self.list:
5755 add("has child")
5756
5757 if self.next:
5758 add("has next")
5759
5760 add("{}:{}".format(self.filename, self.linenr))
5761
5762 return "<{}>".format(", ".join(fields))
5763
5764 def __str__(self):
5765 """
5766 Returns a string representation of the menu node. Matches the Kconfig
5767 format, with any parent dependencies propagated to the 'depends on'
5768 condition.
5769
5770 The output could (almost) be fed back into a Kconfig parser to redefine
5771 the object associated with the menu node. See the module documentation
5772 for a gotcha related to choice symbols.
5773
5774 For symbols and choices with multiple menu nodes (multiple definition
5775 locations), properties that aren't associated with a particular menu
5776 node are shown on all menu nodes ('option env=...', 'optional' for
5777 choices, etc.).
5778
5779 The returned string does not end in a newline.
5780 """
5781 return self.custom_str(standard_sc_expr_str)
5782
5783 def custom_str(self, sc_expr_str_fn):
5784 """
5785 Works like MenuNode.__str__(), but allows a custom format to be used
5786 for all symbol/choice references. See expr_str().
5787 """
5788 return self._menu_comment_node_str(sc_expr_str_fn) \
5789 if self.item in _MENU_COMMENT else \
5790 self._sym_choice_node_str(sc_expr_str_fn)
5791
5792 def _menu_comment_node_str(self, sc_expr_str_fn):
5793 s = '{} "{}"'.format("menu" if self.item is MENU else "comment",
5794 self.prompt[0])
5795
5796 if self.dep is not self.kconfig.y:
5797 s += "\n\tdepends on {}".format(expr_str(self.dep, sc_expr_str_fn))
5798
5799 if self.item is MENU and self.visibility is not self.kconfig.y:
5800 s += "\n\tvisible if {}".format(expr_str(self.visibility,
5801 sc_expr_str_fn))
5802
5803 return s
5804
5805 def _sym_choice_node_str(self, sc_expr_str_fn):
5806 def indent_add(s):
5807 lines.append("\t" + s)
5808
5809 def indent_add_cond(s, cond):
5810 if cond is not self.kconfig.y:
5811 s += " if " + expr_str(cond, sc_expr_str_fn)
5812 indent_add(s)
5813
5814 sc = self.item
5815
5816 if sc.__class__ is Symbol:
5817 lines = [("menuconfig " if self.is_menuconfig else "config ")
5818 + sc.name]
5819 else:
5820 lines = ["choice " + sc.name if sc.name else "choice"]
5821
5822 if sc.orig_type and not self.prompt: # sc.orig_type != UNKNOWN
5823 # If there's a prompt, we'll use the '<type> "prompt"' shorthand
5824 # instead
5825 indent_add(TYPE_TO_STR[sc.orig_type])
5826
5827 if self.prompt:
5828 if sc.orig_type:
5829 prefix = TYPE_TO_STR[sc.orig_type]
5830 else:
5831 # Symbol defined without a type (which generates a warning)
5832 prefix = "prompt"
5833
5834 indent_add_cond(prefix + ' "{}"'.format(escape(self.prompt[0])),
5835 self.orig_prompt[1])
5836
5837 if sc.__class__ is Symbol:
5838 if sc.is_allnoconfig_y:
5839 indent_add("option allnoconfig_y")
5840
5841 if sc is sc.kconfig.defconfig_list:
5842 indent_add("option defconfig_list")
5843
5844 if sc.env_var is not None:
5845 indent_add('option env="{}"'.format(sc.env_var))
5846
5847 if sc is sc.kconfig.modules:
5848 indent_add("option modules")
5849
5850 for low, high, cond in self.orig_ranges:
5851 indent_add_cond(
5852 "range {} {}".format(sc_expr_str_fn(low),
5853 sc_expr_str_fn(high)),
5854 cond)
5855
5856 for default, cond in self.orig_defaults:
5857 indent_add_cond("default " + expr_str(default, sc_expr_str_fn),
5858 cond)
5859
5860 if sc.__class__ is Choice and sc.is_optional:
5861 indent_add("optional")
5862
5863 if sc.__class__ is Symbol:
5864 for select, cond in self.orig_selects:
5865 indent_add_cond("select " + sc_expr_str_fn(select), cond)
5866
5867 for imply, cond in self.orig_implies:
5868 indent_add_cond("imply " + sc_expr_str_fn(imply), cond)
5869
5870 if self.dep is not sc.kconfig.y:
5871 indent_add("depends on " + expr_str(self.dep, sc_expr_str_fn))
5872
5873 if self.help is not None:
5874 indent_add("help")
5875 for line in self.help.splitlines():
5876 indent_add(" " + line)
5877
5878 return "\n".join(lines)
5879
5880 def _strip_dep(self, expr):
5881 # Helper function for removing MenuNode.dep from 'expr'. Uses two
5882 # pieces of internal knowledge: (1) Expressions are reused rather than
5883 # copied, and (2) the direct dependencies always appear at the end.
5884
5885 # ... if dep -> ... if y
5886 if self.dep is expr:
5887 return self.kconfig.y
5888
5889 # (AND, X, dep) -> X
5890 if expr.__class__ is tuple and expr[0] is AND and expr[2] is self.dep:
5891 return expr[1]
5892
5893 return expr
5894
5895
5896class Variable(object):
5897 """
5898 Represents a preprocessor variable/function.
5899
5900 The following attributes are available:
5901
5902 name:
5903 The name of the variable.
5904
5905 value:
5906 The unexpanded value of the variable.
5907
5908 expanded_value:
5909 The expanded value of the variable. For simple variables (those defined
5910 with :=), this will equal 'value'. Accessing this property will raise a
5911 KconfigError if the expansion seems to be stuck in a loop.
5912
5913 Accessing this field is the same as calling expanded_value_w_args() with
5914 no arguments. I hadn't considered function arguments when adding it. It
5915 is retained for backwards compatibility though.
5916
5917 is_recursive:
5918 True if the variable is recursive (defined with =).
5919 """
5920 __slots__ = (
5921 "_n_expansions",
5922 "is_recursive",
5923 "kconfig",
5924 "name",
5925 "value",
5926 )
5927
5928 @property
5929 def expanded_value(self):
5930 """
5931 See the class documentation.
5932 """
5933 return self.expanded_value_w_args()
5934
5935 def expanded_value_w_args(self, *args):
5936 """
5937 Returns the expanded value of the variable/function. Any arguments
5938 passed will be substituted for $(1), $(2), etc.
5939
5940 Raises a KconfigError if the expansion seems to be stuck in a loop.
5941 """
5942 return self.kconfig._fn_val((self.name,) + args)
5943
5944 def __repr__(self):
5945 return "<variable {}, {}, value '{}'>" \
5946 .format(self.name,
5947 "recursive" if self.is_recursive else "immediate",
5948 self.value)
5949
5950
5951class KconfigError(Exception):
5952 """
5953 Exception raised for Kconfig-related errors.
5954
5955 KconfigError and KconfigSyntaxError are the same class. The
5956 KconfigSyntaxError alias is only maintained for backwards compatibility.
5957 """
5958
5959KconfigSyntaxError = KconfigError # Backwards compatibility
5960
5961
5962class InternalError(Exception):
5963 "Never raised. Kept around for backwards compatibility."
5964
5965
5966# Workaround:
5967#
5968# If 'errno' and 'strerror' are set on IOError, then __str__() always returns
5969# "[Errno <errno>] <strerror>", ignoring any custom message passed to the
5970# constructor. By defining our own subclass, we can use a custom message while
5971# also providing 'errno', 'strerror', and 'filename' to scripts.
5972class _KconfigIOError(IOError):
5973 def __init__(self, ioerror, msg):
5974 self.msg = msg
5975 super(_KconfigIOError, self).__init__(
5976 ioerror.errno, ioerror.strerror, ioerror.filename)
5977
5978 def __str__(self):
5979 return self.msg
5980
5981
5982#
5983# Public functions
5984#
5985
5986
5987def expr_value(expr):
5988 """
5989 Evaluates the expression 'expr' to a tristate value. Returns 0 (n), 1 (m),
5990 or 2 (y).
5991
5992 'expr' must be an already-parsed expression from a Symbol, Choice, or
5993 MenuNode property. To evaluate an expression represented as a string, use
5994 Kconfig.eval_string().
5995
5996 Passing subexpressions of expressions to this function works as expected.
5997 """
5998 if expr.__class__ is not tuple:
5999 return expr.tri_value
6000
6001 if expr[0] is AND:
6002 v1 = expr_value(expr[1])
6003 # Short-circuit the n case as an optimization (~5% faster
6004 # allnoconfig.py and allyesconfig.py, as of writing)
6005 return 0 if not v1 else min(v1, expr_value(expr[2]))
6006
6007 if expr[0] is OR:
6008 v1 = expr_value(expr[1])
6009 # Short-circuit the y case as an optimization
6010 return 2 if v1 == 2 else max(v1, expr_value(expr[2]))
6011
6012 if expr[0] is NOT:
6013 return 2 - expr_value(expr[1])
6014
6015 # Relation
6016 #
6017 # Implements <, <=, >, >= comparisons as well. These were added to
6018 # kconfig in 31847b67 (kconfig: allow use of relations other than
6019 # (in)equality).
6020
6021 rel, v1, v2 = expr
6022
6023 # If both operands are strings...
6024 if v1.orig_type is STRING and v2.orig_type is STRING:
6025 # ...then compare them lexicographically
6026 comp = _strcmp(v1.str_value, v2.str_value)
6027 else:
6028 # Otherwise, try to compare them as numbers
6029 try:
6030 comp = _sym_to_num(v1) - _sym_to_num(v2)
6031 except ValueError:
6032 # Fall back on a lexicographic comparison if the operands don't
6033 # parse as numbers
6034 comp = _strcmp(v1.str_value, v2.str_value)
6035
6036 return 2*(comp == 0 if rel is EQUAL else
6037 comp != 0 if rel is UNEQUAL else
6038 comp < 0 if rel is LESS else
6039 comp <= 0 if rel is LESS_EQUAL else
6040 comp > 0 if rel is GREATER else
6041 comp >= 0)
6042
6043
6044def standard_sc_expr_str(sc):
6045 """
6046 Standard symbol/choice printing function. Uses plain Kconfig syntax, and
6047 displays choices as <choice> (or <choice NAME>, for named choices).
6048
6049 See expr_str().
6050 """
6051 if sc.__class__ is Symbol:
6052 if sc.is_constant and sc.name not in STR_TO_TRI:
6053 return '"{}"'.format(escape(sc.name))
6054 return sc.name
6055
6056 return "<choice {}>".format(sc.name) if sc.name else "<choice>"
6057
6058
6059def expr_str(expr, sc_expr_str_fn=standard_sc_expr_str):
6060 """
6061 Returns the string representation of the expression 'expr', as in a Kconfig
6062 file.
6063
6064 Passing subexpressions of expressions to this function works as expected.
6065
6066 sc_expr_str_fn (default: standard_sc_expr_str):
6067 This function is called for every symbol/choice (hence "sc") appearing in
6068 the expression, with the symbol/choice as the argument. It is expected to
6069 return a string to be used for the symbol/choice.
6070
6071 This can be used e.g. to turn symbols/choices into links when generating
6072 documentation, or for printing the value of each symbol/choice after it.
6073
6074 Note that quoted values are represented as constants symbols
6075 (Symbol.is_constant == True).
6076 """
6077 if expr.__class__ is not tuple:
6078 return sc_expr_str_fn(expr)
6079
6080 if expr[0] is AND:
6081 return "{} && {}".format(_parenthesize(expr[1], OR, sc_expr_str_fn),
6082 _parenthesize(expr[2], OR, sc_expr_str_fn))
6083
6084 if expr[0] is OR:
6085 # This turns A && B || C && D into "(A && B) || (C && D)", which is
6086 # redundant, but more readable
6087 return "{} || {}".format(_parenthesize(expr[1], AND, sc_expr_str_fn),
6088 _parenthesize(expr[2], AND, sc_expr_str_fn))
6089
6090 if expr[0] is NOT:
6091 if expr[1].__class__ is tuple:
6092 return "!({})".format(expr_str(expr[1], sc_expr_str_fn))
6093 return "!" + sc_expr_str_fn(expr[1]) # Symbol
6094
6095 # Relation
6096 #
6097 # Relation operands are always symbols (quoted strings are constant
6098 # symbols)
6099 return "{} {} {}".format(sc_expr_str_fn(expr[1]), REL_TO_STR[expr[0]],
6100 sc_expr_str_fn(expr[2]))
6101
6102
6103def expr_items(expr):
6104 """
6105 Returns a set() of all items (symbols and choices) that appear in the
6106 expression 'expr'.
6107
6108 Passing subexpressions of expressions to this function works as expected.
6109 """
6110 res = set()
6111
6112 def rec(subexpr):
6113 if subexpr.__class__ is tuple:
6114 # AND, OR, NOT, or relation
6115
6116 rec(subexpr[1])
6117
6118 # NOTs only have a single operand
6119 if subexpr[0] is not NOT:
6120 rec(subexpr[2])
6121
6122 else:
6123 # Symbol or choice
6124 res.add(subexpr)
6125
6126 rec(expr)
6127 return res
6128
6129
6130def split_expr(expr, op):
6131 """
6132 Returns a list containing the top-level AND or OR operands in the
6133 expression 'expr', in the same (left-to-right) order as they appear in
6134 the expression.
6135
6136 This can be handy e.g. for splitting (weak) reverse dependencies
6137 from 'select' and 'imply' into individual selects/implies.
6138
6139 op:
6140 Either AND to get AND operands, or OR to get OR operands.
6141
6142 (Having this as an operand might be more future-safe than having two
6143 hardcoded functions.)
6144
6145
6146 Pseudo-code examples:
6147
6148 split_expr( A , OR ) -> [A]
6149 split_expr( A && B , OR ) -> [A && B]
6150 split_expr( A || B , OR ) -> [A, B]
6151 split_expr( A || B , AND ) -> [A || B]
6152 split_expr( A || B || (C && D) , OR ) -> [A, B, C && D]
6153
6154 # Second || is not at the top level
6155 split_expr( A || (B && (C || D)) , OR ) -> [A, B && (C || D)]
6156
6157 # Parentheses don't matter as long as we stay at the top level (don't
6158 # encounter any non-'op' nodes)
6159 split_expr( (A || B) || C , OR ) -> [A, B, C]
6160 split_expr( A || (B || C) , OR ) -> [A, B, C]
6161 """
6162 res = []
6163
6164 def rec(subexpr):
6165 if subexpr.__class__ is tuple and subexpr[0] is op:
6166 rec(subexpr[1])
6167 rec(subexpr[2])
6168 else:
6169 res.append(subexpr)
6170
6171 rec(expr)
6172 return res
6173
6174
6175def escape(s):
6176 r"""
6177 Escapes the string 's' in the same fashion as is done for display in
6178 Kconfig format and when writing strings to a .config file. " and \ are
6179 replaced by \" and \\, respectively.
6180 """
6181 # \ must be escaped before " to avoid double escaping
6182 return s.replace("\\", r"\\").replace('"', r'\"')
6183
6184
6185def unescape(s):
6186 r"""
6187 Unescapes the string 's'. \ followed by any character is replaced with just
6188 that character. Used internally when reading .config files.
6189 """
6190 return _unescape_sub(r"\1", s)
6191
6192# unescape() helper
6193_unescape_sub = re.compile(r"\\(.)").sub
6194
6195
6196def standard_kconfig(description=None):
6197 """
6198 Argument parsing helper for tools that take a single optional Kconfig file
6199 argument (default: Kconfig). Returns the Kconfig instance for the parsed
6200 configuration. Uses argparse internally.
6201
6202 Exits with sys.exit() (which raises SystemExit) on errors.
6203
6204 description (default: None):
6205 The 'description' passed to argparse.ArgumentParser().
6206 argparse.RawDescriptionHelpFormatter is used, so formatting is preserved.
6207 """
6208 import argparse
6209
6210 parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
6211 formatter_class=argparse.RawDescriptionHelpFormatter,
6212 description=description)
6213
6214 parser.add_argument(
6215 "kconfig",
6216 metavar="KCONFIG",
6217 default="Kconfig",
6218 nargs="?",
6219 help="Top-level Kconfig file (default: Kconfig)")
6220
6221 return Kconfig(parser.parse_args().kconfig, suppress_traceback=True)
6222
6223
6224def standard_config_filename():
6225 """
6226 Helper for tools. Returns the value of KCONFIG_CONFIG (which specifies the
6227 .config file to load/save) if it is set, and ".config" otherwise.
6228
6229 Calling load_config() with filename=None might give the behavior you want,
6230 without having to use this function.
6231 """
6232 return os.getenv("KCONFIG_CONFIG", ".config")
6233
6234
6235def load_allconfig(kconf, filename):
6236 """
6237 Use Kconfig.load_allconfig() instead, which was added in Kconfiglib 13.4.0.
6238 Supported for backwards compatibility. Might be removed at some point after
6239 a long period of deprecation warnings.
6240 """
6241 allconfig = os.getenv("KCONFIG_ALLCONFIG")
6242 if allconfig is None:
6243 return
6244
6245 def std_msg(e):
6246 # "Upcasts" a _KconfigIOError to an IOError, removing the custom
6247 # __str__() message. The standard message is better here.
6248 #
6249 # This might also convert an OSError to an IOError in obscure cases,
6250 # but it's probably not a big deal. The distinction is shaky (see
6251 # PEP-3151).
6252 return IOError(e.errno, e.strerror, e.filename)
6253
6254 old_warn_assign_override = kconf.warn_assign_override
6255 old_warn_assign_redun = kconf.warn_assign_redun
6256 kconf.warn_assign_override = kconf.warn_assign_redun = False
6257
6258 if allconfig in ("", "1"):
6259 try:
6260 print(kconf.load_config(filename, False))
6261 except EnvironmentError as e1:
6262 try:
6263 print(kconf.load_config("all.config", False))
6264 except EnvironmentError as e2:
6265 sys.exit("error: KCONFIG_ALLCONFIG is set, but neither {} "
6266 "nor all.config could be opened: {}, {}"
6267 .format(filename, std_msg(e1), std_msg(e2)))
6268 else:
6269 try:
6270 print(kconf.load_config(allconfig, False))
6271 except EnvironmentError as e:
6272 sys.exit("error: KCONFIG_ALLCONFIG is set to '{}', which "
6273 "could not be opened: {}"
6274 .format(allconfig, std_msg(e)))
6275
6276 kconf.warn_assign_override = old_warn_assign_override
6277 kconf.warn_assign_redun = old_warn_assign_redun
6278
6279
6280#
6281# Internal functions
6282#
6283
6284
6285def _visibility(sc):
6286 # Symbols and Choices have a "visibility" that acts as an upper bound on
6287 # the values a user can set for them, corresponding to the visibility in
6288 # e.g. 'make menuconfig'. This function calculates the visibility for the
6289 # Symbol or Choice 'sc' -- the logic is nearly identical.
6290
6291 vis = 0
6292
6293 for node in sc.nodes:
6294 if node.prompt:
6295 vis = max(vis, expr_value(node.prompt[1]))
6296
6297 if sc.__class__ is Symbol and sc.choice:
6298 if sc.choice.orig_type is TRISTATE and \
6299 sc.orig_type is not TRISTATE and sc.choice.tri_value != 2:
6300 # Non-tristate choice symbols are only visible in y mode
6301 return 0
6302
6303 if sc.orig_type is TRISTATE and vis == 1 and sc.choice.tri_value == 2:
6304 # Choice symbols with m visibility are not visible in y mode
6305 return 0
6306
6307 # Promote m to y if we're dealing with a non-tristate (possibly due to
6308 # modules being disabled)
6309 if vis == 1 and sc.type is not TRISTATE:
6310 return 2
6311
6312 return vis
6313
6314
6315def _depend_on(sc, expr):
6316 # Adds 'sc' (symbol or choice) as a "dependee" to all symbols in 'expr'.
6317 # Constant symbols in 'expr' are skipped as they can never change value
6318 # anyway.
6319
6320 if expr.__class__ is tuple:
6321 # AND, OR, NOT, or relation
6322
6323 _depend_on(sc, expr[1])
6324
6325 # NOTs only have a single operand
6326 if expr[0] is not NOT:
6327 _depend_on(sc, expr[2])
6328
6329 elif not expr.is_constant:
6330 # Non-constant symbol, or choice
6331 expr._dependents.add(sc)
6332
6333
6334def _parenthesize(expr, type_, sc_expr_str_fn):
6335 # expr_str() helper. Adds parentheses around expressions of type 'type_'.
6336
6337 if expr.__class__ is tuple and expr[0] is type_:
6338 return "({})".format(expr_str(expr, sc_expr_str_fn))
6339 return expr_str(expr, sc_expr_str_fn)
6340
6341
6342def _ordered_unique(lst):
6343 # Returns 'lst' with any duplicates removed, preserving order. This hacky
6344 # version seems to be a common idiom. It relies on short-circuit evaluation
6345 # and set.add() returning None, which is falsy.
6346
6347 seen = set()
6348 seen_add = seen.add
6349 return [x for x in lst if x not in seen and not seen_add(x)]
6350
6351
6352def _is_base_n(s, n):
6353 try:
6354 int(s, n)
6355 return True
6356 except ValueError:
6357 return False
6358
6359
6360def _strcmp(s1, s2):
6361 # strcmp()-alike that returns -1, 0, or 1
6362
6363 return (s1 > s2) - (s1 < s2)
6364
6365
6366def _sym_to_num(sym):
6367 # expr_value() helper for converting a symbol to a number. Raises
6368 # ValueError for symbols that can't be converted.
6369
6370 # For BOOL and TRISTATE, n/m/y count as 0/1/2. This mirrors 9059a3493ef
6371 # ("kconfig: fix relational operators for bool and tristate symbols") in
6372 # the C implementation.
6373 return sym.tri_value if sym.orig_type in _BOOL_TRISTATE else \
6374 int(sym.str_value, _TYPE_TO_BASE[sym.orig_type])
6375
6376
6377def _touch_dep_file(path, sym_name):
6378 # If sym_name is MY_SYM_NAME, touches my/sym/name.h. See the sync_deps()
6379 # docstring.
6380
6381 sym_path = path + os.sep + sym_name.lower().replace("_", os.sep) + ".h"
6382 sym_path_dir = dirname(sym_path)
6383 if not exists(sym_path_dir):
6384 os.makedirs(sym_path_dir, 0o755)
6385
6386 # A kind of truncating touch, mirroring the C tools
6387 os.close(os.open(
6388 sym_path, os.O_WRONLY | os.O_CREAT | os.O_TRUNC, 0o644))
6389
6390
6391def _save_old(path):
6392 # See write_config()
6393
6394 if not os.path.isfile(path):
6395 # Backup only files (and symlinks to files). Simplest alternative
6396 # to avoid e.g. (potentially successful attempt to) rename /dev/null
6397 # (and to keep fifos).
6398 return
6399
6400 def copy(src, dst):
6401 # Import as needed, to save some startup time
6402 import shutil
6403 shutil.copyfile(src, dst)
6404
6405 if islink(path):
6406 # Preserve symlinks
6407 copy_fn = copy
6408 elif hasattr(os, "replace"):
6409 # Python 3 (3.3+) only. Best choice when available, because it
6410 # removes <filename>.old on both *nix and Windows.
6411 copy_fn = os.replace
6412 elif os.name == "posix":
6413 # Removes <filename>.old on POSIX systems
6414 copy_fn = os.rename
6415 else:
6416 # Fall back on copying
6417 copy_fn = copy
6418
6419 try:
6420 copy_fn(path, path + ".old")
6421 except Exception:
6422 # Ignore errors from 'path' missing as well as other errors.
6423 # <filename>.old file is usually more of a nice-to-have, and not worth
6424 # erroring out over e.g. if <filename>.old happens to be a directory.
6425 pass
6426
6427
6428def _locs(sc):
6429 # Symbol/Choice.name_and_loc helper. Returns the "(defined at ...)" part of
6430 # the string. 'sc' is a Symbol or Choice.
6431
6432 if sc.nodes:
6433 return "(defined at {})".format(
6434 ", ".join("{0.filename}:{0.linenr}".format(node)
6435 for node in sc.nodes))
6436
6437 return "(undefined)"
6438
6439
6440# Menu manipulation
6441
6442
6443def _expr_depends_on(expr, sym):
6444 # Reimplementation of expr_depends_symbol() from mconf.c. Used to determine
6445 # if a submenu should be implicitly created. This also influences which
6446 # items inside choice statements are considered choice items.
6447
6448 if expr.__class__ is not tuple:
6449 return expr is sym
6450
6451 if expr[0] in _EQUAL_UNEQUAL:
6452 # Check for one of the following:
6453 # sym = m/y, m/y = sym, sym != n, n != sym
6454
6455 left, right = expr[1:]
6456
6457 if right is sym:
6458 left, right = right, left
6459 elif left is not sym:
6460 return False
6461
6462 return (expr[0] is EQUAL and right is sym.kconfig.m or
6463 right is sym.kconfig.y) or \
6464 (expr[0] is UNEQUAL and right is sym.kconfig.n)
6465
6466 return expr[0] is AND and \
6467 (_expr_depends_on(expr[1], sym) or
6468 _expr_depends_on(expr[2], sym))
6469
6470
6471def _auto_menu_dep(node1, node2):
6472 # Returns True if node2 has an "automatic menu dependency" on node1. If
6473 # node2 has a prompt, we check its condition. Otherwise, we look directly
6474 # at node2.dep.
6475
6476 return _expr_depends_on(node2.prompt[1] if node2.prompt else node2.dep,
6477 node1.item)
6478
6479
6480def _flatten(node):
6481 # "Flattens" menu nodes without prompts (e.g. 'if' nodes and non-visible
6482 # symbols with children from automatic menu creation) so that their
6483 # children appear after them instead. This gives a clean menu structure
6484 # with no unexpected "jumps" in the indentation.
6485 #
6486 # Do not flatten promptless choices (which can appear "legitimately" if a
6487 # named choice is defined in multiple locations to add on symbols). It
6488 # looks confusing, and the menuconfig already shows all choice symbols if
6489 # you enter the choice at some location with a prompt.
6490
6491 while node:
6492 if node.list and not node.prompt and \
6493 node.item.__class__ is not Choice:
6494
6495 last_node = node.list
6496 while 1:
6497 last_node.parent = node.parent
6498 if not last_node.next:
6499 break
6500 last_node = last_node.next
6501
6502 last_node.next = node.next
6503 node.next = node.list
6504 node.list = None
6505
6506 node = node.next
6507
6508
6509def _remove_ifs(node):
6510 # Removes 'if' nodes (which can be recognized by MenuNode.item being None),
6511 # which are assumed to already have been flattened. The C implementation
6512 # doesn't bother to do this, but we expose the menu tree directly, and it
6513 # makes it nicer to work with.
6514
6515 cur = node.list
6516 while cur and not cur.item:
6517 cur = cur.next
6518
6519 node.list = cur
6520
6521 while cur:
6522 next = cur.next
6523 while next and not next.item:
6524 next = next.next
6525
6526 # Equivalent to
6527 #
6528 # cur.next = next
6529 # cur = next
6530 #
6531 # due to tricky Python semantics. The order matters.
6532 cur.next = cur = next
6533
6534
6535def _finalize_choice(node):
6536 # Finalizes a choice, marking each symbol whose menu node has the choice as
6537 # the parent as a choice symbol, and automatically determining types if not
6538 # specified.
6539
6540 choice = node.item
6541
6542 cur = node.list
6543 while cur:
6544 if cur.item.__class__ is Symbol:
6545 cur.item.choice = choice
6546 choice.syms.append(cur.item)
6547 cur = cur.next
6548
6549 # If no type is specified for the choice, its type is that of
6550 # the first choice item with a specified type
6551 if not choice.orig_type:
6552 for item in choice.syms:
6553 if item.orig_type:
6554 choice.orig_type = item.orig_type
6555 break
6556
6557 # Each choice item of UNKNOWN type gets the type of the choice
6558 for sym in choice.syms:
6559 if not sym.orig_type:
6560 sym.orig_type = choice.orig_type
6561
6562
6563def _check_dep_loop_sym(sym, ignore_choice):
6564 # Detects dependency loops using depth-first search on the dependency graph
6565 # (which is calculated earlier in Kconfig._build_dep()).
6566 #
6567 # Algorithm:
6568 #
6569 # 1. Symbols/choices start out with _visited = 0, meaning unvisited.
6570 #
6571 # 2. When a symbol/choice is first visited, _visited is set to 1, meaning
6572 # "visited, potentially part of a dependency loop". The recursive
6573 # search then continues from the symbol/choice.
6574 #
6575 # 3. If we run into a symbol/choice X with _visited already set to 1,
6576 # there's a dependency loop. The loop is found on the call stack by
6577 # recording symbols while returning ("on the way back") until X is seen
6578 # again.
6579 #
6580 # 4. Once a symbol/choice and all its dependencies (or dependents in this
6581 # case) have been checked recursively without detecting any loops, its
6582 # _visited is set to 2, meaning "visited, not part of a dependency
6583 # loop".
6584 #
6585 # This saves work if we run into the symbol/choice again in later calls
6586 # to _check_dep_loop_sym(). We just return immediately.
6587 #
6588 # Choices complicate things, as every choice symbol depends on every other
6589 # choice symbol in a sense. When a choice is "entered" via a choice symbol
6590 # X, we visit all choice symbols from the choice except X, and prevent
6591 # immediately revisiting the choice with a flag (ignore_choice).
6592 #
6593 # Maybe there's a better way to handle this (different flags or the
6594 # like...)
6595
6596 if not sym._visited:
6597 # sym._visited == 0, unvisited
6598
6599 sym._visited = 1
6600
6601 for dep in sym._dependents:
6602 # Choices show up in Symbol._dependents when the choice has the
6603 # symbol in a 'prompt' or 'default' condition (e.g.
6604 # 'default ... if SYM').
6605 #
6606 # Since we aren't entering the choice via a choice symbol, all
6607 # choice symbols need to be checked, hence the None.
6608 loop = _check_dep_loop_choice(dep, None) \
6609 if dep.__class__ is Choice \
6610 else _check_dep_loop_sym(dep, False)
6611
6612 if loop:
6613 # Dependency loop found
6614 return _found_dep_loop(loop, sym)
6615
6616 if sym.choice and not ignore_choice:
6617 loop = _check_dep_loop_choice(sym.choice, sym)
6618 if loop:
6619 # Dependency loop found
6620 return _found_dep_loop(loop, sym)
6621
6622 # The symbol is not part of a dependency loop
6623 sym._visited = 2
6624
6625 # No dependency loop found
6626 return None
6627
6628 if sym._visited == 2:
6629 # The symbol was checked earlier and is already known to not be part of
6630 # a dependency loop
6631 return None
6632
6633 # sym._visited == 1, found a dependency loop. Return the symbol as the
6634 # first element in it.
6635 return (sym,)
6636
6637
6638def _check_dep_loop_choice(choice, skip):
6639 if not choice._visited:
6640 # choice._visited == 0, unvisited
6641
6642 choice._visited = 1
6643
6644 # Check for loops involving choice symbols. If we came here via a
6645 # choice symbol, skip that one, as we'd get a false positive
6646 # '<sym FOO> -> <choice> -> <sym FOO>' loop otherwise.
6647 for sym in choice.syms:
6648 if sym is not skip:
6649 # Prevent the choice from being immediately re-entered via the
6650 # "is a choice symbol" path by passing True
6651 loop = _check_dep_loop_sym(sym, True)
6652 if loop:
6653 # Dependency loop found
6654 return _found_dep_loop(loop, choice)
6655
6656 # The choice is not part of a dependency loop
6657 choice._visited = 2
6658
6659 # No dependency loop found
6660 return None
6661
6662 if choice._visited == 2:
6663 # The choice was checked earlier and is already known to not be part of
6664 # a dependency loop
6665 return None
6666
6667 # choice._visited == 1, found a dependency loop. Return the choice as the
6668 # first element in it.
6669 return (choice,)
6670
6671
6672def _found_dep_loop(loop, cur):
6673 # Called "on the way back" when we know we have a loop
6674
6675 # Is the symbol/choice 'cur' where the loop started?
6676 if cur is not loop[0]:
6677 # Nope, it's just a part of the loop
6678 return loop + (cur,)
6679
6680 # Yep, we have the entire loop. Throw an exception that shows it.
6681
6682 msg = "\nDependency loop\n" \
6683 "===============\n\n"
6684
6685 for item in loop:
6686 if item is not loop[0]:
6687 msg += "...depends on "
6688 if item.__class__ is Symbol and item.choice:
6689 msg += "the choice symbol "
6690
6691 msg += "{}, with definition...\n\n{}\n\n" \
6692 .format(item.name_and_loc, item)
6693
6694 # Small wart: Since we reuse the already calculated
6695 # Symbol/Choice._dependents sets for recursive dependency detection, we
6696 # lose information on whether a dependency came from a 'select'/'imply'
6697 # condition or e.g. a 'depends on'.
6698 #
6699 # This might cause selecting symbols to "disappear". For example,
6700 # a symbol B having 'select A if C' gives a direct dependency from A to
6701 # C, since it corresponds to a reverse dependency of B && C.
6702 #
6703 # Always print reverse dependencies for symbols that have them to make
6704 # sure information isn't lost. I wonder if there's some neat way to
6705 # improve this.
6706
6707 if item.__class__ is Symbol:
6708 if item.rev_dep is not item.kconfig.n:
6709 msg += "(select-related dependencies: {})\n\n" \
6710 .format(expr_str(item.rev_dep))
6711
6712 if item.weak_rev_dep is not item.kconfig.n:
6713 msg += "(imply-related dependencies: {})\n\n" \
6714 .format(expr_str(item.rev_dep))
6715
6716 msg += "...depends again on " + loop[0].name_and_loc
6717
6718 raise KconfigError(msg)
6719
6720
6721def _decoding_error(e, filename, macro_linenr=None):
6722 # Gives the filename and context for UnicodeDecodeError's, which are a pain
6723 # to debug otherwise. 'e' is the UnicodeDecodeError object.
6724 #
6725 # If the decoding error is for the output of a $(shell,...) command,
6726 # macro_linenr holds the line number where it was run (the exact line
6727 # number isn't available for decoding errors in files).
6728
6729 raise KconfigError(
6730 "\n"
6731 "Malformed {} in {}\n"
6732 "Context: {}\n"
6733 "Problematic data: {}\n"
6734 "Reason: {}".format(
6735 e.encoding,
6736 "'{}'".format(filename) if macro_linenr is None else
6737 "output from macro at {}:{}".format(filename, macro_linenr),
6738 e.object[max(e.start - 40, 0):e.end + 40],
6739 e.object[e.start:e.end],
6740 e.reason))
6741
6742
6743def _warn_verbose_deprecated(fn_name):
6744 sys.stderr.write(
6745 "Deprecation warning: {0}()'s 'verbose' argument has no effect. Since "
6746 "Kconfiglib 12.0.0, the message is returned from {0}() instead, "
6747 "and is always generated. Do e.g. print(kconf.{0}()) if you want to "
6748 "want to show a message like \"Loaded configuration '.config'\" on "
6749 "stdout. The old API required ugly hacks to reuse messages in "
6750 "configuration interfaces.\n".format(fn_name))
6751
6752
6753# Predefined preprocessor functions
6754
6755
6756def _filename_fn(kconf, _):
6757 return kconf.filename
6758
6759
6760def _lineno_fn(kconf, _):
6761 return str(kconf.linenr)
6762
6763
6764def _info_fn(kconf, _, msg):
6765 print("{}:{}: {}".format(kconf.filename, kconf.linenr, msg))
6766
6767 return ""
6768
6769
6770def _warning_if_fn(kconf, _, cond, msg):
6771 if cond == "y":
6772 kconf._warn(msg, kconf.filename, kconf.linenr)
6773
6774 return ""
6775
6776
6777def _error_if_fn(kconf, _, cond, msg):
6778 if cond == "y":
6779 raise KconfigError("{}:{}: {}".format(
6780 kconf.filename, kconf.linenr, msg))
6781
6782 return ""
6783
6784
6785def _shell_fn(kconf, _, command):
6786 import subprocess # Only import as needed, to save some startup time
6787
6788 stdout, stderr = subprocess.Popen(
6789 command, shell=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE
6790 ).communicate()
6791
6792 if not _IS_PY2:
6793 try:
6794 stdout = stdout.decode(kconf._encoding)
6795 stderr = stderr.decode(kconf._encoding)
6796 except UnicodeDecodeError as e:
6797 _decoding_error(e, kconf.filename, kconf.linenr)
6798
6799 if stderr:
6800 kconf._warn("'{}' wrote to stderr: {}".format(
6801 command, "\n".join(stderr.splitlines())),
6802 kconf.filename, kconf.linenr)
6803
6804 # Universal newlines with splitlines() (to prevent e.g. stray \r's in
6805 # command output on Windows), trailing newline removal, and
6806 # newline-to-space conversion.
6807 #
6808 # On Python 3 versions before 3.6, it's not possible to specify the
6809 # encoding when passing universal_newlines=True to Popen() (the 'encoding'
6810 # parameter was added in 3.6), so we do this manual version instead.
6811 return "\n".join(stdout.splitlines()).rstrip("\n").replace("\n", " ")
6812
6813#
6814# Global constants
6815#
6816
6817TRI_TO_STR = {
6818 0: "n",
6819 1: "m",
6820 2: "y",
6821}
6822
6823STR_TO_TRI = {
6824 "n": 0,
6825 "m": 1,
6826 "y": 2,
6827}
6828
6829# Constant representing that there's no cached choice selection. This is
6830# distinct from a cached None (no selection). Any object that's not None or a
6831# Symbol will do. We test this with 'is'.
6832_NO_CACHED_SELECTION = 0
6833
6834# Are we running on Python 2?
6835_IS_PY2 = sys.version_info[0] < 3
6836
6837try:
6838 _UNAME_RELEASE = os.uname()[2]
6839except AttributeError:
6840 # Only import as needed, to save some startup time
6841 import platform
6842 _UNAME_RELEASE = platform.uname()[2]
6843
6844# The token and type constants below are safe to test with 'is', which is a bit
6845# faster (~30% faster on my machine, and a few % faster for total parsing
6846# time), even without assuming Python's small integer optimization (which
6847# caches small integer objects). The constants end up pointing to unique
6848# integer objects, and since we consistently refer to them via the names below,
6849# we always get the same object.
6850#
6851# Client code should use == though.
6852
6853# Tokens, with values 1, 2, ... . Avoiding 0 simplifies some checks by making
6854# all tokens except empty strings truthy.
6855(
6856 _T_ALLNOCONFIG_Y,
6857 _T_AND,
6858 _T_BOOL,
6859 _T_CHOICE,
6860 _T_CLOSE_PAREN,
6861 _T_COMMENT,
6862 _T_CONFIG,
6863 _T_DEFAULT,
6864 _T_DEFCONFIG_LIST,
6865 _T_DEF_BOOL,
6866 _T_DEF_HEX,
6867 _T_DEF_INT,
6868 _T_DEF_STRING,
6869 _T_DEF_TRISTATE,
6870 _T_DEPENDS,
6871 _T_ENDCHOICE,
6872 _T_ENDIF,
6873 _T_ENDMENU,
6874 _T_ENV,
6875 _T_EQUAL,
6876 _T_GREATER,
6877 _T_GREATER_EQUAL,
6878 _T_HELP,
6879 _T_HEX,
6880 _T_IF,
6881 _T_IMPLY,
6882 _T_INT,
6883 _T_LESS,
6884 _T_LESS_EQUAL,
6885 _T_MAINMENU,
6886 _T_MENU,
6887 _T_MENUCONFIG,
6888 _T_MODULES,
6889 _T_NOT,
6890 _T_ON,
6891 _T_OPEN_PAREN,
6892 _T_OPTION,
6893 _T_OPTIONAL,
6894 _T_OR,
6895 _T_ORSOURCE,
6896 _T_OSOURCE,
6897 _T_PROMPT,
6898 _T_RANGE,
6899 _T_RSOURCE,
6900 _T_SELECT,
6901 _T_SOURCE,
6902 _T_STRING,
6903 _T_TRISTATE,
6904 _T_UNEQUAL,
6905 _T_VISIBLE,
6906) = range(1, 51)
6907
6908# Keyword to token map, with the get() method assigned directly as a small
6909# optimization
6910_get_keyword = {
6911 "---help---": _T_HELP,
6912 "allnoconfig_y": _T_ALLNOCONFIG_Y,
6913 "bool": _T_BOOL,
6914 "boolean": _T_BOOL,
6915 "choice": _T_CHOICE,
6916 "comment": _T_COMMENT,
6917 "config": _T_CONFIG,
6918 "def_bool": _T_DEF_BOOL,
6919 "def_hex": _T_DEF_HEX,
6920 "def_int": _T_DEF_INT,
6921 "def_string": _T_DEF_STRING,
6922 "def_tristate": _T_DEF_TRISTATE,
6923 "default": _T_DEFAULT,
6924 "defconfig_list": _T_DEFCONFIG_LIST,
6925 "depends": _T_DEPENDS,
6926 "endchoice": _T_ENDCHOICE,
6927 "endif": _T_ENDIF,
6928 "endmenu": _T_ENDMENU,
6929 "env": _T_ENV,
6930 "grsource": _T_ORSOURCE, # Backwards compatibility
6931 "gsource": _T_OSOURCE, # Backwards compatibility
6932 "help": _T_HELP,
6933 "hex": _T_HEX,
6934 "if": _T_IF,
6935 "imply": _T_IMPLY,
6936 "int": _T_INT,
6937 "mainmenu": _T_MAINMENU,
6938 "menu": _T_MENU,
6939 "menuconfig": _T_MENUCONFIG,
6940 "modules": _T_MODULES,
6941 "on": _T_ON,
6942 "option": _T_OPTION,
6943 "optional": _T_OPTIONAL,
6944 "orsource": _T_ORSOURCE,
6945 "osource": _T_OSOURCE,
6946 "prompt": _T_PROMPT,
6947 "range": _T_RANGE,
6948 "rsource": _T_RSOURCE,
6949 "select": _T_SELECT,
6950 "source": _T_SOURCE,
6951 "string": _T_STRING,
6952 "tristate": _T_TRISTATE,
6953 "visible": _T_VISIBLE,
6954}.get
6955
6956# The constants below match the value of the corresponding tokens to remove the
6957# need for conversion
6958
6959# Node types
6960MENU = _T_MENU
6961COMMENT = _T_COMMENT
6962
6963# Expression types
6964AND = _T_AND
6965OR = _T_OR
6966NOT = _T_NOT
6967EQUAL = _T_EQUAL
6968UNEQUAL = _T_UNEQUAL
6969LESS = _T_LESS
6970LESS_EQUAL = _T_LESS_EQUAL
6971GREATER = _T_GREATER
6972GREATER_EQUAL = _T_GREATER_EQUAL
6973
6974REL_TO_STR = {
6975 EQUAL: "=",
6976 UNEQUAL: "!=",
6977 LESS: "<",
6978 LESS_EQUAL: "<=",
6979 GREATER: ">",
6980 GREATER_EQUAL: ">=",
6981}
6982
6983# Symbol/choice types. UNKNOWN is 0 (falsy) to simplify some checks.
6984# Client code shouldn't rely on it though, as it was non-zero in
6985# older versions.
6986UNKNOWN = 0
6987BOOL = _T_BOOL
6988TRISTATE = _T_TRISTATE
6989STRING = _T_STRING
6990INT = _T_INT
6991HEX = _T_HEX
6992
6993TYPE_TO_STR = {
6994 UNKNOWN: "unknown",
6995 BOOL: "bool",
6996 TRISTATE: "tristate",
6997 STRING: "string",
6998 INT: "int",
6999 HEX: "hex",
7000}
7001
7002# Used in comparisons. 0 means the base is inferred from the format of the
7003# string.
7004_TYPE_TO_BASE = {
7005 HEX: 16,
7006 INT: 10,
7007 STRING: 0,
7008 UNKNOWN: 0,
7009}
7010
7011# def_bool -> BOOL, etc.
7012_DEF_TOKEN_TO_TYPE = {
7013 _T_DEF_BOOL: BOOL,
7014 _T_DEF_HEX: HEX,
7015 _T_DEF_INT: INT,
7016 _T_DEF_STRING: STRING,
7017 _T_DEF_TRISTATE: TRISTATE,
7018}
7019
7020# Tokens after which strings are expected. This is used to tell strings from
7021# constant symbol references during tokenization, both of which are enclosed in
7022# quotes.
7023#
7024# Identifier-like lexemes ("missing quotes") are also treated as strings after
7025# these tokens. _T_CHOICE is included to avoid symbols being registered for
7026# named choices.
7027_STRING_LEX = frozenset({
7028 _T_BOOL,
7029 _T_CHOICE,
7030 _T_COMMENT,
7031 _T_HEX,
7032 _T_INT,
7033 _T_MAINMENU,
7034 _T_MENU,
7035 _T_ORSOURCE,
7036 _T_OSOURCE,
7037 _T_PROMPT,
7038 _T_RSOURCE,
7039 _T_SOURCE,
7040 _T_STRING,
7041 _T_TRISTATE,
7042})
7043
7044# Various sets for quick membership tests. Gives a single global lookup and
7045# avoids creating temporary dicts/tuples.
7046
7047_TYPE_TOKENS = frozenset({
7048 _T_BOOL,
7049 _T_TRISTATE,
7050 _T_INT,
7051 _T_HEX,
7052 _T_STRING,
7053})
7054
7055_SOURCE_TOKENS = frozenset({
7056 _T_SOURCE,
7057 _T_RSOURCE,
7058 _T_OSOURCE,
7059 _T_ORSOURCE,
7060})
7061
7062_REL_SOURCE_TOKENS = frozenset({
7063 _T_RSOURCE,
7064 _T_ORSOURCE,
7065})
7066
7067# Obligatory (non-optional) sources
7068_OBL_SOURCE_TOKENS = frozenset({
7069 _T_SOURCE,
7070 _T_RSOURCE,
7071})
7072
7073_BOOL_TRISTATE = frozenset({
7074 BOOL,
7075 TRISTATE,
7076})
7077
7078_BOOL_TRISTATE_UNKNOWN = frozenset({
7079 BOOL,
7080 TRISTATE,
7081 UNKNOWN,
7082})
7083
7084_INT_HEX = frozenset({
7085 INT,
7086 HEX,
7087})
7088
7089_SYMBOL_CHOICE = frozenset({
7090 Symbol,
7091 Choice,
7092})
7093
7094_MENU_COMMENT = frozenset({
7095 MENU,
7096 COMMENT,
7097})
7098
7099_EQUAL_UNEQUAL = frozenset({
7100 EQUAL,
7101 UNEQUAL,
7102})
7103
7104_RELATIONS = frozenset({
7105 EQUAL,
7106 UNEQUAL,
7107 LESS,
7108 LESS_EQUAL,
7109 GREATER,
7110 GREATER_EQUAL,
7111})
7112
7113# Helper functions for getting compiled regular expressions, with the needed
7114# matching function returned directly as a small optimization.
7115#
7116# Use ASCII regex matching on Python 3. It's already the default on Python 2.
7117
7118
7119def _re_match(regex):
7120 return re.compile(regex, 0 if _IS_PY2 else re.ASCII).match
7121
7122
7123def _re_search(regex):
7124 return re.compile(regex, 0 if _IS_PY2 else re.ASCII).search
7125
7126
7127# Various regular expressions used during parsing
7128
7129# The initial token on a line. Also eats leading and trailing whitespace, so
7130# that we can jump straight to the next token (or to the end of the line if
7131# there is only one token).
7132#
7133# This regex will also fail to match for empty lines and comment lines.
7134#
7135# '$' is included to detect preprocessor variable assignments with macro
7136# expansions in the left-hand side.
7137_command_match = _re_match(r"\s*([A-Za-z0-9_$-]+)\s*")
7138
7139# An identifier/keyword after the first token. Also eats trailing whitespace.
7140# '$' is included to detect identifiers containing macro expansions.
7141_id_keyword_match = _re_match(r"([A-Za-z0-9_$/.-]+)\s*")
7142
7143# A fragment in the left-hand side of a preprocessor variable assignment. These
7144# are the portions between macro expansions ($(foo)). Macros are supported in
7145# the LHS (variable name).
7146_assignment_lhs_fragment_match = _re_match("[A-Za-z0-9_-]*")
7147
7148# The assignment operator and value (right-hand side) in a preprocessor
7149# variable assignment
7150_assignment_rhs_match = _re_match(r"\s*(=|:=|\+=)\s*(.*)")
7151
7152# Special characters/strings while expanding a macro ('(', ')', ',', and '$(')
7153_macro_special_search = _re_search(r"\(|\)|,|\$\(")
7154
7155# Special characters/strings while expanding a string (quotes, '\', and '$(')
7156_string_special_search = _re_search(r'"|\'|\\|\$\(')
7157
7158# Special characters/strings while expanding a symbol name. Also includes
7159# end-of-line, in case the macro is the last thing on the line.
7160_name_special_search = _re_search(r'[^A-Za-z0-9_$/.-]|\$\(|$')
7161
7162# A valid right-hand side for an assignment to a string symbol in a .config
7163# file, including escaped characters. Extracts the contents.
7164_conf_string_match = _re_match(r'"((?:[^\\"]|\\.)*)"')