Annotation of src/usr.bin/xstr/xstr.1, Revision 1.2
1.2 ! deraadt 1: .\" $OpenBSD: xstr.1,v 1.4 1994/11/26 09:25:22 jtc Exp $
1.1 deraadt 2: .\" $NetBSD: xstr.1,v 1.4 1994/11/26 09:25:22 jtc Exp $
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35: .\" @(#)xstr.1 8.2 (Berkeley) 12/30/93
36: .\"
37: .Dd December 30, 1993
38: .Dt XSTR 1
39: .Os BSD 3
40: .Sh NAME
41: .Nm xstr
42: .Nd "extract strings from C programs to implement shared strings"
43: .Sh SYNOPSIS
44: .Nm xstr
45: .Op Fl c
46: .Op Fl l Ar array
47: .Op Fl
48: .Op Ar file
49: .Sh DESCRIPTION
50: .Nm Xstr
51: maintains a file
52: .Pa strings
53: into which strings in component parts of a large program are hashed.
54: These strings are replaced with references to this common area.
55: This serves to implement shared constant strings, most useful if they
56: are also read-only.
57: .Pp
58: Available options:
59: .Bl -tag -width Ds
60: .It Fl
61: .Nm Xstr
62: reads from the standard input.
63: .It Fl c
64: .Nm Xstr
65: will extract the strings from the C source
66: .Ar file
67: or the standard input
68: .Pq Fl ,
69: replacing
70: string references by expressions of the form (&xstr[number])
71: for some number.
72: An appropriate declaration of
73: .Nm xstr
74: is prepended to the file.
75: The resulting C text is placed in the file
76: .Pa x.c ,
77: to then be compiled.
78: The strings from this file are placed in the
79: .Pa strings
80: data base if they are not there already.
81: Repeated strings and strings which are suffixes of existing strings
82: do not cause changes to the data base.
83: .It Fl l Ar array
84: Specify the named array in program references to abstracted
85: strings. The default array name is xstr.
86: .El
87: .Pp
88: After all components of a large program have been compiled a file
89: .Pa xs.c
90: declaring the common
91: .Nm xstr
92: space can be created by a command of the form
93: .Bd -literal -offset indent
94: xstr
95: .Ed
96: .Pp
97: The file
98: .Pa xs.c
99: should then be compiled and loaded with the rest
100: of the program.
101: If possible, the array can be made read-only (shared) saving
102: space and swap overhead.
103: .Pp
104: .Nm Xstr
105: can also be used on a single file.
106: A command
107: .Bd -literal -offset indent
108: xstr name
109: .Ed
110: .Pp
111: creates files
112: .Pa x.c
113: and
114: .Pa xs.c
115: as before, without using or affecting any
116: .Pa strings
117: file in the same directory.
118: .Pp
119: It may be useful to run
120: .Nm xstr
121: after the C preprocessor if any macro definitions yield strings
122: or if there is conditional code which contains strings
123: which may not, in fact, be needed.
124: An appropriate command sequence for running
125: .Nm xstr
126: after the C preprocessor is:
127: .Pp
128: .Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
129: cc \-E name.c | xstr \-c \-
130: cc \-c x.c
131: mv x.o name.o
132: .Ed
133: .Pp
134: .Nm Xstr
135: does not touch the file
136: .Pa strings
137: unless new items are added, thus
138: .Xr make 1
139: can avoid remaking
140: .Pa xs.o
141: unless truly necessary.
142: .Sh FILES
143: .Bl -tag -width /tmp/xsxx* -compact
144: .It Pa strings
145: Data base of strings
146: .It Pa x.c
147: Massaged C source
148: .It Pa xs.c
149: C source for definition of array `xstr'
150: .It Pa /tmp/xs*
151: Temp file when `xstr name' doesn't touch
152: .Pa strings
153: .El
154: .Sh SEE ALSO
155: .Xr mkstr 1
156: .Sh BUGS
157: If a string is a suffix of another string in the data base,
158: but the shorter string is seen first by
159: .Nm xstr
160: both strings will be placed in the data base, when just
161: placing the longer one there will do.
162: .Sh HISTORY
163: The
164: .Nm
165: command appeared in
166: .Bx 3.0 .