nasm/tools/cleanfile
H. Peter Anvin e1f985c167 Reorganize the source code into subdirectories
Make the source code easier to understand and keep track of by
organizing it into subdirectories depending on the function.

Signed-off-by: H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>
2016-05-25 12:06:29 -07:00

176 lines
3.4 KiB
Perl
Executable file

#!/usr/bin/perl -w
#
# Clean a text file -- or directory of text files -- of stealth whitespace.
# WARNING: this can be a highly destructive operation. Use with caution.
#
use bytes;
use File::Basename;
# Default options
$max_width = 79;
# Clean up space-tab sequences, either by removing spaces or
# replacing them with tabs.
sub clean_space_tabs($)
{
no bytes; # Tab alignment depends on characters
my($li) = @_;
my($lo) = '';
my $pos = 0;
my $nsp = 0;
my($i, $c);
for ($i = 0; $i < length($li); $i++) {
$c = substr($li, $i, 1);
if ($c eq "\t") {
my $npos = ($pos+$nsp+8) & ~7;
my $ntab = ($npos >> 3) - ($pos >> 3);
$lo .= "\t" x $ntab;
$pos = $npos;
$nsp = 0;
} elsif ($c eq "\n" || $c eq "\r") {
$lo .= " " x $nsp;
$pos += $nsp;
$nsp = 0;
$lo .= $c;
$pos = 0;
} elsif ($c eq " ") {
$nsp++;
} else {
$lo .= " " x $nsp;
$pos += $nsp;
$nsp = 0;
$lo .= $c;
$pos++;
}
}
$lo .= " " x $nsp;
return $lo;
}
# Compute the visual width of a string
sub strwidth($) {
no bytes; # Tab alignment depends on characters
my($li) = @_;
my($c, $i);
my $pos = 0;
my $mlen = 0;
for ($i = 0; $i < length($li); $i++) {
$c = substr($li,$i,1);
if ($c eq "\t") {
$pos = ($pos+8) & ~7;
} elsif ($c eq "\n") {
$mlen = $pos if ($pos > $mlen);
$pos = 0;
} else {
$pos++;
}
}
$mlen = $pos if ($pos > $mlen);
return $mlen;
}
$name = basename($0);
@files = ();
while (defined($a = shift(@ARGV))) {
if ($a =~ /^-/) {
if ($a eq '-width' || $a eq '-w') {
$max_width = shift(@ARGV)+0;
} else {
print STDERR "Usage: $name [-width #] files...\n";
exit 1;
}
} else {
push(@files, $a);
}
}
foreach $f ( @files ) {
print STDERR "$name: $f\n";
if (! -f $f) {
print STDERR "$f: not a file\n";
next;
}
if (!open(FILE, '+<', $f)) {
print STDERR "$name: Cannot open file: $f: $!\n";
next;
}
binmode FILE;
# First, verify that it is not a binary file; consider any file
# with a zero byte to be a binary file. Is there any better, or
# additional, heuristic that should be applied?
$is_binary = 0;
while (read(FILE, $data, 65536) > 0) {
if ($data =~ /\0/) {
$is_binary = 1;
last;
}
}
if ($is_binary) {
print STDERR "$name: $f: binary file\n";
next;
}
seek(FILE, 0, 0);
$in_bytes = 0;
$out_bytes = 0;
$blank_bytes = 0;
@blanks = ();
@lines = ();
$lineno = 0;
while ( defined($line = <FILE>) ) {
$lineno++;
$in_bytes += length($line);
$line =~ s/[ \t\r]*$//; # Remove trailing spaces
$line = clean_space_tabs($line);
if ( $line eq "\n" ) {
push(@blanks, $line);
$blank_bytes += length($line);
} else {
push(@lines, @blanks);
$out_bytes += $blank_bytes;
push(@lines, $line);
$out_bytes += length($line);
@blanks = ();
$blank_bytes = 0;
}
$l_width = strwidth($line);
if ($max_width && $l_width > $max_width) {
print STDERR
"$f:$lineno: line exceeds $max_width characters ($l_width)\n";
}
}
# Any blanks at the end of the file are discarded
if ($in_bytes != $out_bytes) {
# Only write to the file if changed
seek(FILE, 0, 0);
print FILE @lines;
if ( !defined($where = tell(FILE)) ||
!truncate(FILE, $where) ) {
die "$name: Failed to truncate modified file: $f: $!\n";
}
}
close(FILE);
}