Museum

Home

Lab Overview

Retrotechnology Articles

Online Manuals

⇒ xstr(1) — NEWS-os 5.0.1

Media Vault

Software Library

Restoration Projects

Artifacts Sought



xstr(1-BSD)       MISC. REFERENCE MANUAL PAGES        xstr(1-BSD)



NAME
     xstr - extract strings from C programs to  implement  shared
     strings

SYNOPSIS
     xstr [ -c ] [ - ] [ file ]

DESCRIPTION
     Xstr maintains a file strings into  which  strings  in  com-
     ponent  parts  of a large program are hashed.  These strings
     are replaced with references  to  this  common  area.   This
     serves  to implement shared constant strings, most useful if
     they are also read-only.

     The command

          xstr -c name

     will extract the strings from the C source in name,  replac-
     ing   string   references   by   expressions   of  the  form
     (&xstr[number]) for some number.  An appropriate declaration
     of  xstr  is prepended to the file.  The resulting C text is
     placed in the file x.c, to then be  compiled.   The  strings
     from  this  file are placed in the strings data base if they
     are not there already.  Repeated strings and  strings  which
     are suffices of existing strings do not cause changes to the
     data base.

     After all components of a large program have been compiled a
     file  xs.c declaring the common xstr space can be created by
     a command of the form

          xstr

     This xs.c file should then be compiled and loaded  with  the
     rest  of  the  program.   If possible, the array can be made
     read-only (shared) saving space and swap overhead.

     Xstr can also be used on a single file.  A command

          xstr name

     creates files x.c and  xs.c  as  before,  without  using  or
     affecting any strings file in the same directory.

     It may be useful to run xstr after the C preprocessor if any
     macro  definitions  yield strings or if there is conditional
     code which contains strings  which  may  not,  in  fact,  be
     needed.   Xstr  reads from its standard input when the argu-
     ment `-' is given.  An appropriate command sequence for run-
     ning xstr after the C preprocessor is:




                                                                1





xstr(1-BSD)       MISC. REFERENCE MANUAL PAGES        xstr(1-BSD)



          cc -E name.c | xstr -c -
          cc -c x.c
          mv x.o name.o

     Xstr does not touch the file strings unless  new  items  are
     added, thus make can avoid remaking xs.o unless truly neces-
     sary.

FILES
     strings        Data base of strings
     x.c       Massaged C source
     xs.c      C source for definition of array `xstr'
     /tmp/xs*  Temp file when `xstr name' doesn't touch strings

BUGS
     If a string is a suffix of another string in the data  base,
     but  the  shorter  string is seen first by xstr both strings
     will be placed in the  data  base,  when  just  placing  the
     longer one there will do.




































                                                                2



Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026