#! /bin/sh # Check for illegal external symbols. # t=__wt.$$ trap 'rm -f $t' 0 1 2 3 13 15 case `uname` in Darwin) NM='nm -gUo $f | egrep " T | D " | sed "s/ _/ /"' ;; *) # We require GNU nm, which may not be installed. type nm > /dev/null 2>&1 && (nm --version | grep 'GNU nm') > /dev/null 2>&1 || exit 0 NM='nm --extern-only --defined-only --print-file-name $f | egrep -v "__bss_start|_edata|_end|_fini|_init"' ;; esac check() { (sed -e '/^#/d' s_export.list && eval $NM | sed 's/.* //' | egrep -v '^__wt') | sort | uniq -u | egrep -v \ 'lz4_extension_init|snappy_extension_init|zlib_extension_init|zstd_extension_init' > $t test -s $t && { echo "=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=" echo 'unexpected external symbols in the WiredTiger library' echo "=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=" cat $t exit 1 } exit 0 } # This check would normally be done after the library is built, but this way # we don't forget about a symbol during development. We usually build in the # top-level or build_posix directories, check the previously built library, # if it exists. And, allow this script to be run from the top-level directory # as well as locally. for d in .. ../build_posix; do for ext in a so dylib; do f="$d/.libs/libwiredtiger.$ext" test -f $f && check $f done done echo "skipped: libwiredtiger.[a|so|dylib] not found" exit 0