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sbang
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sbang
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#!/bin/bash
##############################################################################
# Copyright (c) 2013-2018, Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC.
# Produced at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
#
# This file is part of Spack.
# Created by Todd Gamblin, tgamblin@llnl.gov, All rights reserved.
# LLNL-CODE-647188
#
# For details, see https://github.com/spack/spack
# Please also see the NOTICE and LICENSE files for our notice and the LGPL.
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License (as
# published by the Free Software Foundation) version 2.1, February 1999.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
# WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the IMPLIED WARRANTY OF
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the terms and
# conditions of the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
# License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
##############################################################################
#
# `sbang`: Run scripts with long shebang lines.
#
# Many operating systems limit the length of shebang lines, making it
# hard to use interpreters that are deep in the directory hierarchy.
# `sbang` can run such scripts, either as a shebang interpreter, or
# directly on the command line.
#
# Usage
# -----------------------------
# Suppose you have a script, long-shebang.sh, like this:
#
# 1 #!/very/long/path/to/some/interpreter
# 2
# 3 echo "success!"
#
# Invoking this script will result in an error on some OS's. On
# Linux, you get this:
#
# $ ./long-shebang.sh
# -bash: ./long: /very/long/path/to/some/interp: bad interpreter:
# No such file or directory
#
# On Mac OS X, the system simply assumes the interpreter is the shell
# and tries to run with it, which is likely not what you want.
#
#
# `sbang` on the command line
# -----------------------------
# You can use `sbang` in two ways. The first is to use it directly,
# from the command line, like this:
#
# $ sbang ./long-shebang.sh
# success!
#
#
# `sbang` as the interpreter
# -----------------------------
# You can also use `sbang` *as* the interpreter for your script. Put
# `#!/bin/bash /path/to/sbang` on line 1, and move the original
# shebang to line 2 of the script:
#
# 1 #!/bin/bash /path/to/sbang
# 2 #!/long/path/to/real/interpreter with arguments
# 3
# 4 echo "success!"
#
# $ ./long-shebang.sh
# success!
#
# On Linux, you could shorten line 1 to `#!/path/to/sbang`, but other
# operating systems like Mac OS X require the interpreter to be a
# binary, so it's best to use `sbang` as a `bash` argument.
# Obviously, for this to work, `sbang` needs to have a short enough
# path that *it* will run without hitting OS limits.
#
# For Lua, scripts the second line can't start with #!, as # is not
# the comment character in lua (even though lua ignores #! on the
# *first* line of a script). So, instrument a lua script like this,
# using -- instead of # on the second line:
#
# 1 #!/bin/bash /path/to/sbang
# 2 --!/long/path/to/lua with arguments
# 3
# 4 print "success!"
#
# How it works
# -----------------------------
# `sbang` is a very simple bash script. It looks at the first two
# lines of a script argument and runs the last line starting with
# `#!`, with the script as an argument. It also forwards arguments.
#
# First argument is the script we want to actually run.
script="$1"
# Search the first two lines of script for interpreters.
lines=0
while read line && ((lines < 2)) ; do
if [[ "$line" = '#!'* ]]; then
interpreter="${line#\#!}"
elif [[ "$line" = '//!'*node* ]]; then
interpreter="${line#//!}"
elif [[ "$line" = '--!'*lua* ]]; then
interpreter="${line#--!}"
fi
lines=$((lines+1))
done < "$script"
# this is ineeded for scripts with sbang parameter
# like ones in intltool
# #!/<spack-long-path>/perl -w
# this is the interpreter line with all the parameters as a vector
interpreter_v=(${interpreter})
# this is the single interpreter path
interpreter_f="${interpreter_v[0]}"
# Invoke any interpreter found, or raise an error if none was found.
if [[ -n "$interpreter_f" ]]; then
if [[ "${interpreter_f##*/}" = "perl" ]]; then
exec $interpreter_v -x "$@"
else
exec $interpreter_v "$@"
fi
else
echo "error: sbang found no interpreter in $script"
exit 1
fi