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-rwxr-xr-xindra/cmake/run_build_test.py76
1 files changed, 41 insertions, 35 deletions
diff --git a/indra/cmake/run_build_test.py b/indra/cmake/run_build_test.py
index fdbb0a75f7..f02c5e98b4 100755
--- a/indra/cmake/run_build_test.py
+++ b/indra/cmake/run_build_test.py
@@ -51,11 +51,13 @@ import HTMLParser
import re
import signal
import subprocess
+import logging
-def main(command, libpath=[], vars={}):
+def main(command, arguments=[], libpath=[], vars={}):
"""Pass:
- command is a sequence (e.g. a list) of strings. The first item in the list
- must be the command name, the rest are its arguments.
+ command is the command to be executed
+
+ argument is a sequence (e.g. a list) of strings to be passed to command
libpath is a sequence of directory pathnames. These will be appended to
the platform-specific dynamic library search path environment variable.
@@ -85,7 +87,7 @@ def main(command, libpath=[], vars={}):
# might not exist; instead of KeyError, just use an empty string.
dirs = os.environ.get(var, "").split(os.pathsep)
# Append the sequence in libpath
- print "%s += %r" % (var, libpath)
+ log.info("%s += %r" % (var, libpath))
for dir in libpath:
# append system paths at the end
if dir in ('/lib', '/usr/lib'):
@@ -103,20 +105,20 @@ def main(command, libpath=[], vars={}):
# Now rebuild the path string. This way we use a minimum of separators
# -- and we avoid adding a pointless separator when libpath is empty.
os.environ[var] = os.pathsep.join(clean_dirs)
- print "%s = %r" % (var, os.environ[var])
+ log.info("%s = %r" % (var, os.environ[var]))
# Now handle arbitrary environment variables. The tricky part is ensuring
# that all the keys and values we try to pass are actually strings.
if vars:
- print "Setting:"
- for key, value in vars.iteritems():
- print "%s=%s" % (key, value)
+ log.info("Setting: %s" % ("\n".join(["%s=%s" % (key, value) for key, value in vars.iteritems()])))
os.environ.update(dict([(str(key), str(value)) for key, value in vars.iteritems()]))
# Run the child process.
- print "Running: %s" % " ".join(command)
+ command_list = [command]
+ command_list.extend(arguments)
+ log.info("Running: %s" % " ".join(command_list))
# Make sure we see all relevant output *before* child-process output.
sys.stdout.flush()
try:
- return subprocess.call(command)
+ return subprocess.call(command_list)
except OSError as err:
# If the caller is trying to execute a test program that doesn't
# exist, we want to produce a reasonable error message rather than a
@@ -126,9 +128,9 @@ def main(command, libpath=[], vars={}):
if err.errno != errno.ENOENT:
raise
# In practice, the pathnames into CMake's build tree are so long as to
- # obscure the name of the test program. Just print its basename.
- print "No such program %s; check for preceding build errors" % \
- os.path.basename(command[0])
+ # obscure the name of the test program. Just log its basename.
+ log.warn("No such program %s; check for preceding build errors" % \
+ os.path.basename(command[0]))
# What rc should we simulate for missing executable? Windows produces
# 9009.
return 9009
@@ -172,10 +174,10 @@ def translate_rc(rc):
table = get_windows_table()
symbol, desc = table[hexrc]
except Exception, err:
- print >>sys.stderr, "(%s -- carrying on)" % err
- return "terminated with rc %s (%s)" % (rc, hexrc)
+ log.error("(%s -- carrying on)" % err)
+ log.error("terminated with rc %s (%s)" % (rc, hexrc))
else:
- return "terminated with rc %s: %s: %s" % (hexrc, symbol, desc)
+ log.info("terminated with rc %s: %s: %s" % (hexrc, symbol, desc))
else:
# On Posix, negative rc means the child was terminated by signal -rc.
@@ -303,22 +305,26 @@ def get_windows_table():
return _windows_table
+log=logging.getLogger(__name__)
+logging.basicConfig()
+
if __name__ == "__main__":
- from optparse import OptionParser
- parser = OptionParser(usage="usage: %prog [options] command args...")
- # We want optparse support for the options we ourselves handle -- but we
- # DO NOT want it looking at options for the executable we intend to run,
- # rejecting them as invalid because we don't define them. So configure the
- # parser to stop looking for options as soon as it sees the first
- # positional argument (traditional Unix syntax).
- parser.disable_interspersed_args()
- parser.add_option("-D", "--define", dest="vars", default=[], action="append",
- metavar="VAR=value",
- help="Add VAR=value to the env variables defined")
- parser.add_option("-l", "--libpath", dest="libpath", default=[], action="append",
- metavar="DIR",
- help="Add DIR to the platform-dependent DLL search path")
- opts, args = parser.parse_args()
+ import argparse
+ parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
+ parser.add_argument("-d", "--debug", dest="loglevel", action="store_const",
+ const=logging.DEBUG, default=logging.WARNING)
+ parser.add_argument("-D", "--define", dest="vars", default=[], action="append",
+ metavar="VAR=value",
+ help="Add VAR=value to the env variables defined")
+ parser.add_argument("-l", "--libpath", dest="libpath", default=[], action="append",
+ metavar="DIR",
+ help="Add DIR to the platform-dependent DLL search path")
+ parser.add_argument("command")
+ parser.add_argument('args', nargs=argparse.REMAINDER)
+ args = parser.parse_args()
+
+ log.setLevel(args.loglevel)
+
# What we have in opts.vars is a list of strings of the form "VAR=value"
# or possibly just "VAR". What we want is a dict. We can build that dict by
# constructing a list of ["VAR", "value"] pairs -- so split each
@@ -326,9 +332,9 @@ if __name__ == "__main__":
# "VAR=some=user=string"). To handle the case of just "VAR", append "" to
# the list returned by split(), then slice off anything after the pair we
# want.
- rc = main(command=args, libpath=opts.libpath,
- vars=dict([(pair.split('=', 1) + [""])[:2] for pair in opts.vars]))
+ rc = main(command=args.command, arguments=args.args, libpath=args.libpath,
+ vars=dict([(pair.split('=', 1) + [""])[:2] for pair in args.vars]))
if rc not in (None, 0):
- print >>sys.stderr, "Failure running: %s" % " ".join(args)
- print >>sys.stderr, "Error %s: %s" % (rc, translate_rc(rc))
+ log.error("Failure running: %s" % " ".join([args.command] + args.args))
+ log.error("Error %s: %s" % (rc, translate_rc(rc)))
sys.exit((rc < 0) and 255 or rc)