gettext.h: add parentheses around N_ expansion if supported

The gettext N_ macro is used to mark strings for translation
without actually translating them.  At runtime the string is
expected to be passed to the gettext API for translation.

If two N_ macro invocations appear next to each other with only
whitespace (or nothing at all) between them, the two separate
strings will be marked for translation, but the preprocessor
will then silently combine the strings into one and at runtime
the string passed to gettext will not match the strings that
were translated so no translation will actually occur.

Avoid this by adding parentheses around the expansion of the
N_ macro so that instead of ending up with two adjacent strings
that are then combined by the preprocessor, two adjacent strings
surrounded by parentheses result instead which causes a compile
error so the mistake can be quickly found and corrected.

However, since these string literals are typically assigned to
static variables and not all compilers support parenthesized
string literal assignments, allow this to be controlled by the
Makefile with the default only enabled when the compiler is
known to support the syntax.

For now only __GNUC__ enables this by default which covers both
gcc and clang which should result in early detection of any
adjacent N_ macros.

Although the necessary tests make the affected files a bit less
elegant, the benefit of avoiding propagation of a translation-
marking error to all the translation teams thus creating extra
work for them when the error is eventually detected and fixed
would seem to outweigh the minor inelegance the additional
configuration tests introduce.

Helped-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Signed-off-by: Kyle J. McKay <mackyle@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit is contained in:
Kyle J. McKay 2015-01-11 12:09:22 -08:00 committed by Junio C Hamano
parent 7ba46269a0
commit 290c8e7a3f
3 changed files with 45 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -339,6 +339,15 @@ all::
# return NULL when it receives a bogus time_t.
#
# Define HAVE_CLOCK_GETTIME if your platform has clock_gettime in librt.
#
# Define USE_PARENS_AROUND_GETTEXT_N to "yes" if your compiler happily
# compiles the following initialization:
#
# static const char s[] = ("FOO");
#
# and define it to "no" if you need to remove the parentheses () around the
# constant. The default is "auto", which means to use parentheses if your
# compiler is detected to support it.
GIT-VERSION-FILE: FORCE
@$(SHELL_PATH) ./GIT-VERSION-GEN
@ -946,6 +955,14 @@ ifneq (,$(SOCKLEN_T))
BASIC_CFLAGS += -Dsocklen_t=$(SOCKLEN_T)
endif
ifeq (yes,$(USE_PARENS_AROUND_GETTEXT_N))
BASIC_CFLAGS += -DUSE_PARENS_AROUND_GETTEXT_N=1
else
ifeq (no,$(USE_PARENS_AROUND_GETTEXT_N))
BASIC_CFLAGS += -DUSE_PARENS_AROUND_GETTEXT_N=0
endif
endif
ifeq ($(uname_S),Darwin)
ifndef NO_FINK
ifeq ($(shell test -d /sw/lib && echo y),y)

View File

@ -63,6 +63,30 @@ const char *Q_(const char *msgid, const char *plu, unsigned long n)
}
/* Mark msgid for translation but do not translate it. */
#if !USE_PARENS_AROUND_GETTEXT_N
#define N_(msgid) msgid
#else
/*
* Strictly speaking, this will lead to invalid C when
* used this way:
* static const char s[] = N_("FOO");
* which will expand to
* static const char s[] = ("FOO");
* and in valid C, the initializer on the right hand side must
* be without the parentheses. But many compilers do accept it
* as a language extension and it will allow us to catch mistakes
* like:
* static const char *msgs[] = {
* N_("one")
* N_("two"),
* N_("three"),
* NULL
* };
* (notice the missing comma on one of the lines) by forcing
* a compilation error, because parenthesised ("one") ("two")
* will not get silently turned into ("onetwo").
*/
#define N_(msgid) (msgid)
#endif
#endif

View File

@ -828,4 +828,8 @@ struct tm *git_gmtime_r(const time_t *, struct tm *);
#define gmtime_r git_gmtime_r
#endif
#if !defined(USE_PARENS_AROUND_GETTEXT_N) && defined(__GNUC__)
#define USE_PARENS_AROUND_GETTEXT_N 1
#endif
#endif