#!/bin/sh

# 04.06.2005 Volker Quetschke
# Test for a bug that dmake complained about a continuation char followed
# by a newline. This could happen if \<nl> was used in an imported 
# environment variable.
# This bug was <http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=310107?>

: ${DMAKEPROG:=dmake}
file1="mymakefile.mk"
tmpfiles="$file1"
STARTDIR="`pwd`"; WORKDIR="$0-OUTPUT"
CLEANUP="eval (cd $STARTDIR; rm -rf $WORKDIR)"
$CLEANUP # Zap remnants of any failed run
mkdir "$WORKDIR"; cd "$WORKDIR"

trap "{ echo 'trapped signal - removing temporary files' ; $CLEANUP ; }" 1 2 3 15

# Remember to quote variables in generated makefiles ( $ -> \$ ).
# Also quote line continuations ( \<nl> -> \\<nl> ).
cat > $file1 <<EOT
# Testing continuation char in recipes
SHELL*:=/bin/sh 
SHELLFLAGS*:=-ce
.IMPORT : MYMACRO
all:
	+echo "\$(MYMACRO)"

EOT

MYMACRO=`echo 'aa\\\\\naa'` ;export MYMACRO; ../${DMAKEPROG} -r -f $file1
result=$?

test $result -eq 0 && echo "Success - Cleaning up" && $CLEANUP
test $result -ne 0 && echo "Failure!"
exit $result

