diff -r 22486c9c7b15 -r 378360dbbdba releasing/cbrtools/perl/envsize.bat --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/releasing/cbrtools/perl/envsize.bat Wed Jun 30 11:35:58 2010 +0800 @@ -0,0 +1,98 @@ +@REM Copyright (c) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). +@REM All rights reserved. +@REM This component and the accompanying materials are made available +@REM under the terms of the License "Eclipse Public License v1.0" +@REM which accompanies this distribution, and is available +@REM at the URL "http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html". +@REM +@REM Initial Contributors: +@REM Nokia Corporation - initial contribution. +@REM +@REM Contributors: +@REM +@REM Description: +@REM + +@rem = '--*-Perl-*-- +@echo off +if "%OS%" == "Windows_NT" goto WinNT +perl -x -S "%0" %1 %2 %3 %4 %5 %6 %7 %8 %9 +goto endofperl +:WinNT +perl -w -x -S "%0" %* +if NOT "%COMSPEC%" == "%SystemRoot%\system32\cmd.exe" goto endofperl +if %errorlevel% == 9009 echo You do not have Perl in your PATH. +if errorlevel 1 goto script_failed_so_exit_with_non_zero_val 2>nul +goto endofperl +@rem '; +#!perl -w +#line 15 +$0 =~ s|\.bat||i; +unless (-f $0) { + $0 =~ s|.*[/\\]||; + for (".", split ';', $ENV{PATH}) { + $_ = "." if $_ eq ""; + $0 = "$_/$0" , goto doit if -f "$_/$0"; + } + die "`$0' not found.\n"; +} +doit: exec "perl", "-x", $0, @ARGV; +die "Failed to exec `$0': $!"; +__END__ + +=head1 NAME + +runperl.bat - "universal" batch file to run perl scripts + +=head1 SYNOPSIS + + C:\> copy runperl.bat foo.bat + C:\> foo + [..runs the perl script `foo'..] + + C:\> foo.bat + [..runs the perl script `foo'..] + + +=head1 DESCRIPTION + +This file can be copied to any file name ending in the ".bat" suffix. +When executed on a DOS-like operating system, it will invoke the perl +script of the same name, but without the ".bat" suffix. It will +look for the script in the same directory as itself, and then in +the current directory, and then search the directories in your PATH. + +It relies on the C operator, so you will need to make sure +that works in your perl. + +This method of invoking perl scripts has some advantages over +batch-file wrappers like C: it avoids duplication +of all the code; it ensures C<$0> contains the same name as the +executing file, without any egregious ".bat" suffix; it allows +you to separate your perl scripts from the wrapper used to +run them; since the wrapper is generic, you can use symbolic +links to simply link to C, if you are serving your +files on a filesystem that supports that. + +On the other hand, if the batch file is invoked with the ".bat" +suffix, it does an extra C. This may be a performance +issue. You can avoid this by running it without specifying +the ".bat" suffix. + +Perl is invoked with the -x flag, so the script must contain +a C<#!perl> line. Any flags found on that line will be honored. + +=head1 BUGS + +Perl is invoked with the -S flag, so it will search the PATH to find +the script. This may have undesirable effects. + +=head1 SEE ALSO + +perl, perlwin32, pl2bat.bat + +=cut + + +__END__ +:endofperl