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# Copyright (c) 2011 Google Inc. All rights reserved. # Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be # found in the LICENSE file. """gypsh output module gypsh is a GYP shell. It's not really a generator per se. All it does is fire up an interactive Python session with a few local variables set to the variables passed to the generator. Like gypd, it's intended as a debugging aid, to facilitate the exploration of .gyp structures after being processed by the input module. The expected usage is "gyp -f gypsh -D OS=desired_os". """ import code import sys # All of this stuff about generator variables was lovingly ripped from gypd.py. # That module has a much better description of what's going on and why. _generator_identity_variables = [ 'EXECUTABLE_PREFIX', 'EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX', 'INTERMEDIATE_DIR', 'PRODUCT_DIR', 'RULE_INPUT_ROOT', 'RULE_INPUT_DIRNAME', 'RULE_INPUT_EXT', 'RULE_INPUT_NAME', 'RULE_INPUT_PATH', 'SHARED_INTERMEDIATE_DIR', ] generator_default_variables = { } for v in _generator_identity_variables: generator_default_variables[v] = '<(%s)' % v def GenerateOutput(target_list, target_dicts, data, params): locals = { 'target_list': target_list, 'target_dicts': target_dicts, 'data': data, } # Use a banner that looks like the stock Python one and like what # code.interact uses by default, but tack on something to indicate what # locals are available, and identify gypsh. banner='Python %s on %s\nlocals.keys() = %s\ngypsh' % \ (sys.version, sys.platform, repr(sorted(locals.keys()))) code.interact(banner, local=locals)