PROLOG | NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | OPERANDS | STDIN | INPUT FILES | ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES | ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS | STDOUT | STDERR | OUTPUT FILES | EXTENDED DESCRIPTION | EXIT STATUS | CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS | APPLICATION USAGE | EXAMPLES | RATIONALE | FUTURE DIRECTIONS | SEE ALSO | COPYRIGHT |
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M4(1P) POSIX Programmer's Manual M4(1P)
This manual page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual. The Linux implementation of this interface may differ (consult the corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior), or the interface may not be implemented on Linux.
m4 — macro processor
m4 [-s] [-D name[=val]]... [-U name]... file...
The m4 utility is a macro processor that shall read one or more text files, process them according to their included macro statements, and write the results to standard output.
The m4 utility shall conform to the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2017, Section 12.2, Utility Syntax Guidelines, except that the order of the -D and -U options shall be significant, and options can be interspersed with operands. The following options shall be supported: -s Enable line synchronization output for the c99 preprocessor phase (that is, #line directives). -D name[=val] Define name to val or to null if =val is omitted. -U name Undefine name.
The following operand shall be supported: file A pathname of a text file to be processed. If no file is given, or if it is '-', the standard input shall be read.
The standard input shall be a text file that is used if no file operand is given, or if it is '-'.
The input file named by the file operand shall be a text file.
The following environment variables shall affect the execution of m4: LANG Provide a default value for the internationalization variables that are unset or null. (See the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2017, Section 8.2, Internationalization Variables for the precedence of internationalization variables used to determine the values of locale categories.) LC_ALL If set to a non-empty string value, override the values of all the other internationalization variables. LC_CTYPE Determine the locale for the interpretation of sequences of bytes of text data as characters (for example, single-byte as opposed to multi-byte characters in arguments and input files). LC_MESSAGES Determine the locale that should be used to affect the format and contents of diagnostic messages written to standard error. NLSPATH Determine the location of message catalogs for the processing of LC_MESSAGES.
Default.
The standard output shall be the same as the input files, after being processed for macro expansion.
The standard error shall be used to display strings with the errprint macro, macro tracing enabled by the traceon macro, the defined text for macros written by the dumpdef macro, or for diagnostic messages.
None.
The m4 utility shall compare each token from the input against the set of built-in and user-defined macros. If the token matches the name of a macro, then the token shall be replaced by the macro's defining text, if any, and rescanned for matching macro names. Once no portion of the token matches the name of a macro, it shall be written to standard output. Macros may have arguments, in which case the arguments shall be substituted into the defining text before it is rescanned. Macro calls have the form: name(arg1, arg2, ..., argn) Macro names shall consist of letters, digits, and underscores, where the first character is not a digit. Tokens not of this form shall not be treated as macros. The application shall ensure that the <left-parenthesis> immediately follows the name of the macro. If a token matching the name of a macro is not followed by a <left-parenthesis>, it is handled as a use of that macro without arguments. If a macro name is followed by a <left-parenthesis>, its arguments are the <comma>-separated tokens between the <left- parenthesis> and the matching <right-parenthesis>. Unquoted white-space characters preceding each argument shall be ignored. All other characters, including trailing white-space characters, are retained. <comma> characters enclosed between <left- parenthesis> and <right-parenthesis> characters do not delimit arguments. Arguments are positionally defined and referenced. The string "$1" in the defining text shall be replaced by the first argument. Systems shall support at least nine arguments; only the first nine can be referenced, using the strings "$1" to "$9", inclusive. The string "$0" is replaced with the name of the macro. The string "$#" is replaced by the number of arguments as a string. The string "$*" is replaced by a list of all of the arguments, separated by <comma> characters. The string "$@" is replaced by a list of all of the arguments separated by <comma> characters, and each argument is quoted using the current left and right quoting strings. The string "${" produces unspecified behavior. If fewer arguments are supplied than are in the macro definition, the omitted arguments are taken to be null. It is not an error if more arguments are supplied than are in the macro definition. No special meaning is given to any characters enclosed between matching left and right quoting strings, but the quoting strings are themselves discarded. By default, the left quoting string consists of a grave accent (backquote) and the right quoting string consists of an acute accent (single-quote); see also the changequote macro. Comments are written but not scanned for matching macro names; by default, the begin-comment string consists of the <number-sign> character and the end-comment string consists of a <newline>. See also the changecom and dnl macros. The m4 utility shall make available the following built-in macros. They can be redefined, but once this is done the original meaning is lost. Their values shall be null unless otherwise stated. In the descriptions below, the term defining text refers to the value of the macro: the second argument to the define macro, among other things. Except for the first argument to the eval macro, all numeric arguments to built-in macros shall be interpreted as decimal values. The string values produced as the defining text of the decr, divnum, incr, index, len, and sysval built-in macros shall be in the form of a decimal-constant as defined in the C language. changecom The changecom macro shall set the begin-comment and end-comment strings. With no arguments, the comment mechanism shall be disabled. With a single non-null argument, that argument shall become the begin-comment and the <newline> shall become the end-comment string. With two non-null arguments, the first argument shall become the begin-comment string and the second argument shall become the end-comment string. The behavior is unspecified if either argument is provided but null. Systems shall support comment strings of at least five characters. changequote The changequote macro shall set the begin-quote and end-quote strings. With no arguments, the quote strings shall be set to the default values (that is, `'). The behavior is unspecified if there is a single argument or either argument is null. With two non-null arguments, the first argument shall become the begin- quote string and the second argument shall become the end-quote string. Systems shall support quote strings of at least five characters. decr The defining text of the decr macro shall be its first argument decremented by 1. It shall be an error to specify an argument containing any non-numeric characters. The behavior is unspecified if decr is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. define The second argument shall become the defining text of the macro whose name is the first argument. It is unspecified whether the define macro deletes all prior definitions of the macro named by its first argument or preserves all but the current definition of the macro. The behavior is unspecified if define is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. defn The defining text of the defn macro shall be the quoted definition (using the current quoting strings) of its arguments. The behavior is unspecified if defn is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. divert The m4 utility maintains nine temporary buffers, numbered 1 to 9, inclusive. When the last of the input has been processed, any output that has been placed in these buffers shall be written to standard output in buffer-numerical order. The divert macro shall divert future output to the buffer specified by its argument. Specifying no argument or an argument of 0 shall resume the normal output process. Output diverted to a stream with a negative number shall be discarded. Behavior is implementation-defined if a stream number larger than 9 is specified. It shall be an error to specify an argument containing any non-numeric characters. divnum The defining text of the divnum macro shall be the number of the current output stream as a string. dnl The dnl macro shall cause m4 to discard all input characters up to and including the next <newline>. dumpdef The dumpdef macro shall write the defined text to standard error for each of the macros specified as arguments, or, if no arguments are specified, for all macros. errprint The errprint macro shall write its arguments to standard error. The behavior is unspecified if errprint is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. eval The eval macro shall evaluate its first argument as an arithmetic expression, using signed integer arithmetic with at least 32-bit precision. At least the following C-language operators shall be supported, with precedence, associativity, and behavior as described in Section 1.1.2.1, Arithmetic Precision and Operations: () unary + unary - ~ ! binary * / % binary + binary - << >> < <= > >= == != binary & ^ | && || Systems shall support octal and hexadecimal numbers as in the ISO C standard. The second argument, if specified, shall set the radix for the result; if the argument is blank or unspecified, the default is 10. Behavior is unspecified if the radix falls outside the range 2 to 36, inclusive. The third argument, if specified, sets the minimum number of digits in the result. Behavior is unspecified if the third argument is less than zero. It shall be an error to specify the second or third argument containing any non-numeric characters. The behavior is unspecified if eval is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. ifdef If the first argument to the ifdef macro is defined, the defining text shall be the second argument. Otherwise, the defining text shall be the third argument, if specified, or the null string, if not. The behavior is unspecified if ifdef is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. ifelse The ifelse macro takes three or more arguments. If the first two arguments compare as equal strings (after macro expansion of both arguments), the defining text shall be the third argument. If the first two arguments do not compare as equal strings and there are three arguments, the defining text shall be null. If the first two arguments do not compare as equal strings and there are four or five arguments, the defining text shall be the fourth argument. If the first two arguments do not compare as equal strings and there are six or more arguments, the first three arguments shall be discarded and processing shall restart with the remaining arguments. The behavior is unspecified if ifelse is not immediately followed by a <left- parenthesis>. include The defining text for the include macro shall be the contents of the file named by the first argument. It shall be an error if the file cannot be read. The behavior is unspecified if include is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. incr The defining text of the incr macro shall be its first argument incremented by 1. It shall be an error to specify an argument containing any non-numeric characters. The behavior is unspecified if incr is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. index The defining text of the index macro shall be the first character position (as a string) in the first argument where a string matching the second argument begins (zero origin), or -1 if the second argument does not occur. The behavior is unspecified if index is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. len The defining text of the len macro shall be the length (as a string) of the first argument. The behavior is unspecified if len is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. m4exit Exit from the m4 utility. If the first argument is specified, it shall be the exit code. If no argument is specified, the exit code shall be zero. It shall be an error to specify an argument containing any non-numeric characters. If the first argument is zero or no argument is specified, and an error has previously occurred (for example, a file operand that could not be opened), it is unspecified whether the exit status is zero or non-zero. m4wrap The first argument shall be processed when EOF is reached. If the m4wrap macro is used multiple times, the arguments specified shall be processed in the order in which the m4wrap macros were processed. The behavior is unspecified if m4wrap is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. maketemp The defining text shall be the first argument, with any trailing 'X' characters replaced with the current process ID as a string. The behavior is unspecified if maketemp is not immediately followed by a <left- parenthesis>. mkstemp The defining text shall be as if it were the resulting pathname after a successful call to the mkstemp() function defined in the System Interfaces volume of POSIX.1‐2017 called with the first argument to the macro invocation. If a file is created, that file shall be closed. If a file could not be created, the m4 utility shall write a diagnostic message to standard error and shall continue processing input but its final exit status shall be non-zero; the defining text of the macro shall be the empty string. The behavior is unspecified if mkstemp is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. popdef The popdef macro shall delete the current definition of its arguments, replacing that definition with the previous one. If there is no previous definition, the macro is undefined. The behavior is unspecified if popdef is not immediately followed by a <left- parenthesis>. pushdef The pushdef macro shall be equivalent to the define macro with the exception that it shall preserve any current definition for future retrieval using the popdef macro. The behavior is unspecified if pushdef is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. shift The defining text for the shift macro shall be a comma- separated list of its arguments except the first one. Each argument shall be quoted using the current quoting strings. The behavior is unspecified if shift is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. sinclude The sinclude macro shall be equivalent to the include macro, except that it shall not be an error if the file is inaccessible. The behavior is unspecified if sinclude is not immediately followed by a <left- parenthesis>. substr The defining text for the substr macro shall be the substring of the first argument beginning at the zero- offset character position specified by the second argument. The third argument, if specified, shall be the number of characters to select; if not specified, the characters from the starting point to the end of the first argument shall become the defining text. It shall not be an error to specify a starting point beyond the end of the first argument and the defining text shall be null. It shall be an error to specify an argument containing any non-numeric characters. The behavior is unspecified if substr is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. syscmd The syscmd macro shall interpret its first argument as a shell command line. The defining text shall be the string result of that command. The string result shall not be rescanned for macros while setting the defining text. No output redirection shall be performed by the m4 utility. The exit status value from the command can be retrieved using the sysval macro. The behavior is unspecified if syscmd is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. sysval The defining text of the sysval macro shall be the exit value of the utility last invoked by the syscmd macro (as a string). traceon The traceon macro shall enable tracing for the macros specified as arguments, or, if no arguments are specified, for all macros. The trace output shall be written to standard error in an unspecified format. traceoff The traceoff macro shall disable tracing for the macros specified as arguments, or, if no arguments are specified, for all macros. translit The defining text of the translit macro shall be the first argument with every character that occurs in the second argument replaced with the corresponding character from the third argument. If no replacement character is specified for some source character because the second argument is longer than the third argument, that character shall be deleted from the first argument in translit's defining text. The behavior is unspecified if the '-' character appears within the second or third argument anywhere besides the first or last character. The behavior is unspecified if the same character appears more than once in the second argument. The behavior is unspecified if translit is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. undefine The undefine macro shall delete all definitions (including those preserved using the pushdef macro) of the macros named by its arguments. The behavior is unspecified if undefine is not immediately followed by a <left-parenthesis>. undivert The undivert macro shall cause immediate output of any text in temporary buffers named as arguments, or all temporary buffers if no arguments are specified. Buffers can be undiverted into other temporary buffers. Undiverting shall discard the contents of the temporary buffer. The behavior is unspecified if an argument contains any non-numeric characters.
The following exit values shall be returned: 0 Successful completion. >0 An error occurred If the m4exit macro is used, the exit value can be specified by the input file.
Default. The following sections are informative.
The defn macro is useful for renaming macros, especially built- ins. Since eval defers to the ISO C standard, some operations have undefined behavior. In some implementations, division or remainder by zero cause a fatal signal, even if the division occurs on the short-circuited branch of "&&" or "||". Any operation that overflows in signed arithmetic produces undefined behavior. Likewise, using the shift operators with a shift amount that is not positive and smaller than the precision is undefined, as is shifting a negative number to the right. Historically, not all implementations obeyed C-language precedence rules: '~' and '!' were lower than '=='; '==' and '!=' were not lower than '<'; and '|' was not lower than '^'; the liberal use of "()" can force the desired precedence even with these non-compliant implementations. Furthermore, some traditional implementations treated '^' as an exponentiation operator, although most implementations now use "**" as an extension for this purpose. When a macro has been multiply defined via the pushdef macro, it is unspecified whether the define macro will alter only the most recent definition (as though by popdef and pushdef), or replace the entire stack of definitions with a single definition (as though by undefine and pushdef). An application desiring particular behavior for the define macro in this case can redefine it accordingly. Applications should use the mkstemp macro instead of the obsolescent maketemp macro for creating temporary files.
If the file m4src contains the lines: The value of `VER' is "VER". ifdef(`VER', ``VER'' is defined to be VER., VER is not defined.) ifelse(VER, 1, ``VER'' is `VER'.) ifelse(VER, 2, ``VER'' is `VER'., ``VER'' is not 2.) end then the command m4 m4src or the command: m4 -U VER m4src produces the output: The value of VER is "VER". VER is not defined. VER is not 2. end The command: m4 -D VER m4src produces the output: The value of VER is "". VER is defined to be . VER is not 2. end The command: m4 -D VER=1 m4src produces the output: The value of VER is "1". VER is defined to be 1. VER is 1. VER is not 2. end The command: m4 -D VER=2 m4src produces the output: The value of VER is "2". VER is defined to be 2. VER is 2. end
Historic System V-based behavior treated "${" in a macro definition as two literal characters. However, this sequence is left unspecified so that implementations may offer extensions such as "${11}" meaning the eleventh positional parameter. Macros can still be defined with appropriate uses of nested quoting to result in a literal "${" in the output after rescanning removes the nested quotes. In the translit built-in, historic System V-based behavior treated '-' as a literal; GNU behavior treats it as a range. This version of the standard allows either behavior.
None.
c99(1p) The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2017, Chapter 8, Environment Variables, Section 12.2, Utility Syntax Guidelines
Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic
form from IEEE Std 1003.1-2017, Standard for Information
Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The
Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, 2018 Edition, Copyright
(C) 2018 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. In the event of any
discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and The
Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group
Standard is the referee document. The original Standard can be
obtained online at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .
Any typographical or formatting errors that appear in this page
are most likely to have been introduced during the conversion of
the source files to man page format. To report such errors, see
https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .
IEEE/The Open Group 2017 M4(1P)