pmcpp — simple preprocessor for the Performance Co-Pilot

Synopsis

pmcpp [-Prs?] [-D name[=value] ...] [-I dir ...] [infile]

Description

pmcpp provides a very simple pre-processor originally designed for manipulating Performance Metric Name Space (PMNS) files for the Performance Co-Pilot (PCP), but later generalized to provide conditional blocks, include file processing, in-line shell command execution and macro substitution for arbitrary files. It is most commonly used internally to process the PMNS file(s) after pmLoadNameSpace(3) or pmLoadASCIINameSpace(3) is called and to pre-process the configuration files for pmlogger(1).

Input lines are read from infile (or standard input if infile is not specified), processed and written to standard output.

All C-style comments of the form /* ... */ are stripped from the input stream.

There are no predefined macros for pmcpp although macros may be defined on the command line using the -D option, where name and value must follow the same rules as described below for the #define directive.

pmcpp accepts the following directives in the input stream (like cpp(1)):

Macro substitution is achieved by breaking the input stream into words separated by white space or characters that are not valid in a macro name, i.e. not alphanumeric and not underscore. Each word is checked and if it matches a macro name, the word is replaced by the macro value, otherwise the word is unchanged.

There is generally one output line for each input line, although the line may be empty if the text has been stripped due to the handling of comments or conditional directives. When there is a change in the input stream, an additional output line is generated of the form:

# lineno "filename"

to indicate the following line of output corresponds to line number lineno of the input file filename.

Options

The available command line options are:

-D name[=value], --define=name[=value]

Defines a macro with an optional value, as described earlier.

-I dir, --include=dir

An additional directory to search for include files.

-P

Suppresses the generation of the linemarker lines, described above.

-s, --shell

Changes the expected input style from C-like to shell-like (where # is a comment prefix). This forces the following changes in pmcpp behaviour:

·

The control prefix character changes from # to %, so %include for example.

·

No comment stripping is performed.

-r, --restrict

Provide finer control of macro expansion - this option restricts macro substitution to words that match the patterns #name or #{name} or if -s is specified, then %name or %{name}. In this mode, the macro name alone in the input stream will never be expanded, however in control lines (like #ifdef) the macro name should appear alone with out the prefix character or the curly braces (refer to the Examples below).

Important cpp(1) features that are not supported by pmcpp include:

Examples

Command: pmcpp
Input Output
# 1 "<stdin>"
#define MYDOMAIN 27
root { root {
   foo   MYDOMAIN:0:0   foo   27:0:0
} }

For the following examples, the file frequencies contains the lines:

%define dk_freq 1minute
%define cpu_freq '15 sec'
Command: pmcpp -rs
Input Output
# get logging frequencies # get logging frequencies
# e.g. dk_freq macro # e.g. dk_freq macro
%include "frequencies"
log mandatory on %dk_freq { log mandatory on 1minute {
   disk.dev   disk.dev
} }
# note no % for want_cpu here # note no % for want_cpu here
%ifdef want_cpu
%define cpu_pfx 'kernel.all.cpu.'
log mandatory on %cpu_freq {
   %{cpu_pfx}user
   %{cpu_pfx}sys
}
%endif
Command: pmcpp -rs -Dwant_cpu
Input Output
# get logging frequencies # get logging frequencies
# e.g. dk_freq macro # e.g. dk_freq macro
%include "frequencies"
log mandatory on %dk_freq { log mandatory on 1minute {
   disk.dev   disk.dev
} }
# note no % for want_cpu here # note no % for want_cpu here
%ifdef want_cpu
%define cpu_pfx 'kernel.all.cpu.'
log mandatory on %cpu_freq { log mandatory on 15 sec {
   %{cpu_pfx}user   kernel.all.cpu.user
   %{cpu_pfx}sys   kernel.all.cpu.sys
} }
%endif

PCP Environment

Environment variables with the prefix PCP_ are used to parameterize the file and directory names used by PCP. On each installation, the file /etc/pcp.conf contains the local values for these variables. The $PCP_CONF variable may be used to specify an alternative configuration file, as described in pcp.conf(5).

For environment variables affecting PCP tools, see pmGetOptions(3).

See Also

cpp(1), pmLoadASCIINameSpace(3), pmLoadNameSpace(3), pcp.conf(5), pcp.env(5) and PMNS(5).

Referenced By

pmLoadASCIINameSpace(3), pmlogger(1), PMNS(5).

Performance Co-Pilot