xstr man page on DigitalUNIX

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xstr(1)								       xstr(1)

NAME
       xstr - Extracts strings from C programs to implement shared strings

SYNOPSIS
       xstr [-c] [file | -]

       The  xstr command maintains a file called strings into which strings in
       component parts of a large program are hashed.

OPTIONS
       Extracts strings from the specified file.

DESCRIPTION
       The strings extracted by xstr are  replaced  with  references  to  this
       array. This serves to implement shared constant strings, most useful if
       they are also read-only.

       The following command extracts the strings from the C source  in	 file,
       replacing  string references by expressions of the form (&xstr[number])
       for some number.	 xstr -c file

       The xstr command uses file as input; the resulting C text is placed  in
       the  file  x.c  to  then	 be  compiled.	The strings from this file are
       appended to the strings file if they are not  there  already.  Repeated
       strings	and strings that are suffixes of existing strings do not cause
       changes to the file.

       If a string is a suffix of another string in the file, but the  shorter
       string  is  seen	 first	by  xstr,  both strings are placed in the file
       strings.

       After all components of a large	program	 are  compiled,	 a  file  xs.c
       declaring the common xstr space can be created by a command of the fol‐
       lowing form: xstr

       Compile and load this xs.c file with the rest of the program.   Some  C
       compilers may, by default, put strings in a read-only text section.

       The xstr command can also be used on a single file.  The following com‐
       mand creates files x.c and xs.c as before, without using or affecting a
       strings file in the same directory.  xstr file

       It may be useful to run xstr after the C preprocessor if any macro def‐
       initions yield strings or if there is conditional  code	that  contains
       strings	that may not be needed.	 The xstr command reads from its stan‐
       dard input when the argument - (dash) is given. An appropriate  command
       sequence for running xstr after the C preprocessor is as follows: cc -E
       file.c | xstr -c - cc -c x.c mv x.o file.o

       The xstr command does not touch the file strings unless new  items  are
       added, thus make can avoid remaking xs.o unless truly necessary.

EXAMPLES
       To  extract  the	 strings  from	the  C source in the file.c parameter,
       replacing string references by expressions of the form (&xstr[number]),
       enter: xstr -c file

	      An  appropriate  declaration  of	the xstr array is prepended to
	      file.  The resulting C text is placed in the file x.c,  to  then
	      be compiled.  To declare the common xstr array space in the xs.c
	      file, enter: xstr

FILES
       File that contains the extracted strings.  Modified C source.  C source
       for  definition	of  array  xstr.  Temporary file when the xstr command
       does not touch strings.

SEE ALSO
       Commands:  mkstr(1)

								       xstr(1)
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