#!/bin/bash
#
# texinfo_deleteCrossReferences.sh -- This function looks inside
# texinfo source files, from section level on, and removes all cross
# referece definitions related to a documentation entry. Use this
# function in coordination with texinfo_deleteEntry function, in order
# to keep cross reference information, inside the documentation
# manual, syncronized.
#
# Copyright (C) 2009, 2010, 2011 The CentOS Artwork SIG
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at
# your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
# WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
# General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
#
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
# $Id$
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
function texinfo_deleteCrossReferences {
local -a PATTERN
local -a REPLACE
# Define documentation entry.
local MANUAL_ENTRY="$1"
# Verify documentation entry. If documentation entry is empty,
# stop script execution with an error message.
if [[ $MANUAL_ENTRY == '' ]];then
cli_printMessage "`gettext "The first positional parameter cannot be empty."`" --as-error-line
fi
# Build the node string using entry location.
local NODE=$(${MANUAL_BACKEND}_getNode "$MANUAL_ENTRY")
# Define regular expression patterns for texinfo cross reference
# commands.
PATTERN[0]="@(pxref|xref|ref)\{(${NODE})\}"
PATTERN[1]="^(\* ${NODE}:(.*)?:(.*)?)$"
# Define replacement string for missing entries. It is convenient
# to keep missing entries in documentation for documentation team
# to know. Removing the missing cross reference may intorudce
# confussion. Imagine that! you are spending lots of hours in an
# article and suddenly one of your cross refereces disappears with
# no visible reason, with the next working copy update you
# perform. That's frustrating. Instead, when centos-art.sh script
# finds a missing cross reference it removes the link and remark
# the issue for you to act on it.
REPLACE[0]='--- @strong{'`gettext "Removed"`'}(\1:\2) ---'
REPLACE[1]='@comment --- '`gettext "Removed"`'(\1) ---'
# Define list of entries to process.
local MANUAL_ENTRIES=$(cli_getFilesList ${MANUAL_BASEDIR} \
--pattern=".*\.${MANUAL_EXTENSION}")
# Update node-related cross references. The node-related cross
# reference definition, long ones specially, could require more
# than one line to be set. By default, GNU sed does not matches
# newline characters in the pattern space, so we need to make use
# of `label' feature and the `N' command in order to build a
# pattern space that includes the newline character in it. Here we
# use the `a' letter to name the label we use, followed by N
# command to add a newline to the pattern space, the s command to
# make the pattern replacement using the `g' flag to make it
# global and finaly the command `b' to branch label named `a'.
#
# Inside the pattern space, the `\<' and `\>' are used to restrict
# the match pattern to a word boundary. The word boundary
# restriction applied here is required to avoid undesired
# replacements when we replace singular words with their plurals.
# For example, if we need to change the word `Manual' to its
# plular (i.e., `Manuals'), and no boundary restriction is used in
# the pattern space to do that, we might end up having words like
# `Manualsssss'. This is because this sed command might be applied
# to the same file many times; and each time it is applied a new
# `Manuals' replaces the previous `Manuals' replacement to form
# `Manualss', `Manualsss', and so on for each interaction.
sed -r -i ":a;N;s!\<${PATTERN[0]}\>!${REPLACE[0]}!g;ba" ${MANUAL_ENTRIES}
# Update menu-related cross references. Menu-related cross
# references hardly appear in more than one line, so there is no
# need to complicate much the replacement command.
sed -r -i "s!\<${PATTERN[1]}\>!${REPLACE[1]}!" ${MANUAL_ENTRIES}
}