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emrun.bat
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emrun.bat
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:: Entry point for running python scripts on windows systems.
::
:: Automatically generated by `create_entry_points.py`; DO NOT EDIT.
::
:: To make modifications to this file, edit `tools/run_python.bat` and then run
:: `tools/create_entry_points.py`
:: All env. vars specified in this file are to be local only to this script.
@setlocal
:: -E will not ignore _PYTHON_SYSCONFIGDATA_NAME an internal
:: of cpython used in cross compilation via setup.py.
@set _PYTHON_SYSCONFIGDATA_NAME=
@set EM_PY=%EMSDK_PYTHON%
@if "%EM_PY%"=="" (
set EM_PY=python
)
:: Python Windows bug https://bugs.python.org/issue34780: If this script was invoked via a
:: shared stdin handle from the parent process, and that parent process stdin handle is in
:: a certain state, running python.exe might hang here. To work around this, if
:: EM_WORKAROUND_PYTHON_BUG_34780 is defined, invoke python with '< NUL' stdin to avoid
:: sharing the parent's stdin handle to it, avoiding the hang.
:: On Windows 7, the compiler batch scripts are observed to exit with a non-zero errorlevel,
:: even when the python executable above did succeed and quit with errorlevel 0 above.
:: On Windows 8 and newer, this issue has not been observed. It is possible that this
:: issue is related to the above python bug, but this has not been conclusively confirmed,
:: so using a separate env. var EM_WORKAROUND_WIN7_BAD_ERRORLEVEL_BUG to enable the known
:: workaround this issue, which is to explicitly quit the calling process with the previous
:: errorlevel from the above command.
:: Also must use goto to jump to the command dispatch, since we cannot invoke emcc from
:: inside a if() block, because if a cmdline param would contain a char '(' or ')', that
:: would throw off the parsing of the cmdline arg.
@if "%EM_WORKAROUND_PYTHON_BUG_34780%"=="" (
@if "%EM_WORKAROUND_WIN7_BAD_ERRORLEVEL_BUG%"=="" (
goto NORMAL
) else (
goto NORMAL_EXIT
)
) else (
@if "%EM_WORKAROUND_WIN7_BAD_ERRORLEVEL_BUG%"=="" (
goto MUTE_STDIN
) else (
goto MUTE_STDIN_EXIT
)
)
:NORMAL_EXIT
@"%EM_PY%" -E "%~dp0\%~n0.py" %*
@exit %ERRORLEVEL%
:MUTE_STDIN
@"%EM_PY%" -E "%~dp0\%~n0.py" %* < NUL
@exit /b %ERRORLEVEL%
:MUTE_STDIN_EXIT
@"%EM_PY%" -E "%~dp0\%~n0.py" %* < NUL
@exit %ERRORLEVEL%
:NORMAL
@"%EM_PY%" -E "%~dp0\%~n0.py" %*