It is inconvenient that we also generate the output files when we
update the grammar file, and it's somewhat unexpected. Let's not do
that.
* src/main.c (main): Skip generation when --update is passed.
* src/getargs.c (usage): Update the help message.
* doc/bison.texi (Bison Options): Likewise.
* tests/input.at: Check that we don't generate the output.
After all, this is clearly harmless.
* src/muscle-tab.c (muscle_percent_define_insert): Let equal
definitions of a %define variable be only a warning.
Adjust test cases.
* tests/input.at ("%define" backward compatibility): Don't define
twice "api.namespace", so that we don't get an error, which stops the
process too soon to see an error about the value given to
'lr.keep-unreachable-state'.
Don't repeat the name of the warning in the sub messages. E.g.,
remove the second "[-Wother]" in the following message
foo.y:2.1-27: warning: %define variable 'parse.error' redefined [-Wother]
%define parse.error verbose
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
foo.y:1.1-27: previous definition [-Wother]
%define parse.error verbose
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* src/complain.c (error_message): Don't print the warning type when
it's indented.
Adjust test cases.
Reported by Derek Clegg
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2019-01/msg00021.html
aux/parser-internal.h:429:12: error: 'syntax_error' has no out-of-line virtual
method definitions; its vtable will be emitted in every translation unit
[-Werror,-Wweak-vtables]
struct syntax_error : std::runtime_error
To avoid this warning, we need syntax_error to have a virtual function
defined in a compilation unit. Let it be the destructor. To comply
with C++98, this dtor should be 'throw()'. Merely making YY_NOEXCEPT
be 'throw()' in C++98 triggers
errors (http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2019-01/msg00022.html),
so let's introduce YY_NOTHROW and flag only ~syntax_error with it.
Also, since we now have an explicit dtor, we need to provide an copy
ctor.
* configure.ac (warn_cxx): Add -Wweak-vtables.
* data/skeletons/c++.m4 (YY_NOTHROW): New.
(syntax_error): Declare the dtor, and define the copy ctor.
* data/skeletons/glr.cc, data/skeletons/lalr1.cc (~syntax_error):
Define.
We should use -ffixit and --update to clean files with duplicate
directives. And we should complain only once about duplicate obsolete
directives: keep only the "duplicate" warning. Let's start with %yacc.
For instance on:
%fixed-output_files
%fixed-output-files
%yacc
%%
exp:
This run of bison:
$ bison /tmp/foo.y -u
foo.y:1.1-19: warning: deprecated directive, use '%fixed-output-files' [-Wdeprecated]
%fixed-output_files
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
foo.y:2.1-19: warning: duplicate directive [-Wother]
%fixed-output-files
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
foo.y:1.1-19: previous declaration
%fixed-output_files
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
foo.y:3.1-5: warning: duplicate directive [-Wother]
%yacc
^~~~~
foo.y:1.1-19: previous declaration
%fixed-output_files
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
bison: file 'foo.y' was updated (backup: 'foo.y~')
gives:
%fixed-output-files
%%
exp:
* src/location.h, src/location.c (location_empty): New.
* src/complain.h, src/complain.c (duplicate_directive): New.
* src/getargs.h, src/getargs.c (yacc_flag): Instead of a Boolean, be
the location of the definition.
Update dependencies.
* src/scan-gram.l (%yacc, %fixed-output-files): Move the handling of
its warnings to...
* src/parse-gram.y (do_yacc): This new function.
* tests/input.at (Deprecated Directives): Adjust expectations.
* src/fixits.h, src/fixits.c (fixits_empty): New.
* src/complain.c (deprecated_directive): Register the Wdeprecated
fixits only if -Wdeprecated was enabled, so that we don't apply
updates if the user didn't ask for them.
* src/main.c (main): If there were fixits, issue a warning suggesting
running with --update.
Free uniqstrs after the fixits, since the latter use the former.
* tests/headers.at, tests/input.at: Update expectations.
* src/fixits.c (fixits_run): If erase the content of a line, also
erase the following \n.
* tests/input.at (Deprecated directives): Update expectations.
Reported by Derek Clegg.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2019-01/msg00004.html
* configure.ac (warn_common): Add -Wimplicit-fallthrough.
This does trigger failures in the test suite.
* data/skeletons/glr.c, data/skeletons/lalr1.cc,
* data/skeletons/yacc.c, tests/c++.at:
Make fall-throws explicit.
Reported by Derek Clegg.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2019-01/msg00006.html
Clang does not like this:
template <typename D>
struct basic_symbol : D
{
basic_symbol();
};
struct by_type {};
struct symbol_type : basic_symbol<by_type>
{
symbol_type(){}
};
It gives:
$ clang++-mp-7.0 -Wundefined-func-template foo.cc -c
foo.cc:11:3: warning: instantiation of function 'basic_symbol<by_type>::basic_symbol'
required here, but no definition is available [-Wundefined-func-template]
symbol_type(){}
^
foo.cc:4:3: note: forward declaration of template entity is here
basic_symbol();
^
foo.cc:11:3: note: add an explicit instantiation declaration to suppress this warning
if 'basic_symbol<by_type>::basic_symbol' is explicitly instantiated in
another translation unit
symbol_type(){}
^
1 warning generated.
The same applies for the basic_symbol's destructor and `clear()`.
* configure.ac (warn_cxx): Add -Wundefined-func-template.
This triggered one failure in the test suite:
* tests/headers.at (Sane headers): here, where we check that we can
compile the generated headers in other compilation units than the
parser's.
Add a variant type to make sure that basic_symbol and symbol_type are
properly generated in this case.
* data/skeletons/c++.m4 (basic_symbol): Inline the definitions of the
destructor and of `clear` in the class definition.
Avoid duplicate warnings about %error-verbose, once for deprecation,
another for duplicate. Keep only the duplicate warning for the second
occurrence of %error-verbose.
This will help removal fixits.
* src/scan-gram.l (%error-verbose): Return as a PERCENT_ERROR_VERBOSE
token.
* src/parse-gram.y (do_error_verbose): New.
Use it.
* src/muscle-tab.c (muscle_percent_variable_update): Handle pseudo
variables such as %error-verbose.
* src/parse-gram.y: Use the location of the whole definition to record
the location of a %define variable, instead of just the name of the
variable.
Adjust tests.
Currently the diagnostics for %name-prefix are not precise enough. In
particular, they does not show that braces must be used instead of
quotes.
Before:
foo.y:3.1-14: warning: deprecated directive, use '%define api.prefix' [-Wdeprecated]
%name-prefix = "foo"
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
After:
foo.y:3.1-20: warning: deprecated directive, use '%define api.prefix {foo}' [-Wdeprecated]
%name-prefix = "foo"
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
To do this we need the value passed to %name-prefix, so move the
warning from the scanner to the parser.
Accuracy will be very important for the forthcoming changes.
* src/parse-gram.y (do_name_prefix): New.
(PERCENT_NAME_PREFIX): Have a semantic value: the raw source, with
possibly underscores, equal sign, and spaces. This is used to provide
a more accurate message. It does not take comments into account,
but...
* src/scan-gram.l (%name-prefix): Delegate the warnings to the parser.
* tests/headers.at, tests/input.at: Adjust expectations.
This line:
slice<stack_symbol_type, stack_type> slice (yystack_, yylen);
triggers warnings:
parse.h:1790:11: note: shadowed declaration is here
Reported by Frank Heckenbach.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2019-01/msg00002.html
* configure.ac (warn_c): Move -Wshadow to...
(warn_common): here.
* data/skeletons/stack.hh (slice): Define as an inner class of stack.
* data/skeletons/lalr1.cc: Adjust.
Rename the variable as 'range' instead of 'slice'.
Commit 90a8537e62 was right, but issued
two error messages. Commit 80ef7e7639
tried to address that by mapping yychar and yytoken to empty, but that
completely breaks the invariants of glr.c. In particular, yygetToken
can be called repeatedly and is expected to return the latest result,
unless yytoken is YYEMPTY. Since the previous attempt was "recording"
that the token was coming from an exception by setting it to YYEMPTY,
instead of getting again the faulty token, we fetched another one.
Rather, revert to the first approach: map yytoken to "invalid token",
but record in yychar the fact that we come from an exception thrown in
the scanner.
* data/skeletons/glr.c (YYFAULTYTOK): New.
(yygetToken): Use it to record syntax errors from the scanner.
* tests/c++.at (Syntax error as exception): In addition to checking
syntax_error with error recovery, make sure it also behaves as
expected without.
The previous name was historical and inconsistent.
* src/muscle-tab.c (define_directive): Use the proper value passing
syntax, based on the muscle kind.
(muscle_percent_variable_update): Use the right value passing syntax.
Migrate from parser_class_name to api.parser.class.
* data/skeletons: Migrate from parser_class_name to api.parser.class.
* doc/bison.texi (%define Summary): Document both parser_class_name
and api.parser.class.
Promote the latter over the former.
Reported by Askar Safin.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2019-01/msg00000.html
* data/skeletons/glr.c (yygetToken): Return YYEMPTY when an exception
is thrown.
* data/skeletons/lalr1.cc: Log when an exception is caught.
* tests/c++.at (Syntax error as exception): Be sure to recover from
error before triggering another error.
* tests/local.at (AT_LOCATION_TYPE_IF): Turn into...
(AT_LOCATION_TYPE_SPAN_IF): this.
Adjust dependencies.
* tests/headers.at (Several parsers): Add another C++ parser,
which uses the first C++ parser's locations.
Suggested by Wolfgang Thaller.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2018-12/msg00081.html
* data/c++.m4 (basic_symbol, by_type): Instead of provide either move
or copy constructor, always provide the copy one.
* tests/c++.at (C++ Variant-based Symbols Unit Tests): Check it.
Currently the following piece of code crashes (with parse.assert),
because we don't record that s was moved-from, and we invoke its dtor.
{
auto s = parser::make_INT (42);
auto s2 = std::move (s);
}
Reported by Wolfgang Thaller.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2018-12/msg00077.html
* data/c++.m4 (by_type): Provide a move-ctor.
(basic_symbol): Be sure not to read a moved-from value.
* tests/c++.at (C++ Variant-based Symbols Unit Tests): Check this case.
* tests/c++.at: Use AT_YYLEX_PROTOTYPE etc.
Which requires that we use the same argument names (lvalp, etc.).
* tests/local.at (AT_NAME_PREFIX): Fix regex.
Instead of introducing make_symbol (whose name, btw, somewhat
infringes on the user's "name space", if she defines a token named
"symbol"), let's make the construction of symbol_type safer, using
assertions.
For instance with:
%token ':' <std::string> ID <int> INT;
generate:
symbol_type (int token, const std::string&);
symbol_type (int token, const int&);
symbol_type (int token);
It does mean that now named token constructors (make_ID, make_INT,
etc.) go through a useless assert, but I think we can ignore this: I
assume any decent compiler will inline the symbol_type ctor inside the
make_TOKEN functions, which will show that the assert is trivially
verified, hence I expect no code will be emitted for it. And anyway,
that's an assert, NDEBUG controls it.
* data/c++.m4 (symbol_type): Turn into a subclass of
basic_symbol<by_type>.
Declare symbol constructors when variants are enabled.
* data/variant.hh (_b4_type_constructor_declare)
(_b4_type_constructor_define): Replace with...
(_b4_symbol_constructor_declare, _b4_symbol_constructor_def): these.
Generate symbol_type constructors.
* doc/bison.texi (Complete Symbols): Document.
* tests/types.at: Check.
On
%token <int> FOO BAR
we currently generate make_FOO(int) and make_BAR(int). However, in
order to factor their scanners, some users would also like to have
make_symbol(tok, int), where tok is FOO or BAR. To ensure type
safety, add assertions that do check that value type and token type
match. Bind this assertion to the parse.assert %define variable.
Suggested by Frank Heckenbach.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2018-12/msg00034.html
Should also match expectations from Аскар Сафин.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2018-12/msg00023.html
* data/variant.hh: Use b4_token_visible_if where applicable.
(_b4_type_constructor_declare, _b4_type_constructor_define): New.
Use them.
Bitten by macros, again.
See 680b715518.
* data/variant.hh (_b4_symbol_constructor_declare)
(_b4_symbol_constructor_define): Do not use user types, which can
include commas as in `std::pair<int, int>`, to macros.
* tests/local.at: Adjust the lex related macros to support the
case of token constructors.
* tests/types.at: Also check token constructors on types with commas.
Prompted by Rici Lake.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2018-10/msg00000.html
We have four classes of directives that declare symbols: %nterm,
%type, %token, and the family of %left etc. Currently not all of them
support the possibility to have several type tags (`<type>`), and not
all of them support the fact of not having any type tag at all
(%type). Let's unify this.
- %type
POSIX Yacc specifies that %type is for nonterminals only. However,
some Bison users want to use it for both tokens and nterms
(actually, Bison's own grammar does this in several places, e.g.,
CHAR). So it should accept char/string literals.
As a consequence cannot be used to declare tokens with their alias:
`%type foo "foo"` would be ambiguous (are we defining foo = "foo",
or are these two different symbols?)
POSIX specifies that it is OK to use %type without a type tag. I'm
not sure what it means, but we support it.
- %token
Accept token declarations with number and string literal:
(ID|CHAR) NUM? STRING?.
- %left, etc.
They cannot be the same as %token, because we accept to declare the
symbol with %token, and to then qualify its precedence with %left.
Then `%left foo "foo"` would also be ambiguous: foo="foo", or two
symbols.
They cannot be simply a list of identifiers, but POSIX Yacc says we
can declare token numbers here. I personally think this is a bad
idea, precedence management is tricky in itself and should not be
cluttered with token declaration issues.
We used to accept declaring a token number on a string literal here
(e.g., `%left "token" 1`). This is abnormal. Either the feature is
useful, and then it should be supported in %token, or it's useless
and we should not support it in corner cases.
- %nterm
Obviously cannot accept tokens, nor char/string literals. Does not
exist in POSIX Yacc, but since %type also works for terminals, it is
a nice option to have.
* src/parse-gram.y: Avoid relying on side effects. For instance, get
rid of current_type, rather, build the list of symbols and iterate
over it to assign the type.
It's not always possible/convenient. For instance, we still use
current_class.
Prefer "decl" to "def", since in the rest of the implementation we
actually "declare" symbols, we don't "define" them.
(token_decls, token_decls_for_prec, symbol_decls, nterm_decls): New.
Use them for %token, %left, %type and %nterm.
* src/symlist.h, src/symlist.c (symbol_list_type_set): New.
* tests/regression.at b/tests/regression.at
(Token number in precedence declaration): We no longer accept
to give a number to string literals.