GCC's -Wchar-subscripts may report issues on platforms where char is
unsigned. Unfortunately the current CI does not reproduce the
problem. But that would allow contributors to report issues if the
warning appears somewhere.
See 139d065594.
Problem reported by Andy Fiddaman in:
https://lists.gnu.org/r/bug-bison/2019-12/msg00021.html
* configure.ac (warn_common): Add -Wchar-subscripts.
Problem reported by Andy Fiddaman in:
https://lists.gnu.org/r/bug-bison/2019-12/msg00021.html
* data/skeletons/yacc.c (yy_reduce_print, yy_lac, yysyntax_error)
(yyreturn): If I might be a char, write a[+I] instead of a[I],
so that ‘gcc -Wchar-subscripts’ does not complain.
Another breakage revealed by vcsn.
* data/skeletons/c++.m4 (yytranslate_): Do not hard code "yy" and
"parser", both can be changed by the user.
Actually, since we are in the parser itself, there's really no need to
qualify the type.
* data/skeletons/glr.c (YYASSERT): Rename as...
(YY_ASSERT): this, for consistency with yacc.c, and also to emphasize
the fact that this is not for the end user (YY_ prefix).
* tests/glr-regression.at: Define parse.assert.
Now that we use small integral types, possibly unsigned (e.g.,
unsigned char), to store state numbers, using -1 to denote an empty
state (i.e., a state that stores no semantical value) is very
dangerous: it will be confused with state 255, which might be
non-empty.
Rather than allocating a larger range of state numbers to keep the
empty-state apart, let's use the number of a state known to store no
value. The initial state, numbered 0, seems to fit perfectly the job.
Reported by Frank Heckenbach.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2019-11/msg00016.html
* data/skeletons/lalr1.cc (empty_state): Be 0.
It is not used. And its implementation was wrong when api.token.raw
was defined, as it was still mapping to the external token numbers,
instead of the internal ones. Besides it was provided only when
api.token.constructor is defined, yet always declared.
* data/skeletons/c++.m4 (by_type::token): Remove, useless.
Reported by Frank Heckenbach.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2019-11/msg00016.html
The cast is needed when yytranslate_'s argument type is token_type,
i.e., when api.token.constructor is defined.
373. types.at:138: testing lalr1.cc api.value.type=variant api.token.constructor ...
======== Testing with C++ standard flags: ''
../../tests/types.at:138: bison --color=no -fno-caret -o test.cc test.y
../../tests/types.at:138: $CXX $CXXFLAGS $CPPFLAGS $LDFLAGS -o test test.cc $LIBS
stderr:
test.cc:966:16: error: result of comparison of constant 257 with
expression of type 'yy::parser::token_type'
(aka 'yy::parser::token::yytokentype') is always true
[-Werror,-Wtautological-constant-out-of-range-compare]
else if (t <= user_token_number_max_)
~ ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1 error generated.
It is because it is expected that when api.token.constructor is
defined, only symbol constructors will be used, that yytranslate_ then
takes a token_type. But it is wrong: we still allow literal
characters in this case, as demonstrated by test 373 for instance.
%define api.value.type variant
%define api.token.constructor
%token <std::pair<int, int>> '1' '2';
[...]
static yy::parser::symbol_type yylex ()
{
static char const input[] = "12";
int res = input[toknum++];
typedef yy::parser::symbol_type symbol;
if (res)
return symbol (res, std::make_pair (res - '0', res - '0' + 1));
else
return symbol (res);
}
So let yytranslate_ always take an int, which makes the cast truly
useless.
* data/skeletons/c++.m4, data/skeletons/lalr1.cc (yytranslate_): here.
The C++ implementation of LAC did not skip the $undefined token,
probably because it was not exposed. Expose it, and use clearer
names.
* data/skeletons/c++.m4: Don't define undef_token_ in yytranslate_,
but...
* data/skeletons/lalr1.cc (yy_undef_token_): here.
Use a more precise type to define yy_undef_token_ and yy_error_token_.
Unfortunately we move from a compile-time value defined via an enum to
a static const member. Eventually we should make it constexpr.
Make LAC implementation more alike yacc.c's one.
* data/skeletons/lalr1.d, data/skeletons/lalr1.java: Don't expose
yyuser_token_number_max_ and yyundef_token_. Do as in C++: scope them
into yytranslate_, and only when api.token.raw is not defined.
(yyterror_): Rename as...
(yy_error_token_): this.
* data/skeletons/lalr1.d (token_number_type): New.
Use it.
Can't be done in the Java backend, as Java does not have type aliases.
* data/skeletons/lalr1.d, data/skeletons/lalr1.java (yytoken_number_):
Remove, useless.
Was used in ancient C skeletons to support YYPRINT, long obsoleted by
%printer.
It is not used at all. We will remove it also from yacc.c, but
later (see TODO).
* data/skeletons/lalr1.cc, data/skeletons/lalr1.d,
* data/skeletons/lalr1.java (yyerrcode_):
Remove.
Reported by Frank Heckenbach.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2019-11/msg00016.html
* data/skeletons/c++.m4 (b4_yytranslate_define): Don't use yyeof_ as
if it had two different types.
It is used once against the input argument, which is the value
returned by yylex, which is an "external token number", typically an
int. It is also used as output type, an "internal symbol number".
It turns out that in both cases we mean "0", but let's keep yyeof_
only for the case "internal symbol number", i.e., _after_ conversion
by yytranslate.
This frees us from one cast.