The memory allocated by 'closure' (and some data such as 'fderives')
is used to computed a state's full itemset from its core. This is
needed during the construction of the LR(0) automaton, and the memory
is reclaimed immediately afterwards.
Unfortunately the reports (graph, text, xml) also need this
information when describing the states with their full itemsets. As a
consequence the memory was allocated again, fderives computed again
too, and more --trace reports are generated which only duplicate what
was already reported.
Stop that. It does mean that we release the memory later (hence the
peak memory usage is higher now), but I don't think that's a problem
today.
* src/lr0.c (generate_states): Don't call closure_free.
* src/state.c (states_free): Do it here.
(for symmetry with closure_new which is called in generate_states).
* src/print-graph.c, src/print-xml.c, src/print.c: You can now expect
the closure module to be functional.
When debugging Bison itself, this is very handy, especially when
tweaking the frontend badly enough to break the backends. It can also
be used to check a grammar.
* src/getargs.h, src/getargs.c (feature_syntax_only): New.
(feature_args, feature_types): Adjust.
* src/main.c (main): Use it.
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.
* 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.
Introduce proper support for fixits, instead of just printing them on
demand.
* bootstrap.conf: We need gnulib's xlists.
* src/fixits.h, src/fixits.c: New.
* src/complain.c (deprecated_directive): Use fixits_register.
* src/main.c (main): Use fixits_free.
Suggested by David Barto
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/help-bison/2015-02/msg00004.html
and Victor Zverovich.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2018-10/msg00121.html
This is very easy to do, thanks to work by Bruno Haible in gnulib.
See "Supporting Relocation" in gnulib's documentation.
* bootstrap.conf: We need relocatable-prog and relocatable-script (for yacc).
* src/yacc.in: New.
* configure.ac, src/local.mk: Instantiate it.
* src/main.c, src/output.c (main, pkgdatadir): Use relocatable2.
* doc/bison.texi (FAQ): Document it.
Recent discussions with Joel E. Denny
(http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2013-02/msg00026.html)
show that it is desirable to tell the difference between an option
that was explicitly disabled with -Wno-foo, as opposed to be left
unset. The current framework does not allow this.
Instead of having a first int to store which options are enabled, and
another to store which are turned into errors, use an array that for
each warning category tells its status: disabled, unset, warning,
error.
* src/complain.h, src/complain.c (warning_bit): New enum.
(warnings): Use it.
(severity): New enum.
(warnings_flag): Now an array of severity.
(errors_flag): Remove, now done by warnings_flag.
(complain_init): New function, to initialie warnings_flag.
(warnings_are_errors): New Boolean, for -Werror.
* src/complain.c (warning_severity): New.
(warnings_print_categories, complains): Use it.
* src/getargs.c (warning_argmatch): Adjust to use warnings_flag.
(warnings_argmatch): Ditto.
Handle -Werror and -Wno-error here.
(getargs): Adjust.
* src/main.c (main): Call complain_init.
* tests/input.at (Invalid options): Add more corner cases.
The new warning category "precedence" flags useless precedence and
associativity. -Wprecedence can now be used, it is disabled by default.
The warnings about precedence and associativity are grouped into one, and
the testsuite was corrected accordingly.
* src/complain.h (warnings): Introduce "precedence".
* src/complain.c (warnings_print_categories): Adjust.
* src/getargs.c (warnings_args, warning_types): Likewise.
* src/symtab.h, src/symtab.c (print_associativity_warnings): Remove.
* src/symtab.h (register_assoc): Correct arguments.
* src/symtab.c (print_precedence_warnings): Print both warnings together.
* doc/bison.texi (Bison options): Document the warnings and provide an
example.
* tests/conflicts.at, tests/existing.at, tests/local.at,
* tests/regression.at: Adapt the testsuite for the new category
(-Wprecedence instead of -Wother where appropriate).
Record which symbol associativity is used, and display useless ones.
* src/symtab.h, src/symtab.c (register_assoc, print_assoc_warnings): New
* src/symtab.c (init_assoc, is_assoc_used): New
* src/main.c: Use print_assoc_warnings
* src/conflicts.c: Use register_assoc
* tests/conflicts.at (Useless associativity warning): New.
Due to the new warning, many tests had to be updated.
* tests/conflicts.at tests/existing.at tests/regression.at:
Add the associativity warning in the expected results.
* tests/java.at: Fix the java calculator's grammar to remove a useless
associativity.
* doc/bison.texi (mfcalc example): Fix associativity to remove
warning.
Symbols with precedence but no associativity, and whose precedence is
never used, can be declared with %token instead. The used precedence
relationships are recorded and a warning about useless ones is issued.
* src/conflicts.c (resolve_sr_conflict): Record precedence relation.
* src/symtab.c, src/symtab.h (prec_nodes, init_prec_nodes)
(symgraphlink_new, register_precedence_second_symbol)
(print_precedence_warnings): New.
Record relationships in a graph and warn about useless ones.
* src/main.c (main): Print precedence warnings.
* tests/conflicts.at: New.
* origin/maint:
misc: pacify the Tiny C Compiler
cpp: make the check of Flex version portable
misc: require getline
c++: support wide strings for file names
doc: document carets
tests: enhance existing tests with carets
errors: show carets
getargs: add support for --flags/-f
Conflicts:
doc/bison.texi
m4/.gitignore
src/complain.c
src/flex-scanner.h
src/getargs.c
src/getargs.h
src/gram.c
src/main.c
tests/headers.at
Treating warnings as errors caused Bison to exit earlier than needed, making it
hide warnings that would have been printed had -Werror not been set.
Also, fix a bug that caused some context information of errors to not be
shown.
* src/complain.c (complaint_issued): Rename as...
(complaint_status): This, and change its type from boolean to
* src/complain.h (err_status): This, new enumeration.
* src/main.c (main): Adjust (only finish early if an actual complaint was
risen, not a mere warning treated an error).
* src/reader.c: Adjust.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Require progname.
* src/complain.c, src/getargs.c, src/getargs.h, src/main.c: Use it.
* cfg.mk (exclude): New.
Use it.
Skip lib/main.c for bindtextdomain and set_program_name.
(cherry picked from commit 4d699f44e6)
Conflicts:
cfg.mk
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Require progname.
* src/complain.c, src/getargs.c, src/getargs.h, src/main.c: Use it.
* cfg.mk (exclude): New.
Use it.
Skip lib/main.c for bindtextdomain and set_program_name.
Standard output was never explicitly closed, so we could not
detect failure. Thus, bison would ignore the errors of writing
to a full file system and getting an I/O error on write, but only
for standard output, e.g., for --print-localedir, --print-datadir,
--help and some verbose output.
Now, "bison --print-datadir > /dev/full" reports the write failure:
bison: write error: No space left on device
Before, it would exit 0 with no diagnostic, implying success.
This is not an issue for "--output=-" or the other FILE-accepting
command-line options, because unlike most other GNU programs,
an output file argument of "-" is treated as the literal "./-",
rather than standard output.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add closeout.
* src/main.c: Include "closeout.h".
Use atexit to ensure we close stdout.
* .gitignore: Ignore new files pulled in via gnulib-tool.
(cherry picked from commit acb5895680)
Conflicts:
m4/.gitignore
Standard output was never explicitly closed, so we could not
detect failure. Thus, bison would ignore the errors of writing
to a full file system and getting an I/O error on write, but only
for standard output, e.g., for --print-localedir, --print-datadir,
--help and some verbose output.
Now, "bison --print-datadir > /dev/full" reports the write failure:
bison: write error: No space left on device
Before, it would exit 0 with no diagnostic, implying success.
This is not an issue for "--output=-" or the other FILE-accepting
command-line options, because unlike most other GNU programs,
an output file argument of "-" is treated as the literal "./-",
rather than standard output.
* bootstrap.conf (gnulib_modules): Add closeout.
* src/main.c: Include "closeout.h".
Use atexit to ensure we close stdout.
* .gitignore: Ignore new files pulled in via gnulib-tool.
Stop equating LR(0) with nondeterminism and LALR(1) with
determinism. That is, if all states are consistent, then LR(0)
tables are deterministic. On the other hand, LALR(1) tables
might be nondeterministic before conflict resolution, and GLR
permits LALR(1) tables to remain nondeterministic.
* src/LR0.c, src/LR0.h: Here.
* src/lalr.c, src/lalr.h: Here.
* src/main.c (main): Here.
* src/state.c, src/state.h: Here.
* src/ielr.h (ielr): In preconditions, expect LR(0) not LALR(1)
parser tables.
(cherry picked from commit 1c4ad777cb)
Stop equating LR(0) with nondeterminism and LALR(1) with
determinism. That is, if all states are consistent, then LR(0)
tables are deterministic. On the other hand, LALR(1) tables
might be nondeterministic before conflict resolution, and GLR
permits LALR(1) tables to remain nondeterministic.
* src/LR0.c, src/LR0.h: Here.
* src/lalr.c, src/lalr.h: Here.
* src/main.c (main): Here.
* src/state.c, src/state.h: Here.
* src/ielr.h (ielr): In preconditions, expect LR(0) not LALR(1)
parser tables.