This change allows one to document (and check) which rules participate
in shift/reduce and reduce/reduce conflicts. This is particularly
important GLR parsers, where conflicts are a normal occurrence. For
example,
%glr-parser
%expect 1
%%
...
argument_list:
arguments %expect 1
| arguments ','
| %empty
;
arguments:
expression
| argument_list ',' expression
;
...
Looking at the output from -v, one can see that the shift-reduce
conflict here is due to the fact that the parser does not know whether
to reduce arguments to argument_list until it sees the token AFTER the
following ','. By marking the rule with %expect 1 (because there is a
conflict in one state), we document the source of the 1 overall shift-
reduce conflict.
In GLR parsers, we can use %expect-rr in a rule for reduce/reduce
conflicts. In this case, we mark each of the conflicting rules. For
example,
%glr-parser
%expect-rr 1
%%
stmt:
target_list '=' expr ';'
| expr_list ';'
;
target_list:
target
| target ',' target_list
;
target:
ID %expect-rr 1
;
expr_list:
expr
| expr ',' expr_list
;
expr:
ID %expect-rr 1
| ...
;
In a statement such as
x, y = 3, 4;
the parser must reduce x to a target or an expr, but does not know
which until it sees the '='. So we notate the two possible reductions
to indicate that each conflicts in one rule.
See https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2013-02/msg00105.html.
* doc/bison.texi (Suppressing Conflict Warnings): Document %expect,
%expect-rr in grammar rules.
* src/conflicts.c (count_state_rr_conflicts): Adjust comment.
(rule_has_state_sr_conflicts): New static function.
(count_rule_sr_conflicts): New static function.
(rule_nast_state_rr_conflicts): New static function.
(count_rule_rr_conflicts): New static function.
(rule_conflicts_print): New static function.
(conflicts_print): Also use rule_conflicts_print to report on individual
rules.
* src/gram.h (struct rule): Add new fields expected_sr_conflicts,
expected_rr_conflicts.
* src/reader.c (grammar_midrule_action): Transfer expected_sr_conflicts,
expected_rr_conflicts to new rule, and turn off in current_rule.
(grammar_current_rule_expect_sr): New function.
(grammar_current_rule_expect_rr): New function.
(packgram): Transfer expected_sr_conflicts, expected_rr_conflicts
to new rule.
* src/reader.h (grammar_current_rule_expect_sr): New function.
(grammar_current_rule_expect_rr): New function.
* src/symlist.c (symbol_list_sym_new): Initialize expected_sr_conflicts,
expected_rr_conflicts.
* src/symlist.h (struct symbol_list): Add new fields expected_sr_conflicts,
expected_rr_conflicts.
* tests/conflicts.at: Add tests "%expect in grammar rule not enough",
"%expect in grammar rule right.", "%expect in grammar rule too much."
We also lack a consistent naming for directive implementations.
`directive_skeleton` is too long, `percent_skeleton` is not very nice
looking, `process_skeleton` looks ambiguous, `do_skeleton` is somewhat
ambiguous too, but seems a better track.
* src/parse-gram.y (version_check): Rename as...
(do_require): this.
(do_skeleton): New.
Use it.
We may generate code such as
basic_symbol (typename Base::kind_type t, YY_RVREF (std::pair<int,int>) v);
which, of course, breaks, because YY_RVREF sees two arguments. Let's
not play tricks with _VA_ARGS__, I'm unsure about it portability.
Anyway, I plan to change more things in this area.
Reported by Sébastien Villemot.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2018-11/msg00014.html
* data/variant.hh (b4_basic_symbol_constructor_declare)
(b4_basic_symbol_constructor_define): Don't use macro on user types.
* tests/types.at: Check that we support pairs.
In C++, [[noreturn]] must not be between "static" and the rest of the
function signature, it must precede it. C's _Noreturn does not seem
to have such a constraint, but it is therefore compatible with the C++
constraint. Since we #define _Noreturn as [[noreturn]] is modern C++,
be sure to push the _Noreturn first.
Unfortunately this was not caught by the test suite, because it always
loads config.h first, and config.h contains another definition of
_Noreturn that does not use [[noreturn]], and hides ours. That's
probably a sign we should avoid always loading config.h.
* data/glr.c (yyFail, yyMemoryExhausted): here.
* tests/local.at (AT_LANG_FOR_EACH_STD): New.
(AT_REQUIRE_CXX_VERSION): Rename as...
(AT_REQUIRE_CXX_STD): this.
Accept an argument for what to do when the requirement is not met.
* tests/types.at (api.value.type): Check all the C++ stds.
The following commit introduce even more compilations/runs than
before, and with ASAN on, we go beyond to 50min credit from Travis.
* .travis.yml (Clang 7 libc++ and ASAN): Split in two.
It is unfortunate that %error_verbose was properly diagnosed as
obsoleted by "%define parse.error verbose", but %error-verbose was
not.
* src/parse-gram.y (%error-verbose): Remove support.
* src/scan-gram.l: Do it here instead, with a warning.
* tests/input.at (Deprecated directives): Check it.
These tests are skipped with GCC:
"\"".c:1:5: error: function declaration isn't a prototype [-Werror=strict-prototypes]
int main() { return 0; }
^~~~
* tests/synclines.at: Stop writing C++ in C.
* tests/local.at: Formatting changes.
* src/parse-gram.y (api.value.type): Set to union.
Replace occurrences of %union with explicit %types.
* src/scan-gram.l: Adjust yylval's field names.
(RETURN_VALUE): No longer needs the Field argument.
Use it more.
Support for DJGPP was announced to be removed in the NEWS of Bison
3.1 (2018-08-27) unless someone expressed interest. There was no answer.
* djgpp: Remove.
* NEWS, Makefile.am, cfg.mk, po/POTFILES.in: Adjust.
Reported by Andre da Costa Barros.
https://savannah.gnu.org/patch/?9716
* examples/calc++/local.mk: We no longer generate position.hh and
stack.hh. Leaving them here triggers their concurrent generation,
which fails.
(%C%_calc___CPPFLAGS): Fix the extracted headers in the source tree.
* examples/mfcalc/local.mk (%C%_mfcalc_CPPFLAGS): Ditto.
Currently, the examples are extracted on the user's side.
Unfortunately, that requires that the user has Perl, which is
otherwise not needed for Bison. Let's ship the examples instead.
The examples were handled this way so that we could depend on
configure flags: if --enable-gcc-warnings is passed, it is understood
as "I'm a maintainer", so the examples are generated with `#line`s.
Regular users should not see them, so they are now unconditionally
removed when rolling a tarball.
Reported by Mike Frysinger.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2015-04/msg00000.html
* examples/local.mk: Ship all the extracted files.
(examples-unline): New.
Make sure that the generated tarballs do not contain the #lines.
Also, make sure that `make dist` generates a correct tarball even if
the C++ compiler does not work.
Reported by Nelson H. F. Beebe.
* m4/cxx.m4 (BISON_CXX_WORKS): Define to true/false instead of
true/exit 77. The latter is too dangerous to use (it directly quits).
(ENABLE_CXX): New name for the Automake conditional, for consistency
with ENABLE_CXX11 etc.
* tests/local.at (AT_COMPILE, AT_COMPILE_CXX): Adjust to the new
semantics of BISON_CXX_WORKS.
* examples/c++/local.mk: Skip the variant test if C++ does not work.
* examples/calc++/local.mk: Likewise.
On some systems (x86_64-pc-solaris2.11), with Developer Studio 12.5's
CC, we get:
".../include/CC/Cstd/vector.cc", line 127: Error: Cannot assign const yy::parser::stack_symbol_type to yy::parser::stack_symbol_type without "yy::parser::stack_symbol_type::operator=(const yy::parser::stack_symbol_type&)";.
".../include/CC/Cstd/vector", line 475: Where: While instantiating "std::vector<yy::parser::stack_symbol_type>::__insert_aux(yy::parser::stack_symbol_type*, const yy::parser::stack_symbol_type&)".
".../include/CC/Cstd/vector", line 475: Where: Instantiated from non-template code.
1 Error(s) detected.
Don't expect __cplusplus to be always defined. If it's not, consider
this is C++98.
Reported by Nelson H. F. Beebe.
* data/c++.m4, data/lalr1.cc, examples/c++/variant.yy, tests/local.at,
* tests/testsuite.h:
An undefined __cplusplus means pre C++11.
On some systems, we don't use our getopt. As a consequence the error
messages vary:
$ bison --skeleton
bison: option requires an argument -- skeleton
Try 'bison --help' for more information.
instead of
bison: option '--skeleton' requires an argument
Try 'bison --help' for more information.
Reported by Jannick and Nelson H. F. Beebe.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2018-10/msg00140.html
* tests/input.at (Invalid number of arguments): work around getopt
portability issues.