This generates less code, which is nicer to read, but also takes less
chances with compilers such as G++ 4.8 that are too strict and check
"dead code" (templated code that is not instantiated).
* data/c++.m4 (b4_symbol_type_declare, b4_symbol_type_define): When
variants are used, don't generate code meant for non variants.
Currently, in glr.cc, we emit the definitions of basic_symbol and
symbol_type, although there are not used.
* data/c++.m4 (b4_public_types_declare): Extract these definitions from
here, and move them...
(b4_symbol_type_declare): here.
(b4_public_types_declare): Also remove the definition of the symbol
constructors.
* data/lalr1.cc (b4_shared_declarations): Adjust: call
b4_symbol_type_declare and b4_symbol_constructor_declare.
Benchmarks show that it is more efficient to keep this copy
constructor, rather than forcing the use of the default constructor
and then assignment.
This reverts commit 7ab25ad020.
Currently, in bison's C++ parser template (`lalr.cc`), the `variant<>`
struct's `build()` method uses placement-new in the form `new (...) T`
to initialize a variant type. However, for POD variant types, this
will leave the memory space uninitialized. If we subsequently tries
to `::move` into a variant object in such state, the call can trigger
clang's undefined behavior sanitizer due to accessing the
uninitialized memory.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2018-08/msg00098.html
* data/variant.hh (build): Always initialize the stored value.
Signed-off-by: Akim Demaille <akim@lrde.epita.fr>
Reported by Brooks Moses <bmoses@google.com>
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2018-02/msg00000.html
* data/lalr1.cc (YY_EXCEPTIONS): New.
Use it to disable try/catch clauses.
* doc/bison.texi (C++ Parser Interface): Document it.
* configure.ac (CXXFLAGS_NO_EXCEPTIONS): New.
* tests/atlocal.in: Receive it.
* tests/local.at (AT_FULL_COMPILE, AT_LANG_COMPILE):
Accept a new argument, extra compiler flags.
* tests/calc.at: Run the C++ calculator with exception support disabled.
Visual Studio issues a C4146 warning on '-static_cast<unsigned>(rhs)'.
The code is weird, probably to cope with INT_MIN. Let's go back to
using std::max (whose header is still included in position.hh...) like
originally, but with the needed casts.
Reported by 長田偉伸, and with help from Rici Lake.
See also
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2013-02/msg00000.html
and commit 75ae829984.
* data/location.cc (position::add_): Take min as an int.
Use std::max.
While here, get rid of a couple of useless inlines.
Reported by Jannick.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2017-05/msg00001.html
"Amusingly" enough, we have the same problem with %defines when the
parser file name has backslashes or quotes: we generate #includes with
an incorrect C string.
* src/output.c (prepare_symbol_definitions): Escape properly the file
names before passing them to M4.
* data/bison.m4, data/lalr1.cc: Don't simply put the file name between
two quotes (that should have been strong enough a smell...), expect
the string to be properly quoted.
* tests/synclines.at: New tests to check this.
In 0931d14728 I removed too many
initializations from some ctors: some were not about base ctors, but
about member variables. In fact, more of them were missing to please
GCC 8.
While at it, generate more natural code for C++ without variant:
instead of
template <typename Base>
parser::basic_symbol<Base>::basic_symbol (const basic_symbol& other)
: Base (other)
, value ()
{
value = other.value
}
generate
template <typename Base>
parser::basic_symbol<Base>::basic_symbol (const basic_symbol& other)
: Base (other)
, value (other.value)
{}
* data/c++.m4 (basic_symbol::basic_symbol): Always initialize 'value',
it might be a POD without a ctor.
* data/lalr1.cc (stack_symbol_type::stack_symbol_type): Likewise.
* data/variant.hh (variant::variant): Default initialize the buffer too.
GCC 8 issues warnings whose root cause was a bit hard to find.
calc.cc: In member function 'virtual int yy::parser::parse()':
calc.cc:810:18: warning: '*((void*)&<anonymous> +8)' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
, location (l)
^
calc.cc: In member function 'void yy::parser::yypush_(const char*, yy::parser::stack_symbol_type&)':
calc.cc:810:18: warning: '*((void*)&<anonymous> +8)' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
, location (l)
^
calc.cc: In member function 'void yy::parser::yypush_(const char*, yy::parser::state_type, yy::parser::symbol_type&)':
calc.cc:810:18: warning: '*((void*)&<anonymous> +8)' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
, location (l)
^
The problem is with locations that don't have a constructor, such as
Span (in calc.cc) which is POD. It is POD on purpose: so that we can
use that structure to test glr.cc which cannot use non POD in its
(C) stacks.
* data/c++.m4 (basic_symbol): Also ensure that 'location' is
initialized.
This file was meant to be shown as an example. Install it.
* README, data/README: Put Emacs metadata in the final section.
* examples/README: New.
* examples/variant.yy: Use %empty.
* examples/local.mk: Install both these files.
We currently generate copy constructors such as the following
one (taken from examples/variant.yy):
parser::stack_symbol_type::stack_symbol_type (const stack_symbol_type& that)
: super_type (that.state, that.location)
{
switch (that.type_get ())
{
case 3: // TEXT
case 8: // item
value.copy< ::std::string > (that.value);
break;
case 7: // list
value.copy< ::std::vector<std::string> > (that.value);
break;
case 4: // NUMBER
value.copy< int > (that.value);
break;
default:
break;
}
}
they are actually useless: we never need it.
* data/lalr1.cc: Don't generate the stack_symbol_type copy ctor.
Fix a typo so that instead of
basic_symbol::basic_symbol (typename Base::kind_type t, const int v)
we now generate
basic_symbol::basic_symbol (typename Base::kind_type t, const int& v)
* data/variant.hh (b4_basic_symbol_constructor_declare)
(b4_basic_symbol_constructor_define): Add missing reference.
Predicates with GLR are issued with synclines in the middle of C code:
case 2:
if (! (#line 6 "sempred.y" /* glr.c:816 */
new_syntax)) YYERROR;
#line 793 "sempred.tab.c" /* glr.c:816 */
break;
Reported by Rici Lake.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2018-05/msg00033.html
* data/c.m4 (b4_predicate_case): Be sure to start on column 0.
It would be nicer if b4_syncline could ensure this by itself
(that would avoid ugly code when synclines are disabled), but that's
way more work.
* tests/glr-regression.at (Predicates): Be a real end-to-end test.
This would have caught this error years ago...
For instance on test 99:
In file included from @@.cc:56:
@@.hh:409:26: error: definition of implicit copy constructor for
'stack_symbol_type' is deprecated because it
has a user-declared copy assignment operator
[-Werror,-Wdeprecated]
stack_symbol_type& operator= (const stack_symbol_type& that);
^
Reported by Derek Clegg.
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2018-05/msg00036.html
* configure.ac (warn_tests): Add -Wdeprecated.
* data/lalr1.cc (stack_symbol_type): Add an explicit copy ctor.
We cannot rely on the explicit default implementation (`= default`)
as we support C++ 98.
At least GCC 7.3, with -O1 or -O2 (but not -O0 or -O3) generates
warnings with -Wnull-dereference when using yyformat: it fails to see
yyformat cannot be null.
Reported by Frank Heckenbach, https://savannah.gnu.org/patch/?9620.
* configure.ac: Use -Wnull-dereference if supported.
* data/glr.c, data/lalr1.cc, data/yacc.c: Define yyformat in such
a way that GCC cannot not see that yyformat is defined.
Using `default: abort();` also addresses the issue, but forces
the inclusion of `stdlib.h`, which we avoid.
Sometimes `inline` would be used in *.cc files on symbols that are not
exported (useless but harmless), and sometimes on exported symbols
such as the constructor of syntax_error (harmful: linking fails).
Reported several times, including:
- by Dennis T
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2016-03/msg00002.html
- by Frank Heckenbach
https://savannah.gnu.org/patch/?9616
* data/c++.m4 (b4_inline): New: expands to `inline` or nothing.
Use it where appropriate.
* data/lalr1.cc: Use it where appropriate.
* tests/c++.at (Syntax error as exception): Put the scanner in another
compilation unit to exercise the constructor of syntax_error.
* data/lalr1.cc, doc/bison.texi, etc/bench.pl.in, examples/variant.yy,
* tests/actions.at, tests/atlocal.in, tests/c++.at, tests/headers.at,
* tests/local.at, tests/types.at:
Don't use std::endl, it flushes uselessly, and is considered bad
style.
Currently lalr1.cc makes an out-of-bound access when trying to read @1
in rules with an empty rhs (i.e., when there is no @1) that raises an
error (YYERROR).
glr.c already gracefully handles this by using @$ as initial location
for the errors. Let's do that in yacc.c and lalr1.cc.
* data/lalr1.cc, data/yacc.c: Use @$ to initialize the error location.
* tests/actions.at: Check that case.
This style appears to be more traditional, at least in C++.
For instance in the standard, [facets.examples].
There are occurrences using "unsigned int" too though.
* data/lalr1.cc, data/location.cc, data/stack.hh: here.
* origin/maint:
maint: post-release administrivia
version 3.0.4
gnulib: update
build: re-enable compiler warnings, and fix them
tests: c++: fix a C++03 conformance issue
tests: fix a title
c++: reserve 200 slots in the parser's stack
tests: be more robust to unrecognized synclines, and try to recognize xlc
tests: fix C++ conformance
build: fix some warnings
build: avoid infinite recursions on include_next
There are warnings (-Wextra) in generated C++ code:
ltlparse.cc: In member function 'ltlyy::parser::symbol_number_type
ltlyy::parser::by_state::type_get() const':
ltlparse.cc:452:33: warning: enumeral and non-enumeral type in
conditional expression
return state == empty_state ? empty_symbol : yystos_[state];
Reported by Alexandre Duret-Lutz.
It turns out that -Wall and -Wextra were disabled because of a stupid
typo.
* configure.ac: Fix the stupid typo.
* data/lalr1.cc, src/AnnotationList.c, src/InadequacyList.c,
* src/ielr.c, src/print.c, src/scan-code.l, src/symlist.c,
* src/symlist.h, src/symtab.c, src/tables.c, tests/actions.at,
* tests/calc.at, tests/cxx-type.at, tests/glr-regression.at,
* tests/named-refs.at, tests/torture.at:
Fix warnings, mostly issues about variables used only with assertions,
which are disabled with -DNDEBUG.
This is consistent with what is done with yacc.c and glr.c. Because
it also avoids that the stack needs to be resized very soon, it should
help keeping tests about destructors more reliable.
Indeed, if the stack is created too small, very soon the C++ library
needs to enlarge it, which means creating a new one, copying the
elements from the initial one onto it, and then destroy the elements
of the initial stack: that would be a spurious call to a destructor.
Reported by Thomas Jahns.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2015-01/msg00059.html
* data/stack.hh (stack::stack): Reserve 200 slots.
* tests/c++.at: Remove traces of stack expansions.
* origin/maint:
doc: minor fixes
gnulib: strtoul is considered obsolete and now useless
c++: avoid warnings when destructors don't use $$
maint: post-release administrivia
version 3.0.3
gnulib: update
* origin/maint:
tests: split a large test case into several smaller ones
package: a bit of trouble shooting indications
doc: liby's main arms the internationalization
bison: avoid warnings from static code analysis
c++: fix the use of destructors when variants are enabled
style: tests: simplify the handling of some C++ tests
c++: symbols can be empty, so use it
c++: variants: don't leak the lookahead in error recovery
c++: provide a means to clear symbols
c++: clean up the handling of empty symbols
c++: comment and style changes
c++: variants: comparing addresses of typeid.name() is undefined
c++: locations: complete the API and fix comments
build: do not clean figure sources in make clean
When using variants, destructors generate invalid code.
<http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2014-09/msg00005.html>
Reported by Michael Catanzaro.
* data/c++.m4 (~basic_symbol): b4_symbol_foreach works on yysym:
define it.
* tests/c++.at (Variants): Check it.
The previous patches ensure that symbols (symbol_type and
stack_symbol_type) can be empty, cleared, and their emptiness can be
checked. Therefore, yyempty, which codes whether yyla is empty or
not, is now useless.
In C skeletons (e.g., yacc.c), the fact that the lookahead is empty is
coded by "yychar = YYEMPTY", which is exactly what this patch
restores, since yychar/yytoken corresponds to yyla.type.
* data/lalr1.cc (yyempty): Remove.
Rather, depend on yyla.empty ().
During error recovery, when discarding the lookeahead, we don't
destroy it, which is caught by parse.assert assertions.
Reported by Antonio Silva Correia.
With an analysis and suggested patch from Michel d'Hooge.
<http://savannah.gnu.org/support/?108481>
* tests/c++.at (Variants): Strengthen the test to try syntax errors
with discarded lookahead.