* maint:
c++: shorten the assertions that check whether tokens are correct
c++: don't glue functions together
lalr1.cc: YY_ASSERT should use api.prefix
c++: don't use YY_ASSERT at all if parse.assert is disabled
c++: style: follow the Bison m4 quoting pattern
yacc.c: provide the Bison version as an integral macro
regen
style: make conversion of version string to int public
%require: accept version numbers with three parts ("3.7.4")
yacc.c: fix #definition of YYEMPTY
gnulib: update
doc: fix incorrect section title
doc: minor grammar fixes in counterexamples section
Before:
YY_ASSERT (tok == token::YYEOF || tok == token::YYerror || tok == token::YYUNDEF || tok == 120 || tok == 49 || tok == 50 || tok == 51 || tok == 52 || tok == 53 || tok == 54 || tok == 55 || tok == 56 || tok == 57 || tok == 97 || tok == 98);
After:
YY_ASSERT (tok == token::YYEOF
|| (token::YYerror <= tok && tok <= token::YYUNDEF)
|| tok == 120
|| (49 <= tok && tok <= 57)
|| (97 <= tok && tok <= 98));
Clauses are now also wrapped on several lines. This is nicer to read
and diff, but also avoids pushing Visual C++ to its arbitrary
limits (640K and lines of 16380 bytes ought to be enough for anybody,
otherwise make an C2026 error).
The useless parens are there for the dummy warnings about
precedence (in the future, will we also have to put parens in
`1+2*3`?).
* data/skeletons/variant.hh (_b4_filter_tokens, b4_tok_in, b4_tok_in):
New.
(_b4_token_constructor_define): Use them.
Working on the previous commit I realized that YY_ASSERT was used in
the generated headers, so must follow api.prefix to avoid clashes when
multiple C++ parser with variants are used.
Actually many more macros should obey api.prefix (YY_CPLUSPLUS,
YY_COPY, etc.). There was no complaint so far, so it's not urgent
enough for 3.7.4, but it should be addressed in 3.8.
* data/skeletons/variant.hh (b4_assert): New.
Use it.
* tests/local.at (AT_YYLEX_RETURN): Fix.
* tests/headers.at: Make sure variant-based C++ parsers are checked
too.
This test did find that YY_ASSERT escaped renaming (before the fix in
this commit).
In some extreme situations (about 800 tokens), we generate a
single-line assertion long enough for Visual C++ to discard the end of
the line, thus falling into parse ends for the missing `);`. On a
shorter example:
YY_ASSERT (tok == token::TOK_YYEOF || tok == token::TOK_YYerror || tok == token::TOK_YYUNDEF || tok == token::TOK_ASSIGN || tok == token::TOK_MINUS || tok == token::TOK_PLUS || tok == token::TOK_STAR || tok == token::TOK_SLASH || tok == token::TOK_LPAREN || tok == token::TOK_RPAREN);
Whether NDEBUG is used or not is irrelevant, the parser dies anyway.
Reported by Jot Dot <jotdot@shaw.ca>.
https://lists.gnu.org/r/bug-bison/2020-11/msg00002.html
We should avoid emitting lines so long.
We probably should also use a range-based assertion (with extraneous
parens to pacify fascist compilers):
YY_ASSERT ((token::TOK_YYEOF <= tok && tok <= token::TOK_YYUNDEF)
|| (token::TOK_ASSIGN <= tok && ...)
But anyway, we should simply not emit this assertion at all when not
asked for.
* data/skeletons/variant.hh: Do not define, nor use, YY_ASSERT when it
is not enabled.
When generating a C parser, YYEMPTY is present in enum yytokentype but
there is no corresponding #define like there is for the other values.
There is a special case for YYEMPTY in b4_token_enums but no
corresponding case in b4_token_defines.
* data/skeletons/c.m4 (b4_token_defines): Do define YYEMPTY.
* upstream/maint:
doc: fix typo
maint: post-release administrivia
version 3.7.3
build: don't link bison against libreadline
gnulib: update
glr.cc: fix: use symbol_name
build: fix a concurrent build issue in examples
This is consistent with --defines being deprecated in favor of
--header. The directive %defines is also too similar to %define.
And %header matches nicely with api.header.name.
* src/scan-gram.l (%defines): Deprecate to %header.
(%header): Scan it.
* src/parse-gram.y (PERCENT_DEFINES): Replace with...
(PERCENT_HEADER): this.
* data/skeletons/lalr1.java
* doc/bison.texi
* tests/actions.at, tests/c++.at, tests/calc.at, tests/conflicts.at,
* tests/input.at, tests/java.at, tests/local.at, tests/output.at,
* tests/synclines.at, tests/types.at:
Convert most tests to check %header instead of %defines.
The name "defines" is incorrect, the generated file contains far more
than just #defines.
* src/getargs.h, src/getargs.c (-H, --header): New option.
With optional argument, just like --defines, --xml, etc.
(defines_flag): Rename as...
(header_flag): this.
Adjust dependencies.
* data/skeletons/bison.m4, data/skeletons/c.m4, data/skeletons/glr.c,
* data/skeletons/glr.cc, data/skeletons/glr2.cc, data/skeletons/lalr1.cc,
* data/skeletons/yacc.c:
Adjust.
* examples, doc/bison.texi: Adjust.
* tests/headers.at, tests/local.at, tests/output.at: Convert most
tests from using --defines to using --header.
Commit af000bab11 ("doc: work around
Texinfo 6.7 bug"), published in 3.4.91, added a dependency on the
"all" target.
This is a super bad idea, since "make all" will run this
target *before* "all", which builds bison. It turns out that this new
dependency actually needed bison to be built. So all the regular
process (i) build $(BUILT_SOURCES) and then (ii) build bison, was
wrecked since some of the $(BUILT_SOURCES) depended on bison...
It was "easy" to see in the logs of "make V=1" because we were
building bison files (such as src/files.o) *before* displaying the
banner for "all-recursive". With this fix, we finally get again the
proper sequence:
rm -f examples/c/reccalc/scan.stamp examples/c/reccalc/scan.stamp.tmp
/opt/local/libexec/gnubin/mkdir -p examples/c/reccalc
touch examples/c/reccalc/scan.stamp.tmp
flex -oexamples/c/reccalc/scan.c --header=examples/c/reccalc/scan.h ./examples/c/reccalc/scan.l
mv examples/c/reccalc/scan.stamp.tmp examples/c/reccalc/scan.stamp
rm -f lib/fcntl.h-t lib/fcntl.h && \
{ echo '/* DO NOT EDIT! GENERATED AUTOMATICALLY! */'; \
...
} > lib/fcntl.h-t && \
mv lib/fcntl.h-t lib/fcntl.h
...
mv -f lib/alloca.h-t lib/alloca.h
make all-recursive
Reported by Mingli Yu <mingli.yu@windriver.com>.
https://github.com/akimd/bison/issues/31https://lists.gnu.org/r/bison-patches/2020-05/msg00055.html
Reported by Claudio Calvelli <bugb@w42.org>.
https://lists.gnu.org/r/bug-bison/2020-09/msg00001.htmlhttps://bugs.gentoo.org/716516
* doc/local.mk (all): Rename as...
(all-local): this.
So that we don't compete with BUILT_SOURCES.
On a case such as
%%
exp
: empty "a"
| "a" empty
empty
: %empty
we used to display
warning: shift/reduce conflict on token "a" [-Wcounterexamples]
Example: • "a"
Shift derivation
exp
↳ 2: • "a" empty
↳ 2: ε
Example: • "a"
Reduce derivation
exp
↳ 1: empty "a"
↳ 3: •
where the shift derivation shows an item "2: empty → ε", with an
explicit "ε", but the reduce derivation shows "3: empty → •", without
"ε".
For consistency, let's always show ε/%empty in rules with an empty
rhs:
Reduce derivation
exp
↳ 1: empty "a"
↳ 3: ε •
* src/derivation.c (derivation_width, derivation_print_tree_impl):
Always show ε/%empty in counterexamples.
* tests/diagnostics.at: Check that case.
* tests/conflicts.at, tests/counterexample.at: Adjust.
This is a fork of glr.cc to be c++-first instead of a wrapper around
glr.c.
* data/skeletons/glr2.cc: New.
* data/skeletons/bison.m4, data/skeletons/c++.m4: Adjust.
* data/skeletons/c.m4 (b4_user_args_no_comma): New.
* src/reader.c (grammar_rule_check_and_complete): glr2.cc is C++.
* tests/actions.at, tests/c++.at, tests/calc.at, tests/conflicts.at,
* tests/input.at, tests/local.at, tests/regression.at, tests/scanner.at,
* tests/synclines.at, tests/types.at: Also check glr2.cc.
From
foo.y:1.7-11: error: %type redeclaration for bar
1 | %type <foo> bar bar
| ^~~~~
foo.y:1.7-11: note: previous declaration
1 | %type <foo> bar bar
| ^~~~~
to
foo.y:1.17-19: error: %type redeclaration for bar
1 | %type <foo> bar bar
| ^~~
foo.y:1.13-15: note: previous declaration
1 | %type <foo> bar bar
| ^~~
* src/symlist.h, src/symlist.c (symbol_list_type_set): There's no need
for the tag's location, use that of the symbol.
* src/parse-gram.y: Adjust.
* tests/input.at: Adjust.
The code was written on top of buffers of `char[26]`, and then was
changed to use `char *`, yet was still using `sizeof buf`, which
became `sizeof (char *)` instead of `sizeof (char[26])`.
Reported by Dagobert Michelsen.
https://lists.gnu.org/r/bug-bison/2020-07/msg00023.html
* src/glyphs.h, src/glyphs.c: Get rid of uses of `char *`, use only
glyph_buffer_t.
Sometimes, understanding the derivations is difficult, because they
are serialized to fit in one line. For instance, the example taken
from the NEWS file:
%token ID
%%
s: a ID
a: expr
expr: expr ID ',' | "expr"
gave
First example expr • ID ',' ID $end
Shift derivation $accept → [ s → [ a → [ expr → [ expr • ID ',' ] ] ID ] $end ]
Second example expr • ID $end
Reduce derivation $accept → [ s → [ a → [ expr • ] ID ] $end ]
Printing as trees, it gives:
First example expr • ID ',' ID $end
Shift derivation
$accept
↳ s $end
↳ a ID
↳ expr
↳ expr • ID ','
Second example expr • ID $end
Reduce derivation
$accept
↳ s $end
↳ a ID
↳ expr •
* src/glyphs.h, src/glyphs.c (down_arrow, empty, derivation_separator):
New.
* src/derivation.c (derivation_print, derivation_print_impl): Rename
as...
(derivation_print_flat, derivation_print_flat_impl): These.
(fputs_if, derivation_depth, derivation_width, derivation_print_tree)
(derivation_print_tree_impl, derivation_print): New.
* src/counterexample.c (print_counterexample): Adjust.
* tests/conflicts.at, tests/counterexample.at, tests/diagnostics.at,
* tests/report.at: Adjust.
When reporting counterexamples for s/r conflicts, put the shift first.
This is more natural, and displays the default resolution first, which
is also what happens for r/r conflicts where the smallest rule number
is displayed first, and "wins".
* src/counterexample.c (counterexample): Add a shift_reduce member.
(new_counterexample): Adjust.
Swap the derivations when this is a s/r conflict.
(print_counterexample): For s/r conflicts, prefer "Shift derivation"
and "Reduce derivation" rather than "First/Second derivation".
* tests/conflicts.at, tests/counterexample.at, tests/report.at: Adjust.
* NEWS, doc/bison.texi: Ditto.
It does not make a lot of sense to use ::= in our counterexamples,
that's not something that belongs to the Bison "vocabulary". Using
the colon makes sense, but it's too discreet. Let's use the arrow,
which we already use in some reports (HTML and Dot).
* src/gram.h (print_dot_fallback): Generalize into...
(print_fallback): this.
(print_arrow): New.
* src/derivation.c: Use it.
* NEWS, tests/conflicts.at, tests/counterexample.at,
* tests/diagnostics.at, tests/report.at: Adjust.
* doc/bison.texi: Ditto.
Unfortunately the literal `→` is output as `↦`. So we need to use
@arrow.
* examples/c/bistromathic/parse.y (user_context): We need the current
line.
(yyreport_syntax_error): Quote the guilty line, with squiggles.
* examples/c/bistromathic/bistromathic.test: Adjust.