We don't ship the *.txt files that are used to build the info
file.
Reported by Colin Daley.
* doc/figs/example.txt: New.
* doc/local.mk (bison.info): Depend on the txt files.
And ship them.
* tests/c++.at (Exception safety): In variant mode $$ is an instance
of Object. Assigning YY_NULL in C++98 is incorrect, but behaves ok,
as it assigns YY_NULL=0 using Object::operator= (char v). It is wrong
in C++11 as there is operator for "$$ = nullptr".
Again some issues with the fact that yylval is reported by GCC as
possibly not initialized in some cases. Here, the case at hand is the
%destructor.
I am still not convinced that it is worth going all the trouble of
using pragmas to disable temporarily some warnings, instead of just
initializing the looking symbol once for all, but that's what Paul
voted for, see
<http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2012-10/msg00050.html>.
* data/c.m4 (b4_attribute_define): Define
YY_IGNORE_MAYBE_UNINITIALIZED_BEGIN, YY_IGNORE_MAYBE_UNINITIALIZED_END,
YY_INITIAL_VALUE here, as we will need them in the generation of the
destructor function, which is defined in yacc.c before yyparse, which
was in charge of defining these macros.
* data/yacc.c (b4_declare_scanner_communication_variables): Simplify:
trying to factor the definitions of the case pure and impure is
too complex.
Actually, it is not even clear that this macro should really exist,
as even the calls are complex.
Be careful not to issue a lone ";", as this is a statement, and C90
forbids declarations after statements ; so write
"YY_INITIAL_VALUE(Decl;)", not "YY_INITIAL_VALUE(Decl);".
There are possible conflicts between gnulib replacement functions (in
<stdio.h>) and their C++ wrappers (in <stream>). Trying to address
these in configure seems too hard, and I don't know how to fix the issue
in gnulib. Cowardly avoid the problem by skipping C++ tests when this
happens.
Reported by Stefano Lattarini.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2013-06/msg00001.html
* tests/atlocal.in (BISON_CXX_WORKS): Also set it to "skip" if we can't
compile a simple program using <stream>.
* tests/local.at: Comment changes.
* data/lalr1.java (parse): here, when in push-pull is in "both" mode.
This breaks the test suite, for instance
make check TESTSUITEFLAGS='-d 388 BISON_USE_PUSH_FOR_PULL=1'.
More generally make maintainer-push-check.
* data/lalr1.java: Capture the declarations as m4 macros to avoid
duplication. When push parsing, the declarations occur at the class
instance level rather than within the parse() function.
Change the way that the parser state is initialized. For
push-parsing, the parse state declarations are moved to
"push_parse_initialize()", which is called on the first invocation of
"push_parse()". The %initial-action code is also inserted after the
invocation of "push_parse_initialize()".
The body of the parse loop is modified to return values at appropriate
points when doing push parsing. In order to make push parsing work,
it is necessary to divide YYNEWSTATE into two states: YYNEWSTATE and
YYGETTOKEN. On the first call to push_parse(), the state is
YYNEWSTATE. On all later entries, the state is set to YYGETTOKEN. The
YYNEWSTATE switch arm falls through into YYGETTOKEN. YYGETTOKEN
indicates that a new token is potentially needed. Normally, with a
pull parser, this new token would be obtained by calling "yylex()". In
the push parser, the value YYMORE is returned to the caller. On the
next call to push_parse(), the parser will return to the YYGETTOKEN
state and continue operation.
* tests/javapush.at: New test file for java push parsing.
* tests/testsuite.at: Use it.
* tests/local.mk: Adjust.
* doc/bison.texi (Java Push Parser Interface): New.
Signed-off-by: Akim Demaille <akim@lrde.epita.fr>
Using %code for config.h is wrong, as some headers will already have
been included by Bison. In some cases, e.g., glibc's string.h, this
results in some declaration not being made for lack of definition of
_GNU_SOURCE, which is performed by config.h.
* src/parse-gram.y: here.
* --raw appears to be ignored. It was marked as obsolete in the
commit ec3bc39, and documented as no longer supported as of 1.29
(2001-09-07). Support for %raw appears to have been dropped in
e9955c83 on 2002-06-11, but --raw was kept around. Maybe it's time
to drop it as well?
* Commit e9955c83 dropped support for %no-parser as well, and
converted it to option. --no-parser was later dropped in 728c4be2
on 2007-08-12, but -n was kept around, probably as an omission. All
three are documented as removed since 2.3b (2008-05-27).
* -e existed for a single day in 2001. It was introduced in eeeb962b
on 2001-11-27. The handling was removed in c7925b99 on 2001-11-28,
but "e" was kept in the list of short options. Probably an
omission.
* --include appears to be dead code. The option sets a variable, but
that variable is not used anywhere. It was added in f6bd5427 on
2001-11-26 as a %-directive, with comments that it's not yet
implemented. It was converted to a command-line option later, but
doesn't seem to ever have been actually implemented.
Signed-off-by: Petr Machata <pmachata@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Akim Demaille <akim@lrde.epita.fr>
Some directives cannot be used several times (e.g., a given symbol may
only have a single printer). In case of repeated definitions, an
error is issued for the second definition, yet it is not discarded,
and becomes the definition used for the rest of the file.
This is not consistent with the idea that multiple definitions are not
allowed: discard any repeated directive.
* src/symtab.c (symbol_type_set, symbol_code_props_set)
(semantic_type_code_props_set, symbol_class_set, symbol_translation):
Discard repeated directives.
* tests/input.at (Default %printer and %destructor redeclared)
(Per-type %printer and %destructor redeclared): Update expectations.
* src/symtab.c (symbol_precedence_set): Use prec_location, not
location (which is the first occurrence of the symbol, possibly just
%token).
Also, as redefinitions are not allowed, keep the first values, not
the subsequent ones.
* tests/conflicts.at, tests/existing.at, tests/regression.at: Adjust.
-Wsign-compare was disabled for bison's own code, following gnulib's
approach. However, the generated parsers should not trigger such
warnings.
Reported by Efi Fogel.
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/help-bison/2013-04/msg00018.html
See also http://stackoverflow.com/questions/16101062 for the weird
"-(unsigned)i" piece of code.
* configure.ac (warn_tests): Enable -Wsign-compare.
* data/location.cc (position::add_): New.
(position::lines, position::columns): Use it.
* tests/actions.at (AT_CHECK_PRINTER_AND_DESTRUCTOR): Fix signedness issues.
The purpose of this symbol was only to factor function calls. As a
result the actions were indeed simpler, but the grammar was somewhat
uselessly obfuscated. Get rid of this symbol, but introduce functions
to simplify dependencies.
There is no (intended) changes of behavior here.
* src/parse-gram.y (strip_braces, translate_code(
(translate_code_braceless): New.
(braceless): Remove, use "{...}" instead, and one of the previous
functions depending on the context.
(STRING, "%{...%}", EPILOGUE): Declare as <code>, instead of <chars>,
the difference between both is useless (well, I couldn't make sense of
it, even after having read the initial commit that introduced them).
(%union): Remove the now useless "chars" type.
Adjust the printers.
* src/scan-gram.l: Adjust.
* src/parse-gram.y (version_check, gram_error, char_name, lloc_default):
Move their prototypes from %{...%} to %code.
(YYLLOC_DEFAULT, YY_LOCATION_PRINT): Move from %{...%} to %code.
(current_lhs): Move its implementation to the epilogue.