This change was made by applying emacs' untabify function to
nearly all files in Bison's repository. Required tabs in make
files, ChangeLog, regexps, and test code were manually skipped.
Other notable exceptions and changes are listed below.
* bootstrap: Skip because we sync this with gnulib.
* data/m4sugar/foreach.m4
* data/m4sugar/m4sugar.m4: Skip because we sync these with
Autoconf.
* djgpp: Skip because I don't know how to test djgpp properly, and
this code appears to be unmaintained anyway.
* README-hacking (Hacking): Specify that tabs should be avoided
where not required.
* src/LR0.c (new_itemsets): Explain sorting of itemset and kernel_base.
(generate_states): Don't mention ruleset, which is internal to closure.
* src/closure.c (closure): Explain sorting of core and itemset, which
is required for this function to behave correctly.
* src/closure.h (closure): Mention sorting.
* src/LR0.c (new_itemsets): Use item_number_is_symbol_number.
(new_itemsets, save_reductions): Update for rename to nitemset.
* src/closure.c (nritemset): Rename to...
(nitemset): ... this since the "r" appears to meaningless and isn't
used in the comments.
(closure): Update for rename.
* src/closure.h (nritemset): Update extern to...
(nitemset): ... this.
* src/lalr.c (LA): Fix a typo in comments.
* src/print.c (print_core): Update for rename to nitemset.
* src/print_graph.c (print_graph): Likewise.
* src/state.h: Fix some typos in header comments.
GNU/Linux and Solaris that support unlocked I/O. The basic idea
is to use the gnlib unlocked-io module, and to prefer putc and
puts to printf when either will work (since the latter doesn't
come in an unlocked flavor).
* bootstrap (gnulib_modules): Add unlocked-io.
* data/c.m4 (yysymprint): Prefer puts and putc to printf.
* data/glr.c (YYFPUTC, YYFPUTS, YYDPUTS): New macros.
Prefer them to YYFPRINTF and YYDPRINTF if either will do,
and similarly for puts and putc and printf.
* data/yacc.c: Likewise.
* lib/bitset.c (bitset_print): Likewise.
* lib/bitset.h [USE_UNLOCKED_IO]: Include unlocked-io.h.
* lib/bitsetv.c (bitsetv_dump, debug-bitsetv): Prefer putc and puts
to printf.
* lib/lbitset.c (debug_lbitset): Likewise.
* src/closure.c (print_firsts, print_fderives): Likewise.
* src/gram.c (grammar_dump): Likewise.
* src/lalr.c (look_ahead_tokens_print): Likewise.
* src/output.c (escaped_output): Likewise.
(user_actions_output): Coalesce two printfs.
* src/parse-gram.h (%printer): Prefer putc and puts to printf.
* src/reduce.c (reduce_print): Likewise.
* src/state.c (state_rule_look_ahead_tokens_print): Likewise.
* src/system.h: Include unlocked-io.h rathe than stdio.h.
changed to use xcalloc, xnmalloc, xnrealloc, respectively,
unless otherwise specified below.
* src/LR0.c (allocate_itemsets): Use xnmalloc, not xcalloc,
to allocate kernel_base, kernel_items, kernel_size, since
they needn't be initialized to 0.
(allocate_storgae): Likewise, for shiftset, redset, shift_symbol.
* src/closure.c (new_closure): Likewise, for itemset.
* src/derives.c (derives_compute): Likewise, for delts, derives, q.
* src/lalr.c (set_goto_map): Likewise, for temp_map.
(initialize_F): Likewise, for reads, edge, reads[i], includes[i].
(build_relations): Likewise for edge, states1, includes.
* src/nullable.c (nullable_compute): Likewise, for squeue, relts.
* src/reader.c (packgram): Likewise, for ritem, rules.
* src/reduce.c (nonterminals_reduce): Likewise for nontermmap.
* src/relation.c (relation_digraph): Likewise for VERTICES.
(relation_transpose): Likewise for new_R, end_R.
* src/symtab.c (symbols_token_translations_init): Likewise for
token_translations.
* src/tables.c (save_row): Likewise for froms, tos, conflict_tos.
(token_actions): Likewise for yydefact, actrow, conflrow,
conflict_list.
(save_column): Likewise for froms[symno], tos[symno].
(goto_actions): Likewise for state_count.
(pack_table): Likewise for base, pos, check.
(tables_generate): Likewise for width.
* src/LR0.c (set_states): Don't reuse kernel_size and kernel_base
for initial core. Just have a separate core, so we needn't worry
about whether kernel_size and kernel_base are initialized.
* src/LR0.c (shift_symbol, redset, shiftset, kernel_base,
kernel_size, kernel_items): Remove unnecessary initialization.
* src/conflicts.c (conflicts): Likewise.
* src/derives.c (derives): Likewise.
* src/muscle_tablc (muscle_insert): Likewise.
* src/relation.c (relation_digraph): Likewise.
* src/tables.c (froms, tos, conflict_tos, tally, width, actrow, order,
conflrow, conflict_table, conflict_list, table, check):
Likewise.
* src/closure.c (new_closure): Arg is of type unsigned int, not int.
This is because all callers pass unsigned int.
* src/closure.h (new_closure): Likewise.
* src/lalr.c (initialize_F): Initialize reads[i] in all cases.
(build_relations): Initialize includes[i] in all cases.
* src/reader.c (packgram): Always initialize rules[ruleno].prec
and rules[ruleno].precsym. Initialize members in order.
* src/relation.c (relation_transpose): Always initialize new_R[i]
and end_R[i].
* src/table.c (conflict_row): Initialize 0 at end of conflict_list.
* src/output.c (prepare_actions): Pass 0 instead of conflict_list[0];
conflict_list[0] was always 0, but now it isn't initialized.
* src/table.c (table_grow): When conflict_table grew, the grown
area wasn't cleared. Fix this.
* src/getargs.h (enum trace_e): New.
* src/getargs.c (trace_args, trace_types, trace_argmatch): New.
(long_options, short_options): --trace/-T takes an optional
argument.
Change all the uses of trace_flag to reflect the new flags.
* tests/sets.at (Firsts, Nullable, Broken Closure): Use --trace=sets.
Strengthen `stage' portability.
* m4/stage.m4 (BISON_PREREQ_STAGE): New.
* configure.in: Use it.
Don't check for malloc.h and sys/times.h.
* src/system.h: Include them when appropriate.
* src/main.c (stage): Compile only when mallinfo, struct mallinfo,
times and struct tms are available.
* src/LR0.c, src/closure.c, src/derives.c, src/gram.c, src/lalr.c
* src/nullable.c, src/output.c, src/print.c, src/reader.c
* src/reduce.c: Allocate and free from &rules[0], not &rules[1].
Iterate from 0 to nrules.
Use rule_number_as_item_number and item_number_as_rule_number.
Adjust to `derive' now containing possibly 0.
* src/gram.h (rule_number_as_item_number, item_number_as_rule_number):
Handle the `- 1' part in rule numbers from/to item numbers.
* src/conflicts.c (log_resolution): Fix the message which reversed
shift and reduce.
* src/output.c (action_row): Initialize default_rule to -1.
(token_actions): Adjust.
* tests/sets.at (Nullable, Firsts): Fix the previously bogus
expected output.
* tests/conflicts.at (Resolved SR Conflicts): Likewise.
* src/gram.h, src/gram.c (grammar_rhs_print, grammar_rules_print):
New.
Don't print the rules' location, it is confusing and useless.
(rule_print): Use grammar_rhs_print.
* src/print.c (print_grammar): Use grammar_rules_print.
RITEM. Note that it must be able to code symbol numbers as
positive number, and the negation of rule numbers as negative
numbers.
Adjust all dependencies (pretty many).
* src/reduce.c (rule): Remove this `short *' pointer: use
item_number_t.
* src/system.h (MINSHORT, MAXSHORT): Remove.
Include `limits.h'.
Adjust dependencies to using SHRT_MAX and SHRT_MIN.
(shortcpy): Remove.
(MAXTABLE): Move to...
* src/output.c (MAXTABLE): here.
(prepare_rules): Use output_int_table to output rhs.
* data/bison.simple, data/bison.c++: Adjust.
* tests/torture.at (Big triangle): Move the limit from 254 to
500.
* tests/regression.at (Web2c Actions): Ajust.
Trying with bigger grammars shows various phenomena: at 3000 (28Mb
of grammar file) bison is killed by my system, at 2000 (12Mb) bison
passes, but produces negative #line number, once fixed, GCC is
killed while compiling 14Mb, at 1500 (6.7 Mb of grammar, 8.2Mb of
C), it passes.
* src/state.h (state_h): Code input lines on ints, not shorts.
newly created state.
Adjust to initialize first_state and last_state if needed.
Be sure to distinguish the initial from the final state.
(new_states): Create the itemset of the initial state, and use
new_state.
* src/closure.c (closure): Now that the initial state has its
items properly set, there is no need for a special case when
creating `ruleset'.
As a result, now the rule 0, reducing to $axiom, is visible in the
outputs. Adjust the test suite.
* tests/conflicts.at (Solved SR Conflicts)
(Unresolved SR Conflicts): Adjust.
* tests/regression.at (Web2c Report, Rule Line Numbers): Idem.
* tests/conflicts.at (S/R in initial): New.
* src/nullable.c, src/output.c, src/print.c, src/print_graph.c,
* src/reader.c, src/reduce.c: Let rule_t.rhs point directly to the
RHS, instead of being an index in RITEMS.