| /* Process source files and output type information. |
| Copyright (C) 2006-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
| This file is part of GCC. |
| |
| GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under |
| the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free |
| Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later |
| version. |
| |
| GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY |
| WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or |
| FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License |
| for more details. |
| |
| You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| along with GCC; see the file COPYING3. If not see |
| <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ |
| |
| #ifdef HOST_GENERATOR_FILE |
| #include "config.h" |
| #define GENERATOR_FILE 1 |
| #else |
| #include "bconfig.h" |
| #endif |
| #include "system.h" |
| #include "gengtype.h" |
| |
| /* This is a simple recursive-descent parser which understands a subset of |
| the C type grammar. |
| |
| Rule functions are suffixed _seq if they scan a sequence of items; |
| _opt if they may consume zero tokens; _seqopt if both are true. The |
| "consume_" prefix indicates that a sequence of tokens is parsed for |
| syntactic correctness and then thrown away. */ |
| |
| /* Simple one-token lookahead mechanism. */ |
| |
| struct token |
| { |
| const char *value; |
| int code; |
| bool valid; |
| }; |
| static struct token T; |
| |
| /* Retrieve the code of the current token; if there is no current token, |
| get the next one from the lexer. */ |
| static inline int |
| token (void) |
| { |
| if (!T.valid) |
| { |
| T.code = yylex (&T.value); |
| T.valid = true; |
| } |
| return T.code; |
| } |
| |
| /* Retrieve the value of the current token (if any) and mark it consumed. |
| The next call to token() will get another token from the lexer. */ |
| static inline const char * |
| advance (void) |
| { |
| T.valid = false; |
| return T.value; |
| } |
| |
| /* Diagnostics. */ |
| |
| /* This array is indexed by the token code minus CHAR_TOKEN_OFFSET. */ |
| static const char *const token_names[] = { |
| "GTY", |
| "typedef", |
| "extern", |
| "static", |
| "union", |
| "struct", |
| "enum", |
| "...", |
| "ptr_alias", |
| "nested_ptr", |
| "a param<N>_is option", |
| "a number", |
| "a scalar type", |
| "an identifier", |
| "a string constant", |
| "a character constant", |
| "an array declarator", |
| "a C++ keyword to ignore" |
| }; |
| |
| /* This array is indexed by token code minus FIRST_TOKEN_WITH_VALUE. */ |
| static const char *const token_value_format[] = { |
| "%s", |
| "'%s'", |
| "'%s'", |
| "'%s'", |
| "'\"%s\"'", |
| "\"'%s'\"", |
| "'[%s]'", |
| "'%s'", |
| }; |
| |
| /* Produce a printable representation for a token defined by CODE and |
| VALUE. This sometimes returns pointers into malloc memory and |
| sometimes not, therefore it is unsafe to free the pointer it |
| returns, so that memory is leaked. This does not matter, as this |
| function is only used for diagnostics, and in a successful run of |
| the program there will be none. */ |
| static const char * |
| print_token (int code, const char *value) |
| { |
| if (code < CHAR_TOKEN_OFFSET) |
| return xasprintf ("'%c'", code); |
| else if (code < FIRST_TOKEN_WITH_VALUE) |
| return xasprintf ("'%s'", token_names[code - CHAR_TOKEN_OFFSET]); |
| else if (!value) |
| return token_names[code - CHAR_TOKEN_OFFSET]; /* don't quote these */ |
| else |
| return xasprintf (token_value_format[code - FIRST_TOKEN_WITH_VALUE], |
| value); |
| } |
| |
| /* Convenience wrapper around print_token which produces the printable |
| representation of the current token. */ |
| static inline const char * |
| print_cur_token (void) |
| { |
| return print_token (T.code, T.value); |
| } |
| |
| /* Report a parse error on the current line, with diagnostic MSG. |
| Behaves as standard printf with respect to additional arguments and |
| format escapes. */ |
| static void ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF_1 |
| parse_error (const char *msg, ...) |
| { |
| va_list ap; |
| |
| fprintf (stderr, "%s:%d: parse error: ", |
| get_input_file_name (lexer_line.file), lexer_line.line); |
| |
| va_start (ap, msg); |
| vfprintf (stderr, msg, ap); |
| va_end (ap); |
| |
| fputc ('\n', stderr); |
| |
| hit_error = true; |
| } |
| |
| /* If the next token does not have code T, report a parse error; otherwise |
| return the token's value. */ |
| static const char * |
| require (int t) |
| { |
| int u = token (); |
| const char *v = advance (); |
| if (u != t) |
| { |
| parse_error ("expected %s, have %s", |
| print_token (t, 0), print_token (u, v)); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| return v; |
| } |
| |
| /* As per require, but do not advance. */ |
| static const char * |
| require_without_advance (int t) |
| { |
| int u = token (); |
| const char *v = T.value; |
| if (u != t) |
| { |
| parse_error ("expected %s, have %s", |
| print_token (t, 0), print_token (u, v)); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| return v; |
| } |
| |
| /* If the next token does not have one of the codes T1 or T2, report a |
| parse error; otherwise return the token's value. */ |
| static const char * |
| require2 (int t1, int t2) |
| { |
| int u = token (); |
| const char *v = advance (); |
| if (u != t1 && u != t2) |
| { |
| parse_error ("expected %s or %s, have %s", |
| print_token (t1, 0), print_token (t2, 0), |
| print_token (u, v)); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| return v; |
| } |
| |
| /* If the next token does not have one of the codes T1, T2, T3 or T4, report a |
| parse error; otherwise return the token's value. */ |
| static const char * |
| require4 (int t1, int t2, int t3, int t4) |
| { |
| int u = token (); |
| const char *v = advance (); |
| if (u != t1 && u != t2 && u != t3 && u != t4) |
| { |
| parse_error ("expected %s, %s, %s or %s, have %s", |
| print_token (t1, 0), print_token (t2, 0), |
| print_token (t3, 0), print_token (t4, 0), |
| print_token (u, v)); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| return v; |
| } |
| |
| /* Near-terminals. */ |
| |
| /* C-style string constant concatenation: STRING+ |
| Bare STRING should appear nowhere else in this file. */ |
| static const char * |
| string_seq (void) |
| { |
| const char *s1, *s2; |
| size_t l1, l2; |
| char *buf; |
| |
| s1 = require (STRING); |
| if (s1 == 0) |
| return ""; |
| while (token () == STRING) |
| { |
| s2 = advance (); |
| |
| l1 = strlen (s1); |
| l2 = strlen (s2); |
| buf = XRESIZEVEC (char, CONST_CAST (char *, s1), l1 + l2 + 1); |
| memcpy (buf + l1, s2, l2 + 1); |
| XDELETE (CONST_CAST (char *, s2)); |
| s1 = buf; |
| } |
| return s1; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* The caller has detected a template declaration that starts |
| with TMPL_NAME. Parse up to the closing '>'. This recognizes |
| simple template declarations of the form ID<ID1,ID2,...,IDn>, |
| potentially with a single level of indirection e.g. |
| ID<ID1 *, ID2, ID3 *, ..., IDn>. |
| It does not try to parse anything more sophisticated than that. |
| |
| Returns the template declaration string "ID<ID1,ID2,...,IDn>". */ |
| |
| static const char * |
| require_template_declaration (const char *tmpl_name) |
| { |
| char *str; |
| int num_indirections = 0; |
| |
| /* Recognize the opening '<'. */ |
| require ('<'); |
| str = concat (tmpl_name, "<", (char *) 0); |
| |
| /* Read the comma-separated list of identifiers. */ |
| int depth = 1; |
| while (depth > 0) |
| { |
| if (token () == ENUM) |
| { |
| advance (); |
| str = concat (str, "enum ", (char *) 0); |
| continue; |
| } |
| if (token () == NUM) |
| { |
| str = concat (str, advance (), (char *) 0); |
| continue; |
| } |
| if (token () == ':') |
| { |
| advance (); |
| str = concat (str, ":", (char *) 0); |
| continue; |
| } |
| if (token () == '<') |
| { |
| advance (); |
| str = concat (str, "<", (char *) 0); |
| depth += 1; |
| continue; |
| } |
| if (token () == '>') |
| { |
| advance (); |
| str = concat (str, ">", (char *) 0); |
| depth -= 1; |
| continue; |
| } |
| const char *id = require4 (SCALAR, ID, '*', ','); |
| if (id == NULL) |
| { |
| if (T.code == '*') |
| { |
| id = "*"; |
| if (num_indirections++) |
| parse_error ("only one level of indirection is supported" |
| " in template arguments"); |
| } |
| else |
| id = ","; |
| } |
| else |
| num_indirections = 0; |
| str = concat (str, id, (char *) 0); |
| } |
| return str; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* typedef_name: either an ID, or a template type |
| specification of the form ID<t1,t2,...,tn>. */ |
| |
| static const char * |
| typedef_name (void) |
| { |
| const char *id = require (ID); |
| if (token () == '<') |
| return require_template_declaration (id); |
| else |
| return id; |
| } |
| |
| /* Absorb a sequence of tokens delimited by balanced ()[]{}. */ |
| static void |
| consume_balanced (int opener, int closer) |
| { |
| require (opener); |
| for (;;) |
| switch (token ()) |
| { |
| default: |
| advance (); |
| break; |
| case '(': |
| consume_balanced ('(', ')'); |
| break; |
| case '[': |
| consume_balanced ('[', ']'); |
| break; |
| case '{': |
| consume_balanced ('{', '}'); |
| break; |
| |
| case '}': |
| case ']': |
| case ')': |
| if (token () != closer) |
| parse_error ("unbalanced delimiters - expected '%c', have '%c'", |
| closer, token ()); |
| advance (); |
| return; |
| |
| case EOF_TOKEN: |
| parse_error ("unexpected end of file within %c%c-delimited construct", |
| opener, closer); |
| return; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Absorb a sequence of tokens, possibly including ()[]{}-delimited |
| expressions, until we encounter an end-of-statement marker (a ';' or |
| a '}') outside any such delimiters; absorb that too. */ |
| |
| static void |
| consume_until_eos (void) |
| { |
| for (;;) |
| switch (token ()) |
| { |
| case ';': |
| advance (); |
| return; |
| |
| case '{': |
| consume_balanced ('{', '}'); |
| return; |
| |
| case '(': |
| consume_balanced ('(', ')'); |
| break; |
| |
| case '[': |
| consume_balanced ('[', ']'); |
| break; |
| |
| case '}': |
| case ']': |
| case ')': |
| parse_error ("unmatched '%c' while scanning for ';'", token ()); |
| return; |
| |
| case EOF_TOKEN: |
| parse_error ("unexpected end of file while scanning for ';'"); |
| return; |
| |
| default: |
| advance (); |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Absorb a sequence of tokens, possibly including ()[]{}-delimited |
| expressions, until we encounter a comma or semicolon outside any |
| such delimiters; absorb that too. Returns true if the loop ended |
| with a comma. */ |
| |
| static bool |
| consume_until_comma_or_eos () |
| { |
| for (;;) |
| switch (token ()) |
| { |
| case ',': |
| advance (); |
| return true; |
| |
| case ';': |
| advance (); |
| return false; |
| |
| case '{': |
| consume_balanced ('{', '}'); |
| return false; |
| |
| case '(': |
| consume_balanced ('(', ')'); |
| break; |
| |
| case '[': |
| consume_balanced ('[', ']'); |
| break; |
| |
| case '}': |
| case ']': |
| case ')': |
| parse_error ("unmatched '%s' while scanning for ',' or ';'", |
| print_cur_token ()); |
| return false; |
| |
| case EOF_TOKEN: |
| parse_error ("unexpected end of file while scanning for ',' or ';'"); |
| return false; |
| |
| default: |
| advance (); |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* GTY(()) option handling. */ |
| static type_p type (options_p *optsp, bool nested); |
| |
| /* Optional parenthesized string: ('(' string_seq ')')? */ |
| static options_p |
| str_optvalue_opt (options_p prev) |
| { |
| const char *name = advance (); |
| const char *value = ""; |
| if (token () == '(') |
| { |
| advance (); |
| value = string_seq (); |
| require (')'); |
| } |
| return create_string_option (prev, name, value); |
| } |
| |
| /* absdecl: type '*'* |
| -- a vague approximation to what the C standard calls an abstract |
| declarator. The only kinds that are actually used are those that |
| are just a bare type and those that have trailing pointer-stars. |
| Further kinds should be implemented if and when they become |
| necessary. Used only within GTY(()) option values, therefore |
| further GTY(()) tags within the type are invalid. Note that the |
| return value has already been run through adjust_field_type. */ |
| static type_p |
| absdecl (void) |
| { |
| type_p ty; |
| options_p opts; |
| |
| ty = type (&opts, true); |
| while (token () == '*') |
| { |
| ty = create_pointer (ty); |
| advance (); |
| } |
| |
| if (opts) |
| parse_error ("nested GTY(()) options are invalid"); |
| |
| return adjust_field_type (ty, 0); |
| } |
| |
| /* Type-option: '(' absdecl ')' */ |
| static options_p |
| type_optvalue (options_p prev, const char *name) |
| { |
| type_p ty; |
| require ('('); |
| ty = absdecl (); |
| require (')'); |
| return create_type_option (prev, name, ty); |
| } |
| |
| /* Nested pointer data: '(' type '*'* ',' string_seq ',' string_seq ')' */ |
| static options_p |
| nestedptr_optvalue (options_p prev) |
| { |
| type_p ty; |
| const char *from, *to; |
| |
| require ('('); |
| ty = absdecl (); |
| require (','); |
| to = string_seq (); |
| require (','); |
| from = string_seq (); |
| require (')'); |
| |
| return create_nested_ptr_option (prev, ty, to, from); |
| } |
| |
| /* One GTY(()) option: |
| ID str_optvalue_opt |
| | PTR_ALIAS type_optvalue |
| | NESTED_PTR nestedptr_optvalue |
| */ |
| static options_p |
| option (options_p prev) |
| { |
| switch (token ()) |
| { |
| case ID: |
| return str_optvalue_opt (prev); |
| |
| case PTR_ALIAS: |
| advance (); |
| return type_optvalue (prev, "ptr_alias"); |
| |
| case NESTED_PTR: |
| advance (); |
| return nestedptr_optvalue (prev); |
| |
| case USER_GTY: |
| advance (); |
| return create_string_option (prev, "user", ""); |
| |
| default: |
| parse_error ("expected an option keyword, have %s", print_cur_token ()); |
| advance (); |
| return create_string_option (prev, "", ""); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* One comma-separated list of options. */ |
| static options_p |
| option_seq (void) |
| { |
| options_p o; |
| |
| o = option (0); |
| while (token () == ',') |
| { |
| advance (); |
| o = option (o); |
| } |
| return o; |
| } |
| |
| /* GTY marker: 'GTY' '(' '(' option_seq? ')' ')' */ |
| static options_p |
| gtymarker (void) |
| { |
| options_p result = 0; |
| require (GTY_TOKEN); |
| require ('('); |
| require ('('); |
| if (token () != ')') |
| result = option_seq (); |
| require (')'); |
| require (')'); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /* Optional GTY marker. */ |
| static options_p |
| gtymarker_opt (void) |
| { |
| if (token () != GTY_TOKEN) |
| return 0; |
| return gtymarker (); |
| } |
| |
| |
| |
| /* Declarators. The logic here is largely lifted from c-parser.c. |
| Note that we do not have to process abstract declarators, which can |
| appear only in parameter type lists or casts (but see absdecl, |
| above). Also, type qualifiers are thrown out in gengtype-lex.l so |
| we don't have to do it. */ |
| |
| /* array_and_function_declarators_opt: |
| \epsilon |
| array_and_function_declarators_opt ARRAY |
| array_and_function_declarators_opt '(' ... ')' |
| |
| where '...' indicates stuff we ignore except insofar as grouping |
| symbols ()[]{} must balance. |
| |
| Subroutine of direct_declarator - do not use elsewhere. */ |
| |
| static type_p |
| array_and_function_declarators_opt (type_p ty) |
| { |
| if (token () == ARRAY) |
| { |
| const char *array = advance (); |
| return create_array (array_and_function_declarators_opt (ty), array); |
| } |
| else if (token () == '(') |
| { |
| /* We don't need exact types for functions. */ |
| consume_balanced ('(', ')'); |
| array_and_function_declarators_opt (ty); |
| return create_scalar_type ("function type"); |
| } |
| else |
| return ty; |
| } |
| |
| static type_p inner_declarator (type_p, const char **, options_p *, bool); |
| |
| /* direct_declarator: |
| '(' inner_declarator ')' |
| '(' \epsilon ')' <-- C++ ctors/dtors |
| gtymarker_opt ID array_and_function_declarators_opt |
| |
| Subroutine of declarator, mutually recursive with inner_declarator; |
| do not use elsewhere. |
| |
| IN_STRUCT is true if we are called while parsing structures or classes. */ |
| |
| static type_p |
| direct_declarator (type_p ty, const char **namep, options_p *optsp, |
| bool in_struct) |
| { |
| /* The first token in a direct-declarator must be an ID, a |
| GTY marker, or an open parenthesis. */ |
| switch (token ()) |
| { |
| case GTY_TOKEN: |
| *optsp = gtymarker (); |
| /* fall through */ |
| |
| case ID: |
| *namep = require (ID); |
| /* If the next token is '(', we are parsing a function declaration. |
| Functions are ignored by gengtype, so we return NULL. */ |
| if (token () == '(') |
| return NULL; |
| break; |
| |
| case '(': |
| /* If the declarator starts with a '(', we have three options. We |
| are either parsing 'TYPE (*ID)' (i.e., a function pointer) |
| or 'TYPE(...)'. |
| |
| The latter will be a constructor iff we are inside a |
| structure or class. Otherwise, it could be a typedef, but |
| since we explicitly reject typedefs inside structures, we can |
| assume that we found a ctor and return NULL. */ |
| advance (); |
| if (in_struct && token () != '*') |
| { |
| /* Found a constructor. Find and consume the closing ')'. */ |
| while (token () != ')') |
| advance (); |
| advance (); |
| /* Tell the caller to ignore this. */ |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| ty = inner_declarator (ty, namep, optsp, in_struct); |
| require (')'); |
| break; |
| |
| case IGNORABLE_CXX_KEYWORD: |
| /* Any C++ keyword like 'operator' means that we are not looking |
| at a regular data declarator. */ |
| return NULL; |
| |
| default: |
| parse_error ("expected '(', ')', 'GTY', or an identifier, have %s", |
| print_cur_token ()); |
| /* Do _not_ advance if what we have is a close squiggle brace, as |
| we will get much better error recovery that way. */ |
| if (token () != '}') |
| advance (); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| return array_and_function_declarators_opt (ty); |
| } |
| |
| /* The difference between inner_declarator and declarator is in the |
| handling of stars. Consider this declaration: |
| |
| char * (*pfc) (void) |
| |
| It declares a pointer to a function that takes no arguments and |
| returns a char*. To construct the correct type for this |
| declaration, the star outside the parentheses must be processed |
| _before_ the function type, the star inside the parentheses must |
| be processed _after_ the function type. To accomplish this, |
| declarator() creates pointers before recursing (it is actually |
| coded as a while loop), whereas inner_declarator() recurses before |
| creating pointers. */ |
| |
| /* inner_declarator: |
| '*' inner_declarator |
| direct_declarator |
| |
| Mutually recursive subroutine of direct_declarator; do not use |
| elsewhere. |
| |
| IN_STRUCT is true if we are called while parsing structures or classes. */ |
| |
| static type_p |
| inner_declarator (type_p ty, const char **namep, options_p *optsp, |
| bool in_struct) |
| { |
| if (token () == '*') |
| { |
| type_p inner; |
| advance (); |
| inner = inner_declarator (ty, namep, optsp, in_struct); |
| if (inner == 0) |
| return 0; |
| else |
| return create_pointer (ty); |
| } |
| else |
| return direct_declarator (ty, namep, optsp, in_struct); |
| } |
| |
| /* declarator: '*'+ direct_declarator |
| |
| This is the sole public interface to this part of the grammar. |
| Arguments are the type known so far, a pointer to where the name |
| may be stored, and a pointer to where GTY options may be stored. |
| |
| IN_STRUCT is true when we are called to parse declarators inside |
| a structure or class. |
| |
| Returns the final type. */ |
| |
| static type_p |
| declarator (type_p ty, const char **namep, options_p *optsp, |
| bool in_struct = false) |
| { |
| *namep = 0; |
| *optsp = 0; |
| while (token () == '*') |
| { |
| advance (); |
| ty = create_pointer (ty); |
| } |
| return direct_declarator (ty, namep, optsp, in_struct); |
| } |
| |
| /* Types and declarations. */ |
| |
| /* Structure field(s) declaration: |
| ( |
| type bitfield ';' |
| | type declarator bitfield? ( ',' declarator bitfield? )+ ';' |
| )* |
| |
| Knows that such declarations must end with a close brace (or, |
| erroneously, at EOF). |
| */ |
| static pair_p |
| struct_field_seq (void) |
| { |
| pair_p f = 0; |
| type_p ty, dty; |
| options_p opts, dopts; |
| const char *name; |
| bool another; |
| |
| while (token () != '}' && token () != EOF_TOKEN) |
| { |
| ty = type (&opts, true); |
| |
| /* Ignore access-control keywords ("public:" etc). */ |
| while (!ty && token () == IGNORABLE_CXX_KEYWORD) |
| { |
| const char *keyword = advance (); |
| if (strcmp (keyword, "public:") != 0 |
| && strcmp (keyword, "private:") != 0 |
| && strcmp (keyword, "protected:") != 0) |
| break; |
| ty = type (&opts, true); |
| } |
| |
| if (!ty || token () == ':') |
| { |
| consume_until_eos (); |
| continue; |
| } |
| |
| do |
| { |
| dty = declarator (ty, &name, &dopts, true); |
| |
| /* There could be any number of weird things after the declarator, |
| notably bitfield declarations and __attribute__s. If this |
| function returns true, the last thing was a comma, so we have |
| more than one declarator paired with the current type. */ |
| another = consume_until_comma_or_eos (); |
| |
| if (!dty) |
| continue; |
| |
| if (opts && dopts) |
| parse_error ("two GTY(()) options for field %s", name); |
| if (opts && !dopts) |
| dopts = opts; |
| |
| f = create_field_at (f, dty, name, dopts, &lexer_line); |
| } |
| while (another); |
| } |
| return nreverse_pairs (f); |
| } |
| |
| /* Return true if OPTS contain the option named STR. */ |
| |
| bool |
| opts_have (options_p opts, const char *str) |
| { |
| for (options_p opt = opts; opt; opt = opt->next) |
| if (strcmp (opt->name, str) == 0) |
| return true; |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* This is called type(), but what it parses (sort of) is what C calls |
| declaration-specifiers and specifier-qualifier-list: |
| |
| SCALAR |
| | ID // typedef |
| | (STRUCT|UNION) ID? gtymarker? ( '{' gtymarker? struct_field_seq '}' )? |
| | ENUM ID ( '{' ... '}' )? |
| |
| Returns a partial type; under some conditions (notably |
| "struct foo GTY((...)) thing;") it may write an options |
| structure to *OPTSP. |
| |
| NESTED is true when parsing a declaration already known to have a |
| GTY marker. In these cases, typedef and enum declarations are not |
| allowed because gengtype only understands types at the global |
| scope. */ |
| |
| static type_p |
| type (options_p *optsp, bool nested) |
| { |
| const char *s; |
| *optsp = 0; |
| switch (token ()) |
| { |
| case SCALAR: |
| s = advance (); |
| return create_scalar_type (s); |
| |
| case ID: |
| s = typedef_name (); |
| return resolve_typedef (s, &lexer_line); |
| |
| case IGNORABLE_CXX_KEYWORD: |
| /* By returning NULL here, we indicate to the caller that they |
| should ignore everything following this keyword up to the |
| next ';' or '}'. */ |
| return NULL; |
| |
| case STRUCT: |
| case UNION: |
| { |
| type_p base_class = NULL; |
| options_p opts = 0; |
| /* GTY annotations follow attribute syntax |
| GTY_BEFORE_ID is for union/struct declarations |
| GTY_AFTER_ID is for variable declarations. */ |
| enum |
| { |
| NO_GTY, |
| GTY_BEFORE_ID, |
| GTY_AFTER_ID |
| } is_gty = NO_GTY; |
| enum typekind kind = (token () == UNION) ? TYPE_UNION : TYPE_STRUCT; |
| advance (); |
| |
| /* Top-level structures that are not explicitly tagged GTY(()) |
| are treated as mere forward declarations. This is because |
| there are a lot of structures that we don't need to know |
| about, and some of those have C++ and macro constructs that |
| we cannot handle. */ |
| if (nested || token () == GTY_TOKEN) |
| { |
| is_gty = GTY_BEFORE_ID; |
| opts = gtymarker_opt (); |
| } |
| |
| if (token () == ID) |
| s = advance (); |
| else |
| s = xasprintf ("anonymous:%s:%d", |
| get_input_file_name (lexer_line.file), |
| lexer_line.line); |
| |
| /* Unfortunately above GTY_TOKEN check does not capture the |
| typedef struct_type GTY case. */ |
| if (token () == GTY_TOKEN) |
| { |
| is_gty = GTY_AFTER_ID; |
| opts = gtymarker_opt (); |
| } |
| |
| bool is_user_gty = opts_have (opts, "user"); |
| |
| if (token () == ':') |
| { |
| if (is_gty && !is_user_gty) |
| { |
| /* For GTY-marked types that are not "user", parse some C++ |
| inheritance specifications. |
| We require single-inheritance from a non-template type. */ |
| advance (); |
| const char *basename = require (ID); |
| /* This may be either an access specifier, or the base name. */ |
| if (0 == strcmp (basename, "public") |
| || 0 == strcmp (basename, "protected") |
| || 0 == strcmp (basename, "private")) |
| basename = require (ID); |
| base_class = find_structure (basename, TYPE_STRUCT); |
| if (!base_class) |
| parse_error ("unrecognized base class: %s", basename); |
| require_without_advance ('{'); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* For types lacking GTY-markings, skip over C++ inheritance |
| specification (and thus avoid having to parse e.g. template |
| types). */ |
| while (token () != '{') |
| advance (); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (is_gty) |
| { |
| if (token () == '{') |
| { |
| pair_p fields; |
| |
| if (is_gty == GTY_AFTER_ID) |
| parse_error ("GTY must be specified before identifier"); |
| |
| if (!is_user_gty) |
| { |
| advance (); |
| fields = struct_field_seq (); |
| require ('}'); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* Do not look inside user defined structures. */ |
| fields = NULL; |
| kind = TYPE_USER_STRUCT; |
| consume_balanced ('{', '}'); |
| return create_user_defined_type (s, &lexer_line); |
| } |
| |
| return new_structure (s, kind, &lexer_line, fields, opts, |
| base_class); |
| } |
| } |
| else if (token () == '{') |
| consume_balanced ('{', '}'); |
| if (opts) |
| *optsp = opts; |
| return find_structure (s, kind); |
| } |
| |
| case TYPEDEF: |
| /* In C++, a typedef inside a struct/class/union defines a new |
| type for that inner scope. We cannot support this in |
| gengtype because we have no concept of scoping. |
| |
| We handle typedefs in the global scope separately (see |
| parse_file), so if we find a 'typedef', we must be inside |
| a struct. */ |
| gcc_assert (nested); |
| parse_error ("typedefs not supported in structures marked with " |
| "automatic GTY markers. Use GTY((user)) to mark " |
| "this structure."); |
| advance (); |
| return NULL; |
| |
| case ENUM: |
| advance (); |
| if (token () == ID) |
| s = advance (); |
| else |
| s = xasprintf ("anonymous:%s:%d", |
| get_input_file_name (lexer_line.file), |
| lexer_line.line); |
| |
| if (token () == '{') |
| consume_balanced ('{', '}'); |
| |
| /* If after parsing the enum we are at the end of the statement, |
| and we are currently inside a structure, then this was an |
| enum declaration inside this scope. |
| |
| We cannot support this for the same reason we cannot support |
| 'typedef' inside structures (see the TYPEDEF handler above). |
| If this happens, emit an error and return NULL. */ |
| if (nested && token () == ';') |
| { |
| parse_error ("enum definitions not supported in structures marked " |
| "with automatic GTY markers. Use GTY((user)) to mark " |
| "this structure."); |
| advance (); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| return create_scalar_type (s); |
| |
| default: |
| parse_error ("expected a type specifier, have %s", print_cur_token ()); |
| advance (); |
| return create_scalar_type ("erroneous type"); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Top level constructs. */ |
| |
| /* Dispatch declarations beginning with 'typedef'. */ |
| |
| static void |
| typedef_decl (void) |
| { |
| type_p ty, dty; |
| const char *name; |
| options_p opts; |
| bool another; |
| |
| gcc_assert (token () == TYPEDEF); |
| advance (); |
| |
| ty = type (&opts, false); |
| if (!ty) |
| return; |
| if (opts) |
| parse_error ("GTY((...)) cannot be applied to a typedef"); |
| do |
| { |
| dty = declarator (ty, &name, &opts); |
| if (opts) |
| parse_error ("GTY((...)) cannot be applied to a typedef"); |
| |
| /* Yet another place where we could have junk (notably attributes) |
| after the declarator. */ |
| another = consume_until_comma_or_eos (); |
| if (dty) |
| do_typedef (name, dty, &lexer_line); |
| } |
| while (another); |
| } |
| |
| /* Structure definition: type() does all the work. */ |
| |
| static void |
| struct_or_union (void) |
| { |
| options_p dummy; |
| type (&dummy, false); |
| /* There may be junk after the type: notably, we cannot currently |
| distinguish 'struct foo *function(prototype);' from 'struct foo;' |
| ... we could call declarator(), but it's a waste of time at |
| present. Instead, just eat whatever token is currently lookahead |
| and go back to lexical skipping mode. */ |
| advance (); |
| } |
| |
| /* GC root declaration: |
| (extern|static) gtymarker? type ID array_declarators_opt (';'|'=') |
| If the gtymarker is not present, we ignore the rest of the declaration. */ |
| static void |
| extern_or_static (void) |
| { |
| options_p opts, opts2, dopts; |
| type_p ty, dty; |
| const char *name; |
| require2 (EXTERN, STATIC); |
| |
| if (token () != GTY_TOKEN) |
| { |
| advance (); |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| opts = gtymarker (); |
| ty = type (&opts2, true); /* if we get here, it's got a GTY(()) */ |
| dty = declarator (ty, &name, &dopts); |
| |
| if ((opts && dopts) || (opts && opts2) || (opts2 && dopts)) |
| parse_error ("GTY((...)) specified more than once for %s", name); |
| else if (opts2) |
| opts = opts2; |
| else if (dopts) |
| opts = dopts; |
| |
| if (dty) |
| { |
| note_variable (name, adjust_field_type (dty, opts), opts, &lexer_line); |
| require2 (';', '='); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Parse the file FNAME for GC-relevant declarations and definitions. |
| This is the only entry point to this file. */ |
| void |
| parse_file (const char *fname) |
| { |
| yybegin (fname); |
| for (;;) |
| { |
| switch (token ()) |
| { |
| case EXTERN: |
| case STATIC: |
| extern_or_static (); |
| break; |
| |
| case STRUCT: |
| case UNION: |
| struct_or_union (); |
| break; |
| |
| case TYPEDEF: |
| typedef_decl (); |
| break; |
| |
| case EOF_TOKEN: |
| goto eof; |
| |
| default: |
| parse_error ("unexpected top level token, %s", print_cur_token ()); |
| goto eof; |
| } |
| lexer_toplevel_done = 1; |
| } |
| |
| eof: |
| advance (); |
| yyend (); |
| } |