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1-*- outline -*-
2
eaff5ee3 3* Coding system independence
4358321a 4Paul notes:
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5
6 Currently Bison assumes 8-bit bytes (i.e. that UCHAR_MAX is
7 255). It also assumes that the 8-bit character encoding is
8 the same for the invocation of 'bison' as it is for the
9 invocation of 'cc', but this is not necessarily true when
10 people run bison on an ASCII host and then use cc on an EBCDIC
11 host. I don't think these topics are worth our time
12 addressing (unless we find a gung-ho volunteer for EBCDIC or
13 PDP-10 ports :-) but they should probably be documented
14 somewhere.
15
16* Using enums instead of int for tokens.
17Paul suggests:
18
19 #ifndef YYTOKENTYPE
20 # if defined (__STDC__) || defined (__cplusplus)
21 /* Put the tokens into the symbol table, so that GDB and other debuggers
22 know about them. */
23 enum yytokentype {
24 FOO = 256,
25 BAR,
26 ...
27 };
28 /* POSIX requires `int' for tokens in interfaces. */
29 # define YYTOKENTYPE int
30 # endif
31 #endif
32 #define FOO 256
33 #define BAR 257
34 ...
35
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36> I'm in favor of
37>
38> %token FOO 256
39> %token BAR 257
40>
41> and Bison moves error into 258.
42
43Yes, I think that's a valid extension too, if the user doesn't define
44the token number for error.
45
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46* Output directory
47Akim:
48
49| I consider this to be a bug in bison:
50|
51| /tmp % mkdir src
52| /tmp % cp ~/src/bison/tests/calc.y src
53| /tmp % mkdir build && cd build
54| /tmp/build % bison ../src/calc.y
55| /tmp/build % cd ..
56| /tmp % ls -l build src
57| build:
58| total 0
59|
60| src:
61| total 32
62| -rw-r--r-- 1 akim lrde 27553 oct 2 16:31 calc.tab.c
63| -rw-r--r-- 1 akim lrde 3335 oct 2 16:31 calc.y
64|
65|
66| Would it be safe to change this behavior to something more reasonable?
67| Do you think some people depend upon this?
68
69Jim:
70
71Is it that behavior documented?
72If so, then it's probably not reasonable to change it.
73I've Cc'd the automake list, because some of automake's
74rules use bison through $(YACC) -- though I'll bet they
75all use it in yacc-compatible mode.
76
77Pavel:
78
79Hello, Jim and others!
80
81> Is it that behavior documented?
82> If so, then it's probably not reasonable to change it.
83> I've Cc'd the automake list, because some of automake's
84> rules use bison through $(YACC) -- though I'll bet they
85> all use it in yacc-compatible mode.
86
87Yes, Automake currently used bison in Automake-compatible mode, but it
88would be fair for Automake to switch to the native mode as long as the
89processed files are distributed and "missing" emulates bison.
90
91In any case, the makefiles should specify the output file explicitly
92instead of relying on weird defaults.
93
94> | src:
95> | total 32
96> | -rw-r--r-- 1 akim lrde 27553 oct 2 16:31 calc.tab.c
97> | -rw-r--r-- 1 akim lrde 3335 oct 2 16:31 calc.y
98
99This is not _that_ ugly as it seems - with Automake you want to put
100sources where they belong - to the source directory.
101
102> | This is not _that_ ugly as it seems - with Automake you want to put
103> | sources where they belong - to the source directory.
104>
105> The difference source/build you are referring to is based on Automake
106> concepts. They have no sense at all for tools such as bison or gcc
107> etc. They have input and output. I do not want them to try to grasp
108> source/build. I want them to behave uniformly: output *here*.
109
110I realize that.
111
112It's unfortunate that the native mode of Bison behaves in a less uniform
113way than the yacc mode. I agree with your point. Bison maintainters may
114want to fix it along with the documentation.
115
116
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117* Unit rules
118Maybe we could expand unit rules, i.e., transform
119
120 exp: arith | bool;
121 arith: exp '+' exp;
122 bool: exp '&' exp;
123
124into
125
126 exp: exp '+' exp | exp '&' exp;
127
128when there are no actions. This can significantly speed up some
129grammars.
130
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131* Stupid error messages
132An example shows it easily:
133
134src/bison/tests % ./testsuite -k calc,location,error-verbose -l
135GNU Bison 1.49a test suite test groups:
136
137 NUM: FILENAME:LINE TEST-GROUP-NAME
138 KEYWORDS
139
140 51: calc.at:440 Calculator --locations --yyerror-verbose
141 52: calc.at:442 Calculator --defines --locations --name-prefix=calc --verbose --yacc --yyerror-verbose
142 54: calc.at:445 Calculator --debug --defines --locations --name-prefix=calc --verbose --yacc --yyerror-verbose
143src/bison/tests % ./testsuite 51 -d
144## --------------------------- ##
145## GNU Bison 1.49a test suite. ##
146## --------------------------- ##
147 51: calc.at:440 ok
148## ---------------------------- ##
149## All 1 tests were successful. ##
150## ---------------------------- ##
151src/bison/tests % cd ./testsuite.dir/51
152tests/testsuite.dir/51 % echo "()" | ./calc
1531.2-1.3: parse error, unexpected ')', expecting error or "number" or '-' or '('
fa770c86 154
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155* yyerror, yyprint interface
156It should be improved, in particular when using Bison features such as
157locations, and YYPARSE_PARAMS. For the time being, it is recommended
158to #define yyerror and yyprint to steal internal variables...
159
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160* read_pipe.c
161This is not portable to DOS for instance. Implement a more portable
162scheme. Sources of inspiration include GNU diff, and Free Recode.
163
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164* Memory leaks in the generator
165A round of memory leak clean ups would be most welcome. Dmalloc,
166Checker GCC, Electric Fence, or Valgrind: you chose your tool.
167
168* Memory leaks in the parser
169The same applies to the generated parsers. In particular, this is
170critical for user data: when aborting a parsing, when handling the
171error token etc., we often throw away yylval without giving a chance
172of cleaning it up to the user.
173
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174* NEWS
175Sort from 1.31 NEWS.
176
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177* Prologue
178The %union is declared after the user C declarations. It can be
704a47c4 179a problem if YYSTYPE is declared after the user part. []
bcb05e75 180
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181Actually, the real problem seems that the %union ought to be output
182where it was defined. For instance, in gettext/intl/plural.y, we
183have:
184
185 %{
186 ...
187 #include "gettextP.h"
188 ...
189 %}
190
191 %union {
192 unsigned long int num;
193 enum operator op;
194 struct expression *exp;
195 }
196
197 %{
198 ...
199 static int yylex PARAMS ((YYSTYPE *lval, const char **pexp));
200 ...
201 %}
202
203Where the first part defines struct expression, the second uses it to
204define YYSTYPE, and the last uses YYSTYPE. Only this order is valid.
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205
206* --graph
207Show reductions. []
208
704a47c4 209* Broken options ?
c3995d99 210** %no-lines [ok]
04a76783 211** %no-parser []
fbbf9b3b 212** %pure-parser []
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213** %semantic-parser []
214** %token-table []
215** Options which could use parse_dquoted_param ().
216Maybe transfered in lex.c.
217*** %skeleton [ok]
218*** %output []
219*** %file-prefix []
220*** %name-prefix []
ec93a213 221
fbbf9b3b 222** Skeleton strategy. []
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223Must we keep %no-parser?
224 %token-table?
fbbf9b3b 225*** New skeletons. []
416bd7a9 226
c111e171 227* src/print_graph.c
31b53af2 228Find the best graph parameters. []
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229
230* doc/bison.texinfo
1a4648ff 231** Update
c3a8cbaa 232informations about ERROR_VERBOSE. []
1a4648ff 233** Add explainations about
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234skeleton muscles. []
235%skeleton. []
eeeb962b 236
704a47c4 237* testsuite
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238** tests/pure-parser.at []
239New tests.
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240
241* Debugging parsers
242
243From Greg McGary:
244
245akim demaille <akim.demaille@epita.fr> writes:
246
247> With great pleasure! Nonetheless, things which are debatable
248> (or not, but just `big') should be discuss in `public': something
249> like help- or bug-bison@gnu.org is just fine. Jesse and I are there,
250> but there is also Jim and some other people.
251
252I have no idea whether it qualifies as big or controversial, so I'll
253just summarize for you. I proposed this change years ago and was
254surprised that it was met with utter indifference!
255
256This debug feature is for the programs/grammars one develops with
257bison, not for debugging bison itself. I find that the YYDEBUG
258output comes in a very inconvenient format for my purposes.
259When debugging gcc, for instance, what I want is to see a trace of
260the sequence of reductions and the line#s for the semantic actions
261so I can follow what's happening. Single-step in gdb doesn't cut it
262because to move from one semantic action to the next takes you through
263lots of internal machinery of the parser, which is uninteresting.
264
265The change I made was to the format of the debug output, so that it
266comes out in the format of C error messages, digestible by emacs
267compile mode, like so:
268
269grammar.y:1234: foo: bar(0x123456) baz(0x345678)
270
271where "foo: bar baz" is the reduction rule, whose semantic action
272appears on line 1234 of the bison grammar file grammar.y. The hex
273numbers on the rhs tokens are the parse-stack values associated with
274those tokens. Of course, yytype might be something totally
275incompatible with that representation, but for the most part, yytype
276values are single words (scalars or pointers). In the case of gcc,
277they're most often pointers to tree nodes. Come to think of it, the
278right thing to do is to make the printing of stack values be
279user-definable. It would also be useful to include the filename &
280line# of the file being parsed, but the main filename & line# should
281continue to be that of grammar.y
282
283Anyway, this feature has saved my life on numerous occasions. The way
284I customarily use it is to first run bison with the traces on, isolate
285the sequence of reductions that interests me, put those traces in a
286buffer and force it into compile-mode, then visit each of those lines
287in the grammar and set breakpoints with C-x SPACE. Then, I can run
288again under the control of gdb and stop at each semantic action.
289With the hex addresses of tree nodes, I can inspect the values
290associated with any rhs token.
291
292You like?
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293
294* input synclines
295Some users create their foo.y files, and equip them with #line. Bison
296should recognize these, and preserve them.
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297
298* BTYacc
299See if we can integrate backtracking in Bison. Contact the BTYacc
300maintainers.
301
302* Automaton report
303Display more clearly the lookaheads for each item.
304
305* RR conflicts
306See if we can use precedence between rules to solve RR conflicts. See
307what POSIX says.
308
309* Precedence
310It is unfortunate that there is a total order for precedence. It
311makes it impossible to have modular precedence information. We should
312move to partial orders.
313
314* Parsing grammars
315Rewrite the reader in Bison.
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316
317-----
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