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3c31a486 1# Exercising Bison on conflicts. -*- Autotest -*-
69363a9e 2
34136e65 3# Copyright (C) 2002-2005, 2007-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3c31a486 4
f16b0819 5# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
3c31a486 6# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
f16b0819
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7# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
8# (at your option) any later version.
9#
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10# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
11# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
12# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
13# GNU General Public License for more details.
f16b0819 14#
3c31a486 15# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
f16b0819 16# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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17
18AT_BANNER([[Conflicts.]])
19
20
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21## ---------------- ##
22## S/R in initial. ##
23## ---------------- ##
24
25# I once hacked Bison in such a way that it lost its reductions on the
26# initial state (because it was confusing it with the last state). It
27# took me a while to strip down my failures to this simple case. So
28# make sure it finds the s/r conflict below.
29
30AT_SETUP([S/R in initial])
31
32AT_DATA([[input.y]],
33[[%expect 1
34%%
35exp: e 'e';
36e: 'e' | /* Nothing. */;
37]])
38
da730230 39AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c input.y], 0, [],
73370a9d 40[[input.y:4.9: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: e: /* empty */ [-Wother]
e8832397 41]])
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42
43AT_CLEANUP
44
bc933ef1 45
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46## ------------------- ##
47## %nonassoc and eof. ##
48## ------------------- ##
49
50AT_SETUP([%nonassoc and eof])
51
55f48c48 52AT_BISON_OPTION_PUSHDEFS
9501dc6e 53AT_DATA_GRAMMAR([input.y],
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54[[
55%{
56#include <stdio.h>
6e26ca8c 57#include <stdlib.h>
cf806753 58#include <string.h>
77519a7d 59#include <assert.h>
1207eeac 60
3c31a486 61#define YYERROR_VERBOSE 1
55f48c48 62]AT_YYERROR_DEFINE[
3c31a486 63/* The current argument. */
cf806753 64static const char *input;
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65
66static int
67yylex (void)
68{
cf806753 69 static size_t toknum;
77519a7d 70 assert (toknum <= strlen (input));
cf806753 71 return input[toknum++];
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72}
73
74%}
75
76%nonassoc '<' '>'
77
78%%
79expr: expr '<' expr
80 | expr '>' expr
81 | '0'
82 ;
83%%
84int
85main (int argc, const char *argv[])
86{
9d774aff 87 input = argc <= 1 ? "" : argv[1];
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88 return yyparse ();
89}
90]])
55f48c48 91AT_BISON_OPTION_POPDEFS
3c31a486 92
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93m4_pushdef([AT_NONASSOC_AND_EOF_CHECK],
94[AT_BISON_CHECK([$1[ -o input.c input.y]])
1154cced 95AT_COMPILE([input])
3c31a486 96
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97m4_pushdef([AT_EXPECTING], [m4_if($2, [correct], [[, expecting $end]])])
98
1154cced 99AT_PARSER_CHECK([./input '0<0'])
1154cced 100AT_PARSER_CHECK([./input '0<0<0'], [1], [],
bf35c71c 101 [syntax error, unexpected '<'AT_EXPECTING
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102])
103
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104AT_PARSER_CHECK([./input '0>0'])
105AT_PARSER_CHECK([./input '0>0>0'], [1], [],
bf35c71c 106 [syntax error, unexpected '>'AT_EXPECTING
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107])
108
1154cced 109AT_PARSER_CHECK([./input '0<0>0'], [1], [],
bf35c71c 110 [syntax error, unexpected '>'AT_EXPECTING
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111])
112
bf35c71c 113m4_popdef([AT_EXPECTING])])
d1cc31c5 114
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115# Expected token list is missing.
116AT_NONASSOC_AND_EOF_CHECK([], [[incorrect]])
d1cc31c5 117
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118# We must disable default reductions in inconsistent states in order to
119# have an explicit list of all expected tokens.
120AT_NONASSOC_AND_EOF_CHECK([[-Dlr.default-reductions=consistent]],
121 [[correct]])
122
123# lr.default-reductions=consistent happens to work for this test case.
124# However, for other grammars, lookahead sets can be merged for
125# different left contexts, so it is still possible to have an incorrect
126# expected list. Canonical LR is almost a general solution (that is, it
127# can fail only when %nonassoc is used), so make sure it gives the same
128# result as above.
129AT_NONASSOC_AND_EOF_CHECK([[-Dlr.type=canonical-lr]], [[correct]])
130
131# parse.lac=full is a completely general solution that does not require
132# any of the above sacrifices. Of course, it does not extend the
133# language-recognition power of LALR to (IE)LR, but it does ensure that
134# the reported list of expected tokens matches what the given parser
135# would have accepted in place of the unexpected token.
136AT_NONASSOC_AND_EOF_CHECK([[-Dparse.lac=full]], [[correct]])
137
138m4_popdef([AT_NONASSOC_AND_EOF_CHECK])
d1cc31c5 139
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140AT_CLEANUP
141
142
143
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144## ------------------------------------------- ##
145## parse.error=verbose and consistent errors. ##
146## ------------------------------------------- ##
147
148AT_SETUP([[parse.error=verbose and consistent errors]])
149
150m4_pushdef([AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK], [
151
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152AT_BISON_OPTION_PUSHDEFS([$1])
153
154m4_pushdef([AT_YYLEX_PROTOTYPE],
155[AT_SKEL_CC_IF([[int yylex (yy::parser::semantic_type *lvalp)]],
156 [[int yylex (YYSTYPE *lvalp)]])])
157
158AT_SKEL_JAVA_IF([AT_DATA], [AT_DATA_GRAMMAR])([input.y],
159[AT_SKEL_JAVA_IF([[
160
161%code imports {
162 import java.io.IOException;
163}]], [[
164
165%code {]AT_SKEL_CC_IF([[
166 #include <string>]], [[
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167 #include <assert.h>
168 #include <stdio.h>
55f48c48 169 ]AT_YYERROR_DECLARE])[
d2060f06 170 ]AT_YYLEX_PROTOTYPE[;
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171 #define USE(Var)
172}
173
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174]AT_SKEL_CC_IF([[%defines]], [[%define api.pure]])])[
175
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176]$1[
177
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178%define parse.error verbose
179
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180%%
181
182]$2[
183
d2060f06 184]AT_SKEL_JAVA_IF([[%code lexer {]], [[%%]])[
25a648d8 185
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186/*--------.
187| yylex. |
188`--------*/]AT_SKEL_JAVA_IF([[
189
190public String input = "]$3[";
191public int index = 0;
192public int yylex ()
193{
194 if (index < input.length ())
195 return input.charAt (index++);
196 else
197 return 0;
198}
199public Object getLVal ()
200{
201 return new Integer(1);
202}]], [[
203
204]AT_YYLEX_PROTOTYPE[
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205{
206 static char const *input = "]$3[";
d2060f06 207 *lvalp = 1;
25a648d8 208 return *input++;
d2060f06 209}]])[
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210]AT_YYERROR_DEFINE[
211]AT_SKEL_JAVA_IF([[
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212};
213
55f48c48 214%%]])[
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215
216/*-------.
217| main. |
218`-------*/]AT_SKEL_JAVA_IF([[
219
220class input
221{
222 public static void main (String args[]) throws IOException
223 {
224 YYParser p = new YYParser ();
225 p.parse ();
226 }
227}]], [AT_SKEL_CC_IF([[
228
229int
230main (void)
231{
232 yy::parser parser;
233 return parser.parse ();
234}]], [[
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235
236int
237main (void)
238{
239 return yyparse ();
d2060f06 240}]])])[
25a648d8 241]])
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242
243AT_FULL_COMPILE([[input]])
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244
245m4_pushdef([AT_EXPECTING], [m4_if($5, [ab], [[, expecting 'a' or 'b']],
246 $5, [a], [[, expecting 'a']],
247 $5, [b], [[, expecting 'b']])])
df222dfa 248
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249AT_SKEL_JAVA_IF([AT_JAVA_PARSER_CHECK([[input]], [[0]]],
250 [AT_PARSER_CHECK([[./input]], [[1]]]),
251[[]],
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252[[syntax error, unexpected ]$4[]AT_EXPECTING[
253]])
254
255m4_popdef([AT_EXPECTING])
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256m4_popdef([AT_YYLEX_PROTOTYPE])
257AT_BISON_OPTION_POPDEFS
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258
259])
260
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261m4_pushdef([AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
262[[%nonassoc 'a';
263
264start: consistent-error-on-a-a 'a' ;
265
266consistent-error-on-a-a:
267 'a' default-reduction
268 | 'a' default-reduction 'a'
269 | 'a' shift
270 ;
271
272default-reduction: /*empty*/ ;
273shift: 'b' ;
274
275// Provide another context in which all rules are useful so that this
276// test case looks a little more realistic.
277start: 'b' consistent-error-on-a-a 'c' ;
278]])
279
280m4_pushdef([AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT], [[a]])
281
282# Unfortunately, no expected tokens are reported even though 'b' can be
283# accepted. Nevertheless, the main point of this test is to make sure
284# that at least the unexpected token is reported. In a previous version
285# of Bison, it wasn't reported because the error is detected in a
286# consistent state with an error action, and that case always triggered
287# the simple "syntax error" message.
288#
289# The point isn't to test IELR here, but state merging happens to
290# complicate this example.
291AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr]],
292 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
293 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
294 [[$end]], [[none]])
295AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
296 %glr-parser]],
297 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
298 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
299 [[$end]], [[none]])
300AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
301 %language "c++"]],
302 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
303 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
304 [[$end]], [[none]])
305AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
306 %language "java"]],
307 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
308 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
309 [[end of input]], [[none]])
310
311# Even canonical LR doesn't foresee the error for 'a'!
312AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
313 %define lr.default-reductions consistent]],
314 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
315 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
316 [[$end]], [[ab]])
317AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
318 %define lr.default-reductions accepting]],
319 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
320 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
321 [[$end]], [[ab]])
322AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type canonical-lr]],
323 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
324 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
325 [[$end]], [[ab]])
326
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327# Only LAC gets it right.
328AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type canonical-lr
329 %define parse.lac full]],
330 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
331 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
332 [[$end]], [[b]])
333AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
334 %define parse.lac full]],
335 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
336 [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
337 [[$end]], [[b]])
338
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339m4_popdef([AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR])
340m4_popdef([AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT])
341
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342m4_pushdef([AT_USER_ACTION_GRAMMAR],
343[[%nonassoc 'a';
df222dfa 344
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345// If $$ = 0 here, then we know that the 'a' destructor is being invoked
346// incorrectly for the 'b' set in the semantic action below. All 'a'
347// tokens are returned by yylex, which sets $$ = 1.
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348%destructor {
349 if (!$$)
350 fprintf (stderr, "Wrong destructor.\n");
25a648d8 351} 'a';
df222dfa 352
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353// Rather than depend on an inconsistent state to induce reading a
354// lookahead as in the previous grammar, just assign the lookahead in a
355// semantic action. That lookahead isn't needed before either error
356// action is encountered. In a previous version of Bison, this was a
357// problem as it meant yychar was not translated into yytoken before
358// either error action. The second error action thus invoked a
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359// destructor that it selected according to the incorrect yytoken. The
360// first error action would have reported an incorrect unexpected token
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361// except that, due to the bug described in the previous grammar, the
362// unexpected token was not reported at all.
25a648d8 363start: error-reduce consistent-error 'a' { USE ($][3); } ;
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364
365error-reduce:
366 'a' 'a' consistent-reduction consistent-error 'a'
25a648d8 367 { USE (($][1, $][2, $][5)); }
df222dfa 368| 'a' error
25a648d8 369 { USE ($][1); }
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370;
371
372consistent-reduction: /*empty*/ {
373 assert (yychar == YYEMPTY);
374 yylval = 0;
375 yychar = 'b';
376} ;
377
378consistent-error:
25a648d8 379 'a' { USE ($][1); }
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380| /*empty*/ %prec 'a'
381;
382
383// Provide another context in which all rules are useful so that this
384// test case looks a little more realistic.
385start: 'b' consistent-error 'b' ;
df222dfa 386]])
25a648d8 387m4_pushdef([AT_USER_ACTION_INPUT], [[aa]])
df222dfa 388
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389AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[]],
390 [AT_USER_ACTION_GRAMMAR],
391 [AT_USER_ACTION_INPUT],
392 [['b']], [[none]])
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393AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%glr-parser]],
394 [AT_USER_ACTION_GRAMMAR],
395 [AT_USER_ACTION_INPUT],
396 [['b']], [[none]])
397# No C++ or Java test because yychar cannot be manipulated by users.
398
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399AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.default-reductions consistent]],
400 [AT_USER_ACTION_GRAMMAR],
401 [AT_USER_ACTION_INPUT],
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402 [['b']], [[none]])
403
404# Canonical LR doesn't foresee the error for 'a'!
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405AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.default-reductions accepting]],
406 [AT_USER_ACTION_GRAMMAR],
407 [AT_USER_ACTION_INPUT],
df222dfa 408 [[$end]], [[a]])
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409AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type canonical-lr]],
410 [AT_USER_ACTION_GRAMMAR],
411 [AT_USER_ACTION_INPUT],
412 [[$end]], [[a]])
413
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414AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define parse.lac full]],
415 [AT_USER_ACTION_GRAMMAR],
416 [AT_USER_ACTION_INPUT],
417 [['b']], [[none]])
418AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define parse.lac full
419 %define lr.default-reductions accepting]],
420 [AT_USER_ACTION_GRAMMAR],
421 [AT_USER_ACTION_INPUT],
422 [[$end]], [[none]])
423
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424m4_popdef([AT_USER_ACTION_GRAMMAR])
425m4_popdef([AT_USER_ACTION_INPUT])
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426
427m4_popdef([AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK])
428
429AT_CLEANUP
430
431
432
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433## ------------------------------------------------------- ##
434## LAC: %nonassoc requires splitting canonical LR states. ##
435## ------------------------------------------------------- ##
436
437# This test case demonstrates that, when %nonassoc is used, canonical
438# LR(1) parser table construction followed by conflict resolution
439# without further state splitting is not always sufficient to produce a
440# parser that can detect all syntax errors as soon as possible on one
441# token of lookahead. However, LAC solves the problem completely even
442# with minimal LR parser tables.
443
444AT_SETUP([[LAC: %nonassoc requires splitting canonical LR states]])
55f48c48 445AT_BISON_OPTION_PUSHDEFS
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446AT_DATA_GRAMMAR([[input.y]],
447[[%code {
448 #include <stdio.h>
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449 ]AT_YYERROR_DECLARE[
450 ]AT_YYLEX_DECLARE[
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451}
452
453%error-verbose
454%nonassoc 'a'
455
456%%
457
458start:
459 'a' problem 'a' // First context.
460| 'b' problem 'b' // Second context.
461| 'c' reduce-nonassoc // Just makes reduce-nonassoc useful.
462;
463
464problem:
465 look reduce-nonassoc
466| look 'a'
467| look 'b'
468;
469
470// For the state reached after shifting the 'a' in these productions,
471// lookahead sets are the same in both the first and second contexts.
472// Thus, canonical LR reuses the same state for both contexts. However,
473// the lookahead 'a' for the reduction "look: 'a'" later becomes an
474// error action only in the first context. In order to immediately
475// detect the syntax error on 'a' here for only the first context, this
476// canonical LR state would have to be split into two states, and the
477// 'a' lookahead would have to be removed from only one of the states.
478look:
479 'a' // Reduction lookahead set is always ['a', 'b'].
480| 'a' 'b'
481| 'a' 'c' // 'c' is forgotten as an expected token.
482;
483
484reduce-nonassoc: %prec 'a';
485
486%%
55f48c48 487]AT_YYERROR_DEFINE[
95361618 488]AT_YYLEX_DEFINE(["aaa"])[
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489
490int
491main (void)
492{
493 return yyparse ();
494}
495]])
55f48c48 496AT_BISON_OPTION_POPDEFS
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497
498# Show canonical LR's failure.
499AT_BISON_CHECK([[-Dlr.type=canonical-lr -o input.c input.y]],
500 [[0]], [[]],
501[[input.y: conflicts: 2 shift/reduce
502]])
503AT_COMPILE([[input]])
504AT_PARSER_CHECK([[./input]], [[1]], [[]],
505[[syntax error, unexpected 'a', expecting 'b'
506]])
507
508# It's corrected by LAC.
509AT_BISON_CHECK([[-Dlr.type=canonical-lr -Dparse.lac=full \
510 -o input.c input.y]], [[0]], [[]],
511[[input.y: conflicts: 2 shift/reduce
512]])
513AT_COMPILE([[input]])
514AT_PARSER_CHECK([[./input]], [[1]], [[]],
515[[syntax error, unexpected 'a', expecting 'b' or 'c'
516]])
517
518# IELR is sufficient when LAC is used.
519AT_BISON_CHECK([[-Dlr.type=ielr -Dparse.lac=full -o input.c input.y]],
520 [[0]], [[]],
521[[input.y: conflicts: 2 shift/reduce
522]])
523AT_COMPILE([[input]])
524AT_PARSER_CHECK([[./input]], [[1]], [[]],
525[[syntax error, unexpected 'a', expecting 'b' or 'c'
526]])
527
528AT_CLEANUP
529
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530## ------------------------- ##
531## Unresolved SR Conflicts. ##
532## ------------------------- ##
533
534AT_SETUP([Unresolved SR Conflicts])
535
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536AT_KEYWORDS([report])
537
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538AT_DATA([input.y],
539[[%token NUM OP
540%%
541exp: exp OP exp | NUM;
542]])
543
da730230 544AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c --report=all input.y], 0, [],
2c8ba4cd 545[input.y: conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
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546])
547
548# Check the contents of the report.
549AT_CHECK([cat input.output], [],
2c8ba4cd 550[[State 5 conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
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551
552
553Grammar
554
88bce5a2 555 0 $accept: exp $end
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556
557 1 exp: exp OP exp
558 2 | NUM
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559
560
561Terminals, with rules where they appear
562
88bce5a2 563$end (0) 0
3c31a486 564error (256)
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565NUM (258) 2
566OP (259) 1
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567
568
569Nonterminals, with rules where they appear
570
88bce5a2 571$accept (5)
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572 on left: 0
573exp (6)
574 on left: 1 2, on right: 0 1
575
576
577state 0
578
88bce5a2 579 0 $accept: . exp $end
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580 1 exp: . exp OP exp
581 2 | . NUM
643a5994 582
87675353 583 NUM shift, and go to state 1
3c31a486 584
87675353 585 exp go to state 2
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586
587
588state 1
589
ce4ccb4b 590 2 exp: NUM .
3c31a486 591
87675353 592 $default reduce using rule 2 (exp)
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593
594
595state 2
596
88bce5a2 597 0 $accept: exp . $end
ce4ccb4b 598 1 exp: exp . OP exp
3c31a486 599
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600 $end shift, and go to state 3
601 OP shift, and go to state 4
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602
603
604state 3
605
88bce5a2 606 0 $accept: exp $end .
3c31a486 607
e8832397 608 $default accept
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609
610
611state 4
612
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613 1 exp: . exp OP exp
614 1 | exp OP . exp
615 2 | . NUM
3c31a486 616
87675353 617 NUM shift, and go to state 1
3c31a486 618
87675353 619 exp go to state 5
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620
621
622state 5
623
a0de5091 624 1 exp: exp . OP exp
88bce5a2 625 1 | exp OP exp . [$end, OP]
3c31a486 626
87675353 627 OP shift, and go to state 4
3c31a486 628
87675353
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629 OP [reduce using rule 1 (exp)]
630 $default reduce using rule 1 (exp)
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631]])
632
633AT_CLEANUP
634
635
3c31a486 636
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637## ----------------------- ##
638## Resolved SR Conflicts. ##
639## ----------------------- ##
640
641AT_SETUP([Resolved SR Conflicts])
3c31a486 642
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643AT_KEYWORDS([report])
644
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645AT_DATA([input.y],
646[[%token NUM OP
ce4ccb4b 647%left OP
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648%%
649exp: exp OP exp | NUM;
650]])
651
da730230 652AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c --report=all input.y])
3c31a486
AD
653
654# Check the contents of the report.
655AT_CHECK([cat input.output], [],
ce4ccb4b 656[[Grammar
3c31a486 657
88bce5a2 658 0 $accept: exp $end
6b98e4b5
AD
659
660 1 exp: exp OP exp
661 2 | NUM
3c31a486
AD
662
663
664Terminals, with rules where they appear
665
88bce5a2 666$end (0) 0
3c31a486 667error (256)
007a50a4
AD
668NUM (258) 2
669OP (259) 1
3c31a486
AD
670
671
672Nonterminals, with rules where they appear
673
88bce5a2 674$accept (5)
3c31a486
AD
675 on left: 0
676exp (6)
677 on left: 1 2, on right: 0 1
678
679
680state 0
681
88bce5a2 682 0 $accept: . exp $end
ce4ccb4b
AD
683 1 exp: . exp OP exp
684 2 | . NUM
643a5994 685
87675353 686 NUM shift, and go to state 1
3c31a486 687
87675353 688 exp go to state 2
3c31a486
AD
689
690
691state 1
692
ce4ccb4b 693 2 exp: NUM .
3c31a486 694
87675353 695 $default reduce using rule 2 (exp)
3c31a486
AD
696
697
698state 2
699
88bce5a2 700 0 $accept: exp . $end
ce4ccb4b 701 1 exp: exp . OP exp
3c31a486 702
88bce5a2
AD
703 $end shift, and go to state 3
704 OP shift, and go to state 4
3c31a486
AD
705
706
707state 3
708
88bce5a2 709 0 $accept: exp $end .
3c31a486 710
e8832397 711 $default accept
3c31a486
AD
712
713
714state 4
715
ce4ccb4b
AD
716 1 exp: . exp OP exp
717 1 | exp OP . exp
718 2 | . NUM
3c31a486 719
87675353 720 NUM shift, and go to state 1
3c31a486 721
87675353 722 exp go to state 5
3c31a486
AD
723
724
725state 5
726
a0de5091 727 1 exp: exp . OP exp
88bce5a2 728 1 | exp OP exp . [$end, OP]
3c31a486 729
87675353 730 $default reduce using rule 1 (exp)
7ea9a33f 731
4b3d3a8e 732 Conflict between rule 1 and token OP resolved as reduce (%left OP).
bc933ef1
AD
733]])
734
735AT_CLEANUP
736
737
d78f0ac9
AD
738## ---------------------- ##
739## %precedence suffices. ##
740## ---------------------- ##
741
742AT_SETUP([%precedence suffices])
743
744AT_DATA([input.y],
745[[%precedence "then"
746%precedence "else"
747%%
748stmt:
749 "if" cond "then" stmt
750| "if" cond "then" stmt "else" stmt
751| "stmt"
752;
753
754cond:
755 "exp"
756;
757]])
758
759AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c input.y])
760
761AT_CLEANUP
762
763
764## ------------------------------ ##
765## %precedence does not suffice. ##
766## ------------------------------ ##
767
768AT_SETUP([%precedence does not suffice])
769
770AT_DATA([input.y],
771[[%precedence "then"
772%precedence "else"
773%%
774stmt:
775 "if" cond "then" stmt
776| "if" cond "then" stmt "else" stmt
777| "stmt"
778;
779
780cond:
781 "exp"
782| cond "then" cond
783;
784]])
785
786AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c input.y], 0, [],
787[[input.y: conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
73370a9d 788input.y:12.3-18: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: cond: cond "then" cond [-Wother]
d78f0ac9
AD
789]])
790
791AT_CLEANUP
792
793
bc933ef1
AD
794## -------------------------------- ##
795## Defaulted Conflicted Reduction. ##
796## -------------------------------- ##
797
798# When there are RR conflicts, some rules are disabled. Usually it is
799# simply displayed as:
800#
88bce5a2
AD
801# $end reduce using rule 3 (num)
802# $end [reduce using rule 4 (id)]
bc933ef1
AD
803#
804# But when `reduce 3' is the default action, we'd produce:
805#
88bce5a2 806# $end [reduce using rule 4 (id)]
bc933ef1
AD
807# $default reduce using rule 3 (num)
808#
809# In this precise case (a reduction is masked by the default
810# reduction), we make the `reduce 3' explicit:
811#
88bce5a2
AD
812# $end reduce using rule 3 (num)
813# $end [reduce using rule 4 (id)]
bc933ef1
AD
814# $default reduce using rule 3 (num)
815#
816# Maybe that's not the best display, but then, please propose something
817# else.
818
819AT_SETUP([Defaulted Conflicted Reduction])
820AT_KEYWORDS([report])
821
822AT_DATA([input.y],
823[[%%
824exp: num | id;
825num: '0';
826id : '0';
827%%
828]])
829
da730230 830AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c --report=all input.y], 0, [],
2c8ba4cd 831[[input.y: conflicts: 1 reduce/reduce
73370a9d 832input.y:4.6-8: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: id: '0' [-Wother]
e8832397 833]])
bc933ef1
AD
834
835# Check the contents of the report.
836AT_CHECK([cat input.output], [],
cff03fb2 837[[Rules useless in parser due to conflicts
c8f002c7
AD
838
839 4 id: '0'
840
841
2c8ba4cd 842State 1 conflicts: 1 reduce/reduce
bc933ef1
AD
843
844
845Grammar
846
88bce5a2 847 0 $accept: exp $end
bc933ef1
AD
848
849 1 exp: num
850 2 | id
851
852 3 num: '0'
853
854 4 id: '0'
855
856
857Terminals, with rules where they appear
858
88bce5a2 859$end (0) 0
bc933ef1
AD
860'0' (48) 3 4
861error (256)
862
863
864Nonterminals, with rules where they appear
865
88bce5a2 866$accept (4)
bc933ef1
AD
867 on left: 0
868exp (5)
869 on left: 1 2, on right: 0
870num (6)
871 on left: 3, on right: 1
872id (7)
873 on left: 4, on right: 2
874
875
876state 0
877
88bce5a2 878 0 $accept: . exp $end
ce4ccb4b
AD
879 1 exp: . num
880 2 | . id
881 3 num: . '0'
882 4 id: . '0'
bc933ef1 883
87675353 884 '0' shift, and go to state 1
bc933ef1 885
87675353
AD
886 exp go to state 2
887 num go to state 3
888 id go to state 4
bc933ef1
AD
889
890
891state 1
892
88bce5a2
AD
893 3 num: '0' . [$end]
894 4 id: '0' . [$end]
bc933ef1 895
88bce5a2
AD
896 $end reduce using rule 3 (num)
897 $end [reduce using rule 4 (id)]
87675353 898 $default reduce using rule 3 (num)
bc933ef1
AD
899
900
901state 2
902
88bce5a2 903 0 $accept: exp . $end
bc933ef1 904
88bce5a2 905 $end shift, and go to state 5
bc933ef1
AD
906
907
908state 3
909
ce4ccb4b 910 1 exp: num .
bc933ef1 911
87675353 912 $default reduce using rule 1 (exp)
bc933ef1
AD
913
914
915state 4
916
ce4ccb4b 917 2 exp: id .
bc933ef1 918
87675353 919 $default reduce using rule 2 (exp)
bc933ef1
AD
920
921
922state 5
923
88bce5a2 924 0 $accept: exp $end .
bc933ef1 925
e8832397 926 $default accept
3c31a486
AD
927]])
928
929AT_CLEANUP
930
931
932
933
934## -------------------- ##
935## %expect not enough. ##
936## -------------------- ##
937
938AT_SETUP([%expect not enough])
939
940AT_DATA([input.y],
941[[%token NUM OP
942%expect 0
943%%
944exp: exp OP exp | NUM;
945]])
946
da730230 947AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c input.y], 1, [],
2c8ba4cd 948[input.y: conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
035aa4a0 949input.y: expected 0 shift/reduce conflicts
3c31a486
AD
950])
951AT_CLEANUP
952
953
954## --------------- ##
955## %expect right. ##
956## --------------- ##
957
958AT_SETUP([%expect right])
959
960AT_DATA([input.y],
961[[%token NUM OP
962%expect 1
963%%
964exp: exp OP exp | NUM;
965]])
966
da730230 967AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c input.y])
3c31a486
AD
968AT_CLEANUP
969
970
971## ------------------ ##
972## %expect too much. ##
973## ------------------ ##
974
975AT_SETUP([%expect too much])
976
977AT_DATA([input.y],
978[[%token NUM OP
979%expect 2
980%%
981exp: exp OP exp | NUM;
982]])
983
da730230 984AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c input.y], 1, [],
2c8ba4cd 985[input.y: conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
035aa4a0 986input.y: expected 2 shift/reduce conflicts
3c31a486
AD
987])
988AT_CLEANUP
6876ecd3
PE
989
990
41976786
AD
991## ------------------------------- ##
992## %expect with reduce conflicts. ##
993## ------------------------------- ##
6876ecd3
PE
994
995AT_SETUP([%expect with reduce conflicts])
996
997AT_DATA([input.y],
998[[%expect 0
999%%
1000program: a 'a' | a a;
1001a: 'a';
1002]])
1003
da730230 1004AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c input.y], 1, [],
2c8ba4cd 1005[input.y: conflicts: 1 reduce/reduce
035aa4a0 1006input.y: expected 0 reduce/reduce conflicts
6876ecd3
PE
1007])
1008AT_CLEANUP
39a06c25
PE
1009
1010
44bb9084
AD
1011## ------------------------- ##
1012## %prec with user strings. ##
1013## ------------------------- ##
1014
1015AT_SETUP([%prec with user string])
1016
1017AT_DATA([[input.y]],
1018[[%%
1019exp:
1020 "foo" %prec "foo"
1021;
1022]])
1023
1024AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c input.y])
1025AT_CLEANUP
1026
1027
1028## -------------------------------- ##
1029## %no-default-prec without %prec. ##
1030## -------------------------------- ##
39a06c25 1031
22fccf95 1032AT_SETUP([%no-default-prec without %prec])
39a06c25
PE
1033
1034AT_DATA([[input.y]],
1035[[%left '+'
1036%left '*'
1037
1038%%
1039
22fccf95 1040%no-default-prec;
39a06c25
PE
1041
1042e: e '+' e
1043 | e '*' e
1044 | '0'
1045 ;
1046]])
1047
da730230 1048AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c input.y], 0, [],
39a06c25
PE
1049[[input.y: conflicts: 4 shift/reduce
1050]])
1051AT_CLEANUP
1052
1053
41976786
AD
1054## ----------------------------- ##
1055## %no-default-prec with %prec. ##
1056## ----------------------------- ##
39a06c25 1057
22fccf95 1058AT_SETUP([%no-default-prec with %prec])
39a06c25
PE
1059
1060AT_DATA([[input.y]],
1061[[%left '+'
1062%left '*'
1063
1064%%
1065
22fccf95 1066%no-default-prec;
39a06c25
PE
1067
1068e: e '+' e %prec '+'
1069 | e '*' e %prec '*'
1070 | '0'
1071 ;
1072]])
1073
da730230 1074AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c input.y])
39a06c25
PE
1075AT_CLEANUP
1076
1077
41976786
AD
1078## --------------- ##
1079## %default-prec. ##
1080## --------------- ##
39a06c25 1081
22fccf95 1082AT_SETUP([%default-prec])
39a06c25
PE
1083
1084AT_DATA([[input.y]],
1085[[%left '+'
1086%left '*'
1087
1088%%
1089
22fccf95 1090%default-prec;
39a06c25
PE
1091
1092e: e '+' e
1093 | e '*' e
1094 | '0'
1095 ;
1096]])
1097
da730230 1098AT_BISON_CHECK([-o input.c input.y])
39a06c25 1099AT_CLEANUP
5967f0cf
JD
1100
1101
1102## ---------------------------------------------- ##
1103## Unreachable States After Conflict Resolution. ##
1104## ---------------------------------------------- ##
1105
1106AT_SETUP([[Unreachable States After Conflict Resolution]])
1107
1108# If conflict resolution makes states unreachable, remove those states, report
1109# rules that are then unused, and don't report conflicts in those states. Test
1110# what happens when a nonterminal becomes useless as a result of state removal
1111# since that causes lalr.o's goto map to be rewritten.
1112
1113AT_DATA([[input.y]],
1114[[%output "input.c"
1115%left 'a'
1116
1117%%
1118
1119start: resolved_conflict 'a' reported_conflicts 'a' ;
1120
31984206 1121/* S/R conflict resolved as reduce, so the state with item
5967f0cf
JD
1122 * (resolved_conflict: 'a' . unreachable1) and all it transition successors are
1123 * unreachable, and the associated production is useless. */
1124resolved_conflict:
1125 'a' unreachable1
1126 | %prec 'a'
1127 ;
1128
1129/* S/R conflict that need not be reported since it is unreachable because of
1130 * the previous conflict resolution. Nonterminal unreachable1 and all its
1131 * productions are useless. */
1132unreachable1:
1133 'a' unreachable2
1134 |
1135 ;
1136
1137/* Likewise for a R/R conflict and nonterminal unreachable2. */
1138unreachable2: | ;
1139
1140/* Make sure remaining S/R and R/R conflicts are still reported correctly even
1141 * when their states are renumbered due to state removal. */
1142reported_conflicts:
1143 'a'
1144 | 'a'
1145 |
1146 ;
1147
1148]])
1149
da730230 1150AT_BISON_CHECK([[--report=all input.y]], 0, [],
5967f0cf 1151[[input.y: conflicts: 1 shift/reduce, 1 reduce/reduce
73370a9d
VS
1152input.y:12.5-20: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: resolved_conflict: 'a' unreachable1 [-Wother]
1153input.y:20.5-20: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: unreachable1: 'a' unreachable2 [-Wother]
1154input.y:21.4: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: unreachable1: /* empty */ [-Wother]
1155input.y:25.13: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: unreachable2: /* empty */ [-Wother]
1156input.y:25.16: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: unreachable2: /* empty */ [-Wother]
1157input.y:31.5-7: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: reported_conflicts: 'a' [-Wother]
1158input.y:32.4: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: reported_conflicts: /* empty */ [-Wother]
5967f0cf
JD
1159]])
1160
1161AT_CHECK([[cat input.output]], 0,
cff03fb2 1162[[Rules useless in parser due to conflicts
5967f0cf
JD
1163
1164 2 resolved_conflict: 'a' unreachable1
1165
1166 4 unreachable1: 'a' unreachable2
1167 5 | /* empty */
1168
1169 6 unreachable2: /* empty */
1170 7 | /* empty */
1171
1172 9 reported_conflicts: 'a'
1173 10 | /* empty */
1174
1175
1176State 4 conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
1177State 5 conflicts: 1 reduce/reduce
1178
1179
1180Grammar
1181
1182 0 $accept: start $end
1183
1184 1 start: resolved_conflict 'a' reported_conflicts 'a'
1185
1186 2 resolved_conflict: 'a' unreachable1
1187 3 | /* empty */
1188
1189 4 unreachable1: 'a' unreachable2
1190 5 | /* empty */
1191
1192 6 unreachable2: /* empty */
1193 7 | /* empty */
1194
1195 8 reported_conflicts: 'a'
1196 9 | 'a'
1197 10 | /* empty */
1198
1199
1200Terminals, with rules where they appear
1201
1202$end (0) 0
1203'a' (97) 1 2 4 8 9
1204error (256)
1205
1206
1207Nonterminals, with rules where they appear
1208
1209$accept (4)
1210 on left: 0
1211start (5)
1212 on left: 1, on right: 0
1213resolved_conflict (6)
1214 on left: 2 3, on right: 1
1215unreachable1 (7)
1216 on left: 4 5, on right: 2
1217unreachable2 (8)
1218 on left: 6 7, on right: 4
1219reported_conflicts (9)
1220 on left: 8 9 10, on right: 1
1221
1222
1223state 0
1224
1225 0 $accept: . start $end
1226 1 start: . resolved_conflict 'a' reported_conflicts 'a'
1227 2 resolved_conflict: . 'a' unreachable1
1228 3 | . ['a']
1229
1230 $default reduce using rule 3 (resolved_conflict)
1231
1232 start go to state 1
1233 resolved_conflict go to state 2
1234
1235 Conflict between rule 3 and token 'a' resolved as reduce (%left 'a').
1236
1237
1238state 1
1239
1240 0 $accept: start . $end
1241
1242 $end shift, and go to state 3
1243
1244
1245state 2
1246
1247 1 start: resolved_conflict . 'a' reported_conflicts 'a'
1248
1249 'a' shift, and go to state 4
1250
1251
1252state 3
1253
1254 0 $accept: start $end .
1255
1256 $default accept
1257
1258
1259state 4
1260
1261 1 start: resolved_conflict 'a' . reported_conflicts 'a'
1262 8 reported_conflicts: . 'a'
1263 9 | . 'a'
1264 10 | . ['a']
1265
1266 'a' shift, and go to state 5
1267
1268 'a' [reduce using rule 10 (reported_conflicts)]
1269
1270 reported_conflicts go to state 6
1271
1272
1273state 5
1274
1275 8 reported_conflicts: 'a' . ['a']
1276 9 | 'a' . ['a']
1277
1278 'a' reduce using rule 8 (reported_conflicts)
1279 'a' [reduce using rule 9 (reported_conflicts)]
1280 $default reduce using rule 8 (reported_conflicts)
1281
1282
1283state 6
1284
1285 1 start: resolved_conflict 'a' reported_conflicts . 'a'
1286
1287 'a' shift, and go to state 7
1288
1289
1290state 7
1291
1292 1 start: resolved_conflict 'a' reported_conflicts 'a' .
9d774aff 1293
5967f0cf
JD
1294 $default reduce using rule 1 (start)
1295]])
1296
31984206 1297AT_DATA([[input-keep.y]],
67212941 1298[[%define lr.keep-unreachable-states
31984206
JD
1299]])
1300AT_CHECK([[cat input.y >> input-keep.y]])
1301
da730230 1302AT_BISON_CHECK([[input-keep.y]], 0, [],
31984206 1303[[input-keep.y: conflicts: 2 shift/reduce, 2 reduce/reduce
73370a9d
VS
1304input-keep.y:22.4: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: unreachable1: /* empty */ [-Wother]
1305input-keep.y:26.16: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: unreachable2: /* empty */ [-Wother]
1306input-keep.y:32.5-7: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: reported_conflicts: 'a' [-Wother]
1307input-keep.y:33.4: warning: rule useless in parser due to conflicts: reported_conflicts: /* empty */ [-Wother]
31984206
JD
1308]])
1309
5967f0cf 1310AT_CLEANUP
9d774aff
JD
1311
1312
1313## ------------------------------------------------------------ ##
1314## Solved conflicts report for multiple reductions in a state. ##
1315## ------------------------------------------------------------ ##
1316
1317AT_SETUP([[Solved conflicts report for multiple reductions in a state]])
1318
1319# Used to lose earlier solved conflict messages even within a single S/R/R.
1320
1321AT_DATA([[input.y]],
1322[[%left 'a'
1323%right 'b'
1324%right 'c'
1325%right 'd'
1326%%
1327start:
1328 'a'
1329 | empty_a 'a'
1330 | 'b'
1331 | empty_b 'b'
1332 | 'c'
1333 | empty_c1 'c'
1334 | empty_c2 'c'
1335 | empty_c3 'c'
1336 ;
1337empty_a: %prec 'a' ;
1338empty_b: %prec 'b' ;
1339empty_c1: %prec 'c' ;
1340empty_c2: %prec 'c' ;
1341empty_c3: %prec 'd' ;
1342]])
da730230 1343AT_BISON_CHECK([[--report=all -o input.c input.y]], 0, [], [ignore])
9d774aff
JD
1344AT_CHECK([[cat input.output | sed -n '/^state 0$/,/^state 1$/p']], 0,
1345[[state 0
1346
1347 0 $accept: . start $end
1348 1 start: . 'a'
1349 2 | . empty_a 'a'
1350 3 | . 'b'
1351 4 | . empty_b 'b'
1352 5 | . 'c'
1353 6 | . empty_c1 'c'
1354 7 | . empty_c2 'c'
1355 8 | . empty_c3 'c'
1356 9 empty_a: . ['a']
1357 10 empty_b: . []
1358 11 empty_c1: . []
1359 12 empty_c2: . []
1360 13 empty_c3: . ['c']
1361
1362 'b' shift, and go to state 1
d78f0ac9 1363
9d774aff
JD
1364 'c' reduce using rule 13 (empty_c3)
1365 $default reduce using rule 9 (empty_a)
1366
1367 start go to state 2
1368 empty_a go to state 3
1369 empty_b go to state 4
1370 empty_c1 go to state 5
1371 empty_c2 go to state 6
1372 empty_c3 go to state 7
1373
1374 Conflict between rule 9 and token 'a' resolved as reduce (%left 'a').
1375 Conflict between rule 10 and token 'b' resolved as shift (%right 'b').
1376 Conflict between rule 11 and token 'c' resolved as shift (%right 'c').
1377 Conflict between rule 12 and token 'c' resolved as shift (%right 'c').
1378 Conflict between rule 13 and token 'c' resolved as reduce ('c' < 'd').
1379
1380
1381state 1
1382]])
1383
1384AT_CLEANUP
1385
1386
1387## ------------------------------------------------------------ ##
1388## %nonassoc error actions for multiple reductions in a state. ##
1389## ------------------------------------------------------------ ##
1390
1391# Used to abort when trying to resolve conflicts as %nonassoc error actions for
1392# multiple reductions in a state.
1393
1394# For a %nonassoc error action token, used to print the first remaining
1395# reduction on that token without brackets.
1396
1397AT_SETUP([[%nonassoc error actions for multiple reductions in a state]])
1398
1399AT_DATA([[input.y]],
1400[[%nonassoc 'a' 'b' 'c'
1401%%
1402start:
1403 'a'
1404 | empty_a 'a'
1405 | 'b'
1406 | empty_b 'b'
1407 | 'c'
1408 | empty_c1 'c'
1409 | empty_c2 'c'
1410 | empty_c3 'c'
1411 ;
1412empty_a: %prec 'a' ;
1413empty_b: %prec 'b' ;
1414empty_c1: %prec 'c' ;
1415empty_c2: %prec 'c' ;
1416empty_c3: %prec 'c' ;
1417]])
1418
da730230 1419AT_BISON_CHECK([[--report=all -o input.c input.y]], 0, [], [ignore])
9d774aff
JD
1420AT_CHECK([[cat input.output | sed -n '/^state 0$/,/^state 1$/p']], 0,
1421[[state 0
1422
1423 0 $accept: . start $end
1424 1 start: . 'a'
1425 2 | . empty_a 'a'
1426 3 | . 'b'
1427 4 | . empty_b 'b'
1428 5 | . 'c'
1429 6 | . empty_c1 'c'
1430 7 | . empty_c2 'c'
1431 8 | . empty_c3 'c'
1432 9 empty_a: . []
1433 10 empty_b: . []
1434 11 empty_c1: . []
1435 12 empty_c2: . ['c']
1436 13 empty_c3: . ['c']
1437
1438 'a' error (nonassociative)
1439 'b' error (nonassociative)
1440 'c' error (nonassociative)
1441
1442 'c' [reduce using rule 12 (empty_c2)]
1443 'c' [reduce using rule 13 (empty_c3)]
1444
1445 start go to state 1
1446 empty_a go to state 2
1447 empty_b go to state 3
1448 empty_c1 go to state 4
1449 empty_c2 go to state 5
1450 empty_c3 go to state 6
1451
1452 Conflict between rule 9 and token 'a' resolved as an error (%nonassoc 'a').
1453 Conflict between rule 10 and token 'b' resolved as an error (%nonassoc 'b').
1454 Conflict between rule 11 and token 'c' resolved as an error (%nonassoc 'c').
1455
1456
1457state 1
1458]])
1459AT_CLEANUP
786743d5
JD
1460
1461
1462## --------------------------------- ##
1463## -W versus %expect and %expect-rr ##
1464## --------------------------------- ##
1465
1466AT_SETUP([[-W versus %expect and %expect-rr]])
1467
1468AT_DATA([[sr-rr.y]],
1469[[%glr-parser
1470%%
1471start: 'a' | A 'a' | B 'a' ;
1472A: ;
1473B: ;
1474]])
1475AT_DATA([[sr.y]],
1476[[%glr-parser
1477%%
1478start: 'a' | A 'a' ;
1479A: ;
1480]])
1481AT_DATA([[rr.y]],
1482[[%glr-parser
1483%%
1484start: A | B ;
1485A: ;
1486B: ;
1487]])
1488
1489AT_BISON_CHECK([[sr-rr.y]], [[0]], [[]],
1490[[sr-rr.y: conflicts: 1 shift/reduce, 1 reduce/reduce
1491]])
1492AT_BISON_CHECK([[-Wno-conflicts-sr sr-rr.y]], [[0]], [[]],
1493[[sr-rr.y: conflicts: 1 reduce/reduce
1494]])
1495AT_BISON_CHECK([[-Wno-conflicts-rr sr-rr.y]], [[0]], [[]],
1496[[sr-rr.y: conflicts: 1 shift/reduce
1497]])
1498
1499[for gram in sr-rr sr rr; do
1500 for sr_exp_i in '' 0 1 2; do
1501 for rr_exp_i in '' 0 1 2; do
1502 test -z "$sr_exp_i" && test -z "$rr_exp_i" && continue
1503
1504 # Build grammar file.
1505 sr_exp=0
1506 rr_exp=0
1507 file=$gram
1508 directives=
1509 if test -n "$sr_exp_i"; then
1510 sr_exp=$sr_exp_i
1511 file=$file-expect-$sr_exp
1512 directives="%expect $sr_exp"
1513 fi
1514 if test -n "$rr_exp_i"; then
1515 rr_exp=$rr_exp_i
1516 file=$file-expect-rr-$rr_exp
1517 directives="$directives %expect-rr $rr_exp"
1518 fi
1519 file=$file.y
1520 echo "$directives" > $file
1521 cat $gram.y >> $file
1522
1523 # Count actual conflicts.
1524 conflicts=
1525 sr_count=0
1526 rr_count=0
1527 if test $gram = sr || test $gram = sr-rr; then
1528 conflicts="1 shift/reduce"
1529 sr_count=1
1530 fi
1531 if test $gram = rr || test $gram = sr-rr; then
1532 if test -n "$conflicts"; then
1533 conflicts="$conflicts, "
1534 fi
1535 conflicts="${conflicts}1 reduce/reduce"
1536 rr_count=1
1537 fi
1538
1539 # Run tests.
1540 if test $sr_count -eq $sr_exp && test $rr_count -eq $rr_exp; then
1541 ]AT_BISON_CHECK([[-Wnone $file]])[
1542 ]AT_BISON_CHECK([[-Werror $file]])[
1543 else
1544 echo "$file: conflicts: $conflicts" > experr
1545 if test $sr_count -ne $sr_exp; then
1546 if test $sr_exp -ne 1; then s=s; else s= ; fi
1547 echo "$file: expected $sr_exp shift/reduce conflict$s" >> experr
1548 fi
1549 if test $rr_count -ne $rr_exp; then
1550 if test $rr_exp -ne 1; then s=s; else s= ; fi
1551 echo "$file: expected $rr_exp reduce/reduce conflict$s" >> experr
1552 fi
1553 ]AT_BISON_CHECK([[-Wnone $file]], [[1]], [[]], [[experr]])[
1554 ]AT_BISON_CHECK([[-Werror $file]], [[1]], [[]], [[experr]])[
1555 fi
1556 done
1557 done
1558done]
1559
1560AT_CLEANUP