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1/* Data definitions for internal representation of Bison's input.
2
3 Copyright (C) 1984, 1986, 1989, 1992, 2001, 2002
4 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5
6 This file is part of Bison, the GNU Compiler Compiler.
7
8 Bison is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
9 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
10 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
11 any later version.
12
13 Bison is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
14 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
15 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
16 GNU General Public License for more details.
17
18 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
19 along with Bison; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
20 the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
21 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */
22
23#ifndef GRAM_H_
24# define GRAM_H_
25
26/* Representation of the grammar rules:
27
28 NTOKENS is the number of tokens, and NVARS is the number of
29 variables (nonterminals). NSYMS is the total number, ntokens +
30 nvars.
31
32 Each symbol (either token or variable) receives a symbol number.
33 Numbers 0 to NTOKENS - 1 are for tokens, and NTOKENS to NSYMS - 1
34 are for variables. Symbol number zero is the end-of-input token.
35 This token is counted in ntokens. The true number of token values
36 assigned is NTOKENS reduced by one for each alias declaration.
37
38 The rules receive rule numbers 1 to NRULES in the order they are
39 written. More precisely Bison augments the grammar with the
40 initial rule, `$accept: START-SYMBOL $end', which is numbered 1,
41 all the user rules are 2, 3 etc. Each time a rule number is
42 presented to the user, we subtract 1, so *displayed* rule numbers
43 are 0, 1, 2...
44
45 Internally, we cannot use the number 0 for a rule because for
46 instance RITEM stores both symbol (the RHS) and rule numbers: the
47 symbols are shorts >= 0, and rule number are stored negative.
48 Therefore 0 cannot be used, since it would be both the rule number
49 0, and the token $end).
50
51 Actions are accessed via the rule number.
52
53 The rules themselves are described by several arrays: amongst which
54 RITEM, and RULES.
55
56 RULES is an array of rules, whose members are:
57
58 RULES[R].lhs -- the symbol of the left hand side of rule R.
59
60 RULES[R].rhs -- the index in RITEM of the beginning of the portion
61 for rule R.
62
63 RULES[R].prec -- the symbol providing the precedence level of R.
64
65 RULES[R].precsym -- the symbol attached (via %prec) to give its
66 precedence to R. Of course, if set, it is equal to `prec', but we
67 need to distinguish one from the other when reducing: a symbol used
68 in a %prec is not useless.
69
70 RULES[R].assoc -- the associativity of R.
71
72 RULES[R].dprec -- the dynamic precedence level of R (for GLR
73 parsing).
74
75 RULES[R].merger -- index of merging function for R (for GLR
76 parsing).
77
78 RULES[R].line -- the line where R was defined.
79
80 RULES[R].useful -- true iff the rule is used (i.e., false if thrown
81 away by reduce).
82
83 The right hand side is stored as symbol numbers in a portion of
84 RITEM.
85
86 The length of the portion is one greater than the number of symbols
87 in the rule's right hand side. The last element in the portion
88 contains minus R, which identifies it as the end of a portion and
89 says which rule it is for.
90
91 The portions of RITEM come in order of increasing rule number.
92 NRITEMS is the total length of RITEM. Each element of RITEM is
93 called an "item" and its index in RITEM is an item number.
94
95 Item numbers are used in the finite state machine to represent
96 places that parsing can get to.
97
98 SYMBOLS[I]->prec records the precedence level of each symbol.
99
100 Precedence levels are assigned in increasing order starting with 1
101 so that numerically higher precedence values mean tighter binding
102 as they ought to. Zero as a symbol or rule's precedence means none
103 is assigned.
104
105 Associativities are recorded similarly in SYMBOLS[I]->assoc. */
106
107# include "location.h"
108# include "symtab.h"
109
110# define ISTOKEN(s) ((s) < ntokens)
111# define ISVAR(s) ((s) >= ntokens)
112
113extern int nsyms;
114extern int ntokens;
115extern int nvars;
116
117typedef int item_number;
118extern item_number *ritem;
119extern unsigned int nritems;
120
121/* There is weird relationship between OT1H item_number and OTOH
122 symbol_number and rule_number: we store the latter in
123 item_number. symbol_number values are stored as-is, while
124 the negation of (rule_number + 1) is stored.
125
126 Therefore, a symbol_number must be a valid item_number, and we
127 sometimes have to perform the converse transformation. */
128
129static inline item_number
130symbol_number_as_item_number (symbol_number s)
131{
132 return s;
133}
134
135static inline symbol_number
136item_number_as_symbol_number (item_number i)
137{
138 return i;
139}
140
141extern symbol_number start_symbol;
142
143/* Rule numbers. */
144typedef short rule_number;
145extern rule_number nrules;
146
147static inline item_number
148rule_number_as_item_number (rule_number r)
149{
150 return -1 - r;
151}
152
153static inline rule_number
154item_number_as_rule_number (item_number i)
155{
156 return -1 - i;
157}
158
159
160/*--------.
161| Rules. |
162`--------*/
163
164typedef struct
165{
166 /* The number of the rule in the source. It is usually the index in
167 RULES too, except if there are useless rules. */
168 rule_number user_number;
169
170 /* The index in RULES. Usually the rule number in the source,
171 except if some rules are useless. */
172 rule_number number;
173
174 symbol *lhs;
175 item_number *rhs;
176
177 /* This symbol provides both the associativity, and the precedence. */
178 symbol *prec;
179
180 short dprec;
181 short merger;
182
183 /* This symbol was attached to the rule via %prec. */
184 symbol *precsym;
185
186 location location;
187 bool useful;
188
189 const char *action;
190 location action_location;
191} rule;
192
193extern rule *rules;
194
195/* A function that selects a rule. */
196typedef bool (*rule_filter) (rule *);
197
198/* Return true IFF the rule has a `number' smaller than NRULES. */
199bool rule_useful_p (rule *r);
200
201/* Return true IFF the rule has a `number' higher than NRULES. */
202bool rule_useless_p (rule *r);
203
204/* Return true IFF the rule is not flagged as useful *and* is useful.
205 In other words, it was discarded because of conflicts. */
206bool rule_never_reduced_p (rule *r);
207
208/* Print this rule's number and lhs on OUT. If a PREVIOUS_LHS was
209 already displayed (by a previous call for another rule), avoid
210 useless repetitions. */
211void rule_lhs_print (rule *r, symbol *previous_lhs, FILE *out);
212
213/* Return the length of the RHS. */
214int rule_rhs_length (rule *r);
215
216/* Print this rule's RHS on OUT. */
217void rule_rhs_print (rule *r, FILE *out);
218
219/* Print this rule on OUT. */
220void rule_print (rule *r, FILE *out);
221
222
223
224
225/* Table of the symbols, indexed by the symbol number. */
226extern symbol **symbols;
227
228/* TOKEN_TRANSLATION -- a table indexed by a token number as returned
229 by the user's yylex routine, it yields the internal token number
230 used by the parser and throughout bison. */
231extern symbol_number *token_translations;
232extern int max_user_token_number;
233
234
235
236/* GLR_PARSER is nonzero if the input file says to use the GLR
237 (Generalized LR) parser, and to output some additional
238 information used by the GLR algorithm. */
239
240extern int glr_parser;
241
242/* PURE_PARSER is nonzero if should generate a parser that is all pure
243 and reentrant. */
244
245extern int pure_parser;
246
247/* Dump RITEM for traces. */
248void ritem_print (FILE *out);
249
250/* Return the size of the longest rule RHS. */
251size_t ritem_longest_rhs (void);
252
253/* Print the grammar's rules numbers from BEGIN (inclusive) to END
254 (exclusive) on OUT under TITLE. */
255void grammar_rules_partial_print (FILE *out, const char *title,
256 rule_filter filter);
257
258/* Print the grammar's rules on OUT. */
259void grammar_rules_print (FILE *out);
260
261/* Dump the grammar. */
262void grammar_dump (FILE *out, const char *title);
263
264/* Report on STDERR the rules that are not flagged USEFUL, using the
265 MESSAGE (which can be `useless rule' when invoked after grammar
266 reduction, or `never reduced' after conflicts were taken into
267 account). */
268void grammar_rules_never_reduced_report (const char *message);
269
270/* Free the packed grammar. */
271void grammar_free (void);
272
273#endif /* !GRAM_H_ */