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1 This file attempts to describe the rules to use when hacking Bison.
2 Don't put this file into the distribution.
3
4 Everything related to the development of Bison is on Savannah:
5
6 http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/bison/
7
8
9 * Administrivia
10
11 ** If you incorporate a change from somebody on the net:
12 First, if it is a large change, you must make sure they have signed
13 the appropriate paperwork. Second, be sure to add their name and
14 email address to THANKS.
15
16 ** If a change fixes a test, mention the test in the commit message.
17
18 ** Bug reports
19 If somebody reports a new bug, mention his name in the commit message
20 and in the test case you write. Put him into THANKS.
21
22 The correct response to most actual bugs is to write a new test case
23 which demonstrates the bug. Then fix the bug, re-run the test suite,
24 and check everything in.
25
26
27 * Hacking
28
29 ** Visible changes
30 Which include serious bug fixes, must be mentioned in NEWS.
31
32 ** Translations
33 Only user visible strings are to be translated: error messages, bits
34 of the .output file etc. This excludes impossible error messages
35 (comparable to assert/abort), and all the --trace output which is
36 meant for the maintainers only.
37
38 ** Horizontal tabs
39 Do not add horizontal tab characters to any file in Bison's repository
40 except where required. For example, do not use tabs to format C code.
41 However, make files, ChangeLog, and some regular expressions require
42 tabs. Also, test cases might need to contain tabs to check that Bison
43 properly processes tabs in its input.
44
45
46 * Working from the repository
47
48 These notes intend to help people working on the checked-out sources.
49 These requirements do not apply when building from a distribution tarball.
50
51 ** Requirements
52
53 We've opted to keep only the highest-level sources in the repository. This
54 eases our maintenance burden, (fewer merges etc.), but imposes more
55 requirements on anyone wishing to build from the just-checked-out sources.
56 For example, you have to use the latest stable versions of the maintainer
57 tools we depend upon, including:
58
59 - Autoconf <http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/>
60 - Automake <http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/>
61 - Flex <http://www.gnu.org/software/flex/>
62 - Gettext <http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/>
63 - Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org>
64 - Gzip <http://www.gnu.org/software/gzip/>
65 - Help2man <http://www.gnu.org/software/help2man/>
66 - Perl <http://www.cpan.org/>
67 - Rsync <http://samba.anu.edu.au/rsync/>
68 - Tar <http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/>
69 - Texinfo <http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/>
70
71 Valgrind <http://valgrind.org/> is also highly recommended, if it supports
72 your architecture.
73
74 If you're using a GNU/Linux distribution, the easiest way to install the
75 above packages depends on your system. The following shell command should
76 work for Debian-based systems such as Ubuntu:
77
78 sudo apt-get install \
79 autoconf automake autopoint flex graphviz help2man texinfo valgrind
80
81 Bison is written using Bison grammars, so there are bootstrapping issues.
82 The bootstrap script attempts to discover when the C code generated from the
83 grammars is out of date, and to bootstrap with an out-of-date version of the
84 C code, but the process is not foolproof. Also, you may run into similar
85 problems yourself if you modify Bison.
86
87 Only building the initial full source tree will be a bit painful. Later,
88 after synchronizing from the repository a plain 'make' should be sufficient.
89 Note, however, that when gnulib is updated, running './bootstrap' again
90 might be needed.
91
92 ** First checkout
93
94 Obviously, if you are reading these notes, you did manage to check out
95 this package from the repository. For the record, you will find all the
96 relevant information on:
97
98 http://savannah.gnu.org/git/?group=bison
99
100 Bison uses Git submodules: subscriptions to other Git repositories.
101 In particular it uses gnulib, the GNU portability library. To ask Git
102 to perform the first checkout of the submodules, run
103
104 $ git submodule update --init
105
106 Git submodule support is weak before versions 1.6 and later, upgrade Git if
107 your version is older.
108
109 The next step is to get other files needed to build, which are
110 extracted from other source packages:
111
112 $ ./bootstrap
113
114 If it fails with missing symbols (e.g., "error: possibly undefined macro:
115 AC_PROG_GNU_M4"), you are likely to have forgotten the submodule
116 initialization part. Otherwise, there you are! Just
117
118 $ ./configure
119 $ make
120 $ make check
121
122 At this point, there should be no difference between your local copy,
123 and the master copy:
124
125 $ git diff
126
127 should output no difference.
128
129 Enjoy!
130
131 ** Updating
132
133 The use of submodules make things somewhat different because git does
134 not support recursive operations: submodules must be taken care of
135 explicitly by the user.
136
137 *** Updating Bison
138
139 If you pull a newer version of a branch, say via "git pull", you might
140 import requests for updated submodules. A simple "git diff" will
141 reveal if the current version of the submodule (i.e., the actual
142 contents of the gnulib directory) and the current request from the
143 subscriber (i.e., the reference of the version of gnulib that the
144 Bison repository requests) differ. To upgrade the submodules (i.e.,
145 to check out the version that is actually requested by the subscriber,
146 run "git submodule update".
147
148 $ git pull
149 $ git submodule update
150
151 *** Updating a submodule
152 To update a submodule, say gnulib, do as follows:
153
154 Get the most recent version of the master branch from git.
155
156 $ cd gnulib
157 $ git fetch
158 $ git checkout -b master --track origin/master
159
160 Make sure Bison can live with that version of gnulib.
161
162 $ cd ..
163 $ ./bootstrap
164 $ make distcheck
165
166 Register your changes.
167
168 $ git checkin ...
169
170 For a suggestion of what gnulib commit might be stable enough for a
171 formal release, see the ChangeLog in the latest gnulib snapshot at:
172
173 http://erislabs.net/ianb/projects/gnulib/
174
175 The Autoconf files we use are currently:
176
177 m4/m4.m4
178 lib/m4sugar/m4sugar.m4
179 lib/m4sugar/foreach.m4
180
181 These files don't change very often in Autoconf, so it should be
182 relatively straight-forward to examine the differences in order to
183 decide whether to update.
184
185 * Test suite
186
187 ** make check
188 Use liberally.
189
190 ** TESTSUITEFLAGS
191
192 The default is for make check to run all tests sequentially. This can be
193 very time consumming when checking repeatedly or on slower setups. This can
194 be sped up in two ways:
195
196 Using -j, in a make-like fashion, for example:
197 $ make check TESTSUITEFLAGS='-j8'
198
199 Running only the tests of a certain category, as specified in the AT files
200 with AT_KEYWORDS([[category]]). Categories include:
201 - c++, for c++ parsers
202 - deprec, for tests concerning deprecated constructs.
203 - glr, for glr parsers
204 - java, for java parsers
205 - report, for automaton dumps
206
207 To run a specific set of tests, use -k (for "keyword"). For example:
208 $ make check TESTSUITEFLAGS='-k c++'
209
210 Both can be combined.
211
212 ** Typical errors
213 If the test suite shows failures such as the following one
214
215 .../bison/lib/getopt.h:196:8: error: redefinition of 'struct option'
216 /usr/include/getopt.h:54:8: error: previous definition of 'struct option'
217
218 it probably means that some file was compiled without
219 AT_DATA_SOURCE_PROLOGUE. This error is due to the fact that our -I options
220 pick up gnulib's replacement headers, such as getopt.h, and this will go
221 wrong if config.h was not included first.
222
223 See tests/local.at for details.
224
225 ** make maintainer-check-valgrind
226 This target uses valgrind both to check bison, and the generated parsers.
227
228 This is not mature on Mac OS X. First, Valgrind does support the way bison
229 calls m4, so Valgrind cannot be used to check bison on Mac OS X.
230
231 Second, there are many errors that come from the platform itself, not from
232 bison. build-aux/darwin11.4.0.valgrind addresses some of them.
233
234 Third, valgrind issues warnings such as:
235
236 --99312:0:syswrap- WARNING: Ignoring sigreturn( ..., UC_RESET_ALT_STACK );
237
238 which cause the test to fail uselessly. It is hard to ignore these errors
239 with a major overhaul of the way instrumentation is performed in the test
240 suite. So currently, do not try to run valgrind on Mac OS X.
241
242 ** Release checks
243 Try to run the test suite with more severe conditions before a
244 release:
245
246 - Configure the package with --enable-gcc-warnings, so that one checks
247 that 1. Bison compiles cleanly, 2. the parsers it produces compile
248 cleanly too.
249
250 - Maybe build with -DGNULIB_POSIXCHECK, which suggests gnulib modules
251 that can fix portability issues. See if you really want to pay
252 attention to its warnings; there's no need to obey blindly to it
253 (<http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bison-patches/2012-05/msg00057.html>).
254
255 - Check with "make syntax-check" if there are issues diagnosed by
256 gnulib.
257
258 - run "make maintainer-check" which:
259 - runs "valgrind -q bison" to run Bison under Valgrind.
260 - runs the parsers under Valgrind.
261 - runs the test suite with G++ as C compiler...
262
263 - run "make maintainer-push-check", which runs "make maintainer-check"
264 while activating the push implementation and its pull interface wrappers
265 in many test cases that were originally written to exercise only the
266 pull implementation. This makes certain the push implementation can
267 perform every task the pull implementation can.
268
269 - run "make maintainer-xml-check", which runs "make maintainer-check"
270 while checking Bison's XML automaton report for every working grammar
271 passed to Bison in the test suite. The check just diffs the output of
272 Bison's included XSLT style sheets with the output of --report=all and
273 --graph.
274
275 - running "make maintainer-release-check" takes care of running
276 maintainer-check, maintainer-push-check and maintainer-xml-check.
277
278 - Change tests/atlocal/CFLAGS to add your preferred options. For
279 instance, "-traditional" to check that the parsers are K&R. Note
280 that it does not make sense for glr.c, which should be ANSI, but
281 currently is actually GNU C, nor for lalr1.cc.
282
283 - Test with a very recent version of GCC for both C and C++. Testing
284 with older versions that are still in use is nice too.
285
286
287 * Release Procedure
288 This section needs to be updated to take into account features from
289 gnulib. In particular, be sure to read README-release.
290
291 ** Update the submodules. See above.
292
293 ** Update maintainer tools, such as Autoconf. See above.
294
295 ** Try to get the *.pot files to the Translation Project at least one
296 week before a stable release, to give them time to translate them.
297 Before generating the *.pot files, make sure that po/POTFILES.in and
298 runtime-po/POTFILES.in list all files with translatable strings.
299 This helps: grep -l '\<_(' *
300
301 ** Tests
302 See above.
303
304 ** Update the foreign files
305 Running "./bootstrap" in the top level should update them all for you.
306 This covers PO files too. Sometimes a PO file contains problems that
307 causes it to be rejected by recent Gettext releases; please report
308 these to the Translation Project.
309
310 ** Update README
311 Make sure the information in README is current. Most notably, make sure
312 it recommends a version of GNU M4 that is compatible with the latest
313 Bison sources.
314
315 ** Check copyright years.
316 We update years in copyright statements throughout Bison once at the
317 start of every year by running "make update-copyright". However, before
318 a release, it's good to verify that it's actually been run. Besides the
319 copyright statement for each Bison file, check the copyright statements
320 that the skeletons insert into generated parsers, and check all
321 occurrences of PACKAGE_COPYRIGHT_YEAR in configure.ac.
322
323 ** Update NEWS, commit and tag.
324 See do-release-commit-and-tag in README-release. For a while, we used
325 beta names such as "2.6_rc1". Now that we use gnulib in the release
326 procedure, we must use "2.5.90", which has the additional benefit of
327 being properly sorted in "git tag -l".
328
329 ** make alpha, beta, or stable
330 See README-release.
331
332 ** Upload
333 There are two ways to upload the tarballs to the GNU servers: using
334 gnupload (from gnulib), or by hand. Obviously prefer the former. But
335 in either case, be sure to read the following paragraph.
336
337 *** Setup
338 You need "gnupg".
339
340 Make sure your public key has been uploaded at least to
341 keys.gnupg.net. You can upload it with:
342
343 gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --send-keys F125BDF3
344
345 where F125BDF3 should be replaced with your key ID.
346
347 *** Using gnupload
348 You need "ncftp".
349
350 At the end "make stable" (or alpha/beta) will display the procedure to
351 run. Just copy and paste it in your shell.
352
353 *** By hand
354
355 The generic GNU upload procedure is at:
356
357 http://www.gnu.org/prep/maintain/maintain.html#Automated-FTP-Uploads
358
359 Follow the instructions there to register your information so you're permitted
360 to upload.
361
362 Here's a brief reminder of how to roll the tarballs and upload them:
363
364 *** make distcheck
365 *** gpg -b bison-2.3b.tar.gz
366 *** In a file named "bison-2.3b.tar.gz.directive", type:
367
368 version: 1.1
369 directory: bison
370 filename: bison-2.3b.tar.gz
371
372 *** gpg --clearsign bison-2.3b.tar.gz.directive
373 *** ftp ftp-upload.gnu.org # Log in as anonymous.
374 *** cd /incoming/alpha # cd /incoming/ftp for full release.
375 *** put bison-2.3b.tar.gz # This can take a while.
376 *** put bison-2.3b.tar.gz.sig
377 *** put bison-2.3b.tar.gz.directive.asc
378 *** Repeat all these steps for bison-2.3b.tar.xz.
379
380 ** Update Bison manual on www.gnu.org.
381
382 *** You need a non-anonymous checkout of the web pages directory.
383
384 $ cvs -d YOUR_USERID@cvs.savannah.gnu.org:/web/bison checkout bison
385
386 *** Get familiar with the instructions for web page maintainers.
387 http://www.gnu.org/server/standards/readme_index.html
388 http://www.gnu.org/server/standards/README.software.html
389 especially the note about symlinks.
390
391 *** Build the web pages.
392 Assuming BISON_CHECKOUT refers to a checkout of the Bison dir, and
393 BISON_WWW_CHECKOUT refers to the web directory created above, do:
394
395 $ cd $BISON_CHECKOUT/doc
396 $ make stamp-vti
397 $ ../build-aux/gendocs.sh -o "$BISON_WWW_CHECKOUT/manual" \
398 bison "Bison - GNU parser generator"
399 $ cd $BISON_WWW_CHECKOUT
400
401 Verify that the result looks sane.
402
403 *** Commit the modified and the new files.
404
405 *** Remove old files.
406 Find the files which have not been overwritten (because they belonged to
407 sections that have been removed or renamed):
408
409 $ cd manual/html_node
410 $ ls -lt
411
412 Remove these files and commit their removal to CVS. For each of these
413 files, add a line to the file .symlinks. This will ensure that
414 hyperlinks to the removed files will redirect to the entire manual; this
415 is better than a 404 error.
416
417 There is a problem with 'index.html' being written twice (once for POSIX
418 function 'index', once for the table of contents); you can ignore this
419 issue.
420
421 ** Announce
422 The "make stable" (or alpha/beta) command just created a template,
423 $HOME/announce-bison-X.Y. Otherwise, to generate it, run:
424
425 make RELEASE_TYPE=alpha gpg_key_ID=F125BDF3 announcement
426
427 where alpha can be replaced by beta or stable and F125BDF3 should be
428 replaced with your key ID.
429
430 Complete/fix the announcement file. The generated list of recipients
431 (info-gnu@gnu.org, bug-bison@gnu.org, help-bison@gnu.org,
432 bison-patches@gnu.org, and coordinator@translationproject.org) is
433 appropriate for a stable release or a "serious beta". For any other
434 release, drop at least info-gnu@gnu.org. For an example of how to
435 fill out the rest of the template, search the mailing list archives
436 for the most recent release announcement.
437
438 For a stable release, send the same announcement on the comp.compilers
439 newsgroup by sending email to compilers@iecc.com. Do not make any Cc as
440 the moderator will throw away anything cross-posted or Cc'ed. It really
441 needs to be a separate message.
442
443 ** Prepare NEWS
444 So that developers don't accidentally add new items to the old NEWS
445 entry, create a new empty entry in line 3 (without the two leading
446 spaces):
447
448 * Noteworthy changes in release ?.? (????-??-??) [?]
449
450 Push these changes.
451
452 -----
453
454 Copyright (C) 2002-2005, 2007-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
455
456 This file is part of GNU Bison.
457
458 This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
459 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
460 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
461 (at your option) any later version.
462
463 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
464 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
465 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
466 GNU General Public License for more details.
467
468 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
469 along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
470
471 LocalWords: Automake Autoconf Gettext Gzip Rsync Valgrind gnulib submodules
472 LocalWords: submodule init cd distcheck checkin ChangeLog valgrind sigreturn
473 LocalWords: UC gcc DGNULIB POSIXCHECK xml XSLT glr lalr README po runtime rc
474 LocalWords: gnupload gnupg gpg keyserver BDF ncftp filename clearsign cvs dir
475 LocalWords: symlinks vti html lt POSIX Cc'ed
476
477 Local Variables:
478 mode: outline
479 fill-column: 76
480 End: