#include "symtab.h"
#include "tables.h"
+# define ARRAY_CARDINALITY(Array) (sizeof (Array) / sizeof *(Array))
static struct obstack format_obstack;
{
symbol *sym = symbols[i];
int number = sym->user_token_number;
-
- /* At this stage, if there are literal aliases, they are part of
- SYMBOLS, so we should not find symbols which are the aliases
- here. */
- aver (number != USER_NUMBER_ALIAS);
-
- /* Skip error token. */
- if (sym == errtoken)
- continue;
-
- /* If this string has an alias, then it is necessarily the alias
- which is to be output. */
- if (sym->alias)
- sym = sym->alias;
-
- /* Don't output literal chars or strings (when defined only as a
- string). Note that must be done after the alias resolution:
- think about `%token 'f' "f"'. */
- if (sym->tag[0] == '\'' || sym->tag[0] == '\"')
- continue;
-
- /* Don't #define nonliteral tokens whose names contain periods
- or '$' (as does the default value of the EOF token). */
- if (strchr (sym->tag, '.') || strchr (sym->tag, '$'))
- continue;
-
- fprintf (out, "%s[[[%s]], %d]",
- sep, sym->tag, number);
- sep = ",\n";
+ uniqstr id = symbol_id_get (sym);
+
+ /* At this stage, if there are literal string aliases, they are
+ part of SYMBOLS, so we should not find their aliased symbols
+ here. */
+ aver (number != USER_NUMBER_HAS_STRING_ALIAS);
+
+ /* Skip error token and tokens without identifier. */
+ if (sym != errtoken && id)
+ {
+ fprintf (out, "%s[[[%s]], %d]",
+ sep, id, number);
+ sep = ",\n";
+ }
}
fputs ("])\n\n", out);
}
{
FILE *in;
int filter_fd[2];
- char const *argv[9];
+ char const *argv[10];
pid_t pid;
/* Compute the names of the package data dir and skeleton files. */
{
int i = 0;
argv[i++] = m4;
+
+ /* When POSIXLY_CORRECT is set, GNU M4 1.6 and later disable GNU
+ extensions, which Bison's skeletons depend on. With older M4,
+ it has no effect. M4 1.4.12 added a -g/--gnu command-line
+ option to make it explicit that a program wants GNU M4
+ extensions even when POSIXLY_CORRECT is set.
+
+ See the thread starting at
+ <http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2008-07/msg00000.html>
+ for details. */
+ if (*M4_GNU_OPTION)
+ argv[i++] = M4_GNU_OPTION;
+
argv[i++] = "-I";
argv[i++] = pkgdatadir;
if (trace_flag & trace_m4)
argv[i++] = full_m4bison;
argv[i++] = full_skeleton;
argv[i++] = NULL;
+ aver (i <= ARRAY_CARDINALITY (argv));
}
- /* When POSIXLY_CORRECT is set, some future versions of GNU M4 (most likely
- 2.0) may drop some of the GNU extensions that Bison's skeletons depend
- upon. So that the next release of Bison is forward compatible with those
- future versions of GNU M4, we unset POSIXLY_CORRECT here.
-
- FIXME: A user might set POSIXLY_CORRECT to affect processes run from
- macros like m4_syscmd in a custom skeleton. For now, Bison makes no
- promises about the behavior of custom skeletons, so this scenario is not a
- concern. However, we eventually want to eliminate this shortcoming. The
- next release of GNU M4 (1.4.12 or 1.6) will accept the -g command-line
- option as a no-op, and later releases will accept it to indicate that
- POSIXLY_CORRECT should be ignored. Once the GNU M4 versions that accept
- -g are pervasive, Bison should use -g instead of unsetting
- POSIXLY_CORRECT.
- See the thread starting at
- <http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-bison/2008-07/msg00000.html>
- for details. */
- unsetenv ("POSIXLY_CORRECT");
init_subpipe ();
pid = create_subpipe (argv, filter_fd);
free (full_m4sugar);