AT_SETUP([Torturing the Scanner])
-AT_DATA([input.y],
+AT_DATA_GRAMMAR([input.y],
[[%{
/* This is seen in GCC: a %{ and %} in middle of a comment. */
const char *foo = "So %{ and %} can be here too.";
-#ifdef __STDC__
+#if 0
+/* These examples test Bison while not stressing C compilers too much.
+ Many C compilers mishandle backslash-newlines, so this part of the
+ test is inside "#if 0". The comment and string are written so that
+ the "#endif" will be seen regardless of the C compiler bugs that we
+ know about, namely:
+
+ HP C (as of late 2002) mishandles *\[newline]\[newline]/ within a
+ comment.
+
+ The Apple Darwin compiler (as of late 2002) mishandles
+ \\[newline]' within a character constant.
+
+ */
+
/\
-* A comment with backslash-newlines in it. %{ %} *\
+* A comment with backslash-newlines in it. %} *\
+\
/
+/* { Close the above comment, if the C compiler mishandled it. */
char str[] = "\\
" A string with backslash-newlines in it %{ %} \\
+\
"";
-char apostrophe = '\\
-'\
-';
+char apostrophe = '\'';
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
}
]])
+# Pacify Emacs'font-lock-mode: "
+
AT_DATA([main.c],
[[typedef int value_t;
#include "input.h"
]])
AT_CHECK([bison -d -v -o input.c input.y])
-AT_COMPILE([input], [input.c main.c])
+AT_COMPILE([input.o], [-c input.c])
+AT_COMPILE([main.o], [-c main.c])
+AT_COMPILE([input], [input.o main.o])
AT_PARSER_CHECK([./input], 0,
[[[@<:@],
]])