+int
+main (void)
+{
+ yy::parser parser;
+ return parser.parse ();
+}]], [[
+
+int
+main (void)
+{
+ return yyparse ();
+}]])])[
+]])
+
+AT_FULL_COMPILE([[input]])
+
+m4_pushdef([AT_EXPECTING], [m4_if($5, [ab], [[, expecting 'a' or 'b']],
+ $5, [a], [[, expecting 'a']],
+ $5, [b], [[, expecting 'b']])])
+
+AT_SKEL_JAVA_IF([AT_JAVA_PARSER_CHECK([[input]], [[0]]],
+ [AT_PARSER_CHECK([[./input]], [[1]]]),
+[[]],
+[[syntax error, unexpected ]$4[]AT_EXPECTING[
+]])
+
+m4_popdef([AT_EXPECTING])
+m4_popdef([AT_YYLEX_PROTOTYPE])
+AT_BISON_OPTION_POPDEFS
+
+])
+
+m4_pushdef([AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
+[[%nonassoc 'a';
+
+start: consistent-error-on-a-a 'a' ;
+
+consistent-error-on-a-a:
+ 'a' default-reduction
+ | 'a' default-reduction 'a'
+ | 'a' shift
+ ;
+
+default-reduction: /*empty*/ ;
+shift: 'b' ;
+
+// Provide another context in which all rules are useful so that this
+// test case looks a little more realistic.
+start: 'b' consistent-error-on-a-a 'c' ;
+]])
+
+m4_pushdef([AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT], [[a]])
+
+# Unfortunately, no expected tokens are reported even though 'b' can be
+# accepted. Nevertheless, the main point of this test is to make sure
+# that at least the unexpected token is reported. In a previous version
+# of Bison, it wasn't reported because the error is detected in a
+# consistent state with an error action, and that case always triggered
+# the simple "syntax error" message.
+#
+# The point isn't to test IELR here, but state merging happens to
+# complicate this example.
+AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr]],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
+ [[$end]], [[none]])
+AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
+ %glr-parser]],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
+ [[$end]], [[none]])
+AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
+ %language "c++"]],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
+ [[$end]], [[none]])
+AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
+ %language "java"]],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
+ [[end of input]], [[none]])
+
+# Even canonical LR doesn't foresee the error for 'a'!
+AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
+ %define lr.default-reductions consistent]],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
+ [[$end]], [[ab]])
+AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
+ %define lr.default-reductions accepting]],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
+ [[$end]], [[ab]])
+AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type canonical-lr]],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
+ [[$end]], [[ab]])
+
+# Only LAC gets it right.
+AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type canonical-lr
+ %define parse.lac full]],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
+ [[$end]], [[b]])
+AT_CONSISTENT_ERRORS_CHECK([[%define lr.type ielr
+ %define parse.lac full]],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR],
+ [AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT],
+ [[$end]], [[b]])
+
+m4_popdef([AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_GRAMMAR])
+m4_popdef([AT_PREVIOUS_STATE_INPUT])
+
+m4_pushdef([AT_USER_ACTION_GRAMMAR],
+[[%nonassoc 'a';
+
+// If $$ = 0 here, then we know that the 'a' destructor is being invoked
+// incorrectly for the 'b' set in the semantic action below. All 'a'
+// tokens are returned by yylex, which sets $$ = 1.