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1 /* ansi2knr.c */
2
3 /* Convert ANSI C function definitions to K&R ("traditional C") syntax
4 Copyright (C) 1989 Aladdin Enterprises. All rights reserved.
5 Copyright (C) 1988 Richard M. Stallman
6
7 ansi2knr is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
8 WARRANTY. No author or distributor accepts responsibility to anyone for the
9 consequences of using it or for whether it serves any particular purpose or
10 works at all, unless he says so in writing. Refer to the GNU General Public
11 License (the "GPL") for full details.
12
13 Everyone is granted permission to copy, modify and redistribute ansi2knr,
14 but only under the conditions described in the GPL. A copy of this license
15 is supposed to have been given to you along with ansi2knr so you can know
16 your rights and responsibilities. It should be in a file named COPYLEFT.
17 [In the LIBPNG distribution, the GPL appears below, not in a separate file.]
18 Among other things, the copyright notice and this notice must be preserved
19 on all copies.
20
21 We explicitly state here what we believe is already implied by the GPL: if
22 the ansi2knr program is distributed as a separate source file and a
23 separate executable file which are aggregated on a storage medium together
24 with another program, this in itself does not bring the other program under
25 the GPL, nor does the mere fact that such a program or the procedures for
26 constructing it invoke the ansi2knr executable bring any other part of the
27 program under the GPL.
28 */
29
30 /*
31 ---------- Here is the GNU GPL file COPYLEFT, referred to above ----------
32 ----- These terms do NOT apply to the LIBPNG software itself; see README ------
33
34 GHOSTSCRIPT GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
35 (Clarified 11 Feb 1988)
36
37 Copyright (C) 1988 Richard M. Stallman
38 Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this
39 license, but changing it is not allowed. You can also use this wording
40 to make the terms for other programs.
41
42 The license agreements of most software companies keep you at the
43 mercy of those companies. By contrast, our general public license is
44 intended to give everyone the right to share Ghostscript. To make sure
45 that you get the rights we want you to have, we need to make
46 restrictions that forbid anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you
47 to surrender the rights. Hence this license agreement.
48
49 Specifically, we want to make sure that you have the right to give
50 away copies of Ghostscript, that you receive source code or else can get
51 it if you want it, that you can change Ghostscript or use pieces of it
52 in new free programs, and that you know you can do these things.
53
54 To make sure that everyone has such rights, we have to forbid you to
55 deprive anyone else of these rights. For example, if you distribute
56 copies of Ghostscript, you must give the recipients all the rights that
57 you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the
58 source code. And you must tell them their rights.
59
60 Also, for our own protection, we must make certain that everyone finds
61 out that there is no warranty for Ghostscript. If Ghostscript is
62 modified by someone else and passed on, we want its recipients to know
63 that what they have is not what we distributed, so that any problems
64 introduced by others will not reflect on our reputation.
65
66 Therefore we (Richard M. Stallman and the Free Software Foundation,
67 Inc.) make the following terms which say what you must do to be allowed
68 to distribute or change Ghostscript.
69
70
71 COPYING POLICIES
72
73 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of Ghostscript source
74 code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously
75 and appropriately publish on each copy a valid copyright and license
76 notice "Copyright (C) 1989 Aladdin Enterprises. All rights reserved.
77 Distributed by Free Software Foundation, Inc." (or with whatever year is
78 appropriate); keep intact the notices on all files that refer to this
79 License Agreement and to the absence of any warranty; and give any other
80 recipients of the Ghostscript program a copy of this License Agreement
81 along with the program. You may charge a distribution fee for the
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84 2. You may modify your copy or copies of Ghostscript or any portion of
85 it, and copy and distribute such modifications under the terms of
86 Paragraph 1 above, provided that you also do the following:
87
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90
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92 that in whole or in part contains or is a derivative of Ghostscript
93 or any part thereof, to be licensed at no charge to all third
94 parties on terms identical to those contained in this License
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96 warranty protection to some or all third parties, at your option).
97
98 c) You may charge a distribution fee for the physical act of
99 transferring a copy, and you may at your option offer warranty
100 protection in exchange for a fee.
101
102 Mere aggregation of another unrelated program with this program (or its
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104 the other program under the scope of these terms.
105
106 3. You may copy and distribute Ghostscript (or a portion or derivative
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115 b) accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three
116 years, to give any third party free (except for a nominal
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118 corresponding source code, to be distributed under the terms of
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120
121 c) accompany it with the information you received as to where the
122 corresponding source code may be obtained. (This alternative is
123 allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you
124 received the program in object code or executable form alone.)
125
126 For an executable file, complete source code means all the source code for
127 all modules it contains; but, as a special exception, it need not include
128 source code for modules which are standard libraries that accompany the
129 operating system on which the executable file runs.
130
131 4. You may not copy, sublicense, distribute or transfer Ghostscript
132 except as expressly provided under this License Agreement. Any attempt
133 otherwise to copy, sublicense, distribute or transfer Ghostscript is
134 void and your rights to use the program under this License agreement
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140 5. If you wish to incorporate parts of Ghostscript into other free
141 programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the Free
142 Software Foundation at 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139. We have not
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148 Your comments and suggestions about our licensing policies and our
149 software are welcome! Please contact the Free Software Foundation,
150 Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, or call (617) 876-3296.
151
152 NO WARRANTY
153
154 BECAUSE GHOSTSCRIPT IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, WE PROVIDE ABSOLUTELY
155 NO WARRANTY, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE STATE LAW. EXCEPT
156 WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING, FREE SOFTWARE FOUNDATION, INC, RICHARD
157 M. STALLMAN, ALADDIN ENTERPRISES, L. PETER DEUTSCH, AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
158 PROVIDE GHOSTSCRIPT "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER
159 EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
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165 IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW WILL RICHARD M.
166 STALLMAN, THE FREE SOFTWARE FOUNDATION, INC., L. PETER DEUTSCH, ALADDIN
167 ENTERPRISES, AND/OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND REDISTRIBUTE
168 GHOSTSCRIPT AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING
169 ANY LOST PROFITS, LOST MONIES, OR OTHER SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR
170 CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE
171 (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED
172 INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE
173 PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS) GHOSTSCRIPT, EVEN IF YOU
174 HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES, OR FOR ANY CLAIM
175 BY ANY OTHER PARTY.
176
177 -------------------- End of file COPYLEFT ------------------------------
178 */
179
180 /*
181 * Usage:
182 ansi2knr input_file [output_file]
183 * If no output_file is supplied, output goes to stdout.
184 * There are no error messages.
185 *
186 * ansi2knr recognizes function definitions by seeing a non-keyword
187 * identifier at the left margin, followed by a left parenthesis,
188 * with a right parenthesis as the last character on the line,
189 * and with a left brace as the first token on the following line
190 * (ignoring possible intervening comments).
191 * It will recognize a multi-line header provided that no intervening
192 * line ends with a left or right brace or a semicolon.
193 * These algorithms ignore whitespace and comments, except that
194 * the function name must be the first thing on the line.
195 * The following constructs will confuse it:
196 * - Any other construct that starts at the left margin and
197 * follows the above syntax (such as a macro or function call).
198 * - Some macros that tinker with the syntax of the function header.
199 */
200
201 /*
202 * The original and principal author of ansi2knr is L. Peter Deutsch
203 * <ghost@aladdin.com>. Other authors are noted in the change history
204 * that follows (in reverse chronological order):
205 lpd 96-01-21 added code to cope with not HAVE_CONFIG_H and with
206 compilers that don't understand void, as suggested by
207 Tom Lane
208 lpd 96-01-15 changed to require that the first non-comment token
209 on the line following a function header be a left brace,
210 to reduce sensitivity to macros, as suggested by Tom Lane
211 <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
212 lpd 95-06-22 removed #ifndefs whose sole purpose was to define
213 undefined preprocessor symbols as 0; changed all #ifdefs
214 for configuration symbols to #ifs
215 lpd 95-04-05 changed copyright notice to make it clear that
216 including ansi2knr in a program does not bring the entire
217 program under the GPL
218 lpd 94-12-18 added conditionals for systems where ctype macros
219 don't handle 8-bit characters properly, suggested by
220 Francois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>;
221 removed --varargs switch (this is now the default)
222 lpd 94-10-10 removed CONFIG_BROKETS conditional
223 lpd 94-07-16 added some conditionals to help GNU `configure',
224 suggested by Francois Pinard <pinard@iro.umontreal.ca>;
225 properly erase prototype args in function parameters,
226 contributed by Jim Avera <jima@netcom.com>;
227 correct error in writeblanks (it shouldn't erase EOLs)
228 lpd 89-xx-xx original version
229 */
230
231 /* Most of the conditionals here are to make ansi2knr work with */
232 /* or without the GNU configure machinery. */
233
234 #if HAVE_CONFIG_H
235 # include <config.h>
236 #endif
237
238 #include <stdio.h>
239 #include <ctype.h>
240
241 #if HAVE_CONFIG_H
242
243 /*
244 For properly autoconfiguring ansi2knr, use AC_CONFIG_HEADER(config.h).
245 This will define HAVE_CONFIG_H and so, activate the following lines.
246 */
247
248 # if STDC_HEADERS || HAVE_STRING_H
249 # include <string.h>
250 # else
251 # include <strings.h>
252 # endif
253
254 #else /* not HAVE_CONFIG_H */
255
256 /* Otherwise do it the hard way */
257
258 # ifdef BSD
259 # include <strings.h>
260 # else
261 # ifdef VMS
262 extern int strlen(), strncmp();
263 # else
264 # include <string.h>
265 # endif
266 # endif
267
268 #endif /* not HAVE_CONFIG_H */
269
270 #if STDC_HEADERS
271 # include <stdlib.h>
272 #else
273 /*
274 malloc and free should be declared in stdlib.h,
275 but if you've got a K&R compiler, they probably aren't.
276 */
277 # ifdef MSDOS
278 # include <malloc.h>
279 # else
280 # ifdef VMS
281 extern char *malloc();
282 extern void free();
283 # else
284 extern char *malloc();
285 extern int free();
286 # endif
287 # endif
288
289 #endif
290
291 /*
292 * The ctype macros don't always handle 8-bit characters correctly.
293 * Compensate for this here.
294 */
295 #ifdef isascii
296 # undef HAVE_ISASCII /* just in case */
297 # define HAVE_ISASCII 1
298 #else
299 #endif
300 #if STDC_HEADERS || !HAVE_ISASCII
301 # define is_ascii(c) 1
302 #else
303 # define is_ascii(c) isascii(c)
304 #endif
305
306 #define is_space(c) (is_ascii(c) && isspace(c))
307 #define is_alpha(c) (is_ascii(c) && isalpha(c))
308 #define is_alnum(c) (is_ascii(c) && isalnum(c))
309
310 /* Scanning macros */
311 #define isidchar(ch) (is_alnum(ch) || (ch) == '_')
312 #define isidfirstchar(ch) (is_alpha(ch) || (ch) == '_')
313
314 /* Forward references */
315 char *skipspace();
316 int writeblanks();
317 int test1();
318 int convert1();
319
320 /* The main program */
321 int
322 main(argc, argv)
323 int argc;
324 char *argv[];
325 { FILE *in, *out;
326 #define bufsize 5000 /* arbitrary size */
327 char *buf;
328 char *line;
329 char *more;
330 /*
331 * In previous versions, ansi2knr recognized a --varargs switch.
332 * If this switch was supplied, ansi2knr would attempt to convert
333 * a ... argument to va_alist and va_dcl; if this switch was not
334 * supplied, ansi2knr would simply drop any such arguments.
335 * Now, ansi2knr always does this conversion, and we only
336 * check for this switch for backward compatibility.
337 */
338 int convert_varargs = 1;
339
340 if ( argc > 1 && argv[1][0] == '-' )
341 { if ( !strcmp(argv[1], "--varargs") )
342 { convert_varargs = 1;
343 argc--;
344 argv++;
345 }
346 else
347 { fprintf(stderr, "Unrecognized switch: %s\n", argv[1]);
348 exit(1);
349 }
350 }
351 switch ( argc )
352 {
353 default:
354 printf("Usage: ansi2knr input_file [output_file]\n");
355 exit(0);
356 case 2:
357 out = stdout;
358 break;
359 case 3:
360 out = fopen(argv[2], "w");
361 if ( out == NULL )
362 { fprintf(stderr, "Cannot open output file %s\n", argv[2]);
363 exit(1);
364 }
365 }
366 in = fopen(argv[1], "r");
367 if ( in == NULL )
368 { fprintf(stderr, "Cannot open input file %s\n", argv[1]);
369 exit(1);
370 }
371 fprintf(out, "#line 1 \"%s\"\n", argv[1]);
372 buf = malloc(bufsize);
373 line = buf;
374 while ( fgets(line, (unsigned)(buf + bufsize - line), in) != NULL )
375 {
376 test: line += strlen(line);
377 switch ( test1(buf) )
378 {
379 case 2: /* a function header */
380 convert1(buf, out, 1, convert_varargs);
381 break;
382 case 1: /* a function */
383 /* Check for a { at the start of the next line. */
384 more = ++line;
385 f: if ( line >= buf + (bufsize - 1) ) /* overflow check */
386 goto wl;
387 if ( fgets(line, (unsigned)(buf + bufsize - line), in) == NULL )
388 goto wl;
389 switch ( *skipspace(more, 1) )
390 {
391 case '{':
392 /* Definitely a function header. */
393 convert1(buf, out, 0, convert_varargs);
394 fputs(more, out);
395 break;
396 case 0:
397 /* The next line was blank or a comment: */
398 /* keep scanning for a non-comment. */
399 line += strlen(line);
400 goto f;
401 default:
402 /* buf isn't a function header, but */
403 /* more might be. */
404 fputs(buf, out);
405 strcpy(buf, more);
406 line = buf;
407 goto test;
408 }
409 break;
410 case -1: /* maybe the start of a function */
411 if ( line != buf + (bufsize - 1) ) /* overflow check */
412 continue;
413 /* falls through */
414 default: /* not a function */
415 wl: fputs(buf, out);
416 break;
417 }
418 line = buf;
419 }
420 if ( line != buf )
421 fputs(buf, out);
422 free(buf);
423 fclose(out);
424 fclose(in);
425 return 0;
426 }
427
428 /* Skip over space and comments, in either direction. */
429 char *
430 skipspace(p, dir)
431 register char *p;
432 register int dir; /* 1 for forward, -1 for backward */
433 { for ( ; ; )
434 { while ( is_space(*p) )
435 p += dir;
436 if ( !(*p == '/' && p[dir] == '*') )
437 break;
438 p += dir; p += dir;
439 while ( !(*p == '*' && p[dir] == '/') )
440 { if ( *p == 0 )
441 return p; /* multi-line comment?? */
442 p += dir;
443 }
444 p += dir; p += dir;
445 }
446 return p;
447 }
448
449 /*
450 * Write blanks over part of a string.
451 * Don't overwrite end-of-line characters.
452 */
453 int
454 writeblanks(start, end)
455 char *start;
456 char *end;
457 { char *p;
458 for ( p = start; p < end; p++ )
459 if ( *p != '\r' && *p != '\n' )
460 *p = ' ';
461 return 0;
462 }
463
464 /*
465 * Test whether the string in buf is a function definition.
466 * The string may contain and/or end with a newline.
467 * Return as follows:
468 * 0 - definitely not a function definition;
469 * 1 - definitely a function definition;
470 * 2 - definitely a function prototype (NOT USED);
471 * -1 - may be the beginning of a function definition,
472 * append another line and look again.
473 * The reason we don't attempt to convert function prototypes is that
474 * Ghostscript's declaration-generating macros look too much like
475 * prototypes, and confuse the algorithms.
476 */
477 int
478 test1(buf)
479 char *buf;
480 { register char *p = buf;
481 char *bend;
482 char *endfn;
483 int contin;
484
485 if ( !isidfirstchar(*p) )
486 return 0; /* no name at left margin */
487 bend = skipspace(buf + strlen(buf) - 1, -1);
488 switch ( *bend )
489 {
490 case ';': contin = 0 /*2*/; break;
491 case ')': contin = 1; break;
492 case '{': return 0; /* not a function */
493 case '}': return 0; /* not a function */
494 default: contin = -1;
495 }
496 while ( isidchar(*p) )
497 p++;
498 endfn = p;
499 p = skipspace(p, 1);
500 if ( *p++ != '(' )
501 return 0; /* not a function */
502 p = skipspace(p, 1);
503 if ( *p == ')' )
504 return 0; /* no parameters */
505 /* Check that the apparent function name isn't a keyword. */
506 /* We only need to check for keywords that could be followed */
507 /* by a left parenthesis (which, unfortunately, is most of them). */
508 { static char *words[] =
509 { "asm", "auto", "case", "char", "const", "double",
510 "extern", "float", "for", "if", "int", "long",
511 "register", "return", "short", "signed", "sizeof",
512 "static", "switch", "typedef", "unsigned",
513 "void", "volatile", "while", 0
514 };
515 char **key = words;
516 char *kp;
517 int len = endfn - buf;
518
519 while ( (kp = *key) != 0 )
520 { if ( strlen(kp) == len && !strncmp(kp, buf, len) )
521 return 0; /* name is a keyword */
522 key++;
523 }
524 }
525 return contin;
526 }
527
528 /* Convert a recognized function definition or header to K&R syntax. */
529 int
530 convert1(buf, out, header, convert_varargs)
531 char *buf;
532 FILE *out;
533 int header; /* Boolean */
534 int convert_varargs; /* Boolean */
535 { char *endfn;
536 register char *p;
537 char **breaks;
538 unsigned num_breaks = 2; /* for testing */
539 char **btop;
540 char **bp;
541 char **ap;
542 char *vararg = 0;
543
544 /* Pre-ANSI implementations don't agree on whether strchr */
545 /* is called strchr or index, so we open-code it here. */
546 for ( endfn = buf; *(endfn++) != '('; )
547 ;
548 top: p = endfn;
549 breaks = (char **)malloc(sizeof(char *) * num_breaks * 2);
550 if ( breaks == 0 )
551 { /* Couldn't allocate break table, give up */
552 fprintf(stderr, "Unable to allocate break table!\n");
553 fputs(buf, out);
554 return -1;
555 }
556 btop = breaks + num_breaks * 2 - 2;
557 bp = breaks;
558 /* Parse the argument list */
559 do
560 { int level = 0;
561 char *lp = NULL;
562 char *rp;
563 char *end = NULL;
564
565 if ( bp >= btop )
566 { /* Filled up break table. */
567 /* Allocate a bigger one and start over. */
568 free((char *)breaks);
569 num_breaks <<= 1;
570 goto top;
571 }
572 *bp++ = p;
573 /* Find the end of the argument */
574 for ( ; end == NULL; p++ )
575 { switch(*p)
576 {
577 case ',':
578 if ( !level ) end = p;
579 break;
580 case '(':
581 if ( !level ) lp = p;
582 level++;
583 break;
584 case ')':
585 if ( --level < 0 ) end = p;
586 else rp = p;
587 break;
588 case '/':
589 p = skipspace(p, 1) - 1;
590 break;
591 default:
592 ;
593 }
594 }
595 /* Erase any embedded prototype parameters. */
596 if ( lp )
597 writeblanks(lp + 1, rp);
598 p--; /* back up over terminator */
599 /* Find the name being declared. */
600 /* This is complicated because of procedure and */
601 /* array modifiers. */
602 for ( ; ; )
603 { p = skipspace(p - 1, -1);
604 switch ( *p )
605 {
606 case ']': /* skip array dimension(s) */
607 case ')': /* skip procedure args OR name */
608 { int level = 1;
609 while ( level )
610 switch ( *--p )
611 {
612 case ']': case ')': level++; break;
613 case '[': case '(': level--; break;
614 case '/': p = skipspace(p, -1) + 1; break;
615 default: ;
616 }
617 }
618 if ( *p == '(' && *skipspace(p + 1, 1) == '*' )
619 { /* We found the name being declared */
620 while ( !isidfirstchar(*p) )
621 p = skipspace(p, 1) + 1;
622 goto found;
623 }
624 break;
625 default:
626 goto found;
627 }
628 }
629 found: if ( *p == '.' && p[-1] == '.' && p[-2] == '.' )
630 { if ( convert_varargs )
631 { *bp++ = "va_alist";
632 vararg = p-2;
633 }
634 else
635 { p++;
636 if ( bp == breaks + 1 ) /* sole argument */
637 writeblanks(breaks[0], p);
638 else
639 writeblanks(bp[-1] - 1, p);
640 bp--;
641 }
642 }
643 else
644 { while ( isidchar(*p) ) p--;
645 *bp++ = p+1;
646 }
647 p = end;
648 }
649 while ( *p++ == ',' );
650 *bp = p;
651 /* Make a special check for 'void' arglist */
652 if ( bp == breaks+2 )
653 { p = skipspace(breaks[0], 1);
654 if ( !strncmp(p, "void", 4) )
655 { p = skipspace(p+4, 1);
656 if ( p == breaks[2] - 1 )
657 { bp = breaks; /* yup, pretend arglist is empty */
658 writeblanks(breaks[0], p + 1);
659 }
660 }
661 }
662 /* Put out the function name and left parenthesis. */
663 p = buf;
664 while ( p != endfn ) putc(*p, out), p++;
665 /* Put out the declaration. */
666 if ( header )
667 { fputs(");", out);
668 for ( p = breaks[0]; *p; p++ )
669 if ( *p == '\r' || *p == '\n' )
670 putc(*p, out);
671 }
672 else
673 { for ( ap = breaks+1; ap < bp; ap += 2 )
674 { p = *ap;
675 while ( isidchar(*p) )
676 putc(*p, out), p++;
677 if ( ap < bp - 1 )
678 fputs(", ", out);
679 }
680 fputs(") ", out);
681 /* Put out the argument declarations */
682 for ( ap = breaks+2; ap <= bp; ap += 2 )
683 (*ap)[-1] = ';';
684 if ( vararg != 0 )
685 { *vararg = 0;
686 fputs(breaks[0], out); /* any prior args */
687 fputs("va_dcl", out); /* the final arg */
688 fputs(bp[0], out);
689 }
690 else
691 fputs(breaks[0], out);
692 }
693 free((char *)breaks);
694 return 0;
695 }