import re import sys def negate(condition): """ Returns a CPP conditional that is the opposite of the conditional passed in. """ if condition.startswith('!'): return condition[1:] return "!" + condition class Monitor: """ A simple C preprocessor that scans C source and computes, line by line, what the current C preprocessor #if state is. Doesn't handle everything--for example, if you have /* inside a C string, without a matching */ (also inside a C string), or with a */ inside a C string but on another line and with preprocessor macros in between... the parser will get lost. Anyway this implementation seems to work well enough for the CPython sources. """ is_a_simple_defined = re.compile(r'^defined\s*\(\s*[A-Za-z0-9_]+\s*\)$').match def __init__(self, filename=None, *, verbose=False): self.stack = [] self.in_comment = False self.continuation = None self.line_number = 0 self.filename = filename self.verbose = verbose def __repr__(self): return ''.join(( '")) def status(self): return str(self.line_number).rjust(4) + ": " + self.condition() def condition(self): """ Returns the current preprocessor state, as a single #if condition. """ return " && ".join(condition for token, condition in self.stack) def fail(self, *a): if self.filename: filename = " " + self.filename else: filename = '' print("Error at" + filename, "line", self.line_number, ":") print(" ", ' '.join(str(x) for x in a)) sys.exit(-1) def close(self): if self.stack: self.fail("Ended file while still in a preprocessor conditional block!") def write(self, s): for line in s.split("\n"): self.writeline(line) def writeline(self, line): self.line_number += 1 line = line.strip() def pop_stack(): if not self.stack: self.fail("#" + token + " without matching #if / #ifdef / #ifndef!") return self.stack.pop() if self.continuation: line = self.continuation + line self.continuation = None if not line: return if line.endswith('\\'): self.continuation = line[:-1].rstrip() + " " return # we have to ignore preprocessor commands inside comments # # we also have to handle this: # /* start # ... # */ /* <-- tricky! # ... # */ # and this: # /* start # ... # */ /* also tricky! */ if self.in_comment: if '*/' in line: # snip out the comment and continue # # GCC allows # /* comment # */ #include # maybe other compilers too? _, _, line = line.partition('*/') self.in_comment = False while True: if '/*' in line: if self.in_comment: self.fail("Nested block comment!") before, _, remainder = line.partition('/*') comment, comment_ends, after = remainder.partition('*/') if comment_ends: # snip out the comment line = before.rstrip() + ' ' + after.lstrip() continue # comment continues to eol self.in_comment = True line = before.rstrip() break # we actually have some // comments # (but block comments take precedence) before, line_comment, comment = line.partition('//') if line_comment: line = before.rstrip() if not line.startswith('#'): return line = line[1:].lstrip() assert line fields = line.split() token = fields[0].lower() condition = ' '.join(fields[1:]).strip() if_tokens = {'if', 'ifdef', 'ifndef'} all_tokens = if_tokens | {'elif', 'else', 'endif'} if token not in all_tokens: return # cheat a little here, to reuse the implementation of if if token == 'elif': pop_stack() token = 'if' if token in if_tokens: if not condition: self.fail("Invalid format for #" + token + " line: no argument!") if token == 'if': if not self.is_a_simple_defined(condition): condition = "(" + condition + ")" else: fields = condition.split() if len(fields) != 1: self.fail("Invalid format for #" + token + " line: should be exactly one argument!") symbol = fields[0] condition = 'defined(' + symbol + ')' if token == 'ifndef': condition = '!' + condition self.stack.append(("if", condition)) if self.verbose: print(self.status()) return previous_token, previous_condition = pop_stack() if token == 'else': self.stack.append(('else', negate(previous_condition))) elif token == 'endif': pass if self.verbose: print(self.status()) if __name__ == '__main__': for filename in sys.argv[1:]: with open(filename, "rt") as f: cpp = Monitor(filename, verbose=True) print() print(filename) for line_number, line in enumerate(f.read().split('\n'), 1): cpp.writeline(line)