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#!/usr/bin/perl
#
# regen_perly.pl, DAPM 12-Feb-04
#
# Copyright (c) 2004, 2005 Larry Wall
#
# Given an input file perly.y, run bison on it and produce
# the following output files:
#
# perly.h standard bison header file with minor doctoring of
# #line directives plus adding a #ifdef PERL_CORE
#
# perly.tab the parser table C definitions extracted from the bison output
# plus an extra table generated by this script.
#
# perly.act the action case statements extracted from the bison output
#
# Note that perly.c is *not* regenerated - this is now a static file which
# is not dependent on perly.y any more.
#
# If a filename of the form foo.y is given on the command line, then
# this is used instead as the basename for all the files mentioned
# above.
#
# Note that temporary files of the form perlytmp.h and perlytmp.c are
# created and then deleted during this process
#
# Note also that this script is intended to be run on a UNIX system;
# it may work elsewhere but no specific attempt has been made to make it
# portable.
sub usage { die "usage: $0 [ -b bison_executable ] [ file.y ]\n" }
use warnings;
use strict;
my $bison = 'bison';
if (@ARGV >= 2 and $ARGV[0] eq '-b') {
shift;
$bison = shift;
}
my $y_file = shift || 'perly.y';
usage unless @ARGV==0 && $y_file =~ /\.y$/;
(my $h_file = $y_file) =~ s/\.y$/.h/;
(my $act_file = $y_file) =~ s/\.y$/.act/;
(my $tab_file = $y_file) =~ s/\.y$/.tab/;
(my $tmpc_file = $y_file) =~ s/\.y$/tmp.c/;
(my $tmph_file = $y_file) =~ s/\.y$/tmp.h/;
# the yytranslate[] table generated by bison is ASCII/EBCDIC sensitive
die "$0: must be run on an ASCII system\n" unless ord 'A' == 65;
# check for correct version number. The constraints are:
# * must be >= 1.24 to avoid licensing issues.
# * it must generate the yystos[] table. Version 1.28 doesn't generate
# this; 1.35+ does
# * Must produce output which is extractable by the regexes below
# * Must produce the right values.
# These last two contstraints may well be met by earlier versions, but
# I simply haven't tested them yet. If it works for you, then modify
# the test below to allow that version too. DAPM Feb 04.
my $version = `$bison -V`;
unless ($version =~ /\b(1\.875[a-z]?|2\.[01])\b/) { die <<EOF; }
You have the wrong version of bison in your path; currently 1.875
2.0 or 2.1 is required. Try installing
http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/bison/bison-2.1.tar.gz
or similar. Your bison identifies itself as:
$version
EOF
# creates $tmpc_file and $tmph_file
my_system("$bison -d -o $tmpc_file $y_file");
open CTMPFILE, $tmpc_file or die "Can't open $tmpc_file: $!\n";
my $clines;
{ local $/; $clines = <CTMPFILE>; }
die "failed to read $tmpc_file: length mismatch\n"
unless length $clines == -s $tmpc_file;
close CTMPFILE;
my ($actlines, $tablines) = extract($clines);
$tablines .= make_opval_tab($y_file, $tablines);
chmod 0644, $act_file;
open ACTFILE, ">$act_file" or die "can't open $act_file: $!\n";
print ACTFILE $actlines;
close ACTFILE;
chmod 0444, $act_file;
chmod 0644, $tab_file;
open TABFILE, ">$tab_file" or die "can't open $tab_file: $!\n";
print TABFILE $tablines;
close TABFILE;
chmod 0444, $tab_file;
unlink $tmpc_file;
# Wrap PERL_CORE round the symbol definitions. Also, the
# C<#line 123 "perlytmp.h"> gets picked up by make depend, so change it.
open TMPH_FILE, $tmph_file or die "Can't open $tmph_file: $!\n";
chmod 0644, $h_file;
open H_FILE, ">$h_file" or die "Can't open $h_file: $!\n";
my $endcore_done = 0;
while (<TMPH_FILE>) {
print H_FILE "#ifdef PERL_CORE\n" if $. == 1;
if (!$endcore_done and /YYSTYPE_IS_DECLARED/) {
print H_FILE "#endif /* PERL_CORE */\n";
$endcore_done = 1;
}
s/"$tmph_file"/"$h_file"/;
print H_FILE $_;
}
close TMPH_FILE;
close H_FILE;
chmod 0444, $h_file;
unlink $tmph_file;
print "rebuilt: $h_file $tab_file $act_file\n";
exit 0;
sub extract {
my $clines = shift;
my $tablines;
my $actlines;
$clines =~ m@
(?:
^/* YYFINAL[^\n]+\n #optional comment
)?
\# \s* define \s* YYFINAL # first #define
.*? # other defines + most tables
yystos\[\]\s*= # start of last table
.*?
}\s*; # end of last table
@xms
or die "Can't extract tables from $tmpc_file\n";
$tablines = $&;
$clines =~ m@
switch \s* \( \s* \w+ \s* \) \s* { \s*
(
case \s* \d+ \s* : \s*
\#line [^\n]+"\Q$y_file\E"
.*?
)
}
\s*
( \s* /\* .*? \*/ \s* )* # optional C-comments
\s*
(
\#line[^\n]+\.c"
|
\#line[^\n]+\.simple"
)
@xms
or die "Can't extract actions from $tmpc_file\n";
$actlines = $1;
return $actlines. "\n", $tablines. "\n";
}
# read a .y file and extract a list of all the token names and
# non-terminal names that are declared to be of type opval
# then scan the string $tablines for the table yytname which gives
# the token index of each token/non-terminal, then use this to
# create a new table, indexed by token number, which indicates
# whether that token is of type opval.
#
# ie given
# %token <opval> A B
# %type <opval> C D
#
# and yytname[] = { "A" "B", "C", "D", "E", "F" };
#
# then return
# static const int yy_is_opval[] = { 1, 1, 1, 1, 0, 0 }
sub make_opval_tab {
my ($y_file, $tablines) = @_;
my %tokens;
open my $fh, '<', $y_file or die "Can't open $y_file: $!\n";
while (<$fh>) {
next unless s/^%(token|type)\s+<opval>\s+//;
$tokens{$_} =1 for (split ' ', $_);
}
$tablines =~ /^\Qstatic const char *const yytname[] =\E\n
{\n
(.*?)
^};
/xsm
or die "Can't extract yytname[] from table string\n";
my $fields = $1;
$fields =~ s/"([^"]+)"/$tokens{$1}||0/ge;
return
"/* which symbols are of type opval */\n" .
"static const int yy_is_opval[] =\n{\n" . $fields . "\n};\n";
}
sub my_system {
system(@_);
if ($? == -1) {
die "failed to execute comamnd '@_': $!\n";
}
elsif ($? & 127) {
die sprintf "command '@_' died with signal %d\n",
($? & 127);
}
elsif ($? >> 8) {
die sprintf "command '@_' exited with value %d\n", $? >> 8;
}
}
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