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- This is x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals.info, produced by makeinfo version
- 6.7 from cppinternals.texi.
- INFO-DIR-SECTION Software development
- START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
- * x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals: (x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals). Cpplib internals.
- END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
- This file documents the internals of the GNU C Preprocessor.
- Copyright (C) 2000-2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
- Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
- manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are
- preserved on all copies.
- Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of
- this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also
- that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of
- a permission notice identical to this one.
- Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this
- manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified
- versions.
- File: x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals.info, Node: Top, Next: Conventions, Up: (dir)
- The GNU C Preprocessor Internals
- ********************************
- * Menu:
- * Conventions::
- * Lexer::
- * Hash Nodes::
- * Macro Expansion::
- * Token Spacing::
- * Line Numbering::
- * Guard Macros::
- * Files::
- * Concept Index::
- 1 Cpplib--the GNU C Preprocessor
- ********************************
- The GNU C preprocessor is implemented as a library, "cpplib", so it can
- be easily shared between a stand-alone preprocessor, and a preprocessor
- integrated with the C, C++ and Objective-C front ends. It is also
- available for use by other programs, though this is not recommended as
- its exposed interface has not yet reached a point of reasonable
- stability.
- The library has been written to be re-entrant, so that it can be used
- to preprocess many files simultaneously if necessary. It has also been
- written with the preprocessing token as the fundamental unit; the
- preprocessor in previous versions of GCC would operate on text strings
- as the fundamental unit.
- This brief manual documents the internals of cpplib, and explains
- some of the tricky issues. It is intended that, along with the comments
- in the source code, a reasonably competent C programmer should be able
- to figure out what the code is doing, and why things have been
- implemented the way they have.
- * Menu:
- * Conventions:: Conventions used in the code.
- * Lexer:: The combined C, C++ and Objective-C Lexer.
- * Hash Nodes:: All identifiers are entered into a hash table.
- * Macro Expansion:: Macro expansion algorithm.
- * Token Spacing:: Spacing and paste avoidance issues.
- * Line Numbering:: Tracking location within files.
- * Guard Macros:: Optimizing header files with guard macros.
- * Files:: File handling.
- * Concept Index:: Index.
- File: x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals.info, Node: Conventions, Next: Lexer, Prev: Top, Up: Top
- Conventions
- ***********
- cpplib has two interfaces--one is exposed internally only, and the other
- is for both internal and external use.
- The convention is that functions and types that are exposed to
- multiple files internally are prefixed with '_cpp_', and are to be found
- in the file 'internal.h'. Functions and types exposed to external
- clients are in 'cpplib.h', and prefixed with 'cpp_'. For historical
- reasons this is no longer quite true, but we should strive to stick to
- it.
- We are striving to reduce the information exposed in 'cpplib.h' to
- the bare minimum necessary, and then to keep it there. This makes clear
- exactly what external clients are entitled to assume, and allows us to
- change internals in the future without worrying whether library clients
- are perhaps relying on some kind of undocumented implementation-specific
- behavior.
- File: x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals.info, Node: Lexer, Next: Hash Nodes, Prev: Conventions, Up: Top
- The Lexer
- *********
- Overview
- ========
- The lexer is contained in the file 'lex.c'. It is a hand-coded lexer,
- and not implemented as a state machine. It can understand C, C++ and
- Objective-C source code, and has been extended to allow reasonably
- successful preprocessing of assembly language. The lexer does not make
- an initial pass to strip out trigraphs and escaped newlines, but handles
- them as they are encountered in a single pass of the input file. It
- returns preprocessing tokens individually, not a line at a time.
- It is mostly transparent to users of the library, since the library's
- interface for obtaining the next token, 'cpp_get_token', takes care of
- lexing new tokens, handling directives, and expanding macros as
- necessary. However, the lexer does expose some functionality so that
- clients of the library can easily spell a given token, such as
- 'cpp_spell_token' and 'cpp_token_len'. These functions are useful when
- generating diagnostics, and for emitting the preprocessed output.
- Lexing a token
- ==============
- Lexing of an individual token is handled by '_cpp_lex_direct' and its
- subroutines. In its current form the code is quite complicated, with
- read ahead characters and such-like, since it strives to not step back
- in the character stream in preparation for handling non-ASCII file
- encodings. The current plan is to convert any such files to UTF-8
- before processing them. This complexity is therefore unnecessary and
- will be removed, so I'll not discuss it further here.
- The job of '_cpp_lex_direct' is simply to lex a token. It is not
- responsible for issues like directive handling, returning lookahead
- tokens directly, multiple-include optimization, or conditional block
- skipping. It necessarily has a minor rôle to play in memory management
- of lexed lines. I discuss these issues in a separate section (*note
- Lexing a line::).
- The lexer places the token it lexes into storage pointed to by the
- variable 'cur_token', and then increments it. This variable is
- important for correct diagnostic positioning. Unless a specific line
- and column are passed to the diagnostic routines, they will examine the
- 'line' and 'col' values of the token just before the location that
- 'cur_token' points to, and use that location to report the diagnostic.
- The lexer does not consider whitespace to be a token in its own
- right. If whitespace (other than a new line) precedes a token, it sets
- the 'PREV_WHITE' bit in the token's flags. Each token has its 'line'
- and 'col' variables set to the line and column of the first character of
- the token. This line number is the line number in the translation unit,
- and can be converted to a source (file, line) pair using the line map
- code.
- The first token on a logical, i.e. unescaped, line has the flag 'BOL'
- set for beginning-of-line. This flag is intended for internal use, both
- to distinguish a '#' that begins a directive from one that doesn't, and
- to generate a call-back to clients that want to be notified about the
- start of every non-directive line with tokens on it. Clients cannot
- reliably determine this for themselves: the first token might be a
- macro, and the tokens of a macro expansion do not have the 'BOL' flag
- set. The macro expansion may even be empty, and the next token on the
- line certainly won't have the 'BOL' flag set.
- New lines are treated specially; exactly how the lexer handles them
- is context-dependent. The C standard mandates that directives are
- terminated by the first unescaped newline character, even if it appears
- in the middle of a macro expansion. Therefore, if the state variable
- 'in_directive' is set, the lexer returns a 'CPP_EOF' token, which is
- normally used to indicate end-of-file, to indicate end-of-directive. In
- a directive a 'CPP_EOF' token never means end-of-file. Conveniently, if
- the caller was 'collect_args', it already handles 'CPP_EOF' as if it
- were end-of-file, and reports an error about an unterminated macro
- argument list.
- The C standard also specifies that a new line in the middle of the
- arguments to a macro is treated as whitespace. This white space is
- important in case the macro argument is stringized. The state variable
- 'parsing_args' is nonzero when the preprocessor is collecting the
- arguments to a macro call. It is set to 1 when looking for the opening
- parenthesis to a function-like macro, and 2 when collecting the actual
- arguments up to the closing parenthesis, since these two cases need to
- be distinguished sometimes. One such time is here: the lexer sets the
- 'PREV_WHITE' flag of a token if it meets a new line when 'parsing_args'
- is set to 2. It doesn't set it if it meets a new line when
- 'parsing_args' is 1, since then code like
- #define foo() bar
- foo
- baz
- would be output with an erroneous space before 'baz':
- foo
- baz
- This is a good example of the subtlety of getting token spacing
- correct in the preprocessor; there are plenty of tests in the testsuite
- for corner cases like this.
- The lexer is written to treat each of '\r', '\n', '\r\n' and '\n\r'
- as a single new line indicator. This allows it to transparently
- preprocess MS-DOS, Macintosh and Unix files without their needing to
- pass through a special filter beforehand.
- We also decided to treat a backslash, either '\' or the trigraph
- '??/', separated from one of the above newline indicators by non-comment
- whitespace only, as intending to escape the newline. It tends to be a
- typing mistake, and cannot reasonably be mistaken for anything else in
- any of the C-family grammars. Since handling it this way is not
- strictly conforming to the ISO standard, the library issues a warning
- wherever it encounters it.
- Handling newlines like this is made simpler by doing it in one place
- only. The function 'handle_newline' takes care of all newline
- characters, and 'skip_escaped_newlines' takes care of arbitrarily long
- sequences of escaped newlines, deferring to 'handle_newline' to handle
- the newlines themselves.
- The most painful aspect of lexing ISO-standard C and C++ is handling
- trigraphs and backlash-escaped newlines. Trigraphs are processed before
- any interpretation of the meaning of a character is made, and
- unfortunately there is a trigraph representation for a backslash, so it
- is possible for the trigraph '??/' to introduce an escaped newline.
- Escaped newlines are tedious because theoretically they can occur
- anywhere--between the '+' and '=' of the '+=' token, within the
- characters of an identifier, and even between the '*' and '/' that
- terminates a comment. Moreover, you cannot be sure there is just
- one--there might be an arbitrarily long sequence of them.
- So, for example, the routine that lexes a number, 'parse_number',
- cannot assume that it can scan forwards until the first non-number
- character and be done with it, because this could be the '\' introducing
- an escaped newline, or the '?' introducing the trigraph sequence that
- represents the '\' of an escaped newline. If it encounters a '?' or
- '\', it calls 'skip_escaped_newlines' to skip over any potential escaped
- newlines before checking whether the number has been finished.
- Similarly code in the main body of '_cpp_lex_direct' cannot simply
- check for a '=' after a '+' character to determine whether it has a '+='
- token; it needs to be prepared for an escaped newline of some sort.
- Such cases use the function 'get_effective_char', which returns the
- first character after any intervening escaped newlines.
- The lexer needs to keep track of the correct column position,
- including counting tabs as specified by the '-ftabstop=' option. This
- should be done even within C-style comments; they can appear in the
- middle of a line, and we want to report diagnostics in the correct
- position for text appearing after the end of the comment.
- Some identifiers, such as '__VA_ARGS__' and poisoned identifiers, may
- be invalid and require a diagnostic. However, if they appear in a macro
- expansion we don't want to complain with each use of the macro. It is
- therefore best to catch them during the lexing stage, in
- 'parse_identifier'. In both cases, whether a diagnostic is needed or
- not is dependent upon the lexer's state. For example, we don't want to
- issue a diagnostic for re-poisoning a poisoned identifier, or for using
- '__VA_ARGS__' in the expansion of a variable-argument macro. Therefore
- 'parse_identifier' makes use of state flags to determine whether a
- diagnostic is appropriate. Since we change state on a per-token basis,
- and don't lex whole lines at a time, this is not a problem.
- Another place where state flags are used to change behavior is whilst
- lexing header names. Normally, a '<' would be lexed as a single token.
- After a '#include' directive, though, it should be lexed as a single
- token as far as the nearest '>' character. Note that we don't allow the
- terminators of header names to be escaped; the first '"' or '>'
- terminates the header name.
- Interpretation of some character sequences depends upon whether we
- are lexing C, C++ or Objective-C, and on the revision of the standard in
- force. For example, '::' is a single token in C++, but in C it is two
- separate ':' tokens and almost certainly a syntax error. Such cases are
- handled by '_cpp_lex_direct' based upon command-line flags stored in the
- 'cpp_options' structure.
- Once a token has been lexed, it leads an independent existence. The
- spelling of numbers, identifiers and strings is copied to permanent
- storage from the original input buffer, so a token remains valid and
- correct even if its source buffer is freed with '_cpp_pop_buffer'. The
- storage holding the spellings of such tokens remains until the client
- program calls cpp_destroy, probably at the end of the translation unit.
- Lexing a line
- =============
- When the preprocessor was changed to return pointers to tokens, one
- feature I wanted was some sort of guarantee regarding how long a
- returned pointer remains valid. This is important to the stand-alone
- preprocessor, the future direction of the C family front ends, and even
- to cpplib itself internally.
- Occasionally the preprocessor wants to be able to peek ahead in the
- token stream. For example, after the name of a function-like macro, it
- wants to check the next token to see if it is an opening parenthesis.
- Another example is that, after reading the first few tokens of a
- '#pragma' directive and not recognizing it as a registered pragma, it
- wants to backtrack and allow the user-defined handler for unknown
- pragmas to access the full '#pragma' token stream. The stand-alone
- preprocessor wants to be able to test the current token with the
- previous one to see if a space needs to be inserted to preserve their
- separate tokenization upon re-lexing (paste avoidance), so it needs to
- be sure the pointer to the previous token is still valid. The
- recursive-descent C++ parser wants to be able to perform tentative
- parsing arbitrarily far ahead in the token stream, and then to be able
- to jump back to a prior position in that stream if necessary.
- The rule I chose, which is fairly natural, is to arrange that the
- preprocessor lex all tokens on a line consecutively into a token buffer,
- which I call a "token run", and when meeting an unescaped new line
- (newlines within comments do not count either), to start lexing back at
- the beginning of the run. Note that we do _not_ lex a line of tokens at
- once; if we did that 'parse_identifier' would not have state flags
- available to warn about invalid identifiers (*note Invalid
- identifiers::).
- In other words, accessing tokens that appeared earlier in the current
- line is valid, but since each logical line overwrites the tokens of the
- previous line, tokens from prior lines are unavailable. In particular,
- since a directive only occupies a single logical line, this means that
- the directive handlers like the '#pragma' handler can jump around in the
- directive's tokens if necessary.
- Two issues remain: what about tokens that arise from macro
- expansions, and what happens when we have a long line that overflows the
- token run?
- Since we promise clients that we preserve the validity of pointers
- that we have already returned for tokens that appeared earlier in the
- line, we cannot reallocate the run. Instead, on overflow it is expanded
- by chaining a new token run on to the end of the existing one.
- The tokens forming a macro's replacement list are collected by the
- '#define' handler, and placed in storage that is only freed by
- 'cpp_destroy'. So if a macro is expanded in the line of tokens, the
- pointers to the tokens of its expansion that are returned will always
- remain valid. However, macros are a little trickier than that, since
- they give rise to three sources of fresh tokens. They are the built-in
- macros like '__LINE__', and the '#' and '##' operators for stringizing
- and token pasting. I handled this by allocating space for these tokens
- from the lexer's token run chain. This means they automatically receive
- the same lifetime guarantees as lexed tokens, and we don't need to
- concern ourselves with freeing them.
- Lexing into a line of tokens solves some of the token memory
- management issues, but not all. The opening parenthesis after a
- function-like macro name might lie on a different line, and the front
- ends definitely want the ability to look ahead past the end of the
- current line. So cpplib only moves back to the start of the token run
- at the end of a line if the variable 'keep_tokens' is zero.
- Line-buffering is quite natural for the preprocessor, and as a result
- the only time cpplib needs to increment this variable is whilst looking
- for the opening parenthesis to, and reading the arguments of, a
- function-like macro. In the near future cpplib will export an interface
- to increment and decrement this variable, so that clients can share full
- control over the lifetime of token pointers too.
- The routine '_cpp_lex_token' handles moving to new token runs,
- calling '_cpp_lex_direct' to lex new tokens, or returning
- previously-lexed tokens if we stepped back in the token stream. It also
- checks each token for the 'BOL' flag, which might indicate a directive
- that needs to be handled, or require a start-of-line call-back to be
- made. '_cpp_lex_token' also handles skipping over tokens in failed
- conditional blocks, and invalidates the control macro of the
- multiple-include optimization if a token was successfully lexed outside
- a directive. In other words, its callers do not need to concern
- themselves with such issues.
- File: x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals.info, Node: Hash Nodes, Next: Macro Expansion, Prev: Lexer, Up: Top
- Hash Nodes
- **********
- When cpplib encounters an "identifier", it generates a hash code for it
- and stores it in the hash table. By "identifier" we mean tokens with
- type 'CPP_NAME'; this includes identifiers in the usual C sense, as well
- as keywords, directive names, macro names and so on. For example, all
- of 'pragma', 'int', 'foo' and '__GNUC__' are identifiers and hashed when
- lexed.
- Each node in the hash table contain various information about the
- identifier it represents. For example, its length and type. At any one
- time, each identifier falls into exactly one of three categories:
- * Macros
- These have been declared to be macros, either on the command line
- or with '#define'. A few, such as '__TIME__' are built-ins entered
- in the hash table during initialization. The hash node for a
- normal macro points to a structure with more information about the
- macro, such as whether it is function-like, how many arguments it
- takes, and its expansion. Built-in macros are flagged as special,
- and instead contain an enum indicating which of the various
- built-in macros it is.
- * Assertions
- Assertions are in a separate namespace to macros. To enforce this,
- cpp actually prepends a '#' character before hashing and entering
- it in the hash table. An assertion's node points to a chain of
- answers to that assertion.
- * Void
- Everything else falls into this category--an identifier that is not
- currently a macro, or a macro that has since been undefined with
- '#undef'.
- When preprocessing C++, this category also includes the named
- operators, such as 'xor'. In expressions these behave like the
- operators they represent, but in contexts where the spelling of a
- token matters they are spelt differently. This spelling
- distinction is relevant when they are operands of the stringizing
- and pasting macro operators '#' and '##'. Named operator hash
- nodes are flagged, both to catch the spelling distinction and to
- prevent them from being defined as macros.
- The same identifiers share the same hash node. Since each identifier
- token, after lexing, contains a pointer to its hash node, this is used
- to provide rapid lookup of various information. For example, when
- parsing a '#define' statement, CPP flags each argument's identifier hash
- node with the index of that argument. This makes duplicated argument
- checking an O(1) operation for each argument. Similarly, for each
- identifier in the macro's expansion, lookup to see if it is an argument,
- and which argument it is, is also an O(1) operation. Further, each
- directive name, such as 'endif', has an associated directive enum stored
- in its hash node, so that directive lookup is also O(1).
- File: x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals.info, Node: Macro Expansion, Next: Token Spacing, Prev: Hash Nodes, Up: Top
- Macro Expansion Algorithm
- *************************
- Macro expansion is a tricky operation, fraught with nasty corner cases
- and situations that render what you thought was a nifty way to optimize
- the preprocessor's expansion algorithm wrong in quite subtle ways.
- I strongly recommend you have a good grasp of how the C and C++
- standards require macros to be expanded before diving into this section,
- let alone the code!. If you don't have a clear mental picture of how
- things like nested macro expansion, stringizing and token pasting are
- supposed to work, damage to your sanity can quickly result.
- Internal representation of macros
- =================================
- The preprocessor stores macro expansions in tokenized form. This saves
- repeated lexing passes during expansion, at the cost of a small increase
- in memory consumption on average. The tokens are stored contiguously in
- memory, so a pointer to the first one and a token count is all you need
- to get the replacement list of a macro.
- If the macro is a function-like macro the preprocessor also stores
- its parameters, in the form of an ordered list of pointers to the hash
- table entry of each parameter's identifier. Further, in the macro's
- stored expansion each occurrence of a parameter is replaced with a
- special token of type 'CPP_MACRO_ARG'. Each such token holds the index
- of the parameter it represents in the parameter list, which allows rapid
- replacement of parameters with their arguments during expansion.
- Despite this optimization it is still necessary to store the original
- parameters to the macro, both for dumping with e.g., '-dD', and to warn
- about non-trivial macro redefinitions when the parameter names have
- changed.
- Macro expansion overview
- ========================
- The preprocessor maintains a "context stack", implemented as a linked
- list of 'cpp_context' structures, which together represent the macro
- expansion state at any one time. The 'struct cpp_reader' member
- variable 'context' points to the current top of this stack. The top
- normally holds the unexpanded replacement list of the innermost macro
- under expansion, except when cpplib is about to pre-expand an argument,
- in which case it holds that argument's unexpanded tokens.
- When there are no macros under expansion, cpplib is in "base
- context". All contexts other than the base context contain a contiguous
- list of tokens delimited by a starting and ending token. When not in
- base context, cpplib obtains the next token from the list of the top
- context. If there are no tokens left in the list, it pops that context
- off the stack, and subsequent ones if necessary, until an unexhausted
- context is found or it returns to base context. In base context, cpplib
- reads tokens directly from the lexer.
- If it encounters an identifier that is both a macro and enabled for
- expansion, cpplib prepares to push a new context for that macro on the
- stack by calling the routine 'enter_macro_context'. When this routine
- returns, the new context will contain the unexpanded tokens of the
- replacement list of that macro. In the case of function-like macros,
- 'enter_macro_context' also replaces any parameters in the replacement
- list, stored as 'CPP_MACRO_ARG' tokens, with the appropriate macro
- argument. If the standard requires that the parameter be replaced with
- its expanded argument, the argument will have been fully macro expanded
- first.
- 'enter_macro_context' also handles special macros like '__LINE__'.
- Although these macros expand to a single token which cannot contain any
- further macros, for reasons of token spacing (*note Token Spacing::) and
- simplicity of implementation, cpplib handles these special macros by
- pushing a context containing just that one token.
- The final thing that 'enter_macro_context' does before returning is
- to mark the macro disabled for expansion (except for special macros like
- '__TIME__'). The macro is re-enabled when its context is later popped
- from the context stack, as described above. This strict ordering
- ensures that a macro is disabled whilst its expansion is being scanned,
- but that it is _not_ disabled whilst any arguments to it are being
- expanded.
- Scanning the replacement list for macros to expand
- ==================================================
- The C standard states that, after any parameters have been replaced with
- their possibly-expanded arguments, the replacement list is scanned for
- nested macros. Further, any identifiers in the replacement list that
- are not expanded during this scan are never again eligible for expansion
- in the future, if the reason they were not expanded is that the macro in
- question was disabled.
- Clearly this latter condition can only apply to tokens resulting from
- argument pre-expansion. Other tokens never have an opportunity to be
- re-tested for expansion. It is possible for identifiers that are
- function-like macros to not expand initially but to expand during a
- later scan. This occurs when the identifier is the last token of an
- argument (and therefore originally followed by a comma or a closing
- parenthesis in its macro's argument list), and when it replaces its
- parameter in the macro's replacement list, the subsequent token happens
- to be an opening parenthesis (itself possibly the first token of an
- argument).
- It is important to note that when cpplib reads the last token of a
- given context, that context still remains on the stack. Only when
- looking for the _next_ token do we pop it off the stack and drop to a
- lower context. This makes backing up by one token easy, but more
- importantly ensures that the macro corresponding to the current context
- is still disabled when we are considering the last token of its
- replacement list for expansion (or indeed expanding it). As an example,
- which illustrates many of the points above, consider
- #define foo(x) bar x
- foo(foo) (2)
- which fully expands to 'bar foo (2)'. During pre-expansion of the
- argument, 'foo' does not expand even though the macro is enabled, since
- it has no following parenthesis [pre-expansion of an argument only uses
- tokens from that argument; it cannot take tokens from whatever follows
- the macro invocation]. This still leaves the argument token 'foo'
- eligible for future expansion. Then, when re-scanning after argument
- replacement, the token 'foo' is rejected for expansion, and marked
- ineligible for future expansion, since the macro is now disabled. It is
- disabled because the replacement list 'bar foo' of the macro is still on
- the context stack.
- If instead the algorithm looked for an opening parenthesis first and
- then tested whether the macro were disabled it would be subtly wrong.
- In the example above, the replacement list of 'foo' would be popped in
- the process of finding the parenthesis, re-enabling 'foo' and expanding
- it a second time.
- Looking for a function-like macro's opening parenthesis
- =======================================================
- Function-like macros only expand when immediately followed by a
- parenthesis. To do this cpplib needs to temporarily disable macros and
- read the next token. Unfortunately, because of spacing issues (*note
- Token Spacing::), there can be fake padding tokens in-between, and if
- the next real token is not a parenthesis cpplib needs to be able to back
- up that one token as well as retain the information in any intervening
- padding tokens.
- Backing up more than one token when macros are involved is not
- permitted by cpplib, because in general it might involve issues like
- restoring popped contexts onto the context stack, which are too hard.
- Instead, searching for the parenthesis is handled by a special function,
- 'funlike_invocation_p', which remembers padding information as it reads
- tokens. If the next real token is not an opening parenthesis, it backs
- up that one token, and then pushes an extra context just containing the
- padding information if necessary.
- Marking tokens ineligible for future expansion
- ==============================================
- As discussed above, cpplib needs a way of marking tokens as
- unexpandable. Since the tokens cpplib handles are read-only once they
- have been lexed, it instead makes a copy of the token and adds the flag
- 'NO_EXPAND' to the copy.
- For efficiency and to simplify memory management by avoiding having
- to remember to free these tokens, they are allocated as temporary tokens
- from the lexer's current token run (*note Lexing a line::) using the
- function '_cpp_temp_token'. The tokens are then re-used once the
- current line of tokens has been read in.
- This might sound unsafe. However, tokens runs are not re-used at the
- end of a line if it happens to be in the middle of a macro argument
- list, and cpplib only wants to back-up more than one lexer token in
- situations where no macro expansion is involved, so the optimization is
- safe.
- File: x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals.info, Node: Token Spacing, Next: Line Numbering, Prev: Macro Expansion, Up: Top
- Token Spacing
- *************
- First, consider an issue that only concerns the stand-alone
- preprocessor: there needs to be a guarantee that re-reading its
- preprocessed output results in an identical token stream. Without
- taking special measures, this might not be the case because of macro
- substitution. For example:
- #define PLUS +
- #define EMPTY
- #define f(x) =x=
- +PLUS -EMPTY- PLUS+ f(=)
- ==> + + - - + + = = =
- _not_
- ==> ++ -- ++ ===
- One solution would be to simply insert a space between all adjacent
- tokens. However, we would like to keep space insertion to a minimum,
- both for aesthetic reasons and because it causes problems for people who
- still try to abuse the preprocessor for things like Fortran source and
- Makefiles.
- For now, just notice that when tokens are added (or removed, as shown
- by the 'EMPTY' example) from the original lexed token stream, we need to
- check for accidental token pasting. We call this "paste avoidance".
- Token addition and removal can only occur because of macro expansion,
- but accidental pasting can occur in many places: both before and after
- each macro replacement, each argument replacement, and additionally each
- token created by the '#' and '##' operators.
- Look at how the preprocessor gets whitespace output correct normally.
- The 'cpp_token' structure contains a flags byte, and one of those flags
- is 'PREV_WHITE'. This is flagged by the lexer, and indicates that the
- token was preceded by whitespace of some form other than a new line.
- The stand-alone preprocessor can use this flag to decide whether to
- insert a space between tokens in the output.
- Now consider the result of the following macro expansion:
- #define add(x, y, z) x + y +z;
- sum = add (1,2, 3);
- ==> sum = 1 + 2 +3;
- The interesting thing here is that the tokens '1' and '2' are output
- with a preceding space, and '3' is output without a preceding space, but
- when lexed none of these tokens had that property. Careful
- consideration reveals that '1' gets its preceding whitespace from the
- space preceding 'add' in the macro invocation, _not_ replacement list.
- '2' gets its whitespace from the space preceding the parameter 'y' in
- the macro replacement list, and '3' has no preceding space because
- parameter 'z' has none in the replacement list.
- Once lexed, tokens are effectively fixed and cannot be altered, since
- pointers to them might be held in many places, in particular by
- in-progress macro expansions. So instead of modifying the two tokens
- above, the preprocessor inserts a special token, which I call a "padding
- token", into the token stream to indicate that spacing of the subsequent
- token is special. The preprocessor inserts padding tokens in front of
- every macro expansion and expanded macro argument. These point to a
- "source token" from which the subsequent real token should inherit its
- spacing. In the above example, the source tokens are 'add' in the macro
- invocation, and 'y' and 'z' in the macro replacement list, respectively.
- It is quite easy to get multiple padding tokens in a row, for example
- if a macro's first replacement token expands straight into another
- macro.
- #define foo bar
- #define bar baz
- [foo]
- ==> [baz]
- Here, two padding tokens are generated with sources the 'foo' token
- between the brackets, and the 'bar' token from foo's replacement list,
- respectively. Clearly the first padding token is the one to use, so the
- output code should contain a rule that the first padding token in a
- sequence is the one that matters.
- But what if a macro expansion is left? Adjusting the above example
- slightly:
- #define foo bar
- #define bar EMPTY baz
- #define EMPTY
- [foo] EMPTY;
- ==> [ baz] ;
- As shown, now there should be a space before 'baz' and the semicolon
- in the output.
- The rules we decided above fail for 'baz': we generate three padding
- tokens, one per macro invocation, before the token 'baz'. We would then
- have it take its spacing from the first of these, which carries source
- token 'foo' with no leading space.
- It is vital that cpplib get spacing correct in these examples since
- any of these macro expansions could be stringized, where spacing
- matters.
- So, this demonstrates that not just entering macro and argument
- expansions, but leaving them requires special handling too. I made
- cpplib insert a padding token with a 'NULL' source token when leaving
- macro expansions, as well as after each replaced argument in a macro's
- replacement list. It also inserts appropriate padding tokens on either
- side of tokens created by the '#' and '##' operators. I expanded the
- rule so that, if we see a padding token with a 'NULL' source token,
- _and_ that source token has no leading space, then we behave as if we
- have seen no padding tokens at all. A quick check shows this rule will
- then get the above example correct as well.
- Now a relationship with paste avoidance is apparent: we have to be
- careful about paste avoidance in exactly the same locations we have
- padding tokens in order to get white space correct. This makes
- implementation of paste avoidance easy: wherever the stand-alone
- preprocessor is fixing up spacing because of padding tokens, and it
- turns out that no space is needed, it has to take the extra step to
- check that a space is not needed after all to avoid an accidental paste.
- The function 'cpp_avoid_paste' advises whether a space is required
- between two consecutive tokens. To avoid excessive spacing, it tries
- hard to only require a space if one is likely to be necessary, but for
- reasons of efficiency it is slightly conservative and might recommend a
- space where one is not strictly needed.
- File: x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals.info, Node: Line Numbering, Next: Guard Macros, Prev: Token Spacing, Up: Top
- Line numbering
- **************
- Just which line number anyway?
- ==============================
- There are three reasonable requirements a cpplib client might have for
- the line number of a token passed to it:
- * The source line it was lexed on.
- * The line it is output on. This can be different to the line it was
- lexed on if, for example, there are intervening escaped newlines or
- C-style comments. For example:
- foo /* A long
- comment */ bar \
- baz
- =>
- foo bar baz
- * If the token results from a macro expansion, the line of the macro
- name, or possibly the line of the closing parenthesis in the case
- of function-like macro expansion.
- The 'cpp_token' structure contains 'line' and 'col' members. The
- lexer fills these in with the line and column of the first character of
- the token. Consequently, but maybe unexpectedly, a token from the
- replacement list of a macro expansion carries the location of the token
- within the '#define' directive, because cpplib expands a macro by
- returning pointers to the tokens in its replacement list. The current
- implementation of cpplib assigns tokens created from built-in macros and
- the '#' and '##' operators the location of the most recently lexed
- token. This is a because they are allocated from the lexer's token
- runs, and because of the way the diagnostic routines infer the
- appropriate location to report.
- The diagnostic routines in cpplib display the location of the most
- recently _lexed_ token, unless they are passed a specific line and
- column to report. For diagnostics regarding tokens that arise from
- macro expansions, it might also be helpful for the user to see the
- original location in the macro definition that the token came from.
- Since that is exactly the information each token carries, such an
- enhancement could be made relatively easily in future.
- The stand-alone preprocessor faces a similar problem when determining
- the correct line to output the token on: the position attached to a
- token is fairly useless if the token came from a macro expansion. All
- tokens on a logical line should be output on its first physical line, so
- the token's reported location is also wrong if it is part of a physical
- line other than the first.
- To solve these issues, cpplib provides a callback that is generated
- whenever it lexes a preprocessing token that starts a new logical line
- other than a directive. It passes this token (which may be a 'CPP_EOF'
- token indicating the end of the translation unit) to the callback
- routine, which can then use the line and column of this token to produce
- correct output.
- Representation of line numbers
- ==============================
- As mentioned above, cpplib stores with each token the line number that
- it was lexed on. In fact, this number is not the number of the line in
- the source file, but instead bears more resemblance to the number of the
- line in the translation unit.
- The preprocessor maintains a monotonic increasing line count, which
- is incremented at every new line character (and also at the end of any
- buffer that does not end in a new line). Since a line number of zero is
- useful to indicate certain special states and conditions, this variable
- starts counting from one.
- This variable therefore uniquely enumerates each line in the
- translation unit. With some simple infrastructure, it is straight
- forward to map from this to the original source file and line number
- pair, saving space whenever line number information needs to be saved.
- The code the implements this mapping lies in the files 'line-map.c' and
- 'line-map.h'.
- Command-line macros and assertions are implemented by pushing a
- buffer containing the right hand side of an equivalent '#define' or
- '#assert' directive. Some built-in macros are handled similarly. Since
- these are all processed before the first line of the main input file, it
- will typically have an assigned line closer to twenty than to one.
- File: x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals.info, Node: Guard Macros, Next: Files, Prev: Line Numbering, Up: Top
- The Multiple-Include Optimization
- *********************************
- Header files are often of the form
- #ifndef FOO
- #define FOO
- ...
- #endif
- to prevent the compiler from processing them more than once. The
- preprocessor notices such header files, so that if the header file
- appears in a subsequent '#include' directive and 'FOO' is defined, then
- it is ignored and it doesn't preprocess or even re-open the file a
- second time. This is referred to as the "multiple include
- optimization".
- Under what circumstances is such an optimization valid? If the file
- were included a second time, it can only be optimized away if that
- inclusion would result in no tokens to return, and no relevant
- directives to process. Therefore the current implementation imposes
- requirements and makes some allowances as follows:
- 1. There must be no tokens outside the controlling '#if'-'#endif'
- pair, but whitespace and comments are permitted.
- 2. There must be no directives outside the controlling directive pair,
- but the "null directive" (a line containing nothing other than a
- single '#' and possibly whitespace) is permitted.
- 3. The opening directive must be of the form
- #ifndef FOO
- or
- #if !defined FOO [equivalently, #if !defined(FOO)]
- 4. In the second form above, the tokens forming the '#if' expression
- must have come directly from the source file--no macro expansion
- must have been involved. This is because macro definitions can
- change, and tracking whether or not a relevant change has been made
- is not worth the implementation cost.
- 5. There can be no '#else' or '#elif' directives at the outer
- conditional block level, because they would probably contain
- something of interest to a subsequent pass.
- First, when pushing a new file on the buffer stack,
- '_stack_include_file' sets the controlling macro 'mi_cmacro' to 'NULL',
- and sets 'mi_valid' to 'true'. This indicates that the preprocessor has
- not yet encountered anything that would invalidate the multiple-include
- optimization. As described in the next few paragraphs, these two
- variables having these values effectively indicates top-of-file.
- When about to return a token that is not part of a directive,
- '_cpp_lex_token' sets 'mi_valid' to 'false'. This enforces the
- constraint that tokens outside the controlling conditional block
- invalidate the optimization.
- The 'do_if', when appropriate, and 'do_ifndef' directive handlers
- pass the controlling macro to the function 'push_conditional'. cpplib
- maintains a stack of nested conditional blocks, and after processing
- every opening conditional this function pushes an 'if_stack' structure
- onto the stack. In this structure it records the controlling macro for
- the block, provided there is one and we're at top-of-file (as described
- above). If an '#elif' or '#else' directive is encountered, the
- controlling macro for that block is cleared to 'NULL'. Otherwise, it
- survives until the '#endif' closing the block, upon which 'do_endif'
- sets 'mi_valid' to true and stores the controlling macro in 'mi_cmacro'.
- '_cpp_handle_directive' clears 'mi_valid' when processing any
- directive other than an opening conditional and the null directive.
- With this, and requiring top-of-file to record a controlling macro, and
- no '#else' or '#elif' for it to survive and be copied to 'mi_cmacro' by
- 'do_endif', we have enforced the absence of directives outside the main
- conditional block for the optimization to be on.
- Note that whilst we are inside the conditional block, 'mi_valid' is
- likely to be reset to 'false', but this does not matter since the
- closing '#endif' restores it to 'true' if appropriate.
- Finally, since '_cpp_lex_direct' pops the file off the buffer stack
- at 'EOF' without returning a token, if the '#endif' directive was not
- followed by any tokens, 'mi_valid' is 'true' and '_cpp_pop_file_buffer'
- remembers the controlling macro associated with the file. Subsequent
- calls to 'stack_include_file' result in no buffer being pushed if the
- controlling macro is defined, effecting the optimization.
- A quick word on how we handle the
- #if !defined FOO
- case. '_cpp_parse_expr' and 'parse_defined' take steps to see whether
- the three stages '!', 'defined-expression' and 'end-of-directive' occur
- in order in a '#if' expression. If so, they return the guard macro to
- 'do_if' in the variable 'mi_ind_cmacro', and otherwise set it to 'NULL'.
- 'enter_macro_context' sets 'mi_valid' to false, so if a macro was
- expanded whilst parsing any part of the expression, then the top-of-file
- test in 'push_conditional' fails and the optimization is turned off.
- File: x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals.info, Node: Files, Next: Concept Index, Prev: Guard Macros, Up: Top
- File Handling
- *************
- Fairly obviously, the file handling code of cpplib resides in the file
- 'files.c'. It takes care of the details of file searching, opening,
- reading and caching, for both the main source file and all the headers
- it recursively includes.
- The basic strategy is to minimize the number of system calls. On
- many systems, the basic 'open ()' and 'fstat ()' system calls can be
- quite expensive. For every '#include'-d file, we need to try all the
- directories in the search path until we find a match. Some projects,
- such as glibc, pass twenty or thirty include paths on the command line,
- so this can rapidly become time consuming.
- For a header file we have not encountered before we have little
- choice but to do this. However, it is often the case that the same
- headers are repeatedly included, and in these cases we try to avoid
- repeating the filesystem queries whilst searching for the correct file.
- For each file we try to open, we store the constructed path in a
- splay tree. This path first undergoes simplification by the function
- '_cpp_simplify_pathname'. For example, '/usr/include/bits/../foo.h' is
- simplified to '/usr/include/foo.h' before we enter it in the splay tree
- and try to 'open ()' the file. CPP will then find subsequent uses of
- 'foo.h', even as '/usr/include/foo.h', in the splay tree and save system
- calls.
- Further, it is likely the file contents have also been cached, saving
- a 'read ()' system call. We don't bother caching the contents of header
- files that are re-inclusion protected, and whose re-inclusion macro is
- defined when we leave the header file for the first time. If the host
- supports it, we try to map suitably large files into memory, rather than
- reading them in directly.
- The include paths are internally stored on a null-terminated
- singly-linked list, starting with the '"header.h"' directory search
- chain, which then links into the '<header.h>' directory chain.
- Files included with the '<foo.h>' syntax start the lookup directly in
- the second half of this chain. However, files included with the
- '"foo.h"' syntax start at the beginning of the chain, but with one extra
- directory prepended. This is the directory of the current file; the one
- containing the '#include' directive. Prepending this directory on a
- per-file basis is handled by the function 'search_from'.
- Note that a header included with a directory component, such as
- '#include "mydir/foo.h"' and opened as '/usr/local/include/mydir/foo.h',
- will have the complete path minus the basename 'foo.h' as the current
- directory.
- Enough information is stored in the splay tree that CPP can
- immediately tell whether it can skip the header file because of the
- multiple include optimization, whether the file didn't exist or couldn't
- be opened for some reason, or whether the header was flagged not to be
- re-used, as it is with the obsolete '#import' directive.
- For the benefit of MS-DOS filesystems with an 8.3 filename
- limitation, CPP offers the ability to treat various include file names
- as aliases for the real header files with shorter names. The map from
- one to the other is found in a special file called 'header.gcc', stored
- in the command line (or system) include directories to which the mapping
- applies. This may be higher up the directory tree than the full path to
- the file minus the base name.
- File: x86_64-linux-gnu-cppinternals.info, Node: Concept Index, Prev: Files, Up: Top
- Concept Index
- *************
- �[index�]
- * Menu:
- * assertions: Hash Nodes. (line 6)
- * controlling macros: Guard Macros. (line 6)
- * escaped newlines: Lexer. (line 5)
- * files: Files. (line 6)
- * guard macros: Guard Macros. (line 6)
- * hash table: Hash Nodes. (line 6)
- * header files: Conventions. (line 6)
- * identifiers: Hash Nodes. (line 6)
- * interface: Conventions. (line 6)
- * lexer: Lexer. (line 6)
- * line numbers: Line Numbering. (line 5)
- * macro expansion: Macro Expansion. (line 6)
- * macro representation (internal): Macro Expansion. (line 19)
- * macros: Hash Nodes. (line 6)
- * multiple-include optimization: Guard Macros. (line 6)
- * named operators: Hash Nodes. (line 6)
- * newlines: Lexer. (line 6)
- * paste avoidance: Token Spacing. (line 6)
- * spacing: Token Spacing. (line 6)
- * token run: Lexer. (line 191)
- * token spacing: Token Spacing. (line 6)
- Tag Table:
- Node: Top962
- Node: Conventions2817
- Node: Lexer3776
- Ref: Invalid identifiers11707
- Ref: Lexing a line13657
- Node: Hash Nodes18426
- Node: Macro Expansion21322
- Node: Token Spacing30283
- Node: Line Numbering36156
- Node: Guard Macros40258
- Node: Files45066
- Node: Concept Index48549
- End Tag Table
- Local Variables:
- coding: utf-8
- End:
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