Files
epics-base/src/libCom/flex/nfa.c
Michael Davidsaver f7fc564556 Fold antelope/flex and asHost into libCom
Build lexer and parser from libCom/Makefile.
Since libCom now includes asLib.c and asLib_lex.c we must build
antelope and flex without linking them to Com.  This works because
they only need epicsTempFile anyway.  However make doesn't like a
subdirectory with the same name as a target object, so the antelope
source directory is now called yacc.  The two main.c files were also
renamed to avoid other build problems.

Merge asHost into Com and remove mentions in CONFIG_BASE

Lots of noise since SRCS must be renamed to Com_SRCS
2011-02-25 15:39:44 -06:00

695 lines
17 KiB
C

/*************************************************************************\
* Copyright (c) 2002 The University of Chicago, as Operator of Argonne
* National Laboratory.
* Copyright (c) 2002 The Regents of the University of California, as
* Operator of Los Alamos National Laboratory.
* EPICS BASE is distributed subject to a Software License Agreement found
* in file LICENSE that is included with this distribution.
\*************************************************************************/
/* nfa - NFA construction routines */
/*-
* Copyright (c) 1990 The Regents of the University of California.
* All rights reserved.
*
* This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by
* Vern Paxson.
*
* The United States Government has rights in this work pursuant
* to contract no. DE-AC03-76SF00098 between the United States
* Department of Energy and the University of California.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted provided
* that: (1) source distributions retain this entire copyright notice and
* comment, and (2) distributions including binaries display the following
* acknowledgement: ``This product includes software developed by the
* University of California, Berkeley and its contributors'' in the
* documentation or other materials provided with the distribution and in
* all advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software.
* Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors may
* be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without
* specific prior written permission.
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
* WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
*/
#ifndef lint
static char rcsid[] =
"@(#) $Revision-Id$ (LBL)";
#endif
#include "flexdef.h"
/* declare functions that have forward references */
int dupmachine (int);
void mkxtion (int, int);
/* add_accept - add an accepting state to a machine
*
* synopsis
*
* add_accept( mach, accepting_number );
*
* accepting_number becomes mach's accepting number.
*/
void add_accept(int mach, int accepting_number)
{
/* hang the accepting number off an epsilon state. if it is associated
* with a state that has a non-epsilon out-transition, then the state
* will accept BEFORE it makes that transition, i.e., one character
* too soon
*/
if ( transchar[finalst[mach]] == SYM_EPSILON )
accptnum[finalst[mach]] = accepting_number;
else
{
int astate = mkstate( SYM_EPSILON );
accptnum[astate] = accepting_number;
mach = link_machines( mach, astate );
}
}
/* copysingl - make a given number of copies of a singleton machine
*
* synopsis
*
* newsng = copysingl( singl, num );
*
* newsng - a new singleton composed of num copies of singl
* singl - a singleton machine
* num - the number of copies of singl to be present in newsng
*/
int copysingl(int singl, int num)
{
int copy, i;
copy = mkstate( SYM_EPSILON );
for ( i = 1; i <= num; ++i )
copy = link_machines( copy, dupmachine( singl ) );
return ( copy );
}
/* dumpnfa - debugging routine to write out an nfa
*
* synopsis
* int state1;
* dumpnfa( state1 );
*/
void dumpnfa(int state1)
{
int sym, tsp1, tsp2, anum, ns;
fprintf( stderr, "\n\n********** beginning dump of nfa with start state %d\n",
state1 );
/* we probably should loop starting at firstst[state1] and going to
* lastst[state1], but they're not maintained properly when we "or"
* all of the rules together. So we use our knowledge that the machine
* starts at state 1 and ends at lastnfa.
*/
/* for ( ns = firstst[state1]; ns <= lastst[state1]; ++ns ) */
for ( ns = 1; ns <= lastnfa; ++ns )
{
fprintf( stderr, "state # %4d\t", ns );
sym = transchar[ns];
tsp1 = trans1[ns];
tsp2 = trans2[ns];
anum = accptnum[ns];
fprintf( stderr, "%3d: %4d, %4d", sym, tsp1, tsp2 );
if ( anum != NIL )
fprintf( stderr, " [%d]", anum );
fprintf( stderr, "\n" );
}
fprintf( stderr, "********** end of dump\n" );
}
/* dupmachine - make a duplicate of a given machine
*
* synopsis
*
* copy = dupmachine( mach );
*
* copy - holds duplicate of mach
* mach - machine to be duplicated
*
* note that the copy of mach is NOT an exact duplicate; rather, all the
* transition states values are adjusted so that the copy is self-contained,
* as the original should have been.
*
* also note that the original MUST be contiguous, with its low and high
* states accessible by the arrays firstst and lastst
*/
int dupmachine(int mach)
{
int i, init, state_offset;
int state = 0;
int last = lastst[mach];
for ( i = firstst[mach]; i <= last; ++i )
{
state = mkstate( transchar[i] );
if ( trans1[i] != NO_TRANSITION )
{
mkxtion( finalst[state], trans1[i] + state - i );
if ( transchar[i] == SYM_EPSILON && trans2[i] != NO_TRANSITION )
mkxtion( finalst[state], trans2[i] + state - i );
}
accptnum[state] = accptnum[i];
}
if ( state == 0 )
flexfatal( "empty machine in dupmachine()" );
state_offset = state - i + 1;
init = mach + state_offset;
firstst[init] = firstst[mach] + state_offset;
finalst[init] = finalst[mach] + state_offset;
lastst[init] = lastst[mach] + state_offset;
return ( init );
}
/* finish_rule - finish up the processing for a rule
*
* synopsis
*
* finish_rule( mach, variable_trail_rule, headcnt, trailcnt );
*
* An accepting number is added to the given machine. If variable_trail_rule
* is true then the rule has trailing context and both the head and trail
* are variable size. Otherwise if headcnt or trailcnt is non-zero then
* the machine recognizes a pattern with trailing context and headcnt is
* the number of characters in the matched part of the pattern, or zero
* if the matched part has variable length. trailcnt is the number of
* trailing context characters in the pattern, or zero if the trailing
* context has variable length.
*/
void finish_rule(int mach, int variable_trail_rule, int headcnt, int trailcnt)
{
add_accept( mach, num_rules );
/* we did this in new_rule(), but it often gets the wrong
* number because we do it before we start parsing the current rule
*/
rule_linenum[num_rules] = linenum;
/* if this is a continued action, then the line-number has
* already been updated, giving us the wrong number
*/
if ( continued_action )
--rule_linenum[num_rules];
fprintf( temp_action_file, "case %d:\n", num_rules );
if ( variable_trail_rule )
{
rule_type[num_rules] = RULE_VARIABLE;
if ( performance_report )
fprintf( stderr, "Variable trailing context rule at line %d\n",
rule_linenum[num_rules] );
variable_trailing_context_rules = true;
}
else
{
rule_type[num_rules] = RULE_NORMAL;
if ( headcnt > 0 || trailcnt > 0 )
{
/* do trailing context magic to not match the trailing characters */
char *scanner_cp = "yy_c_buf_p = yy_cp";
char *scanner_bp = "yy_bp";
fprintf( temp_action_file,
"*yy_cp = yy_hold_char; /* undo effects of setting up yytext */\n" );
if ( headcnt > 0 )
fprintf( temp_action_file, "%s = %s + %d;\n",
scanner_cp, scanner_bp, headcnt );
else
fprintf( temp_action_file,
"%s -= %d;\n", scanner_cp, trailcnt );
fprintf( temp_action_file,
"YY_DO_BEFORE_ACTION; /* set up yytext again */\n" );
}
}
line_directive_out( temp_action_file );
}
/* link_machines - connect two machines together
*
* synopsis
*
* new = link_machines( first, last );
*
* new - a machine constructed by connecting first to last
* first - the machine whose successor is to be last
* last - the machine whose predecessor is to be first
*
* note: this routine concatenates the machine first with the machine
* last to produce a machine new which will pattern-match first first
* and then last, and will fail if either of the sub-patterns fails.
* FIRST is set to new by the operation. last is unmolested.
*/
int link_machines(int first, int last)
{
if ( first == NIL )
return ( last );
else if ( last == NIL )
return ( first );
else
{
mkxtion( finalst[first], last );
finalst[first] = finalst[last];
lastst[first] = max( lastst[first], lastst[last] );
firstst[first] = min( firstst[first], firstst[last] );
return ( first );
}
}
/* mark_beginning_as_normal - mark each "beginning" state in a machine
* as being a "normal" (i.e., not trailing context-
* associated) states
*
* synopsis
*
* mark_beginning_as_normal( mach )
*
* mach - machine to mark
*
* The "beginning" states are the epsilon closure of the first state
*/
void mark_beginning_as_normal(int mach)
{
switch ( state_type[mach] )
{
case STATE_NORMAL:
/* oh, we've already visited here */
return;
case STATE_TRAILING_CONTEXT:
state_type[mach] = STATE_NORMAL;
if ( transchar[mach] == SYM_EPSILON )
{
if ( trans1[mach] != NO_TRANSITION )
mark_beginning_as_normal( trans1[mach] );
if ( trans2[mach] != NO_TRANSITION )
mark_beginning_as_normal( trans2[mach] );
}
break;
default:
flexerror( "bad state type in mark_beginning_as_normal()" );
break;
}
}
/* mkbranch - make a machine that branches to two machines
*
* synopsis
*
* branch = mkbranch( first, second );
*
* branch - a machine which matches either first's pattern or second's
* first, second - machines whose patterns are to be or'ed (the | operator)
*
* note that first and second are NEITHER destroyed by the operation. Also,
* the resulting machine CANNOT be used with any other "mk" operation except
* more mkbranch's. Compare with mkor()
*/
int mkbranch(int first, int second)
{
int eps;
if ( first == NO_TRANSITION )
return ( second );
else if ( second == NO_TRANSITION )
return ( first );
eps = mkstate( SYM_EPSILON );
mkxtion( eps, first );
mkxtion( eps, second );
return ( eps );
}
/* mkclos - convert a machine into a closure
*
* synopsis
* new = mkclos( state );
*
* new - a new state which matches the closure of "state"
*/
int mkclos(int state)
{
return ( mkopt( mkposcl( state ) ) );
}
/* mkopt - make a machine optional
*
* synopsis
*
* new = mkopt( mach );
*
* new - a machine which optionally matches whatever mach matched
* mach - the machine to make optional
*
* notes:
* 1. mach must be the last machine created
* 2. mach is destroyed by the call
*/
int mkopt(int mach)
{
int eps;
if ( ! SUPER_FREE_EPSILON(finalst[mach]) )
{
eps = mkstate( SYM_EPSILON );
mach = link_machines( mach, eps );
}
/* can't skimp on the following if FREE_EPSILON(mach) is true because
* some state interior to "mach" might point back to the beginning
* for a closure
*/
eps = mkstate( SYM_EPSILON );
mach = link_machines( eps, mach );
mkxtion( mach, finalst[mach] );
return ( mach );
}
/* mkor - make a machine that matches either one of two machines
*
* synopsis
*
* new = mkor( first, second );
*
* new - a machine which matches either first's pattern or second's
* first, second - machines whose patterns are to be or'ed (the | operator)
*
* note that first and second are both destroyed by the operation
* the code is rather convoluted because an attempt is made to minimize
* the number of epsilon states needed
*/
int mkor(int first, int second)
{
int eps, orend;
if ( first == NIL )
return ( second );
else if ( second == NIL )
return ( first );
else
{
/* see comment in mkopt() about why we can't use the first state
* of "first" or "second" if they satisfy "FREE_EPSILON"
*/
eps = mkstate( SYM_EPSILON );
first = link_machines( eps, first );
mkxtion( first, second );
if ( SUPER_FREE_EPSILON(finalst[first]) &&
accptnum[finalst[first]] == NIL )
{
orend = finalst[first];
mkxtion( finalst[second], orend );
}
else if ( SUPER_FREE_EPSILON(finalst[second]) &&
accptnum[finalst[second]] == NIL )
{
orend = finalst[second];
mkxtion( finalst[first], orend );
}
else
{
eps = mkstate( SYM_EPSILON );
first = link_machines( first, eps );
orend = finalst[first];
mkxtion( finalst[second], orend );
}
}
finalst[first] = orend;
return ( first );
}
/* mkposcl - convert a machine into a positive closure
*
* synopsis
* new = mkposcl( state );
*
* new - a machine matching the positive closure of "state"
*/
int mkposcl(int state)
{
int eps;
if ( SUPER_FREE_EPSILON(finalst[state]) )
{
mkxtion( finalst[state], state );
return ( state );
}
else
{
eps = mkstate( SYM_EPSILON );
mkxtion( eps, state );
return ( link_machines( state, eps ) );
}
}
/* mkrep - make a replicated machine
*
* synopsis
* new = mkrep( mach, lb, ub );
*
* new - a machine that matches whatever "mach" matched from "lb"
* number of times to "ub" number of times
*
* note
* if "ub" is INFINITY then "new" matches "lb" or more occurrences of "mach"
*/
int mkrep(int mach, int lb, int ub)
{
int base_mach, tail, copy, i;
base_mach = copysingl( mach, lb - 1 );
if ( ub == INFINITY )
{
copy = dupmachine( mach );
mach = link_machines( mach,
link_machines( base_mach, mkclos( copy ) ) );
}
else
{
tail = mkstate( SYM_EPSILON );
for ( i = lb; i < ub; ++i )
{
copy = dupmachine( mach );
tail = mkopt( link_machines( copy, tail ) );
}
mach = link_machines( mach, link_machines( base_mach, tail ) );
}
return ( mach );
}
/* mkstate - create a state with a transition on a given symbol
*
* synopsis
*
* state = mkstate( sym );
*
* state - a new state matching sym
* sym - the symbol the new state is to have an out-transition on
*
* note that this routine makes new states in ascending order through the
* state array (and increments LASTNFA accordingly). The routine DUPMACHINE
* relies on machines being made in ascending order and that they are
* CONTIGUOUS. Change it and you will have to rewrite DUPMACHINE (kludge
* that it admittedly is)
*/
int mkstate(int sym)
{
if ( ++lastnfa >= current_mns )
{
if ( (current_mns += MNS_INCREMENT) >= MAXIMUM_MNS )
lerrif( "input rules are too complicated (>= %d NFA states)",
current_mns );
++num_reallocs;
firstst = reallocate_integer_array( firstst, current_mns );
lastst = reallocate_integer_array( lastst, current_mns );
finalst = reallocate_integer_array( finalst, current_mns );
transchar = reallocate_integer_array( transchar, current_mns );
trans1 = reallocate_integer_array( trans1, current_mns );
trans2 = reallocate_integer_array( trans2, current_mns );
accptnum = reallocate_integer_array( accptnum, current_mns );
assoc_rule = reallocate_integer_array( assoc_rule, current_mns );
state_type = reallocate_integer_array( state_type, current_mns );
}
firstst[lastnfa] = lastnfa;
finalst[lastnfa] = lastnfa;
lastst[lastnfa] = lastnfa;
transchar[lastnfa] = sym;
trans1[lastnfa] = NO_TRANSITION;
trans2[lastnfa] = NO_TRANSITION;
accptnum[lastnfa] = NIL;
assoc_rule[lastnfa] = num_rules;
state_type[lastnfa] = current_state_type;
/* fix up equivalence classes base on this transition. Note that any
* character which has its own transition gets its own equivalence class.
* Thus only characters which are only in character classes have a chance
* at being in the same equivalence class. E.g. "a|b" puts 'a' and 'b'
* into two different equivalence classes. "[ab]" puts them in the same
* equivalence class (barring other differences elsewhere in the input).
*/
if ( sym < 0 )
{
/* we don't have to update the equivalence classes since that was
* already done when the ccl was created for the first time
*/
}
else if ( sym == SYM_EPSILON )
++numeps;
else
{
if ( useecs )
/* map NUL's to csize */
mkechar( sym ? sym : csize, nextecm, ecgroup );
}
return ( lastnfa );
}
/* mkxtion - make a transition from one state to another
*
* synopsis
*
* mkxtion( statefrom, stateto );
*
* statefrom - the state from which the transition is to be made
* stateto - the state to which the transition is to be made
*/
void mkxtion(int statefrom, int stateto)
{
if ( trans1[statefrom] == NO_TRANSITION )
trans1[statefrom] = stateto;
else if ( (transchar[statefrom] != SYM_EPSILON) ||
(trans2[statefrom] != NO_TRANSITION) )
flexfatal( "found too many transitions in mkxtion()" );
else
{ /* second out-transition for an epsilon state */
++eps2;
trans2[statefrom] = stateto;
}
}
/* new_rule - initialize for a new rule
*
* synopsis
*
* new_rule();
*
* the global num_rules is incremented and the any corresponding dynamic
* arrays (such as rule_type[]) are grown as needed.
*/
void new_rule(void)
{
if ( ++num_rules >= current_max_rules )
{
++num_reallocs;
current_max_rules += MAX_RULES_INCREMENT;
rule_type = reallocate_integer_array( rule_type, current_max_rules );
rule_linenum =
reallocate_integer_array( rule_linenum, current_max_rules );
}
if ( num_rules > MAX_RULE )
lerrif( "too many rules (> %d)!", MAX_RULE );
rule_linenum[num_rules] = linenum;
}