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* glsl: move to compiler/Emil Velikov2016-01-261-1/+0
| | | | | | Signed-off-by: Emil Velikov <emil.velikov@collabora.com> Acked-by: Matt Turner <mattst88@gmail.com> Acked-by: Jose Fonseca <jfonseca@vmware.com>
* glsl/glcpp: Add explicit error for "#define without macro name"Carl Worth2014-08-071-2/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Previously, glcpp would emit an error like this if <EOF> happened to occur immediately after the "#define", but in general would just get confused, (leading to un-helpful error messages). To fix things to generate a clean error message, we do a few things: 1. Don't require horizontal whitespace immediately after #define 2. Add a production for the error case, (DEFINE_TOKEN followed immediately by a NEWLINE token). 3. Make the lexer reset to the <INITIAL> state after every NEWLINE. This 3rd point prevents the lexer from getting so confused and generating further spurious errors in the file because it was stuck in the <DEFINE> start condition. We also drop the similar error message from the <EOF> rule since the newly-added rule will have already printed the error message. Reviewed-by: Ian Romanick <ian.d.romanick@intel.com>
* glsl/glcpp: Correctly parse directives with intervening commentsCarl Worth2014-07-291-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | It's legal (though highly bizarre) for a pre-processor directive to look like this: # /* why? */ define FOO bar This behavior comes about since the specification defines separate logical phases in a precise order, and comment-removal occurs in a phase before the identification of directives. Our implementation does not use an actual separate phase for comment removal, so some extra care is necessary to correctly parse this. What we want is for '#' to introduce a directive iff it is the first token on a line, (ignoring whitespace and comments). Previously, we had a lexical rule that worked only for whitespace (not comments) with the following regular expression to find a directive-introducing '#' at the beginning of a line: HASH ^{HSPACE}*#{HSPACE}* In this commit, we switch to instead use a simple literal match of '#' to return a HASH_TOKEN token and add a new <HASH> start condition for whenever the HASH_TOKEN is the first non-space token of a line. This requires the addition of the new bit of state: first_non_space_token_this_line. This approach has a couple of implications on the glcpp parser: 1. The parser now sees two separate tokens, (such as HASH_TOKEN and HASH_DEFINE) where it previously saw one token (HASH_DEFINE) for the sequence "#define". This is a straightforward change throughout the grammar. 2. The parser may now see a SPACE token before the HASH_TOKEN token of a directive. Previously the lexical regular expression for {HASH} would eat up the space and there would be no SPACE token. This second implication is a bit of a nuisance for the parser. It causes a SPACE token to appear in a production of the grammar with the following two definitions of a control_line: control_line SPACE control_line This is really ugly, since normally a space would simply be a token separator, so it wouldn't appear in the tokens of a production. This leads to a further problem with interleaved spaces and comments: /* ... */ /* ... */ #define /* ..*/ For this, we must not return several consecutive SPACE tokens, or else we would need an arbitrary number of new productions: SPACE SPACE control_line SPACE SPACE SPACE control_line ad nauseam To avoid this problem, in this commit we also change the lexer to emit only a single SPACE token for any series of consecutive spaces, (whether from actual whitespace or comments). For this compression, we add a new bit of parser state: last_token_was_space. And we also update the expected results of all necessary test cases for the new compression of space tokens. Fortunately, the compression of spaces should not lead to any semantic changes in terms of what the eventual GLSL compiler sees. So there's a lot happening in this commit, (particularly for such a tiny feature). But fortunately, the lexer itself is looking cleaner than ever. The only ugly bit is all the state updating, but it is at least isolated to a single shared function. Of course, a new "make check" test is added for the new feature, (directives with comments and whitespace interleaved in many combinations). And this commit fixes the following Khronos GLES3 CTS tests: function_definition_with_comments_vertex function_definition_with_comments_fragment Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
* glsl/glcpp: Fix off-by-one error in column in first-line error messagesCarl Worth2014-07-291-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | For the first line we were initializing the column to 1, but for all subsequent lines we were initializing the column to 0. The column number is advanced for each token read before any error message is printed. So the 0 value is the correct initialization, (so that the first column is reported as column 1). With this extremely minor change, many of the .expected files are updated such that error messages for the first line now have the correct column number in them. Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
* glsl/glcpp: Add testing for EOF sans newline (and fix for <DEFINE>, <COMMENT>)Carl Worth2014-07-291-0/+2
The glcpp implementation has long had code to support a file that ends without a final newline. But we didn't have a "make check" test for this. Additionally, the <EOF> action was restricted only to the <INITIAL> state so it would fail to get invoked if the EOF was encountered in the <COMMENT> or the <DEFINE> case. Neither of these was a bug, per se, since EOF in either of these cases is an error anyway, (either "unterminated comment" or "missing macro name for #define"). But with the new explicit support for these cases, we not generate clean error messages in these cases, (rather than "unexpected $end" from before). Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>