-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 12.8k
/
macro_parser.rs
843 lines (786 loc) · 35.8 KB
/
macro_parser.rs
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
// Copyright 2012-2017 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
// except according to those terms.
//! This is an NFA-based parser, which calls out to the main rust parser for named nonterminals
//! (which it commits to fully when it hits one in a grammar). There's a set of current NFA threads
//! and a set of next ones. Instead of NTs, we have a special case for Kleene star. The big-O, in
//! pathological cases, is worse than traditional use of NFA or Earley parsing, but it's an easier
//! fit for Macro-by-Example-style rules.
//!
//! (In order to prevent the pathological case, we'd need to lazily construct the resulting
//! `NamedMatch`es at the very end. It'd be a pain, and require more memory to keep around old
//! items, but it would also save overhead)
//!
//! We don't say this parser uses the Earley algorithm, because it's unnecessarily innacurate.
//! The macro parser restricts itself to the features of finite state automata. Earley parsers
//! can be described as an extension of NFAs with completion rules, prediction rules, and recursion.
//!
//! Quick intro to how the parser works:
//!
//! A 'position' is a dot in the middle of a matcher, usually represented as a
//! dot. For example `· a $( a )* a b` is a position, as is `a $( · a )* a b`.
//!
//! The parser walks through the input a character at a time, maintaining a list
//! of threads consistent with the current position in the input string: `cur_items`.
//!
//! As it processes them, it fills up `eof_items` with threads that would be valid if
//! the macro invocation is now over, `bb_items` with threads that are waiting on
//! a Rust nonterminal like `$e:expr`, and `next_items` with threads that are waiting
//! on a particular token. Most of the logic concerns moving the · through the
//! repetitions indicated by Kleene stars. The rules for moving the · without
//! consuming any input are called epsilon transitions. It only advances or calls
//! out to the real Rust parser when no `cur_items` threads remain.
//!
//! Example:
//!
//! ```text, ignore
//! Start parsing a a a a b against [· a $( a )* a b].
//!
//! Remaining input: a a a a b
//! next: [· a $( a )* a b]
//!
//! - - - Advance over an a. - - -
//!
//! Remaining input: a a a b
//! cur: [a · $( a )* a b]
//! Descend/Skip (first item).
//! next: [a $( · a )* a b] [a $( a )* · a b].
//!
//! - - - Advance over an a. - - -
//!
//! Remaining input: a a b
//! cur: [a $( a · )* a b] [a $( a )* a · b]
//! Follow epsilon transition: Finish/Repeat (first item)
//! next: [a $( a )* · a b] [a $( · a )* a b] [a $( a )* a · b]
//!
//! - - - Advance over an a. - - - (this looks exactly like the last step)
//!
//! Remaining input: a b
//! cur: [a $( a · )* a b] [a $( a )* a · b]
//! Follow epsilon transition: Finish/Repeat (first item)
//! next: [a $( a )* · a b] [a $( · a )* a b] [a $( a )* a · b]
//!
//! - - - Advance over an a. - - - (this looks exactly like the last step)
//!
//! Remaining input: b
//! cur: [a $( a · )* a b] [a $( a )* a · b]
//! Follow epsilon transition: Finish/Repeat (first item)
//! next: [a $( a )* · a b] [a $( · a )* a b] [a $( a )* a · b]
//!
//! - - - Advance over a b. - - -
//!
//! Remaining input: ''
//! eof: [a $( a )* a b ·]
//! ```
pub use self::NamedMatch::*;
pub use self::ParseResult::*;
use self::TokenTreeOrTokenTreeVec::*;
use ast::Ident;
use syntax_pos::{self, BytePos, Span};
use errors::FatalError;
use ext::tt::quoted::{self, TokenTree};
use parse::{Directory, ParseSess};
use parse::parser::{Parser, PathStyle};
use parse::token::{self, DocComment, Nonterminal, Token};
use print::pprust;
use symbol::keywords;
use tokenstream::TokenStream;
use util::small_vector::SmallVector;
use std::mem;
use std::rc::Rc;
use std::collections::HashMap;
use std::collections::hash_map::Entry::{Occupied, Vacant};
// To avoid costly uniqueness checks, we require that `MatchSeq` always has a nonempty body.
/// Either a sequence of token trees or a single one. This is used as the representation of the
/// sequence of tokens that make up a matcher.
#[derive(Clone)]
enum TokenTreeOrTokenTreeVec {
Tt(TokenTree),
TtSeq(Vec<TokenTree>),
}
impl TokenTreeOrTokenTreeVec {
/// Returns the number of constituent top-level token trees of `self` (top-level in that it
/// will not recursively descend into subtrees).
fn len(&self) -> usize {
match *self {
TtSeq(ref v) => v.len(),
Tt(ref tt) => tt.len(),
}
}
/// The the `index`-th token tree of `self`.
fn get_tt(&self, index: usize) -> TokenTree {
match *self {
TtSeq(ref v) => v[index].clone(),
Tt(ref tt) => tt.get_tt(index),
}
}
}
/// An unzipping of `TokenTree`s... see the `stack` field of `MatcherPos`.
///
/// This is used by `inner_parse_loop` to keep track of delimited submatchers that we have
/// descended into.
#[derive(Clone)]
struct MatcherTtFrame {
/// The "parent" matcher that we are descending into.
elts: TokenTreeOrTokenTreeVec,
/// The position of the "dot" in `elts` at the time we descended.
idx: usize,
}
/// Represents a single "position" (aka "matcher position", aka "item"), as described in the module
/// documentation.
#[derive(Clone)]
struct MatcherPos {
/// The token or sequence of tokens that make up the matcher
top_elts: TokenTreeOrTokenTreeVec,
/// The position of the "dot" in this matcher
idx: usize,
/// The beginning position in the source that the beginning of this matcher corresponds to. In
/// other words, the token in the source at `sp_lo` is matched against the first token of the
/// matcher.
sp_lo: BytePos,
/// For each named metavar in the matcher, we keep track of token trees matched against the
/// metavar by the black box parser. In particular, there may be more than one match per
/// metavar if we are in a repetition (each repetition matches each of the variables).
/// Moreover, matchers and repetitions can be nested; the `matches` field is shared (hence the
/// `Rc`) among all "nested" matchers. `match_lo`, `match_cur`, and `match_hi` keep track of
/// the current position of the `self` matcher position in the shared `matches` list.
///
/// Also, note that while we are descending into a sequence, matchers are given their own
/// `matches` vector. Only once we reach the end of a full repetition of the sequence do we add
/// all bound matches from the submatcher into the shared top-level `matches` vector. If `sep`
/// and `up` are `Some`, then `matches` is _not_ the shared top-level list. Instead, if one
/// wants the shared `matches`, one should use `up.matches`.
matches: Vec<Rc<Vec<NamedMatch>>>,
/// The position in `matches` corresponding to the first metavar in this matcher's sequence of
/// token trees. In other words, the first metavar in the first token of `top_elts` corresponds
/// to `matches[match_lo]`.
match_lo: usize,
/// The position in `matches` corresponding to the metavar we are currently trying to match
/// against the source token stream. `match_lo <= match_cur <= match_hi`.
match_cur: usize,
/// Similar to `match_lo` except `match_hi` is the position in `matches` of the _last_ metavar
/// in this matcher.
match_hi: usize,
// Specifically used if we are matching a repetition. If we aren't both should be `None`.
/// The KleeneOp of this sequence if we are in a repetition.
seq_op: Option<quoted::KleeneOp>,
/// The separator if we are in a repetition
sep: Option<Token>,
/// The "parent" matcher position if we are in a repetition. That is, the matcher position just
/// before we enter the sequence.
up: Option<Box<MatcherPos>>,
// Specifically used to "unzip" token trees. By "unzip", we mean to unwrap the delimiters from
// a delimited token tree (e.g. something wrapped in `(` `)`) or to get the contents of a doc
// comment...
/// When matching against matchers with nested delimited submatchers (e.g. `pat ( pat ( .. )
/// pat ) pat`), we need to keep track of the matchers we are descending into. This stack does
/// that where the bottom of the stack is the outermost matcher.
// Also, throughout the comments, this "descent" is often referred to as "unzipping"...
stack: Vec<MatcherTtFrame>,
}
impl MatcherPos {
/// Add `m` as a named match for the `idx`-th metavar.
fn push_match(&mut self, idx: usize, m: NamedMatch) {
let matches = Rc::make_mut(&mut self.matches[idx]);
matches.push(m);
}
}
/// Represents the possible results of an attempted parse.
pub enum ParseResult<T> {
/// Parsed successfully.
Success(T),
/// Arm failed to match. If the second parameter is `token::Eof`, it indicates an unexpected
/// end of macro invocation. Otherwise, it indicates that no rules expected the given token.
Failure(syntax_pos::Span, Token),
/// Fatal error (malformed macro?). Abort compilation.
Error(syntax_pos::Span, String),
}
/// A `ParseResult` where the `Success` variant contains a mapping of `Ident`s to `NamedMatch`es.
/// This represents the mapping of metavars to the token trees they bind to.
pub type NamedParseResult = ParseResult<HashMap<Ident, Rc<NamedMatch>>>;
/// Count how many metavars are named in the given matcher `ms`.
pub fn count_names(ms: &[TokenTree]) -> usize {
ms.iter().fold(0, |count, elt| {
count + match *elt {
TokenTree::Sequence(_, ref seq) => seq.num_captures,
TokenTree::Delimited(_, ref delim) => count_names(&delim.tts),
TokenTree::MetaVar(..) => 0,
TokenTree::MetaVarDecl(..) => 1,
TokenTree::Token(..) => 0,
}
})
}
/// Initialize `len` empty shared `Vec`s to be used to store matches of metavars.
fn create_matches(len: usize) -> Vec<Rc<Vec<NamedMatch>>> {
(0..len).into_iter().map(|_| Rc::new(Vec::new())).collect()
}
/// Generate the top-level matcher position in which the "dot" is before the first token of the
/// matcher `ms` and we are going to start matching at position `lo` in the source.
fn initial_matcher_pos(ms: Vec<TokenTree>, lo: BytePos) -> Box<MatcherPos> {
let match_idx_hi = count_names(&ms[..]);
let matches = create_matches(match_idx_hi);
Box::new(MatcherPos {
// Start with the top level matcher given to us
top_elts: TtSeq(ms), // "elts" is an abbr. for "elements"
// The "dot" is before the first token of the matcher
idx: 0,
// We start matching with byte `lo` in the source code
sp_lo: lo,
// Initialize `matches` to a bunch of empty `Vec`s -- one for each metavar in `top_elts`.
// `match_lo` for `top_elts` is 0 and `match_hi` is `matches.len()`. `match_cur` is 0 since
// we haven't actually matched anything yet.
matches,
match_lo: 0,
match_cur: 0,
match_hi: match_idx_hi,
// Haven't descended into any delimiters, so empty stack
stack: vec![],
// Haven't descended into any sequences, so both of these are `None`.
seq_op: None,
sep: None,
up: None,
})
}
/// `NamedMatch` is a pattern-match result for a single `token::MATCH_NONTERMINAL`:
/// so it is associated with a single ident in a parse, and all
/// `MatchedNonterminal`s in the `NamedMatch` have the same nonterminal type
/// (expr, item, etc). Each leaf in a single `NamedMatch` corresponds to a
/// single `token::MATCH_NONTERMINAL` in the `TokenTree` that produced it.
///
/// The in-memory structure of a particular `NamedMatch` represents the match
/// that occurred when a particular subset of a matcher was applied to a
/// particular token tree.
///
/// The width of each `MatchedSeq` in the `NamedMatch`, and the identity of
/// the `MatchedNonterminal`s, will depend on the token tree it was applied
/// to: each `MatchedSeq` corresponds to a single `TTSeq` in the originating
/// token tree. The depth of the `NamedMatch` structure will therefore depend
/// only on the nesting depth of `ast::TTSeq`s in the originating
/// token tree it was derived from.
#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
pub enum NamedMatch {
MatchedSeq(Rc<Vec<NamedMatch>>, syntax_pos::Span),
MatchedNonterminal(Rc<Nonterminal>),
}
/// Takes a sequence of token trees `ms` representing a matcher which successfully matched input
/// and an iterator of items that matched input and produces a `NamedParseResult`.
fn nameize<I: Iterator<Item = NamedMatch>>(
sess: &ParseSess,
ms: &[TokenTree],
mut res: I,
) -> NamedParseResult {
// Recursively descend into each type of matcher (e.g. sequences, delimited, metavars) and make
// sure that each metavar has _exactly one_ binding. If a metavar does not have exactly one
// binding, then there is an error. If it does, then we insert the binding into the
// `NamedParseResult`.
fn n_rec<I: Iterator<Item = NamedMatch>>(
sess: &ParseSess,
m: &TokenTree,
res: &mut I,
ret_val: &mut HashMap<Ident, Rc<NamedMatch>>,
) -> Result<(), (syntax_pos::Span, String)> {
match *m {
TokenTree::Sequence(_, ref seq) => for next_m in &seq.tts {
n_rec(sess, next_m, res.by_ref(), ret_val)?
},
TokenTree::Delimited(_, ref delim) => for next_m in &delim.tts {
n_rec(sess, next_m, res.by_ref(), ret_val)?;
},
TokenTree::MetaVarDecl(span, _, id) if id.name == keywords::Invalid.name() => {
if sess.missing_fragment_specifiers.borrow_mut().remove(&span) {
return Err((span, "missing fragment specifier".to_string()));
}
}
TokenTree::MetaVarDecl(sp, bind_name, _) => {
match ret_val.entry(bind_name) {
Vacant(spot) => {
// FIXME(simulacrum): Don't construct Rc here
spot.insert(Rc::new(res.next().unwrap()));
}
Occupied(..) => {
return Err((sp, format!("duplicated bind name: {}", bind_name)))
}
}
}
TokenTree::MetaVar(..) | TokenTree::Token(..) => (),
}
Ok(())
}
let mut ret_val = HashMap::new();
for m in ms {
match n_rec(sess, m, res.by_ref(), &mut ret_val) {
Ok(_) => {}
Err((sp, msg)) => return Error(sp, msg),
}
}
Success(ret_val)
}
/// Generate an appropriate parsing failure message. For EOF, this is "unexpected end...". For
/// other tokens, this is "unexpected token...".
pub fn parse_failure_msg(tok: Token) -> String {
match tok {
token::Eof => "unexpected end of macro invocation".to_string(),
_ => format!(
"no rules expected the token `{}`",
pprust::token_to_string(&tok)
),
}
}
/// Perform a token equality check, ignoring syntax context (that is, an unhygienic comparison)
fn token_name_eq(t1: &Token, t2: &Token) -> bool {
if let (Some((id1, is_raw1)), Some((id2, is_raw2))) = (t1.ident(), t2.ident()) {
id1.name == id2.name && is_raw1 == is_raw2
} else if let (Some(id1), Some(id2)) = (t1.lifetime(), t2.lifetime()) {
id1.name == id2.name
} else {
*t1 == *t2
}
}
/// Process the matcher positions of `cur_items` until it is empty. In the process, this will
/// produce more items in `next_items`, `eof_items`, and `bb_items`.
///
/// For more info about the how this happens, see the module-level doc comments and the inline
/// comments of this function.
///
/// # Parameters
///
/// - `sess`: the parsing session into which errors are emitted.
/// - `cur_items`: the set of current items to be processed. This should be empty by the end of a
/// successful execution of this function.
/// - `next_items`: the set of newly generated items. These are used to replenish `cur_items` in
/// the function `parse`.
/// - `eof_items`: the set of items that would be valid if this was the EOF.
/// - `bb_items`: the set of items that are waiting for the black-box parser.
/// - `token`: the current token of the parser.
/// - `span`: the `Span` in the source code corresponding to the token trees we are trying to match
/// against the matcher positions in `cur_items`.
///
/// # Returns
///
/// A `ParseResult`. Note that matches are kept track of through the items generated.
fn inner_parse_loop(
sess: &ParseSess,
cur_items: &mut SmallVector<Box<MatcherPos>>,
next_items: &mut Vec<Box<MatcherPos>>,
eof_items: &mut SmallVector<Box<MatcherPos>>,
bb_items: &mut SmallVector<Box<MatcherPos>>,
token: &Token,
span: syntax_pos::Span,
) -> ParseResult<()> {
// Pop items from `cur_items` until it is empty.
while let Some(mut item) = cur_items.pop() {
// When unzipped trees end, remove them. This corresponds to backtracking out of a
// delimited submatcher into which we already descended. In backtracking out again, we need
// to advance the "dot" past the delimiters in the outer matcher.
while item.idx >= item.top_elts.len() {
match item.stack.pop() {
Some(MatcherTtFrame { elts, idx }) => {
item.top_elts = elts;
item.idx = idx + 1;
}
None => break,
}
}
// Get the current position of the "dot" (`idx`) in `item` and the number of token trees in
// the matcher (`len`).
let idx = item.idx;
let len = item.top_elts.len();
// If `idx >= len`, then we are at or past the end of the matcher of `item`.
if idx >= len {
// We are repeating iff there is a parent. If the matcher is inside of a repetition,
// then we could be at the end of a sequence or at the beginning of the next
// repetition.
if item.up.is_some() {
// At this point, regardless of whether there is a separator, we should add all
// matches from the complete repetition of the sequence to the shared, top-level
// `matches` list (actually, `up.matches`, which could itself not be the top-level,
// but anyway...). Moreover, we add another item to `cur_items` in which the "dot"
// is at the end of the `up` matcher. This ensures that the "dot" in the `up`
// matcher is also advanced sufficiently.
//
// NOTE: removing the condition `idx == len` allows trailing separators.
if idx == len {
// Get the `up` matcher
let mut new_pos = item.up.clone().unwrap();
// Add matches from this repetition to the `matches` of `up`
for idx in item.match_lo..item.match_hi {
let sub = item.matches[idx].clone();
let span = span.with_lo(item.sp_lo);
new_pos.push_match(idx, MatchedSeq(sub, span));
}
// Move the "dot" past the repetition in `up`
new_pos.match_cur = item.match_hi;
new_pos.idx += 1;
cur_items.push(new_pos);
}
// Check if we need a separator.
if idx == len && item.sep.is_some() {
// We have a separator, and it is the current token. We can advance past the
// separator token.
if item.sep
.as_ref()
.map(|sep| token_name_eq(token, sep))
.unwrap_or(false)
{
item.idx += 1;
next_items.push(item);
}
}
// We don't need a separator. Move the "dot" back to the beginning of the matcher
// and try to match again UNLESS we are only allowed to have _one_ repetition.
else if item.seq_op != Some(quoted::KleeneOp::ZeroOrOne) {
item.match_cur = item.match_lo;
item.idx = 0;
cur_items.push(item);
}
}
// If we are not in a repetition, then being at the end of a matcher means that we have
// reached the potential end of the input.
else {
eof_items.push(item);
}
}
// We are in the middle of a matcher.
else {
// Look at what token in the matcher we are trying to match the current token (`token`)
// against. Depending on that, we may generate new items.
match item.top_elts.get_tt(idx) {
// Need to descend into a sequence
TokenTree::Sequence(sp, seq) => {
// Examine the case where there are 0 matches of this sequence
if seq.op == quoted::KleeneOp::ZeroOrMore
|| seq.op == quoted::KleeneOp::ZeroOrOne
{
let mut new_item = item.clone();
new_item.match_cur += seq.num_captures;
new_item.idx += 1;
for idx in item.match_cur..item.match_cur + seq.num_captures {
new_item.push_match(idx, MatchedSeq(Rc::new(vec![]), sp));
}
cur_items.push(new_item);
}
let matches = create_matches(item.matches.len());
cur_items.push(Box::new(MatcherPos {
stack: vec![],
sep: seq.separator.clone(),
seq_op: Some(seq.op),
idx: 0,
matches,
match_lo: item.match_cur,
match_cur: item.match_cur,
match_hi: item.match_cur + seq.num_captures,
up: Some(item),
sp_lo: sp.lo(),
top_elts: Tt(TokenTree::Sequence(sp, seq)),
}));
}
// We need to match a metavar (but the identifier is invalid)... this is an error
TokenTree::MetaVarDecl(span, _, id) if id.name == keywords::Invalid.name() => {
if sess.missing_fragment_specifiers.borrow_mut().remove(&span) {
return Error(span, "missing fragment specifier".to_string());
}
}
// We need to match a metavar with a valid ident... call out to the black-box
// parser by adding an item to `bb_items`.
TokenTree::MetaVarDecl(_, _, id) => {
// Built-in nonterminals never start with these tokens,
// so we can eliminate them from consideration.
if may_begin_with(&*id.name.as_str(), token) {
bb_items.push(item);
}
}
// We need to descend into a delimited submatcher or a doc comment. To do this, we
// push the current matcher onto a stack and push a new item containing the
// submatcher onto `cur_items`.
//
// At the beginning of the loop, if we reach the end of the delimited submatcher,
// we pop the stack to backtrack out of the descent.
seq @ TokenTree::Delimited(..) | seq @ TokenTree::Token(_, DocComment(..)) => {
let lower_elts = mem::replace(&mut item.top_elts, Tt(seq));
let idx = item.idx;
item.stack.push(MatcherTtFrame {
elts: lower_elts,
idx,
});
item.idx = 0;
cur_items.push(item);
}
// We just matched a normal token. We can just advance the parser.
TokenTree::Token(_, ref t) if token_name_eq(t, token) => {
item.idx += 1;
next_items.push(item);
}
// There was another token that was not `token`... This means we can't add any
// rules. NOTE that this is not necessarily an error unless _all_ items in
// `cur_items` end up doing this. There may still be some other matchers that do
// end up working out.
TokenTree::Token(..) | TokenTree::MetaVar(..) => {}
}
}
}
// Yay a successful parse (so far)!
Success(())
}
/// Use the given sequence of token trees (`ms`) as a matcher. Match the given token stream `tts`
/// against it and return the match.
///
/// # Parameters
///
/// - `sess`: The session into which errors are emitted
/// - `tts`: The tokenstream we are matching against the pattern `ms`
/// - `ms`: A sequence of token trees representing a pattern against which we are matching
/// - `directory`: Information about the file locations (needed for the black-box parser)
/// - `recurse_into_modules`: Whether or not to recurse into modules (needed for the black-box
/// parser)
pub fn parse(
sess: &ParseSess,
tts: TokenStream,
ms: &[TokenTree],
directory: Option<Directory>,
recurse_into_modules: bool,
) -> NamedParseResult {
// Create a parser that can be used for the "black box" parts.
let mut parser = Parser::new(sess, tts, directory, recurse_into_modules, true);
// A queue of possible matcher positions. We initialize it with the matcher position in which
// the "dot" is before the first token of the first token tree in `ms`. `inner_parse_loop` then
// processes all of these possible matcher positions and produces posible next positions into
// `next_items`. After some post-processing, the contents of `next_items` replenish `cur_items`
// and we start over again.
let mut cur_items = SmallVector::one(initial_matcher_pos(ms.to_owned(), parser.span.lo()));
let mut next_items = Vec::new();
loop {
// Matcher positions black-box parsed by parser.rs (`parser`)
let mut bb_items = SmallVector::new();
// Matcher positions that would be valid if the macro invocation was over now
let mut eof_items = SmallVector::new();
assert!(next_items.is_empty());
// Process `cur_items` until either we have finished the input or we need to get some
// parsing from the black-box parser done. The result is that `next_items` will contain a
// bunch of possible next matcher positions in `next_items`.
match inner_parse_loop(
sess,
&mut cur_items,
&mut next_items,
&mut eof_items,
&mut bb_items,
&parser.token,
parser.span,
) {
Success(_) => {}
Failure(sp, tok) => return Failure(sp, tok),
Error(sp, msg) => return Error(sp, msg),
}
// inner parse loop handled all cur_items, so it's empty
assert!(cur_items.is_empty());
// We need to do some post processing after the `inner_parser_loop`.
//
// Error messages here could be improved with links to original rules.
// If we reached the EOF, check that there is EXACTLY ONE possible matcher. Otherwise,
// either the parse is ambiguous (which should never happen) or their is a syntax error.
if token_name_eq(&parser.token, &token::Eof) {
if eof_items.len() == 1 {
let matches = eof_items[0]
.matches
.iter_mut()
.map(|dv| Rc::make_mut(dv).pop().unwrap());
return nameize(sess, ms, matches);
} else if eof_items.len() > 1 {
return Error(
parser.span,
"ambiguity: multiple successful parses".to_string(),
);
} else {
return Failure(parser.span, token::Eof);
}
}
// Another possibility is that we need to call out to parse some rust nonterminal
// (black-box) parser. However, if there is not EXACTLY ONE of these, something is wrong.
else if (!bb_items.is_empty() && !next_items.is_empty()) || bb_items.len() > 1 {
let nts = bb_items
.iter()
.map(|item| match item.top_elts.get_tt(item.idx) {
TokenTree::MetaVarDecl(_, bind, name) => format!("{} ('{}')", name, bind),
_ => panic!(),
})
.collect::<Vec<String>>()
.join(" or ");
return Error(
parser.span,
format!(
"local ambiguity: multiple parsing options: {}",
match next_items.len() {
0 => format!("built-in NTs {}.", nts),
1 => format!("built-in NTs {} or 1 other option.", nts),
n => format!("built-in NTs {} or {} other options.", nts, n),
}
),
);
}
// If there are no posible next positions AND we aren't waiting for the black-box parser,
// then their is a syntax error.
else if bb_items.is_empty() && next_items.is_empty() {
return Failure(parser.span, parser.token);
}
// Dump all possible `next_items` into `cur_items` for the next iteration.
else if !next_items.is_empty() {
// Now process the next token
cur_items.extend(next_items.drain(..));
parser.bump();
}
// Finally, we have the case where we need to call the black-box parser to get some
// nonterminal.
else {
assert_eq!(bb_items.len(), 1);
let mut item = bb_items.pop().unwrap();
if let TokenTree::MetaVarDecl(span, _, ident) = item.top_elts.get_tt(item.idx) {
let match_cur = item.match_cur;
item.push_match(
match_cur,
MatchedNonterminal(Rc::new(parse_nt(&mut parser, span, &ident.name.as_str()))),
);
item.idx += 1;
item.match_cur += 1;
} else {
unreachable!()
}
cur_items.push(item);
}
assert!(!cur_items.is_empty());
}
}
/// The token is an identifier, but not `_`.
/// We prohibit passing `_` to macros expecting `ident` for now.
fn get_macro_ident(token: &Token) -> Option<(Ident, bool)> {
match *token {
token::Ident(ident, is_raw) if ident.name != keywords::Underscore.name() =>
Some((ident, is_raw)),
_ => None,
}
}
/// Checks whether a non-terminal may begin with a particular token.
///
/// Returning `false` is a *stability guarantee* that such a matcher will *never* begin with that
/// token. Be conservative (return true) if not sure.
fn may_begin_with(name: &str, token: &Token) -> bool {
/// Checks whether the non-terminal may contain a single (non-keyword) identifier.
fn may_be_ident(nt: &token::Nonterminal) -> bool {
match *nt {
token::NtItem(_) | token::NtBlock(_) | token::NtVis(_) => false,
_ => true,
}
}
match name {
"expr" => token.can_begin_expr(),
"ty" => token.can_begin_type(),
"ident" => get_macro_ident(token).is_some(),
"vis" => match *token {
// The follow-set of :vis + "priv" keyword + interpolated
Token::Comma | Token::Ident(..) | Token::Interpolated(_) => true,
_ => token.can_begin_type(),
},
"block" => match *token {
Token::OpenDelim(token::Brace) => true,
Token::Interpolated(ref nt) => match nt.0 {
token::NtItem(_)
| token::NtPat(_)
| token::NtTy(_)
| token::NtIdent(..)
| token::NtMeta(_)
| token::NtPath(_)
| token::NtVis(_) => false, // none of these may start with '{'.
_ => true,
},
_ => false,
},
"path" | "meta" => match *token {
Token::ModSep | Token::Ident(..) => true,
Token::Interpolated(ref nt) => match nt.0 {
token::NtPath(_) | token::NtMeta(_) => true,
_ => may_be_ident(&nt.0),
},
_ => false,
},
"pat" => match *token {
Token::Ident(..) | // box, ref, mut, and other identifiers (can stricten)
Token::OpenDelim(token::Paren) | // tuple pattern
Token::OpenDelim(token::Bracket) | // slice pattern
Token::BinOp(token::And) | // reference
Token::BinOp(token::Minus) | // negative literal
Token::AndAnd | // double reference
Token::Literal(..) | // literal
Token::DotDot | // range pattern (future compat)
Token::DotDotDot | // range pattern (future compat)
Token::ModSep | // path
Token::Lt | // path (UFCS constant)
Token::BinOp(token::Shl) => true, // path (double UFCS)
Token::Interpolated(ref nt) => may_be_ident(&nt.0),
_ => false,
},
_ => match *token {
token::CloseDelim(_) => false,
_ => true,
},
}
}
/// A call to the "black-box" parser to parse some rust nonterminal.
///
/// # Parameters
///
/// - `p`: the "black-box" parser to use
/// - `sp`: the `Span` we want to parse
/// - `name`: the name of the metavar _matcher_ we want to match (e.g. `tt`, `ident`, `block`,
/// etc...)
///
/// # Returns
///
/// The parsed nonterminal.
fn parse_nt<'a>(p: &mut Parser<'a>, sp: Span, name: &str) -> Nonterminal {
if name == "tt" {
return token::NtTT(p.parse_token_tree());
}
// check at the beginning and the parser checks after each bump
p.process_potential_macro_variable();
match name {
"item" => match panictry!(p.parse_item()) {
Some(i) => token::NtItem(i),
None => {
p.fatal("expected an item keyword").emit();
FatalError.raise();
}
},
"block" => token::NtBlock(panictry!(p.parse_block())),
"stmt" => match panictry!(p.parse_stmt()) {
Some(s) => token::NtStmt(s),
None => {
p.fatal("expected a statement").emit();
FatalError.raise();
}
},
"pat" => token::NtPat(panictry!(p.parse_pat())),
"expr" => token::NtExpr(panictry!(p.parse_expr())),
"ty" => token::NtTy(panictry!(p.parse_ty())),
// this could be handled like a token, since it is one
"ident" => if let Some((ident, is_raw)) = get_macro_ident(&p.token) {
let span = p.span;
p.bump();
token::NtIdent(Ident::new(ident.name, span), is_raw)
} else {
let token_str = pprust::token_to_string(&p.token);
p.fatal(&format!("expected ident, found {}", &token_str)).emit();
FatalError.raise()
}
"path" => token::NtPath(panictry!(p.parse_path_common(PathStyle::Type, false))),
"meta" => token::NtMeta(panictry!(p.parse_meta_item())),
"vis" => token::NtVis(panictry!(p.parse_visibility(true))),
"lifetime" => token::NtLifetime(p.expect_lifetime().ident),
// this is not supposed to happen, since it has been checked
// when compiling the macro.
_ => p.span_bug(sp, "invalid fragment specifier"),
}
}