This is the mail archive of the gdb-patches@sourceware.org mailing list for the GDB project.


Index Nav: [Date Index] [Subject Index] [Author Index] [Thread Index]
Message Nav: [Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next]
Other format: [Raw text]

[RFA/Ada] Allow 'thread' to be used as a variable name in expressions.


GDB treats the identifiers 'if', 'thread', and 'task' unconditionally
as expression delimiters in Ada mode, which is correct for 'if' and 'task',
but wrong for 'thread' in cases such as

      print thread

Borrowing from c-exp.y, we observe that 'thread' must be followed by
numerals, whereas identifiers never are and treat them as delimiters
only in that case.

In the process, the current also refactors and incidentally fixes the
code for rewinding the input to before the delimiting tokens.  For
example, the code

      watch expr if i > 2

fails because the input is only rewound to just before the 'i',
leaving the 'if' as part of the expression (and thus making the
rest look like trailing junk rather than a conditional clause).

OK to commit?

Paul N. Hilfinger
(Hilfinger@adacore.com)

gdb/ChangeLog:

    * ada-lex.l (rules): Only recognize 'thread' as a
      delimiter when followed by numerals, as for c-exp.y.
      Use new rewind_to_char function to rewind the input for
      expression-delimiting tokens.
      (rewind_to_char): New function.

---
 gdb/ada-lex.l |   39 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-----------
 1 file changed, 28 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-)

diff --git a/gdb/ada-lex.l b/gdb/ada-lex.l
index 2bad4a1..2b02985 100644
--- a/gdb/ada-lex.l
+++ b/gdb/ada-lex.l
@@ -53,6 +53,7 @@ static int processReal (const char *);
 static struct stoken processId (const char *, int);
 static int processAttribute (const char *);
 static int find_dot_all (const char *);
+static void rewind_to_char(int);
 
 #undef YY_DECL
 #define YY_DECL static int yylex ( void )
@@ -157,18 +158,19 @@ static int find_dot_all (const char *);
 
 
 if		{
-		  while (*lexptr != 'i' && *lexptr != 'I')
-		    lexptr -= 1;
-		  yyrestart(NULL);
+                  rewind_to_char ('i');
 		  return 0;
 		}
 
-(task|thread)	{
+task            {
+                  rewind_to_char ('t');
+		  return 0;
+		}
+
+thread{WHITE}+{DIG} {
                   /* This keyword signals the end of the expression and
                      will be processed separately.  */
-		  while (*lexptr != 't' && *lexptr != 'T')
-		    lexptr--;
-		  yyrestart(NULL);
+                  rewind_to_char ('t');
 		  return 0;
 		}
 
@@ -218,8 +220,7 @@ false		{ return FALSEKEYWORD; }
 
 ","		{ if (paren_depth == 0 && comma_terminates)
 		    {
-		      lexptr -= 1;
-		      yyrestart(NULL);
+		      rewind_to_char (',');
 		      return 0;
 		    }
 		  else
@@ -229,8 +230,7 @@ false		{ return FALSEKEYWORD; }
 "("		{ paren_depth += 1; return '('; }
 ")"		{ if (paren_depth == 0)
 		    {
-		      lexptr -= 1;
-		      yyrestart(NULL);
+		      rewind_to_char (')');
 		      return 0;
 		    }
 		  else
@@ -616,6 +616,23 @@ processAttribute (const char *str)
   return attributes[k].code;
 }
 
+/* Back up lexptr by yyleng and then to the rightmost occurrence of character
+   CH, case-folded (there must be one).  WARNING: since lexptr points to the
+   next input character that Flex has not yet transferred to its
+   internal buffer, the use of this function depends on the assumption
+   that Flex calls YY_INPUT only when it is logically necessary to do so
+   (thus, there is no reading ahead farther than needed to identify
+   the next token.)  */
+
+static void
+rewind_to_char(int ch)
+{
+  lexptr -= yyleng;
+  while (toupper(*lexptr) != toupper(ch))
+    lexptr -= 1;
+  yyrestart (NULL);
+}
+
 int
 yywrap(void)
 {
-- 
1.7.9.5


Index Nav: [Date Index] [Subject Index] [Author Index] [Thread Index]
Message Nav: [Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next]