1 <html> 2 <head> 3 <title>The Lemon Parser Generator</title> 4 </head> 5 <body bgcolor=white> 6 <h1 align=center>The Lemon Parser Generator</h1> 7 8 <p>Lemon is an LALR(1) parser generator for C or C++. 9 It does the same job as ``bison'' and ``yacc''. 10 But lemon is not another bison or yacc clone. It 11 uses a different grammar syntax which is designed to 12 reduce the number of coding errors. Lemon also uses a more 13 sophisticated parsing engine that is faster than yacc and 14 bison and which is both reentrant and thread-safe. 15 Furthermore, Lemon implements features that can be used 16 to eliminate resource leaks, making is suitable for use 17 in long-running programs such as graphical user interfaces 18 or embedded controllers.</p> 19 20 <p>This document is an introduction to the Lemon 21 parser generator.</p> 22 23 <h2>Theory of Operation</h2> 24 25 <p>The main goal of Lemon is to translate a context free grammar (CFG) 26 for a particular language into C code that implements a parser for 27 that language. 28 The program has two inputs: 29 <ul> 30 <li>The grammar specification. 31 <li>A parser template file. 32 </ul> 33 Typically, only the grammar specification is supplied by the programmer. 34 Lemon comes with a default parser template which works fine for most 35 applications. But the user is free to substitute a different parser 36 template if desired.</p> 37 38 <p>Depending on command-line options, Lemon will generate between 39 one and three files of outputs. 40 <ul> 41 <li>C code to implement the parser. 42 <li>A header file defining an integer ID for each terminal symbol. 43 <li>An information file that describes the states of the generated parser 44 automaton. 45 </ul> 46 By default, all three of these output files are generated. 47 The header file is suppressed if the ``-m'' command-line option is 48 used and the report file is omitted when ``-q'' is selected.</p> 49 50 <p>The grammar specification file uses a ``.y'' suffix, by convention. 51 In the examples used in this document, we'll assume the name of the 52 grammar file is ``gram.y''. A typical use of Lemon would be the 53 following command: 54 <pre> 55 lemon gram.y 56 </pre> 57 This command will generate three output files named ``gram.c'', 58 ``gram.h'' and ``gram.out''. 59 The first is C code to implement the parser. The second 60 is the header file that defines numerical values for all 61 terminal symbols, and the last is the report that explains 62 the states used by the parser automaton.</p> 63 64 <h3>Command Line Options</h3> 65 66 <p>The behavior of Lemon can be modified using command-line options. 67 You can obtain a list of the available command-line options together 68 with a brief explanation of what each does by typing 69 <pre> 70 lemon -? 71 </pre> 72 As of this writing, the following command-line options are supported: 73 <ul> 74 <li><tt>-b</tt> 75 <li><tt>-c</tt> 76 <li><tt>-g</tt> 77 <li><tt>-m</tt> 78 <li><tt>-q</tt> 79 <li><tt>-s</tt> 80 <li><tt>-x</tt> 81 </ul> 82 The ``-b'' option reduces the amount of text in the report file by 83 printing only the basis of each parser state, rather than the full 84 configuration. 85 The ``-c'' option suppresses action table compression. Using -c 86 will make the parser a little larger and slower but it will detect 87 syntax errors sooner. 88 The ``-g'' option causes no output files to be generated at all. 89 Instead, the input grammar file is printed on standard output but 90 with all comments, actions and other extraneous text deleted. This 91 is a useful way to get a quick summary of a grammar. 92 The ``-m'' option causes the output C source file to be compatible 93 with the ``makeheaders'' program. 94 Makeheaders is a program that automatically generates header files 95 from C source code. When the ``-m'' option is used, the header 96 file is not output since the makeheaders program will take care 97 of generated all header files automatically. 98 The ``-q'' option suppresses the report file. 99 Using ``-s'' causes a brief summary of parser statistics to be 100 printed. Like this: 101 <pre> 102 Parser statistics: 74 terminals, 70 nonterminals, 179 rules 103 340 states, 2026 parser table entries, 0 conflicts 104 </pre> 105 Finally, the ``-x'' option causes Lemon to print its version number 106 and then stops without attempting to read the grammar or generate a parser.</p> 107 108 <h3>The Parser Interface</h3> 109 110 <p>Lemon doesn't generate a complete, working program. It only generates 111 a few subroutines that implement a parser. This section describes 112 the interface to those subroutines. It is up to the programmer to 113 call these subroutines in an appropriate way in order to produce a 114 complete system.</p> 115 116 <p>Before a program begins using a Lemon-generated parser, the program 117 must first create the parser. 118 A new parser is created as follows: 119 <pre> 120 void *pParser = ParseAlloc( malloc ); 121 </pre> 122 The ParseAlloc() routine allocates and initializes a new parser and 123 returns a pointer to it. 124 The actual data structure used to represent a parser is opaque -- 125 its internal structure is not visible or usable by the calling routine. 126 For this reason, the ParseAlloc() routine returns a pointer to void 127 rather than a pointer to some particular structure. 128 The sole argument to the ParseAlloc() routine is a pointer to the 129 subroutine used to allocate memory. Typically this means ``malloc()''.</p> 130 131 <p>After a program is finished using a parser, it can reclaim all 132 memory allocated by that parser by calling 133 <pre> 134 ParseFree(pParser, free); 135 </pre> 136 The first argument is the same pointer returned by ParseAlloc(). The 137 second argument is a pointer to the function used to release bulk 138 memory back to the system.</p> 139 140 <p>After a parser has been allocated using ParseAlloc(), the programmer 141 must supply the parser with a sequence of tokens (terminal symbols) to 142 be parsed. This is accomplished by calling the following function 143 once for each token: 144 <pre> 145 Parse(pParser, hTokenID, sTokenData, pArg); 146 </pre> 147 The first argument to the Parse() routine is the pointer returned by 148 ParseAlloc(). 149 The second argument is a small positive integer that tells the parse the 150 type of the next token in the data stream. 151 There is one token type for each terminal symbol in the grammar. 152 The gram.h file generated by Lemon contains #define statements that 153 map symbolic terminal symbol names into appropriate integer values. 154 (A value of 0 for the second argument is a special flag to the 155 parser to indicate that the end of input has been reached.) 156 The third argument is the value of the given token. By default, 157 the type of the third argument is integer, but the grammar will 158 usually redefine this type to be some kind of structure. 159 Typically the second argument will be a broad category of tokens 160 such as ``identifier'' or ``number'' and the third argument will 161 be the name of the identifier or the value of the number.</p> 162 163 <p>The Parse() function may have either three or four arguments, 164 depending on the grammar. If the grammar specification file request 165 it, the Parse() function will have a fourth parameter that can be 166 of any type chosen by the programmer. The parser doesn't do anything 167 with this argument except to pass it through to action routines. 168 This is a convenient mechanism for passing state information down 169 to the action routines without having to use global variables.</p> 170 171 <p>A typical use of a Lemon parser might look something like the 172 following: 173 <pre> 174 01 ParseTree *ParseFile(const char *zFilename){ 175 02 Tokenizer *pTokenizer; 176 03 void *pParser; 177 04 Token sToken; 178 05 int hTokenId; 179 06 ParserState sState; 180 07 181 08 pTokenizer = TokenizerCreate(zFilename); 182 09 pParser = ParseAlloc( malloc ); 183 10 InitParserState(&sState); 184 11 while( GetNextToken(pTokenizer, &hTokenId, &sToken) ){ 185 12 Parse(pParser, hTokenId, sToken, &sState); 186 13 } 187 14 Parse(pParser, 0, sToken, &sState); 188 15 ParseFree(pParser, free ); 189 16 TokenizerFree(pTokenizer); 190 17 return sState.treeRoot; 191 18 } 192 </pre> 193 This example shows a user-written routine that parses a file of 194 text and returns a pointer to the parse tree. 195 (We've omitted all error-handling from this example to keep it 196 simple.) 197 We assume the existence of some kind of tokenizer which is created 198 using TokenizerCreate() on line 8 and deleted by TokenizerFree() 199 on line 16. The GetNextToken() function on line 11 retrieves the 200 next token from the input file and puts its type in the 201 integer variable hTokenId. The sToken variable is assumed to be 202 some kind of structure that contains details about each token, 203 such as its complete text, what line it occurs on, etc. </p> 204 205 <p>This example also assumes the existence of structure of type 206 ParserState that holds state information about a particular parse. 207 An instance of such a structure is created on line 6 and initialized 208 on line 10. A pointer to this structure is passed into the Parse() 209 routine as the optional 4th argument. 210 The action routine specified by the grammar for the parser can use 211 the ParserState structure to hold whatever information is useful and 212 appropriate. In the example, we note that the treeRoot field of 213 the ParserState structure is left pointing to the root of the parse 214 tree.</p> 215 216 <p>The core of this example as it relates to Lemon is as follows: 217 <pre> 218 ParseFile(){ 219 pParser = ParseAlloc( malloc ); 220 while( GetNextToken(pTokenizer,&hTokenId, &sToken) ){ 221 Parse(pParser, hTokenId, sToken); 222 } 223 Parse(pParser, 0, sToken); 224 ParseFree(pParser, free ); 225 } 226 </pre> 227 Basically, what a program has to do to use a Lemon-generated parser 228 is first create the parser, then send it lots of tokens obtained by 229 tokenizing an input source. When the end of input is reached, the 230 Parse() routine should be called one last time with a token type 231 of 0. This step is necessary to inform the parser that the end of 232 input has been reached. Finally, we reclaim memory used by the 233 parser by calling ParseFree().</p> 234 235 <p>There is one other interface routine that should be mentioned 236 before we move on. 237 The ParseTrace() function can be used to generate debugging output 238 from the parser. A prototype for this routine is as follows: 239 <pre> 240 ParseTrace(FILE *stream, char *zPrefix); 241 </pre> 242 After this routine is called, a short (one-line) message is written 243 to the designated output stream every time the parser changes states 244 or calls an action routine. Each such message is prefaced using 245 the text given by zPrefix. This debugging output can be turned off 246 by calling ParseTrace() again with a first argument of NULL (0).</p> 247 248 <h3>Differences With YACC and BISON</h3> 249 250 <p>Programmers who have previously used the yacc or bison parser 251 generator will notice several important differences between yacc and/or 252 bison and Lemon. 253 <ul> 254 <li>In yacc and bison, the parser calls the tokenizer. In Lemon, 255 the tokenizer calls the parser. 256 <li>Lemon uses no global variables. Yacc and bison use global variables 257 to pass information between the tokenizer and parser. 258 <li>Lemon allows multiple parsers to be running simultaneously. Yacc 259 and bison do not. 260 </ul> 261 These differences may cause some initial confusion for programmers 262 with prior yacc and bison experience. 263 But after years of experience using Lemon, I firmly 264 believe that the Lemon way of doing things is better.</p> 265 266 <h2>Input File Syntax</h2> 267 268 <p>The main purpose of the grammar specification file for Lemon is 269 to define the grammar for the parser. But the input file also 270 specifies additional information Lemon requires to do its job. 271 Most of the work in using Lemon is in writing an appropriate 272 grammar file.</p> 273 274 <p>The grammar file for lemon is, for the most part, free format. 275 It does not have sections or divisions like yacc or bison. Any 276 declaration can occur at any point in the file. 277 Lemon ignores whitespace (except where it is needed to separate 278 tokens) and it honors the same commenting conventions as C and C++.</p> 279 280 <h3>Terminals and Nonterminals</h3> 281 282 <p>A terminal symbol (token) is any string of alphanumeric 283 and underscore characters 284 that begins with an upper case letter. 285 A terminal can contain lower class letters after the first character, 286 but the usual convention is to make terminals all upper case. 287 A nonterminal, on the other hand, is any string of alphanumeric 288 and underscore characters than begins with a lower case letter. 289 Again, the usual convention is to make nonterminals use all lower 290 case letters.</p> 291 292 <p>In Lemon, terminal and nonterminal symbols do not need to 293 be declared or identified in a separate section of the grammar file. 294 Lemon is able to generate a list of all terminals and nonterminals 295 by examining the grammar rules, and it can always distinguish a 296 terminal from a nonterminal by checking the case of the first 297 character of the name.</p> 298 299 <p>Yacc and bison allow terminal symbols to have either alphanumeric 300 names or to be individual characters included in single quotes, like 301 this: ')' or '$'. Lemon does not allow this alternative form for 302 terminal symbols. With Lemon, all symbols, terminals and nonterminals, 303 must have alphanumeric names.</p> 304 305 <h3>Grammar Rules</h3> 306 307 <p>The main component of a Lemon grammar file is a sequence of grammar 308 rules. 309 Each grammar rule consists of a nonterminal symbol followed by 310 the special symbol ``::='' and then a list of terminals and/or nonterminals. 311 The rule is terminated by a period. 312 The list of terminals and nonterminals on the right-hand side of the 313 rule can be empty. 314 Rules can occur in any order, except that the left-hand side of the 315 first rule is assumed to be the start symbol for the grammar (unless 316 specified otherwise using the <tt>%start</tt> directive described below.) 317 A typical sequence of grammar rules might look something like this: 318 <pre> 319 expr ::= expr PLUS expr. 320 expr ::= expr TIMES expr. 321 expr ::= LPAREN expr RPAREN. 322 expr ::= VALUE. 323 </pre> 324 </p> 325 326 <p>There is one non-terminal in this example, ``expr'', and five 327 terminal symbols or tokens: ``PLUS'', ``TIMES'', ``LPAREN'', 328 ``RPAREN'' and ``VALUE''.</p> 329 330 <p>Like yacc and bison, Lemon allows the grammar to specify a block 331 of C code that will be executed whenever a grammar rule is reduced 332 by the parser. 333 In Lemon, this action is specified by putting the C code (contained 334 within curly braces <tt>{...}</tt>) immediately after the 335 period that closes the rule. 336 For example: 337 <pre> 338 expr ::= expr PLUS expr. { printf("Doing an addition...\n"); } 339 </pre> 340 </p> 341 342 <p>In order to be useful, grammar actions must normally be linked to 343 their associated grammar rules. 344 In yacc and bison, this is accomplished by embedding a ``$$'' in the 345 action to stand for the value of the left-hand side of the rule and 346 symbols ``$1'', ``$2'', and so forth to stand for the value of 347 the terminal or nonterminal at position 1, 2 and so forth on the 348 right-hand side of the rule. 349 This idea is very powerful, but it is also very error-prone. The 350 single most common source of errors in a yacc or bison grammar is 351 to miscount the number of symbols on the right-hand side of a grammar 352 rule and say ``$7'' when you really mean ``$8''.</p> 353 354 <p>Lemon avoids the need to count grammar symbols by assigning symbolic 355 names to each symbol in a grammar rule and then using those symbolic 356 names in the action. 357 In yacc or bison, one would write this: 358 <pre> 359 expr -> expr PLUS expr { $$ = $1 + $3; }; 360 </pre> 361 But in Lemon, the same rule becomes the following: 362 <pre> 363 expr(A) ::= expr(B) PLUS expr(C). { A = B+C; } 364 </pre> 365 In the Lemon rule, any symbol in parentheses after a grammar rule 366 symbol becomes a place holder for that symbol in the grammar rule. 367 This place holder can then be used in the associated C action to 368 stand for the value of that symbol.<p> 369 370 <p>The Lemon notation for linking a grammar rule with its reduce 371 action is superior to yacc/bison on several counts. 372 First, as mentioned above, the Lemon method avoids the need to 373 count grammar symbols. 374 Secondly, if a terminal or nonterminal in a Lemon grammar rule 375 includes a linking symbol in parentheses but that linking symbol 376 is not actually used in the reduce action, then an error message 377 is generated. 378 For example, the rule 379 <pre> 380 expr(A) ::= expr(B) PLUS expr(C). { A = B; } 381 </pre> 382 will generate an error because the linking symbol ``C'' is used 383 in the grammar rule but not in the reduce action.</p> 384 385 <p>The Lemon notation for linking grammar rules to reduce actions 386 also facilitates the use of destructors for reclaiming memory 387 allocated by the values of terminals and nonterminals on the 388 right-hand side of a rule.</p> 389 390 <h3>Precedence Rules</h3> 391 392 <p>Lemon resolves parsing ambiguities in exactly the same way as 393 yacc and bison. A shift-reduce conflict is resolved in favor 394 of the shift, and a reduce-reduce conflict is resolved by reducing 395 whichever rule comes first in the grammar file.</p> 396 397 <p>Just like in 398 yacc and bison, Lemon allows a measure of control 399 over the resolution of paring conflicts using precedence rules. 400 A precedence value can be assigned to any terminal symbol 401 using the %left, %right or %nonassoc directives. Terminal symbols 402 mentioned in earlier directives have a lower precedence that 403 terminal symbols mentioned in later directives. For example:</p> 404 405 <p><pre> 406 %left AND. 407 %left OR. 408 %nonassoc EQ NE GT GE LT LE. 409 %left PLUS MINUS. 410 %left TIMES DIVIDE MOD. 411 %right EXP NOT. 412 </pre></p> 413 414 <p>In the preceding sequence of directives, the AND operator is 415 defined to have the lowest precedence. The OR operator is one 416 precedence level higher. And so forth. Hence, the grammar would 417 attempt to group the ambiguous expression 418 <pre> 419 a AND b OR c 420 </pre> 421 like this 422 <pre> 423 a AND (b OR c). 424 </pre> 425 The associativity (left, right or nonassoc) is used to determine 426 the grouping when the precedence is the same. AND is left-associative 427 in our example, so 428 <pre> 429 a AND b AND c 430 </pre> 431 is parsed like this 432 <pre> 433 (a AND b) AND c. 434 </pre> 435 The EXP operator is right-associative, though, so 436 <pre> 437 a EXP b EXP c 438 </pre> 439 is parsed like this 440 <pre> 441 a EXP (b EXP c). 442 </pre> 443 The nonassoc precedence is used for non-associative operators. 444 So 445 <pre> 446 a EQ b EQ c 447 </pre> 448 is an error.</p> 449 450 <p>The precedence of non-terminals is transferred to rules as follows: 451 The precedence of a grammar rule is equal to the precedence of the 452 left-most terminal symbol in the rule for which a precedence is 453 defined. This is normally what you want, but in those cases where 454 you want to precedence of a grammar rule to be something different, 455 you can specify an alternative precedence symbol by putting the 456 symbol in square braces after the period at the end of the rule and 457 before any C-code. For example:</p> 458 459 <p><pre> 460 expr = MINUS expr. [NOT] 461 </pre></p> 462 463 <p>This rule has a precedence equal to that of the NOT symbol, not the 464 MINUS symbol as would have been the case by default.</p> 465 466 <p>With the knowledge of how precedence is assigned to terminal 467 symbols and individual 468 grammar rules, we can now explain precisely how parsing conflicts 469 are resolved in Lemon. Shift-reduce conflicts are resolved 470 as follows: 471 <ul> 472 <li> If either the token to be shifted or the rule to be reduced 473 lacks precedence information, then resolve in favor of the 474 shift, but report a parsing conflict. 475 <li> If the precedence of the token to be shifted is greater than 476 the precedence of the rule to reduce, then resolve in favor 477 of the shift. No parsing conflict is reported. 478 <li> If the precedence of the token it be shifted is less than the 479 precedence of the rule to reduce, then resolve in favor of the 480 reduce action. No parsing conflict is reported. 481 <li> If the precedences are the same and the shift token is 482 right-associative, then resolve in favor of the shift. 483 No parsing conflict is reported. 484 <li> If the precedences are the same the the shift token is 485 left-associative, then resolve in favor of the reduce. 486 No parsing conflict is reported. 487 <li> Otherwise, resolve the conflict by doing the shift and 488 report the parsing conflict. 489 </ul> 490 Reduce-reduce conflicts are resolved this way: 491 <ul> 492 <li> If either reduce rule 493 lacks precedence information, then resolve in favor of the 494 rule that appears first in the grammar and report a parsing 495 conflict. 496 <li> If both rules have precedence and the precedence is different 497 then resolve the dispute in favor of the rule with the highest 498 precedence and do not report a conflict. 499 <li> Otherwise, resolve the conflict by reducing by the rule that 500 appears first in the grammar and report a parsing conflict. 501 </ul> 502 503 <h3>Special Directives</h3> 504 505 <p>The input grammar to Lemon consists of grammar rules and special 506 directives. We've described all the grammar rules, so now we'll 507 talk about the special directives.</p> 508 509 <p>Directives in lemon can occur in any order. You can put them before 510 the grammar rules, or after the grammar rules, or in the mist of the 511 grammar rules. It doesn't matter. The relative order of 512 directives used to assign precedence to terminals is important, but 513 other than that, the order of directives in Lemon is arbitrary.</p> 514 515 <p>Lemon supports the following special directives: 516 <ul> 517 <li><tt>%code</tt> 518 <li><tt>%default_destructor</tt> 519 <li><tt>%default_type</tt> 520 <li><tt>%destructor</tt> 521 <li><tt>%extra_argument</tt> 522 <li><tt>%include</tt> 523 <li><tt>%left</tt> 524 <li><tt>%name</tt> 525 <li><tt>%nonassoc</tt> 526 <li><tt>%parse_accept</tt> 527 <li><tt>%parse_failure </tt> 528 <li><tt>%right</tt> 529 <li><tt>%stack_overflow</tt> 530 <li><tt>%stack_size</tt> 531 <li><tt>%start_symbol</tt> 532 <li><tt>%syntax_error</tt> 533 <li><tt>%token_destructor</tt> 534 <li><tt>%token_prefix</tt> 535 <li><tt>%token_type</tt> 536 <li><tt>%type</tt> 537 </ul> 538 Each of these directives will be described separately in the 539 following sections:</p> 540 541 <h4>The <tt>%code</tt> directive</h4> 542 543 <p>The %code directive is used to specify addition C/C++ code that 544 is added to the end of the main output file. This is similar to 545 the %include directive except that %include is inserted at the 546 beginning of the main output file.</p> 547 548 <p>%code is typically used to include some action routines or perhaps 549 a tokenizer as part of the output file.</p> 550 551 <h4>The <tt>%default_destructor</tt> directive</h4> 552 553 <p>The %default_destructor directive specifies a destructor to 554 use for non-terminals that do not have their own destructor 555 specified by a separate %destructor directive. See the documentation 556 on the %destructor directive below for additional information.</p> 557 558 <p>In some grammers, many different non-terminal symbols have the 559 same datatype and hence the same destructor. This directive is 560 a convenience way to specify the same destructor for all those 561 non-terminals using a single statement.</p> 562 563 <h4>The <tt>%default_type</tt> directive</h4> 564 565 <p>The %default_type directive specifies the datatype of non-terminal 566 symbols that do no have their own datatype defined using a separate 567 %type directive. See the documentation on %type below for addition 568 information.</p> 569 570 <h4>The <tt>%destructor</tt> directive</h4> 571 572 <p>The %destructor directive is used to specify a destructor for 573 a non-terminal symbol. 574 (See also the %token_destructor directive which is used to 575 specify a destructor for terminal symbols.)</p> 576 577 <p>A non-terminal's destructor is called to dispose of the 578 non-terminal's value whenever the non-terminal is popped from 579 the stack. This includes all of the following circumstances: 580 <ul> 581 <li> When a rule reduces and the value of a non-terminal on 582 the right-hand side is not linked to C code. 583 <li> When the stack is popped during error processing. 584 <li> When the ParseFree() function runs. 585 </ul> 586 The destructor can do whatever it wants with the value of 587 the non-terminal, but its design is to deallocate memory 588 or other resources held by that non-terminal.</p> 589 590 <p>Consider an example: 591 <pre> 592 %type nt {void*} 593 %destructor nt { free($$); } 594 nt(A) ::= ID NUM. { A = malloc( 100 ); } 595 </pre> 596 This example is a bit contrived but it serves to illustrate how 597 destructors work. The example shows a non-terminal named 598 ``nt'' that holds values of type ``void*''. When the rule for 599 an ``nt'' reduces, it sets the value of the non-terminal to 600 space obtained from malloc(). Later, when the nt non-terminal 601 is popped from the stack, the destructor will fire and call 602 free() on this malloced space, thus avoiding a memory leak. 603 (Note that the symbol ``$$'' in the destructor code is replaced 604 by the value of the non-terminal.)</p> 605 606 <p>It is important to note that the value of a non-terminal is passed 607 to the destructor whenever the non-terminal is removed from the 608 stack, unless the non-terminal is used in a C-code action. If 609 the non-terminal is used by C-code, then it is assumed that the 610 C-code will take care of destroying it if it should really 611 be destroyed. More commonly, the value is used to build some 612 larger structure and we don't want to destroy it, which is why 613 the destructor is not called in this circumstance.</p> 614 615 <p>By appropriate use of destructors, it is possible to 616 build a parser using Lemon that can be used within a long-running 617 program, such as a GUI, that will not leak memory or other resources. 618 To do the same using yacc or bison is much more difficult.</p> 619 620 <h4>The <tt>%extra_argument</tt> directive</h4> 621 622 The %extra_argument directive instructs Lemon to add a 4th parameter 623 to the parameter list of the Parse() function it generates. Lemon 624 doesn't do anything itself with this extra argument, but it does 625 make the argument available to C-code action routines, destructors, 626 and so forth. For example, if the grammar file contains:</p> 627 628 <p><pre> 629 %extra_argument { MyStruct *pAbc } 630 </pre></p> 631 632 <p>Then the Parse() function generated will have an 4th parameter 633 of type ``MyStruct*'' and all action routines will have access to 634 a variable named ``pAbc'' that is the value of the 4th parameter 635 in the most recent call to Parse().</p> 636 637 <h4>The <tt>%include</tt> directive</h4> 638 639 <p>The %include directive specifies C code that is included at the 640 top of the generated parser. You can include any text you want -- 641 the Lemon parser generator copies it blindly. If you have multiple 642 %include directives in your grammar file the value of the last 643 %include directive overwrites all the others.</p. 644 645 <p>The %include directive is very handy for getting some extra #include 646 preprocessor statements at the beginning of the generated parser. 647 For example:</p> 648 649 <p><pre> 650 %include {#include <unistd.h>} 651 </pre></p> 652 653 <p>This might be needed, for example, if some of the C actions in the 654 grammar call functions that are prototyed in unistd.h.</p> 655 656 <h4>The <tt>%left</tt> directive</h4> 657 658 The %left directive is used (along with the %right and 659 %nonassoc directives) to declare precedences of terminal 660 symbols. Every terminal symbol whose name appears after 661 a %left directive but before the next period (``.'') is 662 given the same left-associative precedence value. Subsequent 663 %left directives have higher precedence. For example:</p> 664 665 <p><pre> 666 %left AND. 667 %left OR. 668 %nonassoc EQ NE GT GE LT LE. 669 %left PLUS MINUS. 670 %left TIMES DIVIDE MOD. 671 %right EXP NOT. 672 </pre></p> 673 674 <p>Note the period that terminates each %left, %right or %nonassoc 675 directive.</p> 676 677 <p>LALR(1) grammars can get into a situation where they require 678 a large amount of stack space if you make heavy use or right-associative 679 operators. For this reason, it is recommended that you use %left 680 rather than %right whenever possible.</p> 681 682 <h4>The <tt>%name</tt> directive</h4> 683 684 <p>By default, the functions generated by Lemon all begin with the 685 five-character string ``Parse''. You can change this string to something 686 different using the %name directive. For instance:</p> 687 688 <p><pre> 689 %name Abcde 690 </pre></p> 691 692 <p>Putting this directive in the grammar file will cause Lemon to generate 693 functions named 694 <ul> 695 <li> AbcdeAlloc(), 696 <li> AbcdeFree(), 697 <li> AbcdeTrace(), and 698 <li> Abcde(). 699 </ul> 700 The %name directive allows you to generator two or more different 701 parsers and link them all into the same executable. 702 </p> 703 704 <h4>The <tt>%nonassoc</tt> directive</h4> 705 706 <p>This directive is used to assign non-associative precedence to 707 one or more terminal symbols. See the section on precedence rules 708 or on the %left directive for additional information.</p> 709 710 <h4>The <tt>%parse_accept</tt> directive</h4> 711 712 <p>The %parse_accept directive specifies a block of C code that is 713 executed whenever the parser accepts its input string. To ``accept'' 714 an input string means that the parser was able to process all tokens 715 without error.</p> 716 717 <p>For example:</p> 718 719 <p><pre> 720 %parse_accept { 721 printf("parsing complete!\n"); 722 } 723 </pre></p> 724 725 726 <h4>The <tt>%parse_failure</tt> directive</h4> 727 728 <p>The %parse_failure directive specifies a block of C code that 729 is executed whenever the parser fails complete. This code is not 730 executed until the parser has tried and failed to resolve an input 731 error using is usual error recovery strategy. The routine is 732 only invoked when parsing is unable to continue.</p> 733 734 <p><pre> 735 %parse_failure { 736 fprintf(stderr,"Giving up. Parser is hopelessly lost...\n"); 737 } 738 </pre></p> 739 740 <h4>The <tt>%right</tt> directive</h4> 741 742 <p>This directive is used to assign right-associative precedence to 743 one or more terminal symbols. See the section on precedence rules 744 or on the %left directive for additional information.</p> 745 746 <h4>The <tt>%stack_overflow</tt> directive</h4> 747 748 <p>The %stack_overflow directive specifies a block of C code that 749 is executed if the parser's internal stack ever overflows. Typically 750 this just prints an error message. After a stack overflow, the parser 751 will be unable to continue and must be reset.</p> 752 753 <p><pre> 754 %stack_overflow { 755 fprintf(stderr,"Giving up. Parser stack overflow\n"); 756 } 757 </pre></p> 758 759 <p>You can help prevent parser stack overflows by avoiding the use 760 of right recursion and right-precedence operators in your grammar. 761 Use left recursion and and left-precedence operators instead, to 762 encourage rules to reduce sooner and keep the stack size down. 763 For example, do rules like this: 764 <pre> 765 list ::= list element. // left-recursion. Good! 766 list ::= . 767 </pre> 768 Not like this: 769 <pre> 770 list ::= element list. // right-recursion. Bad! 771 list ::= . 772 </pre> 773 774 <h4>The <tt>%stack_size</tt> directive</h4> 775 776 <p>If stack overflow is a problem and you can't resolve the trouble 777 by using left-recursion, then you might want to increase the size 778 of the parser's stack using this directive. Put an positive integer 779 after the %stack_size directive and Lemon will generate a parse 780 with a stack of the requested size. The default value is 100.</p> 781 782 <p><pre> 783 %stack_size 2000 784 </pre></p> 785 786 <h4>The <tt>%start_symbol</tt> directive</h4> 787 788 <p>By default, the start-symbol for the grammar that Lemon generates 789 is the first non-terminal that appears in the grammar file. But you 790 can choose a different start-symbol using the %start_symbol directive.</p> 791 792 <p><pre> 793 %start_symbol prog 794 </pre></p> 795 796 <h4>The <tt>%token_destructor</tt> directive</h4> 797 798 <p>The %destructor directive assigns a destructor to a non-terminal 799 symbol. (See the description of the %destructor directive above.) 800 This directive does the same thing for all terminal symbols.</p> 801 802 <p>Unlike non-terminal symbols which may each have a different data type 803 for their values, terminals all use the same data type (defined by 804 the %token_type directive) and so they use a common destructor. Other 805 than that, the token destructor works just like the non-terminal 806 destructors.</p> 807 808 <h4>The <tt>%token_prefix</tt> directive</h4> 809 810 <p>Lemon generates #defines that assign small integer constants 811 to each terminal symbol in the grammar. If desired, Lemon will 812 add a prefix specified by this directive 813 to each of the #defines it generates. 814 So if the default output of Lemon looked like this: 815 <pre> 816 #define AND 1 817 #define MINUS 2 818 #define OR 3 819 #define PLUS 4 820 </pre> 821 You can insert a statement into the grammar like this: 822 <pre> 823 %token_prefix TOKEN_ 824 </pre> 825 to cause Lemon to produce these symbols instead: 826 <pre> 827 #define TOKEN_AND 1 828 #define TOKEN_MINUS 2 829 #define TOKEN_OR 3 830 #define TOKEN_PLUS 4 831 </pre> 832 833 <h4>The <tt>%token_type</tt> and <tt>%type</tt> directives</h4> 834 835 <p>These directives are used to specify the data types for values 836 on the parser's stack associated with terminal and non-terminal 837 symbols. The values of all terminal symbols must be of the same 838 type. This turns out to be the same data type as the 3rd parameter 839 to the Parse() function generated by Lemon. Typically, you will 840 make the value of a terminal symbol by a pointer to some kind of 841 token structure. Like this:</p> 842 843 <p><pre> 844 %token_type {Token*} 845 </pre></p> 846 847 <p>If the data type of terminals is not specified, the default value 848 is ``int''.</p> 849 850 <p>Non-terminal symbols can each have their own data types. Typically 851 the data type of a non-terminal is a pointer to the root of a parse-tree 852 structure that contains all information about that non-terminal. 853 For example:</p> 854 855 <p><pre> 856 %type expr {Expr*} 857 </pre></p> 858 859 <p>Each entry on the parser's stack is actually a union containing 860 instances of all data types for every non-terminal and terminal symbol. 861 Lemon will automatically use the correct element of this union depending 862 on what the corresponding non-terminal or terminal symbol is. But 863 the grammar designer should keep in mind that the size of the union 864 will be the size of its largest element. So if you have a single 865 non-terminal whose data type requires 1K of storage, then your 100 866 entry parser stack will require 100K of heap space. If you are willing 867 and able to pay that price, fine. You just need to know.</p> 868 869 <h3>Error Processing</h3> 870 871 <p>After extensive experimentation over several years, it has been 872 discovered that the error recovery strategy used by yacc is about 873 as good as it gets. And so that is what Lemon uses.</p> 874 875 <p>When a Lemon-generated parser encounters a syntax error, it 876 first invokes the code specified by the %syntax_error directive, if 877 any. It then enters its error recovery strategy. The error recovery 878 strategy is to begin popping the parsers stack until it enters a 879 state where it is permitted to shift a special non-terminal symbol 880 named ``error''. It then shifts this non-terminal and continues 881 parsing. But the %syntax_error routine will not be called again 882 until at least three new tokens have been successfully shifted.</p> 883 884 <p>If the parser pops its stack until the stack is empty, and it still 885 is unable to shift the error symbol, then the %parse_failed routine 886 is invoked and the parser resets itself to its start state, ready 887 to begin parsing a new file. This is what will happen at the very 888 first syntax error, of course, if there are no instances of the 889 ``error'' non-terminal in your grammar.</p> 890 891 </body> 892 </html> 893