RE2C(1)RE2C(1)NAMEre2c - convert regular expressions to C/C++
SYNOPSISre2c [OPTIONS] FILE
DESCRIPTIONre2c is a lexer generator for C/C++. It finds regular expression
specifications inside of C/C++ comments and replaces them with a
hard-coded DFA. The user must supply some interface code in order to
control and customize the generated DFA.
EXAMPLE
Given the following code:
unsigned int stou (const char * s)
{
# define YYCTYPE char
const YYCTYPE * YYCURSOR = s;
unsigned int result = 0;
for (;;)
{
/*!re2c
re2c:yyfill:enable = 0;
"\x00" { return result; }
[0-9] { result = result * 10 + c; continue; }
*/
}
}
re2c-is will generate:
/* Generated by re2c 0.13.7.dev on Mon Jul 14 13:37:46 2014 */
unsigned int stou (const char * s)
{
# define YYCTYPE char
const YYCTYPE * YYCURSOR = s;
unsigned int result = 0;
for (;;)
{
{
YYCTYPE yych;
yych = *YYCURSOR;
if (yych <= 0x00) goto yy3;
if (yych <= '/') goto yy2;
if (yych <= '9') goto yy5;
yy2:
yy3:
++YYCURSOR;
{ return result; }
yy5:
++YYCURSOR;
{ result = result * 10 + c; continue; }
}
}
}
OPTIONS
-?, -h
Invoke a short help.
-b
Implies -s. Use bit vectors as well in the attempt to coax better
code out of the compiler. Most useful for specifications with more
than a few keywords (e.g. for most programming languages).
-c
Used to support (f)lex-like condition support.
-d
Creates a parser that dumps information about the current position
and in which state the parser is while parsing the input. This is
useful to debug parser issues and states. If you use this switch
you need to define a macro YYDEBUG that is called like a function
with two parameters: void YYDEBUG (int state, char current). The
first parameter receives the state or -1 and the second parameter
receives the input at the current cursor.
-D
Emit Graphviz dot data. It can then be processed with e.g. dot
-Tpng input.dot > output.png. Please note that scanners with many
states may crash dot.
-e
Generate a parser that supports EBCDIC. The generated code can deal
with any character up to 0xFF. In this mode re2c assumes that input
character size is 1 byte. This switch is incompatible with -w, -x,
-u and -8.
-f
Generate a scanner with support for storable state. For details see
below at SCANNER WITH STORABLE STATES.
-F
Partial support for flex syntax. When this flag is active then
named definitions must be surrounded by curly braces and can be
defined without an equal sign and the terminating semi colon.
Instead names are treated as direct double quoted strings.
-g
Generate a scanner that utilizes GCC’s computed goto feature. That
is re2c generates jump tables whenever a decision is of a certain
complexity (e.g. a lot of if conditions are otherwise necessary).
This is only useable with GCC and produces output that cannot be
compiled with any other compiler. Note that this implies -b and
that the complexity threshold can be configured using the inplace
configuration cgoto:threshold.
-i
Do not output #line information. This is usefull when you want use
a CMS tool with the re2c output which you might want if you do not
require your users to have re2c themselves when building from your
source.
-o OUTPUT
Specify the output file.
-r
Allows reuse of scanner definitions with /*!use:re2c after
/*!rules:re2c. In this mode no /*!re2c block and exactly one
/*!rules:re2c must be present. The rules are being saved and used
by every /*!use:re2c block that follows. These blocks can contain
inplace configurations, especially re2c:flags:e, re2c:flags:w,
re2c:flags:x, re2c:flags:u and re2c:flags:8. That way it is
possible to create the same scanner multiple times for different
character types, different input mechanisms or different output
mechanisms. The /*!use:re2c blocks can also contain additional
rules that will be appended to the set of rules in /*!rules:re2c.
-s
Generate nested ifs for some switches. Many compilers need this
assist to generate better code.
-t
Create a header file that contains types for the (f)lex-like
condition support. This can only be activated when -c is in use.
-u
Generate a parser that supports UTF-32. The generated code can deal
with any valid Unicode character up to 0x10FFFF. In this mode re2c
assumes that input character size is 4 bytes. This switch is
incompatible with -e, -w, -x and -8. This implies -s.
-v
Show version information.
-V
Show the version as a number XXYYZZ.
-w
Generate a parser that supports UCS-2. The generated code can deal
with any valid Unicode character up to 0xFFFF. In this mode re2c
assumes that input character size is 2 bytes. This switch is
incompatible with -e, -x, -u and -8. This implies -s.
-x
Generate a parser that supports UTF-16. The generated code can deal
with any valid Unicode character up to 0x10FFFF. In this mode re2c
assumes that input character size is 2 bytes. This switch is
incompatible with -e, -w, -u and -8. This implies -s.
-1
Force single pass generation, this cannot be combined with -f and
disables YYMAXFILL generation prior to last re2c block.
-8
Generate a parser that supports UTF-8. The generated code can deal
with any valid Unicode character up to 0x10FFFF. In this mode re2c
assumes that input character size is 1 byte. This switch is
incompatible with -e, -w, -x and -u.
--case-insensitive
All strings are case insensitive, so all "-expressions are treated
in the same way '-expressions are.
--case-inverted
Invert the meaning of single and double quoted strings. With this
switch single quotes are case sensitive and double quotes are case
insensitive.
--no-generation-date
Suppress date output in the generated output so that it only shows
the re2c version.
--encoding-policy POLICY
Specify how re2c must treat Unicode surrogates. POLICY can be one
of the following: fail (abort with error when surrogate
encountered), substitute (silently substitute surrogate with error
code point 0xFFFD), ignore (treat surrogates as normal code
points). By default re2c ignores surrogates (for backward
compatibility). Unicode standard says that standalone surrogates
are invalid code points, but different libraries and programs treat
them differently.
INTERFACE CODE
The user must supply interface code either in the form of C/C++ code
(macros, functions, variables, etc.) or in the form of inplace
configurations. Which symbols must be defined and which are optional
depends on a particular use case.
YYCONDTYPE
In -c mode you can use -t to generate a file that contains the
enumeration used as conditions. Each of the values refers to a
condition of a rule set.
YYCTXMARKER
l-value of type * YYCTYPE. The generated code saves trailing
context backtracking information in YYCTXMARKER. The user only
needs to define this macro if a scanner specification uses trailing
context in one or more of its regular expressions.
YYCTYPE
Type used to hold an input symbol (code unit). Usually char or
unsigned char for ASCII, EBCDIC and UTF-8, unsigned short for
UTF-16 or UCS-2 and unsigned int for UTF-32.
YYCURSOR
l-value of type * YYCTYPE that points to the current input symbol.
The generated code advances YYCURSOR as symbols are matched. On
entry, YYCURSOR is assumed to point to the first character of the
current token. On exit, YYCURSOR will point to the first character
of the following token.
YYDEBUG (state, current)
This is only needed if the -d flag was specified. It allows to
easily debug the generated parser by calling a user defined
function for every state. The function should have the following
signature: void YYDEBUG (int state, char current). The first
parameter receives the state or -1 and the second parameter
receives the input at the current cursor.
YYFILL (n)
The generated code “calls” YYFILL (n) when the buffer needs
(re)filling: at least n additional characters should be provided.
YYFILL (n) should adjust YYCURSOR, YYLIMIT, YYMARKER and
YYCTXMARKER as needed. Note that for typical programming languages
n will be the length of the longest keyword plus one. The user can
place a comment of the form /*!max:re2c*/ once to insert a
YYMAXFILL (n) definition that is set to the maximum length value.
If -1 switch is used then YYMAXFILL can be triggered only once
after the last /*!re2c ... */ block.
YYGETCONDITION ()
This define is used to get the condition prior to entering the
scanner code when using -c switch. The value must be initialized
with a value from the enumeration YYCONDTYPE type.
YYGETSTATE ()
The user only needs to define this macro if the -f flag was
specified. In that case, the generated code “calls” YYGETSTATE ()
at the very beginning of the scanner in order to obtain the saved
state. YYGETSTATE () must return a signed integer. The value must
be either -1, indicating that the scanner is entered for the first
time, or a value previously saved by YYSETSTATE (s). In the second
case, the scanner will resume operations right after where the last
YYFILL (n) was called.
YYLIMIT
Expression of type * YYCTYPE that marks the end of the buffer
(YYLIMIT[-1] is the last character in the buffer). The generated
code repeatedly compares YYCURSOR to YYLIMIT to determine when the
buffer needs (re)filling.
YYMARKER
l-value of type * YYCTYPE. The generated code saves backtracking
information in YYMARKER. Some easy scanners might not use this.
YYMAXFILL
This will be automatically defined by /*!max:re2c*/ blocks as
explained above.
YYSETCONDITION (c)
This define is used to set the condition in transition rules. This
is only being used when -c is active and transition rules are being
used.
YYSETSTATE (s)
The user only needs to define this macro if the -f flag was
specified. In that case, the generated code “calls” YYSETSTATE just
before calling YYFILL (n). The parameter to YYSETSTATE is a signed
integer that uniquely identifies the specific instance of YYFILL
(n) that is about to be called. Should the user wish to save the
state of the scanner and have YYFILL (n) return to the caller, all
he has to do is store that unique identifer in a variable. Later,
when the scannered is called again, it will call YYGETSTATE () and
resume execution right where it left off. The generated code will
contain both YYSETSTATE (s) and YYGETSTATE even if YYFILL (n) is
being disabled.
SYNTAX
Code for re2c consists of a set of rules, named definitions and inplace
configurations.
rules consist of a regular-expressions along with a block of C/C++ code
that is to be executed when the associated regular-expression is
matched. You can either start the code with an opening curly brace or
the sequence :=. When the code with a curly brace then re2c counts the
brace depth and stops looking for code automatically. Otherwise curly
braces are not allowed and re2c stops looking for code at the first
line that does not begin with whitespace. If two or more rules overlap,
the first rule is preferred.
regular-expression { C/C++ code }
regular-expression := C/C++ code
There is one special rule: default rule *:
* { C/C++ code }
* := C/C++ code
Note
[^] differs from *: * has the lowest priority, matches any code
unit (either valid or invalid) and always consumes one character;
[^] matches any valid code point (not code unit) and can consume
multiple characters. In fact, when variable-length encoding is
used, * is the only possible way to match invalid input character.
If -c is active then each regular-expression is preceeded by a list of
comma separated condition names. Besides normal naming rules there are
two special cases. A rule may contain the single condition name * and
no contition name at all. In the latter case the rule cannot have a
regular-expression. Non empty rules may further more specify the new
condition. In that case re2c will generated the necessary code to
change the condition automatically. Just as above code can be started
with a curly brace of the sequence :=. Further more rules can use :=>
as a shortcut to automatically generate code that not only sets the new
condition state but also continues execution with the new state. A
shortcut rule should not be used in a loop where there is code between
the start of the loop and the re2c block unless re2c:cond:goto is
changed to continue. If code is necessary before all rule (though not
simple jumps) you can doso by using <! pseudo-rules.
<condition-list> regular-expression { C/C++ code }
<condition-list> regular-expression := C/C++ code
<condition-list> * { C/C++ code }
<condition-list> * := C/C++ code
<condition-list> regular-expression => condition { C/C++ code }
<condition-list> regular-expression => condition := C/C++ code
<condition-list> regular-expression :=> condition
<*> regular-expression { C/C++ code }
<*> regular-expression := C/C++ code
<*> * { C/C++ code }
<*> * := C/C++ code
<*> regular-expression => condition { C/C++ code }
<*> regular-expression => condition := C/C++ code
<*> regular-expression :=> condition
<> { C/C++ code }
<> := C/C++ code
<> => condition { C/C++ code }
<> => condition := C/C++ code
<> :=> condition
<!condition-list> { C/C++ code }
<!condition-list> := C/C++ code
<!*> { C/C++ code }
<!*> := C/C++ code
named definitions are of the form:
name = regular-expression;
If -F is active, then named definitions are also of the form:
name regular-expression
inplace configurations are of the form:
re2c:name = value;
re2c:name = “_value_”;
REGULAR EXPRESSIONS
“foo”
literal string “foo”. ANSI-C escape sequences can be used.
‘foo’
literal string “foo” (characters [a-zA-Z] treated
case-insensitive). ANSI-C escape sequences can be used.
[xyz]
character class; in this case, regular-expression matches either
‘x’, ‘y’, or ‘z’.
[abj-oZ]
character class with a range in it; matches ‘a’, ‘b’, any letter
from ‘j’ through ‘o’ or ‘Z’.
[^class]
inverted character class.
r \ s
match any r which isn’t s. r and s must be regular-expressions
which can be expressed as character classes.
r *
zero or more r's, where r is any regular-expression.
r +
one or more r's.
r ?
zero or one r's (that is, an optional r).
name
the expansion of the named definition.
( r )
r; parentheses are used to override precedence.
r s
r followed by s (concatenation).
r | s
either r or s (alternative).
r / s
r but only if it is followed by s. Note that s is not part of the
matched text. This type of regular-expression is called “trailing
context”. Trailing context can only be the end of a rule and not
part of a named definition.
r { n }
matches r exactly n times.
r { n , }
matches r at least n times.
r { n , m }
matches r at least n times, but not more than m times.
.
match any character except newline.
def
matches named definition as specified by def only if -F is off. If
-F is active then this behaves like it was enclosed in double
quotes and matches the string “def”.
Character classes and string literals may contain octal or hexadecimal
character definitions and the following set of escape sequences: \a,
\b, \f, \n, \r, \t, \v, \\. An octal character is defined by a
backslash followed by its three octal digits (e.g. \377). Hexadecimal
characters from 0 to 0xFF are defined by backslash, a lower cased ‘x’
and two hexadecimal digits (e.g. \x12). Hexadecimal characters from
0x100 to 0xFFFF are defined by backslash, a lower cased ‘u’ (or an
upper cased ‘X’) and four hexadecimal digits (e.g. \u1234). Hexadecimal
characters from 0x10000 to 0xFFFFffff are defined by backslash, an
upper cased ‘U’ and eight hexadecimal digits (e.g. \U12345678).
The only portable “any” rule is the default rule *.
INPLACE CONFIGURATIONS
It is possible to configure code generation inside re2c blocks. The
following lists the available configurations:
re2c:condprefix = yyc_;
Allows to specify the prefix used for condition labels. That is
this text is prepended to any condition label in the generated
output file.
re2c:condenumprefix = yyc;
Allows to specify the prefix used for condition values. That is
this text is prepended to any condition enum value in the generated
output file.
re2c:cond:divider = “/* *********************************** */”;
Allows to customize the devider for condition blocks. You can use
‘@@’ to put the name of the condition or ustomize the placeholder
using re2c:cond:divider@cond.
re2c:cond:divider@cond = @@;
Specifies the placeholder that will be replaced with the condition
name in re2c:cond:divider.
re2c:cond:goto = “goto @@;”;
Allows to customize the condition goto statements used with :=>
style rules. You can use ‘@@’ to put the name of the condition or
ustomize the placeholder using re2c:cond:goto@cond. You can also
change this to ‘continue;’, which would allow you to continue with
the next loop cycle including any code between loop start and re2c
block.
re2c:cond:goto@cond = @@;
Spcifies the placeholder that will be replaced with the condition
label in re2c:cond:goto.
re2c:indent:top = 0;
Specifies the minimum number of indendation to use. Requires a
numeric value greater than or equal zero.
re2c:indent:string = “\t”;
Specifies the string to use for indendation. Requires a string that
should contain only whitespace unless you need this for external
tools. The easiest way to specify spaces is to enclude them in
single or double quotes. If you do not want any indendation at all
you can simply set this to “”.
re2c:yych:conversion = 0;
When this setting is non zero, then re2c automatically generates
conversion code whenever yych gets read. In this case the type must
be defined using re2c:define:YYCTYPE.
re2c:yych:emit = 1;
Generation of yych can be suppressed by setting this to 0.
re2c:yybm:hex = 0;
If set to zero then a decimal table is being used else a
hexadecimal table will be generated.
re2c:yyfill:enable = 1;
Set this to zero to suppress generation of YYFILL (n). When using
this be sure to verify that the generated scanner does not read
behind input. Allowing this behavior might introduce sever security
issues to you programs.
re2c:yyfill:check = 1;
This can be set 0 to suppress output of the pre condition using
YYCURSOR and YYLIMIT which becomes usefull when YYLIMIT + max
(YYFILL) is always accessible.
re2c:yyfill:parameter = 1;
Allows to suppress parameter passing to YYFILL calls. If set to
zero then no parameter is passed to YYFILL. However
define:YYFILL@LEN allows to specify a replacement string for the
actual length value. If set to a non zero value then YYFILL usage
will be followed by the number of requested characters in braces
unless re2c:define:YYFILL:naked is set. Also look at
re2c:define:YYFILL:naked and re2c:define:YYFILL@LEN.
re2c:startlabel = 0;
If set to a non zero integer then the start label of the next
scanner blocks will be generated even if not used by the scanner
itself. Otherwise the normal yy0 like start label is only being
generated if needed. If set to a text value then a label with that
text will be generated regardless of whether the normal start label
is being used or not. This setting is being reset to 0 after a
start label has been generated.
re2c:labelprefix = yy;
Allows to change the prefix of numbered labels. The default is yy
and can be set any string that is a valid label.
re2c:state:abort = 0;
When not zero and switch -f is active then the YYGETSTATE block
will contain a default case that aborts and a -1 case is used for
initialization.
re2c:state:nextlabel = 0;
Used when -f is active to control whether the YYGETSTATE block is
followed by a yyNext: label line. Instead of using yyNext you can
usually also use configuration startlabel to force a specific start
label or default to yy0 as start label. Instead of using a
dedicated label it is often better to separate the YYGETSTATE code
from the actual scanner code by placing a /*!getstate:re2c*/
comment.
re2c:cgoto:threshold = 9;
When -g is active this value specifies the complexity threshold
that triggers generation of jump tables rather than using nested
if’s and decision bitfields. The threshold is compared against a
calculated estimation of if-s needed where every used bitmap
divides the threshold by 2.
re2c:yych:conversion = 0;
When the input uses signed characters and -s or -b switches are in
effect re2c allows to automatically convert to the unsigned
character type that is then necessary for its internal single
character. When this setting is zero or an empty string the
conversion is disabled. Using a non zero number the conversion is
taken from YYCTYPE. If that is given by an inplace configuration
that value is being used. Otherwise it will be (YYCTYPE) and
changes to that configuration are no longer possible. When this
setting is a string the braces must be specified. Now assuming your
input is a char * buffer and you are using above mentioned switches
you can set YYCTYPE to unsigned char and this setting to either 1
or (unsigned char).
re2c:define:define:YYCONDTYPE = YYCONDTYPE;
Enumeration used for condition support with -c mode.
re2c:define:YYCTXMARKER = YYCTXMARKER;
Allows to overwrite the define YYCTXMARKER and thus avoiding it by
setting the value to the actual code needed.
re2c:define:YYCTYPE = YYCTYPE;
Allows to overwrite the define YYCTYPE and thus avoiding it by
setting the value to the actual code needed.
re2c:define:YYCURSOR = YYCURSOR;
Allows to overwrite the define YYCURSOR and thus avoiding it by
setting the value to the actual code needed.
re2c:define:YYDEBUG = YYDEBUG;
Allows to overwrite the define YYDEBUG and thus avoiding it by
setting the value to the actual code needed.
re2c:define:YYFILL = YYFILL;
Allows to overwrite the define YYFILL and thus avoiding it by
setting the value to the actual code needed.
re2c:define:YYFILL:naked = 0;
When set to 1 neither braces, parameter nor semicolon gets emitted.
re2c:define:YYFILL@len = @@;
When using re2c:define:YYFILL and re2c:yyfill:parameter is 0 then
any occurence of this text inside YYFILL will be replaced with the
actual length value.
re2c:define:YYGETCONDITION = YYGETCONDITION;
Allows to overwrite the define YYGETCONDITION.
re2c:define:YYGETCONDITION:naked = 0;
When set to 1 neither braces, parameter nor semicolon gets emitted.
re2c:define:YYGETSTATE = YYGETSTATE;
Allows to overwrite the define YYGETSTATE and thus avoiding it by
setting the value to the actual code needed.
re2c:define:YYGETSTATE:naked = 0;
When set to 1 neither braces, parameter nor semicolon gets emitted.
re2c:define:YYLIMIT = YYLIMIT;
Allows to overwrite the define YYLIMIT and thus avoiding it by
setting the value to the actual code needed.
re2c:define:YYMARKER = YYMARKER;
Allows to overwrite the define YYMARKER and thus avoiding it by
setting the value to the actual code needed.
re2c:define:YYSETCONDITION = YYSETCONDITION;
Allows to overwrite the define YYSETCONDITION.
re2c:define:YYSETCONDITION@cond = @@;
When using re2c:define:YYSETCONDITION then any occurence of this
text inside YYSETCONDITION will be replaced with the actual new
condition value.
re2c:define:YYSETSTATE = YYSETSTATE;
Allows to overwrite the define YYSETSTATE and thus avoiding it by
setting the value to the actual code needed.
re2c:define:YYSETSTATE:naked = 0;
When set to 1 neither braces, parameter nor semicolon gets emitted.
re2c:define:YYSETSTATE@state = @@;
When using re2c:define:YYSETSTATE then any occurence of this text
inside YYSETSTATE will be replaced with the actual new state value.
re2c:label:yyFillLabel = yyFillLabel;
Allows to overwrite the name of the label yyFillLabel.
re2c:label:yyNext = yyNext;
Allows to overwrite the name of the label yyNext.
re2c:variable:yyaccept = yyaccept;
Allows to overwrite the name of the variable yyaccept.
re2c:variable:yybm = yybm;
Allows to overwrite the name of the variable yybm.
re2c:variable:yych = yych;
Allows to overwrite the name of the variable yych.
re2c:variable:yyctable = yyctable;
When both -c and -g are active then re2c uses this variable to
generate a static jump table for YYGETCONDITION.
re2c:variable:yystable = yystable;
When both -f and -g are active then re2c uses this variable to
generate a static jump table for YYGETSTATE.
re2c:variable:yytarget = yytarget;
Allows to overwrite the name of the variable yytarget.
SCANNER WITH STORABLE STATES
When the -f flag is specified, re2c generates a scanner that can store
its current state, return to the caller, and later resume operations
exactly where it left off.
The default operation of re2c is a “pull” model, where the scanner asks
for extra input whenever it needs it. However, this mode of operation
assumes that the scanner is the “owner” the parsing loop, and that may
not always be convenient.
Typically, if there is a preprocessor ahead of the scanner in the
stream, or for that matter any other procedural source of data, the
scanner cannot “ask” for more data unless both scanner and source live
in a separate threads.
The -f flag is useful for just this situation: it lets users design
scanners that work in a “push” model, i.e. where data is fed to the
scanner chunk by chunk. When the scanner runs out of data to consume,
it just stores its state, and return to the caller. When more input
data is fed to the scanner, it resumes operations exactly where it left
off.
When using the -f option re2c does not accept stdin because it has to
do the full generation process twice which means it has to read the
input twice. That means re2c would fail in case it cannot open the
input twice or reading the input for the first time influences the
second read attempt.
Changes needed compared to the “pull” model:
1. User has to supply macros YYSETSTATE () and YYGETSTATE (state).
2. The -f option inhibits declaration of yych and yyaccept. So the
user has to declare these. Also the user has to save and restore
these. In the example examples/push.re these are declared as fields
of the (C\++) class of which the scanner is a method, so they do
not need to be saved/restored explicitly. For C they could e.g. be
made macros that select fields from a structure passed in as
parameter. Alternatively, they could be declared as local
variables, saved with YYFILL (n) when it decides to return and
restored at entry to the function. Also, it could be more efficient
to save the state from YYFILL (n) because YYSETSTATE (state) is
called unconditionally. YYFILL (n) however does not get state as
parameter, so we would have to store state in a local variable by
YYSETSTATE (state).
3. Modify YYFILL (n) to return (from the function calling it) if more
input is needed.
4. Modify caller to recognise “more input is needed” and respond
appropriately.
5. The generated code will contain a switch block that is used to
restores the last state by jumping behind the corrspoding YYFILL
(n) call. This code is automatically generated in the epilog of the
first /*!re2c */ block. It is possible to trigger generation of the
YYGETSTATE () block earlier by placing a /*!getstate:re2c*/
comment. This is especially useful when the scanner code should be
wrapped inside a loop.
Please see examples/push.re for push-model scanner. The generated code
can be tweaked using inplace configurations state:abort and
state:nextlabel.
SCANNER WITH CONDITION SUPPORT
You can preceed regular expressions with a list of condition names when
using the -c switch. In this case re2c generates scanner blocks for
each conditon. Where each of the generated blocks has its own
precondition. The precondition is given by the interface define
YYGETCONDITON() and must be of type YYCONDTYPE.
There are two special rule types. First, the rules of the condition *
are merged to all conditions. And second the empty condition list
allows to provide a code block that does not have a scanner part.
Meaning it does not allow any regular expression. The condition value
referring to this special block is always the one with the enumeration
value 0. This way the code of this special rule can be used to
initialize a scanner. It is in no way necessary to have these rules:
but sometimes it is helpful to have a dedicated uninitialized condition
state.
Non empty rules allow to specify the new condition, which makes them
transition rules. Besides generating calls for the define
YYSETCONDTITION no other special code is generated.
There is another kind of special rules that allow to prepend code to
any code block of all rules of a certain set of conditions or to all
code blocks to all rules. This can be helpful when some operation is
common among rules. For instance this can be used to store the length
of the scanned string. These special setup rules start with an
exclamation mark followed by either a list of conditions <! condition,
... > or a star <!*>. When re2c generates the code for a rule whose
state does not have a setup rule and a star’d setup rule is present,
than that code will be used as setup code.
ENCODINGSre2c supports the following encodings: ASCII (default), EBCDIC (-e),
UCS-2 (-w), UTF-16 (-x), UTF-32 (-u) and UTF-8 (-8). ASCII is default.
You can either pass cmd flag or use inplace configuration in the form
re2c:flags.
The following concepts should be clarified when talking about encoding.
Code point is an abstract number, which represents single encoding
symbol. Code unit is the smallest unit of memory, which is used in the
encoded text (it corresponds to one character in the input stream). One
or more code units can be needed to represent a single code point,
depending on the encoding. In fixed-length encoding, each code point is
represented with equal number of code units. In variable-length
encoding, different code points can be represented with different
number of code units.
ASCII
is a fixed-length encoding. Its code space includes 0x100 code
points, from 0 to 0xFF (note that this is re2c-specific
understanding of ASCII). One code point is represented with exactly
one 1-byte code unit, which has the same value as the code point.
Size of YYCTYPE must be 1 byte.
EBCDIC
is a fixed-length encoding. Its code space includes 0x100 code
points, from 0 to 0xFF. One code point is represented with exactly
one 1-byte code unit, which has the same value as the code point.
Size of YYCTYPE must be 1 byte.
UCS-2
is a fixed-length encoding. Its code space includes 0x10000 code
points, from 0 to 0xFFFF. One code point is represented with
exactly one 2-byte code unit, which has the same value as the code
point. Size of YYCTYPE must be 2 bytes.
UTF-16
is a variable-length encoding. Its code space includes all Unicode
code points, from 0 to 0xD7FF and from 0xE000 to 0x10FFFF. One code
point is represented with one or two 2-byte code units. Size of
YYCTYPE must be 2 bytes.
UTF-32
is a fixed-length encoding. Its code space includes all Unicode
code points, from 0 to 0xD7FF and from 0xE000 to 0x10FFFF. One code
point is represented with exactly one 4-byte code unit. Size of
YYCTYPE must be 4 bytes.
UTF-8
is a variable-length encoding. Its code space includes all Unicode
code points, from 0 to 0xD7FF and from 0xE000 to 0x10FFFF. One code
point is represented with sequence of one, two, three or four
1-byte code units. Size of YYCTYPE must be 1 bytes.
In Unicode, values from range 0xD800 to 0xDFFF (surrogates) are not
valid Unicode code points, any encoded sequence of code units, that
would map to Unicode code points in the range 0xD800-0xDFFF, is
ill-formed. The user can control how re2c treats such ill-formed
sequences with --encoding-policy policy flag (see OPTIONS section for
full explanation).
For some encodings, there are code units, that never occur in valid
encoded stream (e.g. 0xFF byte in UTF-8). If the generated scanner must
check for invalid input, the only true way to do so is to use default
rule *. Note, that full range rule [^] won’t catch invalid code units
when variable-length encoding is used ([^] means “all valid code
points”, while default rule * means “all possible code units”: see Note
about default rule in SYNTAX section).
GENERIC INPUT APIre2c usually operates on input using pointer-like primitives YYCURSOR,
YYMARKER, YYCTXMARKER and YYLIMIT.
Generic input API (enabled with --input custom switch) allows to
customize input operations. In this mode, re2c will express all
operations on input in terms of the following primitives:
1. YYPEEK () --- get current input character
2. YYSKIP () --- advance to the next character
3. YYBACKUP () --- backup current input position
4. YYBACKUPCTX () --- backup current input position for trailing
context
5. YYRESTORE () --- restore current input position
6. YYRESTORECTX () --- restore current input position for trailing
context
7. YYLESSTHAN (n) --- check if less than n input characters are left
This article
(http://skvadrik.github.io/aleph_null/posts/re2c/2015-01-13-input_model.html)
has more details, and you can find some usage examples:
http://skvadrik.github.io/aleph_null/posts/re2c/2015-01-15-input_model_custom.html
.
UNDERSTANDING RE2C
The subdirectory lessons of the re2c distribution contains a few step
by step lessons to get you started with re2c. All examples in the
lessons subdirectory can be compiled and actually work.
BUGS
1. Difference only works for character sets, and not in UTF-8 mode.
2. The generated DFA is not minimal.
3. Features, that are naturally orthogonal (such as reusable rules,
conditions, setup rules and default rules), cannot always be
combined. E.g., one cannot set setup/default rule for condition in
scanner with reusable rules.
4. re2c does too much unnecessary work: e.g., if /*!use:re2c ... */
block has additional rules, these rules are parsed 4 times, while
they should be parsed only once.
5. The re2c internal algorithms need documentation.
SEE ALSOflex(1), lex(1), quex (http://quex.sourceforge.net)
More information on re2c can be found here: http://re2c.org/.
AUTHORS
1. Peter Bumbulis peter@csg.uwaterloo.ca
2. Brian Young bayoung@acm.org
3. Dan Nuffer nuffer@users.sourceforge.net
4. Marcus Boerger helly@users.sourceforge.net
5. Hartmut Kaiser hkaiser@users.sourceforge.net
6. Emmanuel Mogenet mgix@mgix.com (added storable state)
7. Ulya Trofimovich skvadrik@gmail.com
VERSION INFORMATION
This manpage describes re2c, version 0.14.3, package date 20 May 2015.
05/20/2015 RE2C(1)