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1#!/usr/bin/perl
2# Generate the Summary of Library Facilities (summary.texi).
3
2b778ceb 4# Copyright (C) 2017-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
d08a7e4c 5# This file is part of the GNU C Library.
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6
7# The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
8# modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License
9# as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of
10# the License, or (at your option) any later version.
11
12# The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
13# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
14# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
15# Lesser General Public License for more details.
16
17# You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
18# License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
5a82c748 19# <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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20
21# Anything declared in a header or defined in a standard should have
22# its origins annotated using the @standards macro (see macro.texi).
23# This script checks all such elements in the manual (generally,
24# @def|item*-commands), ensuring annotations are present and correct.
25# If any errors are detected, they are all reported at the end and
26# failure is indicated.
27
28use strict;
29use warnings;
30use locale;
31use File::Basename;
32
33$| = 1;
34my $script = basename $0;
35
36&help if $ARGV[0] eq "--help"; # Will exit(0).
37
38my @texis = @ARGV;
39
40# Various regexes.
41my $nde = qr/^\@node /;
42my $def = qr/^\@def/;
43my $itm = qr/^\@item /;
44my $itms = qr/^\@itemx? /; # Don't match @itemize.
45my $ann = qr/^\@(def\w+|item)x? /; # Annotatable.
46my $std = qr/^\@standards\{/;
47my $stx = qr/^\@standardsx\{/;
48my $stds = qr/^\@standardsx?\{/;
49my $strict_std = qr/^\@standards\{([^,]+, )[^,\}]+\}$/;
50my $strict_stx = qr/^\@standardsx\{([^,]+, ){2}[^,\}]+\}$/;
51my $lcon = qr/([vf]?table|itemize|enumerate)/;
52my $list = qr/^\@${lcon}/;
53my $endl = qr/^\@end ${lcon}/;
54my $ign = qr/^\@ignore/;
55my $eig = qr/^\@end ignore/;
56
57# Global scope.
58my $node;
59our $texi;
60my $input;
61my %entries;
62my %errors;
63
64for $texi (@texis) {
65 open $input, '<', $texi or die "open $texi: $!";
66 while (my $line = <$input>) {
67 if ($line =~ $nde) {
68 $node = &get_node($line);
69 } elsif ($line =~ $def) {
70 &process_annotation($line);
71 } elsif ($line =~ $list) {
72 &process_list($1); # @items occur in list or table context.
73 } elsif ($line =~ $stds) {
74 &record_error("Misplaced annotation", ["[$.] ".$line]);
75 } elsif ($line =~ $ign) {
76 while (<$input> !~ $eig) {}
77 }
78 }
79 close $input or die "close $texi: $!";
80}
81
82# Disabled until annotations are complete.
83&print_errors() if %errors && 0; # Will exit(1).
84
85print("\@c DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE!\n".
86 "\@c This file is generated by $script from the Texinfo sources.\n".
87 "\@c The \@items are \@include'd from a \@table in header.texi.\n\n");
88
89&print_entry($_) for sort keys %entries;
90
91# Processes an annotatable element, including any subsequent elements
92# in an @*x chain, ensuring @standards are present, with valid syntax,
93# either recording any errors detected or creating Summary entries.
94# This function is the heart of the script.
95#
96# Prototypes and standards are gathered into separate lists and used
97# to evaluate the completeness and correctness of annotations before
98# generating the Summary entries. "Prototype" is used to refer to an
99# element's entire definition while avoiding conflation with
100# @def*-commands. "Element" is strictly used here to refer to the
101# name extracted from the prototype, as used in @standardsx, for
102# sorting the Summary.
103sub process_annotation
104{
105 my $line = shift;
106 my (@prototypes, @standards, $i, @tmp);
107
108 # Gather prototypes and standards.
109 push @prototypes, $line;
110 while ($line = <$input>) {
111 last if $line !~ $ann;
112 push @prototypes, $line;
113 }
114 if ($line !~ $stds) { # The fundamental error.
115 return &record_error('Missing annotation', \@prototypes);
116 }
117 push @standards, $line;
118 push @standards, $line while ($line = <$input>) =~ $stds;
119
120 # If next line is an @item, seek back to catch it on the next
121 # iteration. This avoids imposing a non-Texinfo syntax
122 # requirement of blank lines between consecutive annotated @items.
123 if ($line =~ $itm) {
124 seek $input, -length($line), 1 or die "seek: $!";
125 }
126
127 # Strict check for syntax errors. Other matches are loose, which
128 # aids error detection and reporting by ensuring things that look
129 # like standards aren't simply passed over, but caught here.
130 for ($i=0; $i<@standards; ++$i) {
131 my $standard = $standards[$i];
132 if ($standard !~ $strict_std && $standard !~ $strict_stx) {
133 push @tmp, $standard;
134 }
135 }
136 return &record_error('Invalid syntax', \@tmp) if @tmp;
137
138 # @standardsx should not be in non-@*x chains.
139 if (@prototypes == 1) {
140 for ($i=0; $i<@standards; ++$i) {
141 return &record_error('Misplaced @standardsx', \@prototypes)
142 if $standards[$i] =~ $stx;
143 }
144 }
145 # @standards may only occur once in @*x chains, at the beginning.
146 if (@prototypes > 1) {
147 for ($i=1; $i<@standards; ++$i) {
148 return &record_error('Misplaced @standards', \@prototypes)
149 if $standards[$i] =~ $std;
150 }
151 }
152
153 # The @standards are aligned.
154 &add_entries(\@prototypes, \@standards);
155}
156
157# Goes through the prototypes, cleaning them up and extracting the
158# elements, pairing them with the appropriate annotations to create
159# Summary entries.
160sub add_entries
161{
162 my ($prototypes, $standards) = @_;
163 my $isx = @{$prototypes} > 1 ? 1 : 0;
164 my $allx = $standards->[0] =~ $stx ? 1 : 0;
165 my ($defstd, $defhdr, %standardsx, $i, $j);
166
167 # Grab the default annotation and index any @standardsx. Take
168 # care in case there is no default.
169 if ($isx) {
170 if (!$allx) {
171 ($defstd, $defhdr)
172 = $standards->[0] =~ /${std}([^,]+), (.*)\}$/;
173 }
174 for ($i = $allx ? 0 : 1; $i<@{$standards}; ++$i) {
175 my ($e, $s, $h)
176 = $standards->[$i] =~ /${stx}([^,]+), ([^,]+), (.*)\}$/;
177 push @{$standardsx{$e}{hs}}, [$h, $s];
178 }
179 }
180
181 for ($i=0; $i<@{$prototypes}; ++$i) {
182 my $e = &get_element($prototypes->[$i]);
183 my $p = &get_prototype($prototypes->[$i]);
184 my ($s, $h);
185 if ($isx && exists $standardsx{$e}) {
186 for ($j=0; $j<@{$standardsx{$e}{hs}}; ++$j) {
187 $h = $standardsx{$e}{hs}[$j]->[0];
188 $s = $standardsx{$e}{hs}[$j]->[1];
189 &record_entry($e, $p, $h, $s, $node);
190 ++$standardsx{$e}{seen};
191 }
192 } elsif ($isx && $allx) {
193 &record_error('Missing annotation', [$prototypes->[$i]]);
194 } elsif ($isx) {
195 &record_entry($e, $p, $defhdr, $defstd, $node);
196 } else {
197 for ($j=0; $j<@{$standards}; ++$j) {
198 ($s, $h) = $standards->[$j] =~ /${std}([^,]+), ([^,\}]+)\}$/;
199 &record_entry($e, $p, $h, $s, $node);
200 }
201 }
202 }
203
204 # Check if there were any unmatched @standardsx.
205 for my $e (keys %standardsx) {
206 if (!exists $standardsx{$e}{seen}) {
207 &record_error('Spurious @standardsx', [$e."\n"])
208 }
209 }
210}
211
212# Stores a Summary entry in %entries. May be called multiple times
213# per element if multiple header and standard annotations exist. Also
214# keys on prototypes, as some elements have multiple prototypes. See
215# isnan in arith.texi for one example.
216sub record_entry
217{
218 my ($ele, $proto, $hdr, $std, $node) = @_;
219 push @{$entries{$ele}{$proto}}, [$hdr, $std, $node];
220}
221
222# Processes list or table contexts, with nesting.
223sub process_list
224{
225 my $type = shift;
226 my $in_vtbl = $type eq "vtable" ? 1 : 0;
227
228 while (my $line = <$input>) {
229 if ($line =~ $itms) {
230 next if ! $in_vtbl; # Not an annotatable context.
231 &process_annotation($line);
232 } elsif ($line =~ $def) {
233 &process_annotation($line);
234 } elsif ($line =~ $stds) {
235 &record_error('Misplaced annotation', ["[$.] ".$line]);
236 } elsif ($line =~ $endl) {
237 return; # All done.
238 } elsif ($line =~ $list) {
239 &process_list($1); # Nested list.
240 }
241 }
242}
243
244# Returns the current node from an @node line. Used for referencing
245# from the Summary.
246sub get_node
247{
248 my $line = shift;
249 chomp $line;
250 $line =~ s/$nde//;
251 my ($n) = split ',', $line;
252 return $n
253}
254
255# Returns the cleaned up prototype from @def|item* lines.
256sub get_prototype
257{
258 my $dfn = shift;
259 chomp $dfn;
260 $dfn =~ s/\s+/ /g; # Collapse whitespace.
261 $dfn =~ s/ \{([^\}]*)\} / $1 /g; # Remove grouping braces.
262 $dfn =~ s/^\@\S+ //; # Remove @-command.
263 $dfn =~ s/^Macro //i; # Scrape off cruft...
264 $dfn =~ s/^Data Type //i;
265 $dfn =~ s/^Variable //i;
266 $dfn =~ s/^Deprecated Function //i;
267 $dfn =~ s/^SVID Macro //i;
268 $dfn =~ s/^Obsolete function //i;
269 $dfn =~ s/^Constant //i;
270 $dfn =~ s/^Type //i;
271 $dfn =~ s/^Function //i;
272 $dfn =~ s/^\{(.*)\}$/$1/; # Debrace yourself.
273 $dfn =~ s/^\{([^\}]*)\} /$1 /; # These ones too.
274 return $dfn;
275}
276
277# Returns an annotated element's name.
278#
279# Takes a line defining an annotatable element (e.g., @def|item*),
280# splitting it on whitespace. The element is generally detected as
281# the member immediately preceding the first parenthesized expression
282# (e.g., a function), or the last token in the list. Some additional
283# cleanup is applied to the element before returning it.
284sub get_element
285{
286 my $i = 0;
287 my @toks = split /\s+/, shift;
288 # tzname array uses '['; don't match function pointers.
289 ++$i while $toks[$i] && $toks[$i] !~ /^[\(\[](?!\*)/;
290 $toks[$i-1] =~ s/^\*//; # Strip pointer type syntax.
291 $toks[$i-1] =~ s/^\{?([^\}]+)\}?$/$1/; # Strip braces.
292 $toks[$i-1] =~ s/^\(\*([^\)]+)\)$/$1/; # Function pointers.
293 return $toks[$i-1];
294}
295
296# Records syntax errors detected in the manual related to @standards.
297# The @def|item*s are grouped by file, then errors, to make it easier
298# to track down exactly where and what the problems are.
299sub record_error
300{
301 my ($err, $list) = @_;
302 push @{$errors{$texi}{$err}}, $_ for (@{$list});
303 return 0;
304}
305
306# Reports all detected errors and exits with failure. Indentation is
307# used for readability, and "ERROR" is used for visibility.
308sub print_errors
309{
310 for $texi (sort keys %errors) {
311 print STDERR "ERRORS in $texi:\n";
312 for my $err (sort keys %{$errors{$texi}}) {
313 print STDERR " $err:\n";
314 print STDERR " $_" for (@{$errors{$texi}{$err}});
315 }
316 }
317 print(STDERR "\nFor a description of expected syntax, see ".
318 "\`$script --help'\n\n");
319 exit 1;
320}
321
322# Prints an entry in the Summary.
323#
324# All the blank lines in summary.texi may seem strange at first, but
325# they have significant impact on how Texinfo renders the output.
326# Essentially, each line is its own paragraph. There is a @comment
327# with the element name, arguably unnecessary, but useful for seeing
328# the sorting order and extracted element names, and maintains the
329# format established by summary.awk. Each @item in the @table is the
330# prototype, which may be anything from just a variable name to a
331# function declaration. The body of each @item contains lines
332# annotating the headers and standards each element is declared
333# in/comes from, with a reference to the @node documenting the element
334# wrt. each header and standard combination.
335sub print_entry
336{
337 my $element = shift;
338 for my $prototype (sort keys %{$entries{$element}}) {
339 print "\@comment $element\n\@item $prototype\n\n";
340 for (@{$entries{$element}{$prototype}}) {
341 my ($header, $standard, $node)
342 = ($_->[0], $_->[1], $_->[2]);
343 if ($header =~ /^\(none\)$/i) {
344 $header = "\@emph{no header}";
345 } elsif ($header =~ /\(optional\)$/) {
346 $header =~ s/^(\S+) \((.*)\)$/\@file{$1} \@emph{$2}/;
347 } elsif ($header ne '???') {
348 $header = "\@file{$header}";
349 }
350 print "$header ($standard): \@ref{$node}.\n\n";
351 }
352 }
353}
354
355# Document the syntax of @standards.
356sub help
357{
358 print "$script ";
359 print <<'EOH';
360generates the Summary of Library Facilities (summary.texi)
361from @standards and @standardsx macros in the Texinfo sources (see
362macros.texi). While generating the Summary, it also checks that
363@standards are used, correctly.
364
365In general, any @def*-command or @item in a @vtable is considered
366annotatable. "Misplaced annotation" refers to @standards macros
367detected outside an annotatable context. "Missing annotation" refers
368to annotatable elements without @standards. @standards are expected
369to immediately follow the elements being annotated. In @*x lists,
370@standards sets the default annotation and may only occur as the first
371annotation ("Misplaced @standards"). @standardsx may not be used
372outside @*x lists ("Misplaced @standardsx"). "Spurious @standardsx"
373refers to otherwise valid @standardsx macros that were not matched to
374an element in an @*x list. "Invalid syntax" means just that.
375
5295172e 376The syntax of @standards annotations is designed to accommodate
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377multiple header and standards annotations, as necessary.
378
379Examples:
380
381 @deftp FOO
382 @standards{STD, HDR}
383
384 @defvar BAR
385 @standards{STD, HDR1}
386 @standards{STD, HDR2}
387
388 @deftypefun foo
389 @deftypefunx fool
390 @standards{STD, HDR}
391
392 @item bar
393 @itemx baz
394 @standardsx{bar, STD1, HDR1}
395 @standardsx{baz, STD1, HDR1}
396 @standardsx{baz, STD2, HDR2}
397
398Note that @standardsx deviates from the usual Texinfo syntax in that
399it is optional and may be used without @standards.
400EOH
401 ; exit 0;
402}