+2005-02-08 Paolo Bonzini <bonzini@gnu.org>
+
+ PR preprocessor/19801
+ * doc/cppinternals.texi (Conventions, Lexer, Files): Adjust
+ filenames that changed when libcpp was moved to the toplevel.
+
2005-02-07 Roger Sayle <roger@eyesopen.com>
* simplify-rtx.c (simplify_relational_operation_1): Avoid creating
The convention is that functions and types that are exposed to multiple
files internally are prefixed with @samp{_cpp_}, and are to be found in
-the file @file{cpphash.h}. Functions and types exposed to external
+the file @file{internal.h}. Functions and types exposed to external
clients are in @file{cpplib.h}, and prefixed with @samp{cpp_}. For
historical reasons this is no longer quite true, but we should strive to
stick to it.
@cindex escaped newlines
@section Overview
-The lexer is contained in the file @file{cpplex.c}. It is a hand-coded
+The lexer is contained in the file @file{lex.c}. It is a hand-coded
lexer, and not implemented as a state machine. It can understand C, C++
and Objective-C source code, and has been extended to allow reasonably
successful preprocessing of assembly language. The lexer does not make
@cindex files
Fairly obviously, the file handling code of cpplib resides in the file
-@file{cppfiles.c}. It takes care of the details of file searching,
+@file{files.c}. It takes care of the details of file searching,
opening, reading and caching, for both the main source file and all the
headers it recursively includes.