1\input texinfo 2@setfilename cppinternals.info 3@settitle The GNU C Preprocessor Internals 4 5@include gcc-common.texi 6 7@ifinfo 8@dircategory Software development 9@direntry 10* Cpplib: (cppinternals). Cpplib internals. 11@end direntry 12@end ifinfo 13 14@c @smallbook 15@c @cropmarks 16@c @finalout 17@setchapternewpage odd 18@ifinfo 19This file documents the internals of the GNU C Preprocessor. 20 21Copyright (C) 2000-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 22 23Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of 24this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice 25are preserved on all copies. 26 27@ignore 28Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the 29results, provided the printed document carries copying permission 30notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph 31(this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual). 32 33@end ignore 34Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this 35manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that 36the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a 37permission notice identical to this one. 38 39Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual 40into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions. 41@end ifinfo 42 43@titlepage 44@title Cpplib Internals 45@versionsubtitle 46@author Neil Booth 47@page 48@vskip 0pt plus 1filll 49@c man begin COPYRIGHT 50Copyright @copyright{} 2000-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 51 52Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of 53this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice 54are preserved on all copies. 55 56Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this 57manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that 58the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a 59permission notice identical to this one. 60 61Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual 62into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions. 63@c man end 64@end titlepage 65@contents 66@page 67 68@ifnottex 69@node Top 70@top 71@chapter Cpplib---the GNU C Preprocessor 72 73The GNU C preprocessor is 74implemented as a library, @dfn{cpplib}, so it can be easily shared between 75a stand-alone preprocessor, and a preprocessor integrated with the C, 76C++ and Objective-C front ends. It is also available for use by other 77programs, though this is not recommended as its exposed interface has 78not yet reached a point of reasonable stability. 79 80The library has been written to be re-entrant, so that it can be used 81to preprocess many files simultaneously if necessary. It has also been 82written with the preprocessing token as the fundamental unit; the 83preprocessor in previous versions of GCC would operate on text strings 84as the fundamental unit. 85 86This brief manual documents the internals of cpplib, and explains some 87of the tricky issues. It is intended that, along with the comments in 88the source code, a reasonably competent C programmer should be able to 89figure out what the code is doing, and why things have been implemented 90the way they have. 91 92@menu 93* Conventions:: Conventions used in the code. 94* Lexer:: The combined C, C++ and Objective-C Lexer. 95* Hash Nodes:: All identifiers are entered into a hash table. 96* Macro Expansion:: Macro expansion algorithm. 97* Token Spacing:: Spacing and paste avoidance issues. 98* Line Numbering:: Tracking location within files. 99* Guard Macros:: Optimizing header files with guard macros. 100* Files:: File handling. 101* Concept Index:: Index. 102@end menu 103@end ifnottex 104 105@node Conventions 106@unnumbered Conventions 107@cindex interface 108@cindex header files 109 110cpplib has two interfaces---one is exposed internally only, and the 111other is for both internal and external use. 112 113The convention is that functions and types that are exposed to multiple 114files internally are prefixed with @samp{_cpp_}, and are to be found in 115the file @file{internal.h}. Functions and types exposed to external 116clients are in @file{cpplib.h}, and prefixed with @samp{cpp_}. For 117historical reasons this is no longer quite true, but we should strive to 118stick to it. 119 120We are striving to reduce the information exposed in @file{cpplib.h} to the 121bare minimum necessary, and then to keep it there. This makes clear 122exactly what external clients are entitled to assume, and allows us to 123change internals in the future without worrying whether library clients 124are perhaps relying on some kind of undocumented implementation-specific 125behavior. 126 127@node Lexer 128@unnumbered The Lexer 129@cindex lexer 130@cindex newlines 131@cindex escaped newlines 132 133@section Overview 134The lexer is contained in the file @file{lex.c}. It is a hand-coded 135lexer, and not implemented as a state machine. It can understand C, C++ 136and Objective-C source code, and has been extended to allow reasonably 137successful preprocessing of assembly language. The lexer does not make 138an initial pass to strip out trigraphs and escaped newlines, but handles 139them as they are encountered in a single pass of the input file. It 140returns preprocessing tokens individually, not a line at a time. 141 142It is mostly transparent to users of the library, since the library's 143interface for obtaining the next token, @code{cpp_get_token}, takes care 144of lexing new tokens, handling directives, and expanding macros as 145necessary. However, the lexer does expose some functionality so that 146clients of the library can easily spell a given token, such as 147@code{cpp_spell_token} and @code{cpp_token_len}. These functions are 148useful when generating diagnostics, and for emitting the preprocessed 149output. 150 151@section Lexing a token 152Lexing of an individual token is handled by @code{_cpp_lex_direct} and 153its subroutines. In its current form the code is quite complicated, 154with read ahead characters and such-like, since it strives to not step 155back in the character stream in preparation for handling non-ASCII file 156encodings. The current plan is to convert any such files to UTF-8 157before processing them. This complexity is therefore unnecessary and 158will be removed, so I'll not discuss it further here. 159 160The job of @code{_cpp_lex_direct} is simply to lex a token. It is not 161responsible for issues like directive handling, returning lookahead 162tokens directly, multiple-include optimization, or conditional block 163skipping. It necessarily has a minor r@^ole to play in memory 164management of lexed lines. I discuss these issues in a separate section 165(@pxref{Lexing a line}). 166 167The lexer places the token it lexes into storage pointed to by the 168variable @code{cur_token}, and then increments it. This variable is 169important for correct diagnostic positioning. Unless a specific line 170and column are passed to the diagnostic routines, they will examine the 171@code{line} and @code{col} values of the token just before the location 172that @code{cur_token} points to, and use that location to report the 173diagnostic. 174 175The lexer does not consider whitespace to be a token in its own right. 176If whitespace (other than a new line) precedes a token, it sets the 177@code{PREV_WHITE} bit in the token's flags. Each token has its 178@code{line} and @code{col} variables set to the line and column of the 179first character of the token. This line number is the line number in 180the translation unit, and can be converted to a source (file, line) pair 181using the line map code. 182 183The first token on a logical, i.e.@: unescaped, line has the flag 184@code{BOL} set for beginning-of-line. This flag is intended for 185internal use, both to distinguish a @samp{#} that begins a directive 186from one that doesn't, and to generate a call-back to clients that want 187to be notified about the start of every non-directive line with tokens 188on it. Clients cannot reliably determine this for themselves: the first 189token might be a macro, and the tokens of a macro expansion do not have 190the @code{BOL} flag set. The macro expansion may even be empty, and the 191next token on the line certainly won't have the @code{BOL} flag set. 192 193New lines are treated specially; exactly how the lexer handles them is 194context-dependent. The C standard mandates that directives are 195terminated by the first unescaped newline character, even if it appears 196in the middle of a macro expansion. Therefore, if the state variable 197@code{in_directive} is set, the lexer returns a @code{CPP_EOF} token, 198which is normally used to indicate end-of-file, to indicate 199end-of-directive. In a directive a @code{CPP_EOF} token never means 200end-of-file. Conveniently, if the caller was @code{collect_args}, it 201already handles @code{CPP_EOF} as if it were end-of-file, and reports an 202error about an unterminated macro argument list. 203 204The C standard also specifies that a new line in the middle of the 205arguments to a macro is treated as whitespace. This white space is 206important in case the macro argument is stringized. The state variable 207@code{parsing_args} is nonzero when the preprocessor is collecting the 208arguments to a macro call. It is set to 1 when looking for the opening 209parenthesis to a function-like macro, and 2 when collecting the actual 210arguments up to the closing parenthesis, since these two cases need to 211be distinguished sometimes. One such time is here: the lexer sets the 212@code{PREV_WHITE} flag of a token if it meets a new line when 213@code{parsing_args} is set to 2. It doesn't set it if it meets a new 214line when @code{parsing_args} is 1, since then code like 215 216@smallexample 217#define foo() bar 218foo 219baz 220@end smallexample 221 222@noindent would be output with an erroneous space before @samp{baz}: 223 224@smallexample 225foo 226 baz 227@end smallexample 228 229This is a good example of the subtlety of getting token spacing correct 230in the preprocessor; there are plenty of tests in the testsuite for 231corner cases like this. 232 233The lexer is written to treat each of @samp{\r}, @samp{\n}, @samp{\r\n} 234and @samp{\n\r} as a single new line indicator. This allows it to 235transparently preprocess MS-DOS, Macintosh and Unix files without their 236needing to pass through a special filter beforehand. 237 238We also decided to treat a backslash, either @samp{\} or the trigraph 239@samp{??/}, separated from one of the above newline indicators by 240non-comment whitespace only, as intending to escape the newline. It 241tends to be a typing mistake, and cannot reasonably be mistaken for 242anything else in any of the C-family grammars. Since handling it this 243way is not strictly conforming to the ISO standard, the library issues a 244warning wherever it encounters it. 245 246Handling newlines like this is made simpler by doing it in one place 247only. The function @code{handle_newline} takes care of all newline 248characters, and @code{skip_escaped_newlines} takes care of arbitrarily 249long sequences of escaped newlines, deferring to @code{handle_newline} 250to handle the newlines themselves. 251 252The most painful aspect of lexing ISO-standard C and C++ is handling 253trigraphs and backlash-escaped newlines. Trigraphs are processed before 254any interpretation of the meaning of a character is made, and unfortunately 255there is a trigraph representation for a backslash, so it is possible for 256the trigraph @samp{??/} to introduce an escaped newline. 257 258Escaped newlines are tedious because theoretically they can occur 259anywhere---between the @samp{+} and @samp{=} of the @samp{+=} token, 260within the characters of an identifier, and even between the @samp{*} 261and @samp{/} that terminates a comment. Moreover, you cannot be sure 262there is just one---there might be an arbitrarily long sequence of them. 263 264So, for example, the routine that lexes a number, @code{parse_number}, 265cannot assume that it can scan forwards until the first non-number 266character and be done with it, because this could be the @samp{\} 267introducing an escaped newline, or the @samp{?} introducing the trigraph 268sequence that represents the @samp{\} of an escaped newline. If it 269encounters a @samp{?} or @samp{\}, it calls @code{skip_escaped_newlines} 270to skip over any potential escaped newlines before checking whether the 271number has been finished. 272 273Similarly code in the main body of @code{_cpp_lex_direct} cannot simply 274check for a @samp{=} after a @samp{+} character to determine whether it 275has a @samp{+=} token; it needs to be prepared for an escaped newline of 276some sort. Such cases use the function @code{get_effective_char}, which 277returns the first character after any intervening escaped newlines. 278 279The lexer needs to keep track of the correct column position, including 280counting tabs as specified by the @option{-ftabstop=} option. This 281should be done even within C-style comments; they can appear in the 282middle of a line, and we want to report diagnostics in the correct 283position for text appearing after the end of the comment. 284 285@anchor{Invalid identifiers} 286Some identifiers, such as @code{__VA_ARGS__} and poisoned identifiers, 287may be invalid and require a diagnostic. However, if they appear in a 288macro expansion we don't want to complain with each use of the macro. 289It is therefore best to catch them during the lexing stage, in 290@code{parse_identifier}. In both cases, whether a diagnostic is needed 291or not is dependent upon the lexer's state. For example, we don't want 292to issue a diagnostic for re-poisoning a poisoned identifier, or for 293using @code{__VA_ARGS__} in the expansion of a variable-argument macro. 294Therefore @code{parse_identifier} makes use of state flags to determine 295whether a diagnostic is appropriate. Since we change state on a 296per-token basis, and don't lex whole lines at a time, this is not a 297problem. 298 299Another place where state flags are used to change behavior is whilst 300lexing header names. Normally, a @samp{<} would be lexed as a single 301token. After a @code{#include} directive, though, it should be lexed as 302a single token as far as the nearest @samp{>} character. Note that we 303don't allow the terminators of header names to be escaped; the first 304@samp{"} or @samp{>} terminates the header name. 305 306Interpretation of some character sequences depends upon whether we are 307lexing C, C++ or Objective-C, and on the revision of the standard in 308force. For example, @samp{::} is a single token in C++, but in C it is 309two separate @samp{:} tokens and almost certainly a syntax error. Such 310cases are handled by @code{_cpp_lex_direct} based upon command-line 311flags stored in the @code{cpp_options} structure. 312 313Once a token has been lexed, it leads an independent existence. The 314spelling of numbers, identifiers and strings is copied to permanent 315storage from the original input buffer, so a token remains valid and 316correct even if its source buffer is freed with @code{_cpp_pop_buffer}. 317The storage holding the spellings of such tokens remains until the 318client program calls cpp_destroy, probably at the end of the translation 319unit. 320 321@anchor{Lexing a line} 322@section Lexing a line 323@cindex token run 324 325When the preprocessor was changed to return pointers to tokens, one 326feature I wanted was some sort of guarantee regarding how long a 327returned pointer remains valid. This is important to the stand-alone 328preprocessor, the future direction of the C family front ends, and even 329to cpplib itself internally. 330 331Occasionally the preprocessor wants to be able to peek ahead in the 332token stream. For example, after the name of a function-like macro, it 333wants to check the next token to see if it is an opening parenthesis. 334Another example is that, after reading the first few tokens of a 335@code{#pragma} directive and not recognizing it as a registered pragma, 336it wants to backtrack and allow the user-defined handler for unknown 337pragmas to access the full @code{#pragma} token stream. The stand-alone 338preprocessor wants to be able to test the current token with the 339previous one to see if a space needs to be inserted to preserve their 340separate tokenization upon re-lexing (paste avoidance), so it needs to 341be sure the pointer to the previous token is still valid. The 342recursive-descent C++ parser wants to be able to perform tentative 343parsing arbitrarily far ahead in the token stream, and then to be able 344to jump back to a prior position in that stream if necessary. 345 346The rule I chose, which is fairly natural, is to arrange that the 347preprocessor lex all tokens on a line consecutively into a token buffer, 348which I call a @dfn{token run}, and when meeting an unescaped new line 349(newlines within comments do not count either), to start lexing back at 350the beginning of the run. Note that we do @emph{not} lex a line of 351tokens at once; if we did that @code{parse_identifier} would not have 352state flags available to warn about invalid identifiers (@pxref{Invalid 353identifiers}). 354 355In other words, accessing tokens that appeared earlier in the current 356line is valid, but since each logical line overwrites the tokens of the 357previous line, tokens from prior lines are unavailable. In particular, 358since a directive only occupies a single logical line, this means that 359the directive handlers like the @code{#pragma} handler can jump around 360in the directive's tokens if necessary. 361 362Two issues remain: what about tokens that arise from macro expansions, 363and what happens when we have a long line that overflows the token run? 364 365Since we promise clients that we preserve the validity of pointers that 366we have already returned for tokens that appeared earlier in the line, 367we cannot reallocate the run. Instead, on overflow it is expanded by 368chaining a new token run on to the end of the existing one. 369 370The tokens forming a macro's replacement list are collected by the 371@code{#define} handler, and placed in storage that is only freed by 372@code{cpp_destroy}. So if a macro is expanded in the line of tokens, 373the pointers to the tokens of its expansion that are returned will always 374remain valid. However, macros are a little trickier than that, since 375they give rise to three sources of fresh tokens. They are the built-in 376macros like @code{__LINE__}, and the @samp{#} and @samp{##} operators 377for stringizing and token pasting. I handled this by allocating 378space for these tokens from the lexer's token run chain. This means 379they automatically receive the same lifetime guarantees as lexed tokens, 380and we don't need to concern ourselves with freeing them. 381 382Lexing into a line of tokens solves some of the token memory management 383issues, but not all. The opening parenthesis after a function-like 384macro name might lie on a different line, and the front ends definitely 385want the ability to look ahead past the end of the current line. So 386cpplib only moves back to the start of the token run at the end of a 387line if the variable @code{keep_tokens} is zero. Line-buffering is 388quite natural for the preprocessor, and as a result the only time cpplib 389needs to increment this variable is whilst looking for the opening 390parenthesis to, and reading the arguments of, a function-like macro. In 391the near future cpplib will export an interface to increment and 392decrement this variable, so that clients can share full control over the 393lifetime of token pointers too. 394 395The routine @code{_cpp_lex_token} handles moving to new token runs, 396calling @code{_cpp_lex_direct} to lex new tokens, or returning 397previously-lexed tokens if we stepped back in the token stream. It also 398checks each token for the @code{BOL} flag, which might indicate a 399directive that needs to be handled, or require a start-of-line call-back 400to be made. @code{_cpp_lex_token} also handles skipping over tokens in 401failed conditional blocks, and invalidates the control macro of the 402multiple-include optimization if a token was successfully lexed outside 403a directive. In other words, its callers do not need to concern 404themselves with such issues. 405 406@node Hash Nodes 407@unnumbered Hash Nodes 408@cindex hash table 409@cindex identifiers 410@cindex macros 411@cindex assertions 412@cindex named operators 413 414When cpplib encounters an ``identifier'', it generates a hash code for 415it and stores it in the hash table. By ``identifier'' we mean tokens 416with type @code{CPP_NAME}; this includes identifiers in the usual C 417sense, as well as keywords, directive names, macro names and so on. For 418example, all of @code{pragma}, @code{int}, @code{foo} and 419@code{__GNUC__} are identifiers and hashed when lexed. 420 421Each node in the hash table contain various information about the 422identifier it represents. For example, its length and type. At any one 423time, each identifier falls into exactly one of three categories: 424 425@itemize @bullet 426@item Macros 427 428These have been declared to be macros, either on the command line or 429with @code{#define}. A few, such as @code{__TIME__} are built-ins 430entered in the hash table during initialization. The hash node for a 431normal macro points to a structure with more information about the 432macro, such as whether it is function-like, how many arguments it takes, 433and its expansion. Built-in macros are flagged as special, and instead 434contain an enum indicating which of the various built-in macros it is. 435 436@item Assertions 437 438Assertions are in a separate namespace to macros. To enforce this, cpp 439actually prepends a @code{#} character before hashing and entering it in 440the hash table. An assertion's node points to a chain of answers to 441that assertion. 442 443@item Void 444 445Everything else falls into this category---an identifier that is not 446currently a macro, or a macro that has since been undefined with 447@code{#undef}. 448 449When preprocessing C++, this category also includes the named operators, 450such as @code{xor}. In expressions these behave like the operators they 451represent, but in contexts where the spelling of a token matters they 452are spelt differently. This spelling distinction is relevant when they 453are operands of the stringizing and pasting macro operators @code{#} and 454@code{##}. Named operator hash nodes are flagged, both to catch the 455spelling distinction and to prevent them from being defined as macros. 456@end itemize 457 458The same identifiers share the same hash node. Since each identifier 459token, after lexing, contains a pointer to its hash node, this is used 460to provide rapid lookup of various information. For example, when 461parsing a @code{#define} statement, CPP flags each argument's identifier 462hash node with the index of that argument. This makes duplicated 463argument checking an O(1) operation for each argument. Similarly, for 464each identifier in the macro's expansion, lookup to see if it is an 465argument, and which argument it is, is also an O(1) operation. Further, 466each directive name, such as @code{endif}, has an associated directive 467enum stored in its hash node, so that directive lookup is also O(1). 468 469@node Macro Expansion 470@unnumbered Macro Expansion Algorithm 471@cindex macro expansion 472 473Macro expansion is a tricky operation, fraught with nasty corner cases 474and situations that render what you thought was a nifty way to 475optimize the preprocessor's expansion algorithm wrong in quite subtle 476ways. 477 478I strongly recommend you have a good grasp of how the C and C++ 479standards require macros to be expanded before diving into this 480section, let alone the code!. If you don't have a clear mental 481picture of how things like nested macro expansion, stringizing and 482token pasting are supposed to work, damage to your sanity can quickly 483result. 484 485@section Internal representation of macros 486@cindex macro representation (internal) 487 488The preprocessor stores macro expansions in tokenized form. This 489saves repeated lexing passes during expansion, at the cost of a small 490increase in memory consumption on average. The tokens are stored 491contiguously in memory, so a pointer to the first one and a token 492count is all you need to get the replacement list of a macro. 493 494If the macro is a function-like macro the preprocessor also stores its 495parameters, in the form of an ordered list of pointers to the hash 496table entry of each parameter's identifier. Further, in the macro's 497stored expansion each occurrence of a parameter is replaced with a 498special token of type @code{CPP_MACRO_ARG}. Each such token holds the 499index of the parameter it represents in the parameter list, which 500allows rapid replacement of parameters with their arguments during 501expansion. Despite this optimization it is still necessary to store 502the original parameters to the macro, both for dumping with e.g., 503@option{-dD}, and to warn about non-trivial macro redefinitions when 504the parameter names have changed. 505 506@section Macro expansion overview 507The preprocessor maintains a @dfn{context stack}, implemented as a 508linked list of @code{cpp_context} structures, which together represent 509the macro expansion state at any one time. The @code{struct 510cpp_reader} member variable @code{context} points to the current top 511of this stack. The top normally holds the unexpanded replacement list 512of the innermost macro under expansion, except when cpplib is about to 513pre-expand an argument, in which case it holds that argument's 514unexpanded tokens. 515 516When there are no macros under expansion, cpplib is in @dfn{base 517context}. All contexts other than the base context contain a 518contiguous list of tokens delimited by a starting and ending token. 519When not in base context, cpplib obtains the next token from the list 520of the top context. If there are no tokens left in the list, it pops 521that context off the stack, and subsequent ones if necessary, until an 522unexhausted context is found or it returns to base context. In base 523context, cpplib reads tokens directly from the lexer. 524 525If it encounters an identifier that is both a macro and enabled for 526expansion, cpplib prepares to push a new context for that macro on the 527stack by calling the routine @code{enter_macro_context}. When this 528routine returns, the new context will contain the unexpanded tokens of 529the replacement list of that macro. In the case of function-like 530macros, @code{enter_macro_context} also replaces any parameters in the 531replacement list, stored as @code{CPP_MACRO_ARG} tokens, with the 532appropriate macro argument. If the standard requires that the 533parameter be replaced with its expanded argument, the argument will 534have been fully macro expanded first. 535 536@code{enter_macro_context} also handles special macros like 537@code{__LINE__}. Although these macros expand to a single token which 538cannot contain any further macros, for reasons of token spacing 539(@pxref{Token Spacing}) and simplicity of implementation, cpplib 540handles these special macros by pushing a context containing just that 541one token. 542 543The final thing that @code{enter_macro_context} does before returning 544is to mark the macro disabled for expansion (except for special macros 545like @code{__TIME__}). The macro is re-enabled when its context is 546later popped from the context stack, as described above. This strict 547ordering ensures that a macro is disabled whilst its expansion is 548being scanned, but that it is @emph{not} disabled whilst any arguments 549to it are being expanded. 550 551@section Scanning the replacement list for macros to expand 552The C standard states that, after any parameters have been replaced 553with their possibly-expanded arguments, the replacement list is 554scanned for nested macros. Further, any identifiers in the 555replacement list that are not expanded during this scan are never 556again eligible for expansion in the future, if the reason they were 557not expanded is that the macro in question was disabled. 558 559Clearly this latter condition can only apply to tokens resulting from 560argument pre-expansion. Other tokens never have an opportunity to be 561re-tested for expansion. It is possible for identifiers that are 562function-like macros to not expand initially but to expand during a 563later scan. This occurs when the identifier is the last token of an 564argument (and therefore originally followed by a comma or a closing 565parenthesis in its macro's argument list), and when it replaces its 566parameter in the macro's replacement list, the subsequent token 567happens to be an opening parenthesis (itself possibly the first token 568of an argument). 569 570It is important to note that when cpplib reads the last token of a 571given context, that context still remains on the stack. Only when 572looking for the @emph{next} token do we pop it off the stack and drop 573to a lower context. This makes backing up by one token easy, but more 574importantly ensures that the macro corresponding to the current 575context is still disabled when we are considering the last token of 576its replacement list for expansion (or indeed expanding it). As an 577example, which illustrates many of the points above, consider 578 579@smallexample 580#define foo(x) bar x 581foo(foo) (2) 582@end smallexample 583 584@noindent which fully expands to @samp{bar foo (2)}. During pre-expansion 585of the argument, @samp{foo} does not expand even though the macro is 586enabled, since it has no following parenthesis [pre-expansion of an 587argument only uses tokens from that argument; it cannot take tokens 588from whatever follows the macro invocation]. This still leaves the 589argument token @samp{foo} eligible for future expansion. Then, when 590re-scanning after argument replacement, the token @samp{foo} is 591rejected for expansion, and marked ineligible for future expansion, 592since the macro is now disabled. It is disabled because the 593replacement list @samp{bar foo} of the macro is still on the context 594stack. 595 596If instead the algorithm looked for an opening parenthesis first and 597then tested whether the macro were disabled it would be subtly wrong. 598In the example above, the replacement list of @samp{foo} would be 599popped in the process of finding the parenthesis, re-enabling 600@samp{foo} and expanding it a second time. 601 602@section Looking for a function-like macro's opening parenthesis 603Function-like macros only expand when immediately followed by a 604parenthesis. To do this cpplib needs to temporarily disable macros 605and read the next token. Unfortunately, because of spacing issues 606(@pxref{Token Spacing}), there can be fake padding tokens in-between, 607and if the next real token is not a parenthesis cpplib needs to be 608able to back up that one token as well as retain the information in 609any intervening padding tokens. 610 611Backing up more than one token when macros are involved is not 612permitted by cpplib, because in general it might involve issues like 613restoring popped contexts onto the context stack, which are too hard. 614Instead, searching for the parenthesis is handled by a special 615function, @code{funlike_invocation_p}, which remembers padding 616information as it reads tokens. If the next real token is not an 617opening parenthesis, it backs up that one token, and then pushes an 618extra context just containing the padding information if necessary. 619 620@section Marking tokens ineligible for future expansion 621As discussed above, cpplib needs a way of marking tokens as 622unexpandable. Since the tokens cpplib handles are read-only once they 623have been lexed, it instead makes a copy of the token and adds the 624flag @code{NO_EXPAND} to the copy. 625 626For efficiency and to simplify memory management by avoiding having to 627remember to free these tokens, they are allocated as temporary tokens 628from the lexer's current token run (@pxref{Lexing a line}) using the 629function @code{_cpp_temp_token}. The tokens are then re-used once the 630current line of tokens has been read in. 631 632This might sound unsafe. However, tokens runs are not re-used at the 633end of a line if it happens to be in the middle of a macro argument 634list, and cpplib only wants to back-up more than one lexer token in 635situations where no macro expansion is involved, so the optimization 636is safe. 637 638@node Token Spacing 639@unnumbered Token Spacing 640@cindex paste avoidance 641@cindex spacing 642@cindex token spacing 643 644First, consider an issue that only concerns the stand-alone 645preprocessor: there needs to be a guarantee that re-reading its preprocessed 646output results in an identical token stream. Without taking special 647measures, this might not be the case because of macro substitution. 648For example: 649 650@smallexample 651#define PLUS + 652#define EMPTY 653#define f(x) =x= 654+PLUS -EMPTY- PLUS+ f(=) 655 @expansion{} + + - - + + = = = 656@emph{not} 657 @expansion{} ++ -- ++ === 658@end smallexample 659 660One solution would be to simply insert a space between all adjacent 661tokens. However, we would like to keep space insertion to a minimum, 662both for aesthetic reasons and because it causes problems for people who 663still try to abuse the preprocessor for things like Fortran source and 664Makefiles. 665 666For now, just notice that when tokens are added (or removed, as shown by 667the @code{EMPTY} example) from the original lexed token stream, we need 668to check for accidental token pasting. We call this @dfn{paste 669avoidance}. Token addition and removal can only occur because of macro 670expansion, but accidental pasting can occur in many places: both before 671and after each macro replacement, each argument replacement, and 672additionally each token created by the @samp{#} and @samp{##} operators. 673 674Look at how the preprocessor gets whitespace output correct 675normally. The @code{cpp_token} structure contains a flags byte, and one 676of those flags is @code{PREV_WHITE}. This is flagged by the lexer, and 677indicates that the token was preceded by whitespace of some form other 678than a new line. The stand-alone preprocessor can use this flag to 679decide whether to insert a space between tokens in the output. 680 681Now consider the result of the following macro expansion: 682 683@smallexample 684#define add(x, y, z) x + y +z; 685sum = add (1,2, 3); 686 @expansion{} sum = 1 + 2 +3; 687@end smallexample 688 689The interesting thing here is that the tokens @samp{1} and @samp{2} are 690output with a preceding space, and @samp{3} is output without a 691preceding space, but when lexed none of these tokens had that property. 692Careful consideration reveals that @samp{1} gets its preceding 693whitespace from the space preceding @samp{add} in the macro invocation, 694@emph{not} replacement list. @samp{2} gets its whitespace from the 695space preceding the parameter @samp{y} in the macro replacement list, 696and @samp{3} has no preceding space because parameter @samp{z} has none 697in the replacement list. 698 699Once lexed, tokens are effectively fixed and cannot be altered, since 700pointers to them might be held in many places, in particular by 701in-progress macro expansions. So instead of modifying the two tokens 702above, the preprocessor inserts a special token, which I call a 703@dfn{padding token}, into the token stream to indicate that spacing of 704the subsequent token is special. The preprocessor inserts padding 705tokens in front of every macro expansion and expanded macro argument. 706These point to a @dfn{source token} from which the subsequent real token 707should inherit its spacing. In the above example, the source tokens are 708@samp{add} in the macro invocation, and @samp{y} and @samp{z} in the 709macro replacement list, respectively. 710 711It is quite easy to get multiple padding tokens in a row, for example if 712a macro's first replacement token expands straight into another macro. 713 714@smallexample 715#define foo bar 716#define bar baz 717[foo] 718 @expansion{} [baz] 719@end smallexample 720 721Here, two padding tokens are generated with sources the @samp{foo} token 722between the brackets, and the @samp{bar} token from foo's replacement 723list, respectively. Clearly the first padding token is the one to 724use, so the output code should contain a rule that the first 725padding token in a sequence is the one that matters. 726 727But what if a macro expansion is left? Adjusting the above 728example slightly: 729 730@smallexample 731#define foo bar 732#define bar EMPTY baz 733#define EMPTY 734[foo] EMPTY; 735 @expansion{} [ baz] ; 736@end smallexample 737 738As shown, now there should be a space before @samp{baz} and the 739semicolon in the output. 740 741The rules we decided above fail for @samp{baz}: we generate three 742padding tokens, one per macro invocation, before the token @samp{baz}. 743We would then have it take its spacing from the first of these, which 744carries source token @samp{foo} with no leading space. 745 746It is vital that cpplib get spacing correct in these examples since any 747of these macro expansions could be stringized, where spacing matters. 748 749So, this demonstrates that not just entering macro and argument 750expansions, but leaving them requires special handling too. I made 751cpplib insert a padding token with a @code{NULL} source token when 752leaving macro expansions, as well as after each replaced argument in a 753macro's replacement list. It also inserts appropriate padding tokens on 754either side of tokens created by the @samp{#} and @samp{##} operators. 755I expanded the rule so that, if we see a padding token with a 756@code{NULL} source token, @emph{and} that source token has no leading 757space, then we behave as if we have seen no padding tokens at all. A 758quick check shows this rule will then get the above example correct as 759well. 760 761Now a relationship with paste avoidance is apparent: we have to be 762careful about paste avoidance in exactly the same locations we have 763padding tokens in order to get white space correct. This makes 764implementation of paste avoidance easy: wherever the stand-alone 765preprocessor is fixing up spacing because of padding tokens, and it 766turns out that no space is needed, it has to take the extra step to 767check that a space is not needed after all to avoid an accidental paste. 768The function @code{cpp_avoid_paste} advises whether a space is required 769between two consecutive tokens. To avoid excessive spacing, it tries 770hard to only require a space if one is likely to be necessary, but for 771reasons of efficiency it is slightly conservative and might recommend a 772space where one is not strictly needed. 773 774@node Line Numbering 775@unnumbered Line numbering 776@cindex line numbers 777 778@section Just which line number anyway? 779 780There are three reasonable requirements a cpplib client might have for 781the line number of a token passed to it: 782 783@itemize @bullet 784@item 785The source line it was lexed on. 786@item 787The line it is output on. This can be different to the line it was 788lexed on if, for example, there are intervening escaped newlines or 789C-style comments. For example: 790 791@smallexample 792foo /* @r{A long 793comment} */ bar \ 794baz 795@result{} 796foo bar baz 797@end smallexample 798 799@item 800If the token results from a macro expansion, the line of the macro name, 801or possibly the line of the closing parenthesis in the case of 802function-like macro expansion. 803@end itemize 804 805The @code{cpp_token} structure contains @code{line} and @code{col} 806members. The lexer fills these in with the line and column of the first 807character of the token. Consequently, but maybe unexpectedly, a token 808from the replacement list of a macro expansion carries the location of 809the token within the @code{#define} directive, because cpplib expands a 810macro by returning pointers to the tokens in its replacement list. The 811current implementation of cpplib assigns tokens created from built-in 812macros and the @samp{#} and @samp{##} operators the location of the most 813recently lexed token. This is a because they are allocated from the 814lexer's token runs, and because of the way the diagnostic routines infer 815the appropriate location to report. 816 817The diagnostic routines in cpplib display the location of the most 818recently @emph{lexed} token, unless they are passed a specific line and 819column to report. For diagnostics regarding tokens that arise from 820macro expansions, it might also be helpful for the user to see the 821original location in the macro definition that the token came from. 822Since that is exactly the information each token carries, such an 823enhancement could be made relatively easily in future. 824 825The stand-alone preprocessor faces a similar problem when determining 826the correct line to output the token on: the position attached to a 827token is fairly useless if the token came from a macro expansion. All 828tokens on a logical line should be output on its first physical line, so 829the token's reported location is also wrong if it is part of a physical 830line other than the first. 831 832To solve these issues, cpplib provides a callback that is generated 833whenever it lexes a preprocessing token that starts a new logical line 834other than a directive. It passes this token (which may be a 835@code{CPP_EOF} token indicating the end of the translation unit) to the 836callback routine, which can then use the line and column of this token 837to produce correct output. 838 839@section Representation of line numbers 840 841As mentioned above, cpplib stores with each token the line number that 842it was lexed on. In fact, this number is not the number of the line in 843the source file, but instead bears more resemblance to the number of the 844line in the translation unit. 845 846The preprocessor maintains a monotonic increasing line count, which is 847incremented at every new line character (and also at the end of any 848buffer that does not end in a new line). Since a line number of zero is 849useful to indicate certain special states and conditions, this variable 850starts counting from one. 851 852This variable therefore uniquely enumerates each line in the translation 853unit. With some simple infrastructure, it is straight forward to map 854from this to the original source file and line number pair, saving space 855whenever line number information needs to be saved. The code the 856implements this mapping lies in the files @file{line-map.c} and 857@file{line-map.h}. 858 859Command-line macros and assertions are implemented by pushing a buffer 860containing the right hand side of an equivalent @code{#define} or 861@code{#assert} directive. Some built-in macros are handled similarly. 862Since these are all processed before the first line of the main input 863file, it will typically have an assigned line closer to twenty than to 864one. 865 866@node Guard Macros 867@unnumbered The Multiple-Include Optimization 868@cindex guard macros 869@cindex controlling macros 870@cindex multiple-include optimization 871 872Header files are often of the form 873 874@smallexample 875#ifndef FOO 876#define FOO 877@dots{} 878#endif 879@end smallexample 880 881@noindent 882to prevent the compiler from processing them more than once. The 883preprocessor notices such header files, so that if the header file 884appears in a subsequent @code{#include} directive and @code{FOO} is 885defined, then it is ignored and it doesn't preprocess or even re-open 886the file a second time. This is referred to as the @dfn{multiple 887include optimization}. 888 889Under what circumstances is such an optimization valid? If the file 890were included a second time, it can only be optimized away if that 891inclusion would result in no tokens to return, and no relevant 892directives to process. Therefore the current implementation imposes 893requirements and makes some allowances as follows: 894 895@enumerate 896@item 897There must be no tokens outside the controlling @code{#if}-@code{#endif} 898pair, but whitespace and comments are permitted. 899 900@item 901There must be no directives outside the controlling directive pair, but 902the @dfn{null directive} (a line containing nothing other than a single 903@samp{#} and possibly whitespace) is permitted. 904 905@item 906The opening directive must be of the form 907 908@smallexample 909#ifndef FOO 910@end smallexample 911 912or 913 914@smallexample 915#if !defined FOO [equivalently, #if !defined(FOO)] 916@end smallexample 917 918@item 919In the second form above, the tokens forming the @code{#if} expression 920must have come directly from the source file---no macro expansion must 921have been involved. This is because macro definitions can change, and 922tracking whether or not a relevant change has been made is not worth the 923implementation cost. 924 925@item 926There can be no @code{#else} or @code{#elif} directives at the outer 927conditional block level, because they would probably contain something 928of interest to a subsequent pass. 929@end enumerate 930 931First, when pushing a new file on the buffer stack, 932@code{_stack_include_file} sets the controlling macro @code{mi_cmacro} to 933@code{NULL}, and sets @code{mi_valid} to @code{true}. This indicates 934that the preprocessor has not yet encountered anything that would 935invalidate the multiple-include optimization. As described in the next 936few paragraphs, these two variables having these values effectively 937indicates top-of-file. 938 939When about to return a token that is not part of a directive, 940@code{_cpp_lex_token} sets @code{mi_valid} to @code{false}. This 941enforces the constraint that tokens outside the controlling conditional 942block invalidate the optimization. 943 944The @code{do_if}, when appropriate, and @code{do_ifndef} directive 945handlers pass the controlling macro to the function 946@code{push_conditional}. cpplib maintains a stack of nested conditional 947blocks, and after processing every opening conditional this function 948pushes an @code{if_stack} structure onto the stack. In this structure 949it records the controlling macro for the block, provided there is one 950and we're at top-of-file (as described above). If an @code{#elif} or 951@code{#else} directive is encountered, the controlling macro for that 952block is cleared to @code{NULL}. Otherwise, it survives until the 953@code{#endif} closing the block, upon which @code{do_endif} sets 954@code{mi_valid} to true and stores the controlling macro in 955@code{mi_cmacro}. 956 957@code{_cpp_handle_directive} clears @code{mi_valid} when processing any 958directive other than an opening conditional and the null directive. 959With this, and requiring top-of-file to record a controlling macro, and 960no @code{#else} or @code{#elif} for it to survive and be copied to 961@code{mi_cmacro} by @code{do_endif}, we have enforced the absence of 962directives outside the main conditional block for the optimization to be 963on. 964 965Note that whilst we are inside the conditional block, @code{mi_valid} is 966likely to be reset to @code{false}, but this does not matter since 967the closing @code{#endif} restores it to @code{true} if appropriate. 968 969Finally, since @code{_cpp_lex_direct} pops the file off the buffer stack 970at @code{EOF} without returning a token, if the @code{#endif} directive 971was not followed by any tokens, @code{mi_valid} is @code{true} and 972@code{_cpp_pop_file_buffer} remembers the controlling macro associated 973with the file. Subsequent calls to @code{stack_include_file} result in 974no buffer being pushed if the controlling macro is defined, effecting 975the optimization. 976 977A quick word on how we handle the 978 979@smallexample 980#if !defined FOO 981@end smallexample 982 983@noindent 984case. @code{_cpp_parse_expr} and @code{parse_defined} take steps to see 985whether the three stages @samp{!}, @samp{defined-expression} and 986@samp{end-of-directive} occur in order in a @code{#if} expression. If 987so, they return the guard macro to @code{do_if} in the variable 988@code{mi_ind_cmacro}, and otherwise set it to @code{NULL}. 989@code{enter_macro_context} sets @code{mi_valid} to false, so if a macro 990was expanded whilst parsing any part of the expression, then the 991top-of-file test in @code{push_conditional} fails and the optimization 992is turned off. 993 994@node Files 995@unnumbered File Handling 996@cindex files 997 998Fairly obviously, the file handling code of cpplib resides in the file 999@file{files.c}. It takes care of the details of file searching, 1000opening, reading and caching, for both the main source file and all the 1001headers it recursively includes. 1002 1003The basic strategy is to minimize the number of system calls. On many 1004systems, the basic @code{open ()} and @code{fstat ()} system calls can 1005be quite expensive. For every @code{#include}-d file, we need to try 1006all the directories in the search path until we find a match. Some 1007projects, such as glibc, pass twenty or thirty include paths on the 1008command line, so this can rapidly become time consuming. 1009 1010For a header file we have not encountered before we have little choice 1011but to do this. However, it is often the case that the same headers are 1012repeatedly included, and in these cases we try to avoid repeating the 1013filesystem queries whilst searching for the correct file. 1014 1015For each file we try to open, we store the constructed path in a splay 1016tree. This path first undergoes simplification by the function 1017@code{_cpp_simplify_pathname}. For example, 1018@file{/usr/include/bits/../foo.h} is simplified to 1019@file{/usr/include/foo.h} before we enter it in the splay tree and try 1020to @code{open ()} the file. CPP will then find subsequent uses of 1021@file{foo.h}, even as @file{/usr/include/foo.h}, in the splay tree and 1022save system calls. 1023 1024Further, it is likely the file contents have also been cached, saving a 1025@code{read ()} system call. We don't bother caching the contents of 1026header files that are re-inclusion protected, and whose re-inclusion 1027macro is defined when we leave the header file for the first time. If 1028the host supports it, we try to map suitably large files into memory, 1029rather than reading them in directly. 1030 1031The include paths are internally stored on a null-terminated 1032singly-linked list, starting with the @code{"header.h"} directory search 1033chain, which then links into the @code{<header.h>} directory chain. 1034 1035Files included with the @code{<foo.h>} syntax start the lookup directly 1036in the second half of this chain. However, files included with the 1037@code{"foo.h"} syntax start at the beginning of the chain, but with one 1038extra directory prepended. This is the directory of the current file; 1039the one containing the @code{#include} directive. Prepending this 1040directory on a per-file basis is handled by the function 1041@code{search_from}. 1042 1043Note that a header included with a directory component, such as 1044@code{#include "mydir/foo.h"} and opened as 1045@file{/usr/local/include/mydir/foo.h}, will have the complete path minus 1046the basename @samp{foo.h} as the current directory. 1047 1048Enough information is stored in the splay tree that CPP can immediately 1049tell whether it can skip the header file because of the multiple include 1050optimization, whether the file didn't exist or couldn't be opened for 1051some reason, or whether the header was flagged not to be re-used, as it 1052is with the obsolete @code{#import} directive. 1053 1054For the benefit of MS-DOS filesystems with an 8.3 filename limitation, 1055CPP offers the ability to treat various include file names as aliases 1056for the real header files with shorter names. The map from one to the 1057other is found in a special file called @samp{header.gcc}, stored in the 1058command line (or system) include directories to which the mapping 1059applies. This may be higher up the directory tree than the full path to 1060the file minus the base name. 1061 1062@node Concept Index 1063@unnumbered Concept Index 1064@printindex cp 1065 1066@bye 1067