[RFA] Add language-dependent post-parser

Paul Hilfinger hilfingr@gnat.com
Tue Mar 30 09:24:00 GMT 2004


Ping.  I have not yet received a reply to my last message on this
proposed patch (submitted Thu, 4 Mar 2004 06:33:45 -0500 (EST), with
a followup message on Fri, 5 Mar 2004 03:15:26 -0500 (EST)).   As a reminder,
I've appended the discussion preceding the original patch and my response to
Daniel.

Paul Hilfinger

Original message of 4 March (minus patch):

For Ada, we found it convenient to do a name-resolution pass after parsing and
before evaluation of expressions.  The most convenient form on which to
perform this resolution is the prefix form (that way, we can use the usual 
type-computing machinery already included in expression evaluation).  
Unfortunately, prefixification occurs after and separate from parsing.  
The obvious thing to do was to add a function to the language vector for
post-parsing.  For most languages, it does nothing.  The patch below
does most of the work in inserting this hook, including the introduction
of a parse-in-type-context function that provides a type context for 
the post-parser.  In its current form, this patch is a NOP that merely
provides the hooks.

Paul Hilfinger

2004-03-04  Paul N. Hilfinger  <Hilfinger@gnat.com>

        * language.h (language_defn): Add new la_post_parser field.
        * parser-defs.h (null_post_parser): New declaration (default for
        la_post_parser).
        
        * parse.c (parse_exp_1): Move code to parse_exp_in_context and
        insert call to that function.
        (parse_exp_in_context): New function, including code formerly in
        parse_exp_1.  Calls language-dependent post-parser after 
        prefixification.
        (parse_expression_in_context): New exported function.
        (null_post_parser): New definition.
        * expression.h (parse_expression_in_context): Add declaration.
        
        * p-lang.c (pascal_language_defn): Add trivial post-parser.
        * c-lang.c (c_language_defn): Ditto.
        (cplus_language_defn): Ditto.
        (asm_language_defn): Ditto.
        (minimal_language_defn): Ditto.
        * f-lang.c (f_language_defn): Ditto.
        * jv-lang.c (java_language_defn): Ditto.
        * language.c (unknown_language_defn): Ditto.
        (auto_language_defn): Ditto.
        (local_language_defn): Ditto.
        * m2-lang.c (m2_language_defn): Ditto.
        * scm-lang.c (scm_language_defn): Ditto.
        * obj-lang.c (objc_language_defn): Ditto.
        
------------------------------------------------------------

My reply to Daniel Jacobowitz of 5 March:

> Could you explain more about why you found this necessary?  It's hard
> to evaluate the patch without that.

Daniel,

Sure.  In Ada mode, we handle overloaded functions (not just those
that are the Ada equivalent of member functions).  More precisely, we
resolve overloading that can be resolved bottom-up, as C++ (almost
always) does.  The issue we encountered was the point at which GDB
discovers it cannot resolve the overloading.

With a command such as 

     print f(3)

there is no problem: you can resolve during execution, and print an error
message (or whatever) then.  But what about 

     cond 1 (f(3) > 12)

?  In similar C++ examples, such as

     cond 1 (A.f(3) > 12)

you'll find that resolution problems are reported when the breakpoint is 
hit, possibly long after the breakpoint is set.  This is safe (the program
stops), but we felt it was somewhat annoying that one didn't notice the 
problem earlier.  

We perform resolution in the obvious way, but that calls for
determining the static types of the arguments.  While it is possible
to do so during parsing, it would mean partially rebuilding the
existing infrastructure that allows GDB to compute types and expression
values.  We thought it would be easier to operate on the same prefix
form that is used for evaluation.  Unfortunately, this happens only AFTER 
the language-dependent parser returns.

Paul Hilfinger
Ada Core Technologies, Inc.



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