/*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * scanner.h * API for the core scanner (flex machine) * * The core scanner is also used by PL/pgsql, so we provide a public API * for it. However, the rest of the backend is only expected to use the * higher-level API provided by parser.h. * * * Portions Copyright (c) 2003-2013, PgPool Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2012, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * src/include/parser/scanner.h * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #ifndef SCANNER_H #define SCANNER_H #include "keywords.h" /* * The scanner returns extra data about scanned tokens in this union type. * Note that this is a subset of the fields used in YYSTYPE of the bison * parsers built atop the scanner. */ typedef union core_YYSTYPE { int ival; /* for integer literals */ char *str; /* for identifiers and non-integer literals */ const char *keyword; /* canonical spelling of keywords */ } core_YYSTYPE; /* * We track token locations in terms of byte offsets from the start of the * source string, not the column number/line number representation that * bison uses by default. Also, to minimize overhead we track only one * location (usually the first token location) for each construct, not * the beginning and ending locations as bison does by default. It's * therefore sufficient to make YYLTYPE an int. */ #define YYLTYPE int /* * Another important component of the scanner's API is the token code numbers. * However, those are not defined in this file, because bison insists on * defining them for itself. The token codes used by the core scanner are * the ASCII characters plus these: * %token IDENT FCONST SCONST BCONST XCONST Op * %token ICONST PARAM * %token TYPECAST DOT_DOT COLON_EQUALS * The above token definitions *must* be the first ones declared in any * bison parser built atop this scanner, so that they will have consistent * numbers assigned to them (specifically, IDENT = 258 and so on). */ /* * The YY_EXTRA data that a flex scanner allows us to pass around. * Private state needed by the core scanner goes here. Note that the actual * yy_extra struct may be larger and have this as its first component, thus * allowing the calling parser to keep some fields of its own in YY_EXTRA. */ typedef struct core_yy_extra_type { /* * The string the scanner is physically scanning. We keep this mainly so * that we can cheaply compute the offset of the current token (yytext). */ char *scanbuf; Size scanbuflen; /* * The keyword list to use. */ const ScanKeyword *keywords; int num_keywords; /* * literalbuf is used to accumulate literal values when multiple rules are * needed to parse a single literal. Call startlit() to reset buffer to * empty, addlit() to add text. NOTE: the string in literalbuf is NOT * necessarily null-terminated, but there always IS room to add a trailing * null at offset literallen. We store a null only when we need it. */ char *literalbuf; /* palloc'd expandable buffer */ int literallen; /* actual current string length */ int literalalloc; /* current allocated buffer size */ int xcdepth; /* depth of nesting in slash-star comments */ char *dolqstart; /* current $foo$ quote start string */ /* first part of UTF16 surrogate pair for Unicode escapes */ int32 utf16_first_part; /* state variables for literal-lexing warnings */ bool warn_on_first_escape; bool saw_non_ascii; } core_yy_extra_type; /* * The type of yyscanner is opaque outside scan.l. */ typedef void *core_yyscan_t; /* Entry points in parser/scan.l */ extern core_yyscan_t scanner_init(const char *str, core_yy_extra_type *yyext, const ScanKeyword *keywords, int num_keywords); extern void scanner_finish(core_yyscan_t yyscanner); extern int core_yylex(core_YYSTYPE *lvalp, YYLTYPE *llocp, core_yyscan_t yyscanner); extern int scanner_errposition(int location, core_yyscan_t yyscanner); extern void scanner_yyerror(const char *message, core_yyscan_t yyscanner); #endif /* SCANNER_H */