This patch makes some small cleanups to the declaration of YYLTYPE,
YYLLOC_DEFAULT and related things.
- We used to use undocumented magic #defines for bison,
YYLTYPE_IS_DECLARED and YYLTYPE_IS_TRIVIAL. This may not be
portable across bison versions. Instead define YYLTYPE as a
macro in terms of struct srcpos, as the info pages suggest.
- Our kernel-derived coding style discourages typedefed
structures. So use 'struct srcpos' instead of 'srcpos'
throughout'.
- Indent the YYLLOC_DEFAULT macro according to our coding
style (it was in GNU indent style, since it was taken from
the example in the bison info).
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
There are several small problems with the current srcpos_string().
- The code unnecessarily uses a temp buffer and two rounds of
*printf(); a single asprintf() will suffice.
- With previous changes, pos->file->name can never be NULL,
and the name field for a srcfile bound to stdin is already
set to something sensible.
- On allocation failure in asprintf() it returns a bogus
result, instead of causing a fatal error like every other
failed allocation.
- The format for representing file/line/column is gratuitously
different from the file/line format we used to use, and the
format used by gcc and bison.
This patch addresses all of these. There remains the problem that
asprintf() is not portable, but that can wait until another patch.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
Our YYLTYPE current carries around first and last line and first and
last column information. However, of these, on the first line
information is actually filled in properly.
Furthermore, filling in the line number information from yylineno is
kind of clunky: we have to copy its value to the srcfile stack and
back to handle include file positioning correctly.
This patch cleans this up. We turn off flex's yylineno option and
instead track the line and column number ourselves from
YY_USER_ACTION. The line and column number are stored directly inside
the srcfile_state structure, so it's automatically a per-file
quantity. We now also fill in all the yylloc from YY_USER_ACTION.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
This patch cleans up our handling of input files, particularly dts
source files, but also (to an extent) other input files such as those
used by /incbin/ and those used in -I dtb and -I fs modes.
We eliminate the current clunky mechanism which combines search paths
(which we don't actually use at present) with the open relative to
current source file behaviour, which we do.
Instead there's a single srcfile_relative_open() entry point for
callers which opens a new input file relative to the current source
file (which the srcpos code tracks internally). It doesn't currently
do search paths, but we can add that later without messing with the
callers, by drawing the search path from a global (which makes sense
anyway, rather than shuffling it around the rest of the processing
code).
That suffices for non-dts input files. For the actual dts files,
srcfile_push() and srcfile_pop() wrappers open the file while also
keeping track of it as the current source file for future opens.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
Implemented some print and copy routines.
Made empty srcpos objects that will be used later.
Protected .h file from multiple #include's.
Added srcpos_error() and srcpos_warn().
Signed-off-by: Jon Loeliger <jdl@freescale.com>
Many places in dtc use strdup(), but none of them actually check the
return value to see if the implied allocation succeeded. This is a
potential bug, which we fix in the patch below by replacing strdup()
with an xstrdup() which in analogy to xmalloc() will quit with a fatal
error if the allocation fails.
I felt the introduciton of util.[ch] was a better choice
for utility oriented code than directly using srcpos.c
for the new string function.
This patch is a re-factoring of Dave Gibson's similar patch.
Signed-off-by: Jon Loeliger <jdl@freescale.com>
All current callers of dtc_open_file() immediately die() if it returns
an error. In a non-interative tool like dtc, it's hard to see what
you could sensibly do to recover from a failure to open an input file
in any case.
Therefore, make dtc_open_file() itself die() if there's an error
opening the requested file. This removes the need for error checking
at the callsites, and ensures a consistent error message in all cases.
While we're at it, change the rror message from fstree.c when we fail
to open the input directory to match dtc_open_file()'s error message.
Signed-off-by: David Gibson <david@gibson.dropbear.id.au>
Looking in the diretory dtc is invoked from is not very useful behavior.
As part of the code reorganization to implement this, I removed the
uniquifying of name storage -- it seemed a rather dubious optimization
given likely usage, and some aspects of it would have been mildly awkward
to integrate with the new code.
Signed-off-by: Scott Wood <scottwood@freescale.com>
Keeps track of open files in a stack, and assigns
a filenum to source positions for each lexical token.
Modified error reporting to show source file as well.
No policy on file directory basis has been decided.
Still handles stdin.
Tested on all arch/powerpc/boot/dts DTS files
Signed-off-by: Jon Loeliger <jdl@freescale.com>