minix/man/man1/flex.1
2005-06-17 13:00:04 +00:00

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.TH FLEX 1 "26 May 1990" "Version 2.3"
.SH NAME
flex, lex - fast lexical analyzer generator
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B flex
.B [-bcdfinpstvFILT8 -C[efmF] -Sskeleton]
.I [filename ...]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.I flex
is a tool for generating
.I scanners:
programs which recognized lexical patterns in text.
.I flex
reads
the given input files, or its standard input if no file names are given,
for a description of a scanner to generate. The description is in
the form of pairs
of regular expressions and C code, called
.I rules. flex
generates as output a C source file,
.B lex.yy.c,
which defines a routine
.B yylex().
This file is compiled and linked with the
.B -lfl
library to produce an executable. When the executable is run,
it analyzes its input for occurrences
of the regular expressions. Whenever it finds one, it executes
the corresponding C code.
.LP
For full documentation, see
.B flexdoc(1).
This manual entry is intended for use as a quick reference.
.SH OPTIONS
.I flex
has the following options:
.TP
.B -b
Generate backtracking information to
.I lex.backtrack.
This is a list of scanner states which require backtracking
and the input characters on which they do so. By adding rules one
can remove backtracking states. If all backtracking states
are eliminated and
.B -f
or
.B -F
is used, the generated scanner will run faster.
.TP
.B -c
is a do-nothing, deprecated option included for POSIX compliance.
.IP
.B NOTE:
in previous releases of
.I flex
.B -c
specified table-compression options. This functionality is
now given by the
.B -C
flag. To ease the the impact of this change, when
.I flex
encounters
.B -c,
it currently issues a warning message and assumes that
.B -C
was desired instead. In the future this "promotion" of
.B -c
to
.B -C
will go away in the name of full POSIX compliance (unless
the POSIX meaning is removed first).
.TP
.B -d
makes the generated scanner run in
.I debug
mode. Whenever a pattern is recognized and the global
.B yy_flex_debug
is non-zero (which is the default), the scanner will
write to
.I stderr
a line of the form:
.nf
--accepting rule at line 53 ("the matched text")
.fi
The line number refers to the location of the rule in the file
defining the scanner (i.e., the file that was fed to flex). Messages
are also generated when the scanner backtracks, accepts the
default rule, reaches the end of its input buffer (or encounters
a NUL; the two look the same as far as the scanner's concerned),
or reaches an end-of-file.
.TP
.B -f
specifies (take your pick)
.I full table
or
.I fast scanner.
No table compression is done. The result is large but fast.
This option is equivalent to
.B -Cf
(see below).
.TP
.B -i
instructs
.I flex
to generate a
.I case-insensitive
scanner. The case of letters given in the
.I flex
input patterns will
be ignored, and tokens in the input will be matched regardless of case. The
matched text given in
.I yytext
will have the preserved case (i.e., it will not be folded).
.TP
.B -n
is another do-nothing, deprecated option included only for
POSIX compliance.
.TP
.B -p
generates a performance report to stderr. The report
consists of comments regarding features of the
.I flex
input file which will cause a loss of performance in the resulting scanner.
.TP
.B -s
causes the
.I default rule
(that unmatched scanner input is echoed to
.I stdout)
to be suppressed. If the scanner encounters input that does not
match any of its rules, it aborts with an error.
.TP
.B -t
instructs
.I flex
to write the scanner it generates to standard output instead
of
.B lex.yy.c.
.TP
.B -v
specifies that
.I flex
should write to
.I stderr
a summary of statistics regarding the scanner it generates.
.TP
.B -F
specifies that the
.I fast
scanner table representation should be used. This representation is
about as fast as the full table representation
.RB ( \-f ),
and for some sets of patterns will be considerably smaller (and for
others, larger). See
.B flexdoc(1)
for details.
.IP
This option is equivalent to
.B -CF
(see below).
.TP
.B -I
instructs
.I flex
to generate an
.I interactive
scanner, that is, a scanner which stops immediately rather than
looking ahead if it knows
that the currently scanned text cannot be part of a longer rule's match.
Again, see
.B flexdoc(1)
for details.
.IP
Note,
.B -I
cannot be used in conjunction with
.I full
or
.I fast tables,
i.e., the
.B -f, -F, -Cf,
or
.B -CF
flags.
.TP
.B -L
instructs
.I flex
not to generate
.B #line
directives in
.B lex.yy.c.
The default is to generate such directives so error
messages in the actions will be correctly
located with respect to the original
.I flex
input file, and not to
the fairly meaningless line numbers of
.B lex.yy.c.
.TP
.B -T
makes
.I flex
run in
.I trace
mode. It will generate a lot of messages to
.I stdout
concerning
the form of the input and the resultant non-deterministic and deterministic
finite automata. This option is mostly for use in maintaining
.I flex.
.TP
.B -8
instructs
.I flex
to generate an 8-bit scanner.
On some sites, this is the default. On others, the default
is 7-bit characters. To see which is the case, check the verbose
.B (-v)
output for "equivalence classes created". If the denominator of
the number shown is 128, then by default
.I flex
is generating 7-bit characters. If it is 256, then the default is
8-bit characters.
.TP
.B -C[efmF]
controls the degree of table compression.
.IP
.B -Ce
directs
.I flex
to construct
.I equivalence classes,
i.e., sets of characters
which have identical lexical properties.
Equivalence classes usually give
dramatic reductions in the final table/object file sizes (typically
a factor of 2-5) and are pretty cheap performance-wise (one array
look-up per character scanned).
.IP
.B -Cf
specifies that the
.I full
scanner tables should be generated -
.I flex
should not compress the
tables by taking advantages of similar transition functions for
different states.
.IP
.B -CF
specifies that the alternate fast scanner representation (described in
.B flexdoc(1))
should be used.
.IP
.B -Cm
directs
.I flex
to construct
.I meta-equivalence classes,
which are sets of equivalence classes (or characters, if equivalence
classes are not being used) that are commonly used together. Meta-equivalence
classes are often a big win when using compressed tables, but they
have a moderate performance impact (one or two "if" tests and one
array look-up per character scanned).
.IP
A lone
.B -C
specifies that the scanner tables should be compressed but neither
equivalence classes nor meta-equivalence classes should be used.
.IP
The options
.B -Cf
or
.B -CF
and
.B -Cm
do not make sense together - there is no opportunity for meta-equivalence
classes if the table is not being compressed. Otherwise the options
may be freely mixed.
.IP
The default setting is
.B -Cem,
which specifies that
.I flex
should generate equivalence classes
and meta-equivalence classes. This setting provides the highest
degree of table compression. You can trade off
faster-executing scanners at the cost of larger tables with
the following generally being true:
.nf
slowest & smallest
-Cem
-Cm
-Ce
-C
-C{f,F}e
-C{f,F}
fastest & largest
.fi
.IP
.B -C
options are not cumulative; whenever the flag is encountered, the
previous -C settings are forgotten.
.TP
.B -Sskeleton_file
overrides the default skeleton file from which
.I flex
constructs its scanners. You'll never need this option unless you are doing
.I flex
maintenance or development.
.SH SUMMARY OF FLEX REGULAR EXPRESSIONS
The patterns in the input are written using an extended set of regular
expressions. These are:
.nf
x match the character 'x'
. any character except newline
[xyz] a "character class"; in this case, the pattern
matches either an 'x', a 'y', or a 'z'
[abj-oZ] a "character class" with a range in it; matches
an 'a', a 'b', any letter from 'j' through 'o',
or a 'Z'
[^A-Z] a "negated character class", i.e., any character
but those in the class. In this case, any
character EXCEPT an uppercase letter.
[^A-Z\\n] any character EXCEPT an uppercase letter or
a newline
r* zero or more r's, where r is any regular expression
r+ one or more r's
r? zero or one r's (that is, "an optional r")
r{2,5} anywhere from two to five r's
r{2,} two or more r's
r{4} exactly 4 r's
{name} the expansion of the "name" definition
(see above)
"[xyz]\\"foo"
the literal string: [xyz]"foo
\\X if X is an 'a', 'b', 'f', 'n', 'r', 't', or 'v',
then the ANSI-C interpretation of \\x.
Otherwise, a literal 'X' (used to escape
operators such as '*')
\\123 the character with octal value 123
\\x2a the character with hexadecimal value 2a
(r) match an r; parentheses are used to override
precedence (see below)
rs the regular expression r followed by the
regular expression s; called "concatenation"
r|s either an r or an s
r/s an r but only if it is followed by an s. The
s is not part of the matched text. This type
of pattern is called as "trailing context".
^r an r, but only at the beginning of a line
r$ an r, but only at the end of a line. Equivalent
to "r/\\n".
<s>r an r, but only in start condition s (see
below for discussion of start conditions)
<s1,s2,s3>r
same, but in any of start conditions s1,
s2, or s3
<<EOF>> an end-of-file
<s1,s2><<EOF>>
an end-of-file when in start condition s1 or s2
.fi
The regular expressions listed above are grouped according to
precedence, from highest precedence at the top to lowest at the bottom.
Those grouped together have equal precedence.
.LP
Some notes on patterns:
.IP -
Negated character classes
.I match newlines
unless "\\n" (or an equivalent escape sequence) is one of the
characters explicitly present in the negated character class
(e.g., "[^A-Z\\n]").
.IP -
A rule can have at most one instance of trailing context (the '/' operator
or the '$' operator). The start condition, '^', and "<<EOF>>" patterns
can only occur at the beginning of a pattern, and, as well as with '/' and '$',
cannot be grouped inside parentheses. The following are all illegal:
.nf
foo/bar$
foo|(bar$)
foo|^bar
<sc1>foo<sc2>bar
.fi
.SH SUMMARY OF SPECIAL ACTIONS
In addition to arbitrary C code, the following can appear in actions:
.IP -
.B ECHO
copies yytext to the scanner's output.
.IP -
.B BEGIN
followed by the name of a start condition places the scanner in the
corresponding start condition.
.IP -
.B REJECT
directs the scanner to proceed on to the "second best" rule which matched the
input (or a prefix of the input).
.B yytext
and
.B yyleng
are set up appropriately. Note that
.B REJECT
is a particularly expensive feature in terms scanner performance;
if it is used in
.I any
of the scanner's actions it will slow down
.I all
of the scanner's matching. Furthermore,
.B REJECT
cannot be used with the
.I -f
or
.I -F
options.
.IP
Note also that unlike the other special actions,
.B REJECT
is a
.I branch;
code immediately following it in the action will
.I not
be executed.
.IP -
.B yymore()
tells the scanner that the next time it matches a rule, the corresponding
token should be
.I appended
onto the current value of
.B yytext
rather than replacing it.
.IP -
.B yyless(n)
returns all but the first
.I n
characters of the current token back to the input stream, where they
will be rescanned when the scanner looks for the next match.
.B yytext
and
.B yyleng
are adjusted appropriately (e.g.,
.B yyleng
will now be equal to
.I n
).
.IP -
.B unput(c)
puts the character
.I c
back onto the input stream. It will be the next character scanned.
.IP -
.B input()
reads the next character from the input stream (this routine is called
.B yyinput()
if the scanner is compiled using
.B C++).
.IP -
.B yyterminate()
can be used in lieu of a return statement in an action. It terminates
the scanner and returns a 0 to the scanner's caller, indicating "all done".
.IP
By default,
.B yyterminate()
is also called when an end-of-file is encountered. It is a macro and
may be redefined.
.IP -
.B YY_NEW_FILE
is an action available only in <<EOF>> rules. It means "Okay, I've
set up a new input file, continue scanning".
.IP -
.B yy_create_buffer( file, size )
takes a
.I FILE
pointer and an integer
.I size.
It returns a YY_BUFFER_STATE
handle to a new input buffer large enough to accomodate
.I size
characters and associated with the given file. When in doubt, use
.B YY_BUF_SIZE
for the size.
.IP -
.B yy_switch_to_buffer( new_buffer )
switches the scanner's processing to scan for tokens from
the given buffer, which must be a YY_BUFFER_STATE.
.IP -
.B yy_delete_buffer( buffer )
deletes the given buffer.
.SH VALUES AVAILABLE TO THE USER
.IP -
.B char *yytext
holds the text of the current token. It may not be modified.
.IP -
.B int yyleng
holds the length of the current token. It may not be modified.
.IP -
.B FILE *yyin
is the file which by default
.I flex
reads from. It may be redefined but doing so only makes sense before
scanning begins. Changing it in the middle of scanning will have
unexpected results since
.I flex
buffers its input. Once scanning terminates because an end-of-file
has been seen,
.B
void yyrestart( FILE *new_file )
may be called to point
.I yyin
at the new input file.
.IP -
.B FILE *yyout
is the file to which
.B ECHO
actions are done. It can be reassigned by the user.
.IP -
.B YY_CURRENT_BUFFER
returns a
.B YY_BUFFER_STATE
handle to the current buffer.
.SH MACROS THE USER CAN REDEFINE
.IP -
.B YY_DECL
controls how the scanning routine is declared.
By default, it is "int yylex()", or, if prototypes are being
used, "int yylex(void)". This definition may be changed by redefining
the "YY_DECL" macro. Note that
if you give arguments to the scanning routine using a
K&R-style/non-prototyped function declaration, you must terminate
the definition with a semi-colon (;).
.IP -
The nature of how the scanner
gets its input can be controlled by redefining the
.B YY_INPUT
macro.
YY_INPUT's calling sequence is "YY_INPUT(buf,result,max_size)". Its
action is to place up to
.I max_size
characters in the character array
.I buf
and return in the integer variable
.I result
either the
number of characters read or the constant YY_NULL (0 on Unix systems)
to indicate EOF. The default YY_INPUT reads from the
global file-pointer "yyin".
A sample redefinition of YY_INPUT (in the definitions
section of the input file):
.nf
%{
#undef YY_INPUT
#define YY_INPUT(buf,result,max_size) \\
{ \\
int c = getchar(); \\
result = (c == EOF) ? YY_NULL : (buf[0] = c, 1); \\
}
%}
.fi
.IP -
When the scanner receives an end-of-file indication from YY_INPUT,
it then checks the
.B yywrap()
function. If
.B yywrap()
returns false (zero), then it is assumed that the
function has gone ahead and set up
.I yyin
to point to another input file, and scanning continues. If it returns
true (non-zero), then the scanner terminates, returning 0 to its
caller.
.IP
The default
.B yywrap()
always returns 1. Presently, to redefine it you must first
"#undef yywrap", as it is currently implemented as a macro. It is
likely that
.B yywrap()
will soon be defined to be a function rather than a macro.
.IP -
YY_USER_ACTION
can be redefined to provide an action
which is always executed prior to the matched rule's action.
.IP -
The macro
.B YY_USER_INIT
may be redefined to provide an action which is always executed before
the first scan.
.IP -
In the generated scanner, the actions are all gathered in one large
switch statement and separated using
.B YY_BREAK,
which may be redefined. By default, it is simply a "break", to separate
each rule's action from the following rule's.
.SH FILES
.TP
.I flex.skel
skeleton scanner.
.TP
.I lex.yy.c
generated scanner (called
.I lexyy.c
on some systems).
.TP
.I lex.backtrack
backtracking information for
.B -b
flag (called
.I lex.bck
on some systems).
.TP
.B -lfl
library with which to link the scanners.
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.LP
flexdoc(1), lex(1), yacc(1), sed(1), awk(9).
.LP
M. E. Lesk and E. Schmidt,
.I LEX - Lexical Analyzer Generator
.SH DIAGNOSTICS
.I reject_used_but_not_detected undefined
or
.LP
.I yymore_used_but_not_detected undefined -
These errors can occur at compile time. They indicate that the
scanner uses
.B REJECT
or
.B yymore()
but that
.I flex
failed to notice the fact, meaning that
.I flex
scanned the first two sections looking for occurrences of these actions
and failed to find any, but somehow you snuck some in (via a #include
file, for example). Make an explicit reference to the action in your
.I flex
input file. (Note that previously
.I flex
supported a
.B %used/%unused
mechanism for dealing with this problem; this feature is still supported
but now deprecated, and will go away soon unless the author hears from
people who can argue compellingly that they need it.)
.LP
.I flex scanner jammed -
a scanner compiled with
.B -s
has encountered an input string which wasn't matched by
any of its rules.
.LP
.I flex input buffer overflowed -
a scanner rule matched a string long enough to overflow the
scanner's internal input buffer (16K bytes - controlled by
.B YY_BUF_MAX
in "flex.skel").
.LP
.I scanner requires -8 flag -
Your scanner specification includes recognizing 8-bit characters and
you did not specify the -8 flag (and your site has not installed flex
with -8 as the default).
.LP
.I
fatal flex scanner internal error--end of buffer missed -
This can occur in an scanner which is reentered after a long-jump
has jumped out (or over) the scanner's activation frame. Before
reentering the scanner, use:
.nf
yyrestart( yyin );
.fi
.LP
.I too many %t classes! -
You managed to put every single character into its own %t class.
.I flex
requires that at least one of the classes share characters.
.SH AUTHOR
Vern Paxson, with the help of many ideas and much inspiration from
Van Jacobson. Original version by Jef Poskanzer.
.LP
See flexdoc(1) for additional credits and the address to send comments to.
.SH DEFICIENCIES / BUGS
.LP
Some trailing context
patterns cannot be properly matched and generate
warning messages ("Dangerous trailing context"). These are
patterns where the ending of the
first part of the rule matches the beginning of the second
part, such as "zx*/xy*", where the 'x*' matches the 'x' at
the beginning of the trailing context. (Note that the POSIX draft
states that the text matched by such patterns is undefined.)
.LP
For some trailing context rules, parts which are actually fixed-length are
not recognized as such, leading to the abovementioned performance loss.
In particular, parts using '|' or {n} (such as "foo{3}") are always
considered variable-length.
.LP
Combining trailing context with the special '|' action can result in
.I fixed
trailing context being turned into the more expensive
.I variable
trailing context. For example, this happens in the following example:
.nf
%%
abc |
xyz/def
.fi
.LP
Use of unput() invalidates yytext and yyleng.
.LP
Use of unput() to push back more text than was matched can
result in the pushed-back text matching a beginning-of-line ('^')
rule even though it didn't come at the beginning of the line
(though this is rare!).
.LP
Pattern-matching of NUL's is substantially slower than matching other
characters.
.LP
.I flex
does not generate correct #line directives for code internal
to the scanner; thus, bugs in
.I flex.skel
yield bogus line numbers.
.LP
Due to both buffering of input and read-ahead, you cannot intermix
calls to <stdio.h> routines, such as, for example,
.B getchar(),
with
.I flex
rules and expect it to work. Call
.B input()
instead.
.LP
The total table entries listed by the
.B -v
flag excludes the number of table entries needed to determine
what rule has been matched. The number of entries is equal
to the number of DFA states if the scanner does not use
.B REJECT,
and somewhat greater than the number of states if it does.
.LP
.B REJECT
cannot be used with the
.I -f
or
.I -F
options.
.LP
Some of the macros, such as
.B yywrap(),
may in the future become functions which live in the
.B -lfl
library. This will doubtless break a lot of code, but may be
required for POSIX-compliance.
.LP
The
.I flex
internal algorithms need documentation.
.\" ref. to awk(9) man page corrected -- ASW 2005-01-15