Yasm Assembler mainline development tree (ffmpeg 依赖)
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/*
* Error and warning reporting and related functions.
*
* Copyright (C) 2001 Peter Johnson
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND OTHER CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS''
* AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR OTHER CONTRIBUTORS BE
* LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
* CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
* SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
* INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
* CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
* ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
* POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#define YASM_LIB_INTERNAL
#include "util.h"
/*@unused@*/ RCSID("$IdPath$");
#include <ctype.h>
#ifdef STDC_HEADERS
# include <stdarg.h>
#endif
#include "coretype.h"
#include "linemgr.h"
#include "errwarn.h"
#define MSG_MAXSIZE 1024
/* Default handlers for replacable functions */
static /*@exits@*/ void def_internal_error_
(const char *file, unsigned int line, const char *message);
static /*@exits@*/ void def_fatal(const char *message, va_list va);
static const char *def_gettext_hook(const char *msgid);
/* Storage for errwarn's "extern" functions */
/*@exits@*/ void (*yasm_internal_error_)
(const char *file, unsigned int line, const char *message)
= def_internal_error_;
/*@exits@*/ void (*yasm_fatal) (const char *message, va_list va) = def_fatal;
const char * (*yasm_gettext_hook) (const char *msgid) = def_gettext_hook;
/* Enabled warnings. See errwarn.h for a list. */
static unsigned long warn_class_enabled;
/* Total error count */
static unsigned int error_count;
/* Total warning count */
static unsigned int warning_count;
typedef /*@reldef@*/ SLIST_HEAD(errwarndatahead_s, errwarn_data)
errwarndatahead;
static /*@only@*/ /*@null@*/ errwarndatahead errwarns;
typedef struct errwarn_data {
/*@reldef@*/ SLIST_ENTRY(errwarn_data) link;
enum { WE_UNKNOWN, WE_ERROR, WE_WARNING, WE_PARSERERROR } type;
unsigned long line;
unsigned long displine;
/* FIXME: This should not be a fixed size. But we don't have vasprintf()
* right now. */
char msg[MSG_MAXSIZE];
} errwarn_data;
/* Last inserted error/warning. Used to speed up insertions. */
static /*@null@*/ errwarn_data *previous_we;
/* Static buffer for use by conv_unprint(). */
static char unprint[5];
static const char *
def_gettext_hook(const char *msgid)
{
return msgid;
}
void
yasm_errwarn_initialize(void)
{
/* Default enabled warnings. See errwarn.h for a list. */
warn_class_enabled =
(1UL<<YASM_WARN_GENERAL) | (1UL<<YASM_WARN_UNREC_CHAR) |
(1UL<<YASM_WARN_PREPROC) | (0UL<<YASM_WARN_ORPHAN_LABEL);
error_count = 0;
warning_count = 0;
SLIST_INIT(&errwarns);
previous_we = NULL;
}
void
yasm_errwarn_cleanup(void)
{
errwarn_data *we;
/* Delete all error/warnings */
while (!SLIST_EMPTY(&errwarns)) {
we = SLIST_FIRST(&errwarns);
SLIST_REMOVE_HEAD(&errwarns, link);
yasm_xfree(we);
}
}
/* Convert a possibly unprintable character into a printable string, using
* standard cat(1) convention for unprintable characters.
*/
char *
yasm__conv_unprint(int ch)
{
int pos = 0;
if (((ch & ~0x7F) != 0) /*!isascii(ch)*/ && !isprint(ch)) {
unprint[pos++] = 'M';
unprint[pos++] = '-';
ch &= toascii(ch);
}
if (iscntrl(ch)) {
unprint[pos++] = '^';
unprint[pos++] = (ch == '\177') ? '?' : ch | 0100;
} else
unprint[pos++] = ch;
unprint[pos] = '\0';
return unprint;
}
/* Report an internal error. Essentially a fatal error with trace info.
* Exit immediately because it's essentially an assert() trap.
*/
static void
def_internal_error_(const char *file, unsigned int line, const char *message)
{
fprintf(stderr,
yasm_gettext_hook(N_("INTERNAL ERROR at %s, line %u: %s\n")),
file, line, yasm_gettext_hook(message));
#ifdef HAVE_ABORT
abort();
#else
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
#endif
}
/* Report a fatal error. These are unrecoverable (such as running out of
* memory), so just exit immediately.
*/
static void
def_fatal(const char *fmt, va_list va)
{
fprintf(stderr, "%s: ", yasm_gettext_hook(N_("FATAL")));
vfprintf(stderr, yasm_gettext_hook(fmt), va);
fputc('\n', stderr);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
/* Create an errwarn structure in the correct linked list location.
* If replace_parser_error is nonzero, overwrites the last error if its
* type is WE_PARSERERROR.
*/
static errwarn_data *
errwarn_data_new(unsigned long line, unsigned long displine,
int replace_parser_error)
{
errwarn_data *first, *next, *ins_we, *we;
enum { INS_NONE, INS_HEAD, INS_AFTER } action = INS_NONE;
Massive libyasm / module interface update - Phase 1 As yasm has evolved, various minor additions have been made to libyasm to support the new features. These minor additions have accumulated, and some contain significant redundancies. In addition, the core focus of yasm has begun to move away from the front-end commandline program "yasm" to focusing on libyasm, a collection of reusable routines for use in all sorts of programs dealing with code at the assembly level, and the modules that provide specific features for parsing such code. This libyasm/module update focuses on cleaning up much of the cruft that has accumulated in libyasm, standardizing function names, eliminating redundancies, making many of the core objects more reusable for future extensions, and starting to make libyasm and the modules thread-safe by eliminating static variables. Specific changes include: - Making a symbol table data structure (no longer global). It follows a factory model for creating symrecs. - Label symbols now refer only to bytecodes; bytecodes have a pointer to their containing section. - Standardizing on *_create() and *_destroy() for allocation/deallocation. - Adding a standardized callback mechanism for all data structures that allow associated data. Allowed the removal of objfmt and dbgfmt-specific data callbacks in their interfaces. - Unmodularizing linemgr, but allowing multiple linemap instances (linemgr is now renamed linemap). - Remove references to lindex; all virtual lines (from linemap) are now just "line"s. - Eliminating the bytecode "type" enum, instead adding a standardized callback mechanism for custom (and standard internal) bytecode types. This will make it much easier to add new bytecodes, and eliminate the possibility of type collisions. This also allowed the removal of the of_data and df_data bytecodes, as objfmts and dbgfmts can now easily implement their own bytecodes, and the cleanup of arch's bytecode usage. - Remove the bytecodehead and sectionhead pseudo-containers, instead making true containers: section now implements all the functions of bytecodehead, and the new object data structure implements all the functions of sectionhead. - Add object data structure: it's a container that contains sections, a symbol table, and a line mapping for a single object. Every former use of sectionhead now takes an object. - Make arch interface and all standard architectures thread-safe: yasm_arch_module is the module interface; it contains a create() function that returns a yasm_arch * to store local yasm_arch data; all yasm_arch_module functions take the yasm_arch *. - Make nasm parser thread-safe. To be done in phase 2: making other module interfaces thread-safe. Note that while the module interface may be thread-safe, not all modules may be written in such a fashion (hopefully all the "standard" ones will be, but this is yet to be determined). svn path=/trunk/yasm/; revision=1058
21 years ago
/* Find the entry with either line=line or the last one with line<line.
* Start with the last entry added to speed the search.
*/
ins_we = previous_we;
first = SLIST_FIRST(&errwarns);
if (!ins_we || !first)
action = INS_HEAD;
while (action == INS_NONE) {
next = SLIST_NEXT(ins_we, link);
Massive libyasm / module interface update - Phase 1 As yasm has evolved, various minor additions have been made to libyasm to support the new features. These minor additions have accumulated, and some contain significant redundancies. In addition, the core focus of yasm has begun to move away from the front-end commandline program "yasm" to focusing on libyasm, a collection of reusable routines for use in all sorts of programs dealing with code at the assembly level, and the modules that provide specific features for parsing such code. This libyasm/module update focuses on cleaning up much of the cruft that has accumulated in libyasm, standardizing function names, eliminating redundancies, making many of the core objects more reusable for future extensions, and starting to make libyasm and the modules thread-safe by eliminating static variables. Specific changes include: - Making a symbol table data structure (no longer global). It follows a factory model for creating symrecs. - Label symbols now refer only to bytecodes; bytecodes have a pointer to their containing section. - Standardizing on *_create() and *_destroy() for allocation/deallocation. - Adding a standardized callback mechanism for all data structures that allow associated data. Allowed the removal of objfmt and dbgfmt-specific data callbacks in their interfaces. - Unmodularizing linemgr, but allowing multiple linemap instances (linemgr is now renamed linemap). - Remove references to lindex; all virtual lines (from linemap) are now just "line"s. - Eliminating the bytecode "type" enum, instead adding a standardized callback mechanism for custom (and standard internal) bytecode types. This will make it much easier to add new bytecodes, and eliminate the possibility of type collisions. This also allowed the removal of the of_data and df_data bytecodes, as objfmts and dbgfmts can now easily implement their own bytecodes, and the cleanup of arch's bytecode usage. - Remove the bytecodehead and sectionhead pseudo-containers, instead making true containers: section now implements all the functions of bytecodehead, and the new object data structure implements all the functions of sectionhead. - Add object data structure: it's a container that contains sections, a symbol table, and a line mapping for a single object. Every former use of sectionhead now takes an object. - Make arch interface and all standard architectures thread-safe: yasm_arch_module is the module interface; it contains a create() function that returns a yasm_arch * to store local yasm_arch data; all yasm_arch_module functions take the yasm_arch *. - Make nasm parser thread-safe. To be done in phase 2: making other module interfaces thread-safe. Note that while the module interface may be thread-safe, not all modules may be written in such a fashion (hopefully all the "standard" ones will be, but this is yet to be determined). svn path=/trunk/yasm/; revision=1058
21 years ago
if (line < ins_we->line) {
if (ins_we == first)
action = INS_HEAD;
else
ins_we = first;
} else if (!next)
action = INS_AFTER;
Massive libyasm / module interface update - Phase 1 As yasm has evolved, various minor additions have been made to libyasm to support the new features. These minor additions have accumulated, and some contain significant redundancies. In addition, the core focus of yasm has begun to move away from the front-end commandline program "yasm" to focusing on libyasm, a collection of reusable routines for use in all sorts of programs dealing with code at the assembly level, and the modules that provide specific features for parsing such code. This libyasm/module update focuses on cleaning up much of the cruft that has accumulated in libyasm, standardizing function names, eliminating redundancies, making many of the core objects more reusable for future extensions, and starting to make libyasm and the modules thread-safe by eliminating static variables. Specific changes include: - Making a symbol table data structure (no longer global). It follows a factory model for creating symrecs. - Label symbols now refer only to bytecodes; bytecodes have a pointer to their containing section. - Standardizing on *_create() and *_destroy() for allocation/deallocation. - Adding a standardized callback mechanism for all data structures that allow associated data. Allowed the removal of objfmt and dbgfmt-specific data callbacks in their interfaces. - Unmodularizing linemgr, but allowing multiple linemap instances (linemgr is now renamed linemap). - Remove references to lindex; all virtual lines (from linemap) are now just "line"s. - Eliminating the bytecode "type" enum, instead adding a standardized callback mechanism for custom (and standard internal) bytecode types. This will make it much easier to add new bytecodes, and eliminate the possibility of type collisions. This also allowed the removal of the of_data and df_data bytecodes, as objfmts and dbgfmts can now easily implement their own bytecodes, and the cleanup of arch's bytecode usage. - Remove the bytecodehead and sectionhead pseudo-containers, instead making true containers: section now implements all the functions of bytecodehead, and the new object data structure implements all the functions of sectionhead. - Add object data structure: it's a container that contains sections, a symbol table, and a line mapping for a single object. Every former use of sectionhead now takes an object. - Make arch interface and all standard architectures thread-safe: yasm_arch_module is the module interface; it contains a create() function that returns a yasm_arch * to store local yasm_arch data; all yasm_arch_module functions take the yasm_arch *. - Make nasm parser thread-safe. To be done in phase 2: making other module interfaces thread-safe. Note that while the module interface may be thread-safe, not all modules may be written in such a fashion (hopefully all the "standard" ones will be, but this is yet to be determined). svn path=/trunk/yasm/; revision=1058
21 years ago
else if (line >= ins_we->line && line < next->line)
action = INS_AFTER;
else
ins_we = next;
}
if (replace_parser_error && ins_we && ins_we->type == WE_PARSERERROR) {
/* overwrite last error */
we = ins_we;
} else {
/* add a new error */
we = yasm_xmalloc(sizeof(errwarn_data));
we->type = WE_UNKNOWN;
Massive libyasm / module interface update - Phase 1 As yasm has evolved, various minor additions have been made to libyasm to support the new features. These minor additions have accumulated, and some contain significant redundancies. In addition, the core focus of yasm has begun to move away from the front-end commandline program "yasm" to focusing on libyasm, a collection of reusable routines for use in all sorts of programs dealing with code at the assembly level, and the modules that provide specific features for parsing such code. This libyasm/module update focuses on cleaning up much of the cruft that has accumulated in libyasm, standardizing function names, eliminating redundancies, making many of the core objects more reusable for future extensions, and starting to make libyasm and the modules thread-safe by eliminating static variables. Specific changes include: - Making a symbol table data structure (no longer global). It follows a factory model for creating symrecs. - Label symbols now refer only to bytecodes; bytecodes have a pointer to their containing section. - Standardizing on *_create() and *_destroy() for allocation/deallocation. - Adding a standardized callback mechanism for all data structures that allow associated data. Allowed the removal of objfmt and dbgfmt-specific data callbacks in their interfaces. - Unmodularizing linemgr, but allowing multiple linemap instances (linemgr is now renamed linemap). - Remove references to lindex; all virtual lines (from linemap) are now just "line"s. - Eliminating the bytecode "type" enum, instead adding a standardized callback mechanism for custom (and standard internal) bytecode types. This will make it much easier to add new bytecodes, and eliminate the possibility of type collisions. This also allowed the removal of the of_data and df_data bytecodes, as objfmts and dbgfmts can now easily implement their own bytecodes, and the cleanup of arch's bytecode usage. - Remove the bytecodehead and sectionhead pseudo-containers, instead making true containers: section now implements all the functions of bytecodehead, and the new object data structure implements all the functions of sectionhead. - Add object data structure: it's a container that contains sections, a symbol table, and a line mapping for a single object. Every former use of sectionhead now takes an object. - Make arch interface and all standard architectures thread-safe: yasm_arch_module is the module interface; it contains a create() function that returns a yasm_arch * to store local yasm_arch data; all yasm_arch_module functions take the yasm_arch *. - Make nasm parser thread-safe. To be done in phase 2: making other module interfaces thread-safe. Note that while the module interface may be thread-safe, not all modules may be written in such a fashion (hopefully all the "standard" ones will be, but this is yet to be determined). svn path=/trunk/yasm/; revision=1058
21 years ago
we->line = line;
we->displine = displine;
if (action == INS_HEAD)
SLIST_INSERT_HEAD(&errwarns, we, link);
else if (action == INS_AFTER) {
assert(ins_we != NULL);
SLIST_INSERT_AFTER(ins_we, we, link);
} else
yasm_internal_error(N_("Unexpected errwarn insert action"));
}
/* Remember previous err/warn */
previous_we = we;
return we;
}
/* Register an error at line line, displaying line displine. Does not print
* the error, only stores it for output_all() to print.
*/
void
yasm__error_va_at(unsigned long line, unsigned long displine, const char *fmt,
va_list va)
{
errwarn_data *we = errwarn_data_new(line, displine, 1);
we->type = WE_ERROR;
#ifdef HAVE_VSNPRINTF
vsnprintf(we->msg, MSG_MAXSIZE, yasm_gettext_hook(fmt), va);
#else
vsprintf(we->msg, yasm_gettext_hook(fmt), va);
#endif
error_count++;
}
/* Register an warning at line line, displaying line displine. Does not print
* the warning, only stores it for output_all() to print.
*/
void
yasm__warning_va_at(yasm_warn_class num, unsigned long line,
unsigned long displine, const char *fmt, va_list va)
{
errwarn_data *we;
if (!(warn_class_enabled & (1UL<<num)))
return; /* warning is part of disabled class */
we = errwarn_data_new(line, displine, 0);
we->type = WE_WARNING;
#ifdef HAVE_VSNPRINTF
vsnprintf(we->msg, MSG_MAXSIZE, yasm_gettext_hook(fmt), va);
#else
vsprintf(we->msg, yasm_gettext_hook(fmt), va);
#endif
warning_count++;
}
Massive libyasm / module interface update - Phase 1 As yasm has evolved, various minor additions have been made to libyasm to support the new features. These minor additions have accumulated, and some contain significant redundancies. In addition, the core focus of yasm has begun to move away from the front-end commandline program "yasm" to focusing on libyasm, a collection of reusable routines for use in all sorts of programs dealing with code at the assembly level, and the modules that provide specific features for parsing such code. This libyasm/module update focuses on cleaning up much of the cruft that has accumulated in libyasm, standardizing function names, eliminating redundancies, making many of the core objects more reusable for future extensions, and starting to make libyasm and the modules thread-safe by eliminating static variables. Specific changes include: - Making a symbol table data structure (no longer global). It follows a factory model for creating symrecs. - Label symbols now refer only to bytecodes; bytecodes have a pointer to their containing section. - Standardizing on *_create() and *_destroy() for allocation/deallocation. - Adding a standardized callback mechanism for all data structures that allow associated data. Allowed the removal of objfmt and dbgfmt-specific data callbacks in their interfaces. - Unmodularizing linemgr, but allowing multiple linemap instances (linemgr is now renamed linemap). - Remove references to lindex; all virtual lines (from linemap) are now just "line"s. - Eliminating the bytecode "type" enum, instead adding a standardized callback mechanism for custom (and standard internal) bytecode types. This will make it much easier to add new bytecodes, and eliminate the possibility of type collisions. This also allowed the removal of the of_data and df_data bytecodes, as objfmts and dbgfmts can now easily implement their own bytecodes, and the cleanup of arch's bytecode usage. - Remove the bytecodehead and sectionhead pseudo-containers, instead making true containers: section now implements all the functions of bytecodehead, and the new object data structure implements all the functions of sectionhead. - Add object data structure: it's a container that contains sections, a symbol table, and a line mapping for a single object. Every former use of sectionhead now takes an object. - Make arch interface and all standard architectures thread-safe: yasm_arch_module is the module interface; it contains a create() function that returns a yasm_arch * to store local yasm_arch data; all yasm_arch_module functions take the yasm_arch *. - Make nasm parser thread-safe. To be done in phase 2: making other module interfaces thread-safe. Note that while the module interface may be thread-safe, not all modules may be written in such a fashion (hopefully all the "standard" ones will be, but this is yet to be determined). svn path=/trunk/yasm/; revision=1058
21 years ago
/* Register an error at line line. Does not print the error, only stores it
* for output_all() to print.
*/
void
Massive libyasm / module interface update - Phase 1 As yasm has evolved, various minor additions have been made to libyasm to support the new features. These minor additions have accumulated, and some contain significant redundancies. In addition, the core focus of yasm has begun to move away from the front-end commandline program "yasm" to focusing on libyasm, a collection of reusable routines for use in all sorts of programs dealing with code at the assembly level, and the modules that provide specific features for parsing such code. This libyasm/module update focuses on cleaning up much of the cruft that has accumulated in libyasm, standardizing function names, eliminating redundancies, making many of the core objects more reusable for future extensions, and starting to make libyasm and the modules thread-safe by eliminating static variables. Specific changes include: - Making a symbol table data structure (no longer global). It follows a factory model for creating symrecs. - Label symbols now refer only to bytecodes; bytecodes have a pointer to their containing section. - Standardizing on *_create() and *_destroy() for allocation/deallocation. - Adding a standardized callback mechanism for all data structures that allow associated data. Allowed the removal of objfmt and dbgfmt-specific data callbacks in their interfaces. - Unmodularizing linemgr, but allowing multiple linemap instances (linemgr is now renamed linemap). - Remove references to lindex; all virtual lines (from linemap) are now just "line"s. - Eliminating the bytecode "type" enum, instead adding a standardized callback mechanism for custom (and standard internal) bytecode types. This will make it much easier to add new bytecodes, and eliminate the possibility of type collisions. This also allowed the removal of the of_data and df_data bytecodes, as objfmts and dbgfmts can now easily implement their own bytecodes, and the cleanup of arch's bytecode usage. - Remove the bytecodehead and sectionhead pseudo-containers, instead making true containers: section now implements all the functions of bytecodehead, and the new object data structure implements all the functions of sectionhead. - Add object data structure: it's a container that contains sections, a symbol table, and a line mapping for a single object. Every former use of sectionhead now takes an object. - Make arch interface and all standard architectures thread-safe: yasm_arch_module is the module interface; it contains a create() function that returns a yasm_arch * to store local yasm_arch data; all yasm_arch_module functions take the yasm_arch *. - Make nasm parser thread-safe. To be done in phase 2: making other module interfaces thread-safe. Note that while the module interface may be thread-safe, not all modules may be written in such a fashion (hopefully all the "standard" ones will be, but this is yet to be determined). svn path=/trunk/yasm/; revision=1058
21 years ago
yasm__error(unsigned long line, const char *fmt, ...)
{
va_list va;
va_start(va, fmt);
yasm__error_va_at(line, line, fmt, va);
va_end(va);
}
/* Register an error at line line, displaying line displine. Does not print
* the error, only stores it for output_all() to print.
*/
void
yasm__error_at(unsigned long line, unsigned long displine, const char *fmt,
...)
{
va_list va;
va_start(va, fmt);
yasm__error_va_at(line, displine, fmt, va);
va_end(va);
}
Massive libyasm / module interface update - Phase 1 As yasm has evolved, various minor additions have been made to libyasm to support the new features. These minor additions have accumulated, and some contain significant redundancies. In addition, the core focus of yasm has begun to move away from the front-end commandline program "yasm" to focusing on libyasm, a collection of reusable routines for use in all sorts of programs dealing with code at the assembly level, and the modules that provide specific features for parsing such code. This libyasm/module update focuses on cleaning up much of the cruft that has accumulated in libyasm, standardizing function names, eliminating redundancies, making many of the core objects more reusable for future extensions, and starting to make libyasm and the modules thread-safe by eliminating static variables. Specific changes include: - Making a symbol table data structure (no longer global). It follows a factory model for creating symrecs. - Label symbols now refer only to bytecodes; bytecodes have a pointer to their containing section. - Standardizing on *_create() and *_destroy() for allocation/deallocation. - Adding a standardized callback mechanism for all data structures that allow associated data. Allowed the removal of objfmt and dbgfmt-specific data callbacks in their interfaces. - Unmodularizing linemgr, but allowing multiple linemap instances (linemgr is now renamed linemap). - Remove references to lindex; all virtual lines (from linemap) are now just "line"s. - Eliminating the bytecode "type" enum, instead adding a standardized callback mechanism for custom (and standard internal) bytecode types. This will make it much easier to add new bytecodes, and eliminate the possibility of type collisions. This also allowed the removal of the of_data and df_data bytecodes, as objfmts and dbgfmts can now easily implement their own bytecodes, and the cleanup of arch's bytecode usage. - Remove the bytecodehead and sectionhead pseudo-containers, instead making true containers: section now implements all the functions of bytecodehead, and the new object data structure implements all the functions of sectionhead. - Add object data structure: it's a container that contains sections, a symbol table, and a line mapping for a single object. Every former use of sectionhead now takes an object. - Make arch interface and all standard architectures thread-safe: yasm_arch_module is the module interface; it contains a create() function that returns a yasm_arch * to store local yasm_arch data; all yasm_arch_module functions take the yasm_arch *. - Make nasm parser thread-safe. To be done in phase 2: making other module interfaces thread-safe. Note that while the module interface may be thread-safe, not all modules may be written in such a fashion (hopefully all the "standard" ones will be, but this is yet to be determined). svn path=/trunk/yasm/; revision=1058
21 years ago
/* Register an warning at line line. Does not print the warning, only stores
* it for output_all() to print.
*/
void
Massive libyasm / module interface update - Phase 1 As yasm has evolved, various minor additions have been made to libyasm to support the new features. These minor additions have accumulated, and some contain significant redundancies. In addition, the core focus of yasm has begun to move away from the front-end commandline program "yasm" to focusing on libyasm, a collection of reusable routines for use in all sorts of programs dealing with code at the assembly level, and the modules that provide specific features for parsing such code. This libyasm/module update focuses on cleaning up much of the cruft that has accumulated in libyasm, standardizing function names, eliminating redundancies, making many of the core objects more reusable for future extensions, and starting to make libyasm and the modules thread-safe by eliminating static variables. Specific changes include: - Making a symbol table data structure (no longer global). It follows a factory model for creating symrecs. - Label symbols now refer only to bytecodes; bytecodes have a pointer to their containing section. - Standardizing on *_create() and *_destroy() for allocation/deallocation. - Adding a standardized callback mechanism for all data structures that allow associated data. Allowed the removal of objfmt and dbgfmt-specific data callbacks in their interfaces. - Unmodularizing linemgr, but allowing multiple linemap instances (linemgr is now renamed linemap). - Remove references to lindex; all virtual lines (from linemap) are now just "line"s. - Eliminating the bytecode "type" enum, instead adding a standardized callback mechanism for custom (and standard internal) bytecode types. This will make it much easier to add new bytecodes, and eliminate the possibility of type collisions. This also allowed the removal of the of_data and df_data bytecodes, as objfmts and dbgfmts can now easily implement their own bytecodes, and the cleanup of arch's bytecode usage. - Remove the bytecodehead and sectionhead pseudo-containers, instead making true containers: section now implements all the functions of bytecodehead, and the new object data structure implements all the functions of sectionhead. - Add object data structure: it's a container that contains sections, a symbol table, and a line mapping for a single object. Every former use of sectionhead now takes an object. - Make arch interface and all standard architectures thread-safe: yasm_arch_module is the module interface; it contains a create() function that returns a yasm_arch * to store local yasm_arch data; all yasm_arch_module functions take the yasm_arch *. - Make nasm parser thread-safe. To be done in phase 2: making other module interfaces thread-safe. Note that while the module interface may be thread-safe, not all modules may be written in such a fashion (hopefully all the "standard" ones will be, but this is yet to be determined). svn path=/trunk/yasm/; revision=1058
21 years ago
yasm__warning(yasm_warn_class num, unsigned long line, const char *fmt, ...)
{
va_list va;
va_start(va, fmt);
yasm__warning_va_at(num, line, line, fmt, va);
va_end(va);
}
/* Register an warning at line line, displaying line displine. Does not print
* the warning, only stores it for output_all() to print.
*/
void
yasm__warning_at(yasm_warn_class num, unsigned long line,
unsigned long displine, const char *fmt, ...)
{
va_list va;
va_start(va, fmt);
yasm__warning_va_at(num, line, line, fmt, va);
va_end(va);
}
/* Parser error handler. Moves YACC-style error into our error handling
* system.
*/
void
Massive libyasm / module interface update - Phase 1 As yasm has evolved, various minor additions have been made to libyasm to support the new features. These minor additions have accumulated, and some contain significant redundancies. In addition, the core focus of yasm has begun to move away from the front-end commandline program "yasm" to focusing on libyasm, a collection of reusable routines for use in all sorts of programs dealing with code at the assembly level, and the modules that provide specific features for parsing such code. This libyasm/module update focuses on cleaning up much of the cruft that has accumulated in libyasm, standardizing function names, eliminating redundancies, making many of the core objects more reusable for future extensions, and starting to make libyasm and the modules thread-safe by eliminating static variables. Specific changes include: - Making a symbol table data structure (no longer global). It follows a factory model for creating symrecs. - Label symbols now refer only to bytecodes; bytecodes have a pointer to their containing section. - Standardizing on *_create() and *_destroy() for allocation/deallocation. - Adding a standardized callback mechanism for all data structures that allow associated data. Allowed the removal of objfmt and dbgfmt-specific data callbacks in their interfaces. - Unmodularizing linemgr, but allowing multiple linemap instances (linemgr is now renamed linemap). - Remove references to lindex; all virtual lines (from linemap) are now just "line"s. - Eliminating the bytecode "type" enum, instead adding a standardized callback mechanism for custom (and standard internal) bytecode types. This will make it much easier to add new bytecodes, and eliminate the possibility of type collisions. This also allowed the removal of the of_data and df_data bytecodes, as objfmts and dbgfmts can now easily implement their own bytecodes, and the cleanup of arch's bytecode usage. - Remove the bytecodehead and sectionhead pseudo-containers, instead making true containers: section now implements all the functions of bytecodehead, and the new object data structure implements all the functions of sectionhead. - Add object data structure: it's a container that contains sections, a symbol table, and a line mapping for a single object. Every former use of sectionhead now takes an object. - Make arch interface and all standard architectures thread-safe: yasm_arch_module is the module interface; it contains a create() function that returns a yasm_arch * to store local yasm_arch data; all yasm_arch_module functions take the yasm_arch *. - Make nasm parser thread-safe. To be done in phase 2: making other module interfaces thread-safe. Note that while the module interface may be thread-safe, not all modules may be written in such a fashion (hopefully all the "standard" ones will be, but this is yet to be determined). svn path=/trunk/yasm/; revision=1058
21 years ago
yasm__parser_error(unsigned long line, const char *s)
{
Massive libyasm / module interface update - Phase 1 As yasm has evolved, various minor additions have been made to libyasm to support the new features. These minor additions have accumulated, and some contain significant redundancies. In addition, the core focus of yasm has begun to move away from the front-end commandline program "yasm" to focusing on libyasm, a collection of reusable routines for use in all sorts of programs dealing with code at the assembly level, and the modules that provide specific features for parsing such code. This libyasm/module update focuses on cleaning up much of the cruft that has accumulated in libyasm, standardizing function names, eliminating redundancies, making many of the core objects more reusable for future extensions, and starting to make libyasm and the modules thread-safe by eliminating static variables. Specific changes include: - Making a symbol table data structure (no longer global). It follows a factory model for creating symrecs. - Label symbols now refer only to bytecodes; bytecodes have a pointer to their containing section. - Standardizing on *_create() and *_destroy() for allocation/deallocation. - Adding a standardized callback mechanism for all data structures that allow associated data. Allowed the removal of objfmt and dbgfmt-specific data callbacks in their interfaces. - Unmodularizing linemgr, but allowing multiple linemap instances (linemgr is now renamed linemap). - Remove references to lindex; all virtual lines (from linemap) are now just "line"s. - Eliminating the bytecode "type" enum, instead adding a standardized callback mechanism for custom (and standard internal) bytecode types. This will make it much easier to add new bytecodes, and eliminate the possibility of type collisions. This also allowed the removal of the of_data and df_data bytecodes, as objfmts and dbgfmts can now easily implement their own bytecodes, and the cleanup of arch's bytecode usage. - Remove the bytecodehead and sectionhead pseudo-containers, instead making true containers: section now implements all the functions of bytecodehead, and the new object data structure implements all the functions of sectionhead. - Add object data structure: it's a container that contains sections, a symbol table, and a line mapping for a single object. Every former use of sectionhead now takes an object. - Make arch interface and all standard architectures thread-safe: yasm_arch_module is the module interface; it contains a create() function that returns a yasm_arch * to store local yasm_arch data; all yasm_arch_module functions take the yasm_arch *. - Make nasm parser thread-safe. To be done in phase 2: making other module interfaces thread-safe. Note that while the module interface may be thread-safe, not all modules may be written in such a fashion (hopefully all the "standard" ones will be, but this is yet to be determined). svn path=/trunk/yasm/; revision=1058
21 years ago
yasm__error(line, N_("parser error: %s"), s);
previous_we->type = WE_PARSERERROR;
}
void
yasm_warn_enable(yasm_warn_class num)
{
warn_class_enabled |= (1UL<<num);
}
void
yasm_warn_disable(yasm_warn_class num)
{
warn_class_enabled &= ~(1UL<<num);
}
void
yasm_warn_disable_all(void)
{
warn_class_enabled = 0;
}
unsigned int
yasm_get_num_errors(int warning_as_error)
{
if (warning_as_error)
return error_count+warning_count;
else
return error_count;
}
void
Massive libyasm / module interface update - Phase 1 As yasm has evolved, various minor additions have been made to libyasm to support the new features. These minor additions have accumulated, and some contain significant redundancies. In addition, the core focus of yasm has begun to move away from the front-end commandline program "yasm" to focusing on libyasm, a collection of reusable routines for use in all sorts of programs dealing with code at the assembly level, and the modules that provide specific features for parsing such code. This libyasm/module update focuses on cleaning up much of the cruft that has accumulated in libyasm, standardizing function names, eliminating redundancies, making many of the core objects more reusable for future extensions, and starting to make libyasm and the modules thread-safe by eliminating static variables. Specific changes include: - Making a symbol table data structure (no longer global). It follows a factory model for creating symrecs. - Label symbols now refer only to bytecodes; bytecodes have a pointer to their containing section. - Standardizing on *_create() and *_destroy() for allocation/deallocation. - Adding a standardized callback mechanism for all data structures that allow associated data. Allowed the removal of objfmt and dbgfmt-specific data callbacks in their interfaces. - Unmodularizing linemgr, but allowing multiple linemap instances (linemgr is now renamed linemap). - Remove references to lindex; all virtual lines (from linemap) are now just "line"s. - Eliminating the bytecode "type" enum, instead adding a standardized callback mechanism for custom (and standard internal) bytecode types. This will make it much easier to add new bytecodes, and eliminate the possibility of type collisions. This also allowed the removal of the of_data and df_data bytecodes, as objfmts and dbgfmts can now easily implement their own bytecodes, and the cleanup of arch's bytecode usage. - Remove the bytecodehead and sectionhead pseudo-containers, instead making true containers: section now implements all the functions of bytecodehead, and the new object data structure implements all the functions of sectionhead. - Add object data structure: it's a container that contains sections, a symbol table, and a line mapping for a single object. Every former use of sectionhead now takes an object. - Make arch interface and all standard architectures thread-safe: yasm_arch_module is the module interface; it contains a create() function that returns a yasm_arch * to store local yasm_arch data; all yasm_arch_module functions take the yasm_arch *. - Make nasm parser thread-safe. To be done in phase 2: making other module interfaces thread-safe. Note that while the module interface may be thread-safe, not all modules may be written in such a fashion (hopefully all the "standard" ones will be, but this is yet to be determined). svn path=/trunk/yasm/; revision=1058
21 years ago
yasm_errwarn_output_all(yasm_linemap *lm, int warning_as_error,
yasm_print_error_func print_error, yasm_print_warning_func print_warning)
{
errwarn_data *we;
const char *filename;
unsigned long line;
/* If we're treating warnings as errors, tell the user about it. */
if (warning_as_error && warning_as_error != 2) {
print_error("", 0,
yasm_gettext_hook(N_("warnings being treated as errors")));
warning_as_error = 2;
}
/* Output error/warnings. */
SLIST_FOREACH(we, &errwarns, link) {
/* Output error/warning */
yasm_linemap_lookup(lm, we->displine, &filename, &line);
if (we->type == WE_ERROR)
print_error(filename, line, we->msg);
else
print_warning(filename, line, we->msg);
}
}
void
yasm__fatal(const char *message, ...)
{
va_list va;
va_start(va, message);
yasm_fatal(message, va);
/*@notreached@*/
va_end(va);
}