NAME
XS::Parse::Sublike - XS functions to assist in parsing sub-like syntax
DESCRIPTION
This module provides some XS functions to assist in writing parsers for
sub-like syntax, primarily for authors of keyword plugins using the
PL_keyword_plugin hook mechanism. It is unlikely to be of much use to
anyone else; and highly unlikely to be any use when writing perl code
using these. Unless you are writing a keyword plugin using XS, this
module is not for you.
This module is also currently experimental, and the design is still
evolving and subject to change. Later versions may break ABI
compatibility, requiring changes or at least a rebuild of any module
that depends on it.
XS FUNCTIONS
boot_xs_parse_sublike
void boot_xs_parse_sublike(double ver)
Call this function from your BOOT section in order to initialise the
module and parsing hooks.
ver should either be 0 or a decimal number for the module version
requirement; e.g.
boot_xs_parse_sublike(0.04);
xs_parse_sublike
int xs_parse_sublike(const struct XSParseSublikeHooks *hooks, void *hookdata, OP **op_ptr)
This function performs the actual parsing of a sub-like keyword. It
expects the lexer to be at a position just after the introduction
keyword has been consumed, and will proceed to parse an optional name,
list of attributes, signature (if enabled by use feature 'signatures'),
and code body. The return value and op_ptr can be used directly from
the keyword plugin function. It is intended this function be invoked
from it, and the result returned directly.
For a more automated handling of keywords, see
"register_xs_parse_sublike".
hooks should be a structure that can provide optional function pointers
used to customise the parsing process at various stages. hookdata is an
opaque pointer which is passed through to each of the hook stage
functions.
register_xs_parse_sublike
void register_xs_parse_sublike(const char *keyword,
const struct XSParseSublikeHooks *hooks, void *hookdata)
This function installs a set of parsing hooks to be associated with the
given keyword. Such a keyword will then be handled automatically by a
keyword parser installed by XS::Parse::Sublike itself.
When the keyword is encountered, the hook's permit function is first
tested to see if the keyword is permitted at this point. If the
function returns true then the keyword is consumed and parsed as per
"xs_parse_sublike".
hookdata is an opaque pointer which is passed through to each of the
hook stage functions when they are invoked.
xs_parse_sublike_any
int xs_parse_sublike_any(const struct XSParseSublikeHooks *hooks, void *hookdata,
OP **op_ptr)
This function expects to consume an introduction keyword at the lexer
position which is either sub or the name of another sub-like keyword,
which has been previously registered using "register_xs_parse_sublike".
It then proceeds to parse the subsequent syntax similar to how it would
have parsed if encountered by the module's own keyword parser plugin,
except that the second set of hooks given here also take effect.
If a regular sub is encountered, then this is parsed using the hooks in
a similar way to xs_parse_sublike().
If a different registered sub-like keyword is encountered, then parsing
is performed using both sets of hooks - the ones given to this function
as well as the ones registered with the keyword. This allows their
effects to combined. The hooks given by the hooks argument are
considered to be on the "outside" from those of the registered keyword
"inside". The outside ones run first for all stages, except
pre_blockend which runs them inside-out.
hookdata is an opaque pointer which is passed through to each of the
hook stage functions when they are invoked.
Note that this function is now vaguely discouraged, in favour of using
a prefixing keyword instead, by using the XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_FLAG_PREFIX
flag.
PARSE CONTEXT
The various hook stages all share state about the ongoing parse process
using various fields of the XSParseSublikeContext structure.
struct XSParseSublikeContext {
SV *name;
OP *attrs;
OP *body;
CV *cv;
U32 actions;
HV *moddata;
}
The actions field will contain a bitmask of action flags that control
the various steps that XS::Parse::Sublike might take inbetween invoking
hook stages. The initial value of this field is set after the
name-parsing stage, depending on whether or not a name is found. Stage
hook functions may modify the field to adjust the subsequent behaviour.
At the current ABI version, a module will have to set the
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_COMPAT_FLAG_DYNAMIC_ACTIONS bit of the flags field in
order to make use of the actions field. A future ABI version may remove
this restriction.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_ACTION_CVf_ANON
If set, the start_subparse() call will be set up for an anonymous
function protosub; if not it will be set for a named function. This
is set by default if a name was not found.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_ACTION_SET_CVNAME
If set, the newly-constructed CV will have the given name set on it.
This is set by default if a name was found.
On Perl versions 5.22 and above, this flag can be set even if
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_ACTION_INSTALL_SYMBOL is not. In this case, the CV
will not be reachable via the symbol table, even though it knows its
own name and pretends that it is. On earlier versions of perl this
flag will be ignored in that case.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_ACTION_INSTALL_SYMBOL
If set, the newly-constructed CV will be installed into the symbol
table at its given name. Note that it is not possible to enable this
flag without also enabling XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_ACTION_SET_CVNAME. This
is set by default if a name was found.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_ACTION_REFGEN_ANONCODE
If set, the syntax will yield the OP_REFGEN / OP_ANONCODE optree
fragment typical of anonymous code expressions; if not it will be
OP_NULL. This is set by default if a name was not found.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_ACTION_RET_EXPR
If set, the syntax will parse like an expression; if not it will
parse like a statement. This is set by default if a name was not
found.
The moddata field will point towards an HV that modules can used to
store extra data between stages. As a naming convention a module should
prefix its keys with its own module name and a slash character,
"Some::Module/field". The field will point to a newly-created HV for
every parse invocation, and will be released when each parse is
complete.
PARSE HOOKS
The XSParseSublikeHooks structure provides the following hook stages,
which are invoked in the given order.
The structure has a flags field, which controls various optional parts
of operation. The following flags are defined.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_FLAG_FILTERATTRS
If set, the optional filter_attr stage will be invoked.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_FLAG_BODY_OPTIONAL
If not set, the require_parts field will imply the
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_PART_BODY flag, making the body part required. By
setting this flag this will no longer happen. If all hooks agree,
then the body will become optional.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_FLAG_PREFIX
If set, the keyword is considered to be a prefix that can be placed
in front of sub or another sub-like keyword, to add its set of hooks
in addition to those of the following keyword. These prefices may be
further stacked.
In addition there are two U8 fields named require_parts and skip_parts
which control the behaviour of various parts of the syntax which are
usually optional. Any parts with bits set in require_parts become
non-optional, and an error if they are missing. Any parts with bits set
in skip_parts will skip the relevant part of the parsing process.
When multiple sets of hooks are combined by the xs_parse_sublike_any
function, or as part of parsing prefixing keywords, these bitmasks are
accumulated together with inclusive or. Any part required by any set of
hooks will still be required; any step skipped by either will be
skipped entirely.
If the same bit is set in both fields then the relevant parsing step
will not be performed but it will still be an error for that section to
be missing. This is likely not useful.
Note that for skipped parts, only the actual parsing steps are skipped.
A hook function can still set the relevant fields in the context
structure anyway to force a particular value for those parts.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_PART_NAME
The name of the function.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_PART_ATTRS
The attributes of the function.
This part can be skipped, but the bit is ignored when in
require_parts. It is always permitted to not provide any additional
attributes to a function definition.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_PART_SIGNATURE
The parameter signature of the function.
This part can be skipped, but the bit is ignored when in
require_parts. It is always permitted not to provide a signature for
a function definition, because such syntax only applies when use
feature 'signatures' is in effect, and only on supporting perl
versions.
XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_PART_BODY
The actual body of the function, expressed as a brace-delimited
block.
This part cannot be skipped, but it can be made optional by omitting
it from the require_parts field. Instead of the block, it is
permitted to place a single semicolon (;) to act as a statement
terminator; thus giving the same syntax as a subroutine forward
declaration.
In this case, the body and cv fields of the context structure will
remain NULL.
This flag is currently implied on the require_parts field if the hook
does not supply the XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_FLAG_BODY_OPTIONAL flag; meaning
that most use-cases will make it a required part.
The permit Stage
const char *permit_hintkey
bool (*permit)(pTHX_ void *hookdata)
Called by the installed keyword parser hook which is used to handle
keywords registered by "register_xs_parse_sublike".
As a shortcut for the common case, the permit_hintkey may point to a
string to look up from the hints hash. If the given key name is not
found in the hints hash then the keyword is not permitted. If the key
is present then the permit function is invoked as normal.
If not rejected by a hint key that was not found in the hints hash, the
function part of the stage is called next and should inspect whether
the keyword is permitted at this time perhaps by inspecting other
lexical clues, and return true only if the keyword is permitted.
Both the string and the function are optional. Either or both may be
present. If neither is present then the keyword is always permitted -
which is likely not what you wanted to do.
Parse Name
At this point, the optional name is parsed and filled into the name
field of the context.
The pre_subparse Stage
void (*pre_subparse)(pTHX_ struct XSParseSublikeContext *ctx, void *hookdata)
Invoked just before start_subparse() is called.
Parse Attrs
At this point the optional sub attributes are parsed and filled into
the attrs field of the context, then block_start() is called.
The optional filter_attr Stage
bool (*filter_attr)(pTHX_ struct XSParseSublikeContext *ctx,
SV *attr, SV *val, void *hookdata);
If the flags field includes XS_PARSE_SUBLIKE_FLAG_FILTERATTRS then each
individual attribute is passed through this optional filter function
immediately as each is parsed. attr will be a string SV containing the
name of the attribute, and val will either be NULL, or a string SV
containing the contents of the parens after its name (without the
parens themselves).
If the filter returns true, it indicates that it has in some way
handled the attribute and it should not be added to the list given to
newATTRSUB(). If the filter returns false it will be handled in the
usual way; equivalent to the case where the filter function did not
exist.
The post_blockstart Stage
void (*post_blockstart)(pTHX_ struct XSParseSublikeContext *ctx, void *hookdata)
Invoked after the block_start() function has been called. This hook
stage may wish to perform any alterations of PL_compcv or related,
inspect or alter the lexical pad, provide hints hash values, or any
other tasks before the signature and code body are parsed.
Parse Body
At this point, the main body of the function is parsed and the optree
is stored in the body field of the context. If the perl version
supports sub signatures and they are enabled and found, the body will
be prefixed with the signature ops as well.
The pre_blockend Stage
void (*pre_blockend)(pTHX_ struct XSParseSublikeContext *ctx, void *hookdata)
Invoked just before the block_end() function is invoked. The hook stage
may wish to inspect or alter the optree stored in the body context
field.
The post_newcv Stage
void (*post_newcv)(pTHX_ struct XSParseSublikeContext *ctx, void *hookdata)
Invoked just after newATTRSUB() has been invoked on the optree. The
hook stage may wish to inspect or alter the CV stored in the cv context
field.
AUTHOR
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>