/* * (c) Thomas Pornin 1999 - 2002 * (c) Louis P. Santillan 2011 * This file is derived from tune.h * * 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. * 4. The name of the authors may not be used to endorse or promote * products derived from this software without specific prior written * permission. * * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT 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 AUTHORS OR 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. * */ /* ====================================================================== */ /* * The LOW_MEM macro triggers the use of macro storage which uses less * memory. It actually also improves performance on large, modern machines * (due to less cache pressure). This option implies no limitation (except * on the number of arguments a macro may, which is then limited to 32766) * so it is on by default. Non-LOW_MEM code is considered deprecated. */ #define LOW_MEM /* ====================================================================== */ /* * Define AMIGA for systems using "drive letters" at the beginning of * some paths; define MSDOS on systems with drive letters and using * backslashes to seperate directory components. */ /* #define AMIGA */ /* #define MSDOS */ /* ====================================================================== */ /* * Define this if your compiler does not know the strftime() function; * TurboC 2.01 under Msdos does not know strftime(). */ /* #define NOSTRFTIME */ /* ====================================================================== */ /* * Buffering: there are two levels of buffering on input and output streams: * the standard libc buffering (manageable with setbuf() and setvbuf()) * and some buffering provided by ucpp itself. The ucpp buffering uses * two buffers, of size respectively INPUT_BUF_MEMG and OUTPUT_BUF_MEMG * (as defined below). * You can disable one or both of these bufferings by defining the macros * NO_LIBC_BUF and NO_UCPP_BUF. */ /* #define NO_LIBC_BUF */ /* #define NO_UCPP_BUF */ /* * On Unix stations, the system call mmap() might be used on input files. * This option is a subclause of ucpp internal buffering. On one station, * a 10% speed improvement was observed. Do not define this unless the * host architecture has the following characteristics: * -- Posix / Single Unix compliance * -- Text files correspond one to one with memory representation * If a file is not seekable or not mmapable, ucpp will revert to the * standard fread() solution. * * This feature is still considered beta quality. On some systems where * files can be bigger than memory address space (mainly, 32-bit systems * with files bigger than 4 GB), this option makes ucpp fail to operate * on those extremely large files. */ #define UCPP_MMAP /* * Performance issues: * -- On memory-starved systems, such as Minix-i86, do not use ucpp * buffering; keep only libc buffering. * -- If you do not use libc buffering, activate the UCPP_MMAP option. * Note that the UCPP_MMAP option is ignored if ucpp buffering is not * activated. * * On an Athlon 1200 running FreeBSD 4.7, the best performances are * achieved when libc buffering is activated and/or UCPP_MMAP is on. */ /* ====================================================================== */ /* * Define this if you want ucpp to generate tokenized PRAGMA tokens; * otherwise, it will generate raw string contents. This setting is * irrelevant to the stand-alone version of ucpp. */ #define PRAGMA_TOKENIZE /* * Define this to the special character that marks the end of tokens with * a string value inside a tokenized PRAGMA token. The #pragma and _Pragma() * directives which use this character will be a bit more difficult to * decode (but ucpp will not mind). 0 cannot be used. '\n' is fine because * it cannot appear inside a #pragma or _Pragma(), since newlines cannot be * embedded inside tokens, neither directly nor by macro substitution and * stringization. Besides, '\n' is portable. */ #define PRAGMA_TOKEN_END ((unsigned char)'\n') /* * Define this if you want ucpp to include encountered #pragma directives * in its output in non-lexer mode; _Pragma() are translated to equivalent * #pragma directives. */ #define PRAGMA_DUMP /* * According to my interpretation of the C99 standard, _Pragma() are * evaluated wherever macro expansion could take place. However, Neil Booth, * whose mother language is English (contrary to me) and who is well aware * of the C99 standard (and especially the C preprocessor) told me that * it was unclear whether _Pragma() are evaluated inside directives such * as #if, #include and #line. If you want to disable the evaluation of * _Pragma() inside such directives, define the following macro. */ /* #define NO_PRAGMA_IN_DIRECTIVE */ /* * The C99 standard mandates that the operator `##' must yield a single, * valid token, lest undefined behaviour befall upon thy head. Hence, * for instance, `+ ## +=' is forbidden, because `++=' is not a valid * token (although it is a valid list of two tokens, `++' and `='). * However, ucpp only emits a warning for such sin, and unmerges the * tokens (thus emitting `+' then `+=' for that example). When ucpp * produces text output, those two tokens will be separated by a space * character so that the basic rule of text output is preserved: when * parsed again, text output yields the exact same stream of tokens. * That extra space is virtual: it does not count as a true whitespace * token for stringization. * * However, it might be desirable, for some uses other than preprocessing * C source code, not to emit that extra space at all. To make ucpp behave * that way, define the DSHARP_TOKEN_MERGE macro. Please note that this * can trigger spurious token merging. For instance, with that macro * activated, `+ ## +=' will be output as `++=' which, if preprocessed * again, will read as `++' followed by `='. * * All this is irrelevant to lexer mode; and trying to merge incompatible * tokens is a shooting offence, anyway. */ /* #define DSHARP_TOKEN_MERGE */ /* ====================================================================== */ /* * Define INMACRO_FLAG to include two flags to the structure lexer_state, * that tell whether tokens come from a macro-replacement, and count those * macro-replacements. */ /* #define INMACRO_FLAG */ /* ====================================================================== */ /* * Paths where files are looked for by default, when #include is used. * Typical path is /usr/local/include and /usr/include, in that order. * If you want to set up no path, define the macro to 0. * * For Linux, get gcc includes too, or you will miss things like stddef.h. * The exact path varies much, depending on the distribution. */ #define STD_INCLUDE_PATH "/usr/local/include", "/usr/include" /* ====================================================================== */ /* * Arithmetic code for evaluation of #if expressions. Evaluation * uses either a native machine type, or an emulated two's complement * type. Division by 0 and overflow on division are considered as errors * and reported as such. If ARITHMETIC_CHECKS is defined, all other * operations that imply undefined or implementation-defined behaviour * are reported as warnings but otherwise performed nonetheless. * * For native type evaluation, the following macros should be defined: * NATIVE_SIGNED the native signed type * NATIVE_UNSIGNED the native corresponding unsigned type * NATIVE_UNSIGNED_BITS the native unsigned type width, in bits * NATIVE_SIGNED_MIN the native signed type minimum value * NATIVE_SIGNED_MAX the native signed type maximum value * * The code in the arith.c file performs some tricky detection * operations on the native type representation and possible existence * of a trap representation. These operations assume a C99-compliant * compiler; on a C90-only compiler, the operations are valid but may * yield incorrect results. You may force those settings with some * more macros: see the comments in arith.c (look for "ARCH_DEFINED"). * Remember that this is mostly a non-issue, unless you are building * ucpp with a pre-C99 cross-compiler and either the host or target * architecture uses a non-two's complement representation of signed * integers. Such a combination is pretty rare nowadays, so the best * you can do is forgetting completely this paragraph and live in peace. * * * If you do not have a handy native type (for instance, you compile ucpp * with a C90 compiler which lacks the "long long" type, or you compile * ucpp for a cross-compiler which should support an evaluation integer * type of a size that is not available on the host machine), you may use * a simulated type. The type uses two's complement representation and * may have any width from 2 bits to twice the underlying native type * width, inclusive (odd widths are allowed). To use an emulated type, * make sure that NATIVE_SIGNED is not defined, and define the following * macros: * SIMUL_ARITH_SUBTYPE the native underlying type to use * SIMUL_SUBTYPE_BITS the native underlying type width * SIMUL_NUMBITS the emulated type width * * Undefined and implementation-defined behaviours are warned upon, if * ARITHMETIC_CHECKS is defined. Results are truncated to the type * width; shift count for the << and >> operators is reduced modulo the * emulatd type width; right shifting of a signed negative value performs * sign extension (the result is left-padded with bits set to 1). */ /* * For native type evaluation with a 64-bit "long long" type. */ #define NATIVE_SIGNED long long #define NATIVE_UNSIGNED unsigned long long #define NATIVE_UNSIGNED_BITS 64 #define NATIVE_SIGNED_MIN (-9223372036854775807LL - 1) #define NATIVE_SIGNED_MAX 9223372036854775807LL /* * For emulation of a 64-bit type using a native 32-bit "unsigned long" * type. #undef NATIVE_SIGNED #define SIMUL_ARITH_SUBTYPE unsigned long #define SIMUL_SUBTYPE_BITS 32 #define SIMUL_NUMBITS 64 */ /* * Comment out the following line if you want to deactivate arithmetic * checks (warnings upon undefined and implementation-defined * behaviour). Arithmetic checks slow down a bit arithmetic operations, * especially multiplications, but this should not be an issue with * typical C source code. */ #define ARITHMETIC_CHECKS /* ====================================================================== */ /* * To force signedness of wide character constants, define WCHAR_SIGNEDNESS * to 0 for unsigned, 1 for signed. By default, wide character constants * are signed if the native `char' type is signed, and unsigned otherwise. #define WCHAR_SIGNEDNESS 0 */ /* * Standard assertions. They should include one cpu() assertion, one machine() * assertion (identical to cpu()), and one or more system() assertions. * * for Linux/PC: cpu(i386), machine(i386), system(unix), system(linux) * for Linux/Alpha: cpu(alpha), machine(alpha), system(unix), system(linux) * for Sparc/Solaris: cpu(sparc), machine(sparc), system(unix), system(solaris) * * These are only suggestions. On Solaris, machine() should be defined * for i386 or sparc (standard system header use such an assertion). For * cross-compilation, define assertions related to the target architecture. * * If you want no standard assertion, define STD_ASSERT to 0. */ #define STD_ASSERT 0 /* #define STD_ASSERT "cpu(i386)", "machine(i386)", "system(unix)", \ "system(freebsd)" */ /* ====================================================================== */ /* * System predefined macros. Nothing really mandatory, but some programs * might rely on those. * Each string must be either "name" or "name=token-list". If you want * no predefined macro, define STD_MACROS to 0. */ #define STD_MACROS 0 /* #define STD_MACROS "__FreeBSD=4", "__unix", "__i386", \ "__FreeBSD__=4", "__unix__", "__i386__" */ /* ====================================================================== */ /* * Default flags; HANDLE_ASSERTIONS is required for Solaris system headers. * See cpp.h for the definition of these flags. */ #define DEFAULT_CPP_FLAGS (DISCARD_COMMENTS | WARN_STANDARD \ | WARN_PRAGMA | FAIL_SHARP | MACRO_VAARG \ | CPLUSPLUS_COMMENTS | LINE_NUM | TEXT_OUTPUT \ | KEEP_OUTPUT | HANDLE_TRIGRAPHS \ | HANDLE_ASSERTIONS) #define DEFAULT_LEXER_FLAGS (DISCARD_COMMENTS | WARN_STANDARD | FAIL_SHARP \ | MACRO_VAARG | CPLUSPLUS_COMMENTS | LEXER \ | HANDLE_TRIGRAPHS | HANDLE_ASSERTIONS) /* ====================================================================== */ /* * Define this to use sigsetjmp()/siglongjmp() instead of setjmp()/longjmp(). * This is non-ANSI, but it improves performance on some POSIX system. * On typical C source code, such improvement is completely negligeable. */ /* #define POSIX_JMP */ /* ====================================================================== */ /* * Maximum value (plus one) of a character handled by the lexer; 128 is * alright for ASCII native source code, but 256 is needed for EBCDIC. * 256 is safe in both cases; you will have big problems if you set * this value to INT_MAX or above. On Minix-i86 or Msdos (small memory * model), define MAX_CHAR_VAL to 128. * * Set MAX_CHAR_VAL to a power of two to increase lexing speed. Beware * that lexer.c defines a static array of size MSTATE * MAX_CHAR_VAL * values of type int (MSTATE is defined in lexer.c and is about 40). */ #define MAX_CHAR_VAL 128 /* * If you want some extra character to be considered as whitespace, * define this macro to that space. On ISO-8859-1 machines, 160 is * the code for the unbreakable space. */ /* #define UNBREAKABLE_SPACE 160 */ /* * If you want whitespace tokens contents to be recorded (making them * tokens with a string content), define this. The macro STRING_TOKEN * will be adjusted accordingly. * Without this option, whitespace tokens are not even returned by the * lex() function. This is irrelevant for the non-lexer mode (almost -- * it might slow down a bit ucpp, and with this option, comments will be * kept inside #pragma directives). */ /* #define SEMPER_FIDELIS */ /* End of options overridable by UCPP_CONFIG and config.h */