This is a fork of Ian Piumarta's original peg
tool with some enhancements:
- The generated C code compiles cleanly as C++, which means actions in a grammar can be written in C++.
- Case-insensitive string token matching: just put an
i
immediately after a string literal. - Improved error handling: a new field
__maxpos
in theyycontext
points just past the farthest character successfully matched, which is a reasonable position to show the user as where the error occurred. - Fixed a crashing bug parsing certain string literals.
NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
OPTIONS
A SIMPLE EXAMPLE
PEG GRAMMARS
PEG GRAMMAR FOR PEG GRAMMARS
LEG GRAMMARS
LEG EXAMPLE: A DESK CALCULATOR
LEG GRAMMAR FOR LEG GRAMMARS
CUSTOMISING THE PARSER
LEG EXAMPLE: EXTENDING THE PARSER’S CONTEXT
DIAGNOSTICS
CAVEATS
BUGS
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
peg, leg − parser generators
peg [−hvV −o output][filename ...]
leg [−hvV −o output][filename ...]
peg and leg are tools for generating recursive−descent parsers: programs that perform pattern matching on text. They process a Parsing Expression Grammar (PEG) [Ford 2004] to produce a program that recognises legal sentences of that grammar. peg processes PEGs written using the original syntax described by Ford; leg processes PEGs written using slightly different syntax and conventions that are intended to make it an attractive replacement for parsers built with lex(1) and yacc(1). Unlike lex and yacc, peg and leg support unlimited backtracking, provide ordered choice as a means for disambiguation, and can combine scanning (lexical analysis) and parsing (syntactic analysis) into a single activity.
peg reads the specified filenames, or standard input if no filenames are given, for a grammar describing the parser to generate. peg then generates a C source file that defines a function yyparse(). This C source file can be included in, or compiled and then linked with, a client program. Each time the client program calls yyparse() the parser consumes input text according to the parsing rules, starting from the first rule in the grammar. yyparse() returns non−zero if the input could be parsed according to the grammar; it returns zero if the input could not be parsed.
The prefix ’yy’ or ’YY’ is prepended to all externally−visible symbols in the generated parser. This is intended to reduce the risk of namespace pollution in client programs. (The choice of ’yy’ is historical; see lex(1) and yacc(1), for example.)
peg and leg provide the following options:
−h | prints a summary of available options and then exits. |
−o<output> | writes the generated parser to the file output instead of the standard output. |
−P | suppresses #line directives in the output. |
−v | writes verbose information to standard error while working. |
−V | writes version information to standard error then exits. |
The following peg input specifies a grammar with a single rule (called ’start’) that is satisfied when the input contains the string "username".
start <− "username"
(The quotation marks are not part of the matched text; they serve to indicate a literal string to be matched.) In other words, yyparse() in the generated C source will return non−zero only if the next eight characters read from the input spell the word "username". If the input contains anything else, yyparse() returns zero and no input will have been consumed. (Subsequent calls to yyparse() will also return zero, since the parser is effectively blocked looking for the string "username".) To ensure progress we can add an alternative clause to the ’start’ rule that will match any single character if "username" is not found.
start <− "username"
/ .
yyparse() now always returns non−zero (except at the very end of the input). To do something useful we can add actions to the rules. These actions are performed after a complete match is found (starting from the first rule) and are chosen according to the ’path’ taken through the grammar to match the input. (Linguists would call this path a ’phrase marker’.)
start <− "username" { printf("%s\\n", getlogin()); }
/ < . > { putchar(yytext[0]); }
The first line instructs the parser to print the user’s login name whenever it sees "username" in the input. If that match fails, the second line tells the parser to echo the next character on the input the standard output. Our parser is now performing useful work: it will copy the input to the output, replacing all occurrences of "username" with the user’s account name.
Note the angle brackets (’<’ and ’>’) that were added to the second alternative. These have no effect on the meaning of the rule, but serve to delimit the text made available to the following action in the variable yytext.
If the above grammar is placed in the file username.peg, running the command
peg −o username.c username.peg
will save the corresponding parser in the file username.c. To create a complete program this parser could be included by a C program as follows.
#include <stdio.h> /* printf(), putchar() */
#include <unistd.h> /* getlogin() */
#include "username.c" /* yyparse() */
int main()
{
while (yyparse()) /* repeat until EOF */
;
return 0;
}
A grammar consists of a set of named rules.
name <− pattern
name
The element stands for the entire pattern in the rule with the given name.
" characters "
A character or string enclosed in double quotes is matched literally. The ANSI C escape sequences are recognised within the characters.
' characters '
A character or string enclosed in single quotes is matched literally, as above.
[ characters ]
A set of characters enclosed in
square brackets matches any single character from the set,
with escape characters recognised as above. If the set
begins with an uparrow ^
then the set is negated (the
element matches any character not in the set). Any
pair of characters separated with a dash -
represents the range of characters from the first to the
second, inclusive. A single alphabetic character or
underscore is matched by the following set.
[a-zA-Z_]
Similarly, the following matches any single non-digit character.
[^0-9]
( pattern )
Parentheses are used for grouping (modifying the precedence of the operators described below).
{ action }
Curly braces surround actions. The action is arbitrary C source code to be executed at the end of matching. Any braces within the action must be properly nested. Any input text that was matched before the action and delimited by angle brackets (see below) is made available within the action as the contents of the character array yytext. The length of (number of characters in) yytext is available in the variable yyleng. (These variable names are historical; see lex(1).)
Symbol | Description |
---|---|
. | A dot matches any character. Note that the only time this fails is at the end of file, where there is nocharacter to match. |
< | An opening angle bracket always matches (consuming no input) and causes the parser to begin accumulating matched text. This text will be made available to actions in the variable yytext. |
> | A closing angle bracket always matches (consuming no input) and causes the parser to stop accumulating text for yytext. |
The above elements can be made optional and/or repeatable with the following suffixes:
element ?
The element is optional. If present on the input, it is consumed and the match succeeds. If not present on the input, no text is consumed and the match succeeds anyway.
element +
The element is repeatable. If present on the input, one or more occurrences of element are consumed and the match succeeds. If no occurrences of element are present on the input, the match fails.
element *
The element is optional and repeatable. If present on the input, one or more occurrences of element are consumed and the match succeeds. If no occurrences of element are present on the input, the match succeeds anyway.
The above elements and suffixes can be converted into predicates (that match arbitrary input text and subsequently succeed or fail without consuming that input) with the following prefixes:
& element
The predicate succeeds only if element can be matched. Input text scanned while matching element is not consumed from the input and remains available for subsequent matching.
! element
The predicate succeeds only if element cannot be matched. Input
text scanned while matching element is not consumed from the
input and remains available for subsequent matching. A popular
idiom is !.
which matches the end of file, after the last character of the
input has already been consumed.
A special form of the &
predicate is provided:
&{ expression }
In this predicate the simple C expression (not statement) is evaluated immediately when the parser reaches the predicate. If the expression yields non-zero (true) the 'match' succeeds and the parser continues with the next element in the pattern. If the expression yields zero (false) the 'match' fails and the parser backs up to look for an alternative parse of the input.
Several elements (with or without prefixes and suffixes) can be
combined into a sequence by writing them one after the other. The entire
sequence matches only if each individual element within it matches,
from left to right.
Sequences can be separated into disjoint alternatives by the
alternation operator /
.
sequence-1 / sequence-2 / ... / sequence-N
Each sequence is tried in turn until one of them matches, at which time matching for the overall pattern succeeds. If none of the sequences matches then the match of the overall pattern fails.
Finally, the pound sign (#
) introduces a comment (discarded) that con-
tinues until the end of the line.
To summarise the above, the parser tries to match the input text against a pattern containing literals, names (representing other rules), and various operators (written as prefixes, suffixes, juxtapo- sition for sequencing and and infix alternation operator) that modify how the elements within the pattern are matched. Matches are made from left to right, 'descending' into named sub-rules as they are encoun- tered. If the matching process fails, the parser 'back tracks' ('rewinding' the input appropriately in the process) to find the near- est alternative 'path' through the grammar. In other words the parser performs a depth-first, left-to-right search for the first success- fully-matching path through the rules. If found, the actions along the successful path are executed (in the order they were encountered).
Note that predicates are evaluated immediately during the search for a successful match, since they contribute to the success or failure of the search. Actions, however, are evaluated only after a successful match has been found.
The grammar for peg grammars is shown below. This will both illustrate and formalise the above description.
Grammar <- Spacing Definition+ EndOfFile
Definition <- Identifier LEFTARROW Expression
Expression <- Sequence ( SLASH Sequence )*
Sequence <- Prefix*
Prefix <- AND Action
/ ( AND | NOT )? Suffix
Suffix <- Primary ( QUERY / STAR / PLUS )?
Primary <- Identifier !LEFTARROW
/ OPEN Expression CLOSE
/ Literal
/ Class
/ DOT
/ Action
/ BEGIN
/ END
Identifier <- < IdentStart IdentCont* > Spacing
IdentStart <- [a-zA-Z_]
IdentCont <- IdentStart / [0-9]
Literal <- ['] < ( !['] Char )* > ['] Spacing
/ ["] < ( !["] Char )* > ["] Spacing
Class <- '[' < ( !']' Range )* > ']' Spacing
Range <- Char '-' Char / Char
Char <- '\\' [abefnrtv'"\[\]\\]
/ '\\' [0-3][0-7][0-7]
/ '\\' [0-7][0-7]?
/ '\\' '-'
/ !'\\' .
LEFTARROW <- '<-' Spacing
SLASH <- '/' Spacing
AND <- '&' Spacing
NOT <- '!' Spacing
QUERY <- '?' Spacing
STAR <- '*' Spacing
PLUS <- '+' Spacing
OPEN <- '(' Spacing
CLOSE <- ')' Spacing
DOT <- '.' Spacing
Spacing <- ( Space / Comment )*
Comment <- '#' ( !EndOfLine . )* EndOfLine
Space <- ' ' / '\t' / EndOfLine
EndOfLine <- '\r\n' / '\n' / '\r'
EndOfFile <- !.
Action <- '{' < [^}]* > '}' Spacing
BEGIN <- '<' Spacing
END <- '>' Spacing
leg is a variant of peg that adds some features of lex(1) and yacc(1). It differs from peg in the following ways.
%{ text... %}
A declaration section can appear anywhere that a rule definition
is expected. The text between the delimiters %{
and %}
is
copied verbatim to the generated C parser code before the code
that implements the parser itself.
name = pattern
The 'assignment' operator =
replaces the left arrow operator <-
rule-name
Hyphens can appear as letters in the names of rules. Each hyphen
is converted into an underscore in the generated C source code. A
single hyphen -
is a legal rule name.
- = [ \t\n\r]*
number = [0-9]+ -
name = [a-zA-Z_][a-zA_Z_0-9]* -
l-paren = '(' -
r-paren = ')' -
This example shows how ignored whitespace can be obvious when reading the grammar and yet unobtrusive when placed liberally at the end of every rule associated with a lexical element.
seq-1 | seq-2
The alternation operator is vertical bar |
rather than forward
slash /
. The peg rule
name <- sequence-1
/ sequence-2
/ sequence-3
is therefore written
name = sequence-1
| sequence-2
| sequence-3
;
in leg (with the final semicolon being optional, as described next).
@{ action }
Actions prefixed with an @
symbol will be performed during
parsing, at the time they are encountered while matching the
input text with a rule. Because of back-tracking in the PEG
parsing algorithm, actions prefixed with @
might be performed
multiple times for the same input text. (The usual behviour of
actions is that they are saved up until matching is complete, and
then those that are part of the final derivation are performed in
left-to-right order.) The variable yytext is available within
these actions.
exp ~{ action }
A postfix operator ~{ action }
can be placed after any
expression and will behave like a normal action (arbitrary C
code) except that it is invoked only when exp fails.
It binds less tightly than any other operator except
alternation and sequencing, and is intended to make error
handling and recovery code easier to write. Note that
yytext and yyleng are not available inside
these actions, but the pointer variable yy is
available to give the code access to any user-defined
members of the parser state (see "CUSTOMISING THE
PARSER" below).
Note: it is always a single expression; to invoke an error action for any failure within a sequence, parentheses must be used to group the sequence into a single expression.
rule = e1 e2 e3 ~{ error("e[12] ok; e3 has failed"); }
| ...
rule = (e1 e2 e3) ~{ error("one of e[123] has failed"); }
| ...
"text"i or 'text'i
A quoted string immediately followed by a lowercase i
is
case-insensitive: it will match upper- and lower-case ASCII
letters equivalently. This is useful for languages with
case-insensitive keywords, such as SQL and Pascal.
pattern ;
A semicolon punctuator can optionally terminate a pattern.
%% text...
A double percent %%
terminates the rules (and declarations)
section of the grammar. All text following %%
is copied
verbatim to the generated C parser code after the parser
implementation code.
$$=value
A sub-rule can return a semantic value from an action by
assigning it to the pseudo−variable $$
. All semantic
values must have the same type (which defaults to int
). This
type can be changed by defining YYSTYPE in a declaration
section.
identifier:name
The semantic value returned (by assigning to $$
) from the
sub-rule name is associated with the identifier and can be
referred to in subsequent actions.
The desk calculator example below illustrates the use of
$$
and :
.
The extensions in leg described above allow useful parsers and evaluators (including declarations, grammar rules, and supporting C functions such as ’main’) to be kept within a single source file. To illustrate this we show a simple desk calculator supporting the four common arithmetic operators and named variables. The intermediate results of arithmetic evaluation will be accumulated on an implicit stack by returning them as semantic values from sub−rules.
%{
#include <stdio.h> /* printf() */
#include <stdlib.h> /* atoi() */
int vars[26];
%}
Stmt = - e:Expr EOL { printf("%d\n", e); }
| ( !EOL . )* EOL { printf("error\n"); }
Expr = i:ID ASSIGN s:Sum { $$ = vars[i] = s; }
| s:Sum { $$ = s; }
Sum = l:Product
( PLUS r:Product { l += r; }
| MINUS r:Product { l -= r; }
)* { $$ = l; }
Product = l:Value
( TIMES r:Value { l *= r; }
| DIVIDE r:Value { l /= r; }
)* { $$ = l; }
Value = i:NUMBER { $$ = atoi(yytext); }
| i:ID !ASSIGN { $$ = vars[i]; }
| OPEN i:Expr CLOSE { $$ = i; }
NUMBER = < [0-9]+ > - { $$ = atoi(yytext); }
ID = < [a-z] > - { $$ = yytext[0] - 'a'; }
ASSIGN = '=' -
PLUS = '+' -
MINUS = '-' -
TIMES = '*' -
DIVIDE = '/' -
OPEN = '(' -
CLOSE = ')' -
- = [ \t]*
EOL = '\n' | '\r\n' | '\r' | ';'
%%
int main()
{
while (yyparse())
;
return 0;
}
The grammar for leg grammars is shown below. This will both illustrate and formalise the above description.
grammar = -
( declaration | definition )+
trailer? end-of-file
declaration = '%{' < ( !'%}' . )* > RPERCENT
trailer = '%%' < .* >
definition = identifier EQUAL expression SEMICOLON?
expression = sequence ( BAR sequence )*
sequence = error+
error = prefix ( TILDE action )?
prefix = AND action
| ( AND | NOT )? suffix
suffix = primary ( QUERY | STAR | PLUS )?
primary = identifier COLON identifier !EQUAL
| identifier !EQUAL
| OPEN expression CLOSE
| literal
| class
| DOT
| action
| BEGIN
| END
identifier = < [-a-zA-Z_][-a-zA-Z_0-9]* > -
literal = ['] < ( !['] char )* > ['] -
| ["] < ( !["] char )* > ["] -
class = '[' < ( !']' range )* > ']' -
range = char '-' char | char
char = '\\' [abefnrtv'"\[\]\\]
| '\\' [0-3][0-7][0-7]
| '\\' [0-7][0-7]?
| !'\\' .
action = '{' < braces* > '}' -
braces = '{' braces* '}'
| !'}' .
EQUAL = '=' -
COLON = ':' -
SEMICOLON = ';' -
BAR = '|' -
AND = '&' -
NOT = '!' -
QUERY = '?' -
STAR = '*' -
PLUS = '+' -
OPEN = '(' -
CLOSE = ')' -
DOT = '.' -
BEGIN = '<' -
END = '>' -
TILDE = '~' -
RPERCENT = '%}' -
- = ( space | comment )*
space = ' ' | '\t' | end-of-line
comment = '#' ( !end-of-line . )* end-of-line
end-of-line = '\r\n' | '\n' | '\r'
end-of-file = !.
The following symbols can be redefined in declaration sections to modify the generated parser code.
YYSTYPE
The semantic value type. The pseudo−variable $$
and the
identifiers ’bound’ to rule results with the colon operator :
should all be considered as being declared to have this type. The
default value is int
.
YYPARSE
The name of the main entry point to the parser. The default value
is yyparse
.
YYPARSEFROM
The name of an alternative entry point to the parser. This
function expects one argument: the function corresponding to the
rule from which the search for a match should begin. The default
is yyparsefrom
. Note that yyparse()
is defined as
int yyparse() { return yyparsefrom(yy_foo); }
where ’foo’ is the name of the first rule in the grammar.
YY_INPUT(buf, result, max_size)
This macro is invoked by the parser to obtain more input text.
buf
points to an area of memory that can hold at most
max_size
characters. The macro should copy input text to buf
and then assign the integer variable result
to indicate the
number of characters copied. If no more input is available, the
macro should assign 0 to result
. By default, the YY_INPUT
macro is defined as follows.
#define YY_INPUT(buf, result, max_size) \
{ \
int yyc= getchar(); \
result= (EOF == yyc) ? 0 : (*(buf)= yyc, 1); \
}
Note that if YY_CTX_LOCAL
is defined (see below) then an
additional first argument, containing the parser context, is
passed to YY_INPUT
.
YY_DEBUG
If this symbols is defined then additional code will be included in the parser that prints vast quantities of arcane information to the standard error while the parser is running.
YY_BEGIN
This macro is invoked to mark the start of input text that will
be made available in actions as yytext
. This corresponds to
occurrences of <
in the grammar. These are converted into
predicates that are expected to succeed. The default definition
#define YY_BEGIN (yybegin = yypos, 1)
therefore saves the current input position and returns 1 (’true’) as the result of the predicate.
YY_END
This macros corresponds to >
in the grammar. Again, it is a
predicate so the default definition saves the input position
before ’succeeding’.
#define YY_END (yyend = yypos, 1)
YY_PARSE(T)
This macro declares the parser entry points (yyparse and yyparsefrom) to be of type T. The default definition
#define YY_PARSE(T) T
leaves yyparse()
and yyparsefrom()
with global visibility. If
they should not be externally visible in other source files, this
macro can be redefined to declare them ’static’.
#define YY_PARSE(_T_) static T
YY_CTX_LOCAL
If this symbol is defined during compilation of a generated
parser then global parser state will be kept in a structure of
type yycontext
which can be declared as a local variable. This
allows multiple instances of parsers to coexist and to be
thread−safe. The parsing function yyparse()
will be declared to
expect a first argument of type yycontext*
, an instance of
the structure holding the global state for the parser. This
instance must be allocated and initialised to zero by the client.
A trivial but complete example is as follows.
#include <stdio.h>
#define YY_CTX_LOCAL
#include "the−generated−parser.peg.c"
int main()
{
yycontext ctx;
memset(&ctx, 0, sizeof(yycontext));
while (yyparse(&ctx));
return 0;
}
Note that if this symbol is undefined then the compiled parser
will statically allocate its global state and will be neither
reentrant nor thread−safe. Note also that the parser yycontext
structure is initialised automatically the first time yyparse()
is called; this structure must therefore be properly
initialised to zero before the first call to yyparse()
.
YY_CTX_MEMBERS
If YY_CTX_LOCAL
is defined (see above) then the macro
YY_CTX_MEMBERS
can be defined to expand to any additional
member field declarations that the client would like included in
the declaration of the yycontext
structure type. These
additional members are otherwise ignored by the generated parser.
The instance of ’yycontext’ associated with the currently−active
parser is available within actions as the pointer variable
yy
.
YY_BUFFER_SIZE
The initial size of the text buffer, in bytes. The default is 1024 and the buffer size is doubled whenever required to meet demand during parsing. An application that typically parses much longer strings could increase this to avoid unnecessary buffer reallocation.
YY_STACK_SIZE
The initial size of the variable and action stacks. The default is 128, which is doubled whenever required to meet demand during parsing. Applications that have deep call stacks with many local variables, or that perform many actions after a single successful match, could increase this to avoid unnecessary buffer reallocation.
YY_MALLOC(YY, SIZE)
The memory allocator for all parser−related storage. The
parameters are the current yycontext structure and the number of
bytes to allocate. The default definition is: malloc(SIZE)
YY_REALLOC(YY, PTR, SIZE)
The memory reallocator for dynamically−grown storage (such as
text buffers and variable stacks). The parameters are the current
yycontext structure, the previously−allocated storage, and the
number of bytes to which that storage should be grown. The
default definition is: realloc(PTR, SIZE)
YY_FREE(YY, PTR)
The memory deallocator. The parameters are the current yycontext
structure and the storage to deallocate. The default definition
is: free(PTR)
YYRELEASE
The name of the function that releases all resources held by a yycontext structure. The default value is ’yyrelease’.
The following variables can be referred to within actions.
Type | Variable | Description |
---|---|---|
char* | yybuf | This variable points to the parser’s input buffer used to store input text that has not yet been matched. |
int | yypos | This is the offset (in yybuf) of the next character to be matched and consumed. |
char* | yytext | The most recent matched text delimited by < and > is stored in this variable. |
int | yyleng | This variable indicates the number of characters in yytext . |
yycontext* | yy | This variable points to the instance of yycontext associated with the currently−active parser. |
Programs that wish to release all the resources associated with a parser can use the following function.
yyrelease( yycontext*yy)
Returns all parser−allocated storage associated with yy
to the
system. The storage will be reallocated on the next call to
yyparse()
.
Note that the storage for the yycontext structure itself is never
allocated or reclaimed implicitly. The application must allocate
these structures in automatic storage, or use calloc()
and
free()
to manage them explicitly. The example in the following
section demonstrates one approach to resource management.
The yy
variable passed to actions contains the state of the
parser plus any additional fields defined by YY_CTX_MEMBERS
.
Theses fields can be used to store application−specific
information that is global to a particular call of yyparse(). A
trivial but complete leg example follows in which the yycontext
structure is extended with a count of the number of newline
characters seen in the input so far (the grammar otherwise
consumes and ignores the entire input). The caller of yyparse()
uses count to print the number of lines of input that were
read.
%{
#define YY_CTX_LOCAL 1
#define YY_CTX_MEMBERS \
int count;
%}
Char = ('\n' | '\r\n' | '\r') { yy->count++ }
| .
%%
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
int main()
{
/* create a local parser context in automatic storage */
yycontext yy;
/* the context *must* be initialised to zero before first use*/
memset(&yy, 0, sizeof(yy));
while (yyparse(&yy))
;
printf("%d newlines\n", yy.count);
/* release all resources associated with the context */
yyrelease(&yy);
return 0;
}
peg and leg warn about the following conditions while converting a grammar into a parser.
syntax error
The input grammar was malformed in some way. The error message will include the text about to be matched (often backed up a huge amount from the actual location of the error) and the line number of the most recently considered character (which is often the real location of the problem).
rule ’foo’ used but not defined
The grammar referred to a rule named ’foo’ but no definition for it was given. Attempting to use the generated parser will likely result in errors from the linker due to undefined symbols associated with the missing rule.
rule ’foo’ defined but not used
The grammar defined a rule named ’foo’ and then ignored it. The code associated with the rule is included in the generated parser which will in all other respects be healthy.
possible infinite left recursion in rule ’foo’
There exists at least one path through the grammar that leads from the rule ’foo’ back to (a recursive invocation of) the same rule without consuming any input.
Left recursion, especially that found in standards documents, is often ’direct’ and implies trivial repetition.
# (6.7.6)
direct-abstract-declarator =
LPAREN abstract-declarator RPAREN
| direct-abstract-declarator? LBRACKET assign-expr? RBRACKET
| direct-abstract-declarator? LBRACKET STAR RBRACKET
| direct-abstract-declarator? LPAREN param-type-list? RPAREN
The recursion can easily be eliminated by converting the parts of the pattern following the recursion into a repeatable suffix.
# (6.7.6)
direct-abstract-declarator =
direct-abstract-declarator-head?
direct-abstract-declarator-tail*
direct-abstract-declarator-head =
LPAREN abstract-declarator RPAREN
direct-abstract-declarator-tail =
LBRACKET assign-expr? RBRACKET
| LBRACKET STAR RBRACKET
| LPAREN param-type-list? RPAREN
A parser that accepts empty input will always succeed. Consider the following example, not atypical of a first attempt to write a PEG−based parser:
Program = Expression*
Expression = "whatever"
%%
int main() {
while (yyparse())
puts("success!");
return 0;
}
This program loops forever, no matter what (if any) input is provided on stdin. Many fixes are possible, the easiest being to insist that the parser always consumes some non−empty input. Changing the first line to
Program = Expression+
accomplishes this. If the parser is expected to consume the entire input, then explicitly requiring the end−of−file is also highly recommended:
Program = Expression+ !.
This works because the parser will only fail to match ("!" predicate) any character at all ("." expression) when it attempts to read beyond the end of the input.
You have to type ’man peg’ to read the manual page for leg(1).
The ’yy’ and ’YY’ prefixes cannot be changed.
Left recursion is detected in the input grammar but is not handled correctly in the generated parser.
Diagnostics for errors in the input grammar are obscure and not particularly helpful.
The operators **! **and ~ should really be named the other way around.
Several commonly−used lex(1) features (yywrap(), yyin, etc.) are completely absent.
The generated parser does not contain ’#line’ directives to direct C compiler errors back to the grammar description when appropriate.
D. Val Schorre, META II, a syntax−oriented compiler writing language, 19th ACM National Conference, 1964, pp. 41.301−−41.311. Describes a self−implementing parser generator for analytic grammars with no backtracking.
Alexander Birman, The TMG Recognition Schema, Ph.D. dissertation, Princeton, 1970. A mathematical treatment of the power and complexity of recursive−descent parsing with backtracking.
Bryan Ford, Parsing Expression Grammars: A Recognition−Based Syntactic Foundation, ACM SIGPLAN Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages, 2004. Defines PEGs and analyses them in relation to context−free and regular grammars. Introduces the syntax adopted in peg.
The standard Unix utilities lex(1) and yacc(1) which influenced the syntax and features of leg.
The source code for peg and leg whose grammar parsers are written using themselves.
The latest version of this software and documentation:
http://piumarta.com/software/peg
peg, leg and this manual page were written by Ian Piumarta (first−name at last−name dot com) while investigating the viability of regular and parsing−expression grammars for efficiently extracting type and signature information from C header files.
Please send bug reports and suggestions for improvements to the author at the above address.