| 1 | Parser Architecture
|
| 2 | ===================
|
| 3 |
|
| 4 | This doc has rough notes on the architecture of the parser.
|
| 5 |
|
| 6 | [How to Parse Shell Like a Programming Language][parse-shell] (2019 blog post)
|
| 7 | covers some of the same material. (As of 2024, it's still pretty accurate,
|
| 8 | although there have been minor changes.)
|
| 9 |
|
| 10 | <div id="toc">
|
| 11 | </div>
|
| 12 |
|
| 13 | ## The Lossless Invariant
|
| 14 |
|
| 15 | The test suite [test/lossless.sh]($oils-src) invokes `osh --tool lossless-cat
|
| 16 | $file`.
|
| 17 |
|
| 18 | The `lossless-cat` tool does this:
|
| 19 |
|
| 20 | 1. Parse the file
|
| 21 | 1. Collect **all** tokens, from 0 to N
|
| 22 | 1. Print the text of each token.
|
| 23 |
|
| 24 | Now, do the tokens "add up" to the original file? That's what we call the
|
| 25 | *lossless invariant*.
|
| 26 |
|
| 27 | It will be the foundation for tools that statically understand shell:
|
| 28 |
|
| 29 | - `--tool ysh-ify` - change style of `do done` → `{ }`, etc.
|
| 30 | - `--tool fmt` - fix indentation, maybe some line wrapping
|
| 31 |
|
| 32 | The sections on **re-parsing** explain some obstacles which we had to overcome.
|
| 33 |
|
| 34 | ## Lexing
|
| 35 |
|
| 36 | [parse-shell]: https://www.oilshell.org/blog/2019/02/07.html
|
| 37 |
|
| 38 | ### List of Regex-Based Lexers
|
| 39 |
|
| 40 | Oils uses regex-based lexers, which are turned into efficient C code with
|
| 41 | [re2c]($xref). We intentionally avoid hand-written code that manipulates
|
| 42 | strings char-by-char, since that strategy is error prone; it's inevitable that
|
| 43 | rare cases will be mishandled.
|
| 44 |
|
| 45 | The list of lexers can be found by looking at [native/fastlex.c]($oils-src).
|
| 46 |
|
| 47 | - The large, modal OSH/YSH lexer in [frontend/lexer_def.py]($oils-src).
|
| 48 | - Lexers for OSH sublanguages
|
| 49 | - For `echo -e`
|
| 50 | - For `PS1` backslash escapes.
|
| 51 | - For history expansion, e.g. `!$`.
|
| 52 | - For globs, to implement `${x/foo*/replace}` via conversion to ERE. We need
|
| 53 | position information, and the `fnmatch()` API doesn't provide it, but
|
| 54 | `regexec()` does.
|
| 55 | - NOTE: We'll also need one for converting extended globs to EREs, for
|
| 56 | portability.
|
| 57 |
|
| 58 | [re2c]: http://re2c.org/
|
| 59 |
|
| 60 | ### Sublanguages We Don't Lex or Parse
|
| 61 |
|
| 62 | These constructs aren't recognized by the Oils front end. Instead, they're
|
| 63 | punted to [libc]($xref):
|
| 64 |
|
| 65 | - Glob patterns, e.g. `*.py` (in most cases)
|
| 66 | - Extended glob patterns, e.g. `@(*.py|*.sh)`
|
| 67 | - `strftime` format strings, e.g. `printf '%(%Y-%m-%d)T' $timestamp`
|
| 68 |
|
| 69 | ### Lexer Unread
|
| 70 |
|
| 71 | [osh/word_parse.py]($oils-src) calls `lexer.MaybeUnreadOne()` to handle right
|
| 72 | parens in this case:
|
| 73 |
|
| 74 | ```
|
| 75 | (case x in x) ;; esac )
|
| 76 | ```
|
| 77 |
|
| 78 | This is sort of like the `ungetc()` I've seen in other shell lexers.
|
| 79 |
|
| 80 | ## Parsing Issues
|
| 81 |
|
| 82 | This section is about extra passes / "irregularities" at **parse time**. In
|
| 83 | the "Runtime Issues" section below, we discuss cases that involve parsing after
|
| 84 | variable expansion, etc.
|
| 85 |
|
| 86 | ### Re-parsing - reading text more than once
|
| 87 |
|
| 88 | We try to avoid re-parsing, but it happens in 4 places.
|
| 89 |
|
| 90 | It complicates error messages with source location info. It also implications
|
| 91 | for `--tool ysh-ify` and `--tool fmt`, because it affects the **"lossless invariant"**.
|
| 92 |
|
| 93 | This command is perhaps a quicker explanation than the text below:
|
| 94 |
|
| 95 | $ grep do_lossless */*.py
|
| 96 | ...
|
| 97 | osh/cmd.py: ...
|
| 98 | osh/word_parse.py: ...
|
| 99 |
|
| 100 | Where re-parse:
|
| 101 |
|
| 102 | 1. [Here documents]($xref:here-doc): We first read lines, and then parse them.
|
| 103 | - `VirtualLineReader` in [osh/cmd_parse.py]($oils-src)
|
| 104 | - This is re-parsing from **lines**
|
| 105 |
|
| 106 | 2. **Array L-values** like `a[x+1]=foo`. bash allows splitting arithmetic
|
| 107 | expressions across word boundaries: `a[x + 1]=foo`. But I don't see this
|
| 108 | used, and it would significantly complicate the OSH parser.
|
| 109 | - `_MakeAssignPair` in [osh/cmd_parse.py]($oils-src) has `do_lossless` condition
|
| 110 | - This is re-parsing from **tokens**
|
| 111 |
|
| 112 | 3. **Backticks**, the legacy form of `$(command sub)`. There's an extra level
|
| 113 | of backslash quoting that may happen compared with `$(command sub)`.
|
| 114 | - `_ReadCommandSubPart` in [osh/word_parse.py]($oils-src) has `do_lossless`
|
| 115 | condition
|
| 116 | - This is re-parsing from **tokens**
|
| 117 |
|
| 118 | ### Re-parsing that doesn't affect the `ysh-ify` or `fmt` tools
|
| 119 |
|
| 120 | 4. `alias` expansion
|
| 121 | - `SnipCodeString` in [osh/cmd_parse.py]($oils-src)
|
| 122 | - This is re-parsing from **tokens**, but it only happens **after running**
|
| 123 | something like `alias ls=foo`. So it doesn't affect the lossless
|
| 124 | invariant that `--tool ysh-ify` and `--tool fmt` use.
|
| 125 |
|
| 126 | ### Revisiting Tokens, Not Text
|
| 127 |
|
| 128 | These language constructs are handled statically, but not in a single pass of
|
| 129 | parsing:
|
| 130 |
|
| 131 | - Assignment vs. Env binding detection: `FOO=bar declare a[x]=1`.
|
| 132 | We make another pass with `_SplitSimpleCommandPrefix()`.
|
| 133 | - Related: `s=1` doesn't cause reparsing, but `a[x+1]=y` does.
|
| 134 | - Brace Detection in a few places: `echo {a,b}`
|
| 135 | - Tilde Detection: `echo ~bob`, `home=~bob`
|
| 136 |
|
| 137 | This is less problematic, since it doesn't affect error messages
|
| 138 | (`ctx_SourceCode`) or the lossless invariant.
|
| 139 |
|
| 140 | ### Lookahead in Recursive Descent Parsers
|
| 141 |
|
| 142 | - `myfunc() { echo hi; }` vs. `myfunc=() # an array`
|
| 143 | - `shopt -s parse_equals`: For `x = 1 + 2*3`
|
| 144 |
|
| 145 | ### Where Parsers are Instantiated
|
| 146 |
|
| 147 | - See [frontend/parse_lib.py]($oils-src) and its callers.
|
| 148 |
|
| 149 | ## Runtime Parsing
|
| 150 |
|
| 151 | ### Where OSH Dynamically Parses
|
| 152 |
|
| 153 | 1. **Alias expansion** like `alias foo='ls | wc -l'`. Aliases are like
|
| 154 | "lexical macros".
|
| 155 | 2. **Prompt strings**. `$PS1` and family first undergo `\` substitution, and
|
| 156 | then the resulting strings are parsed as words, with `$` escaped to `\$`.
|
| 157 | 3. **Builtins**.
|
| 158 | - `eval`
|
| 159 | - `trap` builtin
|
| 160 | - exit
|
| 161 | - debug
|
| 162 | - err
|
| 163 | - signals
|
| 164 | - `source` — the filename is formed dynamically, but the code is generally
|
| 165 | static.
|
| 166 |
|
| 167 | ### Where Bash Dynamically Parses (perhaps unintentionally)
|
| 168 |
|
| 169 | All of the cases above, plus:
|
| 170 |
|
| 171 | (1) Recursive **Arithmetic Evaluation**:
|
| 172 |
|
| 173 | ```sh-prompt
|
| 174 | $ a='1+2'
|
| 175 | $ b='a+3'
|
| 176 | $ echo $(( b ))
|
| 177 | 6
|
| 178 | ```
|
| 179 |
|
| 180 | This also happens for the operands to `[[ x -eq x ]]`.
|
| 181 |
|
| 182 | Note that `a='$(echo 3)'` results in a **syntax error**. I believe this was
|
| 183 | due to the ShellShock mitigation.
|
| 184 |
|
| 185 | (2) The **`unset` builtin** takes an LValue. (not yet implemented in OSH)
|
| 186 |
|
| 187 | ```sh-prompt
|
| 188 | $ a=(1 2 3 4)
|
| 189 | $ expr='a[1+1]'
|
| 190 | $ unset "$expr"
|
| 191 | $ argv "${a[@]}"
|
| 192 | ['1', '2', '4']
|
| 193 | ```
|
| 194 |
|
| 195 | (3) **printf -v** takes an "LValue".
|
| 196 |
|
| 197 | (4) **Var refs** with `${!x}` takes a "cell". (not yet implemented OSH.
|
| 198 | Relied on by `bash-completion`, as discovered by Greg Price)
|
| 199 |
|
| 200 | ```sh-prompt
|
| 201 | $ a=(1 2 3 4)
|
| 202 | $ expr='a[$(echo 2 | tee BAD)]'
|
| 203 | $ echo ${!expr}
|
| 204 | 3
|
| 205 | $ cat BAD
|
| 206 | 2
|
| 207 | ```
|
| 208 |
|
| 209 | (5) **test -v** takes a "cell".
|
| 210 |
|
| 211 | (6) ShellShock (removed from bash): `export -f`, all variables were checked for
|
| 212 | a certain pattern.
|
| 213 |
|
| 214 | ### Parse Errors at Runtime (Need Line Numbers)
|
| 215 |
|
| 216 | - `test` / `[`, e.g. `[ -a -a -a ]`
|
| 217 | - Command line flag usage errors
|
| 218 | - [alias]($help) parse errors
|