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author | Brendan Kehoe <brendan@cygnus> | 1995-10-26 23:54:44 +0000 |
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committer | Brendan Kehoe <brendan@cygnus> | 1995-10-26 23:54:44 +0000 |
commit | 811f1bdce68c1ac53f95f0cf3ffe23b0ff703eaa (patch) | |
tree | 8ae51a3b849d33f84ed10642ded0e713c4a998f7 /gdb/regex.h | |
parent | 9bfaf1b9527bfa1455986423b95b9ebe832745b0 (diff) | |
download | binutils-811f1bdce68c1ac53f95f0cf3ffe23b0ff703eaa.zip binutils-811f1bdce68c1ac53f95f0cf3ffe23b0ff703eaa.tar.gz binutils-811f1bdce68c1ac53f95f0cf3ffe23b0ff703eaa.tar.bz2 |
* regex.h: Renamed to gnu-regex.h.
* regex.c: Renamed to gnu-regex.c.
* Makefile.in (POSSLIBS): Refer to gnu-regex.h and gnu-regex.c.
(REGEX, REGEX1): Change to gnu-regex.o instead of regex.o.
(regex.o): Renamed to gnu-regex.o; refer to gnu-regex.c.
(irix5-nat.o, osfsolib.o, gnu-regex.o, solib.o, source.o, symtab.o):
Likewise.
* irix5-nat.c, osfsolib.c, gnu-regex.c, solib.c, source.c, symtab.c):
Include "gnu-regex.h" instead of "regex.h".
* alpha-tdep.c (in_prologue): Rename to alpha_in_prologue, to
avoid conflicts with symtab.h.
fixes building gdb under OSF/1 4.0
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb/regex.h')
-rw-r--r-- | gdb/regex.h | 181 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 181 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/regex.h b/gdb/regex.h deleted file mode 100644 index 7b1a4af..0000000 --- a/gdb/regex.h +++ /dev/null @@ -1,181 +0,0 @@ -/* Definitions for data structures callers pass the regex library. - Copyright (C) 1985, 1989 Free Software Foundation, Inc. - -This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify -it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by -the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or -(at your option) any later version. - -This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, -but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of -MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the -GNU General Public License for more details. - -You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License -along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software -Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ - -/* Define number of parens for which we record the beginnings and ends. - This affects how much space the `struct re_registers' type takes up. */ -#ifndef RE_NREGS -#define RE_NREGS 10 -#endif - -/* These bits are used in the obscure_syntax variable to choose among - alternative regexp syntaxes. */ - -/* 1 means plain parentheses serve as grouping, and backslash - parentheses are needed for literal searching. - 0 means backslash-parentheses are grouping, and plain parentheses - are for literal searching. */ -#define RE_NO_BK_PARENS 1 - -/* 1 means plain | serves as the "or"-operator, and \| is a literal. - 0 means \| serves as the "or"-operator, and | is a literal. */ -#define RE_NO_BK_VBAR 2 - -/* 0 means plain + or ? serves as an operator, and \+, \? are literals. - 1 means \+, \? are operators and plain +, ? are literals. */ -#define RE_BK_PLUS_QM 4 - -/* 1 means | binds tighter than ^ or $. - 0 means the contrary. */ -#define RE_TIGHT_VBAR 8 - -/* 1 means treat \n as an _OR operator - 0 means treat it as a normal character */ -#define RE_NEWLINE_OR 16 - -/* 0 means that a special characters (such as *, ^, and $) always have - their special meaning regardless of the surrounding context. - 1 means that special characters may act as normal characters in some - contexts. Specifically, this applies to: - ^ - only special at the beginning, or after ( or | - $ - only special at the end, or before ) or | - *, +, ? - only special when not after the beginning, (, or | */ -#define RE_CONTEXT_INDEP_OPS 32 - -/* Now define combinations of bits for the standard possibilities. */ -#define RE_SYNTAX_AWK (RE_NO_BK_PARENS | RE_NO_BK_VBAR | RE_CONTEXT_INDEP_OPS) -#define RE_SYNTAX_EGREP (RE_SYNTAX_AWK | RE_NEWLINE_OR) -#define RE_SYNTAX_GREP (RE_BK_PLUS_QM | RE_NEWLINE_OR) -#define RE_SYNTAX_EMACS 0 - -/* This data structure is used to represent a compiled pattern. */ - -struct re_pattern_buffer - { - char *buffer; /* Space holding the compiled pattern commands. */ - int allocated; /* Size of space that buffer points to */ - int used; /* Length of portion of buffer actually occupied */ - char *fastmap; /* Pointer to fastmap, if any, or zero if none. */ - /* re_search uses the fastmap, if there is one, - to skip quickly over totally implausible characters */ - char *translate; /* Translate table to apply to all characters before comparing. - Or zero for no translation. - The translation is applied to a pattern when it is compiled - and to data when it is matched. */ - char fastmap_accurate; - /* Set to zero when a new pattern is stored, - set to one when the fastmap is updated from it. */ - char can_be_null; /* Set to one by compiling fastmap - if this pattern might match the null string. - It does not necessarily match the null string - in that case, but if this is zero, it cannot. - 2 as value means can match null string - but at end of range or before a character - listed in the fastmap. */ - }; - -/* Structure to store "register" contents data in. - - Pass the address of such a structure as an argument to re_match, etc., - if you want this information back. - - start[i] and end[i] record the string matched by \( ... \) grouping i, - for i from 1 to RE_NREGS - 1. - start[0] and end[0] record the entire string matched. */ - -struct re_registers - { - int start[RE_NREGS]; - int end[RE_NREGS]; - }; - -/* These are the command codes that appear in compiled regular expressions, one per byte. - Some command codes are followed by argument bytes. - A command code can specify any interpretation whatever for its arguments. - Zero-bytes may appear in the compiled regular expression. */ - -enum regexpcode - { - unused, - exactn, /* followed by one byte giving n, and then by n literal bytes */ - begline, /* fails unless at beginning of line */ - endline, /* fails unless at end of line */ - jump, /* followed by two bytes giving relative address to jump to */ - on_failure_jump, /* followed by two bytes giving relative address of place - to resume at in case of failure. */ - finalize_jump, /* Throw away latest failure point and then jump to address. */ - maybe_finalize_jump, /* Like jump but finalize if safe to do so. - This is used to jump back to the beginning - of a repeat. If the command that follows - this jump is clearly incompatible with the - one at the beginning of the repeat, such that - we can be sure that there is no use backtracking - out of repetitions already completed, - then we finalize. */ - dummy_failure_jump, /* jump, and push a dummy failure point. - This failure point will be thrown away - if an attempt is made to use it for a failure. - A + construct makes this before the first repeat. */ - anychar, /* matches any one character */ - charset, /* matches any one char belonging to specified set. - First following byte is # bitmap bytes. - Then come bytes for a bit-map saying which chars are in. - Bits in each byte are ordered low-bit-first. - A character is in the set if its bit is 1. - A character too large to have a bit in the map - is automatically not in the set */ - charset_not, /* similar but match any character that is NOT one of those specified */ - start_memory, /* starts remembering the text that is matched - and stores it in a memory register. - followed by one byte containing the register number. - Register numbers must be in the range 0 through NREGS. */ - stop_memory, /* stops remembering the text that is matched - and stores it in a memory register. - followed by one byte containing the register number. - Register numbers must be in the range 0 through NREGS. */ - duplicate, /* match a duplicate of something remembered. - Followed by one byte containing the index of the memory register. */ - before_dot, /* Succeeds if before dot */ - at_dot, /* Succeeds if at dot */ - after_dot, /* Succeeds if after dot */ - begbuf, /* Succeeds if at beginning of buffer */ - endbuf, /* Succeeds if at end of buffer */ - wordchar, /* Matches any word-constituent character */ - notwordchar, /* Matches any char that is not a word-constituent */ - wordbeg, /* Succeeds if at word beginning */ - wordend, /* Succeeds if at word end */ - wordbound, /* Succeeds if at a word boundary */ - notwordbound, /* Succeeds if not at a word boundary */ - syntaxspec, /* Matches any character whose syntax is specified. - followed by a byte which contains a syntax code, Sword or such like */ - notsyntaxspec /* Matches any character whose syntax differs from the specified. */ - }; - -extern char *re_compile_pattern (); -/* Is this really advertised? */ -extern void re_compile_fastmap (); -extern int re_search (), re_search_2 (); -extern int re_match (), re_match_2 (); - -/* 4.2 bsd compatibility (yuck) */ -extern char *re_comp (); -extern int re_exec (); - -#ifdef SYNTAX_TABLE -extern char *re_syntax_table; -#endif - -extern int re_set_syntax (); |