1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
|
//! A stably addressed token buffer supporting efficient traversal based on a
//! cheaply copyable cursor.
//!
//! *This module is available if Syn is built with the `"parsing"` feature.*
// This module is heavily commented as it contains most of the unsafe code in
// Syn, and caution should be used when editing it. The public-facing interface
// is 100% safe but the implementation is fragile internally.
#[cfg(all(
not(all(target_arch = "wasm32", any(target_os = "unknown", target_os = "wasi"))),
feature = "proc-macro"
))]
use crate::proc_macro as pm;
use proc_macro2::{Delimiter, Group, Ident, Literal, Punct, Spacing, Span, TokenStream, TokenTree};
use std::marker::PhantomData;
use std::ptr;
use crate::Lifetime;
/// Internal type which is used instead of `TokenTree` to represent a token tree
/// within a `TokenBuffer`.
enum Entry {
// Mimicking types from proc-macro.
Group(Group, TokenBuffer),
Ident(Ident),
Punct(Punct),
Literal(Literal),
// End entries contain a raw pointer to the entry from the containing
// token tree, or null if this is the outermost level.
End(*const Entry),
}
/// A buffer that can be efficiently traversed multiple times, unlike
/// `TokenStream` which requires a deep copy in order to traverse more than
/// once.
///
/// *This type is available if Syn is built with the `"parsing"` feature.*
pub struct TokenBuffer {
// NOTE: Do not derive clone on this - there are raw pointers inside which
// will be messed up. Moving the `TokenBuffer` itself is safe as the actual
// backing slices won't be moved.
data: Box<[Entry]>,
}
impl TokenBuffer {
// NOTE: DO NOT MUTATE THE `Vec` RETURNED FROM THIS FUNCTION ONCE IT
// RETURNS, THE ADDRESS OF ITS BACKING MEMORY MUST REMAIN STABLE.
fn inner_new(stream: TokenStream, up: *const Entry) -> TokenBuffer {
// Build up the entries list, recording the locations of any Groups
// in the list to be processed later.
let mut entries = Vec::new();
let mut seqs = Vec::new();
for tt in stream {
match tt {
TokenTree::Ident(sym) => {
entries.push(Entry::Ident(sym));
}
TokenTree::Punct(op) => {
entries.push(Entry::Punct(op));
}
TokenTree::Literal(l) => {
entries.push(Entry::Literal(l));
}
TokenTree::Group(g) => {
// Record the index of the interesting entry, and store an
// `End(null)` there temporarially.
seqs.push((entries.len(), g));
entries.push(Entry::End(ptr::null()));
}
}
}
// Add an `End` entry to the end with a reference to the enclosing token
// stream which was passed in.
entries.push(Entry::End(up));
// NOTE: This is done to ensure that we don't accidentally modify the
// length of the backing buffer. The backing buffer must remain at a
// constant address after this point, as we are going to store a raw
// pointer into it.
let mut entries = entries.into_boxed_slice();
for (idx, group) in seqs {
// We know that this index refers to one of the temporary
// `End(null)` entries, and we know that the last entry is
// `End(up)`, so the next index is also valid.
let seq_up = &entries[idx + 1] as *const Entry;
// The end entry stored at the end of this Entry::Group should
// point to the Entry which follows the Group in the list.
let inner = Self::inner_new(group.stream(), seq_up);
entries[idx] = Entry::Group(group, inner);
}
TokenBuffer { data: entries }
}
/// Creates a `TokenBuffer` containing all the tokens from the input
/// `TokenStream`.
///
/// *This method is available if Syn is built with both the `"parsing"` and
/// `"proc-macro"` features.*
#[cfg(all(
not(all(target_arch = "wasm32", any(target_os = "unknown", target_os = "wasi"))),
feature = "proc-macro"
))]
pub fn new(stream: pm::TokenStream) -> TokenBuffer {
Self::new2(stream.into())
}
/// Creates a `TokenBuffer` containing all the tokens from the input
/// `TokenStream`.
pub fn new2(stream: TokenStream) -> TokenBuffer {
Self::inner_new(stream, ptr::null())
}
/// Creates a cursor referencing the first token in the buffer and able to
/// traverse until the end of the buffer.
pub fn begin(&self) -> Cursor {
unsafe { Cursor::create(&self.data[0], &self.data[self.data.len() - 1]) }
}
}
/// A cheaply copyable cursor into a `TokenBuffer`.
///
/// This cursor holds a shared reference into the immutable data which is used
/// internally to represent a `TokenStream`, and can be efficiently manipulated
/// and copied around.
///
/// An empty `Cursor` can be created directly, or one may create a `TokenBuffer`
/// object and get a cursor to its first token with `begin()`.
///
/// Two cursors are equal if they have the same location in the same input
/// stream, and have the same scope.
///
/// *This type is available if Syn is built with the `"parsing"` feature.*
#[derive(Copy, Clone, Eq, PartialEq)]
pub struct Cursor<'a> {
// The current entry which the `Cursor` is pointing at.
ptr: *const Entry,
// This is the only `Entry::End(..)` object which this cursor is allowed to
// point at. All other `End` objects are skipped over in `Cursor::create`.
scope: *const Entry,
// Cursor is covariant in 'a. This field ensures that our pointers are still
// valid.
marker: PhantomData<&'a Entry>,
}
impl<'a> Cursor<'a> {
/// Creates a cursor referencing a static empty TokenStream.
pub fn empty() -> Self {
// It's safe in this situation for us to put an `Entry` object in global
// storage, despite it not actually being safe to send across threads
// (`Ident` is a reference into a thread-local table). This is because
// this entry never includes a `Ident` object.
//
// This wrapper struct allows us to break the rules and put a `Sync`
// object in global storage.
struct UnsafeSyncEntry(Entry);
unsafe impl Sync for UnsafeSyncEntry {}
static EMPTY_ENTRY: UnsafeSyncEntry = UnsafeSyncEntry(Entry::End(0 as *const Entry));
Cursor {
ptr: &EMPTY_ENTRY.0,
scope: &EMPTY_ENTRY.0,
marker: PhantomData,
}
}
/// This create method intelligently exits non-explicitly-entered
/// `None`-delimited scopes when the cursor reaches the end of them,
/// allowing for them to be treated transparently.
unsafe fn create(mut ptr: *const Entry, scope: *const Entry) -> Self {
// NOTE: If we're looking at a `End(..)`, we want to advance the cursor
// past it, unless `ptr == scope`, which means that we're at the edge of
// our cursor's scope. We should only have `ptr != scope` at the exit
// from None-delimited groups entered with `ignore_none`.
while let Entry::End(exit) = *ptr {
if ptr == scope {
break;
}
ptr = exit;
}
Cursor {
ptr,
scope,
marker: PhantomData,
}
}
/// Get the current entry.
fn entry(self) -> &'a Entry {
unsafe { &*self.ptr }
}
/// Bump the cursor to point at the next token after the current one. This
/// is undefined behavior if the cursor is currently looking at an
/// `Entry::End`.
unsafe fn bump(self) -> Cursor<'a> {
Cursor::create(self.ptr.offset(1), self.scope)
}
/// If the cursor is looking at a `None`-delimited group, move it to look at
/// the first token inside instead. If the group is empty, this will move
/// the cursor past the `None`-delimited group.
///
/// WARNING: This mutates its argument.
fn ignore_none(&mut self) {
if let Entry::Group(group, buf) = self.entry() {
if group.delimiter() == Delimiter::None {
// NOTE: We call `Cursor::create` here to make sure that
// situations where we should immediately exit the span after
// entering it are handled correctly.
unsafe {
*self = Cursor::create(&buf.data[0], self.scope);
}
}
}
}
/// Checks whether the cursor is currently pointing at the end of its valid
/// scope.
pub fn eof(self) -> bool {
// We're at eof if we're at the end of our scope.
self.ptr == self.scope
}
/// If the cursor is pointing at a `Group` with the given delimiter, returns
/// a cursor into that group and one pointing to the next `TokenTree`.
pub fn group(mut self, delim: Delimiter) -> Option<(Cursor<'a>, Span, Cursor<'a>)> {
// If we're not trying to enter a none-delimited group, we want to
// ignore them. We have to make sure to _not_ ignore them when we want
// to enter them, of course. For obvious reasons.
if delim != Delimiter::None {
self.ignore_none();
}
if let Entry::Group(group, buf) = self.entry() {
if group.delimiter() == delim {
return Some((buf.begin(), group.span(), unsafe { self.bump() }));
}
}
None
}
/// If the cursor is pointing at a `Ident`, returns it along with a cursor
/// pointing at the next `TokenTree`.
pub fn ident(mut self) -> Option<(Ident, Cursor<'a>)> {
self.ignore_none();
match self.entry() {
Entry::Ident(ident) => Some((ident.clone(), unsafe { self.bump() })),
_ => None,
}
}
/// If the cursor is pointing at an `Punct`, returns it along with a cursor
/// pointing at the next `TokenTree`.
pub fn punct(mut self) -> Option<(Punct, Cursor<'a>)> {
self.ignore_none();
match self.entry() {
Entry::Punct(op) if op.as_char() != '\'' => Some((op.clone(), unsafe { self.bump() })),
_ => None,
}
}
/// If the cursor is pointing at a `Literal`, return it along with a cursor
/// pointing at the next `TokenTree`.
pub fn literal(mut self) -> Option<(Literal, Cursor<'a>)> {
self.ignore_none();
match self.entry() {
Entry::Literal(lit) => Some((lit.clone(), unsafe { self.bump() })),
_ => None,
}
}
/// If the cursor is pointing at a `Lifetime`, returns it along with a
/// cursor pointing at the next `TokenTree`.
pub fn lifetime(mut self) -> Option<(Lifetime, Cursor<'a>)> {
self.ignore_none();
match self.entry() {
Entry::Punct(op) if op.as_char() == '\'' && op.spacing() == Spacing::Joint => {
let next = unsafe { self.bump() };
match next.ident() {
Some((ident, rest)) => {
let lifetime = Lifetime {
apostrophe: op.span(),
ident,
};
Some((lifetime, rest))
}
None => None,
}
}
_ => None,
}
}
/// Copies all remaining tokens visible from this cursor into a
/// `TokenStream`.
pub fn token_stream(self) -> TokenStream {
let mut tts = Vec::new();
let mut cursor = self;
while let Some((tt, rest)) = cursor.token_tree() {
tts.push(tt);
cursor = rest;
}
tts.into_iter().collect()
}
/// If the cursor is pointing at a `TokenTree`, returns it along with a
/// cursor pointing at the next `TokenTree`.
///
/// Returns `None` if the cursor has reached the end of its stream.
///
/// This method does not treat `None`-delimited groups as transparent, and
/// will return a `Group(None, ..)` if the cursor is looking at one.
pub fn token_tree(self) -> Option<(TokenTree, Cursor<'a>)> {
let tree = match self.entry() {
Entry::Group(group, _) => group.clone().into(),
Entry::Literal(lit) => lit.clone().into(),
Entry::Ident(ident) => ident.clone().into(),
Entry::Punct(op) => op.clone().into(),
Entry::End(..) => {
return None;
}
};
Some((tree, unsafe { self.bump() }))
}
/// Returns the `Span` of the current token, or `Span::call_site()` if this
/// cursor points to eof.
pub fn span(self) -> Span {
match self.entry() {
Entry::Group(group, _) => group.span(),
Entry::Literal(l) => l.span(),
Entry::Ident(t) => t.span(),
Entry::Punct(o) => o.span(),
Entry::End(..) => Span::call_site(),
}
}
/// Skip over the next token without cloning it. Returns `None` if this
/// cursor points to eof.
///
/// This method treats `'lifetimes` as a single token.
pub(crate) fn skip(self) -> Option<Cursor<'a>> {
match self.entry() {
Entry::End(..) => None,
// Treat lifetimes as a single tt for the purposes of 'skip'.
Entry::Punct(op) if op.as_char() == '\'' && op.spacing() == Spacing::Joint => {
let next = unsafe { self.bump() };
match next.entry() {
Entry::Ident(_) => Some(unsafe { next.bump() }),
_ => Some(next),
}
}
_ => Some(unsafe { self.bump() }),
}
}
}
pub(crate) fn same_scope(a: Cursor, b: Cursor) -> bool {
a.scope == b.scope
}
pub(crate) fn open_span_of_group(cursor: Cursor) -> Span {
match cursor.entry() {
Entry::Group(group, _) => group.span_open(),
_ => cursor.span(),
}
}
pub(crate) fn close_span_of_group(cursor: Cursor) -> Span {
match cursor.entry() {
Entry::Group(group, _) => group.span_close(),
_ => cursor.span(),
}
}
|