- Add new keyword int64_t/uint64_t/i64vec/u64vec.
- Support 64-bit integer literals (dec/hex/oct).
- Support built-in operators for 64-bit integer type.
- Add implicit and explicit type conversion for 64-bit integer type.
- Add new built-in functions defined in this extension.
This plumbs both the current file path and the include depth
back up to the includer. This allows the includer to properly
support relative paths.
This also replaces the string copy that was done during include
with a zero-copy method of accomplishing the same thing. This
prevents extra copies of entire files.
Adds parseVersions.h as the base TParseVersions for versioning,
and splits the remainder between TParseContextBase (sharable across parsers)
and TParseContext (now the GLSL-specific part).
After parsing a #include directive, we push a TokenizableString
which contains the content of the included file into the input
stack. Henceforth, tokens will be read from the newly pushed
TokenizableString. However, the scanner in TParseContext still
points to the previous input stream. We need to update the scanner
to point to the new input stream inside TokenizableString. Thus,
the setCurrent{String|Line|..} method in TParseContext updates
the status of the correct input stream. After finishing the newly
pushed TokenizableString, we need to restore the scanner to the
previous input stream.
When an include directive is recognized by the preprocessor, it
executes a callback on the filepath argument to obtain the file
contents. That way the compilation client can deal with the file
system, include paths, etc.
Currently only accepts quoted filepaths -- no angle brackets yet.
Fixes issue #25. (char 255 aliased to -1 and missing tests for end of input).
1) All layers of input scanning now share a single EndOfInput value.
This avoids translation of it across layers of encapsulation.
2) Some places looking for end of line were not stopping on EndOfInput.
3) Use of "char" for the input made char values > 127 be negative numbers.
This allowed for aliasing of 255 to -1, etc. This is fixed by using
unsigned char.
It also removes some old code that ancient compilers used to need.
However, the main issue is getting access to hash functions for
unordered_map in portable way.
This simplification is a prelude to eliminating what I appear unnecessary
symbol inserts into tables when tokenizing in the preprecessor, which
show up as taking notable time. (Performance issue.) It also simply makes
the preprocessor easier to understand, which it is badly in need of.
- member initializing order in some constructors
- missing default branches in switch-case
- uninitialized variable if switch-case default (uncritical because
program would exit)
- && and || brace warnings in if()
- consistently dealing with EOF and its effect on error recovery (bug 11444, #1)
- turning a simulated OO hierarchy of function pointers and typecasting into a real C++ class hierarchy
- correctly handling '\' everywhere, in all classes of tokens, as a layer before preprocessing itself
- conditionally handling '\n' in macro expansion input, depending on whether it is in a macro expression or not
- delete some unused "memory cleanup" code
git-svn-id: https://cvs.khronos.org/svn/repos/ogl/trunk/ecosystem/public/sdk/tools/glslang@24626 e7fa87d3-cd2b-0410-9028-fcbf551c1848
- macro expansion of hexidecimal numbers
- give errors instead of warnings/silence on extra tokens after #endif, #else, etc.
- give errors on reserved macro name use, reuse of argument, and redefinition with different whitespace presence
- detect and give error for all cases of #elif and #else after #else
git-svn-id: https://cvs.khronos.org/svn/repos/ogl/trunk/ecosystem/public/sdk/tools/glslang@23982 e7fa87d3-cd2b-0410-9028-fcbf551c1848