spark.py :  » 3.1.2-Python » Parser » Parser » Python Open Source

Home
Python Open Source
1.3.1.2 Python
2.Ajax
3.Aspect Oriented
4.Blog
5.Build
6.Business Application
7.Chart Report
8.Content Management Systems
9.Cryptographic
10.Database
11.Development
12.Editor
13.Email
14.ERP
15.Game 2D 3D
16.GIS
17.GUI
18.IDE
19.Installer
20.IRC
21.Issue Tracker
22.Language Interface
23.Log
24.Math
25.Media Sound Audio
26.Mobile
27.Network
28.Parser
29.PDF
30.Project Management
31.RSS
32.Search
33.Security
34.Template Engines
35.Test
36.UML
37.USB Serial
38.Web Frameworks
39.Web Server
40.Web Services
41.Web Unit
42.Wiki
43.Windows
44.XML
Python Open Source » 3.1.2 Python » Parser 
Parser » Parser » spark.py
#  Copyright (c) 1998-2002 John Aycock
#
#  Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
#  a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
#  "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
#  without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
#  distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
#  permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
#  the following conditions:
#
#  The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
#  included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
#
#  THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
#  EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
#  MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
#  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
#  CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
#  TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
#  SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

__version__ = 'SPARK-0.7 (pre-alpha-5)'

import re

# Compatability with older pythons.
def output(string='', end='\n'):
    sys.stdout.write(string + end)

try:
    sorted
except NameError:
    def sorted(seq):
        seq2 = seq[:]
        seq2.sort()
        return seq2

def _namelist(instance):
    namelist, namedict, classlist = [], {}, [instance.__class__]
    for c in classlist:
        for b in c.__bases__:
            classlist.append(b)
        for name in c.__dict__.keys():
            if name not in namedict:
                namelist.append(name)
                namedict[name] = 1
    return namelist

class GenericScanner:
    def __init__(self, flags=0):
        pattern = self.reflect()
        self.re = re.compile(pattern, re.VERBOSE|flags)

        self.index2func = {}
        for name, number in self.re.groupindex.items():
            self.index2func[number-1] = getattr(self, 't_' + name)

    def makeRE(self, name):
        doc = getattr(self, name).__doc__
        rv = '(?P<%s>%s)' % (name[2:], doc)
        return rv

    def reflect(self):
        rv = []
        for name in _namelist(self):
            if name[:2] == 't_' and name != 't_default':
                rv.append(self.makeRE(name))

        rv.append(self.makeRE('t_default'))
        return '|'.join(rv)

    def error(self, s, pos):
        output("Lexical error at position %s" % pos)
        raise SystemExit

    def tokenize(self, s):
        pos = 0
        n = len(s)
        while pos < n:
            m = self.re.match(s, pos)
            if m is None:
                self.error(s, pos)

            groups = m.groups()
            for i in range(len(groups)):
                if groups[i] and i in self.index2func:
                    self.index2func[i](groups[i])
            pos = m.end()

    def t_default(self, s):
        r'( . | \n )+'
        output("Specification error: unmatched input")
        raise SystemExit

#
#  Extracted from GenericParser and made global so that [un]picking works.
#
class _State:
    def __init__(self, stateno, items):
        self.T, self.complete, self.items = [], [], items
        self.stateno = stateno

class GenericParser:
    #
    #  An Earley parser, as per J. Earley, "An Efficient Context-Free
    #  Parsing Algorithm", CACM 13(2), pp. 94-102.  Also J. C. Earley,
    #  "An Efficient Context-Free Parsing Algorithm", Ph.D. thesis,
    #  Carnegie-Mellon University, August 1968.  New formulation of
    #  the parser according to J. Aycock, "Practical Earley Parsing
    #  and the SPARK Toolkit", Ph.D. thesis, University of Victoria,
    #  2001, and J. Aycock and R. N. Horspool, "Practical Earley
    #  Parsing", unpublished paper, 2001.
    #

    def __init__(self, start):
        self.rules = {}
        self.rule2func = {}
        self.rule2name = {}
        self.collectRules()
        self.augment(start)
        self.ruleschanged = 1

    _NULLABLE = '\e_'
    _START = 'START'
    _BOF = '|-'

    #
    #  When pickling, take the time to generate the full state machine;
    #  some information is then extraneous, too.  Unfortunately we
    #  can't save the rule2func map.
    #
    def __getstate__(self):
        if self.ruleschanged:
            #
            #  XXX - duplicated from parse()
            #
            self.computeNull()
            self.newrules = {}
            self.new2old = {}
            self.makeNewRules()
            self.ruleschanged = 0
            self.edges, self.cores = {}, {}
            self.states = { 0: self.makeState0() }
            self.makeState(0, self._BOF)
        #
        #  XXX - should find a better way to do this..
        #
        changes = 1
        while changes:
            changes = 0
            for k, v in self.edges.items():
                if v is None:
                    state, sym = k
                    if state in self.states:
                        self.goto(state, sym)
                        changes = 1
        rv = self.__dict__.copy()
        for s in self.states.values():
            del s.items
        del rv['rule2func']
        del rv['nullable']
        del rv['cores']
        return rv

    def __setstate__(self, D):
        self.rules = {}
        self.rule2func = {}
        self.rule2name = {}
        self.collectRules()
        start = D['rules'][self._START][0][1][1]        # Blech.
        self.augment(start)
        D['rule2func'] = self.rule2func
        D['makeSet'] = self.makeSet_fast
        self.__dict__ = D

    #
    #  A hook for GenericASTBuilder and GenericASTMatcher.  Mess
    #  thee not with this; nor shall thee toucheth the _preprocess
    #  argument to addRule.
    #
    def preprocess(self, rule, func):       return rule, func

    def addRule(self, doc, func, _preprocess=1):
        fn = func
        rules = doc.split()

        index = []
        for i in range(len(rules)):
            if rules[i] == '::=':
                index.append(i-1)
        index.append(len(rules))

        for i in range(len(index)-1):
            lhs = rules[index[i]]
            rhs = rules[index[i]+2:index[i+1]]
            rule = (lhs, tuple(rhs))

            if _preprocess:
                rule, fn = self.preprocess(rule, func)

            if lhs in self.rules:
                self.rules[lhs].append(rule)
            else:
                self.rules[lhs] = [ rule ]
            self.rule2func[rule] = fn
            self.rule2name[rule] = func.__name__[2:]
        self.ruleschanged = 1

    def collectRules(self):
        for name in _namelist(self):
            if name[:2] == 'p_':
                func = getattr(self, name)
                doc = func.__doc__
                self.addRule(doc, func)

    def augment(self, start):
        rule = '%s ::= %s %s' % (self._START, self._BOF, start)
        self.addRule(rule, lambda args: args[1], 0)

    def computeNull(self):
        self.nullable = {}
        tbd = []

        for rulelist in self.rules.values():
            lhs = rulelist[0][0]
            self.nullable[lhs] = 0
            for rule in rulelist:
                rhs = rule[1]
                if len(rhs) == 0:
                    self.nullable[lhs] = 1
                    continue
                #
                #  We only need to consider rules which
                #  consist entirely of nonterminal symbols.
                #  This should be a savings on typical
                #  grammars.
                #
                for sym in rhs:
                    if sym not in self.rules:
                        break
                else:
                    tbd.append(rule)
        changes = 1
        while changes:
            changes = 0
            for lhs, rhs in tbd:
                if self.nullable[lhs]:
                    continue
                for sym in rhs:
                    if not self.nullable[sym]:
                        break
                else:
                    self.nullable[lhs] = 1
                    changes = 1

    def makeState0(self):
        s0 = _State(0, [])
        for rule in self.newrules[self._START]:
            s0.items.append((rule, 0))
        return s0

    def finalState(self, tokens):
        #
        #  Yuck.
        #
        if len(self.newrules[self._START]) == 2 and len(tokens) == 0:
            return 1
        start = self.rules[self._START][0][1][1]
        return self.goto(1, start)

    def makeNewRules(self):
        worklist = []
        for rulelist in self.rules.values():
            for rule in rulelist:
                worklist.append((rule, 0, 1, rule))

        for rule, i, candidate, oldrule in worklist:
            lhs, rhs = rule
            n = len(rhs)
            while i < n:
                sym = rhs[i]
                if sym not in self.rules or \
                   not self.nullable[sym]:
                    candidate = 0
                    i = i + 1
                    continue

                newrhs = list(rhs)
                newrhs[i] = self._NULLABLE+sym
                newrule = (lhs, tuple(newrhs))
                worklist.append((newrule, i+1,
                                 candidate, oldrule))
                candidate = 0
                i = i + 1
            else:
                if candidate:
                    lhs = self._NULLABLE+lhs
                    rule = (lhs, rhs)
                if lhs in self.newrules:
                    self.newrules[lhs].append(rule)
                else:
                    self.newrules[lhs] = [ rule ]
                self.new2old[rule] = oldrule

    def typestring(self, token):
        return None

    def error(self, token):
        output("Syntax error at or near `%s' token" % token)
        raise SystemExit

    def parse(self, tokens):
        sets = [ [(1,0), (2,0)] ]
        self.links = {}

        if self.ruleschanged:
            self.computeNull()
            self.newrules = {}
            self.new2old = {}
            self.makeNewRules()
            self.ruleschanged = 0
            self.edges, self.cores = {}, {}
            self.states = { 0: self.makeState0() }
            self.makeState(0, self._BOF)

        for i in range(len(tokens)):
            sets.append([])

            if sets[i] == []:
                break
            self.makeSet(tokens[i], sets, i)
        else:
            sets.append([])
            self.makeSet(None, sets, len(tokens))

        #_dump(tokens, sets, self.states)

        finalitem = (self.finalState(tokens), 0)
        if finalitem not in sets[-2]:
            if len(tokens) > 0:
                self.error(tokens[i-1])
            else:
                self.error(None)

        return self.buildTree(self._START, finalitem,
                              tokens, len(sets)-2)

    def isnullable(self, sym):
        #
        #  For symbols in G_e only.  If we weren't supporting 1.5,
        #  could just use sym.startswith().
        #
        return self._NULLABLE == sym[0:len(self._NULLABLE)]

    def skip(self, hs, pos=0):
        n = len(hs[1])
        while pos < n:
            if not self.isnullable(hs[1][pos]):
                break
            pos = pos + 1
        return pos

    def makeState(self, state, sym):
        assert sym is not None
        #
        #  Compute \epsilon-kernel state's core and see if
        #  it exists already.
        #
        kitems = []
        for rule, pos in self.states[state].items:
            lhs, rhs = rule
            if rhs[pos:pos+1] == (sym,):
                kitems.append((rule, self.skip(rule, pos+1)))
        core = kitems

        core.sort()
        tcore = tuple(core)
        if tcore in self.cores:
            return self.cores[tcore]
        #
        #  Nope, doesn't exist.  Compute it and the associated
        #  \epsilon-nonkernel state together; we'll need it right away.
        #
        k = self.cores[tcore] = len(self.states)
        K, NK = _State(k, kitems), _State(k+1, [])
        self.states[k] = K
        predicted = {}

        edges = self.edges
        rules = self.newrules
        for X in K, NK:
            worklist = X.items
            for item in worklist:
                rule, pos = item
                lhs, rhs = rule
                if pos == len(rhs):
                    X.complete.append(rule)
                    continue

                nextSym = rhs[pos]
                key = (X.stateno, nextSym)
                if nextSym not in rules:
                    if key not in edges:
                        edges[key] = None
                        X.T.append(nextSym)
                else:
                    edges[key] = None
                    if nextSym not in predicted:
                        predicted[nextSym] = 1
                        for prule in rules[nextSym]:
                            ppos = self.skip(prule)
                            new = (prule, ppos)
                            NK.items.append(new)
            #
            #  Problem: we know K needs generating, but we
            #  don't yet know about NK.  Can't commit anything
            #  regarding NK to self.edges until we're sure.  Should
            #  we delay committing on both K and NK to avoid this
            #  hacky code?  This creates other problems..
            #
            if X is K:
                edges = {}

        if NK.items == []:
            return k

        #
        #  Check for \epsilon-nonkernel's core.  Unfortunately we
        #  need to know the entire set of predicted nonterminals
        #  to do this without accidentally duplicating states.
        #
        core = sorted(predicted.keys())
        tcore = tuple(core)
        if tcore in self.cores:
            self.edges[(k, None)] = self.cores[tcore]
            return k

        nk = self.cores[tcore] = self.edges[(k, None)] = NK.stateno
        self.edges.update(edges)
        self.states[nk] = NK
        return k

    def goto(self, state, sym):
        key = (state, sym)
        if key not in self.edges:
            #
            #  No transitions from state on sym.
            #
            return None

        rv = self.edges[key]
        if rv is None:
            #
            #  Target state isn't generated yet.  Remedy this.
            #
            rv = self.makeState(state, sym)
            self.edges[key] = rv
        return rv

    def gotoT(self, state, t):
        return [self.goto(state, t)]

    def gotoST(self, state, st):
        rv = []
        for t in self.states[state].T:
            if st == t:
                rv.append(self.goto(state, t))
        return rv

    def add(self, set, item, i=None, predecessor=None, causal=None):
        if predecessor is None:
            if item not in set:
                set.append(item)
        else:
            key = (item, i)
            if item not in set:
                self.links[key] = []
                set.append(item)
            self.links[key].append((predecessor, causal))

    def makeSet(self, token, sets, i):
        cur, next = sets[i], sets[i+1]

        ttype = token is not None and self.typestring(token) or None
        if ttype is not None:
            fn, arg = self.gotoT, ttype
        else:
            fn, arg = self.gotoST, token

        for item in cur:
            ptr = (item, i)
            state, parent = item
            add = fn(state, arg)
            for k in add:
                if k is not None:
                    self.add(next, (k, parent), i+1, ptr)
                    nk = self.goto(k, None)
                    if nk is not None:
                        self.add(next, (nk, i+1))

            if parent == i:
                continue

            for rule in self.states[state].complete:
                lhs, rhs = rule
                for pitem in sets[parent]:
                    pstate, pparent = pitem
                    k = self.goto(pstate, lhs)
                    if k is not None:
                        why = (item, i, rule)
                        pptr = (pitem, parent)
                        self.add(cur, (k, pparent),
                                 i, pptr, why)
                        nk = self.goto(k, None)
                        if nk is not None:
                            self.add(cur, (nk, i))

    def makeSet_fast(self, token, sets, i):
        #
        #  Call *only* when the entire state machine has been built!
        #  It relies on self.edges being filled in completely, and
        #  then duplicates and inlines code to boost speed at the
        #  cost of extreme ugliness.
        #
        cur, next = sets[i], sets[i+1]
        ttype = token is not None and self.typestring(token) or None

        for item in cur:
            ptr = (item, i)
            state, parent = item
            if ttype is not None:
                k = self.edges.get((state, ttype), None)
                if k is not None:
                    #self.add(next, (k, parent), i+1, ptr)
                    #INLINED --v
                    new = (k, parent)
                    key = (new, i+1)
                    if new not in next:
                        self.links[key] = []
                        next.append(new)
                    self.links[key].append((ptr, None))
                    #INLINED --^
                    #nk = self.goto(k, None)
                    nk = self.edges.get((k, None), None)
                    if nk is not None:
                        #self.add(next, (nk, i+1))
                        #INLINED --v
                        new = (nk, i+1)
                        if new not in next:
                            next.append(new)
                        #INLINED --^
            else:
                add = self.gotoST(state, token)
                for k in add:
                    if k is not None:
                        self.add(next, (k, parent), i+1, ptr)
                        #nk = self.goto(k, None)
                        nk = self.edges.get((k, None), None)
                        if nk is not None:
                            self.add(next, (nk, i+1))

            if parent == i:
                continue

            for rule in self.states[state].complete:
                lhs, rhs = rule
                for pitem in sets[parent]:
                    pstate, pparent = pitem
                    #k = self.goto(pstate, lhs)
                    k = self.edges.get((pstate, lhs), None)
                    if k is not None:
                        why = (item, i, rule)
                        pptr = (pitem, parent)
                        #self.add(cur, (k, pparent),
                        #        i, pptr, why)
                        #INLINED --v
                        new = (k, pparent)
                        key = (new, i)
                        if new not in cur:
                            self.links[key] = []
                            cur.append(new)
                        self.links[key].append((pptr, why))
                        #INLINED --^
                        #nk = self.goto(k, None)
                        nk = self.edges.get((k, None), None)
                        if nk is not None:
                            #self.add(cur, (nk, i))
                            #INLINED --v
                            new = (nk, i)
                            if new not in cur:
                                cur.append(new)
                            #INLINED --^

    def predecessor(self, key, causal):
        for p, c in self.links[key]:
            if c == causal:
                return p
        assert 0

    def causal(self, key):
        links = self.links[key]
        if len(links) == 1:
            return links[0][1]
        choices = []
        rule2cause = {}
        for p, c in links:
            rule = c[2]
            choices.append(rule)
            rule2cause[rule] = c
        return rule2cause[self.ambiguity(choices)]

    def deriveEpsilon(self, nt):
        if len(self.newrules[nt]) > 1:
            rule = self.ambiguity(self.newrules[nt])
        else:
            rule = self.newrules[nt][0]
        #output(rule)

        rhs = rule[1]
        attr = [None] * len(rhs)

        for i in range(len(rhs)-1, -1, -1):
            attr[i] = self.deriveEpsilon(rhs[i])
        return self.rule2func[self.new2old[rule]](attr)

    def buildTree(self, nt, item, tokens, k):
        state, parent = item

        choices = []
        for rule in self.states[state].complete:
            if rule[0] == nt:
                choices.append(rule)
        rule = choices[0]
        if len(choices) > 1:
            rule = self.ambiguity(choices)
        #output(rule)

        rhs = rule[1]
        attr = [None] * len(rhs)

        for i in range(len(rhs)-1, -1, -1):
            sym = rhs[i]
            if sym not in self.newrules:
                if sym != self._BOF:
                    attr[i] = tokens[k-1]
                    key = (item, k)
                    item, k = self.predecessor(key, None)
            #elif self.isnullable(sym):
            elif self._NULLABLE == sym[0:len(self._NULLABLE)]:
                attr[i] = self.deriveEpsilon(sym)
            else:
                key = (item, k)
                why = self.causal(key)
                attr[i] = self.buildTree(sym, why[0],
                                         tokens, why[1])
                item, k = self.predecessor(key, why)
        return self.rule2func[self.new2old[rule]](attr)

    def ambiguity(self, rules):
        #
        #  XXX - problem here and in collectRules() if the same rule
        #        appears in >1 method.  Also undefined results if rules
        #        causing the ambiguity appear in the same method.
        #
        sortlist = []
        name2index = {}
        for i in range(len(rules)):
            lhs, rhs = rule = rules[i]
            name = self.rule2name[self.new2old[rule]]
            sortlist.append((len(rhs), name))
            name2index[name] = i
        sortlist.sort()
        list = [b for a, b in sortlist]
        return rules[name2index[self.resolve(list)]]

    def resolve(self, list):
        #
        #  Resolve ambiguity in favor of the shortest RHS.
        #  Since we walk the tree from the top down, this
        #  should effectively resolve in favor of a "shift".
        #
        return list[0]

#
#  GenericASTBuilder automagically constructs a concrete/abstract syntax tree
#  for a given input.  The extra argument is a class (not an instance!)
#  which supports the "__setslice__" and "__len__" methods.
#
#  XXX - silently overrides any user code in methods.
#

class GenericASTBuilder(GenericParser):
    def __init__(self, AST, start):
        GenericParser.__init__(self, start)
        self.AST = AST

    def preprocess(self, rule, func):
        rebind = lambda lhs, self=self: \
                        lambda args, lhs=lhs, self=self: \
                                self.buildASTNode(args, lhs)
        lhs, rhs = rule
        return rule, rebind(lhs)

    def buildASTNode(self, args, lhs):
        children = []
        for arg in args:
            if isinstance(arg, self.AST):
                children.append(arg)
            else:
                children.append(self.terminal(arg))
        return self.nonterminal(lhs, children)

    def terminal(self, token):      return token

    def nonterminal(self, type, args):
        rv = self.AST(type)
        rv[:len(args)] = args
        return rv

#
#  GenericASTTraversal is a Visitor pattern according to Design Patterns.  For
#  each node it attempts to invoke the method n_<node type>, falling
#  back onto the default() method if the n_* can't be found.  The preorder
#  traversal also looks for an exit hook named n_<node type>_exit (no default
#  routine is called if it's not found).  To prematurely halt traversal
#  of a subtree, call the prune() method -- this only makes sense for a
#  preorder traversal.  Node type is determined via the typestring() method.
#

class GenericASTTraversalPruningException:
    pass

class GenericASTTraversal:
    def __init__(self, ast):
        self.ast = ast

    def typestring(self, node):
        return node.type

    def prune(self):
        raise GenericASTTraversalPruningException

    def preorder(self, node=None):
        if node is None:
            node = self.ast

        try:
            name = 'n_' + self.typestring(node)
            if hasattr(self, name):
                func = getattr(self, name)
                func(node)
            else:
                self.default(node)
        except GenericASTTraversalPruningException:
            return

        for kid in node:
            self.preorder(kid)

        name = name + '_exit'
        if hasattr(self, name):
            func = getattr(self, name)
            func(node)

    def postorder(self, node=None):
        if node is None:
            node = self.ast

        for kid in node:
            self.postorder(kid)

        name = 'n_' + self.typestring(node)
        if hasattr(self, name):
            func = getattr(self, name)
            func(node)
        else:
            self.default(node)


    def default(self, node):
        pass

#
#  GenericASTMatcher.  AST nodes must have "__getitem__" and "__cmp__"
#  implemented.
#
#  XXX - makes assumptions about how GenericParser walks the parse tree.
#

class GenericASTMatcher(GenericParser):
    def __init__(self, start, ast):
        GenericParser.__init__(self, start)
        self.ast = ast

    def preprocess(self, rule, func):
        rebind = lambda func, self=self: \
                        lambda args, func=func, self=self: \
                                self.foundMatch(args, func)
        lhs, rhs = rule
        rhslist = list(rhs)
        rhslist.reverse()

        return (lhs, tuple(rhslist)), rebind(func)

    def foundMatch(self, args, func):
        func(args[-1])
        return args[-1]

    def match_r(self, node):
        self.input.insert(0, node)
        children = 0

        for child in node:
            if children == 0:
                self.input.insert(0, '(')
            children = children + 1
            self.match_r(child)

        if children > 0:
            self.input.insert(0, ')')

    def match(self, ast=None):
        if ast is None:
            ast = self.ast
        self.input = []

        self.match_r(ast)
        self.parse(self.input)

    def resolve(self, list):
        #
        #  Resolve ambiguity in favor of the longest RHS.
        #
        return list[-1]

def _dump(tokens, sets, states):
    for i in range(len(sets)):
        output('set %d' % i)
        for item in sets[i]:
            output('\t', item)
            for (lhs, rhs), pos in states[item[0]].items:
                output('\t\t', lhs, '::=', end='')
                output(' '.join(rhs[:pos]), end='')
                output('.', end='')
                output(' '.join(rhs[pos:]))
        if i < len(tokens):
            output()
            output('token %s' % str(tokens[i]))
            output()
www.java2java.com | Contact Us
Copyright 2009 - 12 Demo Source and Support. All rights reserved.
All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.