------------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- -- -- GNAT COMPILER COMPONENTS -- -- -- -- E R R U T I L -- -- -- -- S p e c -- -- -- -- Copyright (C) 2002-2005, Free Software Foundation, Inc. -- -- -- -- GNAT is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under -- -- terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Soft- -- -- ware Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later ver- -- -- sion. GNAT is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITH- -- -- OUT 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 distributed with GNAT; see file COPYING. If not, write -- -- to the Free Software Foundation, 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, -- -- Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. -- -- -- -- GNAT was originally developed by the GNAT team at New York University. -- -- Extensive contributions were provided by Ada Core Technologies Inc. -- -- -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- This package contains routines to output error messages and the -- corresponding instantiation of Styleg, suitable to instantiate Scng. -- It is not dependent on the GNAT tree packages (Atree, Sinfo, ...) -- It uses the same global variables as Errout, located in package -- Err_Vars. Like Errout, it also uses the common variables and routines -- in package Erroutc. -- This package is used by the preprocessor (gprep.adb) and the project -- manager (prj-err.ads). with Styleg; with Types; use Types; package Errutil is --------------------------------------------------------- -- Error Message Text and Message Insertion Characters -- --------------------------------------------------------- -- Error message text strings are composed of lower case letters, digits -- and the special characters space, comma, period, colon and semicolon, -- apostrophe and parentheses. Special insertion characters can also -- appear which cause the error message circuit to modify the given -- string as follows: -- Ignored insertion characters: the following characters, used as -- insertion characters by Errout are ignored: '$', '&', and '}'. -- If present in an error message, they are not output and are not -- replaced by any text. -- Insertion character % (Percent: insert name from Names table) -- The character % is replaced by the text for the name specified by -- the Name_Id value stored in Error_Msg_Name_1. A blank precedes -- the name if it is preceded by a non-blank character other than a -- left parenthesis. The name is enclosed in quotes unless manual -- quotation mode is set. If the Name_Id is set to No_Name, then -- no insertion occurs; if the Name_Id is set to Error_Name, then -- the string is inserted. A second and third % may appear -- in a single message, similarly replaced by the names which are -- specified by the Name_Id values stored in Error_Msg_Name_2 and -- Error_Msg_Name_3. The names are decoded and cased according to -- the current identifier casing mode. -- Insertion character { (Left brace: insert literally from names table) -- The character { is treated similarly to %, except that the -- name is output literally as stored in the names table without -- adjusting the casing. This can be used for file names and in -- other situations where the name string is to be output unchanged. -- Insertion character * (Asterisk, insert reserved word name) -- The insertion character * is treated exactly like % except that -- the resulting name is cased according to the default conventions -- for reserved words (see package Scans). -- Insertion character # (Pound: insert line number reference) -- The character # is replaced by the string indicating the source -- position stored in Error_Msg_Sloc. There are two cases: -- -- for locations in current file: at line nnn:ccc -- for locations in other files: at filename:nnn:ccc -- -- By convention, the # insertion character is only used at the end -- of an error message, so the above strings only appear as the last -- characters of an error message. -- Insertion character @ (At: insert column number reference) -- The character @ is replaced by null if the RM_Column_Check mode is -- off (False). If the switch is on (True), then @ is replaced by the -- text string " in column nnn" where nnn is the decimal representation -- of the column number stored in Error_Msg_Col plus one (the plus one -- is because the number is stored 0-origin and displayed 1-origin). -- Insertion character ^ (Carret: insert integer value) -- The character ^ is replaced by the decimal conversion of the Uint -- value stored in Error_Msg_Uint_1, with a possible leading minus. -- A second ^ may occur in the message, in which case it is replaced -- by the decimal conversion of the Uint value in Error_Msg_Uint_2. -- Insertion character ! (Exclamation: unconditional message) -- The character ! appearing as the last character of a message makes -- the message unconditional which means that it is output even if it -- would normally be suppressed. -- Insertion character ? (Question: warning message) -- The character ? appearing anywhere in a message makes the message -- a warning instead of a normal error message, and the text of the -- message will be preceded by "Warning:" instead of "Error:" The -- handling of warnings if further controlled by the Warning_Mode -- option (-w switch), see package Opt for further details, and -- also by the current setting from pragma Warnings. This pragma -- applies only to warnings issued from the semantic phase (not -- the parser), but currently all relevant warnings are posted -- by the semantic phase anyway. Messages starting with (style) -- are also treated as warning messages. -- Insertion character A-Z (Upper case letter: Ada reserved word) -- If two or more upper case letters appear in the message, they are -- taken as an Ada reserved word, and are converted to the default -- case for reserved words (see Scans package spec). Surrounding -- quotes are added unless manual quotation mode is currently set. -- Insertion character ` (Backquote: set manual quotation mode) -- The backquote character always appears in pairs. Each backquote -- of the pair is replaced by a double quote character. In addition, -- Any reserved keywords, or name insertions between these backquotes -- are not surrounded by the usual automatic double quotes. See the -- section below on manual quotation mode for further details. -- Insertion character ' (Quote: literal character) -- Precedes a character which is placed literally into the message. -- Used to insert characters into messages that are one of the -- insertion characters defined here. -- Insertion character \ (Backslash: continuation message) -- Indicates that the message is a continuation of a message -- previously posted. This is used to ensure that such groups -- of messages are treated as a unit. The \ character must be -- the first character of the message text. ----------------------------------------------------- -- Format of Messages and Manual Quotation Control -- ----------------------------------------------------- -- Messages are generally all in lower case, except for inserted names -- and appear in one of the following two forms: -- error: text -- warning: text -- The prefixes error and warning are supplied automatically (depending -- on the use of the ? insertion character), and the call to the error -- message routine supplies the text. The "error: " prefix is omitted -- in brief error message formats. -- Reserved keywords in the message are in the default keyword case -- (determined from the given source program), surrounded by quotation -- marks. This is achieved by spelling the reserved word in upper case -- letters, which is recognized as a request for insertion of quotation -- marks by the error text processor. Thus for example: -- Error_Msg_AP ("IS expected"); -- would result in the output of one of the following: -- error: "is" expected -- error: "IS" expected -- error: "Is" expected -- the choice between these being made by looking at the casing convention -- used for keywords (actually the first compilation unit keyword) in the -- source file. -- In the case of names, the default mode for the error text processor -- is to surround the name by quotation marks automatically. The case -- used for the identifier names is taken from the source program where -- possible, and otherwise is the default casing convention taken from -- the source file usage. -- In some cases, better control over the placement of quote marks is -- required. This is achieved using manual quotation mode. In this mode, -- one or more insertion sequences is surrounded by backquote characters. -- The backquote characters are output as double quote marks, and normal -- automatic insertion of quotes is suppressed between the double quotes. -- For example: -- Error_Msg_AP ("`END &;` expected"); -- generates a message like -- error: "end Open_Scope;" expected -- where the node specifying the name Open_Scope has been stored in -- Error_Msg_Node_1 prior to the call. The great majority of error -- messages operates in normal quotation mode. -- Note: the normal automatic insertion of spaces before insertion -- sequences (such as those that come from & and %) is suppressed in -- manual quotation mode, so blanks, if needed as in the above example, -- must be explicitly present. ------------------------------ -- Error Output Subprograms -- ------------------------------ procedure Initialize; -- Initializes for output of error messages. Must be called for each -- file before using any of the other routines in the package. procedure Finalize (Source_Type : String := "project"); -- Finalize processing of error messages for one file and output message -- indicating the number of detected errors. -- Source_Type is used in verbose mode to indicate the type of the source -- being parsed (project file, definition file or input file for the -- preprocessor). procedure Error_Msg (Msg : String; Flag_Location : Source_Ptr); -- Output a message at specified location procedure Error_Msg_S (Msg : String); -- Output a message at current scan pointer location procedure Error_Msg_SC (Msg : String); -- Output a message at the start of the current token, unless we are at -- the end of file, in which case we always output the message after the -- last real token in the file. procedure Error_Msg_SP (Msg : String); -- Output a message at the start of the previous token procedure Set_Ignore_Errors (To : Boolean); -- Indicate, when To = True, that all reported errors should -- be ignored. By default reported errors are not ignored. package Style is new Styleg (Error_Msg => Error_Msg, Error_Msg_S => Error_Msg_S, Error_Msg_SC => Error_Msg_SC, Error_Msg_SP => Error_Msg_SP); -- Instantiation of the generic style package, suitable for an -- instantiation of Scng. end Errutil;