Example #1
0
/// \brief Return true if the specified macro definition is equal to
/// this macro in spelling, arguments, and whitespace.
///
/// \param Syntactically if true, the macro definitions can be identical even
/// if they use different identifiers for the function macro parameters.
/// Otherwise the comparison is lexical and this implements the rules in
/// C99 6.10.3.
bool MacroInfo::isIdenticalTo(const MacroInfo &Other, Preprocessor &PP,
                              bool Syntactically) const {
  bool Lexically = !Syntactically;

  // Check # tokens in replacement, number of args, and various flags all match.
  if (ReplacementTokens.size() != Other.ReplacementTokens.size() ||
      getNumArgs() != Other.getNumArgs() ||
      isFunctionLike() != Other.isFunctionLike() ||
      isC99Varargs() != Other.isC99Varargs() ||
      isGNUVarargs() != Other.isGNUVarargs())
    return false;

  if (Lexically) {
    // Check arguments.
    for (arg_iterator I = arg_begin(), OI = Other.arg_begin(), E = arg_end();
         I != E; ++I, ++OI)
      if (*I != *OI) return false;
  }

  // Check all the tokens.
  for (unsigned i = 0, e = ReplacementTokens.size(); i != e; ++i) {
    const Token &A = ReplacementTokens[i];
    const Token &B = Other.ReplacementTokens[i];
    if (A.getKind() != B.getKind())
      return false;

    // If this isn't the first first token, check that the whitespace and
    // start-of-line characteristics match.
    if (i != 0 &&
        (A.isAtStartOfLine() != B.isAtStartOfLine() ||
         A.hasLeadingSpace() != B.hasLeadingSpace()))
      return false;

    // If this is an identifier, it is easy.
    if (A.getIdentifierInfo() || B.getIdentifierInfo()) {
      if (A.getIdentifierInfo() == B.getIdentifierInfo())
        continue;
      if (Lexically)
        return false;
      // With syntactic equivalence the parameter names can be different as long
      // as they are used in the same place.
      int AArgNum = getArgumentNum(A.getIdentifierInfo());
      if (AArgNum == -1)
        return false;
      if (AArgNum != Other.getArgumentNum(B.getIdentifierInfo()))
        return false;
      continue;
    }

    // Otherwise, check the spelling.
    if (PP.getSpelling(A) != PP.getSpelling(B))
      return false;
  }

  return true;
}
Example #2
0
/// isIdenticalTo - Return true if the specified macro definition is equal to
/// this macro in spelling, arguments, and whitespace.  This is used to emit
/// duplicate definition warnings.  This implements the rules in C99 6.10.3.
///
bool MacroInfo::isIdenticalTo(const MacroInfo &Other, Preprocessor &PP) const {
  // Check # tokens in replacement, number of args, and various flags all match.
  if (ReplacementTokens.size() != Other.ReplacementTokens.size() ||
      getNumArgs() != Other.getNumArgs() ||
      isFunctionLike() != Other.isFunctionLike() ||
      isC99Varargs() != Other.isC99Varargs() ||
      isGNUVarargs() != Other.isGNUVarargs())
    return false;

  // Check arguments.
  for (arg_iterator I = arg_begin(), OI = Other.arg_begin(), E = arg_end();
       I != E; ++I, ++OI)
    if (*I != *OI) return false;

  // Check all the tokens.
  for (unsigned i = 0, e = ReplacementTokens.size(); i != e; ++i) {
    const Token &A = ReplacementTokens[i];
    const Token &B = Other.ReplacementTokens[i];
    if (A.getKind() != B.getKind())
      return false;

    // If this isn't the first first token, check that the whitespace and
    // start-of-line characteristics match.
    if (i != 0 &&
        (A.isAtStartOfLine() != B.isAtStartOfLine() ||
         A.hasLeadingSpace() != B.hasLeadingSpace()))
      return false;

    // If this is an identifier, it is easy.
    if (A.getIdentifierInfo() || B.getIdentifierInfo()) {
      if (A.getIdentifierInfo() != B.getIdentifierInfo())
        return false;
      continue;
    }

    // Otherwise, check the spelling.
    if (PP.getSpelling(A) != PP.getSpelling(B))
      return false;
  }

  return true;
}