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page(n) 1.0 "Development Tools"
page - Parser Generator
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
COMMAND LINE
OPERATION
OPTIONS
PLUGINS
PLUGIN LOCATIONS
SEE ALSO
KEYWORDS
COPYRIGHT
The application described by this document, page , is actually not just a parser
generator, as the name implies, but a generic tool for the
execution of arbitrary transformations on texts.
Its genericity comes through the use of plugins for
reading, transforming, and writing data, and the predefined set of
plugins provided by Tcllib is for the generation of memoizing
recursive descent parsers (aka packrat parsers) from
grammar specifications (Parsing Expression Grammars).
page is written on top
of the package page::pluginmgr, wrapping its
functionality into a command line based application. All the other
page::* packages are plugin and/or supporting
packages for the generation of parsers. The parsers themselves are
based on the packages grammar::peg , grammar::peg::interp
, and grammar::mengine.
- page ?options...? ?input ?output??
- This is general form for calling page . The application will read the
contents of the file input, process them under
the control of the specified options, and then
write the result to the file output.
If input is the string - the
data to process will be read from stdin instead of
a file. Analogously the result will be written to
stdout instead of a file if output is the string -. A missing output
or input specification causes the application to assume
-.
The detailed specifications of the recognized options are provided in section OPTIONS.
- path input (in)
- This argument specifies the path to the file to be processed by
the application, or -. The last value causes the
application to read the text from stdin. Otherwise
it has to exist, and be readable. If the argument is missing
- is assumed.
- path output (in)
- This argument specifies where to write the generated text. It
can be the path to a file, or -. The last value
causes the application to write the generated documented to
stdout.
If the file output does not exist then [file
dirname $output] has to exist and must be a writable directory, as
the application will create the fileto write to.
If the argument is missing - is assumed.
... reading ... transforming ... writing - plugins - pipeline
...
This section describes all the options available to the user of
the application. Options are always processed in order. I.e. of
both --help and --version are
specified the option encountered first has precedence.
Unknown options specified before any of the options
-rd, -wr, or -tr
will cause processing to abort with an error. Unknown options
coming in between these options, or after the last of them are
assumed to always take a single argument and are associated with
the last plugin option coming before them. They will be checked
after all the relevant plugins, and thus the options they
understand, are known. I.e. such unknown options cause error if and
only if the plugin option they are associated with does not
understand them, and was not superceded by a plugin option coming
after.
Default options are used if and only if the command line did not
contain any options at all. They will set the application up as a
PEG-based parser generator. The exact list of options is
And now the recognized options and their arguments, if they have
any:
- --help
- -h
- -?
- When one of these options is found on the command line all
arguments coming before or after are ignored. The application will
print a short description of the recognized options and exit.
- --version
- -V
- When one of these options is found on the command line all
arguments coming before or after are ignored. The application will
print its own revision and exit.
- -P
- This option signals the application to activate visual feedback
while reading the input.
- -T
- This option signals the application to collect statistics while
reading the input and to print them after reading has completed,
before processing started.
- -D
- This option signals the application to activate logging in the
Safe base, for the debugging of problems with plugins.
- -r parser
- -rd parser
- --reader parser
- These options specify the plugin the application has to use for
reading the input. If the options are used
multiple times the last one will be used.
- -w generator
- -wr generator
- --writer generator
- These options specify the plugin the application has to use for
generating and writing the final output. If the
options are used multiple times the last one will be used.
- -t process
- -tr process
- --transform process
- These options specify a plugin to run on the input. In contrast
to readers and writers each use will not supersede
previous uses, but add each chosen plugin to a list of
transformations, either at the front, or the end, per the last seen
use of either option -p or -a.
The initial default is to append the new transformations.
- -a
- --append
- These options signal the application that all following
transformations should be added at the end of the list of
transformations.
- -p
- --prepend
- These options signal the application that all following
transformations should be added at the beginning of the list of
transformations.
- --reset
- This option signals the application to clear the list of
transformations. This is necessary to wipe out the default
transformations used.
- -c file
- --configuration file
- This option causes the application to load a configuration file
and/or plugin. This is a plugin which in essence provides a
pre-defined set of commandline options. They are processed exactly
as if they have been specified in place of the option and its
arguments. This means that unknown options found at the beginning
of the configuration file are associated with the last plugin, even
if that plugin was specified before the configuration file itself.
Conversely, unknown options coming after the configuration file can
be associated with a plugin specified in the file.
If the argument is a file which cannot be loaded as a plugin the
application will assume that its contents are a list of options and
their arguments, separated by space, tabs, and newlines. Options
and argumentes containing spaces can be quoted via double-quotes
(") and quotes ('). The quote character can be specified within in
a quoted string by doubling it. Newlines in a quoted string are
accepted as is.
page makes use of four
different types of plugins, namely: readers, writers,
transformations, and configurations. Here we provide only a basic
introduction on how to use them from page . The exact APIs provided to and
expected from the plugins can be found in the documentation for
page::pluginmgr, for those who wish to write their
own plugins.
Plugins are specified as arguments to the options
-r, -w, -t,
-c, and their equivalent longer forms. See the
section OPTIONS for reference.
Each such argument will be first treated as the name of a file
and this file is loaded as the plugin. If however there is no file
with that name, then it will be translated into the name of a
package, and this package is then loaded. For each type of plugins
the package management searches not only the regular paths, but a
set application- and type-specific paths as well. Please see the
section PLUGIN LOCATIONS for a
listing of all paths and their sources.
- -c name
- Configurations. The name of the package for the plugin name is "page::config::name".
We have one predefined plugin:
- peg
- It sets the application up as a parser generator accepting
parsing expression grammars and writing a packrat parser in Tcl.
The actual arguments it specifies are:
| |
--reset
--append
--reader peg
--transform reach
--transform use
--writer me
|
- -r name
- Readers. The name of the package for the plugin name is "page::reader::name".
We have five predefined plugins:
- peg
- Interprets the input as a parsing expression grammar (PEG ) and generates a tree
representation for it. Both the syntax of PEGs and the structure of
the tree representation are explained in their own manpages.
- hb
- Interprets the input as Tcl code as generated by the writer
plugin hb and generates its tree representation.
- ser
- Interprets the input as the serialization of a PEG, as
generated by the writer plugin ser, using the package
grammar::peg
.
- lemon
- Interprets the input as a grammar specification as understood
by Richard Hipp's LEMON parser generator and generates a
tree representation for it. Both the input syntax and the structure
of the tree representation are explained in their own manpages.
- treeser
- Interprets the input as the serialization of a struct::tree . It is
validated as such, but nothing else. It is not assumed to
be the tree representation of a grammar.
- -w name
- Writers. The name of the package for the plugin name is "page::writer::name".
We have eight predefined plugins:
- identity
- Simply writes the incoming data as it is, without making any
changes. This is good for inspecting the raw result of a reader or
transformation.
- null
- Generates nothing, and ignores the incoming data structure.
- tree
- Assumes that the incoming data structure is a struct::tree and
generates an indented textual representation of all nodes, their
parental relationships, and their attribute information.
- peg
- Assumes that the incoming data structure is a tree
representation of a PEG
or other other grammar and writes it out as a PEG. The result is
nicely formatted and partially simplified (strings as sequences of
characters). A pretty printer in essence, but can also be used to
obtain a canonical representation of the input grammar.
- tpc
- Assumes that the incoming data structure is a tree
representation of a PEG
or other other grammar and writes out Tcl code defining a package
which defines a grammar::peg object
containing the grammar when it is loaded into an interpreter.
- hb
- This is like the writer plugin tpc, but it writes only
the statements which define stat expression and grammar rules. The
code making the result a package is left out.
- ser
- Assumes that the incoming data structure is a tree
representation of a PEG
or other other grammar, transforms it internally into a grammar::peg object and
writes out its serialization.
- me
- Assumes that the incoming data structure is a tree
representation of a PEG
or other other grammar and writes out Tcl code defining a package
which implements a memoizing recursive descent parser based on the
match engine (ME) provided by the package
grammar::mengine.
- -t name
- Transformers. The name of the package for the plugin name is "page::transform::name".
We have two predefined plugins:
- reach
- Assumes that the incoming data structure is a tree
representation of a PEG
or other other grammar. It determines which nonterminal symbols and
rules are reachable from start-symbol/expression. All nonterminal
symbols which were not reached are removed.
- use
- Assumes that the incoming data structure is a tree
representation of a PEG
or other other grammar. It determines which nonterminal symbols and
rules are able to generate a finite sequences of terminal
symbols (in the sense for a Context Free Grammar). All nonterminal
symbols which were not deemed useful in this sense are
removed.
The application-specific paths searched by page either are, or come from:
- The directory "~/.page/plugin"
- The environment variable PAGE_PLUGINS
- The registry entry
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\PAGE\PLUGINS
- The registry entry
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\PAGE\PLUGINS
The type-specific paths searched by page either are, or come from:
- The directory
"~/.page/plugin/<TYPE>"
- The environment variable PAGE_<TYPE>_PLUGINS
- The registry entry
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\PAGE\<TYPE>\PLUGINS
- The registry entry
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\PAGE\<TYPE>\PLUGINS
Where the placeholder <TYPE> is always one of the
values below, properly capitalized.
- reader
- writer
- transform
- config
The registry entries are specific to the Windows(tm) platform,
all other platforms will ignore them.
The contents of both environment variables and registry entries
are interpreted as a list of paths, with the elements separated by
either colon (Unix), or semicolon (Windows).
page::pluginmgr
parser generator , text processing
Copyright © 2005 Andreas Kupries
<andreas_kupries@users.sourceforge.net>