Commit Graph

7 Commits (93cfdcd4888eb95e0f86a4e50aaec9e2daf9af9c)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alexander Kedrik e2ebe3e2ae Use #pragma once
#pragma once is safer and simpler. According to Wikipedia it's supported by all major compilers.
2014-01-01 15:06:57 +01:00
Michael Stapelberg a99fc537fc re-shuffle struct members to save a bit of memory
Analysis done with pahole(1).
2013-06-08 15:37:41 +02:00
Michael Stapelberg 20c0fa7cfb use the new parser by default
you can force the old parser with the command line flag
--force-old-config-parser-v4.4-only (which will be present in v4.4 only,
as the name suggests)
2012-10-08 13:26:42 +02:00
Michael Stapelberg d638e3029a don’t use reversed identifiers for include guards (Thanks Markus)
Done with:

    sed -in 's/\(ifndef\|define\) _\([0-9A-Z_]*\)$/\1 I3_\2/' include/**/*.h

fixes #804
2012-09-21 15:36:25 +02:00
Michael Stapelberg bbe607899c Send proper error messages upon parser failures, use yajl for generating command replies
Fixes: #693
2012-05-02 22:01:50 +02:00
Michael Stapelberg e114b3dba2 Refactor the interface of commands.c
This change has two implications:

1) tree_render() will now be called precisely once for input which consists of
   multiple commands (like "focus left; focus right"). Also, the caller of
   parse_command() has to call it. This makes us able to fix tickets such as
   ticket #608 (where multiple tree_render() calls are noticable).

2) The output of a command is now a JSON array of return values of the
   individual subcommands. In the case of "focus left; focus right", this is:

   [{"success":true}, {"success":true}]

   While this is incompatible with what i3 returned before, the return value of
   commands was undocumented and therefore not subject to our API stability.
2012-02-15 20:57:25 +00:00
Michael Stapelberg a532f5ac39 Implement a new parser for commands. (+test)
On the rationale of using a custom parser instead of a lex/yacc one, see this
quote from src/commands_parser.c:
     We use a hand-written parser instead of lex/yacc because our commands are
     easy for humans, not for computers. Thus, it’s quite hard to specify a
     context-free grammar for the commands. A PEG grammar would be easier, but
     there’s downsides to every PEG parser generator I have come accross so far.

     This parser is basically a state machine which looks for literals or strings
     and can push either on a stack. After identifying a literal or string, it
     will either transition to the current state, to a different state, or call a
     function (like cmd_move()).

     Special care has been taken that error messages are useful and the code is
     well testable (when compiled with -DTEST_PARSER it will output to stdout
     instead of actually calling any function).

During the migration phase (I plan to completely switch to this parser before
4.2 will be released), the new parser will parse every command you send to
i3 and save the resulting call stack. Then, the old parser will parse your
input and actually execute the commands. Afterwards, both call stacks will be
compared and any differences will be logged.

The new parser works with 100% of the test suite and produces identical call
stacks.
2012-01-14 21:29:57 +00:00