TAP::Parser::Grammar - A grammar for the Test Anything Protocol. |
TAP::Parser::Grammar - A grammar for the Test Anything Protocol.
Version 3.10
TAP::Parser::Grammar
tokenizes lines from a TAP stream and constructs
the TAP::Parser::Result manpage subclasses to represent the tokens.
Do not attempt to use this class directly. It won't make sense. It's mainly here to ensure that we will be able to have pluggable grammars when TAP is expanded at some future date (plus, this stuff was really cluttering the parser).
new
my $grammar = TAP::Grammar->new($stream);
Returns TAP grammar object that will parse the specified stream.
set_version
$grammar->set_version(13);
Tell the grammar which TAP syntax version to support. The lowest supported version is 12. Although 'TAP version' isn't valid version 12 syntax it is accepted so that higher version numbers may be parsed.
tokenize
my $token = $grammar->tokenize;
This method will return a the TAP::Parser::Result manpage object representing the current line of TAP.
token_types
my @types = $grammar->token_types;
Returns the different types of tokens which this grammar can parse.
syntax_for
my $syntax = $grammar->syntax_for($token_type);
Returns a pre-compiled regular expression which will match a chunk of TAP
corresponding to the token type. For example (not that you should really pay
attention to this, $grammar->syntax_for('comment')
will return
qr/^#(.*)/
.
handler_for
my $handler = $grammar->handler_for($token_type);
Returns a code reference which, when passed an appropriate line of TAP, returns the lexed token corresponding to that line. As a result, the basic TAP parsing loop looks similar to the following:
my @tokens; my $grammar = TAP::Grammar->new; LINE: while ( defined( my $line = $parser->_next_chunk_of_tap ) ) { foreach my $type ( $grammar->token_types ) { my $syntax = $grammar->syntax_for($type); if ( $line =~ $syntax ) { my $handler = $grammar->handler_for($type); push @tokens => $grammar->$handler($line); next LINE; } } push @tokens => $grammar->_make_unknown_token($line); }
NOTE: This grammar is slightly out of date. There's still some discussion about it and a new one will be provided when we have things better defined.
The the TAP::Parser manpage does not use a formal grammar because TAP is essentially a stream-based protocol. In fact, it's quite legal to have an infinite stream. For the same reason that we don't apply regexes to streams, we're not using a formal grammar here. Instead, we parse the TAP in lines.
For purposes for forward compatability, any result which does not match the following grammar is currently referred to as the TAP::Parser::Result::Unknown manpage. It is not a parse error.
A formal grammar would look similar to the following:
(* For the time being, I'm cheating on the EBNF by allowing certain terms to be defined by POSIX character classes by using the following syntax:
digit ::= [:digit:]
As far as I am aware, that's not valid EBNF. Sue me. I didn't know how to write "char" otherwise (Unicode issues). Suggestions welcome. *)
tap ::= version? { comment | unknown } leading_plan lines | lines trailing_plan {comment}
version ::= 'TAP version ' positiveInteger {positiveInteger} "\n"
leading_plan ::= plan skip_directive? "\n"
trailing_plan ::= plan "\n"
plan ::= '1..' nonNegativeInteger
lines ::= line {line}
line ::= (comment | test | unknown | bailout ) "\n"
test ::= status positiveInteger? description? directive?
status ::= 'not '? 'ok '
description ::= (character - (digit | '#')) {character - '#'}
directive ::= todo_directive | skip_directive
todo_directive ::= hash_mark 'TODO' ' ' {character}
skip_directive ::= hash_mark 'SKIP' ' ' {character}
comment ::= hash_mark {character}
hash_mark ::= '#' {' '}
bailout ::= 'Bail out!' {character}
unknown ::= { (character - "\n") }
(* POSIX character classes and other terminals *)
digit ::= [:digit:] character ::= ([:print:] - "\n") positiveInteger ::= ( digit - '0' ) {digit} nonNegativeInteger ::= digit {digit}
TAP::Parser::Grammar - A grammar for the Test Anything Protocol. |