hammer/examples/base64_sem1.py
Alex Willmer 287f71d561 Fix uses of retired builtins and builtin methods
In Python 3.x

- int and long types are unified. The unified type is called int.
- the text string type (unicode) is renamed to str.
- the byte string type (str) is renamed to bytes.
- chr returns a text string (i.e. str)
- xrange is renamed to range.
- dict.has_key() is removed
-
2019-05-10 21:59:03 +01:00

169 lines
4.7 KiB
Python

#!/usr/bin/env python2
# Example parser: Base64, with fine-grained semantic actions
#
# Demonstrates how to attach semantic actions to grammar rules and piece by
# piece transform the parse tree into the desired semantic representation,
# in this case a sequence of 8-bit values.
#
# Those rules using h.action get an attached action, which must be declared
# (as a function).
#
# This variant of the example uses fine-grained semantic actions that
# transform the parse tree in small steps in a bottom-up fashion. Compare
# base64_sem2.py for an alternative approach using a single top-level action.
from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
import functools
import sys
import hammer as h
# Semantic actions for the grammar below, each corresponds to an "ARULE".
# They must be named act_<rulename>.
def act_bsfdig(p, user_data=None):
# FIXME See the note in init_parser()
c = p if isinstance(p, h.INTEGER_TYPES) else ord(p)
if 0x41 <= c <= 0x5A: # A-Z
return c - 0x41
elif 0x61 <= c <= 0x7A: # a-z
return c - 0x61 + 26
elif 0x30 <= c <= 0x39: # 0-9
return c - 0x30 + 52
elif c == '+':
return 62
elif c == '/':
return 63
else:
raise ValueError
# Hammer's Python bindings don't currently expose h_act_index or hact_ignore
def act_index0(p, user_data=None):
return p[0]
def act_ignore(p, user_data=None):
return None
act_bsfdig_4bit = act_bsfdig
act_bsfdig_2bit = act_bsfdig
act_equals = act_ignore
act_ws = act_ignore
act_document = act_index0
def act_base64_n(n, p, user_data=None):
"""General-form action to turn a block of base64 digits into bytes.
"""
res = [0]*n
x = 0
bits = 0
for i in range(0, n+1):
x <<= 6
x |= p[i] or 0
bits += 6
x >>= bits % 8 # align, i.e. cut off extra bits
for i in range(n):
item = x & 0xFF
res[n-1-i] = item # output the last byte and
x >>= 8 # discard it
return tuple(res)
act_base64_3 = functools.partial(act_base64_n, 3)
act_base64_2 = functools.partial(act_base64_n, 2)
act_base64_1 = functools.partial(act_base64_n, 1)
def act_base64(p, user_data=None):
assert isinstance(p, tuple)
assert len(p) == 2
assert isinstance(p[0], tuple)
res = []
# concatenate base64_3 blocks
for elem in p[0]:
res.extend(elem)
# append one trailing base64_2 or _1 block
tok = p[1]
if isinstance(tok, tuple):
res.extend(tok)
return tuple(res)
def init_parser():
"""Return a parser with the grammar to be recognized.
"""
# CORE
# This is a direct translation of the C example. In C the literal 0x30
# is interchangable with the char literal '0' (note the single quotes).
# This is not the case in Python.
# TODO In the interests of being more Pythonic settle on either string
# literals, or integers
digit = h.ch_range(0x30, 0x39)
alpha = h.choice(h.ch_range(0x41, 0x5a), h.ch_range(0x61, 0x7a))
space = h.in_(" \t\n\r\f\v")
# AUX.
plus = h.ch('+')
slash = h.ch('/')
equals = h.action(h.ch('='), act_equals)
bsfdig = h.action(h.choice(alpha, digit, plus, slash), act_bsfdig)
bsfdig_4bit = h.action(h.in_("AEIMQUYcgkosw048"), act_bsfdig_4bit)
bsfdig_2bit = h.action(h.in_("AQgw"), act_bsfdig_2bit)
base64_3 = h.action(h.repeat_n(bsfdig, 4), act_base64_3)
base64_2 = h.action(h.sequence(bsfdig, bsfdig, bsfdig_4bit, equals),
act_base64_2)
base64_1 = h.action(h.sequence(bsfdig, bsfdig_2bit, equals, equals),
act_base64_1)
base64 = h.action(h.sequence(h.many(base64_3),
h.optional(h.choice(base64_2,
base64_1))),
act_base64)
# TODO This is not quite the same as the C example, with uses act_ignore.
# But I can't get hammer to filter any value returned by act_ignore.
ws = h.ignore(h.many(space))
document = h.action(h.sequence(ws, base64, ws, h.end_p()),
act_document)
# BUG sometimes inputs that should just don't parse.
# It *seemed* to happen mostly with things like "bbbbaaaaBA==".
# Using less actions seemed to make it less likely.
return document
def main():
parser = init_parser()
s = sys.stdin.read()
inputsize = len(s)
print('inputsize=%i' % inputsize, file=sys.stderr)
print('input=%s' % s, file=sys.stderr, end='')
result = parser.parse(s)
if result:
#print('parsed=%i bytes', result.bit_length/8, file=sys.stderr)
print(result)
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()