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author | Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> | 2015-02-24 17:53:42 -0500 |
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committer | Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> | 2015-02-24 17:53:45 -0500 |
commit | d809fd0008a2e26de463f47b7aba0365264078f3 (patch) | |
tree | d965a051f8ad5ef8d6579408cd13e392f6701de2 /src/backend/utils/adt/ruleutils.c | |
parent | 23a78352c0a0dc21d6120bd868f0b2d07395b537 (diff) | |
download | postgresql-d809fd0008a2e26de463f47b7aba0365264078f3.tar.gz postgresql-d809fd0008a2e26de463f47b7aba0365264078f3.zip |
Improve parser's one-extra-token lookahead mechanism.
There are a couple of places in our grammar that fail to be strict LALR(1),
by requiring more than a single token of lookahead to decide what to do.
Up to now we've dealt with that by using a filter between the lexer and
parser that merges adjacent tokens into one in the places where two tokens
of lookahead are necessary. But that creates a number of user-visible
anomalies, for instance that you can't name a CTE "ordinality" because
"WITH ordinality AS ..." triggers folding of WITH and ORDINALITY into one
token. I realized that there's a better way.
In this patch, we still do the lookahead basically as before, but we never
merge the second token into the first; we replace just the first token by
a special lookahead symbol when one of the lookahead pairs is seen.
This requires a couple extra productions in the grammar, but it involves
fewer special tokens, so that the grammar tables come out a bit smaller
than before. The filter logic is no slower than before, perhaps a bit
faster.
I also fixed the filter logic so that when backing up after a lookahead,
the current token's terminator is correctly restored; this eliminates some
weird behavior in error message issuance, as is shown by the one change in
existing regression test outputs.
I believe that this patch entirely eliminates odd behaviors caused by
lookahead for WITH. It doesn't really improve the situation for NULLS
followed by FIRST/LAST unfortunately: those sequences still act like a
reserved word, even though there are cases where they should be seen as two
ordinary identifiers, eg "SELECT nulls first FROM ...". I experimented
with additional grammar hacks but couldn't find any simple solution for
that. Still, this is better than before, and it seems much more likely
that we *could* somehow solve the NULLS case on the basis of this filter
behavior than the previous one.
Diffstat (limited to 'src/backend/utils/adt/ruleutils.c')
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