Correct the implementation of %arg and %local.
It's questionable how much they make sense for 64-bit mode; even in
32-bit mode one normally make references off the stack pointer instead
of the base pointer (frame pointer), but that requires keeping track
of the stack pointer offset.
Correct the handling of floating-point tokens in the preprocessor.
The preprocessor scanner and the main scanner really are painfully
divergent for no good reason.
Proper use of bool and enum makes code easier to debug. Do more of
it. In particular, we really should stomp out any residual uses of
magic constants that aren't enums or, in some cases, even #defines.
Per the comment:
* In a MMacro describing a `%rep' block, the `in_progress' field
* isn't merely boolean, but gives the number of repeats left to
* run.
This fixes the "global" directive not getting recognized, since it
repeats over all its arguments.
Both C and C++ have "bool", "true" and "false" in lower case; C
requires <stdbool.h> for this, in C++ it is an inherent type built
into the compiler. Use those instead of the old macros; emulate with
a simple typedef enum if unavailable.
Concentrate compiler dependencies to compiler.h; make sure compiler.h
is included first in every .c file (since some prototypes may depend
on the presence of feature request macros.)
Actually use the conditional inclusion of various functions (totally
broken in previous releases.)
The parent-pointer-based freeing loop in %undef should not advance the
parent pointer when a node is freed, since that will result accessing
freed memory.
Implement the -MG option, to generate dependencies in the presence of
generated files. In the end, we probably need to support the full
gamut of GCC-like dependency-generation options.
Document that %+ needs a space after it due to collision with %+1
syntax for multiline macro arguments; make it issue an error message
rather than crashing.
Switch the preprocessor over to using the hash table library. On my
system, this improves the runtime of the output of test/pref/macro.pl
from over 600 seconds to 7 seconds.
Macros have an odd mix of case-sensitive and case-insensitive
behaviour, plus there are matching parameters for arguments, etc. As
a result, we use case-insensitive hash tables and use a linked list to
store all the possible isomorphs.