%top{ /*------------------------------------------------------------------------- * * psqlscan.l * lexical scanner for SQL commands * * This lexer used to be part of psql, and that heritage is reflected in * the file name as well as function and typedef names, though it can now * be used by other frontend programs as well. It's also possible to extend * this lexer with a compatible add-on lexer to handle program-specific * backslash commands. * * This code is mainly concerned with determining where the end of a SQL * statement is: we are looking for semicolons that are not within quotes, * comments, or parentheses. The most reliable way to handle this is to * borrow the backend's flex lexer rules, lock, stock, and barrel. The rules * below are (except for a few) the same as the backend's, but their actions * are just ECHO whereas the backend's actions generally do other things. * * XXX The rules in this file must be kept in sync with the backend lexer!!! * * XXX Avoid creating backtracking cases --- see the backend lexer for info. * * See psqlscan_int.h for additional commentary. * * * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2024, PostgreSQL Global Development Group * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California * * IDENTIFICATION * src/fe_utils/psqlscan.l * *------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ #include "postgres_fe.h" #include "common/logging.h" #include "fe_utils/psqlscan.h" #include "libpq-fe.h" } %{ /* LCOV_EXCL_START */ #include "fe_utils/psqlscan_int.h" /* * We must have a typedef YYSTYPE for yylex's first argument, but this lexer * doesn't presently make use of that argument, so just declare it as int. */ typedef int YYSTYPE; /* * Set the type of yyextra; we use it as a pointer back to the containing * PsqlScanState. */ #define YY_EXTRA_TYPE PsqlScanState /* Return values from yylex() */ #define LEXRES_EOL 0 /* end of input */ #define LEXRES_SEMI 1 /* command-terminating semicolon found */ #define LEXRES_BACKSLASH 2 /* backslash command start */ #define ECHO psqlscan_emit(cur_state, yytext, yyleng) /* * Work around a bug in flex 2.5.35: it emits a couple of functions that * it forgets to emit declarations for. Since we use -Wmissing-prototypes, * this would cause warnings. Providing our own declarations should be * harmless even when the bug gets fixed. */ extern int psql_yyget_column(yyscan_t yyscanner); extern void psql_yyset_column(int column_no, yyscan_t yyscanner); %} %option reentrant %option bison-bridge %option 8bit %option never-interactive %option nodefault %option noinput %option nounput %option noyywrap %option warn %option prefix="psql_yy" /* * All of the following definitions and rules should exactly match * src/backend/parser/scan.l so far as the flex patterns are concerned. * The rule bodies are just ECHO as opposed to what the backend does, * however. (But be sure to duplicate code that affects the lexing process, * such as BEGIN() and yyless().) Also, psqlscan uses a single <> rule * whereas scan.l has a separate one for each exclusive state. */ /* * OK, here is a short description of lex/flex rules behavior. * The longest pattern which matches an input string is always chosen. * For equal-length patterns, the first occurring in the rules list is chosen. * INITIAL is the starting state, to which all non-conditional rules apply. * Exclusive states change parsing rules while the state is active. When in * an exclusive state, only those rules defined for that state apply. * * We use exclusive states for quoted strings, extended comments, * and to eliminate parsing troubles for numeric strings. * Exclusive states: * bit string literal * extended C-style comments * delimited identifiers (double-quoted identifiers) * hexadecimal byte string * standard quoted strings * quote stop (detect continued strings) * extended quoted strings (support backslash escape sequences) * $foo$ quoted strings * quoted identifier with Unicode escapes * quoted string with Unicode escapes * * Note: we intentionally don't mimic the backend's state; we have * no need to distinguish it from state, and no good way to get out * of it in error cases. The backend just throws yyerror() in those * cases, but that's not an option here. */ %x xb %x xc %x xd %x xh %x xq %x xqs %x xe %x xdolq %x xui %x xus /* * In order to make the world safe for Windows and Mac clients as well as * Unix ones, we accept either \n or \r as a newline. A DOS-style \r\n * sequence will be seen as two successive newlines, but that doesn't cause * any problems. Comments that start with -- and extend to the next * newline are treated as equivalent to a single whitespace character. * * NOTE a fine point: if there is no newline following --, we will absorb * everything to the end of the input as a comment. This is correct. Older * versions of Postgres failed to recognize -- as a comment if the input * did not end with a newline. * * non_newline_space tracks all space characters except newlines. * * XXX if you change the set of whitespace characters, fix scanner_isspace() * to agree. */ space [ \t\n\r\f\v] non_newline_space [ \t\f\v] newline [\n\r] non_newline [^\n\r] comment ("--"{non_newline}*) whitespace ({space}+|{comment}) /* * SQL requires at least one newline in the whitespace separating * string literals that are to be concatenated. Silly, but who are we * to argue? Note that {whitespace_with_newline} should not have * after * it, whereas {whitespace} should generally have a * after it... */ special_whitespace ({space}+|{comment}{newline}) non_newline_whitespace ({non_newline_space}|{comment}) whitespace_with_newline ({non_newline_whitespace}*{newline}{special_whitespace}*) quote ' /* If we see {quote} then {quotecontinue}, the quoted string continues */ quotecontinue {whitespace_with_newline}{quote} /* * {quotecontinuefail} is needed to avoid lexer backup when we fail to match * {quotecontinue}. It might seem that this could just be {whitespace}*, * but if there's a dash after {whitespace_with_newline}, it must be consumed * to see if there's another dash --- which would start a {comment} and thus * allow continuation of the {quotecontinue} token. */ quotecontinuefail {whitespace}*"-"? /* Bit string * It is tempting to scan the string for only those characters * which are allowed. However, this leads to silently swallowed * characters if illegal characters are included in the string. * For example, if xbinside is [01] then B'ABCD' is interpreted * as a zero-length string, and the ABCD' is lost! * Better to pass the string forward and let the input routines * validate the contents. */ xbstart [bB]{quote} xbinside [^']* /* Hexadecimal byte string */ xhstart [xX]{quote} xhinside [^']* /* National character */ xnstart [nN]{quote} /* Quoted string that allows backslash escapes */ xestart [eE]{quote} xeinside [^\\']+ xeescape [\\][^0-7] xeoctesc [\\][0-7]{1,3} xehexesc [\\]x[0-9A-Fa-f]{1,2} xeunicode [\\](u[0-9A-Fa-f]{4}|U[0-9A-Fa-f]{8}) xeunicodefail [\\](u[0-9A-Fa-f]{0,3}|U[0-9A-Fa-f]{0,7}) /* Extended quote * xqdouble implements embedded quote, '''' */ xqstart {quote} xqdouble {quote}{quote} xqinside [^']+ /* $foo$ style quotes ("dollar quoting") * The quoted string starts with $foo$ where "foo" is an optional string * in the form of an identifier, except that it may not contain "$", * and extends to the first occurrence of an identical string. * There is *no* processing of the quoted text. * * {dolqfailed} is an error rule to avoid scanner backup when {dolqdelim} * fails to match its trailing "$". */ dolq_start [A-Za-z\200-\377_] dolq_cont [A-Za-z\200-\377_0-9] dolqdelim \$({dolq_start}{dolq_cont}*)?\$ dolqfailed \${dolq_start}{dolq_cont}* dolqinside [^$]+ /* Double quote * Allows embedded spaces and other special characters into identifiers. */ dquote \" xdstart {dquote} xdstop {dquote} xddouble {dquote}{dquote} xdinside [^"]+ /* Quoted identifier with Unicode escapes */ xuistart [uU]&{dquote} /* Quoted string with Unicode escapes */ xusstart [uU]&{quote} /* error rule to avoid backup */ xufailed [uU]& /* C-style comments * * The "extended comment" syntax closely resembles allowable operator syntax. * The tricky part here is to get lex to recognize a string starting with * slash-star as a comment, when interpreting it as an operator would produce * a longer match --- remember lex will prefer a longer match! Also, if we * have something like plus-slash-star, lex will think this is a 3-character * operator whereas we want to see it as a + operator and a comment start. * The solution is two-fold: * 1. append {op_chars}* to xcstart so that it matches as much text as * {operator} would. Then the tie-breaker (first matching rule of same * length) ensures xcstart wins. We put back the extra stuff with yyless() * in case it contains a star-slash that should terminate the comment. * 2. In the operator rule, check for slash-star within the operator, and * if found throw it back with yyless(). This handles the plus-slash-star * problem. * Dash-dash comments have similar interactions with the operator rule. */ xcstart \/\*{op_chars}* xcstop \*+\/ xcinside [^*/]+ ident_start [A-Za-z\200-\377_] ident_cont [A-Za-z\200-\377_0-9\$] identifier {ident_start}{ident_cont}* /* Assorted special-case operators and operator-like tokens */ typecast "::" dot_dot \.\. colon_equals ":=" /* * These operator-like tokens (unlike the above ones) also match the {operator} * rule, which means that they might be overridden by a longer match if they * are followed by a comment start or a + or - character. Accordingly, if you * add to this list, you must also add corresponding code to the {operator} * block to return the correct token in such cases. (This is not needed in * psqlscan.l since the token value is ignored there.) */ equals_greater "=>" less_equals "<=" greater_equals ">=" less_greater "<>" not_equals "!=" /* * "self" is the set of chars that should be returned as single-character * tokens. "op_chars" is the set of chars that can make up "Op" tokens, * which can be one or more characters long (but if a single-char token * appears in the "self" set, it is not to be returned as an Op). Note * that the sets overlap, but each has some chars that are not in the other. * * If you change either set, adjust the character lists appearing in the * rule for "operator"! */ self [,()\[\].;\:\+\-\*\/\%\^\<\>\=] op_chars [\~\!\@\#\^\&\|\`\?\+\-\*\/\%\<\>\=] operator {op_chars}+ /* * Numbers * * Unary minus is not part of a number here. Instead we pass it separately to * the parser, and there it gets coerced via doNegate(). * * {numericfail} is used because we would like "1..10" to lex as 1, dot_dot, 10. * * {realfail} is added to prevent the need for scanner * backup when the {real} rule fails to match completely. */ decdigit [0-9] hexdigit [0-9A-Fa-f] octdigit [0-7] bindigit [0-1] decinteger {decdigit}(_?{decdigit})* hexinteger 0[xX](_?{hexdigit})+ octinteger 0[oO](_?{octdigit})+ bininteger 0[bB](_?{bindigit})+ hexfail 0[xX]_? octfail 0[oO]_? binfail 0[bB]_? numeric (({decinteger}\.{decinteger}?)|(\.{decinteger})) numericfail {decdigit}+\.\. real ({decinteger}|{numeric})[Ee][-+]?{decinteger} realfail ({decinteger}|{numeric})[Ee][-+] decinteger_junk {decinteger}{ident_start} hexinteger_junk {hexinteger}{ident_start} octinteger_junk {octinteger}{ident_start} bininteger_junk {bininteger}{ident_start} numeric_junk {numeric}{ident_start} real_junk {real}{ident_start} param \${decinteger} param_junk \${decinteger}{ident_start} /* psql-specific: characters allowed in variable names */ variable_char [A-Za-z\200-\377_0-9] other . /* * Dollar quoted strings are totally opaque, and no escaping is done on them. * Other quoted strings must allow some special characters such as single-quote * and newline. * Embedded single-quotes are implemented both in the SQL standard * style of two adjacent single quotes "''" and in the Postgres/Java style * of escaped-quote "\'". * Other embedded escaped characters are matched explicitly and the leading * backslash is dropped from the string. * Note that xcstart must appear before operator, as explained above! * Also whitespace (comment) must appear before operator. */ %% %{ /* Declare some local variables inside yylex(), for convenience */ PsqlScanState cur_state = yyextra; PQExpBuffer output_buf = cur_state->output_buf; /* * Force flex into the state indicated by start_state. This has a * couple of purposes: it lets some of the functions below set a new * starting state without ugly direct access to flex variables, and it * allows us to transition from one flex lexer to another so that we * can lex different parts of the source string using separate lexers. */ BEGIN(cur_state->start_state); %} {whitespace} { /* * Note that the whitespace rule includes both true * whitespace and single-line ("--" style) comments. * We suppress whitespace until we have collected some * non-whitespace data. (This interacts with some * decisions in MainLoop(); see there for details.) */ if (output_buf->len > 0) ECHO; } {xcstart} { cur_state->xcdepth = 0; BEGIN(xc); /* Put back any characters past slash-star; see above */ yyless(2); ECHO; } { {xcstart} { cur_state->xcdepth++; /* Put back any characters past slash-star; see above */ yyless(2); ECHO; } {xcstop} { if (cur_state->xcdepth <= 0) BEGIN(INITIAL); else cur_state->xcdepth--; ECHO; } {xcinside} { ECHO; } {op_chars} { ECHO; } \*+ { ECHO; } } /* */ {xbstart} { BEGIN(xb); ECHO; } {xhinside} | {xbinside} { ECHO; } {xhstart} { /* Hexadecimal bit type. * At some point we should simply pass the string * forward to the parser and label it there. * In the meantime, place a leading "x" on the string * to mark it for the input routine as a hex string. */ BEGIN(xh); ECHO; } {xnstart} { yyless(1); /* eat only 'n' this time */ ECHO; } {xqstart} { if (cur_state->std_strings) BEGIN(xq); else BEGIN(xe); ECHO; } {xestart} { BEGIN(xe); ECHO; } {xusstart} { BEGIN(xus); ECHO; } {quote} { /* * When we are scanning a quoted string and see an end * quote, we must look ahead for a possible continuation. * If we don't see one, we know the end quote was in fact * the end of the string. To reduce the lexer table size, * we use a single "xqs" state to do the lookahead for all * types of strings. */ cur_state->state_before_str_stop = YYSTATE; BEGIN(xqs); ECHO; } {quotecontinue} { /* * Found a quote continuation, so return to the in-quote * state and continue scanning the literal. Nothing is * added to the literal's contents. */ BEGIN(cur_state->state_before_str_stop); ECHO; } {quotecontinuefail} | {other} { /* * Failed to see a quote continuation. Throw back * everything after the end quote, and handle the string * according to the state we were in previously. */ yyless(0); BEGIN(INITIAL); /* There's nothing to echo ... */ } {xqdouble} { ECHO; } {xqinside} { ECHO; } {xeinside} { ECHO; } {xeunicode} { ECHO; } {xeunicodefail} { ECHO; } {xeescape} { ECHO; } {xeoctesc} { ECHO; } {xehexesc} { ECHO; } . { /* This is only needed for \ just before EOF */ ECHO; } {dolqdelim} { cur_state->dolqstart = pg_strdup(yytext); BEGIN(xdolq); ECHO; } {dolqfailed} { /* throw back all but the initial "$" */ yyless(1); ECHO; } {dolqdelim} { if (strcmp(yytext, cur_state->dolqstart) == 0) { free(cur_state->dolqstart); cur_state->dolqstart = NULL; BEGIN(INITIAL); } else { /* * When we fail to match $...$ to dolqstart, transfer * the $... part to the output, but put back the final * $ for rescanning. Consider $delim$...$junk$delim$ */ yyless(yyleng - 1); } ECHO; } {dolqinside} { ECHO; } {dolqfailed} { ECHO; } . { /* This is only needed for $ inside the quoted text */ ECHO; } {xdstart} { BEGIN(xd); ECHO; } {xuistart} { BEGIN(xui); ECHO; } {xdstop} { BEGIN(INITIAL); ECHO; } {dquote} { BEGIN(INITIAL); ECHO; } {xddouble} { ECHO; } {xdinside} { ECHO; } {xufailed} { /* throw back all but the initial u/U */ yyless(1); ECHO; } {typecast} { ECHO; } {dot_dot} { ECHO; } {colon_equals} { ECHO; } {equals_greater} { ECHO; } {less_equals} { ECHO; } {greater_equals} { ECHO; } {less_greater} { ECHO; } {not_equals} { ECHO; } /* * These rules are specific to psql --- they implement parenthesis * counting and detection of command-ending semicolon. These must * appear before the {self} rule so that they take precedence over it. */ "(" { cur_state->paren_depth++; ECHO; } ")" { if (cur_state->paren_depth > 0) cur_state->paren_depth--; ECHO; } ";" { ECHO; if (cur_state->paren_depth == 0 && cur_state->begin_depth == 0) { /* Terminate lexing temporarily */ cur_state->start_state = YY_START; cur_state->identifier_count = 0; return LEXRES_SEMI; } } /* * psql-specific rules to handle backslash commands and variable * substitution. We want these before {self}, also. */ "\\"[;:] { /* Force a semi-colon or colon into the query buffer */ psqlscan_emit(cur_state, yytext + 1, 1); if (yytext[1] == ';') cur_state->identifier_count = 0; } "\\" { /* Terminate lexing temporarily */ cur_state->start_state = YY_START; return LEXRES_BACKSLASH; } :{variable_char}+ { /* Possible psql variable substitution */ char *varname; char *value; varname = psqlscan_extract_substring(cur_state, yytext + 1, yyleng - 1); if (cur_state->callbacks->get_variable) value = cur_state->callbacks->get_variable(varname, PQUOTE_PLAIN, cur_state->cb_passthrough); else value = NULL; if (value) { /* It is a variable, check for recursion */ if (psqlscan_var_is_current_source(cur_state, varname)) { /* Recursive expansion --- don't go there */ pg_log_warning("skipping recursive expansion of variable \"%s\"", varname); /* Instead copy the string as is */ ECHO; } else { /* OK, perform substitution */ psqlscan_push_new_buffer(cur_state, value, varname); /* yy_scan_string already made buffer active */ } free(value); } else { /* * if the variable doesn't exist we'll copy the string * as is */ ECHO; } free(varname); } :'{variable_char}+' { psqlscan_escape_variable(cur_state, yytext, yyleng, PQUOTE_SQL_LITERAL); } :\"{variable_char}+\" { psqlscan_escape_variable(cur_state, yytext, yyleng, PQUOTE_SQL_IDENT); } :\{\?{variable_char}+\} { psqlscan_test_variable(cur_state, yytext, yyleng); } /* * These rules just avoid the need for scanner backup if one of the * three rules above fails to match completely. */ :'{variable_char}* { /* Throw back everything but the colon */ yyless(1); ECHO; } :\"{variable_char}* { /* Throw back everything but the colon */ yyless(1); ECHO; } :\{\?{variable_char}* { /* Throw back everything but the colon */ yyless(1); ECHO; } :\{ { /* Throw back everything but the colon */ yyless(1); ECHO; } /* * Back to backend-compatible rules. */ {self} { ECHO; } {operator} { /* * Check for embedded slash-star or dash-dash; those * are comment starts, so operator must stop there. * Note that slash-star or dash-dash at the first * character will match a prior rule, not this one. */ int nchars = yyleng; char *slashstar = strstr(yytext, "/*"); char *dashdash = strstr(yytext, "--"); if (slashstar && dashdash) { /* if both appear, take the first one */ if (slashstar > dashdash) slashstar = dashdash; } else if (!slashstar) slashstar = dashdash; if (slashstar) nchars = slashstar - yytext; /* * For SQL compatibility, '+' and '-' cannot be the * last char of a multi-char operator unless the operator * contains chars that are not in SQL operators. * The idea is to lex '=-' as two operators, but not * to forbid operator names like '?-' that could not be * sequences of SQL operators. */ if (nchars > 1 && (yytext[nchars - 1] == '+' || yytext[nchars - 1] == '-')) { int ic; for (ic = nchars - 2; ic >= 0; ic--) { char c = yytext[ic]; if (c == '~' || c == '!' || c == '@' || c == '#' || c == '^' || c == '&' || c == '|' || c == '`' || c == '?' || c == '%') break; } if (ic < 0) { /* * didn't find a qualifying character, so remove * all trailing [+-] */ do { nchars--; } while (nchars > 1 && (yytext[nchars - 1] == '+' || yytext[nchars - 1] == '-')); } } if (nchars < yyleng) { /* Strip the unwanted chars from the token */ yyless(nchars); } ECHO; } {param} { ECHO; } {param_junk} { ECHO; } {decinteger} { ECHO; } {hexinteger} { ECHO; } {octinteger} { ECHO; } {bininteger} { ECHO; } {hexfail} { ECHO; } {octfail} { ECHO; } {binfail} { ECHO; } {numeric} { ECHO; } {numericfail} { /* throw back the .., and treat as integer */ yyless(yyleng - 2); ECHO; } {real} { ECHO; } {realfail} { ECHO; } {decinteger_junk} { ECHO; } {hexinteger_junk} { ECHO; } {octinteger_junk} { ECHO; } {bininteger_junk} { ECHO; } {numeric_junk} { ECHO; } {real_junk} { ECHO; } {identifier} { /* * We need to track if we are inside a BEGIN .. END block * in a function definition, so that semicolons contained * therein don't terminate the whole statement. Short of * writing a full parser here, the following heuristic * should work. First, we track whether the beginning of * the statement matches CREATE [OR REPLACE] * {FUNCTION|PROCEDURE} */ if (cur_state->identifier_count == 0) memset(cur_state->identifiers, 0, sizeof(cur_state->identifiers)); if (pg_strcasecmp(yytext, "create") == 0 || pg_strcasecmp(yytext, "function") == 0 || pg_strcasecmp(yytext, "procedure") == 0 || pg_strcasecmp(yytext, "or") == 0 || pg_strcasecmp(yytext, "replace") == 0) { if (cur_state->identifier_count < sizeof(cur_state->identifiers)) cur_state->identifiers[cur_state->identifier_count] = pg_tolower((unsigned char) yytext[0]); } cur_state->identifier_count++; if (cur_state->identifiers[0] == 'c' && (cur_state->identifiers[1] == 'f' || cur_state->identifiers[1] == 'p' || (cur_state->identifiers[1] == 'o' && cur_state->identifiers[2] == 'r' && (cur_state->identifiers[3] == 'f' || cur_state->identifiers[3] == 'p'))) && cur_state->paren_depth == 0) { if (pg_strcasecmp(yytext, "begin") == 0) cur_state->begin_depth++; else if (pg_strcasecmp(yytext, "case") == 0) { /* * CASE also ends with END. We only need to track * this if we are already inside a BEGIN. */ if (cur_state->begin_depth >= 1) cur_state->begin_depth++; } else if (pg_strcasecmp(yytext, "end") == 0) { if (cur_state->begin_depth > 0) cur_state->begin_depth--; } } ECHO; } {other} { ECHO; } <> { if (cur_state->buffer_stack == NULL) { cur_state->start_state = YY_START; return LEXRES_EOL; /* end of input reached */ } /* * We were expanding a variable, so pop the inclusion * stack and keep lexing */ psqlscan_pop_buffer_stack(cur_state); psqlscan_select_top_buffer(cur_state); } %% /* LCOV_EXCL_STOP */ /* * Create a lexer working state struct. * * callbacks is a struct of function pointers that encapsulate some * behavior we need from the surrounding program. This struct must * remain valid for the lifespan of the PsqlScanState. */ PsqlScanState psql_scan_create(const PsqlScanCallbacks *callbacks) { PsqlScanState state; state = (PsqlScanStateData *) pg_malloc0(sizeof(PsqlScanStateData)); state->callbacks = callbacks; yylex_init(&state->scanner); yyset_extra(state, state->scanner); psql_scan_reset(state); return state; } /* * Destroy a lexer working state struct, releasing all resources. */ void psql_scan_destroy(PsqlScanState state) { psql_scan_finish(state); psql_scan_reset(state); yylex_destroy(state->scanner); free(state); } /* * Set the callback passthrough pointer for the lexer. * * This could have been integrated into psql_scan_create, but keeping it * separate allows the application to change the pointer later, which might * be useful. */ void psql_scan_set_passthrough(PsqlScanState state, void *passthrough) { state->cb_passthrough = passthrough; } /* * Set up to perform lexing of the given input line. * * The text at *line, extending for line_len bytes, will be scanned by * subsequent calls to the psql_scan routines. psql_scan_finish should * be called when scanning is complete. Note that the lexer retains * a pointer to the storage at *line --- this string must not be altered * or freed until after psql_scan_finish is called. * * encoding is the libpq identifier for the character encoding in use, * and std_strings says whether standard_conforming_strings is on. */ void psql_scan_setup(PsqlScanState state, const char *line, int line_len, int encoding, bool std_strings) { /* Mustn't be scanning already */ Assert(state->scanbufhandle == NULL); Assert(state->buffer_stack == NULL); /* Do we need to hack the character set encoding? */ state->encoding = encoding; state->safe_encoding = pg_valid_server_encoding_id(encoding); /* Save standard-strings flag as well */ state->std_strings = std_strings; /* Set up flex input buffer with appropriate translation and padding */ state->scanbufhandle = psqlscan_prepare_buffer(state, line, line_len, &state->scanbuf); state->scanline = line; /* Set lookaside data in case we have to map unsafe encoding */ state->curline = state->scanbuf; state->refline = state->scanline; } /* * Do lexical analysis of SQL command text. * * The text previously passed to psql_scan_setup is scanned, and appended * (possibly with transformation) to query_buf. * * The return value indicates the condition that stopped scanning: * * PSCAN_SEMICOLON: found a command-ending semicolon. (The semicolon is * transferred to query_buf.) The command accumulated in query_buf should * be executed, then clear query_buf and call again to scan the remainder * of the line. * * PSCAN_BACKSLASH: found a backslash that starts a special command. * Any previous data on the line has been transferred to query_buf. * The caller will typically next apply a separate flex lexer to scan * the special command. * * PSCAN_INCOMPLETE: the end of the line was reached, but we have an * incomplete SQL command. *prompt is set to the appropriate prompt type. * * PSCAN_EOL: the end of the line was reached, and there is no lexical * reason to consider the command incomplete. The caller may or may not * choose to send it. *prompt is set to the appropriate prompt type if * the caller chooses to collect more input. * * In the PSCAN_INCOMPLETE and PSCAN_EOL cases, psql_scan_finish() should * be called next, then the cycle may be repeated with a fresh input line. * * In all cases, *prompt is set to an appropriate prompt type code for the * next line-input operation. */ PsqlScanResult psql_scan(PsqlScanState state, PQExpBuffer query_buf, promptStatus_t *prompt) { PsqlScanResult result; int lexresult; /* Must be scanning already */ Assert(state->scanbufhandle != NULL); /* Set current output target */ state->output_buf = query_buf; /* Set input source */ if (state->buffer_stack != NULL) yy_switch_to_buffer(state->buffer_stack->buf, state->scanner); else yy_switch_to_buffer(state->scanbufhandle, state->scanner); /* And lex. */ lexresult = yylex(NULL, state->scanner); /* * Check termination state and return appropriate result info. */ switch (lexresult) { case LEXRES_EOL: /* end of input */ switch (state->start_state) { case INITIAL: case xqs: /* we treat this like INITIAL */ if (state->paren_depth > 0) { result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_PAREN; } else if (state->begin_depth > 0) { result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_CONTINUE; } else if (query_buf->len > 0) { result = PSCAN_EOL; *prompt = PROMPT_CONTINUE; } else { /* never bother to send an empty buffer */ result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_READY; } break; case xb: result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_SINGLEQUOTE; break; case xc: result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_COMMENT; break; case xd: result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_DOUBLEQUOTE; break; case xh: result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_SINGLEQUOTE; break; case xe: result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_SINGLEQUOTE; break; case xq: result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_SINGLEQUOTE; break; case xdolq: result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_DOLLARQUOTE; break; case xui: result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_DOUBLEQUOTE; break; case xus: result = PSCAN_INCOMPLETE; *prompt = PROMPT_SINGLEQUOTE; break; default: /* can't get here */ fprintf(stderr, "invalid YY_START\n"); exit(1); } break; case LEXRES_SEMI: /* semicolon */ result = PSCAN_SEMICOLON; *prompt = PROMPT_READY; break; case LEXRES_BACKSLASH: /* backslash */ result = PSCAN_BACKSLASH; *prompt = PROMPT_READY; break; default: /* can't get here */ fprintf(stderr, "invalid yylex result\n"); exit(1); } return result; } /* * Clean up after scanning a string. This flushes any unread input and * releases resources (but not the PsqlScanState itself). Note however * that this does not reset the lexer scan state; that can be done by * psql_scan_reset(), which is an orthogonal operation. * * It is legal to call this when not scanning anything (makes it easier * to deal with error recovery). */ void psql_scan_finish(PsqlScanState state) { /* Drop any incomplete variable expansions. */ while (state->buffer_stack != NULL) psqlscan_pop_buffer_stack(state); /* Done with the outer scan buffer, too */ if (state->scanbufhandle) yy_delete_buffer(state->scanbufhandle, state->scanner); state->scanbufhandle = NULL; if (state->scanbuf) free(state->scanbuf); state->scanbuf = NULL; } /* * Reset lexer scanning state to start conditions. This is appropriate * for executing \r psql commands (or any other time that we discard the * prior contents of query_buf). It is not, however, necessary to do this * when we execute and clear the buffer after getting a PSCAN_SEMICOLON or * PSCAN_EOL scan result, because the scan state must be INITIAL when those * conditions are returned. * * Note that this is unrelated to flushing unread input; that task is * done by psql_scan_finish(). */ void psql_scan_reset(PsqlScanState state) { state->start_state = INITIAL; state->paren_depth = 0; state->xcdepth = 0; /* not really necessary */ if (state->dolqstart) free(state->dolqstart); state->dolqstart = NULL; state->identifier_count = 0; state->begin_depth = 0; } /* * Reselect this lexer (psqlscan.l) after using another one. * * Currently and for foreseeable uses, it's sufficient to reset to INITIAL * state, because we'd never switch to another lexer in a different state. * However, we don't want to reset e.g. paren_depth, so this can't be * the same as psql_scan_reset(). * * Note: psql setjmp error recovery just calls psql_scan_reset(), so that * must be a superset of this. * * Note: it seems likely that other lexers could just assign INITIAL for * themselves, since that probably has the value zero in every flex-generated * lexer. But let's not assume that. */ void psql_scan_reselect_sql_lexer(PsqlScanState state) { state->start_state = INITIAL; } /* * Return true if lexer is currently in an "inside quotes" state. * * This is pretty grotty but is needed to preserve the old behavior * that mainloop.c drops blank lines not inside quotes without even * echoing them. */ bool psql_scan_in_quote(PsqlScanState state) { return state->start_state != INITIAL && state->start_state != xqs; } /* * Push the given string onto the stack of stuff to scan. * * NOTE SIDE EFFECT: the new buffer is made the active flex input buffer. */ void psqlscan_push_new_buffer(PsqlScanState state, const char *newstr, const char *varname) { StackElem *stackelem; stackelem = (StackElem *) pg_malloc(sizeof(StackElem)); /* * In current usage, the passed varname points at the current flex input * buffer; we must copy it before calling psqlscan_prepare_buffer() * because that will change the buffer state. */ stackelem->varname = varname ? pg_strdup(varname) : NULL; stackelem->buf = psqlscan_prepare_buffer(state, newstr, strlen(newstr), &stackelem->bufstring); state->curline = stackelem->bufstring; if (state->safe_encoding) { stackelem->origstring = NULL; state->refline = stackelem->bufstring; } else { stackelem->origstring = pg_strdup(newstr); state->refline = stackelem->origstring; } stackelem->next = state->buffer_stack; state->buffer_stack = stackelem; } /* * Pop the topmost buffer stack item (there must be one!) * * NB: after this, the flex input state is unspecified; caller must * switch to an appropriate buffer to continue lexing. * See psqlscan_select_top_buffer(). */ void psqlscan_pop_buffer_stack(PsqlScanState state) { StackElem *stackelem = state->buffer_stack; state->buffer_stack = stackelem->next; yy_delete_buffer(stackelem->buf, state->scanner); free(stackelem->bufstring); if (stackelem->origstring) free(stackelem->origstring); if (stackelem->varname) free(stackelem->varname); free(stackelem); } /* * Select the topmost surviving buffer as the active input. */ void psqlscan_select_top_buffer(PsqlScanState state) { StackElem *stackelem = state->buffer_stack; if (stackelem != NULL) { yy_switch_to_buffer(stackelem->buf, state->scanner); state->curline = stackelem->bufstring; state->refline = stackelem->origstring ? stackelem->origstring : stackelem->bufstring; } else { yy_switch_to_buffer(state->scanbufhandle, state->scanner); state->curline = state->scanbuf; state->refline = state->scanline; } } /* * Check if specified variable name is the source for any string * currently being scanned */ bool psqlscan_var_is_current_source(PsqlScanState state, const char *varname) { StackElem *stackelem; for (stackelem = state->buffer_stack; stackelem != NULL; stackelem = stackelem->next) { if (stackelem->varname && strcmp(stackelem->varname, varname) == 0) return true; } return false; } /* * Set up a flex input buffer to scan the given data. We always make a * copy of the data. If working in an unsafe encoding, the copy has * multibyte sequences replaced by FFs to avoid fooling the lexer rules. * * NOTE SIDE EFFECT: the new buffer is made the active flex input buffer. */ YY_BUFFER_STATE psqlscan_prepare_buffer(PsqlScanState state, const char *txt, int len, char **txtcopy) { char *newtxt; /* Flex wants two \0 characters after the actual data */ newtxt = pg_malloc(len + 2); *txtcopy = newtxt; newtxt[len] = newtxt[len + 1] = YY_END_OF_BUFFER_CHAR; if (state->safe_encoding) memcpy(newtxt, txt, len); else { /* Gotta do it the hard way */ int i = 0; while (i < len) { int thislen = PQmblen(txt + i, state->encoding); /* first byte should always be okay... */ newtxt[i] = txt[i]; i++; while (--thislen > 0 && i < len) newtxt[i++] = (char) 0xFF; } } return yy_scan_buffer(newtxt, len + 2, state->scanner); } /* * psqlscan_emit() --- body for ECHO macro * * NB: this must be used for ALL and ONLY the text copied from the flex * input data. If you pass it something that is not part of the yytext * string, you are making a mistake. Internally generated text can be * appended directly to state->output_buf. */ void psqlscan_emit(PsqlScanState state, const char *txt, int len) { PQExpBuffer output_buf = state->output_buf; if (state->safe_encoding) appendBinaryPQExpBuffer(output_buf, txt, len); else { /* Gotta do it the hard way */ const char *reference = state->refline; int i; reference += (txt - state->curline); for (i = 0; i < len; i++) { char ch = txt[i]; if (ch == (char) 0xFF) ch = reference[i]; appendPQExpBufferChar(output_buf, ch); } } } /* * psqlscan_extract_substring --- fetch value of (part of) the current token * * This is like psqlscan_emit(), except that the data is returned as a * malloc'd string rather than being pushed directly to state->output_buf. */ char * psqlscan_extract_substring(PsqlScanState state, const char *txt, int len) { char *result = (char *) pg_malloc(len + 1); if (state->safe_encoding) memcpy(result, txt, len); else { /* Gotta do it the hard way */ const char *reference = state->refline; int i; reference += (txt - state->curline); for (i = 0; i < len; i++) { char ch = txt[i]; if (ch == (char) 0xFF) ch = reference[i]; result[i] = ch; } } result[len] = '\0'; return result; } /* * psqlscan_escape_variable --- process :'VARIABLE' or :"VARIABLE" * * If the variable name is found, escape its value using the appropriate * quoting method and emit the value to output_buf. (Since the result is * surely quoted, there is never any reason to rescan it.) If we don't * find the variable or escaping fails, emit the token as-is. */ void psqlscan_escape_variable(PsqlScanState state, const char *txt, int len, PsqlScanQuoteType quote) { char *varname; char *value; /* Variable lookup. */ varname = psqlscan_extract_substring(state, txt + 2, len - 3); if (state->callbacks->get_variable) value = state->callbacks->get_variable(varname, quote, state->cb_passthrough); else value = NULL; free(varname); if (value) { /* Emit the suitably-escaped value */ appendPQExpBufferStr(state->output_buf, value); free(value); } else { /* Emit original token as-is */ psqlscan_emit(state, txt, len); } } void psqlscan_test_variable(PsqlScanState state, const char *txt, int len) { char *varname; char *value; varname = psqlscan_extract_substring(state, txt + 3, len - 4); if (state->callbacks->get_variable) value = state->callbacks->get_variable(varname, PQUOTE_PLAIN, state->cb_passthrough); else value = NULL; free(varname); if (value != NULL) { psqlscan_emit(state, "TRUE", 4); free(value); } else { psqlscan_emit(state, "FALSE", 5); } }