Commit Graph

20 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Karpfen
7e8ced534f misc: Use /usr/bin/env for a more generic shebang
Use path based SHELL in Makefiles. It was suggested that this is a
better solution for make for cases when there is no /usr/bin/env.

See: https://github.com/purpleidea/mgmt/pull/694#discussion_r1015596204
2025-03-22 14:53:21 -04:00
James Shubin
c5257dd64b lang: parser: Simplify code and format it
This would get done by gofmt -s anyways.
2025-02-27 17:13:31 -05:00
James Shubin
d30ff6cfae legal: Remove year
Instead of constantly making these updates, let's just remove the year
since things are stored in git anyways, and this is not an actual modern
legal risk anymore.
2025-01-26 16:24:51 -05:00
James Shubin
e10e92596f lang: types: Add stringer information manually
This lets us get the more correct lowercase versions of type kinds in
error messages. (These match what the user would type.)
2024-07-01 18:35:20 -04:00
James Shubin
90f6d4e563 legal: Update http to https 2024-03-05 01:05:50 -05:00
James Shubin
3e31ee9455 legal: Additional permission under GNU GPL version 3 section 7
With the recent merging of embedded package imports and the entry CLI
package, it is now possible for users to build in mcl code into a single
binary. This additional permission makes it explicitly clear that this
is permitted to make it easier for those users. The condition is phrased
so that the terms can be "patched" by the original author if it's
necessary for the project. For example, if the name of the language
(mcl) changes, has a differently named new version, someone finds a
phrasing improvement or a legal loophole, or for some other
reasonable circumstance. Now go write some beautiful embedded tools!
2024-03-05 01:04:09 -05:00
James Shubin
a8f194259b legal: Happy 2024 everyone...
Done with:

ack '2023+' -l | xargs sed -i -e 's/2023+/2024+/g'

Checked manually with:

git add -p

Hello to future James from 2025, and Happy Hacking!
2024-01-22 15:52:49 -05:00
James Shubin
a7624a2bf9 legal: Happy 2023 everyone...
Done with:

ack '2022+' -l | xargs sed -i -e 's/2022+/2023+/g'

Checked manually with:

git add -p

Hello to future James from 2024, and Happy Hacking!
2023-03-05 18:31:52 -05:00
James Shubin
3cea422365 legal: Happy 2022 everyone...
Done with:

ack '2021+' -l | xargs sed -i -e 's/2021+/2022+/g'

Checked manually with:

git add -p

Hello to future James from 2023, and Happy Hacking!
2022-08-05 23:06:27 -04:00
James Shubin
23b5a4729f lang: Split lang package out into many subpackages
This is a giant refactor to split the giant lang package into many
subpackages. The most difficult piece was figuring out how to extract
the extra ast structs into their own package, because they needed to
call two functions which also needed to import the ast.

The solution was to separate out those functions into their own
packages, and to pass them into the ast at the root when they're needed,
and to let the relevant ast portions call a handle.

This isn't terribly ugly because we already had a giant data struct
woven through the ast.

The bad part is rebasing any WIP work on top of this.
2021-10-21 04:13:04 -04:00
James Shubin
88516546fa lib: Move to go modules and shed a few tears
The old system with vendor/ and git submodules worked great,
unfortunately FUD around git submodules seemed to scare people away and
golang moved to a go.mod system that adds a new lock file format instead
of using the built-in git version. It's now almost impossible to use
modern golang without this, so we've switched.

So much for the golang compatibility promise-- turns out it doesn't
apply to the useful parts that I actually care about like this.

Thanks to frebib for his incredibly valuable contributions to this
patch. This snide commit message is mine alone.

This patch also mixes in some changes due to legacy golang as we've also
bumped the minimum version to 1.16 in the docs and tests.

Lastly, we had to disable some tests and fix up a few other misc things
to get this passing. We've definitely hot bugs in the go.mod system, and
our Makefile tries to workaround those.
2021-10-05 08:34:51 -04:00
Joe Groocock
b9741e87bd lang: interpolate: Fix string interpolation of dollar symbols
Dollar symbols were failing to parse when not followed by a non-brace,
non-dollar, non-EOF token and causing expected tests to fail. This
simplifies the rules to allow the remaining tests to succeed.

Fix and reinstate the final few failing tests, and add another.

Allow any escape sequence to be matched so that invalid sequences
produce a meaningful error message instead of a generic "cannot parse":

    ast: interpolate: interpolating: V: \?
    unhandled escape sequence token: \?

Tidy the related Makefile rule for generating the ragel parser.

Signed-off-by: Joe Groocock <me@frebib.net>
2021-09-28 21:40:49 +00:00
James Shubin
400b58c0e9 lang: Improve string interpolation
The original string interpolation was based on hil which didn't allow
proper escaping, since they used a different escape pattern. Secondly,
the golang Unquote function didn't deal with the variable substitution,
which meant it had to be performed in a second step.

Most importantly, because we did this partial job in Unquote (the fact
that is strips the leading and trailing quotes tricked me into thinking
I was done with interpolation!) it was impossible to remedy the
remaining parts in a second pass with hil. Both operations needs to be
done in a single step. This is logical when you aren't tunnel visioned.

This patch replaces both of these so that string interpolation works
properly. This removes the ability to allow inline function calls in a
string, however this was an incidental feature, and it's not clear that
having it is a good idea. It also requires you wrap the var name with
curly braces. (They are not optional.)

This comes with a load of tests, but I think I got some of it wrong,
since I'm quite new at ragel. If you find something, please say so =D In
any case, this is much better than the original hil implementation, and
easy for a new contributor to patch to make the necessary fixes.
2021-02-17 03:35:12 -05:00
James Shubin
336a38081a legal: Happy 2021 everyone...
Done with:

ack '2020+' -l | xargs sed -i -e 's/2020+/2021+/g'

Checked manually with:

git add -p

Hello to future James from 2022, and Happy Hacking!
2021-01-31 16:52:46 -05:00
Patrick Meyer
006de6da14 lang: Add fuzz target to lang Makefile 2020-02-26 12:07:00 +01:00
James Shubin
2648fb1bb1 legal: Happy 2020 everyone...
Done with:

ack '2019+' -l | xargs sed -i -e 's/2019+/2020+/g'

Checked manually with:

git add -p

Hello to future James from 2021, and Happy Hacking!
2020-01-03 20:08:37 -05:00
James Shubin
2f7e202f40 lang, lang: types: Add automatic stringer generation
It's more useful if we know the string representation of Kind's.
2019-05-05 09:32:03 -04:00
James Shubin
07f542b4d7 legal: Happy 2019 everyone...
Done with:

ack '2018+' -l | xargs sed -i -e 's/2018+/2019+/g'

Checked manually with:

git add -p

Hello to future James from 2020, and Happy Hacking!
2019-03-24 15:08:50 -04:00
James Shubin
ab5957f1e9 make: Clean up the Makefiles so the output is more elegant
This avoids printing erroneous messages when nothing is actually
happening.
2019-02-24 12:28:59 -05:00
James Shubin
b19583e7d3 lang: Initial implementation of the mgmt language
This is an initial implementation of the mgmt language. It is a
declarative (immutable) functional, reactive, domain specific
programming language. It is intended to be a language that is:

* safe
* powerful
* easy to reason about

With these properties, we hope this language, and the mgmt engine will
allow you to model the real-time systems that you'd like to automate.

This also includes a number of other associated changes. Sorry for the
large size of this patch.
2018-01-20 08:09:29 -05:00