awk: fix breakage in last commit

While at it, made bb_process_escape_sequence faster (same size)

function                                             old     new   delta
nextchar                                              49      53      +4
bb_process_escape_sequence                           138     140      +2
next_token                                           838     839      +1
static.charmap                                        20      18      -2
is_assignment                                        143     135      -8
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(add/remove: 0/0 grow/shrink: 3/2 up/down: 7/-10)              Total: -3 bytes

Signed-off-by: Denys Vlasenko <vda.linux@googlemail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Denys Vlasenko
2010-10-24 01:58:04 +02:00
parent 5360059131
commit 2b299fed6a
2 changed files with 38 additions and 35 deletions

View File

@@ -18,18 +18,8 @@
char FAST_FUNC bb_process_escape_sequence(const char **ptr)
{
/* bash builtin "echo -e '\ec'" interprets \e as ESC,
* but coreutils "/bin/echo -e '\ec'" does not.
* manpages tend to support coreutils way.
* Update: coreutils added support for \e on 28 Oct 2009. */
static const char charmap[] ALIGN1 = {
'a', 'b', 'e', 'f', 'n', 'r', 't', 'v', '\\', 0,
'\a', '\b', 27, '\f', '\n', '\r', '\t', '\v', '\\', '\\' };
const char *p;
const char *q;
unsigned num_digits;
unsigned r;
unsigned n;
unsigned base;
@@ -37,18 +27,17 @@ char FAST_FUNC bb_process_escape_sequence(const char **ptr)
base = 8;
q = *ptr;
#if WANT_HEX_ESCAPES
if (*q == 'x') {
if (WANT_HEX_ESCAPES && *q == 'x') {
++q;
base = 16;
++num_digits;
}
#endif
/* bash requires leading 0 in octal escapes:
* \02 works, \2 does not (prints \ and 2).
* We treat \2 as a valid octal escape sequence. */
do {
unsigned r;
#if !WANT_HEX_ESCAPES
unsigned d = (unsigned char)(*q) - '0';
#else
@@ -60,8 +49,9 @@ char FAST_FUNC bb_process_escape_sequence(const char **ptr)
if (WANT_HEX_ESCAPES && base == 16) {
--num_digits;
if (num_digits == 0) {
/* \x<bad_char> */
--q; /* go back to x */
/* \x<bad_char>: return '\',
* leave ptr pointing to x */
return '\\';
}
}
break;
@@ -76,20 +66,30 @@ char FAST_FUNC bb_process_escape_sequence(const char **ptr)
++q;
} while (++num_digits < 3);
if (num_digits == 0) { /* mnemonic escape sequence? */
p = charmap;
if (num_digits == 0) {
/* Not octal or hex escape sequence.
* Is it one-letter one? */
/* bash builtin "echo -e '\ec'" interprets \e as ESC,
* but coreutils "/bin/echo -e '\ec'" does not.
* Manpages tend to support coreutils way.
* Update: coreutils added support for \e on 28 Oct 2009. */
static const char charmap[] ALIGN1 = {
'a', 'b', 'e', 'f', 'n', 'r', 't', 'v', '\\',
'\a', '\b', 27, '\f', '\n', '\r', '\t', '\v', '\\',
};
const char *p = charmap;
do {
if (*p == *q) {
q++;
break;
}
} while (*++p);
/* p points to found escape char or NUL,
} while (*++p != '\\');
/* p points to found escape char or '\',
* advance it and find what it translates to.
* Note that unrecognized sequence \z returns '\'
* and leaves ptr pointing to z. */
p += sizeof(charmap) / 2;
n = *p;
* Note that \NUL and unrecognized sequence \z return '\'
* and leave ptr pointing to NUL or z. */
n = p[sizeof(charmap) / 2];
}
*ptr = q;