82 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
82 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
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Introduction
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============
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This project is a PHP 5.2 to PHP 5.6 parser **written in PHP itself**.
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What is this for?
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-----------------
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A parser is useful for [static analysis][0], manipulation of code and basically any other
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application dealing with code programmatically. A parser constructs an [Abstract Syntax Tree][1]
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(AST) of the code and thus allows dealing with it in an abstract and robust way.
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There are other ways of processing source code. One that PHP supports natively is using the
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token stream generated by [`token_get_all`][2]. The token stream is much more low level than
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the AST and thus has different applications: It allows to also analyze the exact formatting of
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a file. On the other hand the token stream is much harder to deal with for more complex analysis.
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For example an AST abstracts away the fact that in PHP variables can be written as `$foo`, but also
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as `$$bar`, `${'foobar'}` or even `${!${''}=barfoo()}`. You don't have to worry about recognizing
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all the different syntaxes from a stream of tokens.
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Another questions is: Why would I want to have a PHP parser *written in PHP*? Well, PHP might not be
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a language especially suited for fast parsing, but processing the AST is much easier in PHP than it
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would be in other, faster languages like C. Furthermore the people most probably wanting to do
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programmatic PHP code analysis are incidentally PHP developers, not C developers.
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What can it parse?
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------------------
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The parser uses a PHP 5.6 compliant grammar, which is backwards compatible with all PHP version from PHP 5.2
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upwards (and maybe older).
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As the parser is based on the tokens returned by `token_get_all` (which is only able to lex the PHP
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version it runs on), additionally a wrapper for emulating new tokens from 5.3, 5.4, 5.5 and 5.6 is provided.
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This allows to parse PHP 5.6 source code running on PHP 5.3, for example. This emulation is very hacky and not
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perfect, but it should work well on any sane code.
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What output does it produce?
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----------------------------
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The parser produces an [Abstract Syntax Tree][1] (AST) also known as a node tree. How this looks like
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can best be seen in an example. The program `<?php echo 'Hi', 'World';` will give you a node tree
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roughly looking like this:
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```
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array(
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0: Stmt_Echo(
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exprs: array(
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0: Scalar_String(
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value: Hi
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)
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1: Scalar_String(
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value: World
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)
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)
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)
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)
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```
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This matches the structure of the code: An echo statement, which takes two strings as expressions,
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with the values `Hi` and `World!`.
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You can also see that the AST does not contain any whitespace information (but most comments are saved).
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So using it for formatting analysis is not possible.
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What else can it do?
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--------------------
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Apart from the parser itself this package also bundles support for some other, related features:
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* Support for pretty printing, which is the act of converting an AST into PHP code. Please note
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that "pretty printing" does not imply that the output is especially pretty. It's just how it's
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called ;)
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* Support for serializing and unserializing the node tree to XML
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* Support for dumping the node tree in a human readable form (see the section above for an
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example of how the output looks like)
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* Infrastructure for traversing and changing the AST (node traverser and node visitors)
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* A node visitor for resolving namespaced names
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[0]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_program_analysis
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[1]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_syntax_tree
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[2]: http://php.net/token_get_all
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