1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
//! Common traits and types related to parsing our IR from Clang cursors.
#![deny(clippy::missing_docs_in_private_items)]
use crate::clang;
use crate::ir::context::{BindgenContext, ItemId};
/// Not so much an error in the traditional sense, but a control flow message
/// when walking over Clang's AST with a cursor.
#[derive(Debug)]
pub(crate) enum ParseError {
/// Recurse down the current AST node's children.
Recurse,
/// Continue on to the next sibling AST node, or back up to the parent's
/// siblings if we've exhausted all of this node's siblings (and so on).
Continue,
}
/// The result of parsing a Clang AST node.
#[derive(Debug)]
pub(crate) enum ParseResult<T> {
/// We've already resolved this item before, here is the extant `ItemId` for
/// it.
AlreadyResolved(ItemId),
/// This is a newly parsed item. If the cursor is `Some`, it points to the
/// AST node where the new `T` was declared.
New(T, Option<clang::Cursor>),
}
/// An intermediate representation "sub-item" (i.e. one of the types contained
/// inside an `ItemKind` variant) that can be parsed from a Clang cursor.
pub(crate) trait ClangSubItemParser: Sized {
/// Attempt to parse this type from the given cursor.
///
/// The fact that is a reference guarantees it's held by the context, and
/// allow returning already existing types.
fn parse(
cursor: clang::Cursor,
context: &mut BindgenContext,
) -> Result<ParseResult<Self>, ParseError>;
}