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23 Diagnostics
The following is a list of flex
diagnostic messages:
-
‘warning, rule cannot be matched’ indicates that the given rule
cannot be matched because it follows other rules that will always match
the same text as it. For example, in the following ‘foo’ cannot be
matched because it comes after an identifier “catch-all” rule:
[a-z]+ got_identifier(); foo got_foo();
Using
REJECT
in a scanner suppresses this warning. - ‘warning, -s option given but default rule can be matched’ means that it is possible (perhaps only in a particular start condition) that the default rule (match any single character) is the only one that will match a particular input. Since ‘-s’ was given, presumably this is not intended.
-
reject_used_but_not_detected undefined
oryymore_used_but_not_detected undefined
. These errors can occur at compile time. They indicate that the scanner usesREJECT
oryymore()
but thatflex
failed to notice the fact, meaning thatflex
scanned the first two sections looking for occurrences of these actions and failed to find any, but somehow you snuck some in (via a #include file, for example). Use%option reject
or%option yymore
to indicate toflex
that you really do use these features. - ‘flex scanner jammed’. a scanner compiled with ‘-s’ has encountered an input string which wasn’t matched by any of its rules. This error can also occur due to internal problems.
-
‘token too large, exceeds YYLMAX’. your scanner uses
%array
and one of its rules matched a string longer than theYYLMAX
constant (8K bytes by default). You can increase the value by #define’ingYYLMAX
in the definitions section of yourflex
input. - ‘scanner requires -8 flag to use the character 'x'’. Your scanner specification includes recognizing the 8-bit character ‘'x'’ and you did not specify the -8 flag, and your scanner defaulted to 7-bit because you used the ‘-Cf’ or ‘-CF’ table compression options. See the discussion of the ‘-7’ flag, Scanner Options, for details.
-
‘flex scanner push-back overflow’. you used
unput()
to push back so much text that the scanner’s buffer could not hold both the pushed-back text and the current token inyytext
. Ideally the scanner should dynamically resize the buffer in this case, but at present it does not. -
‘input buffer overflow, can't enlarge buffer because scanner uses
REJECT’. the scanner was working on matching an extremely large token
and needed to expand the input buffer. This doesn’t work with scanners
that use
REJECT
. -
‘fatal flex scanner internal error--end of buffer missed’. This can
occur in a scanner which is reentered after a long-jump has jumped out
(or over) the scanner’s activation frame. Before reentering the
scanner, use:
yyrestart( yyin );
or, as noted above, switch to using the C++ scanner class.
- ‘too many start conditions in <> construct!’ you listed more start conditions in a <> construct than exist (so you must have listed at least one of them twice).
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