Mercurial > pidgin
view libpurple/dbus-analyze-types.py @ 30157:98de21a2aa9a
I found these by running "strings" on some MSN binary files. Doesn't seem
like that could be considered copyright infringement. They're not
used right now, but it seems like they could be useful in the future.
author | Mark Doliner <mark@kingant.net> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 03 Jun 2010 04:10:13 +0000 |
parents | 5fe8042783c1 |
children |
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# This program takes a C header/source as the input and produces # # with --keyword=enum: the list of all enums # with --keyword=struct: the list of all structs # # the output styles: # # --enum DBUS_POINTER_NAME1, # DBUS_POINTER_NAME2, # DBUS_POINTER_NAME3, # # --list NAME1 # NAME2 # NAME3 # import re import sys options = {} def toprint(match, line): if verbatim: return line else: return pattern % match for arg in sys.argv[1:]: if arg[0:2] == "--": mylist = arg[2:].split("=",1) command = mylist[0] if len(mylist) > 1: options[command] = mylist[1] else: options[command] = None keyword = options.get("keyword", "struct") pattern = options.get("pattern", "%s") verbatim = options.has_key("verbatim") structregexp1 = re.compile(r"^(typedef\s+)?%s\s+\w+\s+(\w+)\s*;" % keyword) structregexp2 = re.compile(r"^(typedef\s+)?%s" % keyword) structregexp3 = re.compile(r"^}\s+(\w+)\s*;") print "/* Generated by %s. Do not edit! */" % sys.argv[0] myinput = iter(sys.stdin) for line in myinput: match = structregexp1.match(line) if match is not None: print toprint(match.group(2), line) continue match = structregexp2.match(line) if match is not None: while True: if verbatim: print line.rstrip() line = myinput.next() match = structregexp3.match(line) if match is not None: print toprint(match.group(1), line) break if line[0] not in [" ", "\t", "{", "\n"]: if verbatim: print line break