| #!/usr/bin/python | 
 | # | 
 | # Copyright (c) 2009 Google Inc. All rights reserved. | 
 | # | 
 | # Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without | 
 | # modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are | 
 | # met: | 
 | # | 
 | #    * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright | 
 | # notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. | 
 | #    * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above | 
 | # copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer | 
 | # in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the | 
 | # distribution. | 
 | #    * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its | 
 | # contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from | 
 | # this software without specific prior written permission. | 
 | # | 
 | # THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS | 
 | # "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT | 
 | # LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR | 
 | # A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT | 
 | # OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, | 
 | # SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT | 
 | # LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, | 
 | # DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY | 
 | # THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT | 
 | # (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE | 
 | # OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | 
 |  | 
 | """Does google-lint on c++ files. | 
 |  | 
 | The goal of this script is to identify places in the code that *may* | 
 | be in non-compliance with google style.  It does not attempt to fix | 
 | up these problems -- the point is to educate.  It does also not | 
 | attempt to find all problems, or to ensure that everything it does | 
 | find is legitimately a problem. | 
 |  | 
 | In particular, we can get very confused by /* and // inside strings! | 
 | We do a small hack, which is to ignore //'s with "'s after them on the | 
 | same line, but it is far from perfect (in either direction). | 
 | """ | 
 |  | 
 | import codecs | 
 | import copy | 
 | import getopt | 
 | import math  # for log | 
 | import os | 
 | import re | 
 | import sre_compile | 
 | import string | 
 | import sys | 
 | import unicodedata | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | _USAGE = """ | 
 | Syntax: cpplint.py [--verbose=#] [--output=vs7] [--filter=-x,+y,...] | 
 |                    [--counting=total|toplevel|detailed] [--root=subdir] | 
 |                    [--linelength=digits] | 
 |         <file> [file] ... | 
 |  | 
 |   The style guidelines this tries to follow are those in | 
 |     http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/cppguide.xml | 
 |  | 
 |   Every problem is given a confidence score from 1-5, with 5 meaning we are | 
 |   certain of the problem, and 1 meaning it could be a legitimate construct. | 
 |   This will miss some errors, and is not a substitute for a code review. | 
 |  | 
 |   To suppress false-positive errors of a certain category, add a | 
 |   'NOLINT(category)' comment to the line.  NOLINT or NOLINT(*) | 
 |   suppresses errors of all categories on that line. | 
 |  | 
 |   The files passed in will be linted; at least one file must be provided. | 
 |   Default linted extensions are .cc, .cpp, .cu, .cuh and .h.  Change the | 
 |   extensions with the --extensions flag. | 
 |  | 
 |   Flags: | 
 |  | 
 |     output=vs7 | 
 |       By default, the output is formatted to ease emacs parsing.  Visual Studio | 
 |       compatible output (vs7) may also be used.  Other formats are unsupported. | 
 |  | 
 |     verbose=# | 
 |       Specify a number 0-5 to restrict errors to certain verbosity levels. | 
 |  | 
 |     filter=-x,+y,... | 
 |       Specify a comma-separated list of category-filters to apply: only | 
 |       error messages whose category names pass the filters will be printed. | 
 |       (Category names are printed with the message and look like | 
 |       "[whitespace/indent]".)  Filters are evaluated left to right. | 
 |       "-FOO" and "FOO" means "do not print categories that start with FOO". | 
 |       "+FOO" means "do print categories that start with FOO". | 
 |  | 
 |       Examples: --filter=-whitespace,+whitespace/braces | 
 |                 --filter=whitespace,runtime/printf,+runtime/printf_format | 
 |                 --filter=-,+build/include_what_you_use | 
 |  | 
 |       To see a list of all the categories used in cpplint, pass no arg: | 
 |          --filter= | 
 |  | 
 |     counting=total|toplevel|detailed | 
 |       The total number of errors found is always printed. If | 
 |       'toplevel' is provided, then the count of errors in each of | 
 |       the top-level categories like 'build' and 'whitespace' will | 
 |       also be printed. If 'detailed' is provided, then a count | 
 |       is provided for each category like 'build/class'. | 
 |  | 
 |     root=subdir | 
 |       The root directory used for deriving header guard CPP variable. | 
 |       By default, the header guard CPP variable is calculated as the relative | 
 |       path to the directory that contains .git, .hg, or .svn.  When this flag | 
 |       is specified, the relative path is calculated from the specified | 
 |       directory. If the specified directory does not exist, this flag is | 
 |       ignored. | 
 |  | 
 |       Examples: | 
 |         Assuing that src/.git exists, the header guard CPP variables for | 
 |         src/chrome/browser/ui/browser.h are: | 
 |  | 
 |         No flag => CHROME_BROWSER_UI_BROWSER_H_ | 
 |         --root=chrome => BROWSER_UI_BROWSER_H_ | 
 |         --root=chrome/browser => UI_BROWSER_H_ | 
 |  | 
 |     linelength=digits | 
 |       This is the allowed line length for the project. The default value is | 
 |       80 characters. | 
 |  | 
 |       Examples: | 
 |         --linelength=120 | 
 |  | 
 |     extensions=extension,extension,... | 
 |       The allowed file extensions that cpplint will check | 
 |  | 
 |       Examples: | 
 |         --extensions=hpp,cpp | 
 | """ | 
 |  | 
 | # We categorize each error message we print.  Here are the categories. | 
 | # We want an explicit list so we can list them all in cpplint --filter=. | 
 | # If you add a new error message with a new category, add it to the list | 
 | # here!  cpplint_unittest.py should tell you if you forget to do this. | 
 | _ERROR_CATEGORIES = [ | 
 |   'build/class', | 
 |   'build/deprecated', | 
 |   'build/endif_comment', | 
 |   'build/explicit_make_pair', | 
 |   'build/forward_decl', | 
 |   'build/header_guard', | 
 |   'build/include', | 
 |   'build/include_alpha', | 
 |   'build/include_order', | 
 |   'build/include_what_you_use', | 
 |   'build/namespaces', | 
 |   'build/printf_format', | 
 |   'build/storage_class', | 
 |   'legal/copyright', | 
 |   'readability/alt_tokens', | 
 |   'readability/braces', | 
 |   'readability/casting', | 
 |   'readability/check', | 
 |   'readability/constructors', | 
 |   'readability/fn_size', | 
 |   'readability/function', | 
 |   'readability/multiline_comment', | 
 |   'readability/multiline_string', | 
 |   'readability/namespace', | 
 |   'readability/nolint', | 
 |   'readability/nul', | 
 |   'readability/streams', | 
 |   'readability/todo', | 
 |   'readability/utf8', | 
 |   'runtime/arrays', | 
 |   'runtime/casting', | 
 |   'runtime/explicit', | 
 |   'runtime/int', | 
 |   'runtime/init', | 
 |   'runtime/invalid_increment', | 
 |   'runtime/member_string_references', | 
 |   'runtime/memset', | 
 |   'runtime/operator', | 
 |   'runtime/printf', | 
 |   'runtime/printf_format', | 
 |   'runtime/references', | 
 |   'runtime/sizeof', | 
 |   'runtime/string', | 
 |   'runtime/threadsafe_fn', | 
 |   'runtime/vlog', | 
 |   'whitespace/blank_line', | 
 |   'whitespace/braces', | 
 |   'whitespace/comma', | 
 |   'whitespace/comments', | 
 |   'whitespace/empty_conditional_body', | 
 |   'whitespace/empty_loop_body', | 
 |   'whitespace/end_of_line', | 
 |   'whitespace/ending_newline', | 
 |   'whitespace/forcolon', | 
 |   'whitespace/indent', | 
 |   'whitespace/line_length', | 
 |   'whitespace/newline', | 
 |   'whitespace/operators', | 
 |   'whitespace/parens', | 
 |   'whitespace/semicolon', | 
 |   'whitespace/tab', | 
 |   'whitespace/todo' | 
 |   ] | 
 |  | 
 | # The default state of the category filter. This is overrided by the --filter= | 
 | # flag. By default all errors are on, so only add here categories that should be | 
 | # off by default (i.e., categories that must be enabled by the --filter= flags). | 
 | # All entries here should start with a '-' or '+', as in the --filter= flag. | 
 | _DEFAULT_FILTERS = ['-build/include_alpha'] | 
 |  | 
 | # We used to check for high-bit characters, but after much discussion we | 
 | # decided those were OK, as long as they were in UTF-8 and didn't represent | 
 | # hard-coded international strings, which belong in a separate i18n file. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # C++ headers | 
 | _CPP_HEADERS = frozenset([ | 
 |     # Legacy | 
 |     'algobase.h', | 
 |     'algo.h', | 
 |     'alloc.h', | 
 |     'builtinbuf.h', | 
 |     'bvector.h', | 
 |     'complex.h', | 
 |     'defalloc.h', | 
 |     'deque.h', | 
 |     'editbuf.h', | 
 |     'fstream.h', | 
 |     'function.h', | 
 |     'hash_map', | 
 |     'hash_map.h', | 
 |     'hash_set', | 
 |     'hash_set.h', | 
 |     'hashtable.h', | 
 |     'heap.h', | 
 |     'indstream.h', | 
 |     'iomanip.h', | 
 |     'iostream.h', | 
 |     'istream.h', | 
 |     'iterator.h', | 
 |     'list.h', | 
 |     'map.h', | 
 |     'multimap.h', | 
 |     'multiset.h', | 
 |     'ostream.h', | 
 |     'pair.h', | 
 |     'parsestream.h', | 
 |     'pfstream.h', | 
 |     'procbuf.h', | 
 |     'pthread_alloc', | 
 |     'pthread_alloc.h', | 
 |     'rope', | 
 |     'rope.h', | 
 |     'ropeimpl.h', | 
 |     'set.h', | 
 |     'slist', | 
 |     'slist.h', | 
 |     'stack.h', | 
 |     'stdiostream.h', | 
 |     'stl_alloc.h', | 
 |     'stl_relops.h', | 
 |     'streambuf.h', | 
 |     'stream.h', | 
 |     'strfile.h', | 
 |     'strstream.h', | 
 |     'tempbuf.h', | 
 |     'tree.h', | 
 |     'type_traits.h', | 
 |     'vector.h', | 
 |     # 17.6.1.2 C++ library headers | 
 |     'algorithm', | 
 |     'array', | 
 |     'atomic', | 
 |     'bitset', | 
 |     'chrono', | 
 |     'codecvt', | 
 |     'complex', | 
 |     'condition_variable', | 
 |     'deque', | 
 |     'exception', | 
 |     'forward_list', | 
 |     'fstream', | 
 |     'functional', | 
 |     'future', | 
 |     'initializer_list', | 
 |     'iomanip', | 
 |     'ios', | 
 |     'iosfwd', | 
 |     'iostream', | 
 |     'istream', | 
 |     'iterator', | 
 |     'limits', | 
 |     'list', | 
 |     'locale', | 
 |     'map', | 
 |     'memory', | 
 |     'mutex', | 
 |     'new', | 
 |     'numeric', | 
 |     'ostream', | 
 |     'queue', | 
 |     'random', | 
 |     'ratio', | 
 |     'regex', | 
 |     'set', | 
 |     'sstream', | 
 |     'stack', | 
 |     'stdexcept', | 
 |     'streambuf', | 
 |     'string', | 
 |     'strstream', | 
 |     'system_error', | 
 |     'thread', | 
 |     'tuple', | 
 |     'typeindex', | 
 |     'typeinfo', | 
 |     'type_traits', | 
 |     'unordered_map', | 
 |     'unordered_set', | 
 |     'utility', | 
 |     'valarray', | 
 |     'vector', | 
 |     # 17.6.1.2 C++ headers for C library facilities | 
 |     'cassert', | 
 |     'ccomplex', | 
 |     'cctype', | 
 |     'cerrno', | 
 |     'cfenv', | 
 |     'cfloat', | 
 |     'cinttypes', | 
 |     'ciso646', | 
 |     'climits', | 
 |     'clocale', | 
 |     'cmath', | 
 |     'csetjmp', | 
 |     'csignal', | 
 |     'cstdalign', | 
 |     'cstdarg', | 
 |     'cstdbool', | 
 |     'cstddef', | 
 |     'cstdint', | 
 |     'cstdio', | 
 |     'cstdlib', | 
 |     'cstring', | 
 |     'ctgmath', | 
 |     'ctime', | 
 |     'cuchar', | 
 |     'cwchar', | 
 |     'cwctype', | 
 |     ]) | 
 |  | 
 | # Assertion macros.  These are defined in base/logging.h and | 
 | # testing/base/gunit.h.  Note that the _M versions need to come first | 
 | # for substring matching to work. | 
 | _CHECK_MACROS = [ | 
 |     'DCHECK', 'CHECK', | 
 |     'EXPECT_TRUE_M', 'EXPECT_TRUE', | 
 |     'ASSERT_TRUE_M', 'ASSERT_TRUE', | 
 |     'EXPECT_FALSE_M', 'EXPECT_FALSE', | 
 |     'ASSERT_FALSE_M', 'ASSERT_FALSE', | 
 |     ] | 
 |  | 
 | # Replacement macros for CHECK/DCHECK/EXPECT_TRUE/EXPECT_FALSE | 
 | _CHECK_REPLACEMENT = dict([(m, {}) for m in _CHECK_MACROS]) | 
 |  | 
 | for op, replacement in [('==', 'EQ'), ('!=', 'NE'), | 
 |                         ('>=', 'GE'), ('>', 'GT'), | 
 |                         ('<=', 'LE'), ('<', 'LT')]: | 
 |   _CHECK_REPLACEMENT['DCHECK'][op] = 'DCHECK_%s' % replacement | 
 |   _CHECK_REPLACEMENT['CHECK'][op] = 'CHECK_%s' % replacement | 
 |   _CHECK_REPLACEMENT['EXPECT_TRUE'][op] = 'EXPECT_%s' % replacement | 
 |   _CHECK_REPLACEMENT['ASSERT_TRUE'][op] = 'ASSERT_%s' % replacement | 
 |   _CHECK_REPLACEMENT['EXPECT_TRUE_M'][op] = 'EXPECT_%s_M' % replacement | 
 |   _CHECK_REPLACEMENT['ASSERT_TRUE_M'][op] = 'ASSERT_%s_M' % replacement | 
 |  | 
 | for op, inv_replacement in [('==', 'NE'), ('!=', 'EQ'), | 
 |                             ('>=', 'LT'), ('>', 'LE'), | 
 |                             ('<=', 'GT'), ('<', 'GE')]: | 
 |   _CHECK_REPLACEMENT['EXPECT_FALSE'][op] = 'EXPECT_%s' % inv_replacement | 
 |   _CHECK_REPLACEMENT['ASSERT_FALSE'][op] = 'ASSERT_%s' % inv_replacement | 
 |   _CHECK_REPLACEMENT['EXPECT_FALSE_M'][op] = 'EXPECT_%s_M' % inv_replacement | 
 |   _CHECK_REPLACEMENT['ASSERT_FALSE_M'][op] = 'ASSERT_%s_M' % inv_replacement | 
 |  | 
 | # Alternative tokens and their replacements.  For full list, see section 2.5 | 
 | # Alternative tokens [lex.digraph] in the C++ standard. | 
 | # | 
 | # Digraphs (such as '%:') are not included here since it's a mess to | 
 | # match those on a word boundary. | 
 | _ALT_TOKEN_REPLACEMENT = { | 
 |     'and': '&&', | 
 |     'bitor': '|', | 
 |     'or': '||', | 
 |     'xor': '^', | 
 |     'compl': '~', | 
 |     'bitand': '&', | 
 |     'and_eq': '&=', | 
 |     'or_eq': '|=', | 
 |     'xor_eq': '^=', | 
 |     'not': '!', | 
 |     'not_eq': '!=' | 
 |     } | 
 |  | 
 | # Compile regular expression that matches all the above keywords.  The "[ =()]" | 
 | # bit is meant to avoid matching these keywords outside of boolean expressions. | 
 | # | 
 | # False positives include C-style multi-line comments and multi-line strings | 
 | # but those have always been troublesome for cpplint. | 
 | _ALT_TOKEN_REPLACEMENT_PATTERN = re.compile( | 
 |     r'[ =()](' + ('|'.join(_ALT_TOKEN_REPLACEMENT.keys())) + r')(?=[ (]|$)') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # These constants define types of headers for use with | 
 | # _IncludeState.CheckNextIncludeOrder(). | 
 | _C_SYS_HEADER = 1 | 
 | _CPP_SYS_HEADER = 2 | 
 | _LIKELY_MY_HEADER = 3 | 
 | _POSSIBLE_MY_HEADER = 4 | 
 | _OTHER_HEADER = 5 | 
 |  | 
 | # These constants define the current inline assembly state | 
 | _NO_ASM = 0       # Outside of inline assembly block | 
 | _INSIDE_ASM = 1   # Inside inline assembly block | 
 | _END_ASM = 2      # Last line of inline assembly block | 
 | _BLOCK_ASM = 3    # The whole block is an inline assembly block | 
 |  | 
 | # Match start of assembly blocks | 
 | _MATCH_ASM = re.compile(r'^\s*(?:asm|_asm|__asm|__asm__)' | 
 |                         r'(?:\s+(volatile|__volatile__))?' | 
 |                         r'\s*[{(]') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | _regexp_compile_cache = {} | 
 |  | 
 | # Finds occurrences of NOLINT or NOLINT(...). | 
 | _RE_SUPPRESSION = re.compile(r'\bNOLINT\b(\([^)]*\))?') | 
 |  | 
 | # {str, set(int)}: a map from error categories to sets of linenumbers | 
 | # on which those errors are expected and should be suppressed. | 
 | _error_suppressions = {} | 
 |  | 
 | # The root directory used for deriving header guard CPP variable. | 
 | # This is set by --root flag. | 
 | _root = None | 
 |  | 
 | # The allowed line length of files. | 
 | # This is set by --linelength flag. | 
 | _line_length = 80 | 
 |  | 
 | # The allowed extensions for file names | 
 | # This is set by --extensions flag. | 
 | _valid_extensions = set(['cc', 'h', 'cpp', 'cu', 'cuh']) | 
 |  | 
 | def ParseNolintSuppressions(filename, raw_line, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Updates the global list of error-suppressions. | 
 |  | 
 |   Parses any NOLINT comments on the current line, updating the global | 
 |   error_suppressions store.  Reports an error if the NOLINT comment | 
 |   was malformed. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: str, the name of the input file. | 
 |     raw_line: str, the line of input text, with comments. | 
 |     linenum: int, the number of the current line. | 
 |     error: function, an error handler. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # FIXME(adonovan): "NOLINT(" is misparsed as NOLINT(*). | 
 |   matched = _RE_SUPPRESSION.search(raw_line) | 
 |   if matched: | 
 |     category = matched.group(1) | 
 |     if category in (None, '(*)'):  # => "suppress all" | 
 |       _error_suppressions.setdefault(None, set()).add(linenum) | 
 |     else: | 
 |       if category.startswith('(') and category.endswith(')'): | 
 |         category = category[1:-1] | 
 |         if category in _ERROR_CATEGORIES: | 
 |           _error_suppressions.setdefault(category, set()).add(linenum) | 
 |         else: | 
 |           error(filename, linenum, 'readability/nolint', 5, | 
 |                 'Unknown NOLINT error category: %s' % category) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def ResetNolintSuppressions(): | 
 |   "Resets the set of NOLINT suppressions to empty." | 
 |   _error_suppressions.clear() | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def IsErrorSuppressedByNolint(category, linenum): | 
 |   """Returns true if the specified error category is suppressed on this line. | 
 |  | 
 |   Consults the global error_suppressions map populated by | 
 |   ParseNolintSuppressions/ResetNolintSuppressions. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     category: str, the category of the error. | 
 |     linenum: int, the current line number. | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     bool, True iff the error should be suppressed due to a NOLINT comment. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   return (linenum in _error_suppressions.get(category, set()) or | 
 |           linenum in _error_suppressions.get(None, set())) | 
 |  | 
 | def Match(pattern, s): | 
 |   """Matches the string with the pattern, caching the compiled regexp.""" | 
 |   # The regexp compilation caching is inlined in both Match and Search for | 
 |   # performance reasons; factoring it out into a separate function turns out | 
 |   # to be noticeably expensive. | 
 |   if pattern not in _regexp_compile_cache: | 
 |     _regexp_compile_cache[pattern] = sre_compile.compile(pattern) | 
 |   return _regexp_compile_cache[pattern].match(s) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def ReplaceAll(pattern, rep, s): | 
 |   """Replaces instances of pattern in a string with a replacement. | 
 |  | 
 |   The compiled regex is kept in a cache shared by Match and Search. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     pattern: regex pattern | 
 |     rep: replacement text | 
 |     s: search string | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     string with replacements made (or original string if no replacements) | 
 |   """ | 
 |   if pattern not in _regexp_compile_cache: | 
 |     _regexp_compile_cache[pattern] = sre_compile.compile(pattern) | 
 |   return _regexp_compile_cache[pattern].sub(rep, s) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def Search(pattern, s): | 
 |   """Searches the string for the pattern, caching the compiled regexp.""" | 
 |   if pattern not in _regexp_compile_cache: | 
 |     _regexp_compile_cache[pattern] = sre_compile.compile(pattern) | 
 |   return _regexp_compile_cache[pattern].search(s) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class _IncludeState(dict): | 
 |   """Tracks line numbers for includes, and the order in which includes appear. | 
 |  | 
 |   As a dict, an _IncludeState object serves as a mapping between include | 
 |   filename and line number on which that file was included. | 
 |  | 
 |   Call CheckNextIncludeOrder() once for each header in the file, passing | 
 |   in the type constants defined above. Calls in an illegal order will | 
 |   raise an _IncludeError with an appropriate error message. | 
 |  | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # self._section will move monotonically through this set. If it ever | 
 |   # needs to move backwards, CheckNextIncludeOrder will raise an error. | 
 |   _INITIAL_SECTION = 0 | 
 |   _MY_H_SECTION = 1 | 
 |   _C_SECTION = 2 | 
 |   _CPP_SECTION = 3 | 
 |   _OTHER_H_SECTION = 4 | 
 |  | 
 |   _TYPE_NAMES = { | 
 |       _C_SYS_HEADER: 'C system header', | 
 |       _CPP_SYS_HEADER: 'C++ system header', | 
 |       _LIKELY_MY_HEADER: 'header this file implements', | 
 |       _POSSIBLE_MY_HEADER: 'header this file may implement', | 
 |       _OTHER_HEADER: 'other header', | 
 |       } | 
 |   _SECTION_NAMES = { | 
 |       _INITIAL_SECTION: "... nothing. (This can't be an error.)", | 
 |       _MY_H_SECTION: 'a header this file implements', | 
 |       _C_SECTION: 'C system header', | 
 |       _CPP_SECTION: 'C++ system header', | 
 |       _OTHER_H_SECTION: 'other header', | 
 |       } | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self): | 
 |     dict.__init__(self) | 
 |     self.ResetSection() | 
 |  | 
 |   def ResetSection(self): | 
 |     # The name of the current section. | 
 |     self._section = self._INITIAL_SECTION | 
 |     # The path of last found header. | 
 |     self._last_header = '' | 
 |  | 
 |   def SetLastHeader(self, header_path): | 
 |     self._last_header = header_path | 
 |  | 
 |   def CanonicalizeAlphabeticalOrder(self, header_path): | 
 |     """Returns a path canonicalized for alphabetical comparison. | 
 |  | 
 |     - replaces "-" with "_" so they both cmp the same. | 
 |     - removes '-inl' since we don't require them to be after the main header. | 
 |     - lowercase everything, just in case. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       header_path: Path to be canonicalized. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       Canonicalized path. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     return header_path.replace('-inl.h', '.h').replace('-', '_').lower() | 
 |  | 
 |   def IsInAlphabeticalOrder(self, clean_lines, linenum, header_path): | 
 |     """Check if a header is in alphabetical order with the previous header. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |       linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |       header_path: Canonicalized header to be checked. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       Returns true if the header is in alphabetical order. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     # If previous section is different from current section, _last_header will | 
 |     # be reset to empty string, so it's always less than current header. | 
 |     # | 
 |     # If previous line was a blank line, assume that the headers are | 
 |     # intentionally sorted the way they are. | 
 |     if (self._last_header > header_path and | 
 |         not Match(r'^\s*$', clean_lines.elided[linenum - 1])): | 
 |       return False | 
 |     return True | 
 |  | 
 |   def CheckNextIncludeOrder(self, header_type): | 
 |     """Returns a non-empty error message if the next header is out of order. | 
 |  | 
 |     This function also updates the internal state to be ready to check | 
 |     the next include. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       header_type: One of the _XXX_HEADER constants defined above. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       The empty string if the header is in the right order, or an | 
 |       error message describing what's wrong. | 
 |  | 
 |     """ | 
 |     error_message = ('Found %s after %s' % | 
 |                      (self._TYPE_NAMES[header_type], | 
 |                       self._SECTION_NAMES[self._section])) | 
 |  | 
 |     last_section = self._section | 
 |  | 
 |     if header_type == _C_SYS_HEADER: | 
 |       if self._section <= self._C_SECTION: | 
 |         self._section = self._C_SECTION | 
 |       else: | 
 |         self._last_header = '' | 
 |         return error_message | 
 |     elif header_type == _CPP_SYS_HEADER: | 
 |       if self._section <= self._CPP_SECTION: | 
 |         self._section = self._CPP_SECTION | 
 |       else: | 
 |         self._last_header = '' | 
 |         return error_message | 
 |     elif header_type == _LIKELY_MY_HEADER: | 
 |       if self._section <= self._MY_H_SECTION: | 
 |         self._section = self._MY_H_SECTION | 
 |       else: | 
 |         self._section = self._OTHER_H_SECTION | 
 |     elif header_type == _POSSIBLE_MY_HEADER: | 
 |       if self._section <= self._MY_H_SECTION: | 
 |         self._section = self._MY_H_SECTION | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # This will always be the fallback because we're not sure | 
 |         # enough that the header is associated with this file. | 
 |         self._section = self._OTHER_H_SECTION | 
 |     else: | 
 |       assert header_type == _OTHER_HEADER | 
 |       self._section = self._OTHER_H_SECTION | 
 |  | 
 |     if last_section != self._section: | 
 |       self._last_header = '' | 
 |  | 
 |     return '' | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class _CppLintState(object): | 
 |   """Maintains module-wide state..""" | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self): | 
 |     self.verbose_level = 1  # global setting. | 
 |     self.error_count = 0    # global count of reported errors | 
 |     # filters to apply when emitting error messages | 
 |     self.filters = _DEFAULT_FILTERS[:] | 
 |     self.counting = 'total'  # In what way are we counting errors? | 
 |     self.errors_by_category = {}  # string to int dict storing error counts | 
 |  | 
 |     # output format: | 
 |     # "emacs" - format that emacs can parse (default) | 
 |     # "vs7" - format that Microsoft Visual Studio 7 can parse | 
 |     self.output_format = 'emacs' | 
 |  | 
 |   def SetOutputFormat(self, output_format): | 
 |     """Sets the output format for errors.""" | 
 |     self.output_format = output_format | 
 |  | 
 |   def SetVerboseLevel(self, level): | 
 |     """Sets the module's verbosity, and returns the previous setting.""" | 
 |     last_verbose_level = self.verbose_level | 
 |     self.verbose_level = level | 
 |     return last_verbose_level | 
 |  | 
 |   def SetCountingStyle(self, counting_style): | 
 |     """Sets the module's counting options.""" | 
 |     self.counting = counting_style | 
 |  | 
 |   def SetFilters(self, filters): | 
 |     """Sets the error-message filters. | 
 |  | 
 |     These filters are applied when deciding whether to emit a given | 
 |     error message. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       filters: A string of comma-separated filters (eg "+whitespace/indent"). | 
 |                Each filter should start with + or -; else we die. | 
 |  | 
 |     Raises: | 
 |       ValueError: The comma-separated filters did not all start with '+' or '-'. | 
 |                   E.g. "-,+whitespace,-whitespace/indent,whitespace/badfilter" | 
 |     """ | 
 |     # Default filters always have less priority than the flag ones. | 
 |     self.filters = _DEFAULT_FILTERS[:] | 
 |     for filt in filters.split(','): | 
 |       clean_filt = filt.strip() | 
 |       if clean_filt: | 
 |         self.filters.append(clean_filt) | 
 |     for filt in self.filters: | 
 |       if not (filt.startswith('+') or filt.startswith('-')): | 
 |         raise ValueError('Every filter in --filters must start with + or -' | 
 |                          ' (%s does not)' % filt) | 
 |  | 
 |   def ResetErrorCounts(self): | 
 |     """Sets the module's error statistic back to zero.""" | 
 |     self.error_count = 0 | 
 |     self.errors_by_category = {} | 
 |  | 
 |   def IncrementErrorCount(self, category): | 
 |     """Bumps the module's error statistic.""" | 
 |     self.error_count += 1 | 
 |     if self.counting in ('toplevel', 'detailed'): | 
 |       if self.counting != 'detailed': | 
 |         category = category.split('/')[0] | 
 |       if category not in self.errors_by_category: | 
 |         self.errors_by_category[category] = 0 | 
 |       self.errors_by_category[category] += 1 | 
 |  | 
 |   def PrintErrorCounts(self): | 
 |     """Print a summary of errors by category, and the total.""" | 
 |     for category, count in self.errors_by_category.iteritems(): | 
 |       sys.stderr.write('Category \'%s\' errors found: %d\n' % | 
 |                        (category, count)) | 
 |     sys.stderr.write('Total errors found: %d\n' % self.error_count) | 
 |  | 
 | _cpplint_state = _CppLintState() | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _OutputFormat(): | 
 |   """Gets the module's output format.""" | 
 |   return _cpplint_state.output_format | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _SetOutputFormat(output_format): | 
 |   """Sets the module's output format.""" | 
 |   _cpplint_state.SetOutputFormat(output_format) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _VerboseLevel(): | 
 |   """Returns the module's verbosity setting.""" | 
 |   return _cpplint_state.verbose_level | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _SetVerboseLevel(level): | 
 |   """Sets the module's verbosity, and returns the previous setting.""" | 
 |   return _cpplint_state.SetVerboseLevel(level) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _SetCountingStyle(level): | 
 |   """Sets the module's counting options.""" | 
 |   _cpplint_state.SetCountingStyle(level) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _Filters(): | 
 |   """Returns the module's list of output filters, as a list.""" | 
 |   return _cpplint_state.filters | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _SetFilters(filters): | 
 |   """Sets the module's error-message filters. | 
 |  | 
 |   These filters are applied when deciding whether to emit a given | 
 |   error message. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filters: A string of comma-separated filters (eg "whitespace/indent"). | 
 |              Each filter should start with + or -; else we die. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   _cpplint_state.SetFilters(filters) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class _FunctionState(object): | 
 |   """Tracks current function name and the number of lines in its body.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   _NORMAL_TRIGGER = 250  # for --v=0, 500 for --v=1, etc. | 
 |   _TEST_TRIGGER = 400    # about 50% more than _NORMAL_TRIGGER. | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self): | 
 |     self.in_a_function = False | 
 |     self.lines_in_function = 0 | 
 |     self.current_function = '' | 
 |  | 
 |   def Begin(self, function_name): | 
 |     """Start analyzing function body. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       function_name: The name of the function being tracked. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     self.in_a_function = True | 
 |     self.lines_in_function = 0 | 
 |     self.current_function = function_name | 
 |  | 
 |   def Count(self): | 
 |     """Count line in current function body.""" | 
 |     if self.in_a_function: | 
 |       self.lines_in_function += 1 | 
 |  | 
 |   def Check(self, error, filename, linenum): | 
 |     """Report if too many lines in function body. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |       filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |       linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     if Match(r'T(EST|est)', self.current_function): | 
 |       base_trigger = self._TEST_TRIGGER | 
 |     else: | 
 |       base_trigger = self._NORMAL_TRIGGER | 
 |     trigger = base_trigger * 2**_VerboseLevel() | 
 |  | 
 |     if self.lines_in_function > trigger: | 
 |       error_level = int(math.log(self.lines_in_function / base_trigger, 2)) | 
 |       # 50 => 0, 100 => 1, 200 => 2, 400 => 3, 800 => 4, 1600 => 5, ... | 
 |       if error_level > 5: | 
 |         error_level = 5 | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'readability/fn_size', error_level, | 
 |             'Small and focused functions are preferred:' | 
 |             ' %s has %d non-comment lines' | 
 |             ' (error triggered by exceeding %d lines).'  % ( | 
 |                 self.current_function, self.lines_in_function, trigger)) | 
 |  | 
 |   def End(self): | 
 |     """Stop analyzing function body.""" | 
 |     self.in_a_function = False | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class _IncludeError(Exception): | 
 |   """Indicates a problem with the include order in a file.""" | 
 |   pass | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class FileInfo: | 
 |   """Provides utility functions for filenames. | 
 |  | 
 |   FileInfo provides easy access to the components of a file's path | 
 |   relative to the project root. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, filename): | 
 |     self._filename = filename | 
 |  | 
 |   def FullName(self): | 
 |     """Make Windows paths like Unix.""" | 
 |     return os.path.abspath(self._filename).replace('\\', '/') | 
 |  | 
 |   def RepositoryName(self): | 
 |     """FullName after removing the local path to the repository. | 
 |  | 
 |     If we have a real absolute path name here we can try to do something smart: | 
 |     detecting the root of the checkout and truncating /path/to/checkout from | 
 |     the name so that we get header guards that don't include things like | 
 |     "C:\Documents and Settings\..." or "/home/username/..." in them and thus | 
 |     people on different computers who have checked the source out to different | 
 |     locations won't see bogus errors. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     fullname = self.FullName() | 
 |  | 
 |     if os.path.exists(fullname): | 
 |       project_dir = os.path.dirname(fullname) | 
 |  | 
 |       if os.path.exists(os.path.join(project_dir, ".svn")): | 
 |         # If there's a .svn file in the current directory, we recursively look | 
 |         # up the directory tree for the top of the SVN checkout | 
 |         root_dir = project_dir | 
 |         one_up_dir = os.path.dirname(root_dir) | 
 |         while os.path.exists(os.path.join(one_up_dir, ".svn")): | 
 |           root_dir = os.path.dirname(root_dir) | 
 |           one_up_dir = os.path.dirname(one_up_dir) | 
 |  | 
 |         prefix = os.path.commonprefix([root_dir, project_dir]) | 
 |         return fullname[len(prefix) + 1:] | 
 |  | 
 |       # Not SVN <= 1.6? Try to find a git, hg, or svn top level directory by | 
 |       # searching up from the current path. | 
 |       root_dir = os.path.dirname(fullname) | 
 |       while (root_dir != os.path.dirname(root_dir) and | 
 |              not os.path.exists(os.path.join(root_dir, ".git")) and | 
 |              not os.path.exists(os.path.join(root_dir, ".hg")) and | 
 |              not os.path.exists(os.path.join(root_dir, ".svn"))): | 
 |         root_dir = os.path.dirname(root_dir) | 
 |  | 
 |       if (os.path.exists(os.path.join(root_dir, ".git")) or | 
 |           os.path.exists(os.path.join(root_dir, ".hg")) or | 
 |           os.path.exists(os.path.join(root_dir, ".svn"))): | 
 |         prefix = os.path.commonprefix([root_dir, project_dir]) | 
 |         return fullname[len(prefix) + 1:] | 
 |  | 
 |     # Don't know what to do; header guard warnings may be wrong... | 
 |     return fullname | 
 |  | 
 |   def Split(self): | 
 |     """Splits the file into the directory, basename, and extension. | 
 |  | 
 |     For 'chrome/browser/browser.cc', Split() would | 
 |     return ('chrome/browser', 'browser', '.cc') | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       A tuple of (directory, basename, extension). | 
 |     """ | 
 |  | 
 |     googlename = self.RepositoryName() | 
 |     project, rest = os.path.split(googlename) | 
 |     return (project,) + os.path.splitext(rest) | 
 |  | 
 |   def BaseName(self): | 
 |     """File base name - text after the final slash, before the final period.""" | 
 |     return self.Split()[1] | 
 |  | 
 |   def Extension(self): | 
 |     """File extension - text following the final period.""" | 
 |     return self.Split()[2] | 
 |  | 
 |   def NoExtension(self): | 
 |     """File has no source file extension.""" | 
 |     return '/'.join(self.Split()[0:2]) | 
 |  | 
 |   def IsSource(self): | 
 |     """File has a source file extension.""" | 
 |     return self.Extension()[1:] in ('c', 'cc', 'cpp', 'cxx') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _ShouldPrintError(category, confidence, linenum): | 
 |   """If confidence >= verbose, category passes filter and is not suppressed.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   # There are three ways we might decide not to print an error message: | 
 |   # a "NOLINT(category)" comment appears in the source, | 
 |   # the verbosity level isn't high enough, or the filters filter it out. | 
 |   if IsErrorSuppressedByNolint(category, linenum): | 
 |     return False | 
 |   if confidence < _cpplint_state.verbose_level: | 
 |     return False | 
 |  | 
 |   is_filtered = False | 
 |   for one_filter in _Filters(): | 
 |     if one_filter.startswith('-'): | 
 |       if category.startswith(one_filter[1:]): | 
 |         is_filtered = True | 
 |     elif one_filter.startswith('+'): | 
 |       if category.startswith(one_filter[1:]): | 
 |         is_filtered = False | 
 |     else: | 
 |       assert False  # should have been checked for in SetFilter. | 
 |   if is_filtered: | 
 |     return False | 
 |  | 
 |   return True | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def Error(filename, linenum, category, confidence, message): | 
 |   """Logs the fact we've found a lint error. | 
 |  | 
 |   We log where the error was found, and also our confidence in the error, | 
 |   that is, how certain we are this is a legitimate style regression, and | 
 |   not a misidentification or a use that's sometimes justified. | 
 |  | 
 |   False positives can be suppressed by the use of | 
 |   "cpplint(category)"  comments on the offending line.  These are | 
 |   parsed into _error_suppressions. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the file containing the error. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line containing the error. | 
 |     category: A string used to describe the "category" this bug | 
 |       falls under: "whitespace", say, or "runtime".  Categories | 
 |       may have a hierarchy separated by slashes: "whitespace/indent". | 
 |     confidence: A number from 1-5 representing a confidence score for | 
 |       the error, with 5 meaning that we are certain of the problem, | 
 |       and 1 meaning that it could be a legitimate construct. | 
 |     message: The error message. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   if _ShouldPrintError(category, confidence, linenum): | 
 |     _cpplint_state.IncrementErrorCount(category) | 
 |     if _cpplint_state.output_format == 'vs7': | 
 |       sys.stderr.write('%s(%s):  %s  [%s] [%d]\n' % ( | 
 |           filename, linenum, message, category, confidence)) | 
 |     elif _cpplint_state.output_format == 'eclipse': | 
 |       sys.stderr.write('%s:%s: warning: %s  [%s] [%d]\n' % ( | 
 |           filename, linenum, message, category, confidence)) | 
 |     else: | 
 |       sys.stderr.write('%s:%s:  %s  [%s] [%d]\n' % ( | 
 |           filename, linenum, message, category, confidence)) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # Matches standard C++ escape sequences per 2.13.2.3 of the C++ standard. | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_ESCAPES = re.compile( | 
 |     r'\\([abfnrtv?"\\\']|\d+|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)') | 
 | # Matches strings.  Escape codes should already be removed by ESCAPES. | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_DOUBLE_QUOTES = re.compile(r'"[^"]*"') | 
 | # Matches characters.  Escape codes should already be removed by ESCAPES. | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_SINGLE_QUOTES = re.compile(r"'.'") | 
 | # Matches multi-line C++ comments. | 
 | # This RE is a little bit more complicated than one might expect, because we | 
 | # have to take care of space removals tools so we can handle comments inside | 
 | # statements better. | 
 | # The current rule is: We only clear spaces from both sides when we're at the | 
 | # end of the line. Otherwise, we try to remove spaces from the right side, | 
 | # if this doesn't work we try on left side but only if there's a non-character | 
 | # on the right. | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_C_COMMENTS = re.compile( | 
 |     r"""(\s*/\*.*\*/\s*$| | 
 |             /\*.*\*/\s+| | 
 |          \s+/\*.*\*/(?=\W)| | 
 |             /\*.*\*/)""", re.VERBOSE) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def IsCppString(line): | 
 |   """Does line terminate so, that the next symbol is in string constant. | 
 |  | 
 |   This function does not consider single-line nor multi-line comments. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     line: is a partial line of code starting from the 0..n. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     True, if next character appended to 'line' is inside a | 
 |     string constant. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   line = line.replace(r'\\', 'XX')  # after this, \\" does not match to \" | 
 |   return ((line.count('"') - line.count(r'\"') - line.count("'\"'")) & 1) == 1 | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CleanseRawStrings(raw_lines): | 
 |   """Removes C++11 raw strings from lines. | 
 |  | 
 |     Before: | 
 |       static const char kData[] = R"( | 
 |           multi-line string | 
 |           )"; | 
 |  | 
 |     After: | 
 |       static const char kData[] = "" | 
 |           (replaced by blank line) | 
 |           ""; | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     raw_lines: list of raw lines. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     list of lines with C++11 raw strings replaced by empty strings. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   delimiter = None | 
 |   lines_without_raw_strings = [] | 
 |   for line in raw_lines: | 
 |     if delimiter: | 
 |       # Inside a raw string, look for the end | 
 |       end = line.find(delimiter) | 
 |       if end >= 0: | 
 |         # Found the end of the string, match leading space for this | 
 |         # line and resume copying the original lines, and also insert | 
 |         # a "" on the last line. | 
 |         leading_space = Match(r'^(\s*)\S', line) | 
 |         line = leading_space.group(1) + '""' + line[end + len(delimiter):] | 
 |         delimiter = None | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # Haven't found the end yet, append a blank line. | 
 |         line = '' | 
 |  | 
 |     else: | 
 |       # Look for beginning of a raw string. | 
 |       # See 2.14.15 [lex.string] for syntax. | 
 |       matched = Match(r'^(.*)\b(?:R|u8R|uR|UR|LR)"([^\s\\()]*)\((.*)$', line) | 
 |       if matched: | 
 |         delimiter = ')' + matched.group(2) + '"' | 
 |  | 
 |         end = matched.group(3).find(delimiter) | 
 |         if end >= 0: | 
 |           # Raw string ended on same line | 
 |           line = (matched.group(1) + '""' + | 
 |                   matched.group(3)[end + len(delimiter):]) | 
 |           delimiter = None | 
 |         else: | 
 |           # Start of a multi-line raw string | 
 |           line = matched.group(1) + '""' | 
 |  | 
 |     lines_without_raw_strings.append(line) | 
 |  | 
 |   # TODO(unknown): if delimiter is not None here, we might want to | 
 |   # emit a warning for unterminated string. | 
 |   return lines_without_raw_strings | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def FindNextMultiLineCommentStart(lines, lineix): | 
 |   """Find the beginning marker for a multiline comment.""" | 
 |   while lineix < len(lines): | 
 |     if lines[lineix].strip().startswith('/*'): | 
 |       # Only return this marker if the comment goes beyond this line | 
 |       if lines[lineix].strip().find('*/', 2) < 0: | 
 |         return lineix | 
 |     lineix += 1 | 
 |   return len(lines) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def FindNextMultiLineCommentEnd(lines, lineix): | 
 |   """We are inside a comment, find the end marker.""" | 
 |   while lineix < len(lines): | 
 |     if lines[lineix].strip().endswith('*/'): | 
 |       return lineix | 
 |     lineix += 1 | 
 |   return len(lines) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def RemoveMultiLineCommentsFromRange(lines, begin, end): | 
 |   """Clears a range of lines for multi-line comments.""" | 
 |   # Having // dummy comments makes the lines non-empty, so we will not get | 
 |   # unnecessary blank line warnings later in the code. | 
 |   for i in range(begin, end): | 
 |     lines[i] = '// dummy' | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def RemoveMultiLineComments(filename, lines, error): | 
 |   """Removes multiline (c-style) comments from lines.""" | 
 |   lineix = 0 | 
 |   while lineix < len(lines): | 
 |     lineix_begin = FindNextMultiLineCommentStart(lines, lineix) | 
 |     if lineix_begin >= len(lines): | 
 |       return | 
 |     lineix_end = FindNextMultiLineCommentEnd(lines, lineix_begin) | 
 |     if lineix_end >= len(lines): | 
 |       error(filename, lineix_begin + 1, 'readability/multiline_comment', 5, | 
 |             'Could not find end of multi-line comment') | 
 |       return | 
 |     RemoveMultiLineCommentsFromRange(lines, lineix_begin, lineix_end + 1) | 
 |     lineix = lineix_end + 1 | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CleanseComments(line): | 
 |   """Removes //-comments and single-line C-style /* */ comments. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     line: A line of C++ source. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     The line with single-line comments removed. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   commentpos = line.find('//') | 
 |   if commentpos != -1 and not IsCppString(line[:commentpos]): | 
 |     line = line[:commentpos].rstrip() | 
 |   # get rid of /* ... */ | 
 |   return _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_C_COMMENTS.sub('', line) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class CleansedLines(object): | 
 |   """Holds 3 copies of all lines with different preprocessing applied to them. | 
 |  | 
 |   1) elided member contains lines without strings and comments, | 
 |   2) lines member contains lines without comments, and | 
 |   3) raw_lines member contains all the lines without processing. | 
 |   All these three members are of <type 'list'>, and of the same length. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, lines): | 
 |     self.elided = [] | 
 |     self.lines = [] | 
 |     self.raw_lines = lines | 
 |     self.num_lines = len(lines) | 
 |     self.lines_without_raw_strings = CleanseRawStrings(lines) | 
 |     for linenum in range(len(self.lines_without_raw_strings)): | 
 |       self.lines.append(CleanseComments( | 
 |           self.lines_without_raw_strings[linenum])) | 
 |       elided = self._CollapseStrings(self.lines_without_raw_strings[linenum]) | 
 |       self.elided.append(CleanseComments(elided)) | 
 |  | 
 |   def NumLines(self): | 
 |     """Returns the number of lines represented.""" | 
 |     return self.num_lines | 
 |  | 
 |   @staticmethod | 
 |   def _CollapseStrings(elided): | 
 |     """Collapses strings and chars on a line to simple "" or '' blocks. | 
 |  | 
 |     We nix strings first so we're not fooled by text like '"http://"' | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       elided: The line being processed. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       The line with collapsed strings. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     if not _RE_PATTERN_INCLUDE.match(elided): | 
 |       # Remove escaped characters first to make quote/single quote collapsing | 
 |       # basic.  Things that look like escaped characters shouldn't occur | 
 |       # outside of strings and chars. | 
 |       elided = _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_ESCAPES.sub('', elided) | 
 |       elided = _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_SINGLE_QUOTES.sub("''", elided) | 
 |       elided = _RE_PATTERN_CLEANSE_LINE_DOUBLE_QUOTES.sub('""', elided) | 
 |     return elided | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def FindEndOfExpressionInLine(line, startpos, depth, startchar, endchar): | 
 |   """Find the position just after the matching endchar. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     line: a CleansedLines line. | 
 |     startpos: start searching at this position. | 
 |     depth: nesting level at startpos. | 
 |     startchar: expression opening character. | 
 |     endchar: expression closing character. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     On finding matching endchar: (index just after matching endchar, 0) | 
 |     Otherwise: (-1, new depth at end of this line) | 
 |   """ | 
 |   for i in xrange(startpos, len(line)): | 
 |     if line[i] == startchar: | 
 |       depth += 1 | 
 |     elif line[i] == endchar: | 
 |       depth -= 1 | 
 |       if depth == 0: | 
 |         return (i + 1, 0) | 
 |   return (-1, depth) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CloseExpression(clean_lines, linenum, pos): | 
 |   """If input points to ( or { or [ or <, finds the position that closes it. | 
 |  | 
 |   If lines[linenum][pos] points to a '(' or '{' or '[' or '<', finds the | 
 |   linenum/pos that correspond to the closing of the expression. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     pos: A position on the line. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     A tuple (line, linenum, pos) pointer *past* the closing brace, or | 
 |     (line, len(lines), -1) if we never find a close.  Note we ignore | 
 |     strings and comments when matching; and the line we return is the | 
 |     'cleansed' line at linenum. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |   startchar = line[pos] | 
 |   if startchar not in '({[<': | 
 |     return (line, clean_lines.NumLines(), -1) | 
 |   if startchar == '(': endchar = ')' | 
 |   if startchar == '[': endchar = ']' | 
 |   if startchar == '{': endchar = '}' | 
 |   if startchar == '<': endchar = '>' | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check first line | 
 |   (end_pos, num_open) = FindEndOfExpressionInLine( | 
 |       line, pos, 0, startchar, endchar) | 
 |   if end_pos > -1: | 
 |     return (line, linenum, end_pos) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Continue scanning forward | 
 |   while linenum < clean_lines.NumLines() - 1: | 
 |     linenum += 1 | 
 |     line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |     (end_pos, num_open) = FindEndOfExpressionInLine( | 
 |         line, 0, num_open, startchar, endchar) | 
 |     if end_pos > -1: | 
 |       return (line, linenum, end_pos) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Did not find endchar before end of file, give up | 
 |   return (line, clean_lines.NumLines(), -1) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def FindStartOfExpressionInLine(line, endpos, depth, startchar, endchar): | 
 |   """Find position at the matching startchar. | 
 |  | 
 |   This is almost the reverse of FindEndOfExpressionInLine, but note | 
 |   that the input position and returned position differs by 1. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     line: a CleansedLines line. | 
 |     endpos: start searching at this position. | 
 |     depth: nesting level at endpos. | 
 |     startchar: expression opening character. | 
 |     endchar: expression closing character. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     On finding matching startchar: (index at matching startchar, 0) | 
 |     Otherwise: (-1, new depth at beginning of this line) | 
 |   """ | 
 |   for i in xrange(endpos, -1, -1): | 
 |     if line[i] == endchar: | 
 |       depth += 1 | 
 |     elif line[i] == startchar: | 
 |       depth -= 1 | 
 |       if depth == 0: | 
 |         return (i, 0) | 
 |   return (-1, depth) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def ReverseCloseExpression(clean_lines, linenum, pos): | 
 |   """If input points to ) or } or ] or >, finds the position that opens it. | 
 |  | 
 |   If lines[linenum][pos] points to a ')' or '}' or ']' or '>', finds the | 
 |   linenum/pos that correspond to the opening of the expression. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     pos: A position on the line. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     A tuple (line, linenum, pos) pointer *at* the opening brace, or | 
 |     (line, 0, -1) if we never find the matching opening brace.  Note | 
 |     we ignore strings and comments when matching; and the line we | 
 |     return is the 'cleansed' line at linenum. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |   endchar = line[pos] | 
 |   if endchar not in ')}]>': | 
 |     return (line, 0, -1) | 
 |   if endchar == ')': startchar = '(' | 
 |   if endchar == ']': startchar = '[' | 
 |   if endchar == '}': startchar = '{' | 
 |   if endchar == '>': startchar = '<' | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check last line | 
 |   (start_pos, num_open) = FindStartOfExpressionInLine( | 
 |       line, pos, 0, startchar, endchar) | 
 |   if start_pos > -1: | 
 |     return (line, linenum, start_pos) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Continue scanning backward | 
 |   while linenum > 0: | 
 |     linenum -= 1 | 
 |     line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |     (start_pos, num_open) = FindStartOfExpressionInLine( | 
 |         line, len(line) - 1, num_open, startchar, endchar) | 
 |     if start_pos > -1: | 
 |       return (line, linenum, start_pos) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Did not find startchar before beginning of file, give up | 
 |   return (line, 0, -1) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckForCopyright(filename, lines, error): | 
 |   """Logs an error if no Copyright message appears at the top of the file.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   # We'll say it should occur by line 10. Don't forget there's a | 
 |   # dummy line at the front. | 
 |   for line in xrange(1, min(len(lines), 11)): | 
 |     if re.search(r'Copyright', lines[line], re.I): break | 
 |   else:                       # means no copyright line was found | 
 |     error(filename, 0, 'legal/copyright', 5, | 
 |           'No copyright message found.  ' | 
 |           'You should have a line: "Copyright [year] <Copyright Owner>"') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def GetHeaderGuardCPPVariable(filename): | 
 |   """Returns the CPP variable that should be used as a header guard. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of a C++ header file. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     The CPP variable that should be used as a header guard in the | 
 |     named file. | 
 |  | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   # Restores original filename in case that cpplint is invoked from Emacs's | 
 |   # flymake. | 
 |   filename = re.sub(r'_flymake\.h$', '.h', filename) | 
 |   filename = re.sub(r'/\.flymake/([^/]*)$', r'/\1', filename) | 
 |  | 
 |   fileinfo = FileInfo(filename) | 
 |   file_path_from_root = fileinfo.RepositoryName() | 
 |   if _root: | 
 |     file_path_from_root = re.sub('^' + _root + os.sep, '', file_path_from_root) | 
 |   return re.sub(r'[-./\s]', '_', file_path_from_root).upper() + '_' | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckForHeaderGuard(filename, lines, error): | 
 |   """Checks that the file contains a header guard. | 
 |  | 
 |   Logs an error if no #ifndef header guard is present.  For other | 
 |   headers, checks that the full pathname is used. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the C++ header file. | 
 |     lines: An array of strings, each representing a line of the file. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   cppvar = GetHeaderGuardCPPVariable(filename) | 
 |  | 
 |   ifndef = None | 
 |   ifndef_linenum = 0 | 
 |   define = None | 
 |   endif = None | 
 |   endif_linenum = 0 | 
 |   for linenum, line in enumerate(lines): | 
 |     linesplit = line.split() | 
 |     if len(linesplit) >= 2: | 
 |       # find the first occurrence of #ifndef and #define, save arg | 
 |       if not ifndef and linesplit[0] == '#ifndef': | 
 |         # set ifndef to the header guard presented on the #ifndef line. | 
 |         ifndef = linesplit[1] | 
 |         ifndef_linenum = linenum | 
 |       if not define and linesplit[0] == '#define': | 
 |         define = linesplit[1] | 
 |     # find the last occurrence of #endif, save entire line | 
 |     if line.startswith('#endif'): | 
 |       endif = line | 
 |       endif_linenum = linenum | 
 |  | 
 |   if not ifndef: | 
 |     error(filename, 0, 'build/header_guard', 5, | 
 |           'No #ifndef header guard found, suggested CPP variable is: %s' % | 
 |           cppvar) | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   if not define: | 
 |     error(filename, 0, 'build/header_guard', 5, | 
 |           'No #define header guard found, suggested CPP variable is: %s' % | 
 |           cppvar) | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   # The guard should be PATH_FILE_H_, but we also allow PATH_FILE_H__ | 
 |   # for backward compatibility. | 
 |   if ifndef != cppvar: | 
 |     error_level = 0 | 
 |     if ifndef != cppvar + '_': | 
 |       error_level = 5 | 
 |  | 
 |     ParseNolintSuppressions(filename, lines[ifndef_linenum], ifndef_linenum, | 
 |                             error) | 
 |     error(filename, ifndef_linenum, 'build/header_guard', error_level, | 
 |           '#ifndef header guard has wrong style, please use: %s' % cppvar) | 
 |  | 
 |   if define != ifndef: | 
 |     error(filename, 0, 'build/header_guard', 5, | 
 |           '#ifndef and #define don\'t match, suggested CPP variable is: %s' % | 
 |           cppvar) | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   if endif != ('#endif  // %s' % cppvar): | 
 |     error_level = 0 | 
 |     if endif != ('#endif  // %s' % (cppvar + '_')): | 
 |       error_level = 5 | 
 |  | 
 |     ParseNolintSuppressions(filename, lines[endif_linenum], endif_linenum, | 
 |                             error) | 
 |     error(filename, endif_linenum, 'build/header_guard', error_level, | 
 |           '#endif line should be "#endif  // %s"' % cppvar) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckForBadCharacters(filename, lines, error): | 
 |   """Logs an error for each line containing bad characters. | 
 |  | 
 |   Two kinds of bad characters: | 
 |  | 
 |   1. Unicode replacement characters: These indicate that either the file | 
 |   contained invalid UTF-8 (likely) or Unicode replacement characters (which | 
 |   it shouldn't).  Note that it's possible for this to throw off line | 
 |   numbering if the invalid UTF-8 occurred adjacent to a newline. | 
 |  | 
 |   2. NUL bytes.  These are problematic for some tools. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     lines: An array of strings, each representing a line of the file. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   for linenum, line in enumerate(lines): | 
 |     if u'\ufffd' in line: | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'readability/utf8', 5, | 
 |             'Line contains invalid UTF-8 (or Unicode replacement character).') | 
 |     if '\0' in line: | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'readability/nul', 5, 'Line contains NUL byte.') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckForNewlineAtEOF(filename, lines, error): | 
 |   """Logs an error if there is no newline char at the end of the file. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     lines: An array of strings, each representing a line of the file. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   # The array lines() was created by adding two newlines to the | 
 |   # original file (go figure), then splitting on \n. | 
 |   # To verify that the file ends in \n, we just have to make sure the | 
 |   # last-but-two element of lines() exists and is empty. | 
 |   if len(lines) < 3 or lines[-2]: | 
 |     error(filename, len(lines) - 2, 'whitespace/ending_newline', 5, | 
 |           'Could not find a newline character at the end of the file.') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckForMultilineCommentsAndStrings(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Logs an error if we see /* ... */ or "..." that extend past one line. | 
 |  | 
 |   /* ... */ comments are legit inside macros, for one line. | 
 |   Otherwise, we prefer // comments, so it's ok to warn about the | 
 |   other.  Likewise, it's ok for strings to extend across multiple | 
 |   lines, as long as a line continuation character (backslash) | 
 |   terminates each line. Although not currently prohibited by the C++ | 
 |   style guide, it's ugly and unnecessary. We don't do well with either | 
 |   in this lint program, so we warn about both. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |  | 
 |   # Remove all \\ (escaped backslashes) from the line. They are OK, and the | 
 |   # second (escaped) slash may trigger later \" detection erroneously. | 
 |   line = line.replace('\\\\', '') | 
 |  | 
 |   if line.count('/*') > line.count('*/'): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'readability/multiline_comment', 5, | 
 |           'Complex multi-line /*...*/-style comment found. ' | 
 |           'Lint may give bogus warnings.  ' | 
 |           'Consider replacing these with //-style comments, ' | 
 |           'with #if 0...#endif, ' | 
 |           'or with more clearly structured multi-line comments.') | 
 |  | 
 |   if (line.count('"') - line.count('\\"')) % 2: | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'readability/multiline_string', 5, | 
 |           'Multi-line string ("...") found.  This lint script doesn\'t ' | 
 |           'do well with such strings, and may give bogus warnings.  ' | 
 |           'Use C++11 raw strings or concatenation instead.') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | threading_list = ( | 
 |     ('asctime(', 'asctime_r('), | 
 |     ('ctime(', 'ctime_r('), | 
 |     ('getgrgid(', 'getgrgid_r('), | 
 |     ('getgrnam(', 'getgrnam_r('), | 
 |     ('getlogin(', 'getlogin_r('), | 
 |     ('getpwnam(', 'getpwnam_r('), | 
 |     ('getpwuid(', 'getpwuid_r('), | 
 |     ('gmtime(', 'gmtime_r('), | 
 |     ('localtime(', 'localtime_r('), | 
 |     ('rand(', 'rand_r('), | 
 |     ('strtok(', 'strtok_r('), | 
 |     ('ttyname(', 'ttyname_r('), | 
 |     ) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckPosixThreading(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Checks for calls to thread-unsafe functions. | 
 |  | 
 |   Much code has been originally written without consideration of | 
 |   multi-threading. Also, engineers are relying on their old experience; | 
 |   they have learned posix before threading extensions were added. These | 
 |   tests guide the engineers to use thread-safe functions (when using | 
 |   posix directly). | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |   for single_thread_function, multithread_safe_function in threading_list: | 
 |     ix = line.find(single_thread_function) | 
 |     # Comparisons made explicit for clarity -- pylint: disable=g-explicit-bool-comparison | 
 |     if ix >= 0 and (ix == 0 or (not line[ix - 1].isalnum() and | 
 |                                 line[ix - 1] not in ('_', '.', '>'))): | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/threadsafe_fn', 2, | 
 |             'Consider using ' + multithread_safe_function + | 
 |             '...) instead of ' + single_thread_function + | 
 |             '...) for improved thread safety.') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckVlogArguments(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Checks that VLOG() is only used for defining a logging level. | 
 |  | 
 |   For example, VLOG(2) is correct. VLOG(INFO), VLOG(WARNING), VLOG(ERROR), and | 
 |   VLOG(FATAL) are not. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |   if Search(r'\bVLOG\((INFO|ERROR|WARNING|DFATAL|FATAL)\)', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/vlog', 5, | 
 |           'VLOG() should be used with numeric verbosity level.  ' | 
 |           'Use LOG() if you want symbolic severity levels.') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # Matches invalid increment: *count++, which moves pointer instead of | 
 | # incrementing a value. | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_INVALID_INCREMENT = re.compile( | 
 |     r'^\s*\*\w+(\+\+|--);') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckInvalidIncrement(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Checks for invalid increment *count++. | 
 |  | 
 |   For example following function: | 
 |   void increment_counter(int* count) { | 
 |     *count++; | 
 |   } | 
 |   is invalid, because it effectively does count++, moving pointer, and should | 
 |   be replaced with ++*count, (*count)++ or *count += 1. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |   if _RE_PATTERN_INVALID_INCREMENT.match(line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/invalid_increment', 5, | 
 |           'Changing pointer instead of value (or unused value of operator*).') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class _BlockInfo(object): | 
 |   """Stores information about a generic block of code.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, seen_open_brace): | 
 |     self.seen_open_brace = seen_open_brace | 
 |     self.open_parentheses = 0 | 
 |     self.inline_asm = _NO_ASM | 
 |  | 
 |   def CheckBegin(self, filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |     """Run checks that applies to text up to the opening brace. | 
 |  | 
 |     This is mostly for checking the text after the class identifier | 
 |     and the "{", usually where the base class is specified.  For other | 
 |     blocks, there isn't much to check, so we always pass. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |       clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |       linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |       error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     pass | 
 |  | 
 |   def CheckEnd(self, filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |     """Run checks that applies to text after the closing brace. | 
 |  | 
 |     This is mostly used for checking end of namespace comments. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |       clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |       linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |       error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     pass | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class _ClassInfo(_BlockInfo): | 
 |   """Stores information about a class.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, name, class_or_struct, clean_lines, linenum): | 
 |     _BlockInfo.__init__(self, False) | 
 |     self.name = name | 
 |     self.starting_linenum = linenum | 
 |     self.is_derived = False | 
 |     if class_or_struct == 'struct': | 
 |       self.access = 'public' | 
 |       self.is_struct = True | 
 |     else: | 
 |       self.access = 'private' | 
 |       self.is_struct = False | 
 |  | 
 |     # Remember initial indentation level for this class.  Using raw_lines here | 
 |     # instead of elided to account for leading comments. | 
 |     initial_indent = Match(r'^( *)\S', clean_lines.raw_lines[linenum]) | 
 |     if initial_indent: | 
 |       self.class_indent = len(initial_indent.group(1)) | 
 |     else: | 
 |       self.class_indent = 0 | 
 |  | 
 |     # Try to find the end of the class.  This will be confused by things like: | 
 |     #   class A { | 
 |     #   } *x = { ... | 
 |     # | 
 |     # But it's still good enough for CheckSectionSpacing. | 
 |     self.last_line = 0 | 
 |     depth = 0 | 
 |     for i in range(linenum, clean_lines.NumLines()): | 
 |       line = clean_lines.elided[i] | 
 |       depth += line.count('{') - line.count('}') | 
 |       if not depth: | 
 |         self.last_line = i | 
 |         break | 
 |  | 
 |   def CheckBegin(self, filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |     # Look for a bare ':' | 
 |     if Search('(^|[^:]):($|[^:])', clean_lines.elided[linenum]): | 
 |       self.is_derived = True | 
 |  | 
 |   def CheckEnd(self, filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |     # Check that closing brace is aligned with beginning of the class. | 
 |     # Only do this if the closing brace is indented by only whitespaces. | 
 |     # This means we will not check single-line class definitions. | 
 |     indent = Match(r'^( *)\}', clean_lines.elided[linenum]) | 
 |     if indent and len(indent.group(1)) != self.class_indent: | 
 |       if self.is_struct: | 
 |         parent = 'struct ' + self.name | 
 |       else: | 
 |         parent = 'class ' + self.name | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/indent', 3, | 
 |             'Closing brace should be aligned with beginning of %s' % parent) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class _NamespaceInfo(_BlockInfo): | 
 |   """Stores information about a namespace.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, name, linenum): | 
 |     _BlockInfo.__init__(self, False) | 
 |     self.name = name or '' | 
 |     self.starting_linenum = linenum | 
 |  | 
 |   def CheckEnd(self, filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |     """Check end of namespace comments.""" | 
 |     line = clean_lines.raw_lines[linenum] | 
 |  | 
 |     # Check how many lines is enclosed in this namespace.  Don't issue | 
 |     # warning for missing namespace comments if there aren't enough | 
 |     # lines.  However, do apply checks if there is already an end of | 
 |     # namespace comment and it's incorrect. | 
 |     # | 
 |     # TODO(unknown): We always want to check end of namespace comments | 
 |     # if a namespace is large, but sometimes we also want to apply the | 
 |     # check if a short namespace contained nontrivial things (something | 
 |     # other than forward declarations).  There is currently no logic on | 
 |     # deciding what these nontrivial things are, so this check is | 
 |     # triggered by namespace size only, which works most of the time. | 
 |     if (linenum - self.starting_linenum < 10 | 
 |         and not Match(r'};*\s*(//|/\*).*\bnamespace\b', line)): | 
 |       return | 
 |  | 
 |     # Look for matching comment at end of namespace. | 
 |     # | 
 |     # Note that we accept C style "/* */" comments for terminating | 
 |     # namespaces, so that code that terminate namespaces inside | 
 |     # preprocessor macros can be cpplint clean. | 
 |     # | 
 |     # We also accept stuff like "// end of namespace <name>." with the | 
 |     # period at the end. | 
 |     # | 
 |     # Besides these, we don't accept anything else, otherwise we might | 
 |     # get false negatives when existing comment is a substring of the | 
 |     # expected namespace. | 
 |     if self.name: | 
 |       # Named namespace | 
 |       if not Match((r'};*\s*(//|/\*).*\bnamespace\s+' + re.escape(self.name) + | 
 |                     r'[\*/\.\\\s]*$'), | 
 |                    line): | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'readability/namespace', 5, | 
 |               'Namespace should be terminated with "// namespace %s"' % | 
 |               self.name) | 
 |     else: | 
 |       # Anonymous namespace | 
 |       if not Match(r'};*\s*(//|/\*).*\bnamespace[\*/\.\\\s]*$', line): | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'readability/namespace', 5, | 
 |               'Namespace should be terminated with "// namespace"') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class _PreprocessorInfo(object): | 
 |   """Stores checkpoints of nesting stacks when #if/#else is seen.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, stack_before_if): | 
 |     # The entire nesting stack before #if | 
 |     self.stack_before_if = stack_before_if | 
 |  | 
 |     # The entire nesting stack up to #else | 
 |     self.stack_before_else = [] | 
 |  | 
 |     # Whether we have already seen #else or #elif | 
 |     self.seen_else = False | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class _NestingState(object): | 
 |   """Holds states related to parsing braces.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self): | 
 |     # Stack for tracking all braces.  An object is pushed whenever we | 
 |     # see a "{", and popped when we see a "}".  Only 3 types of | 
 |     # objects are possible: | 
 |     # - _ClassInfo: a class or struct. | 
 |     # - _NamespaceInfo: a namespace. | 
 |     # - _BlockInfo: some other type of block. | 
 |     self.stack = [] | 
 |  | 
 |     # Stack of _PreprocessorInfo objects. | 
 |     self.pp_stack = [] | 
 |  | 
 |   def SeenOpenBrace(self): | 
 |     """Check if we have seen the opening brace for the innermost block. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       True if we have seen the opening brace, False if the innermost | 
 |       block is still expecting an opening brace. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     return (not self.stack) or self.stack[-1].seen_open_brace | 
 |  | 
 |   def InNamespaceBody(self): | 
 |     """Check if we are currently one level inside a namespace body. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       True if top of the stack is a namespace block, False otherwise. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     return self.stack and isinstance(self.stack[-1], _NamespaceInfo) | 
 |  | 
 |   def UpdatePreprocessor(self, line): | 
 |     """Update preprocessor stack. | 
 |  | 
 |     We need to handle preprocessors due to classes like this: | 
 |       #ifdef SWIG | 
 |       struct ResultDetailsPageElementExtensionPoint { | 
 |       #else | 
 |       struct ResultDetailsPageElementExtensionPoint : public Extension { | 
 |       #endif | 
 |  | 
 |     We make the following assumptions (good enough for most files): | 
 |     - Preprocessor condition evaluates to true from #if up to first | 
 |       #else/#elif/#endif. | 
 |  | 
 |     - Preprocessor condition evaluates to false from #else/#elif up | 
 |       to #endif.  We still perform lint checks on these lines, but | 
 |       these do not affect nesting stack. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       line: current line to check. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     if Match(r'^\s*#\s*(if|ifdef|ifndef)\b', line): | 
 |       # Beginning of #if block, save the nesting stack here.  The saved | 
 |       # stack will allow us to restore the parsing state in the #else case. | 
 |       self.pp_stack.append(_PreprocessorInfo(copy.deepcopy(self.stack))) | 
 |     elif Match(r'^\s*#\s*(else|elif)\b', line): | 
 |       # Beginning of #else block | 
 |       if self.pp_stack: | 
 |         if not self.pp_stack[-1].seen_else: | 
 |           # This is the first #else or #elif block.  Remember the | 
 |           # whole nesting stack up to this point.  This is what we | 
 |           # keep after the #endif. | 
 |           self.pp_stack[-1].seen_else = True | 
 |           self.pp_stack[-1].stack_before_else = copy.deepcopy(self.stack) | 
 |  | 
 |         # Restore the stack to how it was before the #if | 
 |         self.stack = copy.deepcopy(self.pp_stack[-1].stack_before_if) | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # TODO(unknown): unexpected #else, issue warning? | 
 |         pass | 
 |     elif Match(r'^\s*#\s*endif\b', line): | 
 |       # End of #if or #else blocks. | 
 |       if self.pp_stack: | 
 |         # If we saw an #else, we will need to restore the nesting | 
 |         # stack to its former state before the #else, otherwise we | 
 |         # will just continue from where we left off. | 
 |         if self.pp_stack[-1].seen_else: | 
 |           # Here we can just use a shallow copy since we are the last | 
 |           # reference to it. | 
 |           self.stack = self.pp_stack[-1].stack_before_else | 
 |         # Drop the corresponding #if | 
 |         self.pp_stack.pop() | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # TODO(unknown): unexpected #endif, issue warning? | 
 |         pass | 
 |  | 
 |   def Update(self, filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |     """Update nesting state with current line. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |       clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |       linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |       error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |  | 
 |     # Update pp_stack first | 
 |     self.UpdatePreprocessor(line) | 
 |  | 
 |     # Count parentheses.  This is to avoid adding struct arguments to | 
 |     # the nesting stack. | 
 |     if self.stack: | 
 |       inner_block = self.stack[-1] | 
 |       depth_change = line.count('(') - line.count(')') | 
 |       inner_block.open_parentheses += depth_change | 
 |  | 
 |       # Also check if we are starting or ending an inline assembly block. | 
 |       if inner_block.inline_asm in (_NO_ASM, _END_ASM): | 
 |         if (depth_change != 0 and | 
 |             inner_block.open_parentheses == 1 and | 
 |             _MATCH_ASM.match(line)): | 
 |           # Enter assembly block | 
 |           inner_block.inline_asm = _INSIDE_ASM | 
 |         else: | 
 |           # Not entering assembly block.  If previous line was _END_ASM, | 
 |           # we will now shift to _NO_ASM state. | 
 |           inner_block.inline_asm = _NO_ASM | 
 |       elif (inner_block.inline_asm == _INSIDE_ASM and | 
 |             inner_block.open_parentheses == 0): | 
 |         # Exit assembly block | 
 |         inner_block.inline_asm = _END_ASM | 
 |  | 
 |     # Consume namespace declaration at the beginning of the line.  Do | 
 |     # this in a loop so that we catch same line declarations like this: | 
 |     #   namespace proto2 { namespace bridge { class MessageSet; } } | 
 |     while True: | 
 |       # Match start of namespace.  The "\b\s*" below catches namespace | 
 |       # declarations even if it weren't followed by a whitespace, this | 
 |       # is so that we don't confuse our namespace checker.  The | 
 |       # missing spaces will be flagged by CheckSpacing. | 
 |       namespace_decl_match = Match(r'^\s*namespace\b\s*([:\w]+)?(.*)$', line) | 
 |       if not namespace_decl_match: | 
 |         break | 
 |  | 
 |       new_namespace = _NamespaceInfo(namespace_decl_match.group(1), linenum) | 
 |       self.stack.append(new_namespace) | 
 |  | 
 |       line = namespace_decl_match.group(2) | 
 |       if line.find('{') != -1: | 
 |         new_namespace.seen_open_brace = True | 
 |         line = line[line.find('{') + 1:] | 
 |  | 
 |     # Look for a class declaration in whatever is left of the line | 
 |     # after parsing namespaces.  The regexp accounts for decorated classes | 
 |     # such as in: | 
 |     #   class LOCKABLE API Object { | 
 |     #   }; | 
 |     # | 
 |     # Templates with class arguments may confuse the parser, for example: | 
 |     #   template <class T | 
 |     #             class Comparator = less<T>, | 
 |     #             class Vector = vector<T> > | 
 |     #   class HeapQueue { | 
 |     # | 
 |     # Because this parser has no nesting state about templates, by the | 
 |     # time it saw "class Comparator", it may think that it's a new class. | 
 |     # Nested templates have a similar problem: | 
 |     #   template < | 
 |     #       typename ExportedType, | 
 |     #       typename TupleType, | 
 |     #       template <typename, typename> class ImplTemplate> | 
 |     # | 
 |     # To avoid these cases, we ignore classes that are followed by '=' or '>' | 
 |     class_decl_match = Match( | 
 |         r'\s*(template\s*<[\w\s<>,:]*>\s*)?' | 
 |         r'(class|struct)\s+([A-Z_]+\s+)*(\w+(?:::\w+)*)' | 
 |         r'(([^=>]|<[^<>]*>|<[^<>]*<[^<>]*>\s*>)*)$', line) | 
 |     if (class_decl_match and | 
 |         (not self.stack or self.stack[-1].open_parentheses == 0)): | 
 |       self.stack.append(_ClassInfo( | 
 |           class_decl_match.group(4), class_decl_match.group(2), | 
 |           clean_lines, linenum)) | 
 |       line = class_decl_match.group(5) | 
 |  | 
 |     # If we have not yet seen the opening brace for the innermost block, | 
 |     # run checks here. | 
 |     if not self.SeenOpenBrace(): | 
 |       self.stack[-1].CheckBegin(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error) | 
 |  | 
 |     # Update access control if we are inside a class/struct | 
 |     if self.stack and isinstance(self.stack[-1], _ClassInfo): | 
 |       classinfo = self.stack[-1] | 
 |       access_match = Match( | 
 |           r'^(.*)\b(public|private|protected|signals)(\s+(?:slots\s*)?)?' | 
 |           r':(?:[^:]|$)', | 
 |           line) | 
 |       if access_match: | 
 |         classinfo.access = access_match.group(2) | 
 |  | 
 |         # Check that access keywords are indented +1 space.  Skip this | 
 |         # check if the keywords are not preceded by whitespaces. | 
 |         indent = access_match.group(1) | 
 |         if (len(indent) != classinfo.class_indent + 1 and | 
 |             Match(r'^\s*$', indent)): | 
 |           if classinfo.is_struct: | 
 |             parent = 'struct ' + classinfo.name | 
 |           else: | 
 |             parent = 'class ' + classinfo.name | 
 |           slots = '' | 
 |           if access_match.group(3): | 
 |             slots = access_match.group(3) | 
 |           error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/indent', 3, | 
 |                 '%s%s: should be indented +1 space inside %s' % ( | 
 |                     access_match.group(2), slots, parent)) | 
 |  | 
 |     # Consume braces or semicolons from what's left of the line | 
 |     while True: | 
 |       # Match first brace, semicolon, or closed parenthesis. | 
 |       matched = Match(r'^[^{;)}]*([{;)}])(.*)$', line) | 
 |       if not matched: | 
 |         break | 
 |  | 
 |       token = matched.group(1) | 
 |       if token == '{': | 
 |         # If namespace or class hasn't seen a opening brace yet, mark | 
 |         # namespace/class head as complete.  Push a new block onto the | 
 |         # stack otherwise. | 
 |         if not self.SeenOpenBrace(): | 
 |           self.stack[-1].seen_open_brace = True | 
 |         else: | 
 |           self.stack.append(_BlockInfo(True)) | 
 |           if _MATCH_ASM.match(line): | 
 |             self.stack[-1].inline_asm = _BLOCK_ASM | 
 |       elif token == ';' or token == ')': | 
 |         # If we haven't seen an opening brace yet, but we already saw | 
 |         # a semicolon, this is probably a forward declaration.  Pop | 
 |         # the stack for these. | 
 |         # | 
 |         # Similarly, if we haven't seen an opening brace yet, but we | 
 |         # already saw a closing parenthesis, then these are probably | 
 |         # function arguments with extra "class" or "struct" keywords. | 
 |         # Also pop these stack for these. | 
 |         if not self.SeenOpenBrace(): | 
 |           self.stack.pop() | 
 |       else:  # token == '}' | 
 |         # Perform end of block checks and pop the stack. | 
 |         if self.stack: | 
 |           self.stack[-1].CheckEnd(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error) | 
 |           self.stack.pop() | 
 |       line = matched.group(2) | 
 |  | 
 |   def InnermostClass(self): | 
 |     """Get class info on the top of the stack. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       A _ClassInfo object if we are inside a class, or None otherwise. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     for i in range(len(self.stack), 0, -1): | 
 |       classinfo = self.stack[i - 1] | 
 |       if isinstance(classinfo, _ClassInfo): | 
 |         return classinfo | 
 |     return None | 
 |  | 
 |   def CheckCompletedBlocks(self, filename, error): | 
 |     """Checks that all classes and namespaces have been completely parsed. | 
 |  | 
 |     Call this when all lines in a file have been processed. | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |       error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     # Note: This test can result in false positives if #ifdef constructs | 
 |     # get in the way of brace matching. See the testBuildClass test in | 
 |     # cpplint_unittest.py for an example of this. | 
 |     for obj in self.stack: | 
 |       if isinstance(obj, _ClassInfo): | 
 |         error(filename, obj.starting_linenum, 'build/class', 5, | 
 |               'Failed to find complete declaration of class %s' % | 
 |               obj.name) | 
 |       elif isinstance(obj, _NamespaceInfo): | 
 |         error(filename, obj.starting_linenum, 'build/namespaces', 5, | 
 |               'Failed to find complete declaration of namespace %s' % | 
 |               obj.name) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckForNonStandardConstructs(filename, clean_lines, linenum, | 
 |                                   nesting_state, error): | 
 |   r"""Logs an error if we see certain non-ANSI constructs ignored by gcc-2. | 
 |  | 
 |   Complain about several constructs which gcc-2 accepts, but which are | 
 |   not standard C++.  Warning about these in lint is one way to ease the | 
 |   transition to new compilers. | 
 |   - put storage class first (e.g. "static const" instead of "const static"). | 
 |   - "%lld" instead of %qd" in printf-type functions. | 
 |   - "%1$d" is non-standard in printf-type functions. | 
 |   - "\%" is an undefined character escape sequence. | 
 |   - text after #endif is not allowed. | 
 |   - invalid inner-style forward declaration. | 
 |   - >? and <? operators, and their >?= and <?= cousins. | 
 |  | 
 |   Additionally, check for constructor/destructor style violations and reference | 
 |   members, as it is very convenient to do so while checking for | 
 |   gcc-2 compliance. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     nesting_state: A _NestingState instance which maintains information about | 
 |                    the current stack of nested blocks being parsed. | 
 |     error: A callable to which errors are reported, which takes 4 arguments: | 
 |            filename, line number, error level, and message | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   # Remove comments from the line, but leave in strings for now. | 
 |   line = clean_lines.lines[linenum] | 
 |  | 
 |   if Search(r'printf\s*\(.*".*%[-+ ]?\d*q', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/printf_format', 3, | 
 |           '%q in format strings is deprecated.  Use %ll instead.') | 
 |  | 
 |   if Search(r'printf\s*\(.*".*%\d+\$', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/printf_format', 2, | 
 |           '%N$ formats are unconventional.  Try rewriting to avoid them.') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Remove escaped backslashes before looking for undefined escapes. | 
 |   line = line.replace('\\\\', '') | 
 |  | 
 |   if Search(r'("|\').*\\(%|\[|\(|{)', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'build/printf_format', 3, | 
 |           '%, [, (, and { are undefined character escapes.  Unescape them.') | 
 |  | 
 |   # For the rest, work with both comments and strings removed. | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |  | 
 |   if Search(r'\b(const|volatile|void|char|short|int|long' | 
 |             r'|float|double|signed|unsigned' | 
 |             r'|schar|u?int8|u?int16|u?int32|u?int64)' | 
 |             r'\s+(register|static|extern|typedef)\b', | 
 |             line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'build/storage_class', 5, | 
 |           'Storage class (static, extern, typedef, etc) should be first.') | 
 |  | 
 |   if Match(r'\s*#\s*endif\s*[^/\s]+', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'build/endif_comment', 5, | 
 |           'Uncommented text after #endif is non-standard.  Use a comment.') | 
 |  | 
 |   if Match(r'\s*class\s+(\w+\s*::\s*)+\w+\s*;', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'build/forward_decl', 5, | 
 |           'Inner-style forward declarations are invalid.  Remove this line.') | 
 |  | 
 |   if Search(r'(\w+|[+-]?\d+(\.\d*)?)\s*(<|>)\?=?\s*(\w+|[+-]?\d+)(\.\d*)?', | 
 |             line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'build/deprecated', 3, | 
 |           '>? and <? (max and min) operators are non-standard and deprecated.') | 
 |  | 
 |   if Search(r'^\s*const\s*string\s*&\s*\w+\s*;', line): | 
 |     # TODO(unknown): Could it be expanded safely to arbitrary references, | 
 |     # without triggering too many false positives? The first | 
 |     # attempt triggered 5 warnings for mostly benign code in the regtest, hence | 
 |     # the restriction. | 
 |     # Here's the original regexp, for the reference: | 
 |     # type_name = r'\w+((\s*::\s*\w+)|(\s*<\s*\w+?\s*>))?' | 
 |     # r'\s*const\s*' + type_name + '\s*&\s*\w+\s*;' | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/member_string_references', 2, | 
 |           'const string& members are dangerous. It is much better to use ' | 
 |           'alternatives, such as pointers or simple constants.') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Everything else in this function operates on class declarations. | 
 |   # Return early if the top of the nesting stack is not a class, or if | 
 |   # the class head is not completed yet. | 
 |   classinfo = nesting_state.InnermostClass() | 
 |   if not classinfo or not classinfo.seen_open_brace: | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   # The class may have been declared with namespace or classname qualifiers. | 
 |   # The constructor and destructor will not have those qualifiers. | 
 |   base_classname = classinfo.name.split('::')[-1] | 
 |  | 
 |   # Look for single-argument constructors that aren't marked explicit. | 
 |   # Technically a valid construct, but against style. | 
 |   args = Match(r'\s+(?:inline\s+)?%s\s*\(([^,()]+)\)' | 
 |                % re.escape(base_classname), | 
 |                line) | 
 |   if (args and | 
 |       args.group(1) != 'void' and | 
 |       not Match(r'(const\s+)?%s(\s+const)?\s*(?:<\w+>\s*)?&' | 
 |                 % re.escape(base_classname), args.group(1).strip())): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/explicit', 5, | 
 |           'Single-argument constructors should be marked explicit.') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckSpacingForFunctionCall(filename, line, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Checks for the correctness of various spacing around function calls. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     line: The text of the line to check. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   # Since function calls often occur inside if/for/while/switch | 
 |   # expressions - which have their own, more liberal conventions - we | 
 |   # first see if we should be looking inside such an expression for a | 
 |   # function call, to which we can apply more strict standards. | 
 |   fncall = line    # if there's no control flow construct, look at whole line | 
 |   for pattern in (r'\bif\s*\((.*)\)\s*{', | 
 |                   r'\bfor\s*\((.*)\)\s*{', | 
 |                   r'\bwhile\s*\((.*)\)\s*[{;]', | 
 |                   r'\bswitch\s*\((.*)\)\s*{'): | 
 |     match = Search(pattern, line) | 
 |     if match: | 
 |       fncall = match.group(1)    # look inside the parens for function calls | 
 |       break | 
 |  | 
 |   # Except in if/for/while/switch, there should never be space | 
 |   # immediately inside parens (eg "f( 3, 4 )").  We make an exception | 
 |   # for nested parens ( (a+b) + c ).  Likewise, there should never be | 
 |   # a space before a ( when it's a function argument.  I assume it's a | 
 |   # function argument when the char before the whitespace is legal in | 
 |   # a function name (alnum + _) and we're not starting a macro. Also ignore | 
 |   # pointers and references to arrays and functions coz they're too tricky: | 
 |   # we use a very simple way to recognize these: | 
 |   # " (something)(maybe-something)" or | 
 |   # " (something)(maybe-something," or | 
 |   # " (something)[something]" | 
 |   # Note that we assume the contents of [] to be short enough that | 
 |   # they'll never need to wrap. | 
 |   if (  # Ignore control structures. | 
 |       not Search(r'\b(if|for|while|switch|return|new|delete|catch|sizeof)\b', | 
 |                  fncall) and | 
 |       # Ignore pointers/references to functions. | 
 |       not Search(r' \([^)]+\)\([^)]*(\)|,$)', fncall) and | 
 |       # Ignore pointers/references to arrays. | 
 |       not Search(r' \([^)]+\)\[[^\]]+\]', fncall)): | 
 |     if Search(r'\w\s*\(\s(?!\s*\\$)', fncall):      # a ( used for a fn call | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/parens', 4, | 
 |             'Extra space after ( in function call') | 
 |     elif Search(r'\(\s+(?!(\s*\\)|\()', fncall): | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/parens', 2, | 
 |             'Extra space after (') | 
 |     if (Search(r'\w\s+\(', fncall) and | 
 |         not Search(r'#\s*define|typedef', fncall) and | 
 |         not Search(r'\w\s+\((\w+::)*\*\w+\)\(', fncall)): | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/parens', 4, | 
 |             'Extra space before ( in function call') | 
 |     # If the ) is followed only by a newline or a { + newline, assume it's | 
 |     # part of a control statement (if/while/etc), and don't complain | 
 |     if Search(r'[^)]\s+\)\s*[^{\s]', fncall): | 
 |       # If the closing parenthesis is preceded by only whitespaces, | 
 |       # try to give a more descriptive error message. | 
 |       if Search(r'^\s+\)', fncall): | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/parens', 2, | 
 |               'Closing ) should be moved to the previous line') | 
 |       else: | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/parens', 2, | 
 |               'Extra space before )') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def IsBlankLine(line): | 
 |   """Returns true if the given line is blank. | 
 |  | 
 |   We consider a line to be blank if the line is empty or consists of | 
 |   only white spaces. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     line: A line of a string. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     True, if the given line is blank. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   return not line or line.isspace() | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckForFunctionLengths(filename, clean_lines, linenum, | 
 |                             function_state, error): | 
 |   """Reports for long function bodies. | 
 |  | 
 |   For an overview why this is done, see: | 
 |   http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/cppguide.xml#Write_Short_Functions | 
 |  | 
 |   Uses a simplistic algorithm assuming other style guidelines | 
 |   (especially spacing) are followed. | 
 |   Only checks unindented functions, so class members are unchecked. | 
 |   Trivial bodies are unchecked, so constructors with huge initializer lists | 
 |   may be missed. | 
 |   Blank/comment lines are not counted so as to avoid encouraging the removal | 
 |   of vertical space and comments just to get through a lint check. | 
 |   NOLINT *on the last line of a function* disables this check. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     function_state: Current function name and lines in body so far. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   lines = clean_lines.lines | 
 |   line = lines[linenum] | 
 |   raw = clean_lines.raw_lines | 
 |   raw_line = raw[linenum] | 
 |   joined_line = '' | 
 |  | 
 |   starting_func = False | 
 |   regexp = r'(\w(\w|::|\*|\&|\s)*)\('  # decls * & space::name( ... | 
 |   match_result = Match(regexp, line) | 
 |   if match_result: | 
 |     # If the name is all caps and underscores, figure it's a macro and | 
 |     # ignore it, unless it's TEST or TEST_F. | 
 |     function_name = match_result.group(1).split()[-1] | 
 |     if function_name == 'TEST' or function_name == 'TEST_F' or ( | 
 |         not Match(r'[A-Z_]+$', function_name)): | 
 |       starting_func = True | 
 |  | 
 |   if starting_func: | 
 |     body_found = False | 
 |     for start_linenum in xrange(linenum, clean_lines.NumLines()): | 
 |       start_line = lines[start_linenum] | 
 |       joined_line += ' ' + start_line.lstrip() | 
 |       if Search(r'(;|})', start_line):  # Declarations and trivial functions | 
 |         body_found = True | 
 |         break                              # ... ignore | 
 |       elif Search(r'{', start_line): | 
 |         body_found = True | 
 |         function = Search(r'((\w|:)*)\(', line).group(1) | 
 |         if Match(r'TEST', function):    # Handle TEST... macros | 
 |           parameter_regexp = Search(r'(\(.*\))', joined_line) | 
 |           if parameter_regexp:             # Ignore bad syntax | 
 |             function += parameter_regexp.group(1) | 
 |         else: | 
 |           function += '()' | 
 |         function_state.Begin(function) | 
 |         break | 
 |     if not body_found: | 
 |       # No body for the function (or evidence of a non-function) was found. | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'readability/fn_size', 5, | 
 |             'Lint failed to find start of function body.') | 
 |   elif Match(r'^\}\s*$', line):  # function end | 
 |     function_state.Check(error, filename, linenum) | 
 |     function_state.End() | 
 |   elif not Match(r'^\s*$', line): | 
 |     function_state.Count()  # Count non-blank/non-comment lines. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_TODO = re.compile(r'^//(\s*)TODO(\(.+?\))?:?(\s|$)?') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckComment(comment, filename, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Checks for common mistakes in TODO comments. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     comment: The text of the comment from the line in question. | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   match = _RE_PATTERN_TODO.match(comment) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     # One whitespace is correct; zero whitespace is handled elsewhere. | 
 |     leading_whitespace = match.group(1) | 
 |     if len(leading_whitespace) > 1: | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/todo', 2, | 
 |             'Too many spaces before TODO') | 
 |  | 
 |     username = match.group(2) | 
 |     if not username: | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'readability/todo', 2, | 
 |             'Missing username in TODO; it should look like ' | 
 |             '"// TODO(my_username): Stuff."') | 
 |  | 
 |     middle_whitespace = match.group(3) | 
 |     # Comparisons made explicit for correctness -- pylint: disable=g-explicit-bool-comparison | 
 |     if middle_whitespace != ' ' and middle_whitespace != '': | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/todo', 2, | 
 |             'TODO(my_username) should be followed by a space') | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckAccess(filename, clean_lines, linenum, nesting_state, error): | 
 |   """Checks for improper use of DISALLOW* macros. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     nesting_state: A _NestingState instance which maintains information about | 
 |                    the current stack of nested blocks being parsed. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum]  # get rid of comments and strings | 
 |  | 
 |   matched = Match((r'\s*(DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN|' | 
 |                    r'DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS|' | 
 |                    r'DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS)'), line) | 
 |   if not matched: | 
 |     return | 
 |   if nesting_state.stack and isinstance(nesting_state.stack[-1], _ClassInfo): | 
 |     if nesting_state.stack[-1].access != 'private': | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'readability/constructors', 3, | 
 |             '%s must be in the private: section' % matched.group(1)) | 
 |  | 
 |   else: | 
 |     # Found DISALLOW* macro outside a class declaration, or perhaps it | 
 |     # was used inside a function when it should have been part of the | 
 |     # class declaration.  We could issue a warning here, but it | 
 |     # probably resulted in a compiler error already. | 
 |     pass | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def FindNextMatchingAngleBracket(clean_lines, linenum, init_suffix): | 
 |   """Find the corresponding > to close a template. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: Current line number. | 
 |     init_suffix: Remainder of the current line after the initial <. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     True if a matching bracket exists. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   line = init_suffix | 
 |   nesting_stack = ['<'] | 
 |   while True: | 
 |     # Find the next operator that can tell us whether < is used as an | 
 |     # opening bracket or as a less-than operator.  We only want to | 
 |     # warn on the latter case. | 
 |     # | 
 |     # We could also check all other operators and terminate the search | 
 |     # early, e.g. if we got something like this "a<b+c", the "<" is | 
 |     # most likely a less-than operator, but then we will get false | 
 |     # positives for default arguments and other template expressions. | 
 |     match = Search(r'^[^<>(),;\[\]]*([<>(),;\[\]])(.*)$', line) | 
 |     if match: | 
 |       # Found an operator, update nesting stack | 
 |       operator = match.group(1) | 
 |       line = match.group(2) | 
 |  | 
 |       if nesting_stack[-1] == '<': | 
 |         # Expecting closing angle bracket | 
 |         if operator in ('<', '(', '['): | 
 |           nesting_stack.append(operator) | 
 |         elif operator == '>': | 
 |           nesting_stack.pop() | 
 |           if not nesting_stack: | 
 |             # Found matching angle bracket | 
 |             return True | 
 |         elif operator == ',': | 
 |           # Got a comma after a bracket, this is most likely a template | 
 |           # argument.  We have not seen a closing angle bracket yet, but | 
 |           # it's probably a few lines later if we look for it, so just | 
 |           # return early here. | 
 |           return True | 
 |         else: | 
 |           # Got some other operator. | 
 |           return False | 
 |  | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # Expecting closing parenthesis or closing bracket | 
 |         if operator in ('<', '(', '['): | 
 |           nesting_stack.append(operator) | 
 |         elif operator in (')', ']'): | 
 |           # We don't bother checking for matching () or [].  If we got | 
 |           # something like (] or [), it would have been a syntax error. | 
 |           nesting_stack.pop() | 
 |  | 
 |     else: | 
 |       # Scan the next line | 
 |       linenum += 1 | 
 |       if linenum >= len(clean_lines.elided): | 
 |         break | 
 |       line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |  | 
 |   # Exhausted all remaining lines and still no matching angle bracket. | 
 |   # Most likely the input was incomplete, otherwise we should have | 
 |   # seen a semicolon and returned early. | 
 |   return True | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def FindPreviousMatchingAngleBracket(clean_lines, linenum, init_prefix): | 
 |   """Find the corresponding < that started a template. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: Current line number. | 
 |     init_prefix: Part of the current line before the initial >. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     True if a matching bracket exists. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   line = init_prefix | 
 |   nesting_stack = ['>'] | 
 |   while True: | 
 |     # Find the previous operator | 
 |     match = Search(r'^(.*)([<>(),;\[\]])[^<>(),;\[\]]*$', line) | 
 |     if match: | 
 |       # Found an operator, update nesting stack | 
 |       operator = match.group(2) | 
 |       line = match.group(1) | 
 |  | 
 |       if nesting_stack[-1] == '>': | 
 |         # Expecting opening angle bracket | 
 |         if operator in ('>', ')', ']'): | 
 |           nesting_stack.append(operator) | 
 |         elif operator == '<': | 
 |           nesting_stack.pop() | 
 |           if not nesting_stack: | 
 |             # Found matching angle bracket | 
 |             return True | 
 |         elif operator == ',': | 
 |           # Got a comma before a bracket, this is most likely a | 
 |           # template argument.  The opening angle bracket is probably | 
 |           # there if we look for it, so just return early here. | 
 |           return True | 
 |         else: | 
 |           # Got some other operator. | 
 |           return False | 
 |  | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # Expecting opening parenthesis or opening bracket | 
 |         if operator in ('>', ')', ']'): | 
 |           nesting_stack.append(operator) | 
 |         elif operator in ('(', '['): | 
 |           nesting_stack.pop() | 
 |  | 
 |     else: | 
 |       # Scan the previous line | 
 |       linenum -= 1 | 
 |       if linenum < 0: | 
 |         break | 
 |       line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |  | 
 |   # Exhausted all earlier lines and still no matching angle bracket. | 
 |   return False | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckSpacing(filename, clean_lines, linenum, nesting_state, error): | 
 |   """Checks for the correctness of various spacing issues in the code. | 
 |  | 
 |   Things we check for: spaces around operators, spaces after | 
 |   if/for/while/switch, no spaces around parens in function calls, two | 
 |   spaces between code and comment, don't start a block with a blank | 
 |   line, don't end a function with a blank line, don't add a blank line | 
 |   after public/protected/private, don't have too many blank lines in a row. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     nesting_state: A _NestingState instance which maintains information about | 
 |                    the current stack of nested blocks being parsed. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   # Don't use "elided" lines here, otherwise we can't check commented lines. | 
 |   # Don't want to use "raw" either, because we don't want to check inside C++11 | 
 |   # raw strings, | 
 |   raw = clean_lines.lines_without_raw_strings | 
 |   line = raw[linenum] | 
 |  | 
 |   # Before nixing comments, check if the line is blank for no good | 
 |   # reason.  This includes the first line after a block is opened, and | 
 |   # blank lines at the end of a function (ie, right before a line like '}' | 
 |   # | 
 |   # Skip all the blank line checks if we are immediately inside a | 
 |   # namespace body.  In other words, don't issue blank line warnings | 
 |   # for this block: | 
 |   #   namespace { | 
 |   # | 
 |   #   } | 
 |   # | 
 |   # A warning about missing end of namespace comments will be issued instead. | 
 |   if IsBlankLine(line) and not nesting_state.InNamespaceBody(): | 
 |     elided = clean_lines.elided | 
 |     prev_line = elided[linenum - 1] | 
 |     prevbrace = prev_line.rfind('{') | 
 |     # TODO(unknown): Don't complain if line before blank line, and line after, | 
 |     #                both start with alnums and are indented the same amount. | 
 |     #                This ignores whitespace at the start of a namespace block | 
 |     #                because those are not usually indented. | 
 |     if prevbrace != -1 and prev_line[prevbrace:].find('}') == -1: | 
 |       # OK, we have a blank line at the start of a code block.  Before we | 
 |       # complain, we check if it is an exception to the rule: The previous | 
 |       # non-empty line has the parameters of a function header that are indented | 
 |       # 4 spaces (because they did not fit in a 80 column line when placed on | 
 |       # the same line as the function name).  We also check for the case where | 
 |       # the previous line is indented 6 spaces, which may happen when the | 
 |       # initializers of a constructor do not fit into a 80 column line. | 
 |       exception = False | 
 |       if Match(r' {6}\w', prev_line):  # Initializer list? | 
 |         # We are looking for the opening column of initializer list, which | 
 |         # should be indented 4 spaces to cause 6 space indentation afterwards. | 
 |         search_position = linenum-2 | 
 |         while (search_position >= 0 | 
 |                and Match(r' {6}\w', elided[search_position])): | 
 |           search_position -= 1 | 
 |         exception = (search_position >= 0 | 
 |                      and elided[search_position][:5] == '    :') | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # Search for the function arguments or an initializer list.  We use a | 
 |         # simple heuristic here: If the line is indented 4 spaces; and we have a | 
 |         # closing paren, without the opening paren, followed by an opening brace | 
 |         # or colon (for initializer lists) we assume that it is the last line of | 
 |         # a function header.  If we have a colon indented 4 spaces, it is an | 
 |         # initializer list. | 
 |         exception = (Match(r' {4}\w[^\(]*\)\s*(const\s*)?(\{\s*$|:)', | 
 |                            prev_line) | 
 |                      or Match(r' {4}:', prev_line)) | 
 |  | 
 |       if not exception: | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/blank_line', 2, | 
 |               'Redundant blank line at the start of a code block ' | 
 |               'should be deleted.') | 
 |     # Ignore blank lines at the end of a block in a long if-else | 
 |     # chain, like this: | 
 |     #   if (condition1) { | 
 |     #     // Something followed by a blank line | 
 |     # | 
 |     #   } else if (condition2) { | 
 |     #     // Something else | 
 |     #   } | 
 |     if linenum + 1 < clean_lines.NumLines(): | 
 |       next_line = raw[linenum + 1] | 
 |       if (next_line | 
 |           and Match(r'\s*}', next_line) | 
 |           and next_line.find('} else ') == -1): | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/blank_line', 3, | 
 |               'Redundant blank line at the end of a code block ' | 
 |               'should be deleted.') | 
 |  | 
 |     matched = Match(r'\s*(public|protected|private):', prev_line) | 
 |     if matched: | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/blank_line', 3, | 
 |             'Do not leave a blank line after "%s:"' % matched.group(1)) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Next, we complain if there's a comment too near the text | 
 |   commentpos = line.find('//') | 
 |   if commentpos != -1: | 
 |     # Check if the // may be in quotes.  If so, ignore it | 
 |     # Comparisons made explicit for clarity -- pylint: disable=g-explicit-bool-comparison | 
 |     if (line.count('"', 0, commentpos) - | 
 |         line.count('\\"', 0, commentpos)) % 2 == 0:   # not in quotes | 
 |       # Allow one space for new scopes, two spaces otherwise: | 
 |       if (not Match(r'^\s*{ //', line) and | 
 |           ((commentpos >= 1 and | 
 |             line[commentpos-1] not in string.whitespace) or | 
 |            (commentpos >= 2 and | 
 |             line[commentpos-2] not in string.whitespace))): | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/comments', 2, | 
 |               'At least two spaces is best between code and comments') | 
 |       # There should always be a space between the // and the comment | 
 |       commentend = commentpos + 2 | 
 |       if commentend < len(line) and not line[commentend] == ' ': | 
 |         # but some lines are exceptions -- e.g. if they're big | 
 |         # comment delimiters like: | 
 |         # //---------------------------------------------------------- | 
 |         # or are an empty C++ style Doxygen comment, like: | 
 |         # /// | 
 |         # or C++ style Doxygen comments placed after the variable: | 
 |         # ///<  Header comment | 
 |         # //!<  Header comment | 
 |         # or they begin with multiple slashes followed by a space: | 
 |         # //////// Header comment | 
 |         match = (Search(r'[=/-]{4,}\s*$', line[commentend:]) or | 
 |                  Search(r'^/$', line[commentend:]) or | 
 |                  Search(r'^!< ', line[commentend:]) or | 
 |                  Search(r'^/< ', line[commentend:]) or | 
 |                  Search(r'^/+ ', line[commentend:])) | 
 |         if not match: | 
 |           error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/comments', 4, | 
 |                 'Should have a space between // and comment') | 
 |       CheckComment(line[commentpos:], filename, linenum, error) | 
 |  | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum]  # get rid of comments and strings | 
 |  | 
 |   # Don't try to do spacing checks for operator methods | 
 |   line = re.sub(r'operator(==|!=|<|<<|<=|>=|>>|>)\(', 'operator\(', line) | 
 |  | 
 |   # We allow no-spaces around = within an if: "if ( (a=Foo()) == 0 )". | 
 |   # Otherwise not.  Note we only check for non-spaces on *both* sides; | 
 |   # sometimes people put non-spaces on one side when aligning ='s among | 
 |   # many lines (not that this is behavior that I approve of...) | 
 |   if Search(r'[\w.]=[\w.]', line) and not Search(r'\b(if|while) ', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/operators', 4, | 
 |           'Missing spaces around =') | 
 |  | 
 |   # It's ok not to have spaces around binary operators like + - * /, but if | 
 |   # there's too little whitespace, we get concerned.  It's hard to tell, | 
 |   # though, so we punt on this one for now.  TODO. | 
 |  | 
 |   # You should always have whitespace around binary operators. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # Check <= and >= first to avoid false positives with < and >, then | 
 |   # check non-include lines for spacing around < and >. | 
 |   match = Search(r'[^<>=!\s](==|!=|<=|>=)[^<>=!\s]', line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/operators', 3, | 
 |           'Missing spaces around %s' % match.group(1)) | 
 |   # We allow no-spaces around << when used like this: 10<<20, but | 
 |   # not otherwise (particularly, not when used as streams) | 
 |   # Also ignore using ns::operator<<; | 
 |   match = Search(r'(operator|\S)(?:L|UL|ULL|l|ul|ull)?<<(\S)', line) | 
 |   if (match and | 
 |       not (match.group(1).isdigit() and match.group(2).isdigit()) and | 
 |       not (match.group(1) == 'operator' and match.group(2) == ';')): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/operators', 3, | 
 |           'Missing spaces around <<') | 
 |   elif not Match(r'#.*include', line): | 
 |     # Avoid false positives on -> | 
 |     reduced_line = line.replace('->', '') | 
 |  | 
 |     # Look for < that is not surrounded by spaces.  This is only | 
 |     # triggered if both sides are missing spaces, even though | 
 |     # technically should should flag if at least one side is missing a | 
 |     # space.  This is done to avoid some false positives with shifts. | 
 |     match = Search(r'[^\s<]<([^\s=<].*)', reduced_line) | 
 |     if (match and | 
 |         not FindNextMatchingAngleBracket(clean_lines, linenum, match.group(1))): | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/operators', 3, | 
 |             'Missing spaces around <') | 
 |  | 
 |     # Look for > that is not surrounded by spaces.  Similar to the | 
 |     # above, we only trigger if both sides are missing spaces to avoid | 
 |     # false positives with shifts. | 
 |     match = Search(r'^(.*[^\s>])>[^\s=>]', reduced_line) | 
 |     if (match and | 
 |         not FindPreviousMatchingAngleBracket(clean_lines, linenum, | 
 |                                              match.group(1))): | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/operators', 3, | 
 |             'Missing spaces around >') | 
 |  | 
 |   # We allow no-spaces around >> for almost anything.  This is because | 
 |   # C++11 allows ">>" to close nested templates, which accounts for | 
 |   # most cases when ">>" is not followed by a space. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # We still warn on ">>" followed by alpha character, because that is | 
 |   # likely due to ">>" being used for right shifts, e.g.: | 
 |   #   value >> alpha | 
 |   # | 
 |   # When ">>" is used to close templates, the alphanumeric letter that | 
 |   # follows would be part of an identifier, and there should still be | 
 |   # a space separating the template type and the identifier. | 
 |   #   type<type<type>> alpha | 
 |   match = Search(r'>>[a-zA-Z_]', line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/operators', 3, | 
 |           'Missing spaces around >>') | 
 |  | 
 |   # There shouldn't be space around unary operators | 
 |   match = Search(r'(!\s|~\s|[\s]--[\s;]|[\s]\+\+[\s;])', line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/operators', 4, | 
 |           'Extra space for operator %s' % match.group(1)) | 
 |  | 
 |   # A pet peeve of mine: no spaces after an if, while, switch, or for | 
 |   match = Search(r' (if\(|for\(|while\(|switch\()', line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/parens', 5, | 
 |           'Missing space before ( in %s' % match.group(1)) | 
 |  | 
 |   # For if/for/while/switch, the left and right parens should be | 
 |   # consistent about how many spaces are inside the parens, and | 
 |   # there should either be zero or one spaces inside the parens. | 
 |   # We don't want: "if ( foo)" or "if ( foo   )". | 
 |   # Exception: "for ( ; foo; bar)" and "for (foo; bar; )" are allowed. | 
 |   match = Search(r'\b(if|for|while|switch)\s*' | 
 |                  r'\(([ ]*)(.).*[^ ]+([ ]*)\)\s*{\s*$', | 
 |                  line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     if len(match.group(2)) != len(match.group(4)): | 
 |       if not (match.group(3) == ';' and | 
 |               len(match.group(2)) == 1 + len(match.group(4)) or | 
 |               not match.group(2) and Search(r'\bfor\s*\(.*; \)', line)): | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/parens', 5, | 
 |               'Mismatching spaces inside () in %s' % match.group(1)) | 
 |     if len(match.group(2)) not in [0, 1]: | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/parens', 5, | 
 |             'Should have zero or one spaces inside ( and ) in %s' % | 
 |             match.group(1)) | 
 |  | 
 |   # You should always have a space after a comma (either as fn arg or operator) | 
 |   # | 
 |   # This does not apply when the non-space character following the | 
 |   # comma is another comma, since the only time when that happens is | 
 |   # for empty macro arguments. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # We run this check in two passes: first pass on elided lines to | 
 |   # verify that lines contain missing whitespaces, second pass on raw | 
 |   # lines to confirm that those missing whitespaces are not due to | 
 |   # elided comments. | 
 |   if Search(r',[^,\s]', line) and Search(r',[^,\s]', raw[linenum]): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/comma', 3, | 
 |           'Missing space after ,') | 
 |  | 
 |   # You should always have a space after a semicolon | 
 |   # except for few corner cases | 
 |   # TODO(unknown): clarify if 'if (1) { return 1;}' is requires one more | 
 |   # space after ; | 
 |   if Search(r';[^\s};\\)/]', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/semicolon', 3, | 
 |           'Missing space after ;') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Next we will look for issues with function calls. | 
 |   CheckSpacingForFunctionCall(filename, line, linenum, error) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Except after an opening paren, or after another opening brace (in case of | 
 |   # an initializer list, for instance), you should have spaces before your | 
 |   # braces. And since you should never have braces at the beginning of a line, | 
 |   # this is an easy test. | 
 |   match = Match(r'^(.*[^ ({]){', line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     # Try a bit harder to check for brace initialization.  This | 
 |     # happens in one of the following forms: | 
 |     #   Constructor() : initializer_list_{} { ... } | 
 |     #   Constructor{}.MemberFunction() | 
 |     #   Type variable{}; | 
 |     #   FunctionCall(type{}, ...); | 
 |     #   LastArgument(..., type{}); | 
 |     #   LOG(INFO) << type{} << " ..."; | 
 |     #   map_of_type[{...}] = ...; | 
 |     # | 
 |     # We check for the character following the closing brace, and | 
 |     # silence the warning if it's one of those listed above, i.e. | 
 |     # "{.;,)<]". | 
 |     # | 
 |     # To account for nested initializer list, we allow any number of | 
 |     # closing braces up to "{;,)<".  We can't simply silence the | 
 |     # warning on first sight of closing brace, because that would | 
 |     # cause false negatives for things that are not initializer lists. | 
 |     #   Silence this:         But not this: | 
 |     #     Outer{                if (...) { | 
 |     #       Inner{...}            if (...){  // Missing space before { | 
 |     #     };                    } | 
 |     # | 
 |     # There is a false negative with this approach if people inserted | 
 |     # spurious semicolons, e.g. "if (cond){};", but we will catch the | 
 |     # spurious semicolon with a separate check. | 
 |     (endline, endlinenum, endpos) = CloseExpression( | 
 |         clean_lines, linenum, len(match.group(1))) | 
 |     trailing_text = '' | 
 |     if endpos > -1: | 
 |       trailing_text = endline[endpos:] | 
 |     for offset in xrange(endlinenum + 1, | 
 |                          min(endlinenum + 3, clean_lines.NumLines() - 1)): | 
 |       trailing_text += clean_lines.elided[offset] | 
 |     if not Match(r'^[\s}]*[{.;,)<\]]', trailing_text): | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/braces', 5, | 
 |             'Missing space before {') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Make sure '} else {' has spaces. | 
 |   if Search(r'}else', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/braces', 5, | 
 |           'Missing space before else') | 
 |  | 
 |   # You shouldn't have spaces before your brackets, except maybe after | 
 |   # 'delete []' or 'new char * []'. | 
 |   if Search(r'\w\s+\[', line) and not Search(r'delete\s+\[', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/braces', 5, | 
 |           'Extra space before [') | 
 |  | 
 |   # You shouldn't have a space before a semicolon at the end of the line. | 
 |   # There's a special case for "for" since the style guide allows space before | 
 |   # the semicolon there. | 
 |   if Search(r':\s*;\s*$', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/semicolon', 5, | 
 |           'Semicolon defining empty statement. Use {} instead.') | 
 |   elif Search(r'^\s*;\s*$', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/semicolon', 5, | 
 |           'Line contains only semicolon. If this should be an empty statement, ' | 
 |           'use {} instead.') | 
 |   elif (Search(r'\s+;\s*$', line) and | 
 |         not Search(r'\bfor\b', line)): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/semicolon', 5, | 
 |           'Extra space before last semicolon. If this should be an empty ' | 
 |           'statement, use {} instead.') | 
 |  | 
 |   # In range-based for, we wanted spaces before and after the colon, but | 
 |   # not around "::" tokens that might appear. | 
 |   if (Search('for *\(.*[^:]:[^: ]', line) or | 
 |       Search('for *\(.*[^: ]:[^:]', line)): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/forcolon', 2, | 
 |           'Missing space around colon in range-based for loop') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckSectionSpacing(filename, clean_lines, class_info, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Checks for additional blank line issues related to sections. | 
 |  | 
 |   Currently the only thing checked here is blank line before protected/private. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     class_info: A _ClassInfo objects. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # Skip checks if the class is small, where small means 25 lines or less. | 
 |   # 25 lines seems like a good cutoff since that's the usual height of | 
 |   # terminals, and any class that can't fit in one screen can't really | 
 |   # be considered "small". | 
 |   # | 
 |   # Also skip checks if we are on the first line.  This accounts for | 
 |   # classes that look like | 
 |   #   class Foo { public: ... }; | 
 |   # | 
 |   # If we didn't find the end of the class, last_line would be zero, | 
 |   # and the check will be skipped by the first condition. | 
 |   if (class_info.last_line - class_info.starting_linenum <= 24 or | 
 |       linenum <= class_info.starting_linenum): | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   matched = Match(r'\s*(public|protected|private):', clean_lines.lines[linenum]) | 
 |   if matched: | 
 |     # Issue warning if the line before public/protected/private was | 
 |     # not a blank line, but don't do this if the previous line contains | 
 |     # "class" or "struct".  This can happen two ways: | 
 |     #  - We are at the beginning of the class. | 
 |     #  - We are forward-declaring an inner class that is semantically | 
 |     #    private, but needed to be public for implementation reasons. | 
 |     # Also ignores cases where the previous line ends with a backslash as can be | 
 |     # common when defining classes in C macros. | 
 |     prev_line = clean_lines.lines[linenum - 1] | 
 |     if (not IsBlankLine(prev_line) and | 
 |         not Search(r'\b(class|struct)\b', prev_line) and | 
 |         not Search(r'\\$', prev_line)): | 
 |       # Try a bit harder to find the beginning of the class.  This is to | 
 |       # account for multi-line base-specifier lists, e.g.: | 
 |       #   class Derived | 
 |       #       : public Base { | 
 |       end_class_head = class_info.starting_linenum | 
 |       for i in range(class_info.starting_linenum, linenum): | 
 |         if Search(r'\{\s*$', clean_lines.lines[i]): | 
 |           end_class_head = i | 
 |           break | 
 |       if end_class_head < linenum - 1: | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/blank_line', 3, | 
 |               '"%s:" should be preceded by a blank line' % matched.group(1)) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def GetPreviousNonBlankLine(clean_lines, linenum): | 
 |   """Return the most recent non-blank line and its line number. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file contents. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     A tuple with two elements.  The first element is the contents of the last | 
 |     non-blank line before the current line, or the empty string if this is the | 
 |     first non-blank line.  The second is the line number of that line, or -1 | 
 |     if this is the first non-blank line. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   prevlinenum = linenum - 1 | 
 |   while prevlinenum >= 0: | 
 |     prevline = clean_lines.elided[prevlinenum] | 
 |     if not IsBlankLine(prevline):     # if not a blank line... | 
 |       return (prevline, prevlinenum) | 
 |     prevlinenum -= 1 | 
 |   return ('', -1) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckBraces(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Looks for misplaced braces (e.g. at the end of line). | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum]        # get rid of comments and strings | 
 |  | 
 |   if Match(r'\s*{\s*$', line): | 
 |     # We allow an open brace to start a line in the case where someone is using | 
 |     # braces in a block to explicitly create a new scope, which is commonly used | 
 |     # to control the lifetime of stack-allocated variables.  Braces are also | 
 |     # used for brace initializers inside function calls.  We don't detect this | 
 |     # perfectly: we just don't complain if the last non-whitespace character on | 
 |     # the previous non-blank line is ',', ';', ':', '(', '{', or '}', or if the | 
 |     # previous line starts a preprocessor block. | 
 |     prevline = GetPreviousNonBlankLine(clean_lines, linenum)[0] | 
 |     if (not Search(r'[,;:}{(]\s*$', prevline) and | 
 |         not Match(r'\s*#', prevline)): | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/braces', 4, | 
 |             '{ should almost always be at the end of the previous line') | 
 |  | 
 |   # An else clause should be on the same line as the preceding closing brace. | 
 |   if Match(r'\s*else\s*', line): | 
 |     prevline = GetPreviousNonBlankLine(clean_lines, linenum)[0] | 
 |     if Match(r'\s*}\s*$', prevline): | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/newline', 4, | 
 |             'An else should appear on the same line as the preceding }') | 
 |  | 
 |   # If braces come on one side of an else, they should be on both. | 
 |   # However, we have to worry about "else if" that spans multiple lines! | 
 |   if Search(r'}\s*else[^{]*$', line) or Match(r'[^}]*else\s*{', line): | 
 |     if Search(r'}\s*else if([^{]*)$', line):       # could be multi-line if | 
 |       # find the ( after the if | 
 |       pos = line.find('else if') | 
 |       pos = line.find('(', pos) | 
 |       if pos > 0: | 
 |         (endline, _, endpos) = CloseExpression(clean_lines, linenum, pos) | 
 |         if endline[endpos:].find('{') == -1:    # must be brace after if | 
 |           error(filename, linenum, 'readability/braces', 5, | 
 |                 'If an else has a brace on one side, it should have it on both') | 
 |     else:            # common case: else not followed by a multi-line if | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'readability/braces', 5, | 
 |             'If an else has a brace on one side, it should have it on both') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Likewise, an else should never have the else clause on the same line | 
 |   if Search(r'\belse [^\s{]', line) and not Search(r'\belse if\b', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/newline', 4, | 
 |           'Else clause should never be on same line as else (use 2 lines)') | 
 |  | 
 |   # In the same way, a do/while should never be on one line | 
 |   if Match(r'\s*do [^\s{]', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/newline', 4, | 
 |           'do/while clauses should not be on a single line') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Block bodies should not be followed by a semicolon.  Due to C++11 | 
 |   # brace initialization, there are more places where semicolons are | 
 |   # required than not, so we use a whitelist approach to check these | 
 |   # rather than a blacklist.  These are the places where "};" should | 
 |   # be replaced by just "}": | 
 |   # 1. Some flavor of block following closing parenthesis: | 
 |   #    for (;;) {}; | 
 |   #    while (...) {}; | 
 |   #    switch (...) {}; | 
 |   #    Function(...) {}; | 
 |   #    if (...) {}; | 
 |   #    if (...) else if (...) {}; | 
 |   # | 
 |   # 2. else block: | 
 |   #    if (...) else {}; | 
 |   # | 
 |   # 3. const member function: | 
 |   #    Function(...) const {}; | 
 |   # | 
 |   # 4. Block following some statement: | 
 |   #    x = 42; | 
 |   #    {}; | 
 |   # | 
 |   # 5. Block at the beginning of a function: | 
 |   #    Function(...) { | 
 |   #      {}; | 
 |   #    } | 
 |   # | 
 |   #    Note that naively checking for the preceding "{" will also match | 
 |   #    braces inside multi-dimensional arrays, but this is fine since | 
 |   #    that expression will not contain semicolons. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # 6. Block following another block: | 
 |   #    while (true) {} | 
 |   #    {}; | 
 |   # | 
 |   # 7. End of namespaces: | 
 |   #    namespace {}; | 
 |   # | 
 |   #    These semicolons seems far more common than other kinds of | 
 |   #    redundant semicolons, possibly due to people converting classes | 
 |   #    to namespaces.  For now we do not warn for this case. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # Try matching case 1 first. | 
 |   match = Match(r'^(.*\)\s*)\{', line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     # Matched closing parenthesis (case 1).  Check the token before the | 
 |     # matching opening parenthesis, and don't warn if it looks like a | 
 |     # macro.  This avoids these false positives: | 
 |     #  - macro that defines a base class | 
 |     #  - multi-line macro that defines a base class | 
 |     #  - macro that defines the whole class-head | 
 |     # | 
 |     # But we still issue warnings for macros that we know are safe to | 
 |     # warn, specifically: | 
 |     #  - TEST, TEST_F, TEST_P, MATCHER, MATCHER_P | 
 |     #  - TYPED_TEST | 
 |     #  - INTERFACE_DEF | 
 |     #  - EXCLUSIVE_LOCKS_REQUIRED, SHARED_LOCKS_REQUIRED, LOCKS_EXCLUDED: | 
 |     # | 
 |     # We implement a whitelist of safe macros instead of a blacklist of | 
 |     # unsafe macros, even though the latter appears less frequently in | 
 |     # google code and would have been easier to implement.  This is because | 
 |     # the downside for getting the whitelist wrong means some extra | 
 |     # semicolons, while the downside for getting the blacklist wrong | 
 |     # would result in compile errors. | 
 |     # | 
 |     # In addition to macros, we also don't want to warn on compound | 
 |     # literals. | 
 |     closing_brace_pos = match.group(1).rfind(')') | 
 |     opening_parenthesis = ReverseCloseExpression( | 
 |         clean_lines, linenum, closing_brace_pos) | 
 |     if opening_parenthesis[2] > -1: | 
 |       line_prefix = opening_parenthesis[0][0:opening_parenthesis[2]] | 
 |       macro = Search(r'\b([A-Z_]+)\s*$', line_prefix) | 
 |       if ((macro and | 
 |            macro.group(1) not in ( | 
 |                'TEST', 'TEST_F', 'MATCHER', 'MATCHER_P', 'TYPED_TEST', | 
 |                'EXCLUSIVE_LOCKS_REQUIRED', 'SHARED_LOCKS_REQUIRED', | 
 |                'LOCKS_EXCLUDED', 'INTERFACE_DEF')) or | 
 |           Search(r'\s+=\s*$', line_prefix)): | 
 |         match = None | 
 |  | 
 |   else: | 
 |     # Try matching cases 2-3. | 
 |     match = Match(r'^(.*(?:else|\)\s*const)\s*)\{', line) | 
 |     if not match: | 
 |       # Try matching cases 4-6.  These are always matched on separate lines. | 
 |       # | 
 |       # Note that we can't simply concatenate the previous line to the | 
 |       # current line and do a single match, otherwise we may output | 
 |       # duplicate warnings for the blank line case: | 
 |       #   if (cond) { | 
 |       #     // blank line | 
 |       #   } | 
 |       prevline = GetPreviousNonBlankLine(clean_lines, linenum)[0] | 
 |       if prevline and Search(r'[;{}]\s*$', prevline): | 
 |         match = Match(r'^(\s*)\{', line) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check matching closing brace | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     (endline, endlinenum, endpos) = CloseExpression( | 
 |         clean_lines, linenum, len(match.group(1))) | 
 |     if endpos > -1 and Match(r'^\s*;', endline[endpos:]): | 
 |       # Current {} pair is eligible for semicolon check, and we have found | 
 |       # the redundant semicolon, output warning here. | 
 |       # | 
 |       # Note: because we are scanning forward for opening braces, and | 
 |       # outputting warnings for the matching closing brace, if there are | 
 |       # nested blocks with trailing semicolons, we will get the error | 
 |       # messages in reversed order. | 
 |       error(filename, endlinenum, 'readability/braces', 4, | 
 |             "You don't need a ; after a }") | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckEmptyBlockBody(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Look for empty loop/conditional body with only a single semicolon. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   # Search for loop keywords at the beginning of the line.  Because only | 
 |   # whitespaces are allowed before the keywords, this will also ignore most | 
 |   # do-while-loops, since those lines should start with closing brace. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # We also check "if" blocks here, since an empty conditional block | 
 |   # is likely an error. | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |   matched = Match(r'\s*(for|while|if)\s*\(', line) | 
 |   if matched: | 
 |     # Find the end of the conditional expression | 
 |     (end_line, end_linenum, end_pos) = CloseExpression( | 
 |         clean_lines, linenum, line.find('(')) | 
 |  | 
 |     # Output warning if what follows the condition expression is a semicolon. | 
 |     # No warning for all other cases, including whitespace or newline, since we | 
 |     # have a separate check for semicolons preceded by whitespace. | 
 |     if end_pos >= 0 and Match(r';', end_line[end_pos:]): | 
 |       if matched.group(1) == 'if': | 
 |         error(filename, end_linenum, 'whitespace/empty_conditional_body', 5, | 
 |               'Empty conditional bodies should use {}') | 
 |       else: | 
 |         error(filename, end_linenum, 'whitespace/empty_loop_body', 5, | 
 |               'Empty loop bodies should use {} or continue') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckCheck(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Checks the use of CHECK and EXPECT macros. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   # Decide the set of replacement macros that should be suggested | 
 |   lines = clean_lines.elided | 
 |   check_macro = None | 
 |   start_pos = -1 | 
 |   for macro in _CHECK_MACROS: | 
 |     i = lines[linenum].find(macro) | 
 |     if i >= 0: | 
 |       check_macro = macro | 
 |  | 
 |       # Find opening parenthesis.  Do a regular expression match here | 
 |       # to make sure that we are matching the expected CHECK macro, as | 
 |       # opposed to some other macro that happens to contain the CHECK | 
 |       # substring. | 
 |       matched = Match(r'^(.*\b' + check_macro + r'\s*)\(', lines[linenum]) | 
 |       if not matched: | 
 |         continue | 
 |       start_pos = len(matched.group(1)) | 
 |       break | 
 |   if not check_macro or start_pos < 0: | 
 |     # Don't waste time here if line doesn't contain 'CHECK' or 'EXPECT' | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   # Find end of the boolean expression by matching parentheses | 
 |   (last_line, end_line, end_pos) = CloseExpression( | 
 |       clean_lines, linenum, start_pos) | 
 |   if end_pos < 0: | 
 |     return | 
 |   if linenum == end_line: | 
 |     expression = lines[linenum][start_pos + 1:end_pos - 1] | 
 |   else: | 
 |     expression = lines[linenum][start_pos + 1:] | 
 |     for i in xrange(linenum + 1, end_line): | 
 |       expression += lines[i] | 
 |     expression += last_line[0:end_pos - 1] | 
 |  | 
 |   # Parse expression so that we can take parentheses into account. | 
 |   # This avoids false positives for inputs like "CHECK((a < 4) == b)", | 
 |   # which is not replaceable by CHECK_LE. | 
 |   lhs = '' | 
 |   rhs = '' | 
 |   operator = None | 
 |   while expression: | 
 |     matched = Match(r'^\s*(<<|<<=|>>|>>=|->\*|->|&&|\|\||' | 
 |                     r'==|!=|>=|>|<=|<|\()(.*)$', expression) | 
 |     if matched: | 
 |       token = matched.group(1) | 
 |       if token == '(': | 
 |         # Parenthesized operand | 
 |         expression = matched.group(2) | 
 |         (end, _) = FindEndOfExpressionInLine(expression, 0, 1, '(', ')') | 
 |         if end < 0: | 
 |           return  # Unmatched parenthesis | 
 |         lhs += '(' + expression[0:end] | 
 |         expression = expression[end:] | 
 |       elif token in ('&&', '||'): | 
 |         # Logical and/or operators.  This means the expression | 
 |         # contains more than one term, for example: | 
 |         #   CHECK(42 < a && a < b); | 
 |         # | 
 |         # These are not replaceable with CHECK_LE, so bail out early. | 
 |         return | 
 |       elif token in ('<<', '<<=', '>>', '>>=', '->*', '->'): | 
 |         # Non-relational operator | 
 |         lhs += token | 
 |         expression = matched.group(2) | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # Relational operator | 
 |         operator = token | 
 |         rhs = matched.group(2) | 
 |         break | 
 |     else: | 
 |       # Unparenthesized operand.  Instead of appending to lhs one character | 
 |       # at a time, we do another regular expression match to consume several | 
 |       # characters at once if possible.  Trivial benchmark shows that this | 
 |       # is more efficient when the operands are longer than a single | 
 |       # character, which is generally the case. | 
 |       matched = Match(r'^([^-=!<>()&|]+)(.*)$', expression) | 
 |       if not matched: | 
 |         matched = Match(r'^(\s*\S)(.*)$', expression) | 
 |         if not matched: | 
 |           break | 
 |       lhs += matched.group(1) | 
 |       expression = matched.group(2) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Only apply checks if we got all parts of the boolean expression | 
 |   if not (lhs and operator and rhs): | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check that rhs do not contain logical operators.  We already know | 
 |   # that lhs is fine since the loop above parses out && and ||. | 
 |   if rhs.find('&&') > -1 or rhs.find('||') > -1: | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   # At least one of the operands must be a constant literal.  This is | 
 |   # to avoid suggesting replacements for unprintable things like | 
 |   # CHECK(variable != iterator) | 
 |   # | 
 |   # The following pattern matches decimal, hex integers, strings, and | 
 |   # characters (in that order). | 
 |   lhs = lhs.strip() | 
 |   rhs = rhs.strip() | 
 |   match_constant = r'^([-+]?(\d+|0[xX][0-9a-fA-F]+)[lLuU]{0,3}|".*"|\'.*\')$' | 
 |   if Match(match_constant, lhs) or Match(match_constant, rhs): | 
 |     # Note: since we know both lhs and rhs, we can provide a more | 
 |     # descriptive error message like: | 
 |     #   Consider using CHECK_EQ(x, 42) instead of CHECK(x == 42) | 
 |     # Instead of: | 
 |     #   Consider using CHECK_EQ instead of CHECK(a == b) | 
 |     # | 
 |     # We are still keeping the less descriptive message because if lhs | 
 |     # or rhs gets long, the error message might become unreadable. | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'readability/check', 2, | 
 |           'Consider using %s instead of %s(a %s b)' % ( | 
 |               _CHECK_REPLACEMENT[check_macro][operator], | 
 |               check_macro, operator)) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckAltTokens(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Check alternative keywords being used in boolean expressions. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |  | 
 |   # Avoid preprocessor lines | 
 |   if Match(r'^\s*#', line): | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   # Last ditch effort to avoid multi-line comments.  This will not help | 
 |   # if the comment started before the current line or ended after the | 
 |   # current line, but it catches most of the false positives.  At least, | 
 |   # it provides a way to workaround this warning for people who use | 
 |   # multi-line comments in preprocessor macros. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # TODO(unknown): remove this once cpplint has better support for | 
 |   # multi-line comments. | 
 |   if line.find('/*') >= 0 or line.find('*/') >= 0: | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   for match in _ALT_TOKEN_REPLACEMENT_PATTERN.finditer(line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'readability/alt_tokens', 2, | 
 |           'Use operator %s instead of %s' % ( | 
 |               _ALT_TOKEN_REPLACEMENT[match.group(1)], match.group(1))) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def GetLineWidth(line): | 
 |   """Determines the width of the line in column positions. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     line: A string, which may be a Unicode string. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     The width of the line in column positions, accounting for Unicode | 
 |     combining characters and wide characters. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   if isinstance(line, unicode): | 
 |     width = 0 | 
 |     for uc in unicodedata.normalize('NFC', line): | 
 |       if unicodedata.east_asian_width(uc) in ('W', 'F'): | 
 |         width += 2 | 
 |       elif not unicodedata.combining(uc): | 
 |         width += 1 | 
 |     return width | 
 |   else: | 
 |     return len(line) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckStyle(filename, clean_lines, linenum, file_extension, nesting_state, | 
 |                error): | 
 |   """Checks rules from the 'C++ style rules' section of cppguide.html. | 
 |  | 
 |   Most of these rules are hard to test (naming, comment style), but we | 
 |   do what we can.  In particular we check for 2-space indents, line lengths, | 
 |   tab usage, spaces inside code, etc. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     file_extension: The extension (without the dot) of the filename. | 
 |     nesting_state: A _NestingState instance which maintains information about | 
 |                    the current stack of nested blocks being parsed. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   # Don't use "elided" lines here, otherwise we can't check commented lines. | 
 |   # Don't want to use "raw" either, because we don't want to check inside C++11 | 
 |   # raw strings, | 
 |   raw_lines = clean_lines.lines_without_raw_strings | 
 |   line = raw_lines[linenum] | 
 |  | 
 |   if line.find('\t') != -1: | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/tab', 1, | 
 |           'Tab found; better to use spaces') | 
 |  | 
 |   # One or three blank spaces at the beginning of the line is weird; it's | 
 |   # hard to reconcile that with 2-space indents. | 
 |   # NOTE: here are the conditions rob pike used for his tests.  Mine aren't | 
 |   # as sophisticated, but it may be worth becoming so:  RLENGTH==initial_spaces | 
 |   # if(RLENGTH > 20) complain = 0; | 
 |   # if(match($0, " +(error|private|public|protected):")) complain = 0; | 
 |   # if(match(prev, "&& *$")) complain = 0; | 
 |   # if(match(prev, "\\|\\| *$")) complain = 0; | 
 |   # if(match(prev, "[\",=><] *$")) complain = 0; | 
 |   # if(match($0, " <<")) complain = 0; | 
 |   # if(match(prev, " +for \\(")) complain = 0; | 
 |   # if(prevodd && match(prevprev, " +for \\(")) complain = 0; | 
 |   initial_spaces = 0 | 
 |   cleansed_line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |   while initial_spaces < len(line) and line[initial_spaces] == ' ': | 
 |     initial_spaces += 1 | 
 |   if line and line[-1].isspace(): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/end_of_line', 4, | 
 |           'Line ends in whitespace.  Consider deleting these extra spaces.') | 
 |   # There are certain situations we allow one space, notably for section labels | 
 |   elif ((initial_spaces == 1 or initial_spaces == 3) and | 
 |         not Match(r'\s*\w+\s*:\s*$', cleansed_line)): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/indent', 3, | 
 |           'Weird number of spaces at line-start.  ' | 
 |           'Are you using a 2-space indent?') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check if the line is a header guard. | 
 |   is_header_guard = False | 
 |   if file_extension == 'h': | 
 |     cppvar = GetHeaderGuardCPPVariable(filename) | 
 |     if (line.startswith('#ifndef %s' % cppvar) or | 
 |         line.startswith('#define %s' % cppvar) or | 
 |         line.startswith('#endif  // %s' % cppvar)): | 
 |       is_header_guard = True | 
 |   # #include lines and header guards can be long, since there's no clean way to | 
 |   # split them. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # URLs can be long too.  It's possible to split these, but it makes them | 
 |   # harder to cut&paste. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # The "$Id:...$" comment may also get very long without it being the | 
 |   # developers fault. | 
 |   if (not line.startswith('#include') and not is_header_guard and | 
 |       not Match(r'^\s*//.*http(s?)://\S*$', line) and | 
 |       not Match(r'^// \$Id:.*#[0-9]+ \$$', line)): | 
 |     line_width = GetLineWidth(line) | 
 |     extended_length = int((_line_length * 1.25)) | 
 |     if line_width > extended_length: | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/line_length', 4, | 
 |             'Lines should very rarely be longer than %i characters' % | 
 |             extended_length) | 
 |     elif line_width > _line_length: | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/line_length', 2, | 
 |             'Lines should be <= %i characters long' % _line_length) | 
 |  | 
 |   if (cleansed_line.count(';') > 1 and | 
 |       # for loops are allowed two ;'s (and may run over two lines). | 
 |       cleansed_line.find('for') == -1 and | 
 |       (GetPreviousNonBlankLine(clean_lines, linenum)[0].find('for') == -1 or | 
 |        GetPreviousNonBlankLine(clean_lines, linenum)[0].find(';') != -1) and | 
 |       # It's ok to have many commands in a switch case that fits in 1 line | 
 |       not ((cleansed_line.find('case ') != -1 or | 
 |             cleansed_line.find('default:') != -1) and | 
 |            cleansed_line.find('break;') != -1)): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'whitespace/newline', 0, | 
 |           'More than one command on the same line') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Some more style checks | 
 |   CheckBraces(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error) | 
 |   CheckEmptyBlockBody(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error) | 
 |   CheckAccess(filename, clean_lines, linenum, nesting_state, error) | 
 |   CheckSpacing(filename, clean_lines, linenum, nesting_state, error) | 
 |   CheckCheck(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error) | 
 |   CheckAltTokens(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error) | 
 |   classinfo = nesting_state.InnermostClass() | 
 |   if classinfo: | 
 |     CheckSectionSpacing(filename, clean_lines, classinfo, linenum, error) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_INCLUDE_NEW_STYLE = re.compile(r'#include +"[^/]+\.h"') | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_INCLUDE = re.compile(r'^\s*#\s*include\s*([<"])([^>"]*)[>"].*$') | 
 | # Matches the first component of a filename delimited by -s and _s. That is: | 
 | #  _RE_FIRST_COMPONENT.match('foo').group(0) == 'foo' | 
 | #  _RE_FIRST_COMPONENT.match('foo.cc').group(0) == 'foo' | 
 | #  _RE_FIRST_COMPONENT.match('foo-bar_baz.cc').group(0) == 'foo' | 
 | #  _RE_FIRST_COMPONENT.match('foo_bar-baz.cc').group(0) == 'foo' | 
 | _RE_FIRST_COMPONENT = re.compile(r'^[^-_.]+') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _DropCommonSuffixes(filename): | 
 |   """Drops common suffixes like _test.cc or -inl.h from filename. | 
 |  | 
 |   For example: | 
 |     >>> _DropCommonSuffixes('foo/foo-inl.h') | 
 |     'foo/foo' | 
 |     >>> _DropCommonSuffixes('foo/bar/foo.cc') | 
 |     'foo/bar/foo' | 
 |     >>> _DropCommonSuffixes('foo/foo_internal.h') | 
 |     'foo/foo' | 
 |     >>> _DropCommonSuffixes('foo/foo_unusualinternal.h') | 
 |     'foo/foo_unusualinternal' | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The input filename. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     The filename with the common suffix removed. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   for suffix in ('test.cc', 'regtest.cc', 'unittest.cc', | 
 |                  'inl.h', 'impl.h', 'internal.h'): | 
 |     if (filename.endswith(suffix) and len(filename) > len(suffix) and | 
 |         filename[-len(suffix) - 1] in ('-', '_')): | 
 |       return filename[:-len(suffix) - 1] | 
 |   return os.path.splitext(filename)[0] | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _IsTestFilename(filename): | 
 |   """Determines if the given filename has a suffix that identifies it as a test. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The input filename. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     True if 'filename' looks like a test, False otherwise. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   if (filename.endswith('_test.cc') or | 
 |       filename.endswith('_unittest.cc') or | 
 |       filename.endswith('_regtest.cc')): | 
 |     return True | 
 |   else: | 
 |     return False | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _ClassifyInclude(fileinfo, include, is_system): | 
 |   """Figures out what kind of header 'include' is. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     fileinfo: The current file cpplint is running over. A FileInfo instance. | 
 |     include: The path to a #included file. | 
 |     is_system: True if the #include used <> rather than "". | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     One of the _XXX_HEADER constants. | 
 |  | 
 |   For example: | 
 |     >>> _ClassifyInclude(FileInfo('foo/foo.cc'), 'stdio.h', True) | 
 |     _C_SYS_HEADER | 
 |     >>> _ClassifyInclude(FileInfo('foo/foo.cc'), 'string', True) | 
 |     _CPP_SYS_HEADER | 
 |     >>> _ClassifyInclude(FileInfo('foo/foo.cc'), 'foo/foo.h', False) | 
 |     _LIKELY_MY_HEADER | 
 |     >>> _ClassifyInclude(FileInfo('foo/foo_unknown_extension.cc'), | 
 |     ...                  'bar/foo_other_ext.h', False) | 
 |     _POSSIBLE_MY_HEADER | 
 |     >>> _ClassifyInclude(FileInfo('foo/foo.cc'), 'foo/bar.h', False) | 
 |     _OTHER_HEADER | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # This is a list of all standard c++ header files, except | 
 |   # those already checked for above. | 
 |   is_cpp_h = include in _CPP_HEADERS | 
 |  | 
 |   if is_system: | 
 |     if is_cpp_h: | 
 |       return _CPP_SYS_HEADER | 
 |     else: | 
 |       return _C_SYS_HEADER | 
 |  | 
 |   # If the target file and the include we're checking share a | 
 |   # basename when we drop common extensions, and the include | 
 |   # lives in . , then it's likely to be owned by the target file. | 
 |   target_dir, target_base = ( | 
 |       os.path.split(_DropCommonSuffixes(fileinfo.RepositoryName()))) | 
 |   include_dir, include_base = os.path.split(_DropCommonSuffixes(include)) | 
 |   if target_base == include_base and ( | 
 |       include_dir == target_dir or | 
 |       include_dir == os.path.normpath(target_dir + '/../public')): | 
 |     return _LIKELY_MY_HEADER | 
 |  | 
 |   # If the target and include share some initial basename | 
 |   # component, it's possible the target is implementing the | 
 |   # include, so it's allowed to be first, but we'll never | 
 |   # complain if it's not there. | 
 |   target_first_component = _RE_FIRST_COMPONENT.match(target_base) | 
 |   include_first_component = _RE_FIRST_COMPONENT.match(include_base) | 
 |   if (target_first_component and include_first_component and | 
 |       target_first_component.group(0) == | 
 |       include_first_component.group(0)): | 
 |     return _POSSIBLE_MY_HEADER | 
 |  | 
 |   return _OTHER_HEADER | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckIncludeLine(filename, clean_lines, linenum, include_state, error): | 
 |   """Check rules that are applicable to #include lines. | 
 |  | 
 |   Strings on #include lines are NOT removed from elided line, to make | 
 |   certain tasks easier. However, to prevent false positives, checks | 
 |   applicable to #include lines in CheckLanguage must be put here. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     include_state: An _IncludeState instance in which the headers are inserted. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   fileinfo = FileInfo(filename) | 
 |  | 
 |   line = clean_lines.lines[linenum] | 
 |  | 
 |   # "include" should use the new style "foo/bar.h" instead of just "bar.h" | 
 |   if _RE_PATTERN_INCLUDE_NEW_STYLE.search(line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'build/include', 4, | 
 |           'Include the directory when naming .h files') | 
 |  | 
 |   # we shouldn't include a file more than once. actually, there are a | 
 |   # handful of instances where doing so is okay, but in general it's | 
 |   # not. | 
 |   match = _RE_PATTERN_INCLUDE.search(line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     include = match.group(2) | 
 |     is_system = (match.group(1) == '<') | 
 |     if include in include_state: | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'build/include', 4, | 
 |             '"%s" already included at %s:%s' % | 
 |             (include, filename, include_state[include])) | 
 |     else: | 
 |       include_state[include] = linenum | 
 |  | 
 |       # We want to ensure that headers appear in the right order: | 
 |       # 1) for foo.cc, foo.h  (preferred location) | 
 |       # 2) c system files | 
 |       # 3) cpp system files | 
 |       # 4) for foo.cc, foo.h  (deprecated location) | 
 |       # 5) other google headers | 
 |       # | 
 |       # We classify each include statement as one of those 5 types | 
 |       # using a number of techniques. The include_state object keeps | 
 |       # track of the highest type seen, and complains if we see a | 
 |       # lower type after that. | 
 |       error_message = include_state.CheckNextIncludeOrder( | 
 |           _ClassifyInclude(fileinfo, include, is_system)) | 
 |       if error_message: | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'build/include_order', 4, | 
 |               '%s. Should be: %s.h, c system, c++ system, other.' % | 
 |               (error_message, fileinfo.BaseName())) | 
 |       canonical_include = include_state.CanonicalizeAlphabeticalOrder(include) | 
 |       if not include_state.IsInAlphabeticalOrder( | 
 |           clean_lines, linenum, canonical_include): | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'build/include_alpha', 4, | 
 |               'Include "%s" not in alphabetical order' % include) | 
 |       include_state.SetLastHeader(canonical_include) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Look for any of the stream classes that are part of standard C++. | 
 |   match = _RE_PATTERN_INCLUDE.match(line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     include = match.group(2) | 
 |     if Match(r'(f|ind|io|i|o|parse|pf|stdio|str|)?stream$', include): | 
 |       # Many unit tests use cout, so we exempt them. | 
 |       if not _IsTestFilename(filename): | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'readability/streams', 3, | 
 |               'Streams are highly discouraged.') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _GetTextInside(text, start_pattern): | 
 |   r"""Retrieves all the text between matching open and close parentheses. | 
 |  | 
 |   Given a string of lines and a regular expression string, retrieve all the text | 
 |   following the expression and between opening punctuation symbols like | 
 |   (, [, or {, and the matching close-punctuation symbol. This properly nested | 
 |   occurrences of the punctuations, so for the text like | 
 |     printf(a(), b(c())); | 
 |   a call to _GetTextInside(text, r'printf\(') will return 'a(), b(c())'. | 
 |   start_pattern must match string having an open punctuation symbol at the end. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     text: The lines to extract text. Its comments and strings must be elided. | 
 |            It can be single line and can span multiple lines. | 
 |     start_pattern: The regexp string indicating where to start extracting | 
 |                    the text. | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     The extracted text. | 
 |     None if either the opening string or ending punctuation could not be found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # TODO(sugawarayu): Audit cpplint.py to see what places could be profitably | 
 |   # rewritten to use _GetTextInside (and use inferior regexp matching today). | 
 |  | 
 |   # Give opening punctuations to get the matching close-punctuations. | 
 |   matching_punctuation = {'(': ')', '{': '}', '[': ']'} | 
 |   closing_punctuation = set(matching_punctuation.itervalues()) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Find the position to start extracting text. | 
 |   match = re.search(start_pattern, text, re.M) | 
 |   if not match:  # start_pattern not found in text. | 
 |     return None | 
 |   start_position = match.end(0) | 
 |  | 
 |   assert start_position > 0, ( | 
 |       'start_pattern must ends with an opening punctuation.') | 
 |   assert text[start_position - 1] in matching_punctuation, ( | 
 |       'start_pattern must ends with an opening punctuation.') | 
 |   # Stack of closing punctuations we expect to have in text after position. | 
 |   punctuation_stack = [matching_punctuation[text[start_position - 1]]] | 
 |   position = start_position | 
 |   while punctuation_stack and position < len(text): | 
 |     if text[position] == punctuation_stack[-1]: | 
 |       punctuation_stack.pop() | 
 |     elif text[position] in closing_punctuation: | 
 |       # A closing punctuation without matching opening punctuations. | 
 |       return None | 
 |     elif text[position] in matching_punctuation: | 
 |       punctuation_stack.append(matching_punctuation[text[position]]) | 
 |     position += 1 | 
 |   if punctuation_stack: | 
 |     # Opening punctuations left without matching close-punctuations. | 
 |     return None | 
 |   # punctuations match. | 
 |   return text[start_position:position - 1] | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # Patterns for matching call-by-reference parameters. | 
 | # | 
 | # Supports nested templates up to 2 levels deep using this messy pattern: | 
 | #   < (?: < (?: < [^<>]* | 
 | #               > | 
 | #           |   [^<>] )* | 
 | #         > | 
 | #     |   [^<>] )* | 
 | #   > | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_IDENT = r'[_a-zA-Z]\w*'  # =~ [[:alpha:]][[:alnum:]]* | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_TYPE = ( | 
 |     r'(?:const\s+)?(?:typename\s+|class\s+|struct\s+|union\s+|enum\s+)?' | 
 |     r'(?:\w|' | 
 |     r'\s*<(?:<(?:<[^<>]*>|[^<>])*>|[^<>])*>|' | 
 |     r'::)+') | 
 | # A call-by-reference parameter ends with '& identifier'. | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_REF_PARAM = re.compile( | 
 |     r'(' + _RE_PATTERN_TYPE + r'(?:\s*(?:\bconst\b|[*]))*\s*' | 
 |     r'&\s*' + _RE_PATTERN_IDENT + r')\s*(?:=[^,()]+)?[,)]') | 
 | # A call-by-const-reference parameter either ends with 'const& identifier' | 
 | # or looks like 'const type& identifier' when 'type' is atomic. | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_CONST_REF_PARAM = ( | 
 |     r'(?:.*\s*\bconst\s*&\s*' + _RE_PATTERN_IDENT + | 
 |     r'|const\s+' + _RE_PATTERN_TYPE + r'\s*&\s*' + _RE_PATTERN_IDENT + r')') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckLanguage(filename, clean_lines, linenum, file_extension, | 
 |                   include_state, nesting_state, error): | 
 |   """Checks rules from the 'C++ language rules' section of cppguide.html. | 
 |  | 
 |   Some of these rules are hard to test (function overloading, using | 
 |   uint32 inappropriately), but we do the best we can. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     file_extension: The extension (without the dot) of the filename. | 
 |     include_state: An _IncludeState instance in which the headers are inserted. | 
 |     nesting_state: A _NestingState instance which maintains information about | 
 |                    the current stack of nested blocks being parsed. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # If the line is empty or consists of entirely a comment, no need to | 
 |   # check it. | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |   if not line: | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   match = _RE_PATTERN_INCLUDE.search(line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     CheckIncludeLine(filename, clean_lines, linenum, include_state, error) | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   # Reset include state across preprocessor directives.  This is meant | 
 |   # to silence warnings for conditional includes. | 
 |   if Match(r'^\s*#\s*(?:ifdef|elif|else|endif)\b', line): | 
 |     include_state.ResetSection() | 
 |  | 
 |   # Make Windows paths like Unix. | 
 |   fullname = os.path.abspath(filename).replace('\\', '/') | 
 |  | 
 |   # TODO(unknown): figure out if they're using default arguments in fn proto. | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check to see if they're using an conversion function cast. | 
 |   # I just try to capture the most common basic types, though there are more. | 
 |   # Parameterless conversion functions, such as bool(), are allowed as they are | 
 |   # probably a member operator declaration or default constructor. | 
 |   match = Search( | 
 |       r'(\bnew\s+)?\b'  # Grab 'new' operator, if it's there | 
 |       r'(int|float|double|bool|char|int32|uint32|int64|uint64)' | 
 |       r'(\([^)].*)', line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     matched_new = match.group(1) | 
 |     matched_type = match.group(2) | 
 |     matched_funcptr = match.group(3) | 
 |  | 
 |     # gMock methods are defined using some variant of MOCK_METHODx(name, type) | 
 |     # where type may be float(), int(string), etc.  Without context they are | 
 |     # virtually indistinguishable from int(x) casts. Likewise, gMock's | 
 |     # MockCallback takes a template parameter of the form return_type(arg_type), | 
 |     # which looks much like the cast we're trying to detect. | 
 |     # | 
 |     # std::function<> wrapper has a similar problem. | 
 |     # | 
 |     # Return types for function pointers also look like casts if they | 
 |     # don't have an extra space. | 
 |     if (matched_new is None and  # If new operator, then this isn't a cast | 
 |         not (Match(r'^\s*MOCK_(CONST_)?METHOD\d+(_T)?\(', line) or | 
 |              Search(r'\bMockCallback<.*>', line) or | 
 |              Search(r'\bstd::function<.*>', line)) and | 
 |         not (matched_funcptr and | 
 |              Match(r'\((?:[^() ]+::\s*\*\s*)?[^() ]+\)\s*\(', | 
 |                    matched_funcptr))): | 
 |       # Try a bit harder to catch gmock lines: the only place where | 
 |       # something looks like an old-style cast is where we declare the | 
 |       # return type of the mocked method, and the only time when we | 
 |       # are missing context is if MOCK_METHOD was split across | 
 |       # multiple lines.  The missing MOCK_METHOD is usually one or two | 
 |       # lines back, so scan back one or two lines. | 
 |       # | 
 |       # It's not possible for gmock macros to appear in the first 2 | 
 |       # lines, since the class head + section name takes up 2 lines. | 
 |       if (linenum < 2 or | 
 |           not (Match(r'^\s*MOCK_(?:CONST_)?METHOD\d+(?:_T)?\((?:\S+,)?\s*$', | 
 |                      clean_lines.elided[linenum - 1]) or | 
 |                Match(r'^\s*MOCK_(?:CONST_)?METHOD\d+(?:_T)?\(\s*$', | 
 |                      clean_lines.elided[linenum - 2]))): | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'readability/casting', 4, | 
 |               'Using deprecated casting style.  ' | 
 |               'Use static_cast<%s>(...) instead' % | 
 |               matched_type) | 
 |  | 
 |   CheckCStyleCast(filename, linenum, line, clean_lines.raw_lines[linenum], | 
 |                   'static_cast', | 
 |                   r'\((int|float|double|bool|char|u?int(16|32|64))\)', error) | 
 |  | 
 |   # This doesn't catch all cases. Consider (const char * const)"hello". | 
 |   # | 
 |   # (char *) "foo" should always be a const_cast (reinterpret_cast won't | 
 |   # compile). | 
 |   if CheckCStyleCast(filename, linenum, line, clean_lines.raw_lines[linenum], | 
 |                      'const_cast', r'\((char\s?\*+\s?)\)\s*"', error): | 
 |     pass | 
 |   else: | 
 |     # Check pointer casts for other than string constants | 
 |     CheckCStyleCast(filename, linenum, line, clean_lines.raw_lines[linenum], | 
 |                     'reinterpret_cast', r'\((\w+\s?\*+\s?)\)', error) | 
 |  | 
 |   # In addition, we look for people taking the address of a cast.  This | 
 |   # is dangerous -- casts can assign to temporaries, so the pointer doesn't | 
 |   # point where you think. | 
 |   match = Search( | 
 |       r'(?:&\(([^)]+)\)[\w(])|' | 
 |       r'(?:&(static|dynamic|down|reinterpret)_cast\b)', line) | 
 |   if match and match.group(1) != '*': | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/casting', 4, | 
 |           ('Are you taking an address of a cast?  ' | 
 |            'This is dangerous: could be a temp var.  ' | 
 |            'Take the address before doing the cast, rather than after')) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Create an extended_line, which is the concatenation of the current and | 
 |   # next lines, for more effective checking of code that may span more than one | 
 |   # line. | 
 |   if linenum + 1 < clean_lines.NumLines(): | 
 |     extended_line = line + clean_lines.elided[linenum + 1] | 
 |   else: | 
 |     extended_line = line | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check for people declaring static/global STL strings at the top level. | 
 |   # This is dangerous because the C++ language does not guarantee that | 
 |   # globals with constructors are initialized before the first access. | 
 |   match = Match( | 
 |       r'((?:|static +)(?:|const +))string +([a-zA-Z0-9_:]+)\b(.*)', | 
 |       line) | 
 |   # Make sure it's not a function. | 
 |   # Function template specialization looks like: "string foo<Type>(...". | 
 |   # Class template definitions look like: "string Foo<Type>::Method(...". | 
 |   # | 
 |   # Also ignore things that look like operators.  These are matched separately | 
 |   # because operator names cross non-word boundaries.  If we change the pattern | 
 |   # above, we would decrease the accuracy of matching identifiers. | 
 |   if (match and | 
 |       not Search(r'\boperator\W', line) and | 
 |       not Match(r'\s*(<.*>)?(::[a-zA-Z0-9_]+)?\s*\(([^"]|$)', match.group(3))): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/string', 4, | 
 |           'For a static/global string constant, use a C style string instead: ' | 
 |           '"%schar %s[]".' % | 
 |           (match.group(1), match.group(2))) | 
 |  | 
 |   if Search(r'\b([A-Za-z0-9_]*_)\(\1\)', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/init', 4, | 
 |           'You seem to be initializing a member variable with itself.') | 
 |  | 
 |   if file_extension == 'h': | 
 |     # TODO(unknown): check that 1-arg constructors are explicit. | 
 |     #                How to tell it's a constructor? | 
 |     #                (handled in CheckForNonStandardConstructs for now) | 
 |     # TODO(unknown): check that classes have DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS | 
 |     #                (level 1 error) | 
 |     pass | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check if people are using the verboten C basic types.  The only exception | 
 |   # we regularly allow is "unsigned short port" for port. | 
 |   if Search(r'\bshort port\b', line): | 
 |     if not Search(r'\bunsigned short port\b', line): | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/int', 4, | 
 |             'Use "unsigned short" for ports, not "short"') | 
 |   else: | 
 |     match = Search(r'\b(short|long(?! +double)|long long)\b', line) | 
 |     if match: | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/int', 4, | 
 |             'Use int16/int64/etc, rather than the C type %s' % match.group(1)) | 
 |  | 
 |   # When snprintf is used, the second argument shouldn't be a literal. | 
 |   match = Search(r'snprintf\s*\(([^,]*),\s*([0-9]*)\s*,', line) | 
 |   if match and match.group(2) != '0': | 
 |     # If 2nd arg is zero, snprintf is used to calculate size. | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/printf', 3, | 
 |           'If you can, use sizeof(%s) instead of %s as the 2nd arg ' | 
 |           'to snprintf.' % (match.group(1), match.group(2))) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check if some verboten C functions are being used. | 
 |   if Search(r'\bsprintf\b', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/printf', 5, | 
 |           'Never use sprintf.  Use snprintf instead.') | 
 |   match = Search(r'\b(strcpy|strcat)\b', line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/printf', 4, | 
 |           'Almost always, snprintf is better than %s' % match.group(1)) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check if some verboten operator overloading is going on | 
 |   # TODO(unknown): catch out-of-line unary operator&: | 
 |   #   class X {}; | 
 |   #   int operator&(const X& x) { return 42; }  // unary operator& | 
 |   # The trick is it's hard to tell apart from binary operator&: | 
 |   #   class Y { int operator&(const Y& x) { return 23; } }; // binary operator& | 
 |   if Search(r'\boperator\s*&\s*\(\s*\)', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/operator', 4, | 
 |           'Unary operator& is dangerous.  Do not use it.') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check for suspicious usage of "if" like | 
 |   # } if (a == b) { | 
 |   if Search(r'\}\s*if\s*\(', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'readability/braces', 4, | 
 |           'Did you mean "else if"? If not, start a new line for "if".') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check for potential format string bugs like printf(foo). | 
 |   # We constrain the pattern not to pick things like DocidForPrintf(foo). | 
 |   # Not perfect but it can catch printf(foo.c_str()) and printf(foo->c_str()) | 
 |   # TODO(sugawarayu): Catch the following case. Need to change the calling | 
 |   # convention of the whole function to process multiple line to handle it. | 
 |   #   printf( | 
 |   #       boy_this_is_a_really_long_variable_that_cannot_fit_on_the_prev_line); | 
 |   printf_args = _GetTextInside(line, r'(?i)\b(string)?printf\s*\(') | 
 |   if printf_args: | 
 |     match = Match(r'([\w.\->()]+)$', printf_args) | 
 |     if match and match.group(1) != '__VA_ARGS__': | 
 |       function_name = re.search(r'\b((?:string)?printf)\s*\(', | 
 |                                 line, re.I).group(1) | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/printf', 4, | 
 |             'Potential format string bug. Do %s("%%s", %s) instead.' | 
 |             % (function_name, match.group(1))) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check for potential memset bugs like memset(buf, sizeof(buf), 0). | 
 |   match = Search(r'memset\s*\(([^,]*),\s*([^,]*),\s*0\s*\)', line) | 
 |   if match and not Match(r"^''|-?[0-9]+|0x[0-9A-Fa-f]$", match.group(2)): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/memset', 4, | 
 |           'Did you mean "memset(%s, 0, %s)"?' | 
 |           % (match.group(1), match.group(2))) | 
 |  | 
 |   if Search(r'\busing namespace\b', line): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'build/namespaces', 5, | 
 |           'Do not use namespace using-directives.  ' | 
 |           'Use using-declarations instead.') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Detect variable-length arrays. | 
 |   match = Match(r'\s*(.+::)?(\w+) [a-z]\w*\[(.+)];', line) | 
 |   if (match and match.group(2) != 'return' and match.group(2) != 'delete' and | 
 |       match.group(3).find(']') == -1): | 
 |     # Split the size using space and arithmetic operators as delimiters. | 
 |     # If any of the resulting tokens are not compile time constants then | 
 |     # report the error. | 
 |     tokens = re.split(r'\s|\+|\-|\*|\/|<<|>>]', match.group(3)) | 
 |     is_const = True | 
 |     skip_next = False | 
 |     for tok in tokens: | 
 |       if skip_next: | 
 |         skip_next = False | 
 |         continue | 
 |  | 
 |       if Search(r'sizeof\(.+\)', tok): continue | 
 |       if Search(r'arraysize\(\w+\)', tok): continue | 
 |  | 
 |       tok = tok.lstrip('(') | 
 |       tok = tok.rstrip(')') | 
 |       if not tok: continue | 
 |       if Match(r'\d+', tok): continue | 
 |       if Match(r'0[xX][0-9a-fA-F]+', tok): continue | 
 |       if Match(r'k[A-Z0-9]\w*', tok): continue | 
 |       if Match(r'(.+::)?k[A-Z0-9]\w*', tok): continue | 
 |       if Match(r'(.+::)?[A-Z][A-Z0-9_]*', tok): continue | 
 |       # A catch all for tricky sizeof cases, including 'sizeof expression', | 
 |       # 'sizeof(*type)', 'sizeof(const type)', 'sizeof(struct StructName)' | 
 |       # requires skipping the next token because we split on ' ' and '*'. | 
 |       if tok.startswith('sizeof'): | 
 |         skip_next = True | 
 |         continue | 
 |       is_const = False | 
 |       break | 
 |     if not is_const: | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/arrays', 1, | 
 |             'Do not use variable-length arrays.  Use an appropriately named ' | 
 |             "('k' followed by CamelCase) compile-time constant for the size.") | 
 |  | 
 |   # If DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS, DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN, or | 
 |   # DISALLOW_IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS is present, then it should be the last thing | 
 |   # in the class declaration. | 
 |   match = Match( | 
 |       (r'\s*' | 
 |        r'(DISALLOW_(EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS|COPY_AND_ASSIGN|IMPLICIT_CONSTRUCTORS))' | 
 |        r'\(.*\);$'), | 
 |       line) | 
 |   if match and linenum + 1 < clean_lines.NumLines(): | 
 |     next_line = clean_lines.elided[linenum + 1] | 
 |     # We allow some, but not all, declarations of variables to be present | 
 |     # in the statement that defines the class.  The [\w\*,\s]* fragment of | 
 |     # the regular expression below allows users to declare instances of | 
 |     # the class or pointers to instances, but not less common types such | 
 |     # as function pointers or arrays.  It's a tradeoff between allowing | 
 |     # reasonable code and avoiding trying to parse more C++ using regexps. | 
 |     if not Search(r'^\s*}[\w\*,\s]*;', next_line): | 
 |       error(filename, linenum, 'readability/constructors', 3, | 
 |             match.group(1) + ' should be the last thing in the class') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check for use of unnamed namespaces in header files.  Registration | 
 |   # macros are typically OK, so we allow use of "namespace {" on lines | 
 |   # that end with backslashes. | 
 |   if (file_extension == 'h' | 
 |       and Search(r'\bnamespace\s*{', line) | 
 |       and line[-1] != '\\'): | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'build/namespaces', 4, | 
 |           'Do not use unnamed namespaces in header files.  See ' | 
 |           'http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/cppguide.xml#Namespaces' | 
 |           ' for more information.') | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckForNonConstReference(filename, clean_lines, linenum, | 
 |                               nesting_state, error): | 
 |   """Check for non-const references. | 
 |  | 
 |   Separate from CheckLanguage since it scans backwards from current | 
 |   line, instead of scanning forward. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     nesting_state: A _NestingState instance which maintains information about | 
 |                    the current stack of nested blocks being parsed. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # Do nothing if there is no '&' on current line. | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |   if '&' not in line: | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   # Long type names may be broken across multiple lines, usually in one | 
 |   # of these forms: | 
 |   #   LongType | 
 |   #       ::LongTypeContinued &identifier | 
 |   #   LongType:: | 
 |   #       LongTypeContinued &identifier | 
 |   #   LongType< | 
 |   #       ...>::LongTypeContinued &identifier | 
 |   # | 
 |   # If we detected a type split across two lines, join the previous | 
 |   # line to current line so that we can match const references | 
 |   # accordingly. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # Note that this only scans back one line, since scanning back | 
 |   # arbitrary number of lines would be expensive.  If you have a type | 
 |   # that spans more than 2 lines, please use a typedef. | 
 |   if linenum > 1: | 
 |     previous = None | 
 |     if Match(r'\s*::(?:[\w<>]|::)+\s*&\s*\S', line): | 
 |       # previous_line\n + ::current_line | 
 |       previous = Search(r'\b((?:const\s*)?(?:[\w<>]|::)+[\w<>])\s*$', | 
 |                         clean_lines.elided[linenum - 1]) | 
 |     elif Match(r'\s*[a-zA-Z_]([\w<>]|::)+\s*&\s*\S', line): | 
 |       # previous_line::\n + current_line | 
 |       previous = Search(r'\b((?:const\s*)?(?:[\w<>]|::)+::)\s*$', | 
 |                         clean_lines.elided[linenum - 1]) | 
 |     if previous: | 
 |       line = previous.group(1) + line.lstrip() | 
 |     else: | 
 |       # Check for templated parameter that is split across multiple lines | 
 |       endpos = line.rfind('>') | 
 |       if endpos > -1: | 
 |         (_, startline, startpos) = ReverseCloseExpression( | 
 |             clean_lines, linenum, endpos) | 
 |         if startpos > -1 and startline < linenum: | 
 |           # Found the matching < on an earlier line, collect all | 
 |           # pieces up to current line. | 
 |           line = '' | 
 |           for i in xrange(startline, linenum + 1): | 
 |             line += clean_lines.elided[i].strip() | 
 |  | 
 |   # Check for non-const references in function parameters.  A single '&' may | 
 |   # found in the following places: | 
 |   #   inside expression: binary & for bitwise AND | 
 |   #   inside expression: unary & for taking the address of something | 
 |   #   inside declarators: reference parameter | 
 |   # We will exclude the first two cases by checking that we are not inside a | 
 |   # function body, including one that was just introduced by a trailing '{'. | 
 |   # TODO(unknwon): Doesn't account for preprocessor directives. | 
 |   # TODO(unknown): Doesn't account for 'catch(Exception& e)' [rare]. | 
 |   check_params = False | 
 |   if not nesting_state.stack: | 
 |     check_params = True  # top level | 
 |   elif (isinstance(nesting_state.stack[-1], _ClassInfo) or | 
 |         isinstance(nesting_state.stack[-1], _NamespaceInfo)): | 
 |     check_params = True  # within class or namespace | 
 |   elif Match(r'.*{\s*$', line): | 
 |     if (len(nesting_state.stack) == 1 or | 
 |         isinstance(nesting_state.stack[-2], _ClassInfo) or | 
 |         isinstance(nesting_state.stack[-2], _NamespaceInfo)): | 
 |       check_params = True  # just opened global/class/namespace block | 
 |   # We allow non-const references in a few standard places, like functions | 
 |   # called "swap()" or iostream operators like "<<" or ">>".  Do not check | 
 |   # those function parameters. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # We also accept & in static_assert, which looks like a function but | 
 |   # it's actually a declaration expression. | 
 |   whitelisted_functions = (r'(?:[sS]wap(?:<\w:+>)?|' | 
 |                            r'operator\s*[<>][<>]|' | 
 |                            r'static_assert|COMPILE_ASSERT' | 
 |                            r')\s*\(') | 
 |   if Search(whitelisted_functions, line): | 
 |     check_params = False | 
 |   elif not Search(r'\S+\([^)]*$', line): | 
 |     # Don't see a whitelisted function on this line.  Actually we | 
 |     # didn't see any function name on this line, so this is likely a | 
 |     # multi-line parameter list.  Try a bit harder to catch this case. | 
 |     for i in xrange(2): | 
 |       if (linenum > i and | 
 |           Search(whitelisted_functions, clean_lines.elided[linenum - i - 1])): | 
 |         check_params = False | 
 |         break | 
 |  | 
 |   if check_params: | 
 |     decls = ReplaceAll(r'{[^}]*}', ' ', line)  # exclude function body | 
 |     for parameter in re.findall(_RE_PATTERN_REF_PARAM, decls): | 
 |       if not Match(_RE_PATTERN_CONST_REF_PARAM, parameter): | 
 |         error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/references', 2, | 
 |               'Is this a non-const reference? ' | 
 |               'If so, make const or use a pointer: ' + | 
 |               ReplaceAll(' *<', '<', parameter)) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckCStyleCast(filename, linenum, line, raw_line, cast_type, pattern, | 
 |                     error): | 
 |   """Checks for a C-style cast by looking for the pattern. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     line: The line of code to check. | 
 |     raw_line: The raw line of code to check, with comments. | 
 |     cast_type: The string for the C++ cast to recommend.  This is either | 
 |       reinterpret_cast, static_cast, or const_cast, depending. | 
 |     pattern: The regular expression used to find C-style casts. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     True if an error was emitted. | 
 |     False otherwise. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   match = Search(pattern, line) | 
 |   if not match: | 
 |     return False | 
 |  | 
 |   # e.g., sizeof(int) | 
 |   sizeof_match = Match(r'.*sizeof\s*$', line[0:match.start(1) - 1]) | 
 |   if sizeof_match: | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'runtime/sizeof', 1, | 
 |           'Using sizeof(type).  Use sizeof(varname) instead if possible') | 
 |     return True | 
 |  | 
 |   # operator++(int) and operator--(int) | 
 |   if (line[0:match.start(1) - 1].endswith(' operator++') or | 
 |       line[0:match.start(1) - 1].endswith(' operator--')): | 
 |     return False | 
 |  | 
 |   # A single unnamed argument for a function tends to look like old | 
 |   # style cast.  If we see those, don't issue warnings for deprecated | 
 |   # casts, instead issue warnings for unnamed arguments where | 
 |   # appropriate. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # These are things that we want warnings for, since the style guide | 
 |   # explicitly require all parameters to be named: | 
 |   #   Function(int); | 
 |   #   Function(int) { | 
 |   #   ConstMember(int) const; | 
 |   #   ConstMember(int) const { | 
 |   #   ExceptionMember(int) throw (...); | 
 |   #   ExceptionMember(int) throw (...) { | 
 |   #   PureVirtual(int) = 0; | 
 |   # | 
 |   # These are functions of some sort, where the compiler would be fine | 
 |   # if they had named parameters, but people often omit those | 
 |   # identifiers to reduce clutter: | 
 |   #   (FunctionPointer)(int); | 
 |   #   (FunctionPointer)(int) = value; | 
 |   #   Function((function_pointer_arg)(int)) | 
 |   #   <TemplateArgument(int)>; | 
 |   #   <(FunctionPointerTemplateArgument)(int)>; | 
 |   remainder = line[match.end(0):] | 
 |   if Match(r'^\s*(?:;|const\b|throw\b|=|>|\{|\))', remainder): | 
 |     # Looks like an unnamed parameter. | 
 |  | 
 |     # Don't warn on any kind of template arguments. | 
 |     if Match(r'^\s*>', remainder): | 
 |       return False | 
 |  | 
 |     # Don't warn on assignments to function pointers, but keep warnings for | 
 |     # unnamed parameters to pure virtual functions.  Note that this pattern | 
 |     # will also pass on assignments of "0" to function pointers, but the | 
 |     # preferred values for those would be "nullptr" or "NULL". | 
 |     matched_zero = Match(r'^\s=\s*(\S+)\s*;', remainder) | 
 |     if matched_zero and matched_zero.group(1) != '0': | 
 |       return False | 
 |  | 
 |     # Don't warn on function pointer declarations.  For this we need | 
 |     # to check what came before the "(type)" string. | 
 |     if Match(r'.*\)\s*$', line[0:match.start(0)]): | 
 |       return False | 
 |  | 
 |     # Don't warn if the parameter is named with block comments, e.g.: | 
 |     #  Function(int /*unused_param*/); | 
 |     if '/*' in raw_line: | 
 |       return False | 
 |  | 
 |     # Passed all filters, issue warning here. | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'readability/function', 3, | 
 |           'All parameters should be named in a function') | 
 |     return True | 
 |  | 
 |   # At this point, all that should be left is actual casts. | 
 |   error(filename, linenum, 'readability/casting', 4, | 
 |         'Using C-style cast.  Use %s<%s>(...) instead' % | 
 |         (cast_type, match.group(1))) | 
 |  | 
 |   return True | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | _HEADERS_CONTAINING_TEMPLATES = ( | 
 |     ('<deque>', ('deque',)), | 
 |     ('<functional>', ('unary_function', 'binary_function', | 
 |                       'plus', 'minus', 'multiplies', 'divides', 'modulus', | 
 |                       'negate', | 
 |                       'equal_to', 'not_equal_to', 'greater', 'less', | 
 |                       'greater_equal', 'less_equal', | 
 |                       'logical_and', 'logical_or', 'logical_not', | 
 |                       'unary_negate', 'not1', 'binary_negate', 'not2', | 
 |                       'bind1st', 'bind2nd', | 
 |                       'pointer_to_unary_function', | 
 |                       'pointer_to_binary_function', | 
 |                       'ptr_fun', | 
 |                       'mem_fun_t', 'mem_fun', 'mem_fun1_t', 'mem_fun1_ref_t', | 
 |                       'mem_fun_ref_t', | 
 |                       'const_mem_fun_t', 'const_mem_fun1_t', | 
 |                       'const_mem_fun_ref_t', 'const_mem_fun1_ref_t', | 
 |                       'mem_fun_ref', | 
 |                      )), | 
 |     ('<limits>', ('numeric_limits',)), | 
 |     ('<list>', ('list',)), | 
 |     ('<map>', ('map', 'multimap',)), | 
 |     ('<memory>', ('allocator',)), | 
 |     ('<queue>', ('queue', 'priority_queue',)), | 
 |     ('<set>', ('set', 'multiset',)), | 
 |     ('<stack>', ('stack',)), | 
 |     ('<string>', ('char_traits', 'basic_string',)), | 
 |     ('<utility>', ('pair',)), | 
 |     ('<vector>', ('vector',)), | 
 |  | 
 |     # gcc extensions. | 
 |     # Note: std::hash is their hash, ::hash is our hash | 
 |     ('<hash_map>', ('hash_map', 'hash_multimap',)), | 
 |     ('<hash_set>', ('hash_set', 'hash_multiset',)), | 
 |     ('<slist>', ('slist',)), | 
 |     ) | 
 |  | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_STRING = re.compile(r'\bstring\b') | 
 |  | 
 | _re_pattern_algorithm_header = [] | 
 | for _template in ('copy', 'max', 'min', 'min_element', 'sort', 'swap', | 
 |                   'transform'): | 
 |   # Match max<type>(..., ...), max(..., ...), but not foo->max, foo.max or | 
 |   # type::max(). | 
 |   _re_pattern_algorithm_header.append( | 
 |       (re.compile(r'[^>.]\b' + _template + r'(<.*?>)?\([^\)]'), | 
 |        _template, | 
 |        '<algorithm>')) | 
 |  | 
 | _re_pattern_templates = [] | 
 | for _header, _templates in _HEADERS_CONTAINING_TEMPLATES: | 
 |   for _template in _templates: | 
 |     _re_pattern_templates.append( | 
 |         (re.compile(r'(\<|\b)' + _template + r'\s*\<'), | 
 |          _template + '<>', | 
 |          _header)) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def FilesBelongToSameModule(filename_cc, filename_h): | 
 |   """Check if these two filenames belong to the same module. | 
 |  | 
 |   The concept of a 'module' here is a as follows: | 
 |   foo.h, foo-inl.h, foo.cc, foo_test.cc and foo_unittest.cc belong to the | 
 |   same 'module' if they are in the same directory. | 
 |   some/path/public/xyzzy and some/path/internal/xyzzy are also considered | 
 |   to belong to the same module here. | 
 |  | 
 |   If the filename_cc contains a longer path than the filename_h, for example, | 
 |   '/absolute/path/to/base/sysinfo.cc', and this file would include | 
 |   'base/sysinfo.h', this function also produces the prefix needed to open the | 
 |   header. This is used by the caller of this function to more robustly open the | 
 |   header file. We don't have access to the real include paths in this context, | 
 |   so we need this guesswork here. | 
 |  | 
 |   Known bugs: tools/base/bar.cc and base/bar.h belong to the same module | 
 |   according to this implementation. Because of this, this function gives | 
 |   some false positives. This should be sufficiently rare in practice. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename_cc: is the path for the .cc file | 
 |     filename_h: is the path for the header path | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     Tuple with a bool and a string: | 
 |     bool: True if filename_cc and filename_h belong to the same module. | 
 |     string: the additional prefix needed to open the header file. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   if not filename_cc.endswith('.cc'): | 
 |     return (False, '') | 
 |   filename_cc = filename_cc[:-len('.cc')] | 
 |   if filename_cc.endswith('_unittest'): | 
 |     filename_cc = filename_cc[:-len('_unittest')] | 
 |   elif filename_cc.endswith('_test'): | 
 |     filename_cc = filename_cc[:-len('_test')] | 
 |   filename_cc = filename_cc.replace('/public/', '/') | 
 |   filename_cc = filename_cc.replace('/internal/', '/') | 
 |  | 
 |   if not filename_h.endswith('.h'): | 
 |     return (False, '') | 
 |   filename_h = filename_h[:-len('.h')] | 
 |   if filename_h.endswith('-inl'): | 
 |     filename_h = filename_h[:-len('-inl')] | 
 |   filename_h = filename_h.replace('/public/', '/') | 
 |   filename_h = filename_h.replace('/internal/', '/') | 
 |  | 
 |   files_belong_to_same_module = filename_cc.endswith(filename_h) | 
 |   common_path = '' | 
 |   if files_belong_to_same_module: | 
 |     common_path = filename_cc[:-len(filename_h)] | 
 |   return files_belong_to_same_module, common_path | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def UpdateIncludeState(filename, include_state, io=codecs): | 
 |   """Fill up the include_state with new includes found from the file. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: the name of the header to read. | 
 |     include_state: an _IncludeState instance in which the headers are inserted. | 
 |     io: The io factory to use to read the file. Provided for testability. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     True if a header was succesfully added. False otherwise. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   headerfile = None | 
 |   try: | 
 |     headerfile = io.open(filename, 'r', 'utf8', 'replace') | 
 |   except IOError: | 
 |     return False | 
 |   linenum = 0 | 
 |   for line in headerfile: | 
 |     linenum += 1 | 
 |     clean_line = CleanseComments(line) | 
 |     match = _RE_PATTERN_INCLUDE.search(clean_line) | 
 |     if match: | 
 |       include = match.group(2) | 
 |       # The value formatting is cute, but not really used right now. | 
 |       # What matters here is that the key is in include_state. | 
 |       include_state.setdefault(include, '%s:%d' % (filename, linenum)) | 
 |   return True | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckForIncludeWhatYouUse(filename, clean_lines, include_state, error, | 
 |                               io=codecs): | 
 |   """Reports for missing stl includes. | 
 |  | 
 |   This function will output warnings to make sure you are including the headers | 
 |   necessary for the stl containers and functions that you use. We only give one | 
 |   reason to include a header. For example, if you use both equal_to<> and | 
 |   less<> in a .h file, only one (the latter in the file) of these will be | 
 |   reported as a reason to include the <functional>. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     include_state: An _IncludeState instance. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |     io: The IO factory to use to read the header file. Provided for unittest | 
 |         injection. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   required = {}  # A map of header name to linenumber and the template entity. | 
 |                  # Example of required: { '<functional>': (1219, 'less<>') } | 
 |  | 
 |   for linenum in xrange(clean_lines.NumLines()): | 
 |     line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |     if not line or line[0] == '#': | 
 |       continue | 
 |  | 
 |     # String is special -- it is a non-templatized type in STL. | 
 |     matched = _RE_PATTERN_STRING.search(line) | 
 |     if matched: | 
 |       # Don't warn about strings in non-STL namespaces: | 
 |       # (We check only the first match per line; good enough.) | 
 |       prefix = line[:matched.start()] | 
 |       if prefix.endswith('std::') or not prefix.endswith('::'): | 
 |         required['<string>'] = (linenum, 'string') | 
 |  | 
 |     for pattern, template, header in _re_pattern_algorithm_header: | 
 |       if pattern.search(line): | 
 |         required[header] = (linenum, template) | 
 |  | 
 |     # The following function is just a speed up, no semantics are changed. | 
 |     if not '<' in line:  # Reduces the cpu time usage by skipping lines. | 
 |       continue | 
 |  | 
 |     for pattern, template, header in _re_pattern_templates: | 
 |       if pattern.search(line): | 
 |         required[header] = (linenum, template) | 
 |  | 
 |   # The policy is that if you #include something in foo.h you don't need to | 
 |   # include it again in foo.cc. Here, we will look at possible includes. | 
 |   # Let's copy the include_state so it is only messed up within this function. | 
 |   include_state = include_state.copy() | 
 |  | 
 |   # Did we find the header for this file (if any) and succesfully load it? | 
 |   header_found = False | 
 |  | 
 |   # Use the absolute path so that matching works properly. | 
 |   abs_filename = FileInfo(filename).FullName() | 
 |  | 
 |   # For Emacs's flymake. | 
 |   # If cpplint is invoked from Emacs's flymake, a temporary file is generated | 
 |   # by flymake and that file name might end with '_flymake.cc'. In that case, | 
 |   # restore original file name here so that the corresponding header file can be | 
 |   # found. | 
 |   # e.g. If the file name is 'foo_flymake.cc', we should search for 'foo.h' | 
 |   # instead of 'foo_flymake.h' | 
 |   abs_filename = re.sub(r'_flymake\.cc$', '.cc', abs_filename) | 
 |  | 
 |   # include_state is modified during iteration, so we iterate over a copy of | 
 |   # the keys. | 
 |   header_keys = include_state.keys() | 
 |   for header in header_keys: | 
 |     (same_module, common_path) = FilesBelongToSameModule(abs_filename, header) | 
 |     fullpath = common_path + header | 
 |     if same_module and UpdateIncludeState(fullpath, include_state, io): | 
 |       header_found = True | 
 |  | 
 |   # If we can't find the header file for a .cc, assume it's because we don't | 
 |   # know where to look. In that case we'll give up as we're not sure they | 
 |   # didn't include it in the .h file. | 
 |   # TODO(unknown): Do a better job of finding .h files so we are confident that | 
 |   # not having the .h file means there isn't one. | 
 |   if filename.endswith('.cc') and not header_found: | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   # All the lines have been processed, report the errors found. | 
 |   for required_header_unstripped in required: | 
 |     template = required[required_header_unstripped][1] | 
 |     if required_header_unstripped.strip('<>"') not in include_state: | 
 |       error(filename, required[required_header_unstripped][0], | 
 |             'build/include_what_you_use', 4, | 
 |             'Add #include ' + required_header_unstripped + ' for ' + template) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | _RE_PATTERN_EXPLICIT_MAKEPAIR = re.compile(r'\bmake_pair\s*<') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CheckMakePairUsesDeduction(filename, clean_lines, linenum, error): | 
 |   """Check that make_pair's template arguments are deduced. | 
 |  | 
 |   G++ 4.6 in C++0x mode fails badly if make_pair's template arguments are | 
 |   specified explicitly, and such use isn't intended in any case. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the current file. | 
 |     clean_lines: A CleansedLines instance containing the file. | 
 |     linenum: The number of the line to check. | 
 |     error: The function to call with any errors found. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   line = clean_lines.elided[linenum] | 
 |   match = _RE_PATTERN_EXPLICIT_MAKEPAIR.search(line) | 
 |   if match: | 
 |     error(filename, linenum, 'build/explicit_make_pair', | 
 |           4,  # 4 = high confidence | 
 |           'For C++11-compatibility, omit template arguments from make_pair' | 
 |           ' OR use pair directly OR if appropriate, construct a pair directly') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def ProcessLine(filename, file_extension, clean_lines, line, | 
 |                 include_state, function_state, nesting_state, error, | 
 |                 extra_check_functions=[]): | 
 |   """Processes a single line in the file. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: Filename of the file that is being processed. | 
 |     file_extension: The extension (dot not included) of the file. | 
 |     clean_lines: An array of strings, each representing a line of the file, | 
 |                  with comments stripped. | 
 |     line: Number of line being processed. | 
 |     include_state: An _IncludeState instance in which the headers are inserted. | 
 |     function_state: A _FunctionState instance which counts function lines, etc. | 
 |     nesting_state: A _NestingState instance which maintains information about | 
 |                    the current stack of nested blocks being parsed. | 
 |     error: A callable to which errors are reported, which takes 4 arguments: | 
 |            filename, line number, error level, and message | 
 |     extra_check_functions: An array of additional check functions that will be | 
 |                            run on each source line. Each function takes 4 | 
 |                            arguments: filename, clean_lines, line, error | 
 |   """ | 
 |   raw_lines = clean_lines.raw_lines | 
 |   ParseNolintSuppressions(filename, raw_lines[line], line, error) | 
 |   nesting_state.Update(filename, clean_lines, line, error) | 
 |   if nesting_state.stack and nesting_state.stack[-1].inline_asm != _NO_ASM: | 
 |     return | 
 |   CheckForFunctionLengths(filename, clean_lines, line, function_state, error) | 
 |   CheckForMultilineCommentsAndStrings(filename, clean_lines, line, error) | 
 |   CheckStyle(filename, clean_lines, line, file_extension, nesting_state, error) | 
 |   CheckLanguage(filename, clean_lines, line, file_extension, include_state, | 
 |                 nesting_state, error) | 
 |   CheckForNonConstReference(filename, clean_lines, line, nesting_state, error) | 
 |   CheckForNonStandardConstructs(filename, clean_lines, line, | 
 |                                 nesting_state, error) | 
 |   CheckVlogArguments(filename, clean_lines, line, error) | 
 |   CheckPosixThreading(filename, clean_lines, line, error) | 
 |   CheckInvalidIncrement(filename, clean_lines, line, error) | 
 |   CheckMakePairUsesDeduction(filename, clean_lines, line, error) | 
 |   for check_fn in extra_check_functions: | 
 |     check_fn(filename, clean_lines, line, error) | 
 |  | 
 | def ProcessFileData(filename, file_extension, lines, error, | 
 |                     extra_check_functions=[]): | 
 |   """Performs lint checks and reports any errors to the given error function. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: Filename of the file that is being processed. | 
 |     file_extension: The extension (dot not included) of the file. | 
 |     lines: An array of strings, each representing a line of the file, with the | 
 |            last element being empty if the file is terminated with a newline. | 
 |     error: A callable to which errors are reported, which takes 4 arguments: | 
 |            filename, line number, error level, and message | 
 |     extra_check_functions: An array of additional check functions that will be | 
 |                            run on each source line. Each function takes 4 | 
 |                            arguments: filename, clean_lines, line, error | 
 |   """ | 
 |   lines = (['// marker so line numbers and indices both start at 1'] + lines + | 
 |            ['// marker so line numbers end in a known way']) | 
 |  | 
 |   include_state = _IncludeState() | 
 |   function_state = _FunctionState() | 
 |   nesting_state = _NestingState() | 
 |  | 
 |   ResetNolintSuppressions() | 
 |  | 
 |   CheckForCopyright(filename, lines, error) | 
 |  | 
 |   if file_extension == 'h': | 
 |     CheckForHeaderGuard(filename, lines, error) | 
 |  | 
 |   RemoveMultiLineComments(filename, lines, error) | 
 |   clean_lines = CleansedLines(lines) | 
 |   for line in xrange(clean_lines.NumLines()): | 
 |     ProcessLine(filename, file_extension, clean_lines, line, | 
 |                 include_state, function_state, nesting_state, error, | 
 |                 extra_check_functions) | 
 |   nesting_state.CheckCompletedBlocks(filename, error) | 
 |  | 
 |   CheckForIncludeWhatYouUse(filename, clean_lines, include_state, error) | 
 |  | 
 |   # We check here rather than inside ProcessLine so that we see raw | 
 |   # lines rather than "cleaned" lines. | 
 |   CheckForBadCharacters(filename, lines, error) | 
 |  | 
 |   CheckForNewlineAtEOF(filename, lines, error) | 
 |  | 
 | def ProcessFile(filename, vlevel, extra_check_functions=[]): | 
 |   """Does google-lint on a single file. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     filename: The name of the file to parse. | 
 |  | 
 |     vlevel: The level of errors to report.  Every error of confidence | 
 |     >= verbose_level will be reported.  0 is a good default. | 
 |  | 
 |     extra_check_functions: An array of additional check functions that will be | 
 |                            run on each source line. Each function takes 4 | 
 |                            arguments: filename, clean_lines, line, error | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   _SetVerboseLevel(vlevel) | 
 |  | 
 |   try: | 
 |     # Support the UNIX convention of using "-" for stdin.  Note that | 
 |     # we are not opening the file with universal newline support | 
 |     # (which codecs doesn't support anyway), so the resulting lines do | 
 |     # contain trailing '\r' characters if we are reading a file that | 
 |     # has CRLF endings. | 
 |     # If after the split a trailing '\r' is present, it is removed | 
 |     # below. If it is not expected to be present (i.e. os.linesep != | 
 |     # '\r\n' as in Windows), a warning is issued below if this file | 
 |     # is processed. | 
 |  | 
 |     if filename == '-': | 
 |       lines = codecs.StreamReaderWriter(sys.stdin, | 
 |                                         codecs.getreader('utf8'), | 
 |                                         codecs.getwriter('utf8'), | 
 |                                         'replace').read().split('\n') | 
 |     else: | 
 |       lines = codecs.open(filename, 'r', 'utf8', 'replace').read().split('\n') | 
 |  | 
 |     carriage_return_found = False | 
 |     # Remove trailing '\r'. | 
 |     for linenum in range(len(lines)): | 
 |       if lines[linenum].endswith('\r'): | 
 |         lines[linenum] = lines[linenum].rstrip('\r') | 
 |         carriage_return_found = True | 
 |  | 
 |   except IOError: | 
 |     sys.stderr.write( | 
 |         "Skipping input '%s': Can't open for reading\n" % filename) | 
 |     return | 
 |  | 
 |   # Note, if no dot is found, this will give the entire filename as the ext. | 
 |   file_extension = filename[filename.rfind('.') + 1:] | 
 |  | 
 |   # When reading from stdin, the extension is unknown, so no cpplint tests | 
 |   # should rely on the extension. | 
 |   if filename != '-' and file_extension not in _valid_extensions: | 
 |     sys.stderr.write('Ignoring %s; not a valid file name ' | 
 |                      '(%s)\n' % (filename, ', '.join(_valid_extensions))) | 
 |   else: | 
 |     ProcessFileData(filename, file_extension, lines, Error, | 
 |                     extra_check_functions) | 
 |     if carriage_return_found and os.linesep != '\r\n': | 
 |       # Use 0 for linenum since outputting only one error for potentially | 
 |       # several lines. | 
 |       Error(filename, 0, 'whitespace/newline', 1, | 
 |             'One or more unexpected \\r (^M) found;' | 
 |             'better to use only a \\n') | 
 |  | 
 |   sys.stderr.write('Done processing %s\n' % filename) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def PrintUsage(message): | 
 |   """Prints a brief usage string and exits, optionally with an error message. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     message: The optional error message. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   sys.stderr.write(_USAGE) | 
 |   if message: | 
 |     sys.exit('\nFATAL ERROR: ' + message) | 
 |   else: | 
 |     sys.exit(1) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def PrintCategories(): | 
 |   """Prints a list of all the error-categories used by error messages. | 
 |  | 
 |   These are the categories used to filter messages via --filter. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   sys.stderr.write(''.join('  %s\n' % cat for cat in _ERROR_CATEGORIES)) | 
 |   sys.exit(0) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def ParseArguments(args): | 
 |   """Parses the command line arguments. | 
 |  | 
 |   This may set the output format and verbosity level as side-effects. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     args: The command line arguments: | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     The list of filenames to lint. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   try: | 
 |     (opts, filenames) = getopt.getopt(args, '', ['help', 'output=', 'verbose=', | 
 |                                                  'counting=', | 
 |                                                  'filter=', | 
 |                                                  'root=', | 
 |                                                  'linelength=', | 
 |                                                  'extensions=']) | 
 |   except getopt.GetoptError: | 
 |     PrintUsage('Invalid arguments.') | 
 |  | 
 |   verbosity = _VerboseLevel() | 
 |   output_format = _OutputFormat() | 
 |   filters = '' | 
 |   counting_style = '' | 
 |  | 
 |   for (opt, val) in opts: | 
 |     if opt == '--help': | 
 |       PrintUsage(None) | 
 |     elif opt == '--output': | 
 |       if val not in ('emacs', 'vs7', 'eclipse'): | 
 |         PrintUsage('The only allowed output formats are emacs, vs7 and eclipse.') | 
 |       output_format = val | 
 |     elif opt == '--verbose': | 
 |       verbosity = int(val) | 
 |     elif opt == '--filter': | 
 |       filters = val | 
 |       if not filters: | 
 |         PrintCategories() | 
 |     elif opt == '--counting': | 
 |       if val not in ('total', 'toplevel', 'detailed'): | 
 |         PrintUsage('Valid counting options are total, toplevel, and detailed') | 
 |       counting_style = val | 
 |     elif opt == '--root': | 
 |       global _root | 
 |       _root = val | 
 |     elif opt == '--linelength': | 
 |       global _line_length | 
 |       try: | 
 |           _line_length = int(val) | 
 |       except ValueError: | 
 |           PrintUsage('Line length must be digits.') | 
 |     elif opt == '--extensions': | 
 |       global _valid_extensions | 
 |       try: | 
 |           _valid_extensions = set(val.split(',')) | 
 |       except ValueError: | 
 |           PrintUsage('Extensions must be comma seperated list.') | 
 |  | 
 |   if not filenames: | 
 |     PrintUsage('No files were specified.') | 
 |  | 
 |   _SetOutputFormat(output_format) | 
 |   _SetVerboseLevel(verbosity) | 
 |   _SetFilters(filters) | 
 |   _SetCountingStyle(counting_style) | 
 |  | 
 |   return filenames | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def main(): | 
 |   filenames = ParseArguments(sys.argv[1:]) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Change stderr to write with replacement characters so we don't die | 
 |   # if we try to print something containing non-ASCII characters. | 
 |   sys.stderr = codecs.StreamReaderWriter(sys.stderr, | 
 |                                          codecs.getreader('utf8'), | 
 |                                          codecs.getwriter('utf8'), | 
 |                                          'replace') | 
 |  | 
 |   _cpplint_state.ResetErrorCounts() | 
 |   for filename in filenames: | 
 |     ProcessFile(filename, _cpplint_state.verbose_level) | 
 |   _cpplint_state.PrintErrorCounts() | 
 |  | 
 |   sys.exit(_cpplint_state.error_count > 0) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | if __name__ == '__main__': | 
 |   main() |