The stringnozescapes does not make sense with filename,
also we may need similar escaping for string flags.
Handle escaped strings on ast level instead.
This avoids introducing new type and works seamleassly with flags.
As alternative I've also tried using strconv.Quote/Unquote
but it leads to ugly half-escaped strings:
"\xb0\x80s\xe8\xd4N\x91\xe3ڒ,\"C\x82D\xbb\x88\\i\xe2i\xc8\xe9\xd85\xb1\x14):M\xdcn"
Make hex-encoded strings a separate string format instead.
Other packages should use ast.Recursive and ast.PostRecursive to ensure
the root node is visited as well.
Signed-off-by: Paul Chaignon <paul.chaignon@orange.com>
This prepared for handling of bytesize[parent:foo:bar] expressions
by allowing multiple identifiers after colon.
No functional changes for now, just preparation for storing more
than one identifier after colon.
Netlink descriptions contain tons of code duplication,
and need much more for proper descriptions. Introduce
type templates to simplify writing such descriptions
and remove code duplication.
Note: type templates are experimental, have poor error handling
and are subject to change.
Type templates can be declared as follows:
```
type buffer[DIR] ptr[DIR, array[int8]]
type fileoff[BASE] BASE
type nlattr[TYPE, PAYLOAD] {
nla_len len[parent, int16]
nla_type const[TYPE, int16]
payload PAYLOAD
} [align_4]
```
and later used as follows:
```
syscall(a buffer[in], b fileoff[int64], c ptr[in, nlattr[FOO, int32]])
```
Complex types that are often repeated can be given short type aliases using the
following syntax:
```
type identifier underlying_type
```
For example:
```
type signalno int32[0:65]
type net_port proc[20000, 4, int16be]
```
Then, type alias can be used instead of the underlying type in any contexts.
Underlying type needs to be described as if it's a struct field, that is,
with the base type if it's required. However, type alias can be used as syscall
arguments as well. Underlying types are currently restricted to integer types,
`ptr`, `ptr64`, `const`, `flags` and `proc` types.
The old parser in sys/sysparser is too hacky, difficult to extend
and drops debug info too early, so that we can't produce proper error messages.
Add a new parser that is build like a proper language parser
and preserves full debug info for every token.