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pycparser v2.19

Author: Eli Bendersky

1   Introduction

1.1   What is pycparser?

pycparser is a parser for the C language, written in pure Python. It is a module designed to be easily integrated into applications that need to parse C source code.

1.2   What is it good for?

Anything that needs C code to be parsed. The following are some uses for pycparser, taken from real user reports:

  • C code obfuscator
  • Front-end for various specialized C compilers
  • Static code checker
  • Automatic unit-test discovery
  • Adding specialized extensions to the C language

One of the most popular uses of pycparser is in the cffi library, which uses it to parse the declarations of C functions and types in order to auto-generate FFIs.

pycparser is unique in the sense that it's written in pure Python - a very high level language that's easy to experiment with and tweak. To people familiar with Lex and Yacc, pycparser's code will be simple to understand. It also has no external dependencies (except for a Python interpreter), making it very simple to install and deploy.

1.3   Which version of C does pycparser support?

pycparser aims to support the full C99 language (according to the standard ISO/IEC 9899). Some features from C11 are also supported, and patches to support more are welcome.

pycparser supports very few GCC extensions, but it's fairly easy to set things up so that it parses code with a lot of GCC-isms successfully. See the FAQ for more details.

1.4   What grammar does pycparser follow?

pycparser very closely follows the C grammar provided in Annex A of the C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899).

1.5   How is pycparser licensed?

BSD license.

1.6   Contact details

For reporting problems with pycparser or submitting feature requests, please open an issue, or submit a pull request.

2   Installing

2.1   Prerequisites

  • pycparser was tested on Python 2.7, 3.4-3.6, on both Linux and Windows. It should work on any later version (in both the 2.x and 3.x lines) as well.
  • pycparser has no external dependencies. The only non-stdlib library it uses is PLY, which is bundled in pycparser/ply. The current PLY version is 3.10, retrieved from http://www.dabeaz.com/ply/

Note that pycparser (and PLY) uses docstrings for grammar specifications. Python installations that strip docstrings (such as when using the Python -OO option) will fail to instantiate and use pycparser. You can try to work around this problem by making sure the PLY parsing tables are pre-generated in normal mode; this isn't an officially supported/tested mode of operation, though.

2.2   Installation process

Installing pycparser is very simple. Once you download and unzip the package, you just have to execute the standard python setup.py install. The setup script will then place the pycparser module into site-packages in your Python's installation library.

Alternatively, since pycparser is listed in the Python Package Index (PyPI), you can install it using your favorite Python packaging/distribution tool, for example with:

> pip install pycparser

2.3   Known problems

  • Some users who've installed a new version of pycparser over an existing version ran into a problem using the newly installed library. This has to do with parse tables staying around as .pyc files from the older version. If you see unexplained errors from pycparser after an upgrade, remove it (by deleting the pycparser directory in your Python's site-packages, or wherever you installed it) and install again.

3   Using

3.1   Interaction with the C preprocessor

In order to be compilable, C code must be preprocessed by the C preprocessor - cpp. cpp handles preprocessing directives like #include and #define, removes comments, and performs other minor tasks that prepare the C code for compilation.

For all but the most trivial snippets of C code pycparser, like a C compiler, must receive preprocessed C code in order to function correctly. If you import the top-level parse_file function from the pycparser package, it will interact with cpp for you, as long as it's in your PATH, or you provide a path to it.

Note also that you can use gcc -E or clang -E instead of cpp. See the using_gcc_E_libc.py example for more details. Windows users can download and install a binary build of Clang for Windows from this website.

3.2   What about the standard C library headers?

C code almost always #includes various header files from the standard C library, like stdio.h. While (with some effort) pycparser can be made to parse the standard headers from any C compiler, it's much simpler to use the provided "fake" standard includes in utils/fake_libc_include. These are standard C header files that contain only the bare necessities to allow valid parsing of the files that use them. As a bonus, since they're minimal, it can significantly improve the performance of parsing large C files.

The key point to understand here is that pycparser doesn't really care about the semantics of types. It only needs to know whether some token encountered in the source is a previously defined type. This is essential in order to be able to parse C correctly.

See this blog post for more details.

3.3   Basic usage

Take a look at the examples directory of the distribution for a few examples of using pycparser. These should be enough to get you started. Please note that most realistic C code samples would require running the C preprocessor before passing the code to pycparser; see the previous sections for more details.

3.4   Advanced usage

The public interface of pycparser is well documented with comments in pycparser/c_parser.py. For a detailed overview of the various AST nodes created by the parser, see pycparser/_c_ast.cfg.

There's also a FAQ available here. In any case, you can always drop me an email for help.

4   Modifying

There are a few points to keep in mind when modifying pycparser:

  • The code for pycparser's AST nodes is automatically generated from a configuration file - _c_ast.cfg, by _ast_gen.py. If you modify the AST configuration, make sure to re-generate the code.
  • Make sure you understand the optimized mode of pycparser - for that you must read the docstring in the constructor of the CParser class. For development you should create the parser without optimizations, so that it will regenerate the Yacc and Lex tables when you change the grammar.

5   Package contents

Once you unzip the pycparser package, you'll see the following files and directories:

README.rst:
This README file.
LICENSE:
The pycparser license
setup.py:
Installation script
examples/:
A directory with some examples of using pycparser
pycparser/:
The pycparser module source code.
tests/:
Unit tests.
utils/fake_libc_include:
Minimal standard C library include files that should allow to parse any C code.
utils/internal/:
Internal utilities for my own use. You probably don't need them.

6   Contributors

Some people have contributed to pycparser by opening issues on bugs they've found and/or submitting patches. The list of contributors is in the CONTRIBUTORS file in the source distribution. After pycparser moved to Github I stopped updating this list because Github does a much better job at tracking contributions.

7   CI Status

pycparser has automatic testing enabled through the convenient Travis CI project. Here is the latest build status:

https://travis-ci.org/eliben/pycparser.png?branch=master

AppVeyor also helps run tests on Windows:

https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/wrup68o5y8nuk1i9?svg=true

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