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man pages section 5: Standards, Environments, and Macros
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Document Information

Preface

Introduction

Standards, Environments, and Macros

acl(5)

advance(5)

adv_cap_1000fdx(5)

adv_cap_1000hdx(5)

adv_cap_100fdx(5)

adv_cap_100hdx(5)

adv_cap_10fdx(5)

adv_cap_10hdx(5)

adv_cap_asmpause(5)

adv_cap_autoneg(5)

adv_cap_pause(5)

adv_rem_fault(5)

ANSI(5)

architecture(5)

ascii(5)

attributes(5)

audit_binfile(5)

audit_syslog(5)

availability(5)

brands(5)

C++(5)

C(5)

cancellation(5)

cap_1000fdx(5)

cap_1000hdx(5)

cap_100fdx(5)

cap_100hdx(5)

cap_10fdx(5)

cap_10hdx(5)

cap_asmpause(5)

cap_autoneg(5)

cap_pause(5)

cap_rem_fault(5)

charmap(5)

compile(5)

condition(5)

crypt_bsdbf(5)

crypt_bsdmd5(5)

crypt_sha256(5)

crypt_sha512(5)

crypt_sunmd5(5)

crypt_unix(5)

CSI(5)

device_clean(5)

dhcp(5)

dhcp_modules(5)

environ(5)

eqnchar(5)

extendedFILE(5)

extensions(5)

filesystem(5)

fnmatch(5)

formats(5)

fsattr(5)

grub(5)

gss_auth_rules(5)

iconv_1250(5)

iconv_1251(5)

iconv(5)

iconv_646(5)

iconv_852(5)

iconv_8859-1(5)

iconv_8859-2(5)

iconv_8859-5(5)

iconv_dhn(5)

iconv_koi8-r(5)

iconv_mac_cyr(5)

iconv_maz(5)

iconv_pc_cyr(5)

iconv_unicode(5)

ieee802.3(5)

ipfilter(5)

isalist(5)

ISO(5)

kerberos(5)

krb5_auth_rules(5)

krb5envvar(5)

labels(5)

largefile(5)

lf64(5)

lfcompile(5)

lfcompile64(5)

link_asmpause(5)

link_duplex(5)

link_pause(5)

link_up(5)

live_upgrade(5)

locale(5)

lp_cap_1000fdx(5)

lp_cap_1000hdx(5)

lp_cap_100fdx(5)

lp_cap_100hdx(5)

lp_cap_10fdx(5)

lp_cap_10hdx(5)

lp_cap_asmpause(5)

lp_cap_autoneg(5)

lp_cap_pause(5)

lp_rem_fault(5)

lx(5)

man(5)

mansun(5)

me(5)

mech_spnego(5)

mm(5)

ms(5)

MT-Level(5)

mutex(5)

netsnmp(5)

nfssec(5)

openssl(5)

pam_authtok_check(5)

pam_authtok_get(5)

pam_authtok_store(5)

pam_deny(5)

pam_dhkeys(5)

pam_dial_auth(5)

pam_krb5(5)

pam_krb5_migrate(5)

pam_ldap(5)

pam_list(5)

pam_passwd_auth(5)

pam_projects(5)

pam_rhosts_auth(5)

pam_roles(5)

pam_sample(5)

pam_smartcard(5)

pam_tsol_account(5)

pam_unix_account(5)

pam_unix_auth(5)

pam_unix_cred(5)

pam_unix_session(5)

pkcs11_kernel(5)

pkcs11_softtoken(5)

POSIX.1(5)

POSIX.2(5)

POSIX(5)

privileges(5)

prof(5)

pthreads(5)

RBAC(5)

rbac(5)

regex(5)

regexp(5)

resource_controls(5)

sgml(5)

smartcard(5)

sma_snmp(5)

smf(5)

smf_bootstrap(5)

smf_method(5)

smf_restarter(5)

smf_security(5)

solbook(5)

stability(5)

standard(5)

standards(5)

step(5)

sticky(5)

SUS(5)

SUSv2(5)

SUSv3(5)

SVID3(5)

SVID(5)

tecla(5)

teclarc(5)

term(5)

threads(5)

trusted_extensions(5)

vgrindefs(5)

wbem(5)

xcvr_addr(5)

xcvr_id(5)

xcvr_inuse(5)

XNS4(5)

XNS(5)

XNS5(5)

XPG3(5)

XPG4(5)

XPG4v2(5)

XPG(5)

zones(5)

vgrindefs

- vgrind's language definition data base

Synopsis

/usr/lib/vgrindefs

Description

vgrindefs contains all language definitions for vgrind(1). Capabilities in vgrindefs are of two types: Boolean capabilities which indicate that the language has some particular feature and string capabilities which give a regular expression or keyword list. Entries may continue onto multiple lines by giving a \ as the last character of a line. Lines starting with # are comments.

Capabilities

The following table names and describes each capability.

Name
Type
Description
ab
str
Regular expression for the start of an alternate form comment
ae
str
Regular expression for the end of an alternate form comment
bb
str
Regular expression for the start of a block
be
str
Regular expression for the end of a lexical block
cb
str
Regular expression for the start of a comment
ce
str
Regular expression for the end of a comment
id
str
String giving characters other than letters and digits that may legally occur in identifiers (default `_')
kw
str
A list of keywords separated by spaces
lb
str
Regular expression for the start of a character constant
le
str
Regular expression for the end of a character constant
oc
bool
Present means upper and lower case are equivalent
pb
str
Regular expression for start of a procedure
pl
bool
Procedure definitions are constrained to the lexical level matched by the `px' capability
px
str
A match for this regular expression indicates that procedure definitions may occur at the next lexical level. Useful for lisp-like languages in which procedure definitions occur as subexpressions of defuns.
sb
str
Regular expression for the start of a string
se
str
Regular expression for the end of a string
tc
str
Use the named entry as a continuation of this one
tl
bool
Present means procedures are only defined at the top lexical level

Regular Expressions

vgrindefs uses regular expressions similar to those of ex(1) and lex(1). The characters `^', `$', `:', and `\' are reserved characters and must be `quoted' with a preceding \ if they are to be included as normal characters. The metasymbols and their meanings are:

$

The end of a line

^

The beginning of a line

\d

A delimiter (space, tab, newline, start of line)

\a

Matches any string of symbols (like `.*' in lex)

\p

Matches any identifier. In a procedure definition (the `pb' capability) the string that matches this symbol is used as the procedure name.

()

Grouping

|

Alternation

?

Last item is optional

\e

Preceding any string means that the string will not match an input string if the input string is preceded by an escape character (\). This is typically used for languages (like C) that can include the string delimiter in a string by escaping it.

Unlike other regular expressions in the system, these match words and not characters. Hence something like `(tramp|steamer)flies?' would match `tramp', `steamer', `trampflies', or `steamerflies'. Contrary to some forms of regular expressions, vgrindef alternation binds very tightly. Grouping parentheses are likely to be necessary in expressions involving alternation.

Keyword List

The keyword list is just a list of keywords in the language separated by spaces. If the `oc' boolean is specified, indicating that upper and lower case are equivalent, then all the keywords should be specified in lower case.

Examples

Example 1 A sample program.

The following entry, which describes the C language, is typical of a language entry.

C|c|the C programming language:\
    :pb=^\d?*?\d?\p\d?(\a?\)(\d|{):bb={:be=}:cb=/*:ce=*/:sb=":se=\e":\
    :le=\e':tl:\
    :kw=asm auto break case char continue default do double else enum\
    extern float for fortran goto if int long register return short\
    sizeof static struct switch typedef union unsigned void while #define\
    #else #endif #if #ifdef #ifndef #include #undef # define endif\
    ifdef ifndef include undef defined:

Note that the first field is just the language name (and any variants of it). Thus the C language could be specified to vgrind(1) as `c' or `C'.

Files

/usr/lib/vgrindefs

file containing vgrind descriptions

See Also

ex(1), lex(1), troff(1), vgrind(1)