Difference between revisions of "V4 DB Record Instance Syntax"

From EPICSWIKI
(Numeric constants defined)
 
(10 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
: '''This page still being worked on...'''
2005-11-02 MRK


= Overview =


The syntax used for record instances has to change in EPICS V4, since we now have to support structured data. While it would have been possible to modify the V3 syntax to allow for this, a complete redesign of the syntax has been done to help improve parsing, and to provide commonality between the syntax of a DB file and the string representation of structured data values passed through Channel Access.


The syntax used for record instances has to change in EPICS V4,
since we now have to support structured data.
A complete redesign of the syntax has been done to help improve parsing, and to provide commonality between the syntax of a DB file and the string representation of structured data values passed through Channel Access.
<b>NOTE:</b> See the note at the beginning of the "V4 DBD Statement Syntax"
concerning the syntax for link and struct fields.


= Document Conventions =
= Document Conventions =
Line 26: Line 32:
;''integerConstant:''
;''integerConstant:''
: ''positiveInteger''
: ''positiveInteger''
: <tt>-</tt> ''positiveInteger''


;''positiveInteger:''
;''positiveInteger:''
Line 34: Line 39:


;''octalConstant:''
;''octalConstant:''
: <tt>0</tt> ''octalDigit''
: <tt>0</tt>
: ''octalConstant'' ''octalDigit''
: ''octalConstant'' ''octalDigit''


Line 55: Line 60:
: ''one of:'' <tt>0-9</tt>
: ''one of:'' <tt>0-9</tt>


This was meant to be a description of the C99 standard integer representation, but I made it up myself so it may be flawed.
This was meant to be a description of the C99 standard integer representation, but I made it up myself so it may be flawed. Note that we will not accept the C99 numeric suffixes u/U and l/L since (unlike a C compiler) we know the type of the number we're expecting.
 
'''Q: Do we want to allow/require the numeric suffixes u/U and l/L?'''  These are a little tricky to actually include in the grammar, and are not actually needed since (unlike a C compiler) we know the type of the number we're expecting.


== Floating Point Constants ==
== Floating Point Constants ==
Line 66: Line 69:


;''positiveReal:''
;''positiveReal:''
: <tt>.</tt> ''digitSequence''
: ''digitSequence''
: <tt>.</tt> ''digitSequence'' ''exponentPart''
: ''digitSequence'' <tt>.</tt>
: ''digitSequence'' <tt>.</tt>
: ''digitSequence'' <tt>.</tt> ''exponentPart''
: ''digitSequence'' <tt>.</tt> ''exponentPart''
: ''digitSequence'' <tt>.</tt> ''digitSequence''
: ''digitSequence'' <tt>.</tt> ''digitSequence''
: ''digitSequence'' <tt>.</tt> ''digitSequence'' ''exponentPart''
: ''digitSequence'' <tt>.</tt> ''digitSequence'' ''exponentPart''
: <tt>.</tt> ''digitSequence''
: <tt>.</tt> ''digitSequence'' ''exponentPart''
: ''digitSequence'' ''exponentPart''
: ''digitSequence'' ''exponentPart''


Line 87: Line 91:
: ''digitSequence''
: ''digitSequence''


In ANSI C source code, an sequence of decimal digits with neither a decimal point nor an exponent is never a true floating-point constant.  We should probably permit this though, since we know the field type already.
In ANSI C source code, a sequence of decimal digits with neither a decimal point nor an exponent is an integer constant, not a floating-point constant.  We will permit this however, since we always know the field type in advance.


== Boolean Constants ==
== Boolean Constants ==
Line 105: Line 109:
: ''one of:'' <tt>0 F FALSE f false False N NO No n no</tt>
: ''one of:'' <tt>0 F FALSE f false False N NO No n no</tt>


'''I'm proposing all these possibilities for true/false as they are all obvious in meaning, and will allow a CA Put of a string to a boolean field to understand them all. I will listen to objections though, and we might want to allow registration of strings in other languages...'''
'''I'm proposing all these possibilities for true/false as they are all obvious in meaning, and will allow a CA Put of any of these strings to a boolean field. We might even want to allow registration of boolean strings in other languages...'''


== String Constants ==
== String Constants ==
Line 145: Line 149:
= Database File =
= Database File =


I need to define these, which are really preprocessor objects:
This section will eventually define what can appear in a .db file.  That currently means:


* record instances
* comments
* comments
* substitution macros
* macro instances, including where they will be allowed
* templates and ports
* template files and substitution macro definitions
* port definitions for template instances
* data for tools such as VDCT, that will not be discarded by .db processing tools.


The templates, macros and ports design should be very similar to the ideas produced for R3.14 VDCT templates.


= Record Definitions =
= Record Definitions =
Line 214: Line 222:
: ''structInitializer''
: ''structInitializer''
: ''arrayInitializer''
: ''arrayInitializer''
: ''devlinkInitializer''
: ''linkInitializer''


;''initializerList:''
;''initializerList:''
Line 241: Line 249:
   }
   }


'''Q: What about map fields? For record initialization we could parse these like an array of structures, where the first structure element is the key and the second is the value.  However being able to access and modify elements of a map over CA may be harder, and needs some thought.'''


=== Structure Initializers ===
=== Structure Initializers ===
Line 268: Line 275:
   }
   }


=== Link and Device Initializers ===
=== Link Initializer ===
 


;''devlinkInitializer:''
;''linkInitializer:''
: ''linkType'' <tt>(</tt> ''structAssignmentList'' <tt>)</tt>
: ''support(choiceName) supportStructName'' <tt>{</tt> ''structAssignmentList'' <tt>}</tt>  
: ''deviceType'' <tt>(</tt> ''structAssignmentList'' <tt>)</tt>


;''linkType:''
;''choiceName:''
: ''identifier''
: ''identifier''


;''deviceType:''
;''supportStructName:''
: ''identifier''
: ''identifier''


These select a particular link or device support for the field, and set its address according to the structure type defined for that link or device type.
These select a particular link support and interface for the field, and set its address according to the structure type defined for that link type.


   calcout foo:temperature:controller = {
   calcout foo:temperature:controller = {
       output = ca("fum:baz:heater"; pp=y);
      block = true
       inputs = {
       output = support(outputLink) OutputLink{
           { "setpoint", pv("foo:temperature:setpoint") }
                pvname = "fum:baz:heater";
           { "current", db("foo:temperature:sensor"; ms=y) }
                process = true;
                wait = true;
       }
      input = [2] {
           {   link = {
                  support(monitorLink) MonitorLink{
                      pvname = "foo:temperature:setpoint";
                      process = false
                  }
              }
          }
           { block=true
              link = {
                  support(inputLink) InputLink {
                      pvname = "foo:temperature:sensor";
                      process = true;
                      wait = true;
                      inheritSeverity = true
                  }
              }
          }
       };
       };
       expression = "(setpoint - current) > 0";
       expression = "(B - A) > 0";
      ...
   }
   }


   mbbi foo:bar:door = {
   mbbi foo:bar:door = {
       input = acro9440 { 0, 5 };
       input = support(acro9440) VME{0, 5};
      ...
   }
   }
<b>QUESTION</b> There is nothing that allows a DVT to prompt a user
with a valid set if support for a particular link. Should there be?


=== Array Initializers ===
=== Array Initializers ===
Line 321: Line 353:
       stateNames = [4] {"Broken", "Closed", "Open", "Moving"};
       stateNames = [4] {"Broken", "Closed", "Open", "Moving"};
       stateSeverity = [4] {"Major"; [3] = "Minor"};
       stateSeverity = [4] {"Major"; [3] = "Minor"};
      ...
   }
   }


Line 331: Line 364:
       value = float32 [3,3] { {1}, {[1] = 1}, {[2] = 1}};
       value = float32 [3,3] { {1}, {[1] = 1}, {[2] = 1}};
   }
   }
== Extra Fields ==
;''extraFieldAssigment:''
: ''extraField'' <tt>=</tt> ''extraInitializer'' <tt>;</tt>
This syntax not yet developed.
Things to be careful about here:
* An incorrectly spelled field name in a ''fieldAssignment'' will look to the parser like an ''extraFieldAssigment''
* ...

Latest revision as of 19:50, 2 November 2005

2005-11-02 MRK

Overview

The syntax used for record instances has to change in EPICS V4, since we now have to support structured data. A complete redesign of the syntax has been done to help improve parsing, and to provide commonality between the syntax of a DB file and the string representation of structured data values passed through Channel Access.

NOTE: See the note at the beginning of the "V4 DBD Statement Syntax" concerning the syntax for link and struct fields.

Document Conventions

This syntax is presented below in the form of a grammar. The conventions I'm using are as follows:

symbolBeingDefined:
otherSymbol
alternateSymbolFollowedBy literal
one of: list of posible literal values


Common Symbols

The symbols described in this section are used in the grammar, but may be implemented as lexical tokens.

identifier:
A legal C99 identifier. Note that C99 permits implementations to allow extended characters to be used in identifiers, but does not require it, so the use of extended characters may reduce portability and is not recommended.

Integer Constants

integerConstant:
positiveInteger
positiveInteger:
octalConstant
hexConstant
decimalConstant
octalConstant:
0
octalConstant octalDigit
octalDigit:
one of: 0-7
hexConstant:
0x hexDigit
0X hexDigit
hexConstant hexDigit
hexDigit:
one of: 0-9 a-f A-F
decimalConstant:
one of: 1-9
decimalConstant decimalDigit
decimalDigit:
one of: 0-9

This was meant to be a description of the C99 standard integer representation, but I made it up myself so it may be flawed. Note that we will not accept the C99 numeric suffixes u/U and l/L since (unlike a C compiler) we know the type of the number we're expecting.

Floating Point Constants

realConstant:
positiveReal
- positiveReal
positiveReal:
digitSequence
digitSequence .
digitSequence . exponentPart
digitSequence . digitSequence
digitSequence . digitSequence exponentPart
. digitSequence
. digitSequence exponentPart
digitSequence exponentPart
digitSequence:
decimalDigit
digitSequence decimalDigit
exponentPart:
e signedExponent
E signedExponent
signedExponent:
- digitSequence
+ digitSequence
digitSequence

In ANSI C source code, a sequence of decimal digits with neither a decimal point nor an exponent is an integer constant, not a floating-point constant. We will permit this however, since we always know the field type in advance.

Boolean Constants

We can afford to be generous in what we accept as a boolean value:

booleanConstant:
booleanTrue
" booleanTrue "
booleanFalse
" booleanFalse "
booleanTrue:
one of: 1 T TRUE t true True Y YES Yes y yes
booleanFalse:
one of: 0 F FALSE f false False N NO No n no

I'm proposing all these possibilities for true/false as they are all obvious in meaning, and will allow a CA Put of any of these strings to a boolean field. We might even want to allow registration of boolean strings in other languages...

String Constants

stringConstant:
" escapedCharacterList "
escapedCharacterList:
A series of characters, using the C99 escapeSequence syntax defined below:
escapeSequence:
simpleEscapeSequence
octalEscapeSequence
hexEscapeSequence
universalCharacterName
simpleEscapeSequence:
one of: \' \" \? \\ \a \b \f \n \r \t \v
octalEscapeSequence:
\ octalDigit
\ octalDigit octalDigit
\ octalDigit octalDigit octalDigit
hexEscapeSequence:
\x hexDigit
hexEscapeSequence hexDigit

Note: C99 does not limit the number of hexadecimal digits that can appear in a hexEscapeSequence, but it does state that the behaviour is undefined if the resulting character value exceeds that of the largest character.

universalCharacterName:
\u hexQuad
\U hexQuad hexQuad
hexQuad:
hexDigit hexDigit hexDigit hexDigit


Database File

This section will eventually define what can appear in a .db file. That currently means:

  • record instances
  • comments
  • macro instances, including where they will be allowed
  • template files and substitution macro definitions
  • port definitions for template instances
  • data for tools such as VDCT, that will not be discarded by .db processing tools.

The templates, macros and ports design should be very similar to the ideas produced for R3.14 VDCT templates.

Record Definitions

recordDefinition:
recordType recordName = { recordBody }
recordType:
identifier
recordName:
recordNameChar
recordName recordNameChar
recordNameChar:
one of: 0-9 A-Z a-z _ - : ; < > [ ]
Any Unicode/UTF-8 character outside of the Basic Latin set

This extends the character set available to a V3 record name, adding all possible multi-byte characters. However, EPICS sites are strongly advised to confirm that such record names can be processed using all of their database and CA client tools before actually making use of this particular extension.

recordBody:
recordBodyItem
recordBody recordBodyItem

Record instance definitions in EPICS V4 look very similar to a C99 structure definition with initialization. For example:

  ai foo:bar:temperature = {
      ...
  }

Inside the body of the record definition, there are three possible kinds of statements, similar to a C assignment statement. Note these statements must be terminated with a semi-colon (which is different from inside a struct). The reason for this difference is to prevent database instance files from becoming dependent on the order of fields in a record; if we permit record instances to be created from a single comma-separated list of field values without the field names, it could lead to significant confusion if the field order ever changes.

recordBodyItem:
infoAssignment
fieldAssignment
extraFieldAssigment

Information Fields

infoAssignment:
info infoName = stringConstant ;
infoName:
identifier
stringConstant

Info items provide additional configuration data about this record that can be accessed by other software running on the IOC.

  info savePeriod = "30.0";
  info restorePhase = "1";
  info "my favourite things" = "raindrops on roses";

Field Assignment

fieldAssignment:
fieldName = initializer ;
fieldName:
identifier
initializer:
constant
structInitializer
arrayInitializer
linkInitializer
initializerList:
initializer
initializerList , initializer

The initializer in a field assignment is also the exact same syntax that will be used when converting a string value from a CA client for example into a field value that is being put into a field.

Basic and Enumerated Initializers

constant:
booleanConstant
integerConstant
realConstant
stringConstant

The syntax for the field initializer depends on the data type represented by fieldName. Basic types (numeric or string) should need no comment other than to note that values for numeric fields must not be given inside quotes (unlike EPICS V3). Menu field values may be given as either a string or an integer. For enum fields, if the related field that contains the strings is defined first, the enum field may be specified using a string; otherwise it can only be set using an integer value.

Examples:

  ai foo:bar:temperature = {
      inputSmoothing = 0.98;
      invalidValue = 1000;
      units = "Celcius";
      scan = "Interrupt";
      ...
  }


Structure Initializers

structInitializer:
{ structAssignmentList }
structAssignmentList:
initializerList
fieldName = initializerList
structAssignmentList ; fieldName = initializerList

Initializers for a structure field look similar to a nested record body, but the rules are slightly different:

  • You can give a series of values for adjacent items using a simple comma-separated list (for a record body, you must name each field)
  • Semi-colons are required between a value and a following named item.

For example:

  ai foo:temperature:sensor = {
      linearConvert = {
          mode = "Linear";
          low = -12.5, 133.5
      };
      displayLimit = { 0, 100 };
      ...
  }

Link Initializer

linkInitializer:
support(choiceName) supportStructName { structAssignmentList }
choiceName:
identifier
supportStructName:
identifier

These select a particular link support and interface for the field, and set its address according to the structure type defined for that link type.

  calcout foo:temperature:controller = {
      block = true
      output = support(outputLink) OutputLink{
               pvname = "fum:baz:heater";
               process = true;
               wait = true;
      }
      input = [2] {
          {   link = {
                  support(monitorLink) MonitorLink{
                      pvname = "foo:temperature:setpoint";
                      process = false
                  }
              }
          }
          {  block=true
             link = {
                  support(inputLink) InputLink {
                      pvname = "foo:temperature:sensor";
                      process = true;
                      wait = true;
                      inheritSeverity = true
                  }
             }
          }
      };
      expression = "(B - A) > 0";
      ...
  }
  mbbi foo:bar:door = {
      input = support(acro9440) VME{0, 5};
      ...
  }

QUESTION There is nothing that allows a DVT to prompt a user with a valid set if support for a particular link. Should there be?

Array Initializers

arrayInitializer:
{ arrayAssignmentList }
arrayType { arrayAssignmentList }
[ arrayCapacity ] { arrayAssignmentList }
arrayType [ arrayCapacity ] { arrayAssignmentList }
arrayAssignmentList:
initializerList
[ integerConstant ] = initializerList
arrayAssignmentList ; [ integerConstant ] = initializerList
arrayType:
one of: bool int16 uint16 int32 uint32
one of: float32 float64 octet string
arrayCapacity:
integerConstant
arrayCapacity , integerConstant

If the definition of the array field being set did not do so, an array field initialization must include the size of the array and/or the type of the data stored in it. Inside the braces data values are given in a comma-separated list; the index can also be set to initialize individual values, and any mixture of the two can be used as desired:

  mbbi foo:bar:door = {
      stateNames = [4] {"Broken", "Closed", "Open", "Moving"};
      stateSeverity = [4] {"Major"; [3] = "Minor"};
      ...
  }

For multi-dimensional arrays, data values can only appear inside the inner-most sets of braces, although index settings are permitted outside of these. These two definitions give the same result:

  matrix identity1 = {
      value = float32 [3,3] { {1, 0, 0}, {0, 1, 0}, {1, 0, 0}};
  }
  matrix identity2 = {
      value = float32 [3,3] { {1}, {[1] = 1}, {[2] = 1}};
  }