4.5 KiB
PHP Parser
This is a PHP parser written in PHP. It's purpose is to simplify static code analysis and manipulation.
Note: This project is work in progress. It is known to not function perfectly correct yet (see the "Known Issues" section at the end of this document).
Components
This package currently bundles several components:
- The
Parser
itself - A
NodeDumper
to dump the nodes to a human readable string representation - A
PrettyPrinter
to translate the node tree back to PHP
Parser and ParserDebug
Parsing is performed using Parser->parse()
. This method accepts a Lexer
as the first parameter
and a error callback, i.e. a function that will be passed a message in case of an error, as
second parameter. The parser returns an array of statement nodes. If an error occurs the parser
instead returns false
and sends an error message to the error callback.
$code = '<?php // some code';
$parser = new Parser;
$stmts = $parser->parse(
new Lexer($code),
function ($msg) {
echo $msg;
}
);
The ParserDebug
class also parses a PHP code, but outputs a debug trace while doing so.
Node Tree
The output of the parser is an array of statement nodes. All nodes are instances of NodeAbstract
.
Furthermore nodes are divided into three categories:
Node_Stmt
: A statementNode_Expr
: An expressionNode_Scalar
: A scalar (which is a string, a number, aso.)Node_Scalar
inherits fromNode_Expr
.
Each node may have subnodes. For example Node_Expr_Plus
has two subnodes, namely left
and
right
, which represend the left hand side and right hand side expressions of the plus operation.
Subnodes are accessed as normal properties:
$node->left
The subnodes which a certain node can have are documented as @property
doccomments in the
respective files.
NodeDumper
Nodes can be dumped into a string representation using the NodeDumper->dump
method:
$code = <<<'CODE'
<?php
function printLine($msg) {
echo $msg, "\n";
}
printLine('Hallo World!!!');
CODE;
$parser = new Parser;
$stmts = $parser->parse(
new Lexer($code),
function ($msg) {
echo $msg;
}
);
if (false !== $stmts) {
$nodeDumper = new NodeDumper;
echo '<pre>' . htmlspecialchars($nodeDumper->dump($stmts)) . '</pre>';
}
This script will have an output similar to the following:
array(
0: Stmt_Func(
byRef: false
name: printLine
params: array(
0: Stmt_FuncParam(
type: null
name: msg
byRef: false
default: null
)
)
stmts: array(
0: Stmt_Echo(
exprs: array(
0: Variable(
name: msg
)
1: Scalar_String(
value:
isBinary: false
type: 1
)
)
)
)
)
1: Expr_FuncCall(
func: Name(
parts: array(
0: printLine
)
)
args: array(
0: Expr_FuncCallArg(
value: Scalar_String(
value: Hallo World!!!
isBinary: false
type: 0
)
byRef: false
)
)
)
)
PrettyPrinter
The pretty printer compiles nodes back to PHP code. "Pretty printing" here is just the formal name of the process and does not mean that the output is in any way pretty.
$prettyPrinter = new PrettyPrinter_Zend;
echo '<pre>' . htmlspecialchars($prettyPrinter->pStmts($stmts)) . '</pre>';
For the code mentioned in the above section this should create the output:
function printLine($msg)
{
echo $msg, "\n";
}
printLine('Hallo World!!!');
Known Issues
- Parsing expressions of type
a::$b[c]()
(I.e. the method name is specifed by an array) currently does not work (causes 1 parse fail in test against Symfony Beta 3). - When pretty printing strings and InlineHTML those are indented like any other code, thus causing extra whitespace to be inserted (causes 23 compare fails in test against Symfony Beta 3).