These 3 new tests are modeled after 3 existing tests but made slightly
more complex since now instead of definining a new macro to be an
existing macro, we define it to be replaced with two tokens, (one a
literal, and one an existing macro).
These tests all fail currently because the replacement lookup is
currently happening on the basis of the entire replacement string
rather than on a list of tokens.
One with the chained defines in the opposite order, and one with the
potential to trigger an infinite-loop bug through mutual
recursion. Each of these tests pass already.
The fix is as simple as adding a loop to continue to lookup values
in the hash table until one of the following termination conditions:
1. The token we look up has no definition
2. We get back the original symbol we started with
This second termination condition prevents infinite iteration.
Validate desired test cases by ensuring the output of glcpp matches
the output of the gcc preprocessor, (ignoring any lines of the gcc
output beginning with '#').
Only one test case so far with a trivial #define.
Most of the current problems were (mostly) harmless things like
missing declarations, but there was at least one real error, (reversed
argument order for yyerrror).
This allows the final program to be 100% "valgrind clean", (freeing
all memory that it allocates). This will make it much easier to ensure
that any allocation that parser actions perform are also cleaned up.