Package: emacs;
Reported by: Alan Mackenzie <acm <at> muc.de>
Date: Fri, 4 Aug 2023 14:01:02 UTC
Severity: normal
Done: Alan Mackenzie <acm <at> muc.de>
Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.
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From: Alan Mackenzie <acm <at> muc.de> To: Mattias EngdegÄrd <mattias.engdegard <at> gmail.com> Cc: 65051 <at> debbugs.gnu.org, Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org>, Stefan Monnier <monnier <at> iro.umontreal.ca> Subject: bug#65051: internal_equal manipulates symbols with position without checking symbols-with-pos-enabled. Date: Sat, 5 Aug 2023 21:07:24 +0000
Hello, Mattias. On Sat, Aug 05, 2023 at 16:40:23 +0200, Mattias EngdegÄrd wrote: > Alan, could you produce a combined patch that includes your proposal so far (and all tests)? Here it is: diff --git a/doc/lispref/symbols.texi b/doc/lispref/symbols.texi index 34db0caf3a8..a828d303c04 100644 --- a/doc/lispref/symbols.texi +++ b/doc/lispref/symbols.texi @@ -784,9 +784,15 @@ Symbols with Position @cindex bare symbol A @dfn{symbol with position} is a symbol, the @dfn{bare symbol}, together with an unsigned integer called the @dfn{position}. These -objects are intended for use by the byte compiler, which records in -them the position of each symbol occurrence and uses those positions -in warning and error messages. +objects are stored internally much like vectors, and don't themselves +have entries in the obarray (though their bare symbols do; +@pxref{Creating Symbols}). + +Symbols with position are for the use of the byte compiler, which +records in them the position of each symbol occurrence and uses those +positions in warning and error messages. They shouldn't normally be +used otherwise. Doing so can cause unexpected results with basic +Emacs functions such as @code{eq} and @code{equal}. The printed representation of a symbol with position uses the hash notation outlined in @ref{Printed Representation}. It looks like @@ -798,11 +804,20 @@ Symbols with Position For most purposes, when the flag variable @code{symbols-with-pos-enabled} is non-@code{nil}, symbols with -positions behave just as bare symbols do. For example, @samp{(eq -#<symbol foo at 12345> foo)} has a value @code{t} when that variable -is set (but @code{nil} when it isn't set). Most of the time in Emacs this -variable is @code{nil}, but the byte compiler binds it to @code{t} -when it runs. +positions behave just as their bare symbols would. For example, +@samp{(eq #<symbol foo at 12345> foo)} has a value @code{t} when the +variable is set; likewise, @code{equal} will treat a symbol with +position argument as its bare symbol. + +When @code{symbols-with-pos-enabled} is @code{nil}, any symbols with +position continue to exist, but do not behave as symbols, or have the +other useful properties outlined in the previous paragraph. @code{eq} +returns @code{t} when given identical arguments, and @code{equal} +returns @code{t} when given arguments with @code{equal} components. + +Most of the time in Emacs @code{symbols-with-pos-enabled} is +@code{nil}, but the byte compiler and the native compiler bind it to +@code{t} when they run. Typically, symbols with position are created by the byte compiler calling the reader function @code{read-positioning-symbols} @@ -820,7 +835,7 @@ Symbols with Position a symbol with position, ignoring the position. @end defvar -@defun symbol-with-pos-p symbol. +@defun symbol-with-pos-p symbol This function returns @code{t} if @var{symbol} is a symbol with position, @code{nil} otherwise. @end defun diff --git a/src/fns.c b/src/fns.c index bfd19e8c8f2..d47098c8791 100644 --- a/src/fns.c +++ b/src/fns.c @@ -2773,10 +2773,13 @@ internal_equal (Lisp_Object o1, Lisp_Object o2, enum equal_kind equal_kind, /* A symbol with position compares the contained symbol, and is `equal' to the corresponding ordinary symbol. */ - if (SYMBOL_WITH_POS_P (o1)) - o1 = SYMBOL_WITH_POS_SYM (o1); - if (SYMBOL_WITH_POS_P (o2)) - o2 = SYMBOL_WITH_POS_SYM (o2); + if (symbols_with_pos_enabled) + { + if (SYMBOL_WITH_POS_P (o1)) + o1 = SYMBOL_WITH_POS_SYM (o1); + if (SYMBOL_WITH_POS_P (o2)) + o2 = SYMBOL_WITH_POS_SYM (o2); + } if (BASE_EQ (o1, o2)) return true; @@ -2824,8 +2827,8 @@ internal_equal (Lisp_Object o1, Lisp_Object o2, enum equal_kind equal_kind, if (ASIZE (o2) != size) return false; - /* Compare bignums, overlays, markers, and boolvectors - specially, by comparing their values. */ + /* Compare bignums, overlays, markers, boolvectors, and + symbols with position specially, by comparing their values. */ if (BIGNUMP (o1)) return mpz_cmp (*xbignum_val (o1), *xbignum_val (o2)) == 0; if (OVERLAYP (o1)) @@ -2857,6 +2860,13 @@ internal_equal (Lisp_Object o1, Lisp_Object o2, enum equal_kind equal_kind, if (TS_NODEP (o1)) return treesit_node_eq (o1, o2); #endif + if (SYMBOL_WITH_POS_P(o1)) /* symbols_with_pos_enabled is false. */ + return (internal_equal (XSYMBOL_WITH_POS (o1)->sym, + XSYMBOL_WITH_POS (o2)->sym, + equal_kind, depth + 1, ht) + && internal_equal (XSYMBOL_WITH_POS (o1)->pos, + XSYMBOL_WITH_POS (o2)->pos, + equal_kind, depth + 1, ht)); /* Aside from them, only true vectors, char-tables, compiled functions, and fonts (font-spec, font-entity, font-object) diff --git a/test/src/fns-tests.el b/test/src/fns-tests.el index 79ae4393f40..9c09e4f0c33 100644 --- a/test/src/fns-tests.el +++ b/test/src/fns-tests.el @@ -98,6 +98,26 @@ (should-not (equal-including-properties #("a" 0 1 (k "v")) #("b" 0 1 (k "v"))))) +(ert-deftest fns-tests-equal-symbols-with-position () + "Test `eq' and `equal' on symbols with position." + (let ((foo1 (position-symbol 'foo 42)) + (foo2 (position-symbol 'foo 666)) + (foo3 (position-symbol 'foo 42))) + (let (symbols-with-pos-enabled) + (should (eq foo1 foo1)) + (should (equal foo1 foo1)) + (should-not (eq foo1 foo2)) + (should-not (equal foo1 foo2)) + (should-not (eq foo1 foo3)) + (should (equal foo1 foo3))) + (let ((symbols-with-pos-enabled t)) + (should (eq foo1 foo1)) + (should (equal foo1 foo1)) + (should (eq foo1 foo2)) + (should (equal foo1 foo2)) + (should (eq foo1 foo3)) + (should (equal foo1 foo3))))) + (ert-deftest fns-tests-reverse () (should-error (reverse)) (should-error (reverse 1)) -- Alan Mackenzie (Nuremberg, Germany).
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