Gedcom parser in Genes

The intention of this page is to provide some explanation of the gedcom parser, to aid development on and with it.  Currently, the parser is in a state that it works, but some parts are still missing, notably the interface towards applications.  First, some practical issues of testing with the parser will be explained.

Basic testing

The parser is located in the "gedcom" subdirectory of the Genes source code.  You should be able to perform a basic test using the commands:
make clean
make
make test

If everything goes OK, you'll see that some gedcom files are parsed, and that each parse is successful.  Note that the used gedcom files are made by Heiner Eichmann and are an excellent way to test gedcom parsers thoroughly.

Preparing for further testing

The basic testing described above doesn't show anything else than "Parse succeeded", which is nice, but not very interesting.  Some more detailed tests are possible, via the gedcom-parse program that is generated by make test.  

However, since the output that gedcom-parse generates is in UTF-8 format (more on this later), some preparation is necessary to have a full view on it.  Basically, you need a terminal that understands and can display UTF-8 encoded characters, and you need to proper fonts installed to display them.  I'll give some advice on this here, based on the Red Hat 7.1 distribution that I use, with glibc 2.2 and XFree86 4.0.x.  Any other distribution that has the same or newer versions for these components should give the same results.

For the first issue, the UTF-8 capable terminal, the safest bet is to use xterm in its unicode mode (which is supported by the xterm coming with XFree86 4.0.x).  UTF-8 capabilities have only recently been added to gnome-terminal, so probably that is not in your distribution yet (it certainly isn't in Red Hat 7.1).

For the second issue, you'll need the ISO 10646-1 fonts.  These come also with XFree86 4.0.x.

The way to start xterm in unicode mode is then e.g. (put everything on 1 line !):
LANG=en_GB.UTF-8 xterm -bg 'black' -fg 'DarkGrey' -cm -fn '-Misc-Fixed-Medium-R-SemiCondensed--13-120-75-75-C-60-ISO10646-1'
This first sets the LANG variable to a locale that uses UTF-8, and then starts xterm with a proper Unicode font.  Some sample UTF-8 plain text files can be found here .  Just cat them on the command line and see the result.

Testing the parser with debugging

Given the UTF-8 capable terminal, you can now let the gedcom-parse program print the values that it parses.  An example of a command line is (in the gedcom directory):
./gedcom_parse -dg t/ulhc.ged
The -dg option instructs the parser to show its own debug messages  (see ./gedcom_parse -h for the full set of options).  If everything is OK, you'll see the values from the gedcom file, containing a lot of special characters.

For the ANSEL test file (t/ansel.ged), you have to set the environment variable GCONV_PATH to the ansel subdirectory of the gedcom directory:
export GCONV_PATH=./ansel
./gedcom_parse -dg t/ansel.ged
This is because for the ANSEL character set an extra module is needed for the iconv library (more on this later).  But again, this should show a lot of special characters.

Testing the lexers separately

The lexers themselves can be tested separately.  For the 1-byte lexer (i.e. supporting the encodings with 1 byte per characters, such as ASCII, ANSI and ANSEL), the sequence of commands would be:
make clean
make test_1byte
cat t/allged.ged | ./test_1byte

This will show all tokens in the t/allged.ged test file.  With the lexers you have to make sure that you use the proper lexer for each test file.  The test_1byte test program is OK for allged.ged and ansel.ged (the last one again with the environment variable set); for the uhl*.ged files you need the test_hilo test program; for the ulh*.ged files you need the test_lohi program.

This concludes the testing setup.  Now for some explanations...

Structure of the parser

I see the structure of a program using the gedcom parser as follows:

Gedcom parsing scheme


TO BE COMPLETED...