# Parsing Model Output The `common` library contains a PEG parser implementation suitable for parsing model output. Types with the prefix `common_peg_*` are intended for general use and may have applications beyond parsing model output, such as parsing user-provided regex patterns. Types with the prefix `common_chat_peg_*` are specialized helpers for model output. The parser features: - Partial parsing of streaming input - Built-in JSON parsers - AST generation with semantics via "tagged" nodes ## Example Below is a contrived example demonstrating how to use the PEG parser to parse output from a model that emits arguments as JSON. ```cpp auto parser = build_chat_peg_native_parser([&](common_chat_peg_native_builder & p) { // Build a choice of all available tools auto tool_choice = p.choice(); for (const auto & tool : tools) { const auto & function = tool.at("function"); std::string name = function.at("name"); const auto & schema = function.at("parameters"); auto tool_name = p.json_member("name", "\"" + p.literal(name) + "\""); auto tool_args = p.json_member("arguments", p.schema(p.json(), "tool-" + name + "-schema", schema)); tool_choice |= p.rule("tool-" + name, "{" << tool_name << "," << tool_args << "}"); } // Define the tool call structure: [{tool}] auto tool_call = p.trigger_rule("tool-call", p.sequence({ p.literal("["), tool_choice, p.literal("]") }) ); // Parser accepts content, optionally followed by a tool call return p.sequence({ p.content(p.until("")), p.optional(tool_call), p.end() }); }); ``` For a more complete example, see `test_example_native()` in [tests/test-chat-peg-parser.cpp](tests/test-chat-peg-parser.cpp). ## Parsers/Combinators ### Basic Matchers - **`eps()`** - Matches nothing and always succeeds (epsilon/empty match) - **`start()`** - Matches the start of input (anchor `^`) - **`end()`** - Matches the end of input (anchor `$`) - **`literal(string)`** - Matches an exact literal string - **`any()`** - Matches any single character (`.`) ### Combinators - **`sequence(...)`** - Matches parsers in order; all must succeed - **`choice(...)`** - Matches the first parser that succeeds from alternatives (ordered choice) - **`one_or_more(p)`** - Matches one or more repetitions (`+`) - **`zero_or_more(p)`** - Matches zero or more repetitions (`*`) - **`optional(p)`** - Matches zero or one occurrence (`?`) - **`repeat(p, min, max)`** - Matches between min and max repetitions (use `-1` for unbounded) - **`repeat(p, n)`** - Matches exactly n repetitions ### Lookahead - **`peek(p)`** - Positive lookahead: succeeds if parser succeeds without consuming input (`&`) - **`negate(p)`** - Negative lookahead: succeeds if parser fails without consuming input (`!`) ### Character Classes & Utilities - **`chars(classes, min, max)`** - Matches repetitions of characters from a character class - **`space()`** - Matches zero or more whitespace characters (space, tab, newline) - **`until(delimiter)`** - Matches characters until delimiter is found (delimiter not consumed) - **`until_one_of(delimiters)`** - Matches characters until any delimiter in the list is found - **`rest()`** - Matches everything remaining (`.*`) ### JSON Parsers - **`json()`** - Complete JSON parser (objects, arrays, strings, numbers, booleans, null) - **`json_object()`** - JSON object parser - **`json_array()`** - JSON array parser - **`json_string()`** - JSON string parser - **`json_number()`** - JSON number parser - **`json_bool()`** - JSON boolean parser - **`json_null()`** - JSON null parser - **`json_string_content()`** - JSON string content without surrounding quotes - **`json_member(key, p)`** - JSON object member with specific key and value parser ### Grammar Building - **`ref(name)`** - Creates a lightweight reference to a named rule (for recursive grammars) - **`rule(name, p, trigger)`** - Creates a named rule and returns a reference - **`trigger_rule(name, p)`** - Creates a trigger rule (entry point for lazy grammar generation) - **`schema(p, name, schema, raw)`** - Wraps parser with JSON schema metadata for grammar generation ### AST Control - **`atomic(p)`** - Prevents AST node creation for partial parses - **`tag(tag, p)`** - Creates AST nodes with semantic tags (multiple nodes can share tags) ## GBNF Grammar Generation The PEG parser also acts as a convenient DSL for generating GBNF grammars, with some exceptions. ```cpp data.grammar = build_grammar([&](const common_grammar_builder & builder) { foreach_function(params.tools, [&](const json & fn) { builder.resolve_refs(fn.at("parameters")); }); parser.build_grammar(builder, data.grammar_lazy); }); ``` The notable exception is the `negate(p)` lookahead parser, which cannot be defined as a CFG grammar and therefore does not produce a rule. Its usage should be limited and preferably hidden behind a `schema()` parser. In many cases, `until(delimiter)` or `until_one_of(delimiters)` is a better choice. Another limitation is that the PEG parser requires an unambiguous grammar. In contrast, the `llama-grammar` implementation can support ambiguous grammars, though they are difficult to parse. ### Lazy Grammars During lazy grammar generation, only rules reachable from a `trigger_rule(p)` are emitted in the grammar. All trigger rules are added as alternations in the root rule. It is still necessary to define trigger patterns, as the parser has no interaction with the grammar sampling. ### JSON Schema The `schema(p, name, schema, raw)` parser will use the `json-schema-to-grammar` implementation to generate the grammar instead of the underlying parser. The `raw` option emits a grammar suitable for a raw string instead of a JSON string. In other words, it won't be wrapped in quotes or require escaping quotes. It should only be used when `type == "string"`. The downside is that it can potentially lead to ambiguous grammars. For example, if a user provides the pattern `^.*$`, the following grammar may be generated: ``` root ::= "" .* "" ``` This creates an ambiguous grammar that cannot be parsed by the PEG parser. To help mitigate this, if `.*` is found in the pattern, the grammar from the underlying parser will be emitted instead. ## Common AST Shapes for Chat Parsing Most model output can be placed in one of the following categories: - Content only - Tool calling with arguments emitted as a single JSON object - Tool calling with arguments emitted as separate entities, either XML (Qwen3-Coder, MiniMax M2) or pseudo-function calls (LFM2) To provide broad coverage, [`common/chat-peg-parser.h`](common/chat-peg-parser.h) contains builders and mappers that help create parsers and visitors/extractors for these types. They require parsers to tag nodes to conform to an AST "shape". This normalization makes it easy to extract information and generalize parsing. ### Simple The `common_chat_peg_builder` builds a `simple` parser that supports content-only models with optional reasoning. - **`reasoning(p)`** - Tag node for extracting `reasoning_content` - **`content(p)`** - Tag node for extracting `content` ```cpp build_chat_peg_parser([&](common_chat_peg_parser & p) { return p.sequence({ p.optional("" + p.reasoning(p.until("")) + ""), p.content(p.until("")), p.end() }); }); ``` Use `common_chat_peg_mapper` to extract the content. Note that this is already done for you in `common_chat_peg_parser` when `chat_format == COMMON_CHAT_FORMAT_PEG_SIMPLE`. ```cpp auto result = parser.parse(ctx); common_chat_msg msg; auto mapper = common_chat_peg_mapper(msg); mapper.from_ast(ctx.ast, result); ``` ### Native The `common_chat_peg_native_builder` builds a `native` parser suitable for models that emit tool arguments as a direct JSON object. - **`reasoning(p)`** - Tag node for `reasoning_content` - **`content(p)`** - Tag node for `content` - **`tool(p)`** - Tag entirety of a single tool call - **`tool_open(p)`** - Tag start of a tool call - **`tool_close(p)`** - Tag end of a tool call - **`tool_id(p)`** - Tag the tool call ID (optional) - **`tool_name(p)`** - Tag the tool name - **`tool_args(p)`** - Tag the tool arguments ```cpp build_chat_peg_native_parser([&](common_chat_peg_native_parser & p) { auto get_weather_tool = p.tool(p.sequence({ p.tool_open(p.literal("{")), p.json_member("name", "\"" + p.tool_name(p.literal("get_weather")) + "\""), p.literal(","), p.json_member("arguments", p.tool_args(p.json())), p.tool_close(p.literal("}")) })); return p.sequence({ p.content(p.until("")), p.literal(""), get_weather_tool, p.literal(""), p.end() }); }); ``` ### Constructed The `common_chat_peg_constructed_builder` builds a `constructed` parser suitable for models that emit tool arguments as separate entities, such as XML tags. - **`reasoning(p)`** - Tag node for `reasoning_content` - **`content(p)`** - Tag node for `content` - **`tool(p)`** - Tag entirety of a single tool call - **`tool_open(p)`** - Tag start of a tool call - **`tool_close(p)`** - Tag end of a tool call - **`tool_name(p)`** - Tag the tool name - **`tool_arg(p)`** - Tag a complete tool argument (name + value) - **`tool_arg_open(p)`** - Tag start of a tool argument - **`tool_arg_close(p)`** - Tag end of a tool argument - **`tool_arg_name(p)`** - Tag the argument name - **`tool_arg_string_value(p)`** - Tag string value for the argument - **`tool_arg_json_value(p)`** - Tag JSON value for the argument ```cpp build_chat_peg_constructed_parser([&](common_chat_peg_constructed_builder & p) { auto location_arg = p.tool_arg( p.tool_arg_open(""), p.tool_arg_string_value(p.until("")), p.tool_arg_close(p.literal("")) ); auto get_weather_tool = p.tool(p.sequence({ p.tool_open(""), location_arg, p.tool_close(p.literal("")) })); return p.sequence({ p.content(p.until("")), p.literal(""), get_weather_tool, p.literal(""), p.end() }); }); ```