Mercurial > emacs
annotate src/regex.c @ 5842:e9cd26c4e4ff
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| author | Jim Meyering <jim@meyering.net> |
|---|---|
| date | Tue, 08 Feb 1994 04:01:10 +0000 |
| parents | 2f86788715e5 |
| children | ab6eb517d144 |
| rev | line source |
|---|---|
| 1155 | 1 /* Extended regular expression matching and search library, |
| 2454 | 2 version 0.12. |
| 1155 | 3 (Implements POSIX draft P10003.2/D11.2, except for |
| 4 internationalization features.) | |
| 5 | |
| 1738 | 6 Copyright (C) 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| 1155 | 7 |
| 8 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify | |
| 9 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | |
| 10 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) | |
| 11 any later version. | |
| 12 | |
| 13 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, | |
| 14 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of | |
| 15 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the | |
| 16 GNU General Public License for more details. | |
| 17 | |
| 18 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License | |
| 19 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software | |
| 20 Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ | |
| 21 | |
| 22 /* AIX requires this to be the first thing in the file. */ | |
| 23 #if defined (_AIX) && !defined (REGEX_MALLOC) | |
| 24 #pragma alloca | |
| 25 #endif | |
| 26 | |
| 27 #define _GNU_SOURCE | |
| 28 | |
| 4846 | 29 #ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H |
| 30 #if defined (CONFIG_BROKETS) | |
| 31 /* We use <config.h> instead of "config.h" so that a compilation | |
| 32 using -I. -I$srcdir will use ./config.h rather than $srcdir/config.h | |
| 33 (which it would do because it found this file in $srcdir). */ | |
| 34 #include <config.h> | |
| 35 #else | |
| 36 #include "config.h" | |
| 37 #endif | |
| 38 #endif | |
| 39 | |
| 1155 | 40 /* We need this for `regex.h', and perhaps for the Emacs include files. */ |
| 41 #include <sys/types.h> | |
| 42 | |
| 1669 | 43 #ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H |
|
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44 #include "config.h" |
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45 #endif |
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46 |
| 1155 | 47 /* The `emacs' switch turns on certain matching commands |
| 48 that make sense only in Emacs. */ | |
| 49 #ifdef emacs | |
| 50 | |
| 51 #include "lisp.h" | |
| 52 #include "buffer.h" | |
| 53 #include "syntax.h" | |
| 54 | |
| 55 /* Emacs uses `NULL' as a predicate. */ | |
| 56 #undef NULL | |
| 57 | |
| 58 #else /* not emacs */ | |
| 59 | |
| 3766 | 60 #ifdef STDC_HEADERS |
| 61 #include <stdlib.h> | |
| 62 #else | |
| 63 char *malloc (); | |
| 64 char *realloc (); | |
| 65 #endif | |
| 66 | |
| 67 | |
| 1155 | 68 /* We used to test for `BSTRING' here, but only GCC and Emacs define |
| 69 `BSTRING', as far as I know, and neither of them use this code. */ | |
|
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70 #if HAVE_STRING_H || STDC_HEADERS |
| 1155 | 71 #include <string.h> |
| 1637 | 72 #ifndef bcmp |
| 1155 | 73 #define bcmp(s1, s2, n) memcmp ((s1), (s2), (n)) |
| 1637 | 74 #endif |
| 75 #ifndef bcopy | |
| 1155 | 76 #define bcopy(s, d, n) memcpy ((d), (s), (n)) |
| 1637 | 77 #endif |
| 78 #ifndef bzero | |
| 1155 | 79 #define bzero(s, n) memset ((s), 0, (n)) |
| 1637 | 80 #endif |
| 1155 | 81 #else |
| 82 #include <strings.h> | |
| 83 #endif | |
| 84 | |
| 85 /* Define the syntax stuff for \<, \>, etc. */ | |
| 86 | |
| 87 /* This must be nonzero for the wordchar and notwordchar pattern | |
| 88 commands in re_match_2. */ | |
| 89 #ifndef Sword | |
| 90 #define Sword 1 | |
| 91 #endif | |
| 92 | |
| 93 #ifdef SYNTAX_TABLE | |
| 94 | |
| 95 extern char *re_syntax_table; | |
| 96 | |
| 97 #else /* not SYNTAX_TABLE */ | |
| 98 | |
| 99 /* How many characters in the character set. */ | |
| 100 #define CHAR_SET_SIZE 256 | |
| 101 | |
| 102 static char re_syntax_table[CHAR_SET_SIZE]; | |
| 103 | |
| 104 static void | |
| 105 init_syntax_once () | |
| 106 { | |
| 107 register int c; | |
| 108 static int done = 0; | |
| 109 | |
| 110 if (done) | |
| 111 return; | |
| 112 | |
| 113 bzero (re_syntax_table, sizeof re_syntax_table); | |
| 114 | |
| 115 for (c = 'a'; c <= 'z'; c++) | |
| 116 re_syntax_table[c] = Sword; | |
| 117 | |
| 118 for (c = 'A'; c <= 'Z'; c++) | |
| 119 re_syntax_table[c] = Sword; | |
| 120 | |
| 121 for (c = '0'; c <= '9'; c++) | |
| 122 re_syntax_table[c] = Sword; | |
| 123 | |
| 124 re_syntax_table['_'] = Sword; | |
| 125 | |
| 126 done = 1; | |
| 127 } | |
| 128 | |
| 129 #endif /* not SYNTAX_TABLE */ | |
| 130 | |
| 131 #define SYNTAX(c) re_syntax_table[c] | |
| 132 | |
| 133 #endif /* not emacs */ | |
| 134 | |
| 135 /* Get the interface, including the syntax bits. */ | |
| 136 #include "regex.h" | |
| 137 | |
| 138 /* isalpha etc. are used for the character classes. */ | |
| 139 #include <ctype.h> | |
| 1668 | 140 |
| 2465 | 141 /* Jim Meyering writes: |
| 142 | |
| 143 "... Some ctype macros are valid only for character codes that | |
| 144 isascii says are ASCII (SGI's IRIX-4.0.5 is one such system --when | |
| 145 using /bin/cc or gcc but without giving an ansi option). So, all | |
| 146 ctype uses should be through macros like ISPRINT... If | |
| 147 STDC_HEADERS is defined, then autoconf has verified that the ctype | |
| 148 macros don't need to be guarded with references to isascii. ... | |
| 149 Defining isascii to 1 should let any compiler worth its salt | |
| 150 eliminate the && through constant folding." */ | |
| 5076 | 151 |
| 152 #if defined (STDC_HEADERS) || (!defined (isascii) && !defined (HAVE_ISASCII)) | |
| 153 #define ISASCII(c) 1 | |
| 154 #else | |
| 155 #define ISASCII(c) isascii(c) | |
| 1668 | 156 #endif |
| 157 | |
| 158 #ifdef isblank | |
| 5076 | 159 #define ISBLANK(c) (ISASCII (c) && isblank (c)) |
| 1668 | 160 #else |
| 161 #define ISBLANK(c) ((c) == ' ' || (c) == '\t') | |
| 1155 | 162 #endif |
| 1668 | 163 #ifdef isgraph |
| 5076 | 164 #define ISGRAPH(c) (ISASCII (c) && isgraph (c)) |
| 1668 | 165 #else |
| 5076 | 166 #define ISGRAPH(c) (ISASCII (c) && isprint (c) && !isspace (c)) |
| 1155 | 167 #endif |
| 168 | |
| 5076 | 169 #define ISPRINT(c) (ISASCII (c) && isprint (c)) |
| 170 #define ISDIGIT(c) (ISASCII (c) && isdigit (c)) | |
| 171 #define ISALNUM(c) (ISASCII (c) && isalnum (c)) | |
| 172 #define ISALPHA(c) (ISASCII (c) && isalpha (c)) | |
| 173 #define ISCNTRL(c) (ISASCII (c) && iscntrl (c)) | |
| 174 #define ISLOWER(c) (ISASCII (c) && islower (c)) | |
| 175 #define ISPUNCT(c) (ISASCII (c) && ispunct (c)) | |
| 176 #define ISSPACE(c) (ISASCII (c) && isspace (c)) | |
| 177 #define ISUPPER(c) (ISASCII (c) && isupper (c)) | |
| 178 #define ISXDIGIT(c) (ISASCII (c) && isxdigit (c)) | |
| 1668 | 179 |
| 1155 | 180 #ifndef NULL |
| 181 #define NULL 0 | |
| 182 #endif | |
| 183 | |
| 184 /* We remove any previous definition of `SIGN_EXTEND_CHAR', | |
| 185 since ours (we hope) works properly with all combinations of | |
| 186 machines, compilers, `char' and `unsigned char' argument types. | |
| 187 (Per Bothner suggested the basic approach.) */ | |
| 188 #undef SIGN_EXTEND_CHAR | |
| 189 #if __STDC__ | |
| 190 #define SIGN_EXTEND_CHAR(c) ((signed char) (c)) | |
| 1637 | 191 #else /* not __STDC__ */ |
| 1155 | 192 /* As in Harbison and Steele. */ |
| 193 #define SIGN_EXTEND_CHAR(c) ((((unsigned char) (c)) ^ 128) - 128) | |
| 194 #endif | |
| 195 | |
| 196 /* Should we use malloc or alloca? If REGEX_MALLOC is not defined, we | |
| 197 use `alloca' instead of `malloc'. This is because using malloc in | |
| 198 re_search* or re_match* could cause memory leaks when C-g is used in | |
| 199 Emacs; also, malloc is slower and causes storage fragmentation. On | |
| 200 the other hand, malloc is more portable, and easier to debug. | |
| 201 | |
| 202 Because we sometimes use alloca, some routines have to be macros, | |
| 203 not functions -- `alloca'-allocated space disappears at the end of the | |
| 204 function it is called in. */ | |
| 205 | |
| 206 #ifdef REGEX_MALLOC | |
| 207 | |
| 208 #define REGEX_ALLOCATE malloc | |
| 209 #define REGEX_REALLOCATE(source, osize, nsize) realloc (source, nsize) | |
| 210 | |
| 211 #else /* not REGEX_MALLOC */ | |
| 212 | |
| 213 /* Emacs already defines alloca, sometimes. */ | |
| 214 #ifndef alloca | |
| 215 | |
| 216 /* Make alloca work the best possible way. */ | |
| 217 #ifdef __GNUC__ | |
| 218 #define alloca __builtin_alloca | |
| 219 #else /* not __GNUC__ */ | |
| 220 #if HAVE_ALLOCA_H | |
| 221 #include <alloca.h> | |
| 222 #else /* not __GNUC__ or HAVE_ALLOCA_H */ | |
| 223 #ifndef _AIX /* Already did AIX, up at the top. */ | |
| 224 char *alloca (); | |
| 225 #endif /* not _AIX */ | |
| 226 #endif /* not HAVE_ALLOCA_H */ | |
| 227 #endif /* not __GNUC__ */ | |
| 228 | |
| 229 #endif /* not alloca */ | |
| 230 | |
| 231 #define REGEX_ALLOCATE alloca | |
| 232 | |
| 233 /* Assumes a `char *destination' variable. */ | |
| 234 #define REGEX_REALLOCATE(source, osize, nsize) \ | |
| 235 (destination = (char *) alloca (nsize), \ | |
| 236 bcopy (source, destination, osize), \ | |
| 237 destination) | |
| 238 | |
| 239 #endif /* not REGEX_MALLOC */ | |
| 240 | |
| 241 | |
| 242 /* True if `size1' is non-NULL and PTR is pointing anywhere inside | |
| 243 `string1' or just past its end. This works if PTR is NULL, which is | |
| 244 a good thing. */ | |
| 245 #define FIRST_STRING_P(ptr) \ | |
| 246 (size1 && string1 <= (ptr) && (ptr) <= string1 + size1) | |
| 247 | |
| 248 /* (Re)Allocate N items of type T using malloc, or fail. */ | |
| 249 #define TALLOC(n, t) ((t *) malloc ((n) * sizeof (t))) | |
| 250 #define RETALLOC(addr, n, t) ((addr) = (t *) realloc (addr, (n) * sizeof (t))) | |
| 2949 | 251 #define RETALLOC_IF(addr, n, t) \ |
| 252 if (addr) RETALLOC((addr), (n), t); else (addr) = TALLOC ((n), t) | |
| 1155 | 253 #define REGEX_TALLOC(n, t) ((t *) REGEX_ALLOCATE ((n) * sizeof (t))) |
| 254 | |
| 255 #define BYTEWIDTH 8 /* In bits. */ | |
| 256 | |
| 257 #define STREQ(s1, s2) ((strcmp (s1, s2) == 0)) | |
| 258 | |
| 5841 | 259 #undef MAX |
| 260 #undef MIN | |
| 1155 | 261 #define MAX(a, b) ((a) > (b) ? (a) : (b)) |
| 262 #define MIN(a, b) ((a) < (b) ? (a) : (b)) | |
| 263 | |
| 264 typedef char boolean; | |
| 265 #define false 0 | |
| 266 #define true 1 | |
| 267 | |
| 268 /* These are the command codes that appear in compiled regular | |
| 269 expressions. Some opcodes are followed by argument bytes. A | |
| 270 command code can specify any interpretation whatsoever for its | |
| 271 arguments. Zero bytes may appear in the compiled regular expression. | |
| 272 | |
| 273 The value of `exactn' is needed in search.c (search_buffer) in Emacs. | |
| 274 So regex.h defines a symbol `RE_EXACTN_VALUE' to be 1; the value of | |
| 275 `exactn' we use here must also be 1. */ | |
| 276 | |
| 277 typedef enum | |
| 278 { | |
| 279 no_op = 0, | |
| 280 | |
| 281 /* Followed by one byte giving n, then by n literal bytes. */ | |
| 282 exactn = 1, | |
| 283 | |
| 284 /* Matches any (more or less) character. */ | |
| 285 anychar, | |
| 286 | |
| 287 /* Matches any one char belonging to specified set. First | |
| 288 following byte is number of bitmap bytes. Then come bytes | |
| 289 for a bitmap saying which chars are in. Bits in each byte | |
| 290 are ordered low-bit-first. A character is in the set if its | |
| 291 bit is 1. A character too large to have a bit in the map is | |
| 292 automatically not in the set. */ | |
| 293 charset, | |
| 294 | |
| 295 /* Same parameters as charset, but match any character that is | |
| 296 not one of those specified. */ | |
| 297 charset_not, | |
| 298 | |
| 299 /* Start remembering the text that is matched, for storing in a | |
| 300 register. Followed by one byte with the register number, in | |
| 301 the range 0 to one less than the pattern buffer's re_nsub | |
| 302 field. Then followed by one byte with the number of groups | |
| 303 inner to this one. (This last has to be part of the | |
| 304 start_memory only because we need it in the on_failure_jump | |
| 305 of re_match_2.) */ | |
| 306 start_memory, | |
| 307 | |
| 308 /* Stop remembering the text that is matched and store it in a | |
| 309 memory register. Followed by one byte with the register | |
| 310 number, in the range 0 to one less than `re_nsub' in the | |
| 311 pattern buffer, and one byte with the number of inner groups, | |
| 312 just like `start_memory'. (We need the number of inner | |
| 313 groups here because we don't have any easy way of finding the | |
| 314 corresponding start_memory when we're at a stop_memory.) */ | |
| 315 stop_memory, | |
| 316 | |
| 317 /* Match a duplicate of something remembered. Followed by one | |
| 318 byte containing the register number. */ | |
| 319 duplicate, | |
| 320 | |
| 321 /* Fail unless at beginning of line. */ | |
| 322 begline, | |
| 323 | |
| 324 /* Fail unless at end of line. */ | |
| 325 endline, | |
| 326 | |
| 327 /* Succeeds if at beginning of buffer (if emacs) or at beginning | |
| 328 of string to be matched (if not). */ | |
| 329 begbuf, | |
| 330 | |
| 331 /* Analogously, for end of buffer/string. */ | |
| 332 endbuf, | |
| 333 | |
| 334 /* Followed by two byte relative address to which to jump. */ | |
| 335 jump, | |
| 336 | |
| 337 /* Same as jump, but marks the end of an alternative. */ | |
| 338 jump_past_alt, | |
| 339 | |
| 340 /* Followed by two-byte relative address of place to resume at | |
| 341 in case of failure. */ | |
| 342 on_failure_jump, | |
| 343 | |
| 344 /* Like on_failure_jump, but pushes a placeholder instead of the | |
| 345 current string position when executed. */ | |
| 346 on_failure_keep_string_jump, | |
| 347 | |
| 348 /* Throw away latest failure point and then jump to following | |
| 349 two-byte relative address. */ | |
| 350 pop_failure_jump, | |
| 351 | |
| 352 /* Change to pop_failure_jump if know won't have to backtrack to | |
| 353 match; otherwise change to jump. This is used to jump | |
| 354 back to the beginning of a repeat. If what follows this jump | |
| 355 clearly won't match what the repeat does, such that we can be | |
| 356 sure that there is no use backtracking out of repetitions | |
| 357 already matched, then we change it to a pop_failure_jump. | |
| 358 Followed by two-byte address. */ | |
| 359 maybe_pop_jump, | |
| 360 | |
| 361 /* Jump to following two-byte address, and push a dummy failure | |
| 362 point. This failure point will be thrown away if an attempt | |
| 363 is made to use it for a failure. A `+' construct makes this | |
| 364 before the first repeat. Also used as an intermediary kind | |
| 365 of jump when compiling an alternative. */ | |
| 366 dummy_failure_jump, | |
| 367 | |
| 368 /* Push a dummy failure point and continue. Used at the end of | |
| 369 alternatives. */ | |
| 370 push_dummy_failure, | |
| 371 | |
| 372 /* Followed by two-byte relative address and two-byte number n. | |
| 373 After matching N times, jump to the address upon failure. */ | |
| 374 succeed_n, | |
| 375 | |
| 376 /* Followed by two-byte relative address, and two-byte number n. | |
| 377 Jump to the address N times, then fail. */ | |
| 378 jump_n, | |
| 379 | |
| 380 /* Set the following two-byte relative address to the | |
| 381 subsequent two-byte number. The address *includes* the two | |
| 382 bytes of number. */ | |
| 383 set_number_at, | |
| 384 | |
| 385 wordchar, /* Matches any word-constituent character. */ | |
| 386 notwordchar, /* Matches any char that is not a word-constituent. */ | |
| 387 | |
| 388 wordbeg, /* Succeeds if at word beginning. */ | |
| 389 wordend, /* Succeeds if at word end. */ | |
| 390 | |
| 391 wordbound, /* Succeeds if at a word boundary. */ | |
| 392 notwordbound /* Succeeds if not at a word boundary. */ | |
| 393 | |
| 394 #ifdef emacs | |
| 395 ,before_dot, /* Succeeds if before point. */ | |
| 396 at_dot, /* Succeeds if at point. */ | |
| 397 after_dot, /* Succeeds if after point. */ | |
| 398 | |
| 399 /* Matches any character whose syntax is specified. Followed by | |
| 400 a byte which contains a syntax code, e.g., Sword. */ | |
| 401 syntaxspec, | |
| 402 | |
| 403 /* Matches any character whose syntax is not that specified. */ | |
| 404 notsyntaxspec | |
| 405 #endif /* emacs */ | |
| 406 } re_opcode_t; | |
| 407 | |
| 408 /* Common operations on the compiled pattern. */ | |
| 409 | |
| 410 /* Store NUMBER in two contiguous bytes starting at DESTINATION. */ | |
| 411 | |
| 412 #define STORE_NUMBER(destination, number) \ | |
| 413 do { \ | |
| 414 (destination)[0] = (number) & 0377; \ | |
| 415 (destination)[1] = (number) >> 8; \ | |
| 416 } while (0) | |
| 417 | |
| 418 /* Same as STORE_NUMBER, except increment DESTINATION to | |
| 419 the byte after where the number is stored. Therefore, DESTINATION | |
| 420 must be an lvalue. */ | |
| 421 | |
| 422 #define STORE_NUMBER_AND_INCR(destination, number) \ | |
| 423 do { \ | |
| 424 STORE_NUMBER (destination, number); \ | |
| 425 (destination) += 2; \ | |
| 426 } while (0) | |
| 427 | |
| 428 /* Put into DESTINATION a number stored in two contiguous bytes starting | |
| 429 at SOURCE. */ | |
| 430 | |
| 431 #define EXTRACT_NUMBER(destination, source) \ | |
| 432 do { \ | |
| 433 (destination) = *(source) & 0377; \ | |
| 434 (destination) += SIGN_EXTEND_CHAR (*((source) + 1)) << 8; \ | |
| 435 } while (0) | |
| 436 | |
| 437 #ifdef DEBUG | |
| 438 static void | |
| 439 extract_number (dest, source) | |
| 440 int *dest; | |
| 441 unsigned char *source; | |
| 442 { | |
| 443 int temp = SIGN_EXTEND_CHAR (*(source + 1)); | |
| 444 *dest = *source & 0377; | |
| 445 *dest += temp << 8; | |
| 446 } | |
| 447 | |
| 448 #ifndef EXTRACT_MACROS /* To debug the macros. */ | |
| 449 #undef EXTRACT_NUMBER | |
| 450 #define EXTRACT_NUMBER(dest, src) extract_number (&dest, src) | |
| 451 #endif /* not EXTRACT_MACROS */ | |
| 452 | |
| 453 #endif /* DEBUG */ | |
| 454 | |
| 455 /* Same as EXTRACT_NUMBER, except increment SOURCE to after the number. | |
| 456 SOURCE must be an lvalue. */ | |
| 457 | |
| 458 #define EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR(destination, source) \ | |
| 459 do { \ | |
| 460 EXTRACT_NUMBER (destination, source); \ | |
| 461 (source) += 2; \ | |
| 462 } while (0) | |
| 463 | |
| 464 #ifdef DEBUG | |
| 465 static void | |
| 466 extract_number_and_incr (destination, source) | |
| 467 int *destination; | |
| 468 unsigned char **source; | |
| 469 { | |
| 470 extract_number (destination, *source); | |
| 471 *source += 2; | |
| 472 } | |
| 473 | |
| 474 #ifndef EXTRACT_MACROS | |
| 475 #undef EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR | |
| 476 #define EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR(dest, src) \ | |
| 477 extract_number_and_incr (&dest, &src) | |
| 478 #endif /* not EXTRACT_MACROS */ | |
| 479 | |
| 480 #endif /* DEBUG */ | |
| 481 | |
| 482 /* If DEBUG is defined, Regex prints many voluminous messages about what | |
| 483 it is doing (if the variable `debug' is nonzero). If linked with the | |
| 484 main program in `iregex.c', you can enter patterns and strings | |
| 485 interactively. And if linked with the main program in `main.c' and | |
| 486 the other test files, you can run the already-written tests. */ | |
| 487 | |
| 488 #ifdef DEBUG | |
| 489 | |
| 490 /* We use standard I/O for debugging. */ | |
| 491 #include <stdio.h> | |
| 492 | |
| 493 /* It is useful to test things that ``must'' be true when debugging. */ | |
| 494 #include <assert.h> | |
| 495 | |
| 496 static int debug = 0; | |
| 497 | |
| 498 #define DEBUG_STATEMENT(e) e | |
| 499 #define DEBUG_PRINT1(x) if (debug) printf (x) | |
| 500 #define DEBUG_PRINT2(x1, x2) if (debug) printf (x1, x2) | |
| 501 #define DEBUG_PRINT3(x1, x2, x3) if (debug) printf (x1, x2, x3) | |
| 1637 | 502 #define DEBUG_PRINT4(x1, x2, x3, x4) if (debug) printf (x1, x2, x3, x4) |
| 1155 | 503 #define DEBUG_PRINT_COMPILED_PATTERN(p, s, e) \ |
| 504 if (debug) print_partial_compiled_pattern (s, e) | |
| 505 #define DEBUG_PRINT_DOUBLE_STRING(w, s1, sz1, s2, sz2) \ | |
| 506 if (debug) print_double_string (w, s1, sz1, s2, sz2) | |
| 507 | |
| 508 | |
| 509 extern void printchar (); | |
| 510 | |
| 511 /* Print the fastmap in human-readable form. */ | |
| 512 | |
| 513 void | |
| 514 print_fastmap (fastmap) | |
| 515 char *fastmap; | |
| 516 { | |
| 517 unsigned was_a_range = 0; | |
| 518 unsigned i = 0; | |
| 519 | |
| 520 while (i < (1 << BYTEWIDTH)) | |
| 521 { | |
| 522 if (fastmap[i++]) | |
| 523 { | |
| 524 was_a_range = 0; | |
| 525 printchar (i - 1); | |
| 526 while (i < (1 << BYTEWIDTH) && fastmap[i]) | |
| 527 { | |
| 528 was_a_range = 1; | |
| 529 i++; | |
| 530 } | |
| 531 if (was_a_range) | |
| 532 { | |
| 533 printf ("-"); | |
| 534 printchar (i - 1); | |
| 535 } | |
| 536 } | |
| 537 } | |
| 538 putchar ('\n'); | |
| 539 } | |
| 540 | |
| 541 | |
| 542 /* Print a compiled pattern string in human-readable form, starting at | |
| 543 the START pointer into it and ending just before the pointer END. */ | |
| 544 | |
| 545 void | |
| 546 print_partial_compiled_pattern (start, end) | |
| 547 unsigned char *start; | |
| 548 unsigned char *end; | |
| 549 { | |
| 550 int mcnt, mcnt2; | |
| 551 unsigned char *p = start; | |
| 552 unsigned char *pend = end; | |
| 553 | |
| 554 if (start == NULL) | |
| 555 { | |
| 556 printf ("(null)\n"); | |
| 557 return; | |
| 558 } | |
| 559 | |
| 560 /* Loop over pattern commands. */ | |
| 561 while (p < pend) | |
| 562 { | |
| 2615 | 563 printf ("%d:\t", p - start); |
| 564 | |
| 1155 | 565 switch ((re_opcode_t) *p++) |
| 566 { | |
| 567 case no_op: | |
| 568 printf ("/no_op"); | |
| 569 break; | |
| 570 | |
| 571 case exactn: | |
| 572 mcnt = *p++; | |
| 573 printf ("/exactn/%d", mcnt); | |
| 574 do | |
| 575 { | |
| 576 putchar ('/'); | |
| 577 printchar (*p++); | |
| 578 } | |
| 579 while (--mcnt); | |
| 580 break; | |
| 581 | |
| 582 case start_memory: | |
| 583 mcnt = *p++; | |
| 584 printf ("/start_memory/%d/%d", mcnt, *p++); | |
| 585 break; | |
| 586 | |
| 587 case stop_memory: | |
| 588 mcnt = *p++; | |
| 589 printf ("/stop_memory/%d/%d", mcnt, *p++); | |
| 590 break; | |
| 591 | |
| 592 case duplicate: | |
| 593 printf ("/duplicate/%d", *p++); | |
| 594 break; | |
| 595 | |
| 596 case anychar: | |
| 597 printf ("/anychar"); | |
| 598 break; | |
| 599 | |
| 600 case charset: | |
| 601 case charset_not: | |
| 602 { | |
| 2615 | 603 register int c, last = -100; |
| 604 register int in_range = 0; | |
| 605 | |
| 606 printf ("/charset [%s", | |
| 607 (re_opcode_t) *(p - 1) == charset_not ? "^" : ""); | |
| 1155 | 608 |
| 609 assert (p + *p < pend); | |
| 610 | |
| 2615 | 611 for (c = 0; c < 256; c++) |
| 612 if (c / 8 < *p | |
| 613 && (p[1 + (c/8)] & (1 << (c % 8)))) | |
| 614 { | |
| 615 /* Are we starting a range? */ | |
| 616 if (last + 1 == c && ! in_range) | |
| 617 { | |
| 618 putchar ('-'); | |
| 619 in_range = 1; | |
| 620 } | |
| 621 /* Have we broken a range? */ | |
| 622 else if (last + 1 != c && in_range) | |
| 1155 | 623 { |
| 2615 | 624 printchar (last); |
| 625 in_range = 0; | |
| 626 } | |
| 1155 | 627 |
| 2615 | 628 if (! in_range) |
| 629 printchar (c); | |
| 630 | |
| 631 last = c; | |
| 1155 | 632 } |
| 2615 | 633 |
| 634 if (in_range) | |
| 635 printchar (last); | |
| 636 | |
| 637 putchar (']'); | |
| 638 | |
| 1155 | 639 p += 1 + *p; |
| 640 } | |
| 2615 | 641 break; |
| 1155 | 642 |
| 643 case begline: | |
| 644 printf ("/begline"); | |
| 645 break; | |
| 646 | |
| 647 case endline: | |
| 648 printf ("/endline"); | |
| 649 break; | |
| 650 | |
| 651 case on_failure_jump: | |
| 652 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt, &p); | |
| 2615 | 653 printf ("/on_failure_jump to %d", p + mcnt - start); |
| 1155 | 654 break; |
| 655 | |
| 656 case on_failure_keep_string_jump: | |
| 657 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt, &p); | |
| 2615 | 658 printf ("/on_failure_keep_string_jump to %d", p + mcnt - start); |
| 1155 | 659 break; |
| 660 | |
| 661 case dummy_failure_jump: | |
| 662 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt, &p); | |
| 2615 | 663 printf ("/dummy_failure_jump to %d", p + mcnt - start); |
| 1155 | 664 break; |
| 665 | |
| 666 case push_dummy_failure: | |
| 667 printf ("/push_dummy_failure"); | |
| 668 break; | |
| 669 | |
| 670 case maybe_pop_jump: | |
| 671 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt, &p); | |
| 2615 | 672 printf ("/maybe_pop_jump to %d", p + mcnt - start); |
| 1155 | 673 break; |
| 674 | |
| 675 case pop_failure_jump: | |
| 676 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt, &p); | |
| 2615 | 677 printf ("/pop_failure_jump to %d", p + mcnt - start); |
| 1155 | 678 break; |
| 679 | |
| 680 case jump_past_alt: | |
| 681 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt, &p); | |
| 2615 | 682 printf ("/jump_past_alt to %d", p + mcnt - start); |
| 1155 | 683 break; |
| 684 | |
| 685 case jump: | |
| 686 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt, &p); | |
| 2615 | 687 printf ("/jump to %d", p + mcnt - start); |
| 1155 | 688 break; |
| 689 | |
| 690 case succeed_n: | |
| 691 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt, &p); | |
| 692 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt2, &p); | |
| 2615 | 693 printf ("/succeed_n to %d, %d times", p + mcnt - start, mcnt2); |
| 1155 | 694 break; |
| 695 | |
| 696 case jump_n: | |
| 697 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt, &p); | |
| 698 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt2, &p); | |
| 2615 | 699 printf ("/jump_n to %d, %d times", p + mcnt - start, mcnt2); |
| 1155 | 700 break; |
| 701 | |
| 702 case set_number_at: | |
| 703 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt, &p); | |
| 704 extract_number_and_incr (&mcnt2, &p); | |
| 2615 | 705 printf ("/set_number_at location %d to %d", p + mcnt - start, mcnt2); |
| 1155 | 706 break; |
| 707 | |
| 708 case wordbound: | |
| 709 printf ("/wordbound"); | |
| 710 break; | |
| 711 | |
| 712 case notwordbound: | |
| 713 printf ("/notwordbound"); | |
| 714 break; | |
| 715 | |
| 716 case wordbeg: | |
| 717 printf ("/wordbeg"); | |
| 718 break; | |
| 719 | |
| 720 case wordend: | |
| 721 printf ("/wordend"); | |
| 722 | |
| 723 #ifdef emacs | |
| 724 case before_dot: | |
| 725 printf ("/before_dot"); | |
| 726 break; | |
| 727 | |
| 728 case at_dot: | |
| 729 printf ("/at_dot"); | |
| 730 break; | |
| 731 | |
| 732 case after_dot: | |
| 733 printf ("/after_dot"); | |
| 734 break; | |
| 735 | |
| 736 case syntaxspec: | |
| 737 printf ("/syntaxspec"); | |
| 738 mcnt = *p++; | |
| 739 printf ("/%d", mcnt); | |
| 740 break; | |
| 741 | |
| 742 case notsyntaxspec: | |
| 743 printf ("/notsyntaxspec"); | |
| 744 mcnt = *p++; | |
| 745 printf ("/%d", mcnt); | |
| 746 break; | |
| 747 #endif /* emacs */ | |
| 748 | |
| 749 case wordchar: | |
| 750 printf ("/wordchar"); | |
| 751 break; | |
| 752 | |
| 753 case notwordchar: | |
| 754 printf ("/notwordchar"); | |
| 755 break; | |
| 756 | |
| 757 case begbuf: | |
| 758 printf ("/begbuf"); | |
| 759 break; | |
| 760 | |
| 761 case endbuf: | |
| 762 printf ("/endbuf"); | |
| 763 break; | |
| 764 | |
| 765 default: | |
| 766 printf ("?%d", *(p-1)); | |
| 767 } | |
| 2615 | 768 |
| 769 putchar ('\n'); | |
| 1155 | 770 } |
| 2615 | 771 |
| 772 printf ("%d:\tend of pattern.\n", p - start); | |
| 1155 | 773 } |
| 774 | |
| 775 | |
| 776 void | |
| 777 print_compiled_pattern (bufp) | |
| 778 struct re_pattern_buffer *bufp; | |
| 779 { | |
| 780 unsigned char *buffer = bufp->buffer; | |
| 781 | |
| 782 print_partial_compiled_pattern (buffer, buffer + bufp->used); | |
| 783 printf ("%d bytes used/%d bytes allocated.\n", bufp->used, bufp->allocated); | |
| 784 | |
| 785 if (bufp->fastmap_accurate && bufp->fastmap) | |
| 786 { | |
| 787 printf ("fastmap: "); | |
| 788 print_fastmap (bufp->fastmap); | |
| 789 } | |
| 790 | |
| 791 printf ("re_nsub: %d\t", bufp->re_nsub); | |
| 792 printf ("regs_alloc: %d\t", bufp->regs_allocated); | |
| 793 printf ("can_be_null: %d\t", bufp->can_be_null); | |
| 794 printf ("newline_anchor: %d\n", bufp->newline_anchor); | |
| 795 printf ("no_sub: %d\t", bufp->no_sub); | |
| 796 printf ("not_bol: %d\t", bufp->not_bol); | |
| 797 printf ("not_eol: %d\t", bufp->not_eol); | |
| 798 printf ("syntax: %d\n", bufp->syntax); | |
| 799 /* Perhaps we should print the translate table? */ | |
| 800 } | |
| 801 | |
| 802 | |
| 803 void | |
| 804 print_double_string (where, string1, size1, string2, size2) | |
| 805 const char *where; | |
| 806 const char *string1; | |
| 807 const char *string2; | |
| 808 int size1; | |
| 809 int size2; | |
| 810 { | |
| 811 unsigned this_char; | |
| 812 | |
| 813 if (where == NULL) | |
| 814 printf ("(null)"); | |
| 815 else | |
| 816 { | |
| 817 if (FIRST_STRING_P (where)) | |
| 818 { | |
| 819 for (this_char = where - string1; this_char < size1; this_char++) | |
| 820 printchar (string1[this_char]); | |
| 821 | |
| 822 where = string2; | |
| 823 } | |
| 824 | |
| 825 for (this_char = where - string2; this_char < size2; this_char++) | |
| 826 printchar (string2[this_char]); | |
| 827 } | |
| 828 } | |
| 829 | |
| 830 #else /* not DEBUG */ | |
| 831 | |
| 832 #undef assert | |
| 833 #define assert(e) | |
| 834 | |
| 835 #define DEBUG_STATEMENT(e) | |
| 836 #define DEBUG_PRINT1(x) | |
| 837 #define DEBUG_PRINT2(x1, x2) | |
| 838 #define DEBUG_PRINT3(x1, x2, x3) | |
| 1637 | 839 #define DEBUG_PRINT4(x1, x2, x3, x4) |
| 1155 | 840 #define DEBUG_PRINT_COMPILED_PATTERN(p, s, e) |
| 841 #define DEBUG_PRINT_DOUBLE_STRING(w, s1, sz1, s2, sz2) | |
| 842 | |
| 843 #endif /* not DEBUG */ | |
| 844 | |
| 845 /* Set by `re_set_syntax' to the current regexp syntax to recognize. Can | |
| 846 also be assigned to arbitrarily: each pattern buffer stores its own | |
| 847 syntax, so it can be changed between regex compilations. */ | |
| 848 reg_syntax_t re_syntax_options = RE_SYNTAX_EMACS; | |
| 849 | |
| 850 | |
| 851 /* Specify the precise syntax of regexps for compilation. This provides | |
| 852 for compatibility for various utilities which historically have | |
| 853 different, incompatible syntaxes. | |
| 854 | |
| 855 The argument SYNTAX is a bit mask comprised of the various bits | |
| 856 defined in regex.h. We return the old syntax. */ | |
| 857 | |
| 858 reg_syntax_t | |
| 859 re_set_syntax (syntax) | |
| 860 reg_syntax_t syntax; | |
| 861 { | |
| 862 reg_syntax_t ret = re_syntax_options; | |
| 863 | |
| 864 re_syntax_options = syntax; | |
| 865 return ret; | |
| 866 } | |
| 867 | |
| 868 /* This table gives an error message for each of the error codes listed | |
| 869 in regex.h. Obviously the order here has to be same as there. */ | |
| 870 | |
| 871 static const char *re_error_msg[] = | |
| 872 { NULL, /* REG_NOERROR */ | |
| 873 "No match", /* REG_NOMATCH */ | |
| 874 "Invalid regular expression", /* REG_BADPAT */ | |
| 875 "Invalid collation character", /* REG_ECOLLATE */ | |
| 876 "Invalid character class name", /* REG_ECTYPE */ | |
| 877 "Trailing backslash", /* REG_EESCAPE */ | |
| 878 "Invalid back reference", /* REG_ESUBREG */ | |
| 879 "Unmatched [ or [^", /* REG_EBRACK */ | |
| 880 "Unmatched ( or \\(", /* REG_EPAREN */ | |
| 881 "Unmatched \\{", /* REG_EBRACE */ | |
| 882 "Invalid content of \\{\\}", /* REG_BADBR */ | |
| 883 "Invalid range end", /* REG_ERANGE */ | |
| 884 "Memory exhausted", /* REG_ESPACE */ | |
| 885 "Invalid preceding regular expression", /* REG_BADRPT */ | |
| 886 "Premature end of regular expression", /* REG_EEND */ | |
| 887 "Regular expression too big", /* REG_ESIZE */ | |
| 888 "Unmatched ) or \\)", /* REG_ERPAREN */ | |
| 889 }; | |
| 890 | |
| 2949 | 891 /* Avoiding alloca during matching, to placate r_alloc. */ |
| 892 | |
| 2952 | 893 /* Define MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE if we need to make sure that the |
| 2949 | 894 searching and matching functions should not call alloca. On some |
| 895 systems, alloca is implemented in terms of malloc, and if we're | |
| 896 using the relocating allocator routines, then malloc could cause a | |
| 897 relocation, which might (if the strings being searched are in the | |
| 898 ralloc heap) shift the data out from underneath the regexp | |
| 3614 | 899 routines. |
| 900 | |
| 901 Here's another reason to avoid allocation: Emacs insists on | |
| 902 processing input from X in a signal handler; processing X input may | |
| 903 call malloc; if input arrives while a matching routine is calling | |
| 904 malloc, then we're scrod. But Emacs can't just block input while | |
| 905 calling matching routines; then we don't notice interrupts when | |
| 906 they come in. So, Emacs blocks input around all regexp calls | |
| 907 except the matching calls, which it leaves unprotected, in the | |
| 908 faith that they will not malloc. */ | |
| 2952 | 909 |
| 910 /* Normally, this is fine. */ | |
| 911 #define MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE | |
| 912 | |
| 913 /* But under some circumstances, it's not. */ | |
| 3614 | 914 #if defined (emacs) || (defined (REL_ALLOC) && defined (C_ALLOCA)) |
| 2952 | 915 #undef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE |
| 2949 | 916 #endif |
| 917 | |
| 918 | |
| 919 /* Failure stack declarations and macros; both re_compile_fastmap and | |
| 920 re_match_2 use a failure stack. These have to be macros because of | |
| 921 REGEX_ALLOCATE. */ | |
| 922 | |
| 923 | |
| 924 /* Number of failure points for which to initially allocate space | |
| 925 when matching. If this number is exceeded, we allocate more | |
| 926 space, so it is not a hard limit. */ | |
| 927 #ifndef INIT_FAILURE_ALLOC | |
| 928 #define INIT_FAILURE_ALLOC 5 | |
| 929 #endif | |
| 930 | |
| 931 /* Roughly the maximum number of failure points on the stack. Would be | |
| 932 exactly that if always used MAX_FAILURE_SPACE each time we failed. | |
| 933 This is a variable only so users of regex can assign to it; we never | |
| 934 change it ourselves. */ | |
| 935 int re_max_failures = 2000; | |
| 936 | |
|
4918
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
937 typedef unsigned char *fail_stack_elt_t; |
| 2949 | 938 |
| 939 typedef struct | |
| 940 { | |
| 941 fail_stack_elt_t *stack; | |
| 942 unsigned size; | |
| 943 unsigned avail; /* Offset of next open position. */ | |
| 944 } fail_stack_type; | |
| 945 | |
| 946 #define FAIL_STACK_EMPTY() (fail_stack.avail == 0) | |
| 947 #define FAIL_STACK_PTR_EMPTY() (fail_stack_ptr->avail == 0) | |
| 948 #define FAIL_STACK_FULL() (fail_stack.avail == fail_stack.size) | |
| 949 #define FAIL_STACK_TOP() (fail_stack.stack[fail_stack.avail]) | |
| 950 | |
| 951 | |
| 952 /* Initialize `fail_stack'. Do `return -2' if the alloc fails. */ | |
| 953 | |
| 2952 | 954 #ifdef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE |
| 2949 | 955 #define INIT_FAIL_STACK() \ |
| 956 do { \ | |
| 957 fail_stack.stack = (fail_stack_elt_t *) \ | |
| 958 REGEX_ALLOCATE (INIT_FAILURE_ALLOC * sizeof (fail_stack_elt_t)); \ | |
| 959 \ | |
| 960 if (fail_stack.stack == NULL) \ | |
| 961 return -2; \ | |
| 962 \ | |
| 963 fail_stack.size = INIT_FAILURE_ALLOC; \ | |
| 964 fail_stack.avail = 0; \ | |
| 965 } while (0) | |
| 966 #else | |
| 967 #define INIT_FAIL_STACK() \ | |
| 968 do { \ | |
| 969 fail_stack.avail = 0; \ | |
| 970 } while (0) | |
| 971 #endif | |
| 972 | |
| 973 | |
| 974 /* Double the size of FAIL_STACK, up to approximately `re_max_failures' items. | |
| 975 | |
| 976 Return 1 if succeeds, and 0 if either ran out of memory | |
| 977 allocating space for it or it was already too large. | |
| 978 | |
| 979 REGEX_REALLOCATE requires `destination' be declared. */ | |
| 980 | |
| 981 #define DOUBLE_FAIL_STACK(fail_stack) \ | |
| 982 ((fail_stack).size > re_max_failures * MAX_FAILURE_ITEMS \ | |
| 983 ? 0 \ | |
| 984 : ((fail_stack).stack = (fail_stack_elt_t *) \ | |
| 985 REGEX_REALLOCATE ((fail_stack).stack, \ | |
| 986 (fail_stack).size * sizeof (fail_stack_elt_t), \ | |
| 987 ((fail_stack).size << 1) * sizeof (fail_stack_elt_t)), \ | |
| 988 \ | |
| 989 (fail_stack).stack == NULL \ | |
| 990 ? 0 \ | |
| 991 : ((fail_stack).size <<= 1, \ | |
| 992 1))) | |
| 993 | |
| 994 | |
| 995 /* Push PATTERN_OP on FAIL_STACK. | |
| 996 | |
| 997 Return 1 if was able to do so and 0 if ran out of memory allocating | |
| 998 space to do so. */ | |
| 999 #define PUSH_PATTERN_OP(pattern_op, fail_stack) \ | |
| 1000 ((FAIL_STACK_FULL () \ | |
| 1001 && !DOUBLE_FAIL_STACK (fail_stack)) \ | |
| 1002 ? 0 \ | |
| 1003 : ((fail_stack).stack[(fail_stack).avail++] = pattern_op, \ | |
| 1004 1)) | |
| 1005 | |
| 1006 /* This pushes an item onto the failure stack. Must be a four-byte | |
| 1007 value. Assumes the variable `fail_stack'. Probably should only | |
| 1008 be called from within `PUSH_FAILURE_POINT'. */ | |
| 1009 #define PUSH_FAILURE_ITEM(item) \ | |
| 1010 fail_stack.stack[fail_stack.avail++] = (fail_stack_elt_t) item | |
| 1011 | |
| 1012 /* The complement operation. Assumes `fail_stack' is nonempty. */ | |
| 1013 #define POP_FAILURE_ITEM() fail_stack.stack[--fail_stack.avail] | |
| 1014 | |
| 1015 /* Used to omit pushing failure point id's when we're not debugging. */ | |
| 1016 #ifdef DEBUG | |
| 1017 #define DEBUG_PUSH PUSH_FAILURE_ITEM | |
| 1018 #define DEBUG_POP(item_addr) *(item_addr) = POP_FAILURE_ITEM () | |
| 1019 #else | |
| 1020 #define DEBUG_PUSH(item) | |
| 1021 #define DEBUG_POP(item_addr) | |
| 1022 #endif | |
| 1023 | |
| 1024 | |
| 1025 /* Push the information about the state we will need | |
| 1026 if we ever fail back to it. | |
| 1027 | |
| 1028 Requires variables fail_stack, regstart, regend, reg_info, and | |
| 1029 num_regs be declared. DOUBLE_FAIL_STACK requires `destination' be | |
| 1030 declared. | |
| 1031 | |
| 1032 Does `return FAILURE_CODE' if runs out of memory. */ | |
| 1033 | |
| 1034 #define PUSH_FAILURE_POINT(pattern_place, string_place, failure_code) \ | |
| 1035 do { \ | |
| 1036 char *destination; \ | |
| 1037 /* Must be int, so when we don't save any registers, the arithmetic \ | |
| 1038 of 0 + -1 isn't done as unsigned. */ \ | |
| 1039 int this_reg; \ | |
| 1040 \ | |
| 1041 DEBUG_STATEMENT (failure_id++); \ | |
| 1042 DEBUG_STATEMENT (nfailure_points_pushed++); \ | |
| 1043 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("\nPUSH_FAILURE_POINT #%u:\n", failure_id); \ | |
| 1044 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Before push, next avail: %d\n", (fail_stack).avail);\ | |
| 1045 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" size: %d\n", (fail_stack).size);\ | |
| 1046 \ | |
| 1047 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" slots needed: %d\n", NUM_FAILURE_ITEMS); \ | |
| 1048 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" available: %d\n", REMAINING_AVAIL_SLOTS); \ | |
| 1049 \ | |
| 1050 /* Ensure we have enough space allocated for what we will push. */ \ | |
| 1051 while (REMAINING_AVAIL_SLOTS < NUM_FAILURE_ITEMS) \ | |
| 1052 { \ | |
| 1053 if (!DOUBLE_FAIL_STACK (fail_stack)) \ | |
| 1054 return failure_code; \ | |
| 1055 \ | |
| 1056 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("\n Doubled stack; size now: %d\n", \ | |
| 1057 (fail_stack).size); \ | |
| 1058 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" slots available: %d\n", REMAINING_AVAIL_SLOTS);\ | |
| 1059 } \ | |
| 1060 \ | |
| 1061 /* Push the info, starting with the registers. */ \ | |
| 1062 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("\n"); \ | |
| 1063 \ | |
| 1064 for (this_reg = lowest_active_reg; this_reg <= highest_active_reg; \ | |
| 1065 this_reg++) \ | |
| 1066 { \ | |
| 1067 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Pushing reg: %d\n", this_reg); \ | |
| 1068 DEBUG_STATEMENT (num_regs_pushed++); \ | |
| 1069 \ | |
| 1070 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" start: 0x%x\n", regstart[this_reg]); \ | |
| 1071 PUSH_FAILURE_ITEM (regstart[this_reg]); \ | |
| 1072 \ | |
| 1073 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" end: 0x%x\n", regend[this_reg]); \ | |
| 1074 PUSH_FAILURE_ITEM (regend[this_reg]); \ | |
| 1075 \ | |
| 1076 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" info: 0x%x\n ", reg_info[this_reg]); \ | |
| 1077 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" match_null=%d", \ | |
| 1078 REG_MATCH_NULL_STRING_P (reg_info[this_reg])); \ | |
| 1079 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" active=%d", IS_ACTIVE (reg_info[this_reg])); \ | |
| 1080 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" matched_something=%d", \ | |
| 1081 MATCHED_SOMETHING (reg_info[this_reg])); \ | |
| 1082 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" ever_matched=%d", \ | |
| 1083 EVER_MATCHED_SOMETHING (reg_info[this_reg])); \ | |
| 1084 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("\n"); \ | |
| 1085 PUSH_FAILURE_ITEM (reg_info[this_reg].word); \ | |
| 1086 } \ | |
| 1087 \ | |
| 1088 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Pushing low active reg: %d\n", lowest_active_reg);\ | |
| 1089 PUSH_FAILURE_ITEM (lowest_active_reg); \ | |
| 1090 \ | |
| 1091 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Pushing high active reg: %d\n", highest_active_reg);\ | |
| 1092 PUSH_FAILURE_ITEM (highest_active_reg); \ | |
| 1093 \ | |
| 1094 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Pushing pattern 0x%x: ", pattern_place); \ | |
| 1095 DEBUG_PRINT_COMPILED_PATTERN (bufp, pattern_place, pend); \ | |
| 1096 PUSH_FAILURE_ITEM (pattern_place); \ | |
| 1097 \ | |
| 1098 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Pushing string 0x%x: `", string_place); \ | |
| 1099 DEBUG_PRINT_DOUBLE_STRING (string_place, string1, size1, string2, \ | |
| 1100 size2); \ | |
| 1101 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("'\n"); \ | |
| 1102 PUSH_FAILURE_ITEM (string_place); \ | |
| 1103 \ | |
| 1104 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Pushing failure id: %u\n", failure_id); \ | |
| 1105 DEBUG_PUSH (failure_id); \ | |
| 1106 } while (0) | |
| 1107 | |
| 1108 /* This is the number of items that are pushed and popped on the stack | |
| 1109 for each register. */ | |
| 1110 #define NUM_REG_ITEMS 3 | |
| 1111 | |
| 1112 /* Individual items aside from the registers. */ | |
| 1113 #ifdef DEBUG | |
| 1114 #define NUM_NONREG_ITEMS 5 /* Includes failure point id. */ | |
| 1115 #else | |
| 1116 #define NUM_NONREG_ITEMS 4 | |
| 1117 #endif | |
| 1118 | |
| 1119 /* We push at most this many items on the stack. */ | |
| 1120 #define MAX_FAILURE_ITEMS ((num_regs - 1) * NUM_REG_ITEMS + NUM_NONREG_ITEMS) | |
| 1121 | |
| 1122 /* We actually push this many items. */ | |
| 1123 #define NUM_FAILURE_ITEMS \ | |
| 1124 ((highest_active_reg - lowest_active_reg + 1) * NUM_REG_ITEMS \ | |
| 1125 + NUM_NONREG_ITEMS) | |
| 1126 | |
| 1127 /* How many items can still be added to the stack without overflowing it. */ | |
| 1128 #define REMAINING_AVAIL_SLOTS ((fail_stack).size - (fail_stack).avail) | |
| 1129 | |
| 1130 | |
| 1131 /* Pops what PUSH_FAIL_STACK pushes. | |
| 1132 | |
| 1133 We restore into the parameters, all of which should be lvalues: | |
| 1134 STR -- the saved data position. | |
| 1135 PAT -- the saved pattern position. | |
| 1136 LOW_REG, HIGH_REG -- the highest and lowest active registers. | |
| 1137 REGSTART, REGEND -- arrays of string positions. | |
| 1138 REG_INFO -- array of information about each subexpression. | |
| 1139 | |
| 1140 Also assumes the variables `fail_stack' and (if debugging), `bufp', | |
| 1141 `pend', `string1', `size1', `string2', and `size2'. */ | |
| 1142 | |
| 1143 #define POP_FAILURE_POINT(str, pat, low_reg, high_reg, regstart, regend, reg_info)\ | |
| 1144 { \ | |
| 1145 DEBUG_STATEMENT (fail_stack_elt_t failure_id;) \ | |
| 1146 int this_reg; \ | |
| 1147 const unsigned char *string_temp; \ | |
| 1148 \ | |
| 1149 assert (!FAIL_STACK_EMPTY ()); \ | |
| 1150 \ | |
| 1151 /* Remove failure points and point to how many regs pushed. */ \ | |
| 1152 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("POP_FAILURE_POINT:\n"); \ | |
| 1153 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Before pop, next avail: %d\n", fail_stack.avail); \ | |
| 1154 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" size: %d\n", fail_stack.size); \ | |
| 1155 \ | |
| 1156 assert (fail_stack.avail >= NUM_NONREG_ITEMS); \ | |
| 1157 \ | |
| 1158 DEBUG_POP (&failure_id); \ | |
| 1159 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Popping failure id: %u\n", failure_id); \ | |
| 1160 \ | |
| 1161 /* If the saved string location is NULL, it came from an \ | |
| 1162 on_failure_keep_string_jump opcode, and we want to throw away the \ | |
| 1163 saved NULL, thus retaining our current position in the string. */ \ | |
| 1164 string_temp = POP_FAILURE_ITEM (); \ | |
| 1165 if (string_temp != NULL) \ | |
| 1166 str = (const char *) string_temp; \ | |
| 1167 \ | |
| 1168 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Popping string 0x%x: `", str); \ | |
| 1169 DEBUG_PRINT_DOUBLE_STRING (str, string1, size1, string2, size2); \ | |
| 1170 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("'\n"); \ | |
| 1171 \ | |
| 1172 pat = (unsigned char *) POP_FAILURE_ITEM (); \ | |
| 1173 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Popping pattern 0x%x: ", pat); \ | |
| 1174 DEBUG_PRINT_COMPILED_PATTERN (bufp, pat, pend); \ | |
| 1175 \ | |
| 1176 /* Restore register info. */ \ | |
| 1177 high_reg = (unsigned) POP_FAILURE_ITEM (); \ | |
| 1178 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Popping high active reg: %d\n", high_reg); \ | |
| 1179 \ | |
| 1180 low_reg = (unsigned) POP_FAILURE_ITEM (); \ | |
| 1181 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Popping low active reg: %d\n", low_reg); \ | |
| 1182 \ | |
| 1183 for (this_reg = high_reg; this_reg >= low_reg; this_reg--) \ | |
| 1184 { \ | |
| 1185 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Popping reg: %d\n", this_reg); \ | |
| 1186 \ | |
| 1187 reg_info[this_reg].word = POP_FAILURE_ITEM (); \ | |
| 1188 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" info: 0x%x\n", reg_info[this_reg]); \ | |
| 1189 \ | |
| 1190 regend[this_reg] = (const char *) POP_FAILURE_ITEM (); \ | |
| 1191 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" end: 0x%x\n", regend[this_reg]); \ | |
| 1192 \ | |
| 1193 regstart[this_reg] = (const char *) POP_FAILURE_ITEM (); \ | |
| 1194 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" start: 0x%x\n", regstart[this_reg]); \ | |
| 1195 } \ | |
| 1196 \ | |
| 1197 DEBUG_STATEMENT (nfailure_points_popped++); \ | |
| 1198 } /* POP_FAILURE_POINT */ | |
| 1199 | |
| 1200 | |
| 1201 | |
| 1202 /* Structure for per-register (a.k.a. per-group) information. | |
| 1203 This must not be longer than one word, because we push this value | |
| 1204 onto the failure stack. Other register information, such as the | |
| 1205 starting and ending positions (which are addresses), and the list of | |
| 1206 inner groups (which is a bits list) are maintained in separate | |
| 1207 variables. | |
| 1208 | |
| 1209 We are making a (strictly speaking) nonportable assumption here: that | |
| 1210 the compiler will pack our bit fields into something that fits into | |
| 1211 the type of `word', i.e., is something that fits into one item on the | |
| 1212 failure stack. */ | |
| 1213 typedef union | |
| 1214 { | |
| 1215 fail_stack_elt_t word; | |
| 1216 struct | |
| 1217 { | |
| 1218 /* This field is one if this group can match the empty string, | |
| 1219 zero if not. If not yet determined, `MATCH_NULL_UNSET_VALUE'. */ | |
| 1220 #define MATCH_NULL_UNSET_VALUE 3 | |
| 1221 unsigned match_null_string_p : 2; | |
| 1222 unsigned is_active : 1; | |
| 1223 unsigned matched_something : 1; | |
| 1224 unsigned ever_matched_something : 1; | |
| 1225 } bits; | |
| 1226 } register_info_type; | |
| 1227 | |
| 1228 #define REG_MATCH_NULL_STRING_P(R) ((R).bits.match_null_string_p) | |
| 1229 #define IS_ACTIVE(R) ((R).bits.is_active) | |
| 1230 #define MATCHED_SOMETHING(R) ((R).bits.matched_something) | |
| 1231 #define EVER_MATCHED_SOMETHING(R) ((R).bits.ever_matched_something) | |
| 1232 | |
| 1233 | |
| 1234 /* Call this when have matched a real character; it sets `matched' flags | |
| 1235 for the subexpressions which we are currently inside. Also records | |
| 1236 that those subexprs have matched. */ | |
| 1237 #define SET_REGS_MATCHED() \ | |
| 1238 do \ | |
| 1239 { \ | |
| 1240 unsigned r; \ | |
| 1241 for (r = lowest_active_reg; r <= highest_active_reg; r++) \ | |
| 1242 { \ | |
| 1243 MATCHED_SOMETHING (reg_info[r]) \ | |
| 1244 = EVER_MATCHED_SOMETHING (reg_info[r]) \ | |
| 1245 = 1; \ | |
| 1246 } \ | |
| 1247 } \ | |
| 1248 while (0) | |
| 1249 | |
| 1250 | |
| 1251 /* Registers are set to a sentinel when they haven't yet matched. */ | |
| 1252 #define REG_UNSET_VALUE ((char *) -1) | |
| 1253 #define REG_UNSET(e) ((e) == REG_UNSET_VALUE) | |
| 1254 | |
| 1255 | |
| 1256 | |
| 2952 | 1257 /* How do we implement a missing MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE? |
| 2949 | 1258 We make the fail stack a global thing, and then grow it to |
| 1259 re_max_failures when we compile. */ | |
| 2952 | 1260 #ifndef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE |
| 2949 | 1261 static fail_stack_type fail_stack; |
| 1262 | |
| 1263 static const char ** regstart, ** regend; | |
| 1264 static const char ** old_regstart, ** old_regend; | |
| 1265 static const char **best_regstart, **best_regend; | |
| 1266 static register_info_type *reg_info; | |
| 1267 static const char **reg_dummy; | |
| 1268 static register_info_type *reg_info_dummy; | |
| 1269 #endif | |
| 1270 | |
| 1271 | |
| 1155 | 1272 /* Subroutine declarations and macros for regex_compile. */ |
| 1273 | |
| 1274 static void store_op1 (), store_op2 (); | |
| 1275 static void insert_op1 (), insert_op2 (); | |
| 1276 static boolean at_begline_loc_p (), at_endline_loc_p (); | |
| 1277 static boolean group_in_compile_stack (); | |
| 1278 static reg_errcode_t compile_range (); | |
| 1279 | |
| 1280 /* Fetch the next character in the uncompiled pattern---translating it | |
| 1281 if necessary. Also cast from a signed character in the constant | |
| 1282 string passed to us by the user to an unsigned char that we can use | |
| 1283 as an array index (in, e.g., `translate'). */ | |
| 1284 #define PATFETCH(c) \ | |
| 1285 do {if (p == pend) return REG_EEND; \ | |
| 1286 c = (unsigned char) *p++; \ | |
| 1287 if (translate) c = translate[c]; \ | |
| 1288 } while (0) | |
| 1289 | |
| 1290 /* Fetch the next character in the uncompiled pattern, with no | |
| 1291 translation. */ | |
| 1292 #define PATFETCH_RAW(c) \ | |
| 1293 do {if (p == pend) return REG_EEND; \ | |
| 1294 c = (unsigned char) *p++; \ | |
| 1295 } while (0) | |
| 1296 | |
| 1297 /* Go backwards one character in the pattern. */ | |
| 1298 #define PATUNFETCH p-- | |
| 1299 | |
| 1300 | |
| 1301 /* If `translate' is non-null, return translate[D], else just D. We | |
| 1302 cast the subscript to translate because some data is declared as | |
| 1303 `char *', to avoid warnings when a string constant is passed. But | |
| 1304 when we use a character as a subscript we must make it unsigned. */ | |
| 1305 #define TRANSLATE(d) (translate ? translate[(unsigned char) (d)] : (d)) | |
| 1306 | |
| 1307 | |
| 1308 /* Macros for outputting the compiled pattern into `buffer'. */ | |
| 1309 | |
| 1310 /* If the buffer isn't allocated when it comes in, use this. */ | |
| 1311 #define INIT_BUF_SIZE 32 | |
| 1312 | |
| 1313 /* Make sure we have at least N more bytes of space in buffer. */ | |
| 1314 #define GET_BUFFER_SPACE(n) \ | |
| 1315 while (b - bufp->buffer + (n) > bufp->allocated) \ | |
| 1316 EXTEND_BUFFER () | |
| 1317 | |
| 1318 /* Make sure we have one more byte of buffer space and then add C to it. */ | |
| 1319 #define BUF_PUSH(c) \ | |
| 1320 do { \ | |
| 1321 GET_BUFFER_SPACE (1); \ | |
| 1322 *b++ = (unsigned char) (c); \ | |
| 1323 } while (0) | |
| 1324 | |
| 1325 | |
| 1326 /* Ensure we have two more bytes of buffer space and then append C1 and C2. */ | |
| 1327 #define BUF_PUSH_2(c1, c2) \ | |
| 1328 do { \ | |
| 1329 GET_BUFFER_SPACE (2); \ | |
| 1330 *b++ = (unsigned char) (c1); \ | |
| 1331 *b++ = (unsigned char) (c2); \ | |
| 1332 } while (0) | |
| 1333 | |
| 1334 | |
| 1335 /* As with BUF_PUSH_2, except for three bytes. */ | |
| 1336 #define BUF_PUSH_3(c1, c2, c3) \ | |
| 1337 do { \ | |
| 1338 GET_BUFFER_SPACE (3); \ | |
| 1339 *b++ = (unsigned char) (c1); \ | |
| 1340 *b++ = (unsigned char) (c2); \ | |
| 1341 *b++ = (unsigned char) (c3); \ | |
| 1342 } while (0) | |
| 1343 | |
| 1344 | |
| 1345 /* Store a jump with opcode OP at LOC to location TO. We store a | |
| 1346 relative address offset by the three bytes the jump itself occupies. */ | |
| 1347 #define STORE_JUMP(op, loc, to) \ | |
| 1348 store_op1 (op, loc, (to) - (loc) - 3) | |
| 1349 | |
| 1350 /* Likewise, for a two-argument jump. */ | |
| 1351 #define STORE_JUMP2(op, loc, to, arg) \ | |
| 1352 store_op2 (op, loc, (to) - (loc) - 3, arg) | |
| 1353 | |
| 1354 /* Like `STORE_JUMP', but for inserting. Assume `b' is the buffer end. */ | |
| 1355 #define INSERT_JUMP(op, loc, to) \ | |
| 1356 insert_op1 (op, loc, (to) - (loc) - 3, b) | |
| 1357 | |
| 1358 /* Like `STORE_JUMP2', but for inserting. Assume `b' is the buffer end. */ | |
| 1359 #define INSERT_JUMP2(op, loc, to, arg) \ | |
| 1360 insert_op2 (op, loc, (to) - (loc) - 3, arg, b) | |
| 1361 | |
| 1362 | |
| 1363 /* This is not an arbitrary limit: the arguments which represent offsets | |
| 1364 into the pattern are two bytes long. So if 2^16 bytes turns out to | |
| 1365 be too small, many things would have to change. */ | |
| 1366 #define MAX_BUF_SIZE (1L << 16) | |
| 1367 | |
| 1368 | |
| 1369 /* Extend the buffer by twice its current size via realloc and | |
| 1370 reset the pointers that pointed into the old block to point to the | |
| 1371 correct places in the new one. If extending the buffer results in it | |
| 1372 being larger than MAX_BUF_SIZE, then flag memory exhausted. */ | |
| 1373 #define EXTEND_BUFFER() \ | |
| 1374 do { \ | |
| 1375 unsigned char *old_buffer = bufp->buffer; \ | |
| 1376 if (bufp->allocated == MAX_BUF_SIZE) \ | |
| 1377 return REG_ESIZE; \ | |
| 1378 bufp->allocated <<= 1; \ | |
| 1379 if (bufp->allocated > MAX_BUF_SIZE) \ | |
| 1380 bufp->allocated = MAX_BUF_SIZE; \ | |
| 1381 bufp->buffer = (unsigned char *) realloc (bufp->buffer, bufp->allocated);\ | |
| 1382 if (bufp->buffer == NULL) \ | |
| 1383 return REG_ESPACE; \ | |
| 1384 /* If the buffer moved, move all the pointers into it. */ \ | |
| 1385 if (old_buffer != bufp->buffer) \ | |
| 1386 { \ | |
| 1387 b = (b - old_buffer) + bufp->buffer; \ | |
| 1388 begalt = (begalt - old_buffer) + bufp->buffer; \ | |
| 1389 if (fixup_alt_jump) \ | |
| 1390 fixup_alt_jump = (fixup_alt_jump - old_buffer) + bufp->buffer;\ | |
| 1391 if (laststart) \ | |
| 1392 laststart = (laststart - old_buffer) + bufp->buffer; \ | |
| 1393 if (pending_exact) \ | |
| 1394 pending_exact = (pending_exact - old_buffer) + bufp->buffer; \ | |
| 1395 } \ | |
| 1396 } while (0) | |
| 1397 | |
| 1398 | |
| 1399 /* Since we have one byte reserved for the register number argument to | |
| 1400 {start,stop}_memory, the maximum number of groups we can report | |
| 1401 things about is what fits in that byte. */ | |
| 1402 #define MAX_REGNUM 255 | |
| 1403 | |
| 1404 /* But patterns can have more than `MAX_REGNUM' registers. We just | |
| 1405 ignore the excess. */ | |
| 1406 typedef unsigned regnum_t; | |
| 1407 | |
| 1408 | |
| 1409 /* Macros for the compile stack. */ | |
| 1410 | |
| 1411 /* Since offsets can go either forwards or backwards, this type needs to | |
| 1412 be able to hold values from -(MAX_BUF_SIZE - 1) to MAX_BUF_SIZE - 1. */ | |
| 1413 typedef int pattern_offset_t; | |
| 1414 | |
| 1415 typedef struct | |
| 1416 { | |
| 1417 pattern_offset_t begalt_offset; | |
| 1418 pattern_offset_t fixup_alt_jump; | |
| 1419 pattern_offset_t inner_group_offset; | |
| 1420 pattern_offset_t laststart_offset; | |
| 1421 regnum_t regnum; | |
| 1422 } compile_stack_elt_t; | |
| 1423 | |
| 1424 | |
| 1425 typedef struct | |
| 1426 { | |
| 1427 compile_stack_elt_t *stack; | |
| 1428 unsigned size; | |
| 1429 unsigned avail; /* Offset of next open position. */ | |
| 1430 } compile_stack_type; | |
| 1431 | |
| 1432 | |
| 1433 #define INIT_COMPILE_STACK_SIZE 32 | |
| 1434 | |
| 1435 #define COMPILE_STACK_EMPTY (compile_stack.avail == 0) | |
| 1436 #define COMPILE_STACK_FULL (compile_stack.avail == compile_stack.size) | |
| 1437 | |
| 1438 /* The next available element. */ | |
| 1439 #define COMPILE_STACK_TOP (compile_stack.stack[compile_stack.avail]) | |
| 1440 | |
| 1441 | |
| 1442 /* Set the bit for character C in a list. */ | |
| 1443 #define SET_LIST_BIT(c) \ | |
| 1444 (b[((unsigned char) (c)) / BYTEWIDTH] \ | |
| 1445 |= 1 << (((unsigned char) c) % BYTEWIDTH)) | |
| 1446 | |
| 1447 | |
| 1448 /* Get the next unsigned number in the uncompiled pattern. */ | |
| 1449 #define GET_UNSIGNED_NUMBER(num) \ | |
| 1450 { if (p != pend) \ | |
| 1451 { \ | |
| 1452 PATFETCH (c); \ | |
| 1668 | 1453 while (ISDIGIT (c)) \ |
| 1155 | 1454 { \ |
| 1455 if (num < 0) \ | |
| 1456 num = 0; \ | |
| 1457 num = num * 10 + c - '0'; \ | |
| 1458 if (p == pend) \ | |
| 1459 break; \ | |
| 1460 PATFETCH (c); \ | |
| 1461 } \ | |
| 1462 } \ | |
| 1463 } | |
| 1464 | |
| 1465 #define CHAR_CLASS_MAX_LENGTH 6 /* Namely, `xdigit'. */ | |
| 1466 | |
| 1467 #define IS_CHAR_CLASS(string) \ | |
| 1468 (STREQ (string, "alpha") || STREQ (string, "upper") \ | |
| 1469 || STREQ (string, "lower") || STREQ (string, "digit") \ | |
| 1470 || STREQ (string, "alnum") || STREQ (string, "xdigit") \ | |
| 1471 || STREQ (string, "space") || STREQ (string, "print") \ | |
| 1472 || STREQ (string, "punct") || STREQ (string, "graph") \ | |
| 1473 || STREQ (string, "cntrl") || STREQ (string, "blank")) | |
| 1474 | |
| 1475 /* `regex_compile' compiles PATTERN (of length SIZE) according to SYNTAX. | |
| 1476 Returns one of error codes defined in `regex.h', or zero for success. | |
| 1477 | |
| 1478 Assumes the `allocated' (and perhaps `buffer') and `translate' | |
| 1479 fields are set in BUFP on entry. | |
| 1480 | |
| 1481 If it succeeds, results are put in BUFP (if it returns an error, the | |
| 1482 contents of BUFP are undefined): | |
| 1483 `buffer' is the compiled pattern; | |
| 1484 `syntax' is set to SYNTAX; | |
| 1485 `used' is set to the length of the compiled pattern; | |
| 1637 | 1486 `fastmap_accurate' is zero; |
| 1487 `re_nsub' is the number of subexpressions in PATTERN; | |
| 1488 `not_bol' and `not_eol' are zero; | |
| 1155 | 1489 |
| 1490 The `fastmap' and `newline_anchor' fields are neither | |
| 1491 examined nor set. */ | |
| 1492 | |
| 1493 static reg_errcode_t | |
| 1494 regex_compile (pattern, size, syntax, bufp) | |
| 1495 const char *pattern; | |
| 1496 int size; | |
| 1497 reg_syntax_t syntax; | |
| 1498 struct re_pattern_buffer *bufp; | |
| 1499 { | |
| 1500 /* We fetch characters from PATTERN here. Even though PATTERN is | |
| 1501 `char *' (i.e., signed), we declare these variables as unsigned, so | |
| 1502 they can be reliably used as array indices. */ | |
| 1503 register unsigned char c, c1; | |
| 1504 | |
| 5841 | 1505 /* A random temporary spot in PATTERN. */ |
| 1155 | 1506 const char *p1; |
| 1507 | |
| 1508 /* Points to the end of the buffer, where we should append. */ | |
| 1509 register unsigned char *b; | |
| 1510 | |
| 1511 /* Keeps track of unclosed groups. */ | |
| 1512 compile_stack_type compile_stack; | |
| 1513 | |
| 1514 /* Points to the current (ending) position in the pattern. */ | |
| 1515 const char *p = pattern; | |
| 1516 const char *pend = pattern + size; | |
| 1517 | |
| 1518 /* How to translate the characters in the pattern. */ | |
| 1519 char *translate = bufp->translate; | |
| 1520 | |
| 1521 /* Address of the count-byte of the most recently inserted `exactn' | |
| 1522 command. This makes it possible to tell if a new exact-match | |
| 1523 character can be added to that command or if the character requires | |
| 1524 a new `exactn' command. */ | |
| 1525 unsigned char *pending_exact = 0; | |
| 1526 | |
| 1527 /* Address of start of the most recently finished expression. | |
| 1528 This tells, e.g., postfix * where to find the start of its | |
| 1529 operand. Reset at the beginning of groups and alternatives. */ | |
| 1530 unsigned char *laststart = 0; | |
| 1531 | |
| 1532 /* Address of beginning of regexp, or inside of last group. */ | |
| 1533 unsigned char *begalt; | |
| 1534 | |
| 1535 /* Place in the uncompiled pattern (i.e., the {) to | |
| 1536 which to go back if the interval is invalid. */ | |
| 1537 const char *beg_interval; | |
| 1538 | |
| 1539 /* Address of the place where a forward jump should go to the end of | |
| 1540 the containing expression. Each alternative of an `or' -- except the | |
| 1541 last -- ends with a forward jump of this sort. */ | |
| 1542 unsigned char *fixup_alt_jump = 0; | |
| 1543 | |
| 1544 /* Counts open-groups as they are encountered. Remembered for the | |
| 1545 matching close-group on the compile stack, so the same register | |
| 1546 number is put in the stop_memory as the start_memory. */ | |
| 1547 regnum_t regnum = 0; | |
| 1548 | |
| 1549 #ifdef DEBUG | |
| 1550 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("\nCompiling pattern: "); | |
| 1551 if (debug) | |
| 1552 { | |
| 1553 unsigned debug_count; | |
| 1554 | |
| 1555 for (debug_count = 0; debug_count < size; debug_count++) | |
| 1556 printchar (pattern[debug_count]); | |
| 1557 putchar ('\n'); | |
| 1558 } | |
| 1559 #endif /* DEBUG */ | |
| 1560 | |
| 1561 /* Initialize the compile stack. */ | |
| 1562 compile_stack.stack = TALLOC (INIT_COMPILE_STACK_SIZE, compile_stack_elt_t); | |
| 1563 if (compile_stack.stack == NULL) | |
| 1564 return REG_ESPACE; | |
| 1565 | |
| 1566 compile_stack.size = INIT_COMPILE_STACK_SIZE; | |
| 1567 compile_stack.avail = 0; | |
| 1568 | |
| 1569 /* Initialize the pattern buffer. */ | |
| 1570 bufp->syntax = syntax; | |
| 1571 bufp->fastmap_accurate = 0; | |
| 1572 bufp->not_bol = bufp->not_eol = 0; | |
| 1573 | |
| 1574 /* Set `used' to zero, so that if we return an error, the pattern | |
| 1575 printer (for debugging) will think there's no pattern. We reset it | |
| 1576 at the end. */ | |
| 1577 bufp->used = 0; | |
| 1578 | |
| 1579 /* Always count groups, whether or not bufp->no_sub is set. */ | |
| 1580 bufp->re_nsub = 0; | |
| 1581 | |
| 1582 #if !defined (emacs) && !defined (SYNTAX_TABLE) | |
| 1583 /* Initialize the syntax table. */ | |
| 1584 init_syntax_once (); | |
| 1585 #endif | |
| 1586 | |
| 1587 if (bufp->allocated == 0) | |
| 1588 { | |
| 1589 if (bufp->buffer) | |
| 1590 { /* If zero allocated, but buffer is non-null, try to realloc | |
| 1591 enough space. This loses if buffer's address is bogus, but | |
| 1592 that is the user's responsibility. */ | |
| 1593 RETALLOC (bufp->buffer, INIT_BUF_SIZE, unsigned char); | |
| 1594 } | |
| 1595 else | |
| 1596 { /* Caller did not allocate a buffer. Do it for them. */ | |
| 1597 bufp->buffer = TALLOC (INIT_BUF_SIZE, unsigned char); | |
| 1598 } | |
| 1599 if (!bufp->buffer) return REG_ESPACE; | |
| 1600 | |
| 1601 bufp->allocated = INIT_BUF_SIZE; | |
| 1602 } | |
| 1603 | |
| 1604 begalt = b = bufp->buffer; | |
| 1605 | |
| 1606 /* Loop through the uncompiled pattern until we're at the end. */ | |
| 1607 while (p != pend) | |
| 1608 { | |
| 1609 PATFETCH (c); | |
| 1610 | |
| 1611 switch (c) | |
| 1612 { | |
| 1613 case '^': | |
| 1614 { | |
| 1615 if ( /* If at start of pattern, it's an operator. */ | |
| 1616 p == pattern + 1 | |
| 1617 /* If context independent, it's an operator. */ | |
| 1618 || syntax & RE_CONTEXT_INDEP_ANCHORS | |
| 1619 /* Otherwise, depends on what's come before. */ | |
| 1620 || at_begline_loc_p (pattern, p, syntax)) | |
| 1621 BUF_PUSH (begline); | |
| 1622 else | |
| 1623 goto normal_char; | |
| 1624 } | |
| 1625 break; | |
| 1626 | |
| 1627 | |
| 1628 case '$': | |
| 1629 { | |
| 1630 if ( /* If at end of pattern, it's an operator. */ | |
| 1631 p == pend | |
| 1632 /* If context independent, it's an operator. */ | |
| 1633 || syntax & RE_CONTEXT_INDEP_ANCHORS | |
| 1634 /* Otherwise, depends on what's next. */ | |
| 1635 || at_endline_loc_p (p, pend, syntax)) | |
| 1636 BUF_PUSH (endline); | |
| 1637 else | |
| 1638 goto normal_char; | |
| 1639 } | |
| 1640 break; | |
| 1641 | |
| 1642 | |
| 1643 case '+': | |
| 1644 case '?': | |
| 1645 if ((syntax & RE_BK_PLUS_QM) | |
| 1646 || (syntax & RE_LIMITED_OPS)) | |
| 1647 goto normal_char; | |
| 1648 handle_plus: | |
| 1649 case '*': | |
| 1650 /* If there is no previous pattern... */ | |
| 1651 if (!laststart) | |
| 1652 { | |
| 1653 if (syntax & RE_CONTEXT_INVALID_OPS) | |
| 1654 return REG_BADRPT; | |
| 1655 else if (!(syntax & RE_CONTEXT_INDEP_OPS)) | |
| 1656 goto normal_char; | |
| 1657 } | |
| 1658 | |
| 1659 { | |
| 1660 /* Are we optimizing this jump? */ | |
| 1661 boolean keep_string_p = false; | |
| 1662 | |
| 1663 /* 1 means zero (many) matches is allowed. */ | |
| 1664 char zero_times_ok = 0, many_times_ok = 0; | |
| 1665 | |
| 1666 /* If there is a sequence of repetition chars, collapse it | |
| 1667 down to just one (the right one). We can't combine | |
| 1668 interval operators with these because of, e.g., `a{2}*', | |
| 1669 which should only match an even number of `a's. */ | |
| 1670 | |
| 1671 for (;;) | |
| 1672 { | |
| 1673 zero_times_ok |= c != '+'; | |
| 1674 many_times_ok |= c != '?'; | |
| 1675 | |
| 1676 if (p == pend) | |
| 1677 break; | |
| 1678 | |
| 1679 PATFETCH (c); | |
| 1680 | |
| 1681 if (c == '*' | |
| 1682 || (!(syntax & RE_BK_PLUS_QM) && (c == '+' || c == '?'))) | |
| 1683 ; | |
| 1684 | |
| 1685 else if (syntax & RE_BK_PLUS_QM && c == '\\') | |
| 1686 { | |
| 1687 if (p == pend) return REG_EESCAPE; | |
| 1688 | |
| 1689 PATFETCH (c1); | |
| 1690 if (!(c1 == '+' || c1 == '?')) | |
| 1691 { | |
| 1692 PATUNFETCH; | |
| 1693 PATUNFETCH; | |
| 1694 break; | |
| 1695 } | |
| 1696 | |
| 1697 c = c1; | |
| 1698 } | |
| 1699 else | |
| 1700 { | |
| 1701 PATUNFETCH; | |
| 1702 break; | |
| 1703 } | |
| 1704 | |
| 1705 /* If we get here, we found another repeat character. */ | |
| 1706 } | |
| 1707 | |
| 1708 /* Star, etc. applied to an empty pattern is equivalent | |
| 1709 to an empty pattern. */ | |
| 1710 if (!laststart) | |
| 1711 break; | |
| 1712 | |
| 1713 /* Now we know whether or not zero matches is allowed | |
| 1714 and also whether or not two or more matches is allowed. */ | |
| 1715 if (many_times_ok) | |
| 1716 { /* More than one repetition is allowed, so put in at the | |
| 1717 end a backward relative jump from `b' to before the next | |
| 1718 jump we're going to put in below (which jumps from | |
| 1719 laststart to after this jump). | |
| 1720 | |
| 1721 But if we are at the `*' in the exact sequence `.*\n', | |
| 1722 insert an unconditional jump backwards to the ., | |
| 1723 instead of the beginning of the loop. This way we only | |
| 1724 push a failure point once, instead of every time | |
| 1725 through the loop. */ | |
| 1726 assert (p - 1 > pattern); | |
| 1727 | |
| 1728 /* Allocate the space for the jump. */ | |
| 1729 GET_BUFFER_SPACE (3); | |
| 1730 | |
| 1731 /* We know we are not at the first character of the pattern, | |
| 1732 because laststart was nonzero. And we've already | |
| 1733 incremented `p', by the way, to be the character after | |
| 1734 the `*'. Do we have to do something analogous here | |
| 1735 for null bytes, because of RE_DOT_NOT_NULL? */ | |
| 1736 if (TRANSLATE (*(p - 2)) == TRANSLATE ('.') | |
| 2453 | 1737 && zero_times_ok |
| 1155 | 1738 && p < pend && TRANSLATE (*p) == TRANSLATE ('\n') |
| 1739 && !(syntax & RE_DOT_NEWLINE)) | |
| 1740 { /* We have .*\n. */ | |
| 1741 STORE_JUMP (jump, b, laststart); | |
| 1742 keep_string_p = true; | |
| 1743 } | |
| 1744 else | |
| 1745 /* Anything else. */ | |
| 1746 STORE_JUMP (maybe_pop_jump, b, laststart - 3); | |
| 1747 | |
| 1748 /* We've added more stuff to the buffer. */ | |
| 1749 b += 3; | |
| 1750 } | |
| 1751 | |
| 1752 /* On failure, jump from laststart to b + 3, which will be the | |
| 1753 end of the buffer after this jump is inserted. */ | |
| 1754 GET_BUFFER_SPACE (3); | |
| 1755 INSERT_JUMP (keep_string_p ? on_failure_keep_string_jump | |
| 1756 : on_failure_jump, | |
| 1757 laststart, b + 3); | |
| 1758 pending_exact = 0; | |
| 1759 b += 3; | |
| 1760 | |
| 1761 if (!zero_times_ok) | |
| 1762 { | |
| 1763 /* At least one repetition is required, so insert a | |
| 1764 `dummy_failure_jump' before the initial | |
| 1765 `on_failure_jump' instruction of the loop. This | |
| 1766 effects a skip over that instruction the first time | |
| 1767 we hit that loop. */ | |
| 1768 GET_BUFFER_SPACE (3); | |
| 1769 INSERT_JUMP (dummy_failure_jump, laststart, laststart + 6); | |
| 1770 b += 3; | |
| 1771 } | |
| 1772 } | |
| 1773 break; | |
| 1774 | |
| 1775 | |
| 1776 case '.': | |
| 1777 laststart = b; | |
| 1778 BUF_PUSH (anychar); | |
| 1779 break; | |
| 1780 | |
| 1781 | |
| 1782 case '[': | |
| 1783 { | |
| 1784 boolean had_char_class = false; | |
| 1785 | |
| 1786 if (p == pend) return REG_EBRACK; | |
| 1787 | |
| 1788 /* Ensure that we have enough space to push a charset: the | |
| 1789 opcode, the length count, and the bitset; 34 bytes in all. */ | |
| 1790 GET_BUFFER_SPACE (34); | |
| 1791 | |
| 1792 laststart = b; | |
| 1793 | |
| 1794 /* We test `*p == '^' twice, instead of using an if | |
| 1795 statement, so we only need one BUF_PUSH. */ | |
| 1796 BUF_PUSH (*p == '^' ? charset_not : charset); | |
| 1797 if (*p == '^') | |
| 1798 p++; | |
| 1799 | |
| 1800 /* Remember the first position in the bracket expression. */ | |
| 1801 p1 = p; | |
| 1802 | |
| 1803 /* Push the number of bytes in the bitmap. */ | |
| 1804 BUF_PUSH ((1 << BYTEWIDTH) / BYTEWIDTH); | |
| 1805 | |
| 1806 /* Clear the whole map. */ | |
| 1807 bzero (b, (1 << BYTEWIDTH) / BYTEWIDTH); | |
| 1808 | |
| 1809 /* charset_not matches newline according to a syntax bit. */ | |
| 1810 if ((re_opcode_t) b[-2] == charset_not | |
| 1811 && (syntax & RE_HAT_LISTS_NOT_NEWLINE)) | |
| 1812 SET_LIST_BIT ('\n'); | |
| 1813 | |
| 1814 /* Read in characters and ranges, setting map bits. */ | |
| 1815 for (;;) | |
| 1816 { | |
| 1817 if (p == pend) return REG_EBRACK; | |
| 1818 | |
| 1819 PATFETCH (c); | |
| 1820 | |
| 1821 /* \ might escape characters inside [...] and [^...]. */ | |
| 1822 if ((syntax & RE_BACKSLASH_ESCAPE_IN_LISTS) && c == '\\') | |
| 1823 { | |
| 1824 if (p == pend) return REG_EESCAPE; | |
| 1825 | |
| 1826 PATFETCH (c1); | |
| 1827 SET_LIST_BIT (c1); | |
| 1828 continue; | |
| 1829 } | |
| 1830 | |
| 1831 /* Could be the end of the bracket expression. If it's | |
| 1832 not (i.e., when the bracket expression is `[]' so | |
| 1833 far), the ']' character bit gets set way below. */ | |
| 1834 if (c == ']' && p != p1 + 1) | |
| 1835 break; | |
| 1836 | |
| 1837 /* Look ahead to see if it's a range when the last thing | |
| 1838 was a character class. */ | |
| 1839 if (had_char_class && c == '-' && *p != ']') | |
| 1840 return REG_ERANGE; | |
| 1841 | |
| 1842 /* Look ahead to see if it's a range when the last thing | |
| 1843 was a character: if this is a hyphen not at the | |
| 1844 beginning or the end of a list, then it's the range | |
| 1845 operator. */ | |
| 1846 if (c == '-' | |
| 1847 && !(p - 2 >= pattern && p[-2] == '[') | |
| 1848 && !(p - 3 >= pattern && p[-3] == '[' && p[-2] == '^') | |
| 1849 && *p != ']') | |
| 1850 { | |
| 1851 reg_errcode_t ret | |
| 1852 = compile_range (&p, pend, translate, syntax, b); | |
| 1853 if (ret != REG_NOERROR) return ret; | |
| 1854 } | |
| 1855 | |
| 1856 else if (p[0] == '-' && p[1] != ']') | |
| 1857 { /* This handles ranges made up of characters only. */ | |
| 1858 reg_errcode_t ret; | |
| 1859 | |
| 1860 /* Move past the `-'. */ | |
| 1861 PATFETCH (c1); | |
| 1862 | |
| 1863 ret = compile_range (&p, pend, translate, syntax, b); | |
| 1864 if (ret != REG_NOERROR) return ret; | |
| 1865 } | |
| 1866 | |
| 1867 /* See if we're at the beginning of a possible character | |
| 1868 class. */ | |
| 1869 | |
| 1870 else if (syntax & RE_CHAR_CLASSES && c == '[' && *p == ':') | |
| 1871 { /* Leave room for the null. */ | |
| 1872 char str[CHAR_CLASS_MAX_LENGTH + 1]; | |
| 1873 | |
| 1874 PATFETCH (c); | |
| 1875 c1 = 0; | |
| 1876 | |
| 1877 /* If pattern is `[[:'. */ | |
| 1878 if (p == pend) return REG_EBRACK; | |
| 1879 | |
| 1880 for (;;) | |
| 1881 { | |
| 1882 PATFETCH (c); | |
| 1883 if (c == ':' || c == ']' || p == pend | |
| 1884 || c1 == CHAR_CLASS_MAX_LENGTH) | |
| 1885 break; | |
| 1886 str[c1++] = c; | |
| 1887 } | |
| 1888 str[c1] = '\0'; | |
| 1889 | |
| 1890 /* If isn't a word bracketed by `[:' and:`]': | |
| 1891 undo the ending character, the letters, and leave | |
| 1892 the leading `:' and `[' (but set bits for them). */ | |
| 1893 if (c == ':' && *p == ']') | |
| 1894 { | |
| 1895 int ch; | |
| 1896 boolean is_alnum = STREQ (str, "alnum"); | |
| 1897 boolean is_alpha = STREQ (str, "alpha"); | |
| 1898 boolean is_blank = STREQ (str, "blank"); | |
| 1899 boolean is_cntrl = STREQ (str, "cntrl"); | |
| 1900 boolean is_digit = STREQ (str, "digit"); | |
| 1901 boolean is_graph = STREQ (str, "graph"); | |
| 1902 boolean is_lower = STREQ (str, "lower"); | |
| 1903 boolean is_print = STREQ (str, "print"); | |
| 1904 boolean is_punct = STREQ (str, "punct"); | |
| 1905 boolean is_space = STREQ (str, "space"); | |
| 1906 boolean is_upper = STREQ (str, "upper"); | |
| 1907 boolean is_xdigit = STREQ (str, "xdigit"); | |
| 1908 | |
| 1909 if (!IS_CHAR_CLASS (str)) return REG_ECTYPE; | |
| 1910 | |
| 1911 /* Throw away the ] at the end of the character | |
| 1912 class. */ | |
| 1913 PATFETCH (c); | |
| 1914 | |
| 1915 if (p == pend) return REG_EBRACK; | |
| 1916 | |
| 1917 for (ch = 0; ch < 1 << BYTEWIDTH; ch++) | |
| 1918 { | |
| 1668 | 1919 if ( (is_alnum && ISALNUM (ch)) |
| 1920 || (is_alpha && ISALPHA (ch)) | |
| 1921 || (is_blank && ISBLANK (ch)) | |
| 1922 || (is_cntrl && ISCNTRL (ch)) | |
| 1923 || (is_digit && ISDIGIT (ch)) | |
| 1924 || (is_graph && ISGRAPH (ch)) | |
| 1925 || (is_lower && ISLOWER (ch)) | |
| 1926 || (is_print && ISPRINT (ch)) | |
| 1927 || (is_punct && ISPUNCT (ch)) | |
| 1928 || (is_space && ISSPACE (ch)) | |
| 1929 || (is_upper && ISUPPER (ch)) | |
| 1930 || (is_xdigit && ISXDIGIT (ch))) | |
| 1155 | 1931 SET_LIST_BIT (ch); |
| 1932 } | |
| 1933 had_char_class = true; | |
| 1934 } | |
| 1935 else | |
| 1936 { | |
| 1937 c1++; | |
| 1938 while (c1--) | |
| 1939 PATUNFETCH; | |
| 1940 SET_LIST_BIT ('['); | |
| 1941 SET_LIST_BIT (':'); | |
| 1942 had_char_class = false; | |
| 1943 } | |
| 1944 } | |
| 1945 else | |
| 1946 { | |
| 1947 had_char_class = false; | |
| 1948 SET_LIST_BIT (c); | |
| 1949 } | |
| 1950 } | |
| 1951 | |
| 1952 /* Discard any (non)matching list bytes that are all 0 at the | |
| 1953 end of the map. Decrease the map-length byte too. */ | |
| 1954 while ((int) b[-1] > 0 && b[b[-1] - 1] == 0) | |
| 1955 b[-1]--; | |
| 1956 b += b[-1]; | |
| 1957 } | |
| 1958 break; | |
| 1959 | |
| 1960 | |
| 1961 case '(': | |
| 1962 if (syntax & RE_NO_BK_PARENS) | |
| 1963 goto handle_open; | |
| 1964 else | |
| 1965 goto normal_char; | |
| 1966 | |
| 1967 | |
| 1968 case ')': | |
| 1969 if (syntax & RE_NO_BK_PARENS) | |
| 1970 goto handle_close; | |
| 1971 else | |
| 1972 goto normal_char; | |
| 1973 | |
| 1974 | |
| 1975 case '\n': | |
| 1976 if (syntax & RE_NEWLINE_ALT) | |
| 1977 goto handle_alt; | |
| 1978 else | |
| 1979 goto normal_char; | |
| 1980 | |
| 1981 | |
| 1982 case '|': | |
| 1983 if (syntax & RE_NO_BK_VBAR) | |
| 1984 goto handle_alt; | |
| 1985 else | |
| 1986 goto normal_char; | |
| 1987 | |
| 1988 | |
| 1989 case '{': | |
| 1990 if (syntax & RE_INTERVALS && syntax & RE_NO_BK_BRACES) | |
| 1991 goto handle_interval; | |
| 1992 else | |
| 1993 goto normal_char; | |
| 1994 | |
| 1995 | |
| 1996 case '\\': | |
| 1997 if (p == pend) return REG_EESCAPE; | |
| 1998 | |
| 1999 /* Do not translate the character after the \, so that we can | |
| 2000 distinguish, e.g., \B from \b, even if we normally would | |
| 2001 translate, e.g., B to b. */ | |
| 2002 PATFETCH_RAW (c); | |
| 2003 | |
| 2004 switch (c) | |
| 2005 { | |
| 2006 case '(': | |
| 2007 if (syntax & RE_NO_BK_PARENS) | |
| 2008 goto normal_backslash; | |
| 2009 | |
| 2010 handle_open: | |
| 2011 bufp->re_nsub++; | |
| 2012 regnum++; | |
| 2013 | |
| 2014 if (COMPILE_STACK_FULL) | |
| 2015 { | |
| 2016 RETALLOC (compile_stack.stack, compile_stack.size << 1, | |
| 2017 compile_stack_elt_t); | |
| 2018 if (compile_stack.stack == NULL) return REG_ESPACE; | |
| 2019 | |
| 2020 compile_stack.size <<= 1; | |
| 2021 } | |
| 2022 | |
| 2023 /* These are the values to restore when we hit end of this | |
| 2024 group. They are all relative offsets, so that if the | |
| 2025 whole pattern moves because of realloc, they will still | |
| 2026 be valid. */ | |
| 2027 COMPILE_STACK_TOP.begalt_offset = begalt - bufp->buffer; | |
| 2028 COMPILE_STACK_TOP.fixup_alt_jump | |
| 2029 = fixup_alt_jump ? fixup_alt_jump - bufp->buffer + 1 : 0; | |
| 2030 COMPILE_STACK_TOP.laststart_offset = b - bufp->buffer; | |
| 2031 COMPILE_STACK_TOP.regnum = regnum; | |
| 2032 | |
| 2033 /* We will eventually replace the 0 with the number of | |
| 2034 groups inner to this one. But do not push a | |
| 2035 start_memory for groups beyond the last one we can | |
| 2036 represent in the compiled pattern. */ | |
| 2037 if (regnum <= MAX_REGNUM) | |
| 2038 { | |
| 2039 COMPILE_STACK_TOP.inner_group_offset = b - bufp->buffer + 2; | |
| 2040 BUF_PUSH_3 (start_memory, regnum, 0); | |
| 2041 } | |
| 2042 | |
| 2043 compile_stack.avail++; | |
| 2044 | |
| 2045 fixup_alt_jump = 0; | |
| 2046 laststart = 0; | |
| 2047 begalt = b; | |
| 2453 | 2048 /* If we've reached MAX_REGNUM groups, then this open |
| 2049 won't actually generate any code, so we'll have to | |
| 2050 clear pending_exact explicitly. */ | |
| 2051 pending_exact = 0; | |
| 1155 | 2052 break; |
| 2053 | |
| 2054 | |
| 2055 case ')': | |
| 2056 if (syntax & RE_NO_BK_PARENS) goto normal_backslash; | |
| 2057 | |
| 2058 if (COMPILE_STACK_EMPTY) | |
| 2059 if (syntax & RE_UNMATCHED_RIGHT_PAREN_ORD) | |
| 2060 goto normal_backslash; | |
| 2061 else | |
| 2062 return REG_ERPAREN; | |
| 2063 | |
| 2064 handle_close: | |
| 2065 if (fixup_alt_jump) | |
| 2066 { /* Push a dummy failure point at the end of the | |
| 2067 alternative for a possible future | |
| 2068 `pop_failure_jump' to pop. See comments at | |
| 2069 `push_dummy_failure' in `re_match_2'. */ | |
| 2070 BUF_PUSH (push_dummy_failure); | |
| 2071 | |
| 2072 /* We allocated space for this jump when we assigned | |
| 2073 to `fixup_alt_jump', in the `handle_alt' case below. */ | |
| 2074 STORE_JUMP (jump_past_alt, fixup_alt_jump, b - 1); | |
| 2075 } | |
| 2076 | |
| 2077 /* See similar code for backslashed left paren above. */ | |
| 2078 if (COMPILE_STACK_EMPTY) | |
| 2079 if (syntax & RE_UNMATCHED_RIGHT_PAREN_ORD) | |
| 2080 goto normal_char; | |
| 2081 else | |
| 2082 return REG_ERPAREN; | |
| 2083 | |
| 2084 /* Since we just checked for an empty stack above, this | |
| 2085 ``can't happen''. */ | |
| 2086 assert (compile_stack.avail != 0); | |
| 2087 { | |
| 2088 /* We don't just want to restore into `regnum', because | |
| 2089 later groups should continue to be numbered higher, | |
| 2090 as in `(ab)c(de)' -- the second group is #2. */ | |
| 2091 regnum_t this_group_regnum; | |
| 2092 | |
| 2093 compile_stack.avail--; | |
| 2094 begalt = bufp->buffer + COMPILE_STACK_TOP.begalt_offset; | |
| 2095 fixup_alt_jump | |
| 2096 = COMPILE_STACK_TOP.fixup_alt_jump | |
| 2097 ? bufp->buffer + COMPILE_STACK_TOP.fixup_alt_jump - 1 | |
| 2098 : 0; | |
| 2099 laststart = bufp->buffer + COMPILE_STACK_TOP.laststart_offset; | |
| 2100 this_group_regnum = COMPILE_STACK_TOP.regnum; | |
| 2453 | 2101 /* If we've reached MAX_REGNUM groups, then this open |
| 2102 won't actually generate any code, so we'll have to | |
| 2103 clear pending_exact explicitly. */ | |
| 2104 pending_exact = 0; | |
| 1155 | 2105 |
| 2106 /* We're at the end of the group, so now we know how many | |
| 2107 groups were inside this one. */ | |
| 2108 if (this_group_regnum <= MAX_REGNUM) | |
| 2109 { | |
| 2110 unsigned char *inner_group_loc | |
| 2111 = bufp->buffer + COMPILE_STACK_TOP.inner_group_offset; | |
| 2112 | |
| 2113 *inner_group_loc = regnum - this_group_regnum; | |
| 2114 BUF_PUSH_3 (stop_memory, this_group_regnum, | |
| 2115 regnum - this_group_regnum); | |
| 2116 } | |
| 2117 } | |
| 2118 break; | |
| 2119 | |
| 2120 | |
| 2121 case '|': /* `\|'. */ | |
| 2122 if (syntax & RE_LIMITED_OPS || syntax & RE_NO_BK_VBAR) | |
| 2123 goto normal_backslash; | |
| 2124 handle_alt: | |
| 2125 if (syntax & RE_LIMITED_OPS) | |
| 2126 goto normal_char; | |
| 2127 | |
| 2128 /* Insert before the previous alternative a jump which | |
| 2129 jumps to this alternative if the former fails. */ | |
| 2130 GET_BUFFER_SPACE (3); | |
| 2131 INSERT_JUMP (on_failure_jump, begalt, b + 6); | |
| 2132 pending_exact = 0; | |
| 2133 b += 3; | |
| 2134 | |
| 2135 /* The alternative before this one has a jump after it | |
| 2136 which gets executed if it gets matched. Adjust that | |
| 2137 jump so it will jump to this alternative's analogous | |
| 2138 jump (put in below, which in turn will jump to the next | |
| 2139 (if any) alternative's such jump, etc.). The last such | |
| 2140 jump jumps to the correct final destination. A picture: | |
| 2141 _____ _____ | |
| 2142 | | | | | |
| 2143 | v | v | |
| 2144 a | b | c | |
| 2145 | |
| 1637 | 2146 If we are at `b', then fixup_alt_jump right now points to a |
| 2147 three-byte space after `a'. We'll put in the jump, set | |
| 2148 fixup_alt_jump to right after `b', and leave behind three | |
| 2149 bytes which we'll fill in when we get to after `c'. */ | |
| 1155 | 2150 |
| 2151 if (fixup_alt_jump) | |
| 2152 STORE_JUMP (jump_past_alt, fixup_alt_jump, b); | |
| 2153 | |
| 2154 /* Mark and leave space for a jump after this alternative, | |
| 2155 to be filled in later either by next alternative or | |
| 2156 when know we're at the end of a series of alternatives. */ | |
| 2157 fixup_alt_jump = b; | |
| 2158 GET_BUFFER_SPACE (3); | |
| 2159 b += 3; | |
| 2160 | |
| 2161 laststart = 0; | |
| 2162 begalt = b; | |
| 2163 break; | |
| 2164 | |
| 2165 | |
| 2166 case '{': | |
| 2167 /* If \{ is a literal. */ | |
| 2168 if (!(syntax & RE_INTERVALS) | |
| 2169 /* If we're at `\{' and it's not the open-interval | |
| 2170 operator. */ | |
| 2171 || ((syntax & RE_INTERVALS) && (syntax & RE_NO_BK_BRACES)) | |
| 2172 || (p - 2 == pattern && p == pend)) | |
| 2173 goto normal_backslash; | |
| 2174 | |
| 2175 handle_interval: | |
| 2176 { | |
| 2177 /* If got here, then the syntax allows intervals. */ | |
| 2178 | |
| 2179 /* At least (most) this many matches must be made. */ | |
| 2180 int lower_bound = -1, upper_bound = -1; | |
| 2181 | |
| 2182 beg_interval = p - 1; | |
| 2183 | |
| 2184 if (p == pend) | |
| 2185 { | |
| 2186 if (syntax & RE_NO_BK_BRACES) | |
| 2187 goto unfetch_interval; | |
| 2188 else | |
| 2189 return REG_EBRACE; | |
| 2190 } | |
| 2191 | |
| 2192 GET_UNSIGNED_NUMBER (lower_bound); | |
| 2193 | |
| 2194 if (c == ',') | |
| 2195 { | |
| 2196 GET_UNSIGNED_NUMBER (upper_bound); | |
| 2197 if (upper_bound < 0) upper_bound = RE_DUP_MAX; | |
| 2198 } | |
| 2199 else | |
| 2200 /* Interval such as `{1}' => match exactly once. */ | |
| 2201 upper_bound = lower_bound; | |
| 2202 | |
| 2203 if (lower_bound < 0 || upper_bound > RE_DUP_MAX | |
| 2204 || lower_bound > upper_bound) | |
| 2205 { | |
| 2206 if (syntax & RE_NO_BK_BRACES) | |
| 2207 goto unfetch_interval; | |
| 2208 else | |
| 2209 return REG_BADBR; | |
| 2210 } | |
| 2211 | |
| 2212 if (!(syntax & RE_NO_BK_BRACES)) | |
| 2213 { | |
| 2214 if (c != '\\') return REG_EBRACE; | |
| 2215 | |
| 2216 PATFETCH (c); | |
| 2217 } | |
| 2218 | |
| 2219 if (c != '}') | |
| 2220 { | |
| 2221 if (syntax & RE_NO_BK_BRACES) | |
| 2222 goto unfetch_interval; | |
| 2223 else | |
| 2224 return REG_BADBR; | |
| 2225 } | |
| 2226 | |
| 2227 /* We just parsed a valid interval. */ | |
| 2228 | |
| 2229 /* If it's invalid to have no preceding re. */ | |
| 2230 if (!laststart) | |
| 2231 { | |
| 2232 if (syntax & RE_CONTEXT_INVALID_OPS) | |
| 2233 return REG_BADRPT; | |
| 2234 else if (syntax & RE_CONTEXT_INDEP_OPS) | |
| 2235 laststart = b; | |
| 2236 else | |
| 2237 goto unfetch_interval; | |
| 2238 } | |
| 2239 | |
| 2240 /* If the upper bound is zero, don't want to succeed at | |
| 2241 all; jump from `laststart' to `b + 3', which will be | |
| 2242 the end of the buffer after we insert the jump. */ | |
| 2243 if (upper_bound == 0) | |
| 2244 { | |
| 2245 GET_BUFFER_SPACE (3); | |
| 2246 INSERT_JUMP (jump, laststart, b + 3); | |
| 2247 b += 3; | |
| 2248 } | |
| 2249 | |
| 2250 /* Otherwise, we have a nontrivial interval. When | |
| 2251 we're all done, the pattern will look like: | |
| 2252 set_number_at <jump count> <upper bound> | |
| 2253 set_number_at <succeed_n count> <lower bound> | |
| 5841 | 2254 succeed_n <after jump addr> <succeed_n count> |
| 1155 | 2255 <body of loop> |
| 2256 jump_n <succeed_n addr> <jump count> | |
| 2257 (The upper bound and `jump_n' are omitted if | |
| 2258 `upper_bound' is 1, though.) */ | |
| 2259 else | |
| 2260 { /* If the upper bound is > 1, we need to insert | |
| 2261 more at the end of the loop. */ | |
| 2262 unsigned nbytes = 10 + (upper_bound > 1) * 10; | |
| 2263 | |
| 2264 GET_BUFFER_SPACE (nbytes); | |
| 2265 | |
| 2266 /* Initialize lower bound of the `succeed_n', even | |
| 2267 though it will be set during matching by its | |
| 2268 attendant `set_number_at' (inserted next), | |
| 2269 because `re_compile_fastmap' needs to know. | |
| 2270 Jump to the `jump_n' we might insert below. */ | |
| 2271 INSERT_JUMP2 (succeed_n, laststart, | |
| 2272 b + 5 + (upper_bound > 1) * 5, | |
| 2273 lower_bound); | |
| 2274 b += 5; | |
| 2275 | |
| 2276 /* Code to initialize the lower bound. Insert | |
| 2277 before the `succeed_n'. The `5' is the last two | |
| 2278 bytes of this `set_number_at', plus 3 bytes of | |
| 2279 the following `succeed_n'. */ | |
| 2280 insert_op2 (set_number_at, laststart, 5, lower_bound, b); | |
| 2281 b += 5; | |
| 2282 | |
| 2283 if (upper_bound > 1) | |
| 2284 { /* More than one repetition is allowed, so | |
| 2285 append a backward jump to the `succeed_n' | |
| 2286 that starts this interval. | |
| 2287 | |
| 2288 When we've reached this during matching, | |
| 2289 we'll have matched the interval once, so | |
| 2290 jump back only `upper_bound - 1' times. */ | |
| 2291 STORE_JUMP2 (jump_n, b, laststart + 5, | |
| 2292 upper_bound - 1); | |
| 2293 b += 5; | |
| 2294 | |
| 2295 /* The location we want to set is the second | |
| 2296 parameter of the `jump_n'; that is `b-2' as | |
| 2297 an absolute address. `laststart' will be | |
| 2298 the `set_number_at' we're about to insert; | |
| 2299 `laststart+3' the number to set, the source | |
| 2300 for the relative address. But we are | |
| 2301 inserting into the middle of the pattern -- | |
| 2302 so everything is getting moved up by 5. | |
| 2303 Conclusion: (b - 2) - (laststart + 3) + 5, | |
| 2304 i.e., b - laststart. | |
| 2305 | |
| 2306 We insert this at the beginning of the loop | |
| 2307 so that if we fail during matching, we'll | |
| 2308 reinitialize the bounds. */ | |
| 2309 insert_op2 (set_number_at, laststart, b - laststart, | |
| 2310 upper_bound - 1, b); | |
| 2311 b += 5; | |
| 2312 } | |
| 2313 } | |
| 2314 pending_exact = 0; | |
| 2315 beg_interval = NULL; | |
| 2316 } | |
| 2317 break; | |
| 2318 | |
| 2319 unfetch_interval: | |
| 2320 /* If an invalid interval, match the characters as literals. */ | |
| 2321 assert (beg_interval); | |
| 2322 p = beg_interval; | |
| 2323 beg_interval = NULL; | |
| 2324 | |
| 2325 /* normal_char and normal_backslash need `c'. */ | |
| 2326 PATFETCH (c); | |
| 2327 | |
| 2328 if (!(syntax & RE_NO_BK_BRACES)) | |
| 2329 { | |
| 2330 if (p > pattern && p[-1] == '\\') | |
| 2331 goto normal_backslash; | |
| 2332 } | |
| 2333 goto normal_char; | |
| 2334 | |
| 2335 #ifdef emacs | |
| 2336 /* There is no way to specify the before_dot and after_dot | |
| 2337 operators. rms says this is ok. --karl */ | |
| 2338 case '=': | |
| 2339 BUF_PUSH (at_dot); | |
| 2340 break; | |
| 2341 | |
| 2342 case 's': | |
| 2343 laststart = b; | |
| 2344 PATFETCH (c); | |
| 2345 BUF_PUSH_2 (syntaxspec, syntax_spec_code[c]); | |
| 2346 break; | |
| 2347 | |
| 2348 case 'S': | |
| 2349 laststart = b; | |
| 2350 PATFETCH (c); | |
| 2351 BUF_PUSH_2 (notsyntaxspec, syntax_spec_code[c]); | |
| 2352 break; | |
| 2353 #endif /* emacs */ | |
| 2354 | |
| 2355 | |
| 2356 case 'w': | |
| 2357 laststart = b; | |
| 2358 BUF_PUSH (wordchar); | |
| 2359 break; | |
| 2360 | |
| 2361 | |
| 2362 case 'W': | |
| 2363 laststart = b; | |
| 2364 BUF_PUSH (notwordchar); | |
| 2365 break; | |
| 2366 | |
| 2367 | |
| 2368 case '<': | |
| 2369 BUF_PUSH (wordbeg); | |
| 2370 break; | |
| 2371 | |
| 2372 case '>': | |
| 2373 BUF_PUSH (wordend); | |
| 2374 break; | |
| 2375 | |
| 2376 case 'b': | |
| 2377 BUF_PUSH (wordbound); | |
| 2378 break; | |
| 2379 | |
| 2380 case 'B': | |
| 2381 BUF_PUSH (notwordbound); | |
| 2382 break; | |
| 2383 | |
| 2384 case '`': | |
| 2385 BUF_PUSH (begbuf); | |
| 2386 break; | |
| 2387 | |
| 2388 case '\'': | |
| 2389 BUF_PUSH (endbuf); | |
| 2390 break; | |
| 2391 | |
| 2392 case '1': case '2': case '3': case '4': case '5': | |
| 2393 case '6': case '7': case '8': case '9': | |
| 2394 if (syntax & RE_NO_BK_REFS) | |
| 2395 goto normal_char; | |
| 2396 | |
| 2397 c1 = c - '0'; | |
| 2398 | |
| 2399 if (c1 > regnum) | |
| 2400 return REG_ESUBREG; | |
| 2401 | |
| 2402 /* Can't back reference to a subexpression if inside of it. */ | |
| 2403 if (group_in_compile_stack (compile_stack, c1)) | |
| 2404 goto normal_char; | |
| 2405 | |
| 2406 laststart = b; | |
| 2407 BUF_PUSH_2 (duplicate, c1); | |
| 2408 break; | |
| 2409 | |
| 2410 | |
| 2411 case '+': | |
| 2412 case '?': | |
| 2413 if (syntax & RE_BK_PLUS_QM) | |
| 2414 goto handle_plus; | |
| 2415 else | |
| 2416 goto normal_backslash; | |
| 2417 | |
| 2418 default: | |
| 2419 normal_backslash: | |
| 2420 /* You might think it would be useful for \ to mean | |
| 2421 not to translate; but if we don't translate it | |
| 2422 it will never match anything. */ | |
| 2423 c = TRANSLATE (c); | |
| 2424 goto normal_char; | |
| 2425 } | |
| 2426 break; | |
| 2427 | |
| 2428 | |
| 2429 default: | |
| 2430 /* Expects the character in `c'. */ | |
| 2431 normal_char: | |
| 2432 /* If no exactn currently being built. */ | |
| 2433 if (!pending_exact | |
| 2434 | |
| 2435 /* If last exactn not at current position. */ | |
| 2436 || pending_exact + *pending_exact + 1 != b | |
| 2437 | |
| 2438 /* We have only one byte following the exactn for the count. */ | |
| 2439 || *pending_exact == (1 << BYTEWIDTH) - 1 | |
| 2440 | |
| 2441 /* If followed by a repetition operator. */ | |
| 2442 || *p == '*' || *p == '^' | |
| 2443 || ((syntax & RE_BK_PLUS_QM) | |
| 2444 ? *p == '\\' && (p[1] == '+' || p[1] == '?') | |
| 2445 : (*p == '+' || *p == '?')) | |
| 2446 || ((syntax & RE_INTERVALS) | |
| 2447 && ((syntax & RE_NO_BK_BRACES) | |
| 2448 ? *p == '{' | |
| 2449 : (p[0] == '\\' && p[1] == '{')))) | |
| 2450 { | |
| 2451 /* Start building a new exactn. */ | |
| 2452 | |
| 2453 laststart = b; | |
| 2454 | |
| 2455 BUF_PUSH_2 (exactn, 0); | |
| 2456 pending_exact = b - 1; | |
| 2457 } | |
| 2458 | |
| 2459 BUF_PUSH (c); | |
| 2460 (*pending_exact)++; | |
| 2461 break; | |
| 2462 } /* switch (c) */ | |
| 2463 } /* while p != pend */ | |
| 2464 | |
| 2465 | |
| 2466 /* Through the pattern now. */ | |
| 2467 | |
| 2468 if (fixup_alt_jump) | |
| 2469 STORE_JUMP (jump_past_alt, fixup_alt_jump, b); | |
| 2470 | |
| 2471 if (!COMPILE_STACK_EMPTY) | |
| 2472 return REG_EPAREN; | |
| 2473 | |
| 2474 free (compile_stack.stack); | |
| 2475 | |
| 2476 /* We have succeeded; set the length of the buffer. */ | |
| 2477 bufp->used = b - bufp->buffer; | |
| 2478 | |
| 2479 #ifdef DEBUG | |
| 2480 if (debug) | |
| 2481 { | |
| 2615 | 2482 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("\nCompiled pattern: \n"); |
| 1155 | 2483 print_compiled_pattern (bufp); |
| 2484 } | |
| 2485 #endif /* DEBUG */ | |
| 2486 | |
| 2952 | 2487 #ifndef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE |
| 2949 | 2488 /* Initialize the failure stack to the largest possible stack. This |
| 2489 isn't necessary unless we're trying to avoid calling alloca in | |
| 2490 the search and match routines. */ | |
| 2491 { | |
| 2492 int num_regs = bufp->re_nsub + 1; | |
| 2493 | |
| 2494 /* Since DOUBLE_FAIL_STACK refuses to double only if the current size | |
| 2495 is strictly greater than re_max_failures, the largest possible stack | |
| 2496 is 2 * re_max_failures failure points. */ | |
| 2497 fail_stack.size = (2 * re_max_failures * MAX_FAILURE_ITEMS); | |
| 5841 | 2498 if (! fail_stack.stack) |
| 2949 | 2499 fail_stack.stack = |
| 2500 (fail_stack_elt_t *) malloc (fail_stack.size | |
| 2501 * sizeof (fail_stack_elt_t)); | |
| 2502 | |
| 2503 /* Initialize some other variables the matcher uses. */ | |
| 2504 RETALLOC_IF (regstart, num_regs, const char *); | |
| 2505 RETALLOC_IF (regend, num_regs, const char *); | |
| 2506 RETALLOC_IF (old_regstart, num_regs, const char *); | |
| 2507 RETALLOC_IF (old_regend, num_regs, const char *); | |
| 2508 RETALLOC_IF (best_regstart, num_regs, const char *); | |
| 2509 RETALLOC_IF (best_regend, num_regs, const char *); | |
| 2510 RETALLOC_IF (reg_info, num_regs, register_info_type); | |
| 2511 RETALLOC_IF (reg_dummy, num_regs, const char *); | |
| 2512 RETALLOC_IF (reg_info_dummy, num_regs, register_info_type); | |
| 2513 } | |
| 2514 #endif | |
| 2515 | |
| 1155 | 2516 return REG_NOERROR; |
| 2517 } /* regex_compile */ | |
| 2518 | |
| 2519 /* Subroutines for `regex_compile'. */ | |
| 2520 | |
| 2521 /* Store OP at LOC followed by two-byte integer parameter ARG. */ | |
| 2522 | |
| 2523 static void | |
| 2524 store_op1 (op, loc, arg) | |
| 2525 re_opcode_t op; | |
| 2526 unsigned char *loc; | |
| 2527 int arg; | |
| 2528 { | |
| 2529 *loc = (unsigned char) op; | |
| 2530 STORE_NUMBER (loc + 1, arg); | |
| 2531 } | |
| 2532 | |
| 2533 | |
| 2534 /* Like `store_op1', but for two two-byte parameters ARG1 and ARG2. */ | |
| 2535 | |
| 2536 static void | |
| 2537 store_op2 (op, loc, arg1, arg2) | |
| 2538 re_opcode_t op; | |
| 2539 unsigned char *loc; | |
| 2540 int arg1, arg2; | |
| 2541 { | |
| 2542 *loc = (unsigned char) op; | |
| 2543 STORE_NUMBER (loc + 1, arg1); | |
| 2544 STORE_NUMBER (loc + 3, arg2); | |
| 2545 } | |
| 2546 | |
| 2547 | |
| 2548 /* Copy the bytes from LOC to END to open up three bytes of space at LOC | |
| 2549 for OP followed by two-byte integer parameter ARG. */ | |
| 2550 | |
| 2551 static void | |
| 2552 insert_op1 (op, loc, arg, end) | |
| 2553 re_opcode_t op; | |
| 2554 unsigned char *loc; | |
| 2555 int arg; | |
| 2556 unsigned char *end; | |
| 2557 { | |
| 2558 register unsigned char *pfrom = end; | |
| 2559 register unsigned char *pto = end + 3; | |
| 2560 | |
| 2561 while (pfrom != loc) | |
| 2562 *--pto = *--pfrom; | |
| 2563 | |
| 2564 store_op1 (op, loc, arg); | |
| 2565 } | |
| 2566 | |
| 2567 | |
| 2568 /* Like `insert_op1', but for two two-byte parameters ARG1 and ARG2. */ | |
| 2569 | |
| 2570 static void | |
| 2571 insert_op2 (op, loc, arg1, arg2, end) | |
| 2572 re_opcode_t op; | |
| 2573 unsigned char *loc; | |
| 2574 int arg1, arg2; | |
| 2575 unsigned char *end; | |
| 2576 { | |
| 2577 register unsigned char *pfrom = end; | |
| 2578 register unsigned char *pto = end + 5; | |
| 2579 | |
| 2580 while (pfrom != loc) | |
| 2581 *--pto = *--pfrom; | |
| 2582 | |
| 2583 store_op2 (op, loc, arg1, arg2); | |
| 2584 } | |
| 2585 | |
| 2586 | |
| 2587 /* P points to just after a ^ in PATTERN. Return true if that ^ comes | |
| 2588 after an alternative or a begin-subexpression. We assume there is at | |
| 2589 least one character before the ^. */ | |
| 2590 | |
| 2591 static boolean | |
| 2592 at_begline_loc_p (pattern, p, syntax) | |
| 2593 const char *pattern, *p; | |
| 2594 reg_syntax_t syntax; | |
| 2595 { | |
| 2596 const char *prev = p - 2; | |
| 2597 boolean prev_prev_backslash = prev > pattern && prev[-1] == '\\'; | |
| 2598 | |
| 2599 return | |
| 2600 /* After a subexpression? */ | |
| 2601 (*prev == '(' && (syntax & RE_NO_BK_PARENS || prev_prev_backslash)) | |
| 2602 /* After an alternative? */ | |
| 2603 || (*prev == '|' && (syntax & RE_NO_BK_VBAR || prev_prev_backslash)); | |
| 2604 } | |
| 2605 | |
| 2606 | |
| 2607 /* The dual of at_begline_loc_p. This one is for $. We assume there is | |
| 2608 at least one character after the $, i.e., `P < PEND'. */ | |
| 2609 | |
| 2610 static boolean | |
| 2611 at_endline_loc_p (p, pend, syntax) | |
| 2612 const char *p, *pend; | |
| 2613 int syntax; | |
| 2614 { | |
| 2615 const char *next = p; | |
| 2616 boolean next_backslash = *next == '\\'; | |
| 2617 const char *next_next = p + 1 < pend ? p + 1 : NULL; | |
| 2618 | |
| 2619 return | |
| 2620 /* Before a subexpression? */ | |
| 2621 (syntax & RE_NO_BK_PARENS ? *next == ')' | |
| 2622 : next_backslash && next_next && *next_next == ')') | |
| 2623 /* Before an alternative? */ | |
| 2624 || (syntax & RE_NO_BK_VBAR ? *next == '|' | |
| 2625 : next_backslash && next_next && *next_next == '|'); | |
| 2626 } | |
| 2627 | |
| 2628 | |
| 2629 /* Returns true if REGNUM is in one of COMPILE_STACK's elements and | |
| 2630 false if it's not. */ | |
| 2631 | |
| 2632 static boolean | |
| 2633 group_in_compile_stack (compile_stack, regnum) | |
| 2634 compile_stack_type compile_stack; | |
| 2635 regnum_t regnum; | |
| 2636 { | |
| 2637 int this_element; | |
| 2638 | |
| 2639 for (this_element = compile_stack.avail - 1; | |
| 2640 this_element >= 0; | |
| 2641 this_element--) | |
| 2642 if (compile_stack.stack[this_element].regnum == regnum) | |
| 2643 return true; | |
| 2644 | |
| 2645 return false; | |
| 2646 } | |
| 2647 | |
| 2648 | |
| 2649 /* Read the ending character of a range (in a bracket expression) from the | |
| 2650 uncompiled pattern *P_PTR (which ends at PEND). We assume the | |
| 2651 starting character is in `P[-2]'. (`P[-1]' is the character `-'.) | |
| 2652 Then we set the translation of all bits between the starting and | |
| 2653 ending characters (inclusive) in the compiled pattern B. | |
| 2654 | |
| 2655 Return an error code. | |
| 2656 | |
| 2657 We use these short variable names so we can use the same macros as | |
| 2658 `regex_compile' itself. */ | |
| 2659 | |
| 2660 static reg_errcode_t | |
| 2661 compile_range (p_ptr, pend, translate, syntax, b) | |
| 2662 const char **p_ptr, *pend; | |
| 2663 char *translate; | |
| 2664 reg_syntax_t syntax; | |
| 2665 unsigned char *b; | |
| 2666 { | |
| 2667 unsigned this_char; | |
| 2668 | |
| 2669 const char *p = *p_ptr; | |
| 1689 | 2670 int range_start, range_end; |
| 1155 | 2671 |
| 2672 if (p == pend) | |
| 2673 return REG_ERANGE; | |
| 2674 | |
| 1689 | 2675 /* Even though the pattern is a signed `char *', we need to fetch |
| 2676 with unsigned char *'s; if the high bit of the pattern character | |
| 2677 is set, the range endpoints will be negative if we fetch using a | |
| 2678 signed char *. | |
| 2679 | |
| 2680 We also want to fetch the endpoints without translating them; the | |
| 2681 appropriate translation is done in the bit-setting loop below. */ | |
| 2682 range_start = ((unsigned char *) p)[-2]; | |
| 2683 range_end = ((unsigned char *) p)[0]; | |
| 1155 | 2684 |
| 2685 /* Have to increment the pointer into the pattern string, so the | |
| 2686 caller isn't still at the ending character. */ | |
| 2687 (*p_ptr)++; | |
| 2688 | |
| 2689 /* If the start is after the end, the range is empty. */ | |
| 2690 if (range_start > range_end) | |
| 2691 return syntax & RE_NO_EMPTY_RANGES ? REG_ERANGE : REG_NOERROR; | |
| 2692 | |
| 2693 /* Here we see why `this_char' has to be larger than an `unsigned | |
| 2694 char' -- the range is inclusive, so if `range_end' == 0xff | |
| 2695 (assuming 8-bit characters), we would otherwise go into an infinite | |
| 2696 loop, since all characters <= 0xff. */ | |
| 2697 for (this_char = range_start; this_char <= range_end; this_char++) | |
| 2698 { | |
| 2699 SET_LIST_BIT (TRANSLATE (this_char)); | |
| 2700 } | |
| 2701 | |
| 2702 return REG_NOERROR; | |
| 2703 } | |
| 2704 | |
| 2705 /* re_compile_fastmap computes a ``fastmap'' for the compiled pattern in | |
| 2706 BUFP. A fastmap records which of the (1 << BYTEWIDTH) possible | |
| 2707 characters can start a string that matches the pattern. This fastmap | |
| 2708 is used by re_search to skip quickly over impossible starting points. | |
| 2709 | |
| 2710 The caller must supply the address of a (1 << BYTEWIDTH)-byte data | |
| 2711 area as BUFP->fastmap. | |
| 2712 | |
| 2713 We set the `fastmap', `fastmap_accurate', and `can_be_null' fields in | |
| 2714 the pattern buffer. | |
| 2715 | |
| 2716 Returns 0 if we succeed, -2 if an internal error. */ | |
| 2717 | |
| 2718 int | |
| 2719 re_compile_fastmap (bufp) | |
| 2720 struct re_pattern_buffer *bufp; | |
| 2721 { | |
| 2722 int j, k; | |
| 2952 | 2723 #ifdef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE |
| 1155 | 2724 fail_stack_type fail_stack; |
| 2949 | 2725 #endif |
| 1155 | 2726 #ifndef REGEX_MALLOC |
| 2727 char *destination; | |
| 2728 #endif | |
| 2729 /* We don't push any register information onto the failure stack. */ | |
| 2730 unsigned num_regs = 0; | |
| 2731 | |
| 2732 register char *fastmap = bufp->fastmap; | |
| 2733 unsigned char *pattern = bufp->buffer; | |
| 2734 unsigned long size = bufp->used; | |
|
4918
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
2735 unsigned char *p = pattern; |
| 1155 | 2736 register unsigned char *pend = pattern + size; |
| 2737 | |
| 2738 /* Assume that each path through the pattern can be null until | |
| 2739 proven otherwise. We set this false at the bottom of switch | |
| 2740 statement, to which we get only if a particular path doesn't | |
| 2741 match the empty string. */ | |
| 2742 boolean path_can_be_null = true; | |
| 2743 | |
| 2744 /* We aren't doing a `succeed_n' to begin with. */ | |
| 2745 boolean succeed_n_p = false; | |
| 2746 | |
| 2747 assert (fastmap != NULL && p != NULL); | |
| 2748 | |
| 2749 INIT_FAIL_STACK (); | |
| 2750 bzero (fastmap, 1 << BYTEWIDTH); /* Assume nothing's valid. */ | |
| 2751 bufp->fastmap_accurate = 1; /* It will be when we're done. */ | |
| 2752 bufp->can_be_null = 0; | |
| 2753 | |
| 2754 while (p != pend || !FAIL_STACK_EMPTY ()) | |
| 2755 { | |
| 2756 if (p == pend) | |
| 2757 { | |
| 2758 bufp->can_be_null |= path_can_be_null; | |
| 2759 | |
| 2760 /* Reset for next path. */ | |
| 2761 path_can_be_null = true; | |
| 2762 | |
| 2763 p = fail_stack.stack[--fail_stack.avail]; | |
| 2764 } | |
| 2765 | |
| 2766 /* We should never be about to go beyond the end of the pattern. */ | |
| 2767 assert (p < pend); | |
| 2768 | |
| 2769 #ifdef SWITCH_ENUM_BUG | |
| 2770 switch ((int) ((re_opcode_t) *p++)) | |
| 2771 #else | |
| 2772 switch ((re_opcode_t) *p++) | |
| 2773 #endif | |
| 2774 { | |
| 2775 | |
| 2776 /* I guess the idea here is to simply not bother with a fastmap | |
| 2777 if a backreference is used, since it's too hard to figure out | |
| 2778 the fastmap for the corresponding group. Setting | |
| 2779 `can_be_null' stops `re_search_2' from using the fastmap, so | |
| 2780 that is all we do. */ | |
| 2781 case duplicate: | |
| 2782 bufp->can_be_null = 1; | |
| 2783 return 0; | |
| 2784 | |
| 2785 | |
| 2786 /* Following are the cases which match a character. These end | |
| 2787 with `break'. */ | |
| 2788 | |
| 2789 case exactn: | |
| 2790 fastmap[p[1]] = 1; | |
| 2791 break; | |
| 2792 | |
| 2793 | |
| 2794 case charset: | |
| 2795 for (j = *p++ * BYTEWIDTH - 1; j >= 0; j--) | |
| 2796 if (p[j / BYTEWIDTH] & (1 << (j % BYTEWIDTH))) | |
| 2797 fastmap[j] = 1; | |
| 2798 break; | |
| 2799 | |
| 2800 | |
| 2801 case charset_not: | |
| 2802 /* Chars beyond end of map must be allowed. */ | |
| 2803 for (j = *p * BYTEWIDTH; j < (1 << BYTEWIDTH); j++) | |
| 2804 fastmap[j] = 1; | |
| 2805 | |
| 2806 for (j = *p++ * BYTEWIDTH - 1; j >= 0; j--) | |
| 2807 if (!(p[j / BYTEWIDTH] & (1 << (j % BYTEWIDTH)))) | |
| 2808 fastmap[j] = 1; | |
| 2809 break; | |
| 2810 | |
| 2811 | |
| 2812 case wordchar: | |
| 2813 for (j = 0; j < (1 << BYTEWIDTH); j++) | |
| 2814 if (SYNTAX (j) == Sword) | |
| 2815 fastmap[j] = 1; | |
| 2816 break; | |
| 2817 | |
| 2818 | |
| 2819 case notwordchar: | |
| 2820 for (j = 0; j < (1 << BYTEWIDTH); j++) | |
| 2821 if (SYNTAX (j) != Sword) | |
| 2822 fastmap[j] = 1; | |
| 2823 break; | |
| 2824 | |
| 2825 | |
| 2826 case anychar: | |
| 2827 /* `.' matches anything ... */ | |
| 2828 for (j = 0; j < (1 << BYTEWIDTH); j++) | |
| 2829 fastmap[j] = 1; | |
| 2830 | |
| 2831 /* ... except perhaps newline. */ | |
| 2832 if (!(bufp->syntax & RE_DOT_NEWLINE)) | |
| 2833 fastmap['\n'] = 0; | |
| 2834 | |
| 2835 /* Return if we have already set `can_be_null'; if we have, | |
| 2836 then the fastmap is irrelevant. Something's wrong here. */ | |
| 2837 else if (bufp->can_be_null) | |
| 2838 return 0; | |
| 2839 | |
| 2840 /* Otherwise, have to check alternative paths. */ | |
| 2841 break; | |
| 2842 | |
| 2843 | |
| 2844 #ifdef emacs | |
| 2845 case syntaxspec: | |
| 2846 k = *p++; | |
| 2847 for (j = 0; j < (1 << BYTEWIDTH); j++) | |
| 2848 if (SYNTAX (j) == (enum syntaxcode) k) | |
| 2849 fastmap[j] = 1; | |
| 2850 break; | |
| 2851 | |
| 2852 | |
| 2853 case notsyntaxspec: | |
| 2854 k = *p++; | |
| 2855 for (j = 0; j < (1 << BYTEWIDTH); j++) | |
| 2856 if (SYNTAX (j) != (enum syntaxcode) k) | |
| 2857 fastmap[j] = 1; | |
| 2858 break; | |
| 2859 | |
| 2860 | |
| 2861 /* All cases after this match the empty string. These end with | |
| 2862 `continue'. */ | |
| 2863 | |
| 2864 | |
| 2865 case before_dot: | |
| 2866 case at_dot: | |
| 2867 case after_dot: | |
| 2868 continue; | |
| 2869 #endif /* not emacs */ | |
| 2870 | |
| 2871 | |
| 2872 case no_op: | |
| 2873 case begline: | |
| 2874 case endline: | |
| 2875 case begbuf: | |
| 2876 case endbuf: | |
| 2877 case wordbound: | |
| 2878 case notwordbound: | |
| 2879 case wordbeg: | |
| 2880 case wordend: | |
| 2881 case push_dummy_failure: | |
| 2882 continue; | |
| 2883 | |
| 2884 | |
| 2885 case jump_n: | |
| 2886 case pop_failure_jump: | |
| 2887 case maybe_pop_jump: | |
| 2888 case jump: | |
| 2889 case jump_past_alt: | |
| 2890 case dummy_failure_jump: | |
| 2891 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (j, p); | |
| 2892 p += j; | |
| 2893 if (j > 0) | |
| 2894 continue; | |
| 2895 | |
| 2896 /* Jump backward implies we just went through the body of a | |
| 2897 loop and matched nothing. Opcode jumped to should be | |
| 2898 `on_failure_jump' or `succeed_n'. Just treat it like an | |
| 2899 ordinary jump. For a * loop, it has pushed its failure | |
| 2900 point already; if so, discard that as redundant. */ | |
| 2901 if ((re_opcode_t) *p != on_failure_jump | |
| 2902 && (re_opcode_t) *p != succeed_n) | |
| 2903 continue; | |
| 2904 | |
| 2905 p++; | |
| 2906 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (j, p); | |
| 2907 p += j; | |
| 2908 | |
| 2909 /* If what's on the stack is where we are now, pop it. */ | |
| 2910 if (!FAIL_STACK_EMPTY () | |
| 2911 && fail_stack.stack[fail_stack.avail - 1] == p) | |
| 2912 fail_stack.avail--; | |
| 2913 | |
| 2914 continue; | |
| 2915 | |
| 2916 | |
| 2917 case on_failure_jump: | |
| 2918 case on_failure_keep_string_jump: | |
| 2919 handle_on_failure_jump: | |
| 2920 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (j, p); | |
| 2921 | |
| 2922 /* For some patterns, e.g., `(a?)?', `p+j' here points to the | |
| 2923 end of the pattern. We don't want to push such a point, | |
| 2924 since when we restore it above, entering the switch will | |
| 2925 increment `p' past the end of the pattern. We don't need | |
| 2926 to push such a point since we obviously won't find any more | |
| 2927 fastmap entries beyond `pend'. Such a pattern can match | |
| 2928 the null string, though. */ | |
| 2929 if (p + j < pend) | |
| 2930 { | |
| 2931 if (!PUSH_PATTERN_OP (p + j, fail_stack)) | |
| 2932 return -2; | |
| 2933 } | |
| 2934 else | |
| 2935 bufp->can_be_null = 1; | |
| 2936 | |
| 2937 if (succeed_n_p) | |
| 2938 { | |
| 2939 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (k, p); /* Skip the n. */ | |
| 2940 succeed_n_p = false; | |
| 2941 } | |
| 2942 | |
| 2943 continue; | |
| 2944 | |
| 2945 | |
| 2946 case succeed_n: | |
| 2947 /* Get to the number of times to succeed. */ | |
| 2948 p += 2; | |
| 2949 | |
| 2950 /* Increment p past the n for when k != 0. */ | |
| 2951 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (k, p); | |
| 2952 if (k == 0) | |
| 2953 { | |
| 2954 p -= 4; | |
| 2955 succeed_n_p = true; /* Spaghetti code alert. */ | |
| 2956 goto handle_on_failure_jump; | |
| 2957 } | |
| 2958 continue; | |
| 2959 | |
| 2960 | |
| 2961 case set_number_at: | |
| 2962 p += 4; | |
| 2963 continue; | |
| 2964 | |
| 2965 | |
| 2966 case start_memory: | |
| 2967 case stop_memory: | |
| 2968 p += 2; | |
| 2969 continue; | |
| 2970 | |
| 2971 | |
| 2972 default: | |
| 2973 abort (); /* We have listed all the cases. */ | |
| 2974 } /* switch *p++ */ | |
| 2975 | |
| 2976 /* Getting here means we have found the possible starting | |
| 2977 characters for one path of the pattern -- and that the empty | |
| 2978 string does not match. We need not follow this path further. | |
| 2979 Instead, look at the next alternative (remembered on the | |
| 2980 stack), or quit if no more. The test at the top of the loop | |
| 2981 does these things. */ | |
| 2982 path_can_be_null = false; | |
| 2983 p = pend; | |
| 2984 } /* while p */ | |
| 2985 | |
| 2986 /* Set `can_be_null' for the last path (also the first path, if the | |
| 2987 pattern is empty). */ | |
| 2988 bufp->can_be_null |= path_can_be_null; | |
| 2989 return 0; | |
| 2990 } /* re_compile_fastmap */ | |
| 2991 | |
| 2992 /* Set REGS to hold NUM_REGS registers, storing them in STARTS and | |
| 2993 ENDS. Subsequent matches using PATTERN_BUFFER and REGS will use | |
| 2994 this memory for recording register information. STARTS and ENDS | |
| 2995 must be allocated using the malloc library routine, and must each | |
| 2996 be at least NUM_REGS * sizeof (regoff_t) bytes long. | |
| 2997 | |
| 2998 If NUM_REGS == 0, then subsequent matches should allocate their own | |
| 2999 register data. | |
| 3000 | |
| 3001 Unless this function is called, the first search or match using | |
| 3002 PATTERN_BUFFER will allocate its own register data, without | |
| 3003 freeing the old data. */ | |
| 3004 | |
| 3005 void | |
| 3006 re_set_registers (bufp, regs, num_regs, starts, ends) | |
| 3007 struct re_pattern_buffer *bufp; | |
| 3008 struct re_registers *regs; | |
| 3009 unsigned num_regs; | |
| 3010 regoff_t *starts, *ends; | |
| 3011 { | |
| 3012 if (num_regs) | |
| 3013 { | |
| 3014 bufp->regs_allocated = REGS_REALLOCATE; | |
| 3015 regs->num_regs = num_regs; | |
| 3016 regs->start = starts; | |
| 3017 regs->end = ends; | |
| 3018 } | |
| 3019 else | |
| 3020 { | |
| 3021 bufp->regs_allocated = REGS_UNALLOCATED; | |
| 3022 regs->num_regs = 0; | |
|
5014
6062331f7430
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4918
diff
changeset
|
3023 regs->start = regs->end = (regoff_t *) 0; |
| 1155 | 3024 } |
| 3025 } | |
| 3026 | |
| 3027 /* Searching routines. */ | |
| 3028 | |
| 3029 /* Like re_search_2, below, but only one string is specified, and | |
| 3030 doesn't let you say where to stop matching. */ | |
| 3031 | |
| 3032 int | |
| 3033 re_search (bufp, string, size, startpos, range, regs) | |
| 3034 struct re_pattern_buffer *bufp; | |
| 3035 const char *string; | |
| 3036 int size, startpos, range; | |
| 3037 struct re_registers *regs; | |
| 3038 { | |
| 3039 return re_search_2 (bufp, NULL, 0, string, size, startpos, range, | |
| 3040 regs, size); | |
| 3041 } | |
| 3042 | |
| 3043 | |
| 3044 /* Using the compiled pattern in BUFP->buffer, first tries to match the | |
| 3045 virtual concatenation of STRING1 and STRING2, starting first at index | |
| 3046 STARTPOS, then at STARTPOS + 1, and so on. | |
| 3047 | |
| 3048 STRING1 and STRING2 have length SIZE1 and SIZE2, respectively. | |
| 3049 | |
| 3050 RANGE is how far to scan while trying to match. RANGE = 0 means try | |
| 3051 only at STARTPOS; in general, the last start tried is STARTPOS + | |
| 3052 RANGE. | |
| 3053 | |
| 3054 In REGS, return the indices of the virtual concatenation of STRING1 | |
| 3055 and STRING2 that matched the entire BUFP->buffer and its contained | |
| 3056 subexpressions. | |
| 3057 | |
| 3058 Do not consider matching one past the index STOP in the virtual | |
| 3059 concatenation of STRING1 and STRING2. | |
| 3060 | |
| 3061 We return either the position in the strings at which the match was | |
| 3062 found, -1 if no match, or -2 if error (such as failure | |
| 3063 stack overflow). */ | |
| 3064 | |
| 3065 int | |
| 3066 re_search_2 (bufp, string1, size1, string2, size2, startpos, range, regs, stop) | |
| 3067 struct re_pattern_buffer *bufp; | |
| 3068 const char *string1, *string2; | |
| 3069 int size1, size2; | |
| 3070 int startpos; | |
| 3071 int range; | |
| 3072 struct re_registers *regs; | |
| 3073 int stop; | |
| 3074 { | |
| 3075 int val; | |
| 3076 register char *fastmap = bufp->fastmap; | |
| 3077 register char *translate = bufp->translate; | |
| 3078 int total_size = size1 + size2; | |
| 3079 int endpos = startpos + range; | |
| 3080 | |
| 3081 /* Check for out-of-range STARTPOS. */ | |
| 3082 if (startpos < 0 || startpos > total_size) | |
| 3083 return -1; | |
| 3084 | |
| 3085 /* Fix up RANGE if it might eventually take us outside | |
| 3086 the virtual concatenation of STRING1 and STRING2. */ | |
| 3087 if (endpos < -1) | |
| 3088 range = -1 - startpos; | |
| 3089 else if (endpos > total_size) | |
| 3090 range = total_size - startpos; | |
| 3091 | |
| 3092 /* If the search isn't to be a backwards one, don't waste time in a | |
| 1637 | 3093 search for a pattern that must be anchored. */ |
| 3094 if (bufp->used > 0 && (re_opcode_t) bufp->buffer[0] == begbuf && range > 0) | |
| 1155 | 3095 { |
| 3096 if (startpos > 0) | |
| 3097 return -1; | |
| 3098 else | |
| 3099 range = 1; | |
| 3100 } | |
| 3101 | |
| 1637 | 3102 /* Update the fastmap now if not correct already. */ |
| 3103 if (fastmap && !bufp->fastmap_accurate) | |
| 3104 if (re_compile_fastmap (bufp) == -2) | |
| 3105 return -2; | |
| 3106 | |
| 3107 /* Loop through the string, looking for a place to start matching. */ | |
| 1155 | 3108 for (;;) |
| 3109 { | |
| 3110 /* If a fastmap is supplied, skip quickly over characters that | |
| 3111 cannot be the start of a match. If the pattern can match the | |
| 3112 null string, however, we don't need to skip characters; we want | |
| 3113 the first null string. */ | |
| 3114 if (fastmap && startpos < total_size && !bufp->can_be_null) | |
| 3115 { | |
| 3116 if (range > 0) /* Searching forwards. */ | |
| 3117 { | |
| 3118 register const char *d; | |
| 3119 register int lim = 0; | |
| 3120 int irange = range; | |
| 3121 | |
| 3122 if (startpos < size1 && startpos + range >= size1) | |
| 3123 lim = range - (size1 - startpos); | |
| 3124 | |
| 3125 d = (startpos >= size1 ? string2 - size1 : string1) + startpos; | |
| 3126 | |
| 3127 /* Written out as an if-else to avoid testing `translate' | |
| 3128 inside the loop. */ | |
| 3129 if (translate) | |
| 3130 while (range > lim | |
| 2078 | 3131 && !fastmap[(unsigned char) |
| 3132 translate[(unsigned char) *d++]]) | |
| 1155 | 3133 range--; |
| 3134 else | |
| 3135 while (range > lim && !fastmap[(unsigned char) *d++]) | |
| 3136 range--; | |
| 3137 | |
| 3138 startpos += irange - range; | |
| 3139 } | |
| 3140 else /* Searching backwards. */ | |
| 3141 { | |
| 3142 register char c = (size1 == 0 || startpos >= size1 | |
| 3143 ? string2[startpos - size1] | |
| 3144 : string1[startpos]); | |
| 3145 | |
| 1637 | 3146 if (!fastmap[(unsigned char) TRANSLATE (c)]) |
| 1155 | 3147 goto advance; |
| 3148 } | |
| 3149 } | |
| 3150 | |
| 3151 /* If can't match the null string, and that's all we have left, fail. */ | |
| 3152 if (range >= 0 && startpos == total_size && fastmap | |
| 3153 && !bufp->can_be_null) | |
| 3154 return -1; | |
| 3155 | |
| 3156 val = re_match_2 (bufp, string1, size1, string2, size2, | |
| 3157 startpos, regs, stop); | |
| 3158 if (val >= 0) | |
| 3159 return startpos; | |
| 3160 | |
| 3161 if (val == -2) | |
| 3162 return -2; | |
| 3163 | |
| 3164 advance: | |
| 3165 if (!range) | |
| 3166 break; | |
| 3167 else if (range > 0) | |
| 3168 { | |
| 3169 range--; | |
| 3170 startpos++; | |
| 3171 } | |
| 3172 else | |
| 3173 { | |
| 3174 range++; | |
| 3175 startpos--; | |
| 3176 } | |
| 3177 } | |
| 3178 return -1; | |
| 3179 } /* re_search_2 */ | |
| 3180 | |
| 3181 /* Declarations and macros for re_match_2. */ | |
| 3182 | |
| 3183 static int bcmp_translate (); | |
| 3184 static boolean alt_match_null_string_p (), | |
| 3185 common_op_match_null_string_p (), | |
| 3186 group_match_null_string_p (); | |
| 3187 | |
| 3188 /* This converts PTR, a pointer into one of the search strings `string1' | |
| 3189 and `string2' into an offset from the beginning of that string. */ | |
|
4918
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
3190 #define POINTER_TO_OFFSET(ptr) \ |
|
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
3191 (FIRST_STRING_P (ptr) \ |
|
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
3192 ? ((regoff_t) ((ptr) - string1)) \ |
|
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
3193 : ((regoff_t) ((ptr) - string2 + size1))) |
| 1155 | 3194 |
| 3195 /* Macros for dealing with the split strings in re_match_2. */ | |
| 3196 | |
| 3197 #define MATCHING_IN_FIRST_STRING (dend == end_match_1) | |
| 3198 | |
| 3199 /* Call before fetching a character with *d. This switches over to | |
| 3200 string2 if necessary. */ | |
| 3201 #define PREFETCH() \ | |
| 3202 while (d == dend) \ | |
| 3203 { \ | |
| 3204 /* End of string2 => fail. */ \ | |
| 3205 if (dend == end_match_2) \ | |
| 3206 goto fail; \ | |
| 3207 /* End of string1 => advance to string2. */ \ | |
| 3208 d = string2; \ | |
| 3209 dend = end_match_2; \ | |
| 3210 } | |
| 3211 | |
| 3212 | |
| 3213 /* Test if at very beginning or at very end of the virtual concatenation | |
| 3214 of `string1' and `string2'. If only one string, it's `string2'. */ | |
| 1637 | 3215 #define AT_STRINGS_BEG(d) ((d) == (size1 ? string1 : string2) || !size2) |
| 3216 #define AT_STRINGS_END(d) ((d) == end2) | |
| 1155 | 3217 |
| 3218 | |
| 3219 /* Test if D points to a character which is word-constituent. We have | |
| 3220 two special cases to check for: if past the end of string1, look at | |
| 3221 the first character in string2; and if before the beginning of | |
| 1637 | 3222 string2, look at the last character in string1. */ |
| 3223 #define WORDCHAR_P(d) \ | |
| 1155 | 3224 (SYNTAX ((d) == end1 ? *string2 \ |
| 1637 | 3225 : (d) == string2 - 1 ? *(end1 - 1) : *(d)) \ |
| 3226 == Sword) | |
| 1155 | 3227 |
| 3228 /* Test if the character before D and the one at D differ with respect | |
| 3229 to being word-constituent. */ | |
| 3230 #define AT_WORD_BOUNDARY(d) \ | |
| 1637 | 3231 (AT_STRINGS_BEG (d) || AT_STRINGS_END (d) \ |
| 3232 || WORDCHAR_P (d - 1) != WORDCHAR_P (d)) | |
| 1155 | 3233 |
| 3234 | |
| 3235 /* Free everything we malloc. */ | |
| 2952 | 3236 #ifdef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE |
| 1155 | 3237 #ifdef REGEX_MALLOC |
| 3238 #define FREE_VAR(var) if (var) free (var); var = NULL | |
| 3239 #define FREE_VARIABLES() \ | |
| 3240 do { \ | |
| 3241 FREE_VAR (fail_stack.stack); \ | |
| 3242 FREE_VAR (regstart); \ | |
| 3243 FREE_VAR (regend); \ | |
| 3244 FREE_VAR (old_regstart); \ | |
| 3245 FREE_VAR (old_regend); \ | |
| 3246 FREE_VAR (best_regstart); \ | |
| 3247 FREE_VAR (best_regend); \ | |
| 3248 FREE_VAR (reg_info); \ | |
| 3249 FREE_VAR (reg_dummy); \ | |
| 3250 FREE_VAR (reg_info_dummy); \ | |
| 3251 } while (0) | |
| 3252 #else /* not REGEX_MALLOC */ | |
| 3253 /* Some MIPS systems (at least) want this to free alloca'd storage. */ | |
| 3254 #define FREE_VARIABLES() alloca (0) | |
| 3255 #endif /* not REGEX_MALLOC */ | |
| 2952 | 3256 #else |
| 3257 #define FREE_VARIABLES() /* Do nothing! */ | |
| 3258 #endif /* not MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE */ | |
| 1155 | 3259 |
| 3260 /* These values must meet several constraints. They must not be valid | |
| 3261 register values; since we have a limit of 255 registers (because | |
| 3262 we use only one byte in the pattern for the register number), we can | |
| 3263 use numbers larger than 255. They must differ by 1, because of | |
| 3264 NUM_FAILURE_ITEMS above. And the value for the lowest register must | |
| 3265 be larger than the value for the highest register, so we do not try | |
| 3266 to actually save any registers when none are active. */ | |
| 3267 #define NO_HIGHEST_ACTIVE_REG (1 << BYTEWIDTH) | |
| 3268 #define NO_LOWEST_ACTIVE_REG (NO_HIGHEST_ACTIVE_REG + 1) | |
| 3269 | |
| 3270 /* Matching routines. */ | |
| 3271 | |
| 3272 #ifndef emacs /* Emacs never uses this. */ | |
| 3273 /* re_match is like re_match_2 except it takes only a single string. */ | |
| 3274 | |
| 3275 int | |
| 3276 re_match (bufp, string, size, pos, regs) | |
| 3277 struct re_pattern_buffer *bufp; | |
| 3278 const char *string; | |
| 3279 int size, pos; | |
| 3280 struct re_registers *regs; | |
| 3281 { | |
| 3282 return re_match_2 (bufp, NULL, 0, string, size, pos, regs, size); | |
| 3283 } | |
| 3284 #endif /* not emacs */ | |
| 3285 | |
| 3286 | |
| 3287 /* re_match_2 matches the compiled pattern in BUFP against the | |
| 3288 the (virtual) concatenation of STRING1 and STRING2 (of length SIZE1 | |
| 3289 and SIZE2, respectively). We start matching at POS, and stop | |
| 3290 matching at STOP. | |
| 3291 | |
| 3292 If REGS is non-null and the `no_sub' field of BUFP is nonzero, we | |
| 3293 store offsets for the substring each group matched in REGS. See the | |
| 3294 documentation for exactly how many groups we fill. | |
| 3295 | |
| 3296 We return -1 if no match, -2 if an internal error (such as the | |
| 3297 failure stack overflowing). Otherwise, we return the length of the | |
| 3298 matched substring. */ | |
| 3299 | |
| 3300 int | |
| 3301 re_match_2 (bufp, string1, size1, string2, size2, pos, regs, stop) | |
| 3302 struct re_pattern_buffer *bufp; | |
| 3303 const char *string1, *string2; | |
| 3304 int size1, size2; | |
| 3305 int pos; | |
| 3306 struct re_registers *regs; | |
| 3307 int stop; | |
| 3308 { | |
| 3309 /* General temporaries. */ | |
| 3310 int mcnt; | |
| 3311 unsigned char *p1; | |
| 3312 | |
| 3313 /* Just past the end of the corresponding string. */ | |
| 3314 const char *end1, *end2; | |
| 3315 | |
| 3316 /* Pointers into string1 and string2, just past the last characters in | |
| 3317 each to consider matching. */ | |
| 3318 const char *end_match_1, *end_match_2; | |
| 3319 | |
| 3320 /* Where we are in the data, and the end of the current string. */ | |
| 3321 const char *d, *dend; | |
| 3322 | |
| 3323 /* Where we are in the pattern, and the end of the pattern. */ | |
| 3324 unsigned char *p = bufp->buffer; | |
| 3325 register unsigned char *pend = p + bufp->used; | |
| 3326 | |
| 5842 | 3327 /* Mark the opcode just after a start_memory, so we can test for an |
| 3328 empty subpattern when we get to the stop_memory. */ | |
| 3329 unsigned char *just_past_start_mem = 0; | |
| 3330 | |
| 1155 | 3331 /* We use this to map every character in the string. */ |
| 3332 char *translate = bufp->translate; | |
| 3333 | |
| 3334 /* Failure point stack. Each place that can handle a failure further | |
| 3335 down the line pushes a failure point on this stack. It consists of | |
| 3336 restart, regend, and reg_info for all registers corresponding to | |
| 3337 the subexpressions we're currently inside, plus the number of such | |
| 3338 registers, and, finally, two char *'s. The first char * is where | |
| 3339 to resume scanning the pattern; the second one is where to resume | |
| 3340 scanning the strings. If the latter is zero, the failure point is | |
| 3341 a ``dummy''; if a failure happens and the failure point is a dummy, | |
| 3342 it gets discarded and the next next one is tried. */ | |
| 2952 | 3343 #ifdef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE /* otherwise, this is global. */ |
| 1155 | 3344 fail_stack_type fail_stack; |
| 2949 | 3345 #endif |
| 1155 | 3346 #ifdef DEBUG |
| 3347 static unsigned failure_id = 0; | |
| 1637 | 3348 unsigned nfailure_points_pushed = 0, nfailure_points_popped = 0; |
| 1155 | 3349 #endif |
| 3350 | |
| 3351 /* We fill all the registers internally, independent of what we | |
| 3352 return, for use in backreferences. The number here includes | |
| 3353 an element for register zero. */ | |
| 3354 unsigned num_regs = bufp->re_nsub + 1; | |
| 3355 | |
| 3356 /* The currently active registers. */ | |
| 3357 unsigned lowest_active_reg = NO_LOWEST_ACTIVE_REG; | |
| 3358 unsigned highest_active_reg = NO_HIGHEST_ACTIVE_REG; | |
| 3359 | |
| 3360 /* Information on the contents of registers. These are pointers into | |
| 3361 the input strings; they record just what was matched (on this | |
| 3362 attempt) by a subexpression part of the pattern, that is, the | |
| 3363 regnum-th regstart pointer points to where in the pattern we began | |
| 3364 matching and the regnum-th regend points to right after where we | |
| 3365 stopped matching the regnum-th subexpression. (The zeroth register | |
| 3366 keeps track of what the whole pattern matches.) */ | |
| 2952 | 3367 #ifdef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE /* otherwise, these are global. */ |
| 1155 | 3368 const char **regstart, **regend; |
| 2949 | 3369 #endif |
| 1155 | 3370 |
| 3371 /* If a group that's operated upon by a repetition operator fails to | |
| 3372 match anything, then the register for its start will need to be | |
| 3373 restored because it will have been set to wherever in the string we | |
| 3374 are when we last see its open-group operator. Similarly for a | |
| 3375 register's end. */ | |
| 2952 | 3376 #ifdef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE /* otherwise, these are global. */ |
| 1155 | 3377 const char **old_regstart, **old_regend; |
| 2949 | 3378 #endif |
| 1155 | 3379 |
| 3380 /* The is_active field of reg_info helps us keep track of which (possibly | |
| 3381 nested) subexpressions we are currently in. The matched_something | |
| 3382 field of reg_info[reg_num] helps us tell whether or not we have | |
| 3383 matched any of the pattern so far this time through the reg_num-th | |
| 3384 subexpression. These two fields get reset each time through any | |
| 3385 loop their register is in. */ | |
| 2952 | 3386 #ifdef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE /* otherwise, this is global. */ |
| 1155 | 3387 register_info_type *reg_info; |
| 2949 | 3388 #endif |
| 1155 | 3389 |
| 3390 /* The following record the register info as found in the above | |
| 3391 variables when we find a match better than any we've seen before. | |
| 3392 This happens as we backtrack through the failure points, which in | |
| 3393 turn happens only if we have not yet matched the entire string. */ | |
| 3394 unsigned best_regs_set = false; | |
| 2952 | 3395 #ifdef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE /* otherwise, these are global. */ |
| 1155 | 3396 const char **best_regstart, **best_regend; |
| 2949 | 3397 #endif |
| 1155 | 3398 |
| 3399 /* Logically, this is `best_regend[0]'. But we don't want to have to | |
| 3400 allocate space for that if we're not allocating space for anything | |
| 3401 else (see below). Also, we never need info about register 0 for | |
| 3402 any of the other register vectors, and it seems rather a kludge to | |
| 3403 treat `best_regend' differently than the rest. So we keep track of | |
| 3404 the end of the best match so far in a separate variable. We | |
| 3405 initialize this to NULL so that when we backtrack the first time | |
| 3406 and need to test it, it's not garbage. */ | |
| 3407 const char *match_end = NULL; | |
| 3408 | |
| 3409 /* Used when we pop values we don't care about. */ | |
| 2952 | 3410 #ifdef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE /* otherwise, these are global. */ |
| 1155 | 3411 const char **reg_dummy; |
| 3412 register_info_type *reg_info_dummy; | |
| 2949 | 3413 #endif |
| 1155 | 3414 |
| 3415 #ifdef DEBUG | |
| 3416 /* Counts the total number of registers pushed. */ | |
| 3417 unsigned num_regs_pushed = 0; | |
| 3418 #endif | |
| 3419 | |
| 3420 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("\n\nEntering re_match_2.\n"); | |
| 3421 | |
| 3422 INIT_FAIL_STACK (); | |
| 3423 | |
| 2952 | 3424 #ifdef MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE |
| 1155 | 3425 /* Do not bother to initialize all the register variables if there are |
| 3426 no groups in the pattern, as it takes a fair amount of time. If | |
| 3427 there are groups, we include space for register 0 (the whole | |
| 3428 pattern), even though we never use it, since it simplifies the | |
| 3429 array indexing. We should fix this. */ | |
| 3430 if (bufp->re_nsub) | |
| 3431 { | |
| 3432 regstart = REGEX_TALLOC (num_regs, const char *); | |
| 3433 regend = REGEX_TALLOC (num_regs, const char *); | |
| 3434 old_regstart = REGEX_TALLOC (num_regs, const char *); | |
| 3435 old_regend = REGEX_TALLOC (num_regs, const char *); | |
| 3436 best_regstart = REGEX_TALLOC (num_regs, const char *); | |
| 3437 best_regend = REGEX_TALLOC (num_regs, const char *); | |
| 3438 reg_info = REGEX_TALLOC (num_regs, register_info_type); | |
| 3439 reg_dummy = REGEX_TALLOC (num_regs, const char *); | |
| 3440 reg_info_dummy = REGEX_TALLOC (num_regs, register_info_type); | |
| 3441 | |
| 3442 if (!(regstart && regend && old_regstart && old_regend && reg_info | |
| 3443 && best_regstart && best_regend && reg_dummy && reg_info_dummy)) | |
| 3444 { | |
| 3445 FREE_VARIABLES (); | |
| 3446 return -2; | |
| 3447 } | |
| 3448 } | |
| 2949 | 3449 #if defined (REGEX_MALLOC) |
| 1155 | 3450 else |
| 3451 { | |
| 3452 /* We must initialize all our variables to NULL, so that | |
| 1637 | 3453 `FREE_VARIABLES' doesn't try to free them. */ |
| 1155 | 3454 regstart = regend = old_regstart = old_regend = best_regstart |
| 3455 = best_regend = reg_dummy = NULL; | |
| 3456 reg_info = reg_info_dummy = (register_info_type *) NULL; | |
| 3457 } | |
| 3458 #endif /* REGEX_MALLOC */ | |
| 2952 | 3459 #endif /* MATCH_MAY_ALLOCATE */ |
| 1155 | 3460 |
| 3461 /* The starting position is bogus. */ | |
| 3462 if (pos < 0 || pos > size1 + size2) | |
| 3463 { | |
| 3464 FREE_VARIABLES (); | |
| 3465 return -1; | |
| 3466 } | |
| 3467 | |
| 3468 /* Initialize subexpression text positions to -1 to mark ones that no | |
| 3469 start_memory/stop_memory has been seen for. Also initialize the | |
| 3470 register information struct. */ | |
| 3471 for (mcnt = 1; mcnt < num_regs; mcnt++) | |
| 3472 { | |
| 3473 regstart[mcnt] = regend[mcnt] | |
| 3474 = old_regstart[mcnt] = old_regend[mcnt] = REG_UNSET_VALUE; | |
| 3475 | |
| 3476 REG_MATCH_NULL_STRING_P (reg_info[mcnt]) = MATCH_NULL_UNSET_VALUE; | |
| 3477 IS_ACTIVE (reg_info[mcnt]) = 0; | |
| 3478 MATCHED_SOMETHING (reg_info[mcnt]) = 0; | |
| 3479 EVER_MATCHED_SOMETHING (reg_info[mcnt]) = 0; | |
| 3480 } | |
| 3481 | |
| 3482 /* We move `string1' into `string2' if the latter's empty -- but not if | |
| 3483 `string1' is null. */ | |
| 3484 if (size2 == 0 && string1 != NULL) | |
| 3485 { | |
| 3486 string2 = string1; | |
| 3487 size2 = size1; | |
| 3488 string1 = 0; | |
| 3489 size1 = 0; | |
| 3490 } | |
| 3491 end1 = string1 + size1; | |
| 3492 end2 = string2 + size2; | |
| 3493 | |
| 3494 /* Compute where to stop matching, within the two strings. */ | |
| 3495 if (stop <= size1) | |
| 3496 { | |
| 3497 end_match_1 = string1 + stop; | |
| 3498 end_match_2 = string2; | |
| 3499 } | |
| 3500 else | |
| 3501 { | |
| 3502 end_match_1 = end1; | |
| 3503 end_match_2 = string2 + stop - size1; | |
| 3504 } | |
| 3505 | |
| 3506 /* `p' scans through the pattern as `d' scans through the data. | |
| 3507 `dend' is the end of the input string that `d' points within. `d' | |
| 3508 is advanced into the following input string whenever necessary, but | |
| 3509 this happens before fetching; therefore, at the beginning of the | |
| 3510 loop, `d' can be pointing at the end of a string, but it cannot | |
| 3511 equal `string2'. */ | |
| 3512 if (size1 > 0 && pos <= size1) | |
| 3513 { | |
| 3514 d = string1 + pos; | |
| 3515 dend = end_match_1; | |
| 3516 } | |
| 3517 else | |
| 3518 { | |
| 3519 d = string2 + pos - size1; | |
| 3520 dend = end_match_2; | |
| 3521 } | |
| 3522 | |
| 3523 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("The compiled pattern is: "); | |
| 3524 DEBUG_PRINT_COMPILED_PATTERN (bufp, p, pend); | |
| 3525 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("The string to match is: `"); | |
| 3526 DEBUG_PRINT_DOUBLE_STRING (d, string1, size1, string2, size2); | |
| 3527 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("'\n"); | |
| 3528 | |
| 3529 /* This loops over pattern commands. It exits by returning from the | |
| 3530 function if the match is complete, or it drops through if the match | |
| 3531 fails at this starting point in the input data. */ | |
| 3532 for (;;) | |
| 3533 { | |
| 3534 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("\n0x%x: ", p); | |
| 3535 | |
| 3536 if (p == pend) | |
| 3537 { /* End of pattern means we might have succeeded. */ | |
| 1637 | 3538 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("end of pattern ... "); |
| 3539 | |
| 3540 /* If we haven't matched the entire string, and we want the | |
| 3541 longest match, try backtracking. */ | |
| 1155 | 3542 if (d != end_match_2) |
| 3543 { | |
| 3544 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("backtracking.\n"); | |
| 3545 | |
| 3546 if (!FAIL_STACK_EMPTY ()) | |
| 3547 { /* More failure points to try. */ | |
| 3548 boolean same_str_p = (FIRST_STRING_P (match_end) | |
| 3549 == MATCHING_IN_FIRST_STRING); | |
| 3550 | |
| 3551 /* If exceeds best match so far, save it. */ | |
| 3552 if (!best_regs_set | |
| 3553 || (same_str_p && d > match_end) | |
| 3554 || (!same_str_p && !MATCHING_IN_FIRST_STRING)) | |
| 3555 { | |
| 3556 best_regs_set = true; | |
| 3557 match_end = d; | |
| 3558 | |
| 3559 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("\nSAVING match as best so far.\n"); | |
| 3560 | |
| 3561 for (mcnt = 1; mcnt < num_regs; mcnt++) | |
| 3562 { | |
| 3563 best_regstart[mcnt] = regstart[mcnt]; | |
| 3564 best_regend[mcnt] = regend[mcnt]; | |
| 3565 } | |
| 3566 } | |
| 3567 goto fail; | |
| 3568 } | |
| 3569 | |
| 3570 /* If no failure points, don't restore garbage. */ | |
| 3571 else if (best_regs_set) | |
| 3572 { | |
| 3573 restore_best_regs: | |
| 3574 /* Restore best match. It may happen that `dend == | |
| 3575 end_match_1' while the restored d is in string2. | |
| 3576 For example, the pattern `x.*y.*z' against the | |
| 3577 strings `x-' and `y-z-', if the two strings are | |
| 3578 not consecutive in memory. */ | |
| 1637 | 3579 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("Restoring best registers.\n"); |
| 3580 | |
| 1155 | 3581 d = match_end; |
| 3582 dend = ((d >= string1 && d <= end1) | |
| 3583 ? end_match_1 : end_match_2); | |
| 3584 | |
| 3585 for (mcnt = 1; mcnt < num_regs; mcnt++) | |
| 3586 { | |
| 3587 regstart[mcnt] = best_regstart[mcnt]; | |
| 3588 regend[mcnt] = best_regend[mcnt]; | |
| 3589 } | |
| 3590 } | |
| 3591 } /* d != end_match_2 */ | |
| 3592 | |
| 1637 | 3593 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("Accepting match.\n"); |
| 1155 | 3594 |
| 3595 /* If caller wants register contents data back, do it. */ | |
| 3596 if (regs && !bufp->no_sub) | |
| 3597 { | |
| 3598 /* Have the register data arrays been allocated? */ | |
| 3599 if (bufp->regs_allocated == REGS_UNALLOCATED) | |
| 3600 { /* No. So allocate them with malloc. We need one | |
| 3601 extra element beyond `num_regs' for the `-1' marker | |
| 3602 GNU code uses. */ | |
| 3603 regs->num_regs = MAX (RE_NREGS, num_regs + 1); | |
| 3604 regs->start = TALLOC (regs->num_regs, regoff_t); | |
| 3605 regs->end = TALLOC (regs->num_regs, regoff_t); | |
| 3606 if (regs->start == NULL || regs->end == NULL) | |
| 3607 return -2; | |
| 3608 bufp->regs_allocated = REGS_REALLOCATE; | |
| 3609 } | |
| 3610 else if (bufp->regs_allocated == REGS_REALLOCATE) | |
| 3611 { /* Yes. If we need more elements than were already | |
| 3612 allocated, reallocate them. If we need fewer, just | |
| 3613 leave it alone. */ | |
| 3614 if (regs->num_regs < num_regs + 1) | |
| 3615 { | |
| 3616 regs->num_regs = num_regs + 1; | |
| 3617 RETALLOC (regs->start, regs->num_regs, regoff_t); | |
| 3618 RETALLOC (regs->end, regs->num_regs, regoff_t); | |
| 3619 if (regs->start == NULL || regs->end == NULL) | |
| 3620 return -2; | |
| 3621 } | |
| 3622 } | |
| 3623 else | |
| 2465 | 3624 { |
| 3625 /* These braces fend off a "empty body in an else-statement" | |
| 3626 warning under GCC when assert expands to nothing. */ | |
| 3627 assert (bufp->regs_allocated == REGS_FIXED); | |
| 3628 } | |
| 1155 | 3629 |
| 3630 /* Convert the pointer data in `regstart' and `regend' to | |
| 3631 indices. Register zero has to be set differently, | |
| 3632 since we haven't kept track of any info for it. */ | |
| 3633 if (regs->num_regs > 0) | |
| 3634 { | |
| 3635 regs->start[0] = pos; | |
|
4918
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
3636 regs->end[0] = (MATCHING_IN_FIRST_STRING |
|
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
3637 ? ((regoff_t) (d - string1)) |
|
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
3638 : ((regoff_t) (d - string2 + size1))); |
| 1155 | 3639 } |
| 3640 | |
| 3641 /* Go through the first `min (num_regs, regs->num_regs)' | |
| 3642 registers, since that is all we initialized. */ | |
| 3643 for (mcnt = 1; mcnt < MIN (num_regs, regs->num_regs); mcnt++) | |
| 3644 { | |
| 3645 if (REG_UNSET (regstart[mcnt]) || REG_UNSET (regend[mcnt])) | |
| 3646 regs->start[mcnt] = regs->end[mcnt] = -1; | |
| 3647 else | |
| 3648 { | |
|
4918
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
3649 regs->start[mcnt] |
|
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
3650 = (regoff_t) POINTER_TO_OFFSET (regstart[mcnt]); |
|
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
3651 regs->end[mcnt] |
|
e928d39564ad
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
4846
diff
changeset
|
3652 = (regoff_t) POINTER_TO_OFFSET (regend[mcnt]); |
| 1155 | 3653 } |
| 3654 } | |
| 3655 | |
| 3656 /* If the regs structure we return has more elements than | |
| 3657 were in the pattern, set the extra elements to -1. If | |
| 3658 we (re)allocated the registers, this is the case, | |
| 3659 because we always allocate enough to have at least one | |
| 3660 -1 at the end. */ | |
| 3661 for (mcnt = num_regs; mcnt < regs->num_regs; mcnt++) | |
| 3662 regs->start[mcnt] = regs->end[mcnt] = -1; | |
| 3663 } /* regs && !bufp->no_sub */ | |
| 3664 | |
| 3665 FREE_VARIABLES (); | |
| 1637 | 3666 DEBUG_PRINT4 ("%u failure points pushed, %u popped (%u remain).\n", |
| 3667 nfailure_points_pushed, nfailure_points_popped, | |
| 3668 nfailure_points_pushed - nfailure_points_popped); | |
| 3669 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("%u registers pushed.\n", num_regs_pushed); | |
| 1155 | 3670 |
| 3671 mcnt = d - pos - (MATCHING_IN_FIRST_STRING | |
| 3672 ? string1 | |
| 3673 : string2 - size1); | |
| 3674 | |
| 3675 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("Returning %d from re_match_2.\n", mcnt); | |
| 3676 | |
| 3677 return mcnt; | |
| 3678 } | |
| 3679 | |
| 3680 /* Otherwise match next pattern command. */ | |
| 3681 #ifdef SWITCH_ENUM_BUG | |
| 3682 switch ((int) ((re_opcode_t) *p++)) | |
| 3683 #else | |
| 3684 switch ((re_opcode_t) *p++) | |
| 3685 #endif | |
| 3686 { | |
| 3687 /* Ignore these. Used to ignore the n of succeed_n's which | |
| 3688 currently have n == 0. */ | |
| 3689 case no_op: | |
| 3690 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING no_op.\n"); | |
| 3691 break; | |
| 3692 | |
| 3693 | |
| 3694 /* Match the next n pattern characters exactly. The following | |
| 3695 byte in the pattern defines n, and the n bytes after that | |
| 3696 are the characters to match. */ | |
| 3697 case exactn: | |
| 3698 mcnt = *p++; | |
| 3699 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("EXECUTING exactn %d.\n", mcnt); | |
| 3700 | |
| 3701 /* This is written out as an if-else so we don't waste time | |
| 3702 testing `translate' inside the loop. */ | |
| 3703 if (translate) | |
| 3704 { | |
| 3705 do | |
| 3706 { | |
| 3707 PREFETCH (); | |
| 3708 if (translate[(unsigned char) *d++] != (char) *p++) | |
| 3709 goto fail; | |
| 3710 } | |
| 3711 while (--mcnt); | |
| 3712 } | |
| 3713 else | |
| 3714 { | |
| 3715 do | |
| 3716 { | |
| 3717 PREFETCH (); | |
| 3718 if (*d++ != (char) *p++) goto fail; | |
| 3719 } | |
| 3720 while (--mcnt); | |
| 3721 } | |
| 3722 SET_REGS_MATCHED (); | |
| 3723 break; | |
| 3724 | |
| 3725 | |
| 3726 /* Match any character except possibly a newline or a null. */ | |
| 3727 case anychar: | |
| 3728 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING anychar.\n"); | |
| 3729 | |
| 3730 PREFETCH (); | |
| 3731 | |
| 3732 if ((!(bufp->syntax & RE_DOT_NEWLINE) && TRANSLATE (*d) == '\n') | |
| 3733 || (bufp->syntax & RE_DOT_NOT_NULL && TRANSLATE (*d) == '\000')) | |
| 3734 goto fail; | |
| 3735 | |
| 3736 SET_REGS_MATCHED (); | |
| 3737 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Matched `%d'.\n", *d); | |
| 3738 d++; | |
| 3739 break; | |
| 3740 | |
| 3741 | |
| 3742 case charset: | |
| 3743 case charset_not: | |
| 3744 { | |
| 3745 register unsigned char c; | |
| 3746 boolean not = (re_opcode_t) *(p - 1) == charset_not; | |
| 3747 | |
| 3748 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("EXECUTING charset%s.\n", not ? "_not" : ""); | |
| 3749 | |
| 3750 PREFETCH (); | |
| 3751 c = TRANSLATE (*d); /* The character to match. */ | |
| 3752 | |
| 3753 /* Cast to `unsigned' instead of `unsigned char' in case the | |
| 3754 bit list is a full 32 bytes long. */ | |
| 3755 if (c < (unsigned) (*p * BYTEWIDTH) | |
| 3756 && p[1 + c / BYTEWIDTH] & (1 << (c % BYTEWIDTH))) | |
| 3757 not = !not; | |
| 3758 | |
| 3759 p += 1 + *p; | |
| 3760 | |
| 3761 if (!not) goto fail; | |
| 3762 | |
| 3763 SET_REGS_MATCHED (); | |
| 3764 d++; | |
| 3765 break; | |
| 3766 } | |
| 3767 | |
| 3768 | |
| 3769 /* The beginning of a group is represented by start_memory. | |
| 3770 The arguments are the register number in the next byte, and the | |
| 3771 number of groups inner to this one in the next. The text | |
| 3772 matched within the group is recorded (in the internal | |
| 3773 registers data structure) under the register number. */ | |
| 3774 case start_memory: | |
| 3775 DEBUG_PRINT3 ("EXECUTING start_memory %d (%d):\n", *p, p[1]); | |
| 3776 | |
| 3777 /* Find out if this group can match the empty string. */ | |
| 3778 p1 = p; /* To send to group_match_null_string_p. */ | |
| 3779 | |
| 3780 if (REG_MATCH_NULL_STRING_P (reg_info[*p]) == MATCH_NULL_UNSET_VALUE) | |
| 3781 REG_MATCH_NULL_STRING_P (reg_info[*p]) | |
| 3782 = group_match_null_string_p (&p1, pend, reg_info); | |
| 3783 | |
| 3784 /* Save the position in the string where we were the last time | |
| 3785 we were at this open-group operator in case the group is | |
| 3786 operated upon by a repetition operator, e.g., with `(a*)*b' | |
| 3787 against `ab'; then we want to ignore where we are now in | |
| 3788 the string in case this attempt to match fails. */ | |
| 3789 old_regstart[*p] = REG_MATCH_NULL_STRING_P (reg_info[*p]) | |
| 3790 ? REG_UNSET (regstart[*p]) ? d : regstart[*p] | |
| 3791 : regstart[*p]; | |
| 3792 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" old_regstart: %d\n", | |
| 3793 POINTER_TO_OFFSET (old_regstart[*p])); | |
| 3794 | |
| 3795 regstart[*p] = d; | |
| 3796 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" regstart: %d\n", POINTER_TO_OFFSET (regstart[*p])); | |
| 3797 | |
| 3798 IS_ACTIVE (reg_info[*p]) = 1; | |
| 3799 MATCHED_SOMETHING (reg_info[*p]) = 0; | |
| 3800 | |
| 3801 /* This is the new highest active register. */ | |
| 3802 highest_active_reg = *p; | |
| 3803 | |
| 3804 /* If nothing was active before, this is the new lowest active | |
| 3805 register. */ | |
| 3806 if (lowest_active_reg == NO_LOWEST_ACTIVE_REG) | |
| 3807 lowest_active_reg = *p; | |
| 3808 | |
| 3809 /* Move past the register number and inner group count. */ | |
| 3810 p += 2; | |
| 5842 | 3811 just_past_start_mem = p; |
| 1155 | 3812 break; |
| 3813 | |
| 3814 | |
| 3815 /* The stop_memory opcode represents the end of a group. Its | |
| 3816 arguments are the same as start_memory's: the register | |
| 3817 number, and the number of inner groups. */ | |
| 3818 case stop_memory: | |
| 3819 DEBUG_PRINT3 ("EXECUTING stop_memory %d (%d):\n", *p, p[1]); | |
| 3820 | |
| 3821 /* We need to save the string position the last time we were at | |
| 3822 this close-group operator in case the group is operated | |
| 3823 upon by a repetition operator, e.g., with `((a*)*(b*)*)*' | |
| 3824 against `aba'; then we want to ignore where we are now in | |
| 3825 the string in case this attempt to match fails. */ | |
| 3826 old_regend[*p] = REG_MATCH_NULL_STRING_P (reg_info[*p]) | |
| 3827 ? REG_UNSET (regend[*p]) ? d : regend[*p] | |
| 3828 : regend[*p]; | |
| 3829 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" old_regend: %d\n", | |
| 3830 POINTER_TO_OFFSET (old_regend[*p])); | |
| 3831 | |
| 3832 regend[*p] = d; | |
| 3833 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" regend: %d\n", POINTER_TO_OFFSET (regend[*p])); | |
| 3834 | |
| 3835 /* This register isn't active anymore. */ | |
| 3836 IS_ACTIVE (reg_info[*p]) = 0; | |
| 3837 | |
| 3838 /* If this was the only register active, nothing is active | |
| 3839 anymore. */ | |
| 3840 if (lowest_active_reg == highest_active_reg) | |
| 3841 { | |
| 3842 lowest_active_reg = NO_LOWEST_ACTIVE_REG; | |
| 3843 highest_active_reg = NO_HIGHEST_ACTIVE_REG; | |
| 3844 } | |
| 3845 else | |
| 3846 { /* We must scan for the new highest active register, since | |
| 3847 it isn't necessarily one less than now: consider | |
| 3848 (a(b)c(d(e)f)g). When group 3 ends, after the f), the | |
| 3849 new highest active register is 1. */ | |
| 3850 unsigned char r = *p - 1; | |
| 3851 while (r > 0 && !IS_ACTIVE (reg_info[r])) | |
| 3852 r--; | |
| 3853 | |
| 3854 /* If we end up at register zero, that means that we saved | |
| 3855 the registers as the result of an `on_failure_jump', not | |
| 3856 a `start_memory', and we jumped to past the innermost | |
| 3857 `stop_memory'. For example, in ((.)*) we save | |
| 3858 registers 1 and 2 as a result of the *, but when we pop | |
| 3859 back to the second ), we are at the stop_memory 1. | |
| 3860 Thus, nothing is active. */ | |
| 3861 if (r == 0) | |
| 3862 { | |
| 3863 lowest_active_reg = NO_LOWEST_ACTIVE_REG; | |
| 3864 highest_active_reg = NO_HIGHEST_ACTIVE_REG; | |
| 3865 } | |
| 3866 else | |
| 3867 highest_active_reg = r; | |
| 3868 } | |
| 3869 | |
| 3870 /* If just failed to match something this time around with a | |
| 3871 group that's operated on by a repetition operator, try to | |
| 1637 | 3872 force exit from the ``loop'', and restore the register |
| 1155 | 3873 information for this group that we had before trying this |
| 3874 last match. */ | |
| 3875 if ((!MATCHED_SOMETHING (reg_info[*p]) | |
| 5842 | 3876 || just_past_start_mem == p - 1) |
| 1155 | 3877 && (p + 2) < pend) |
| 3878 { | |
| 3879 boolean is_a_jump_n = false; | |
| 3880 | |
| 3881 p1 = p + 2; | |
| 3882 mcnt = 0; | |
| 3883 switch ((re_opcode_t) *p1++) | |
| 3884 { | |
| 3885 case jump_n: | |
| 3886 is_a_jump_n = true; | |
| 3887 case pop_failure_jump: | |
| 3888 case maybe_pop_jump: | |
| 3889 case jump: | |
| 3890 case dummy_failure_jump: | |
| 3891 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p1); | |
| 3892 if (is_a_jump_n) | |
| 3893 p1 += 2; | |
| 3894 break; | |
| 3895 | |
| 3896 default: | |
| 3897 /* do nothing */ ; | |
| 3898 } | |
| 3899 p1 += mcnt; | |
| 3900 | |
| 3901 /* If the next operation is a jump backwards in the pattern | |
| 3902 to an on_failure_jump right before the start_memory | |
| 3903 corresponding to this stop_memory, exit from the loop | |
| 3904 by forcing a failure after pushing on the stack the | |
| 3905 on_failure_jump's jump in the pattern, and d. */ | |
| 3906 if (mcnt < 0 && (re_opcode_t) *p1 == on_failure_jump | |
| 3907 && (re_opcode_t) p1[3] == start_memory && p1[4] == *p) | |
| 3908 { | |
| 3909 /* If this group ever matched anything, then restore | |
| 3910 what its registers were before trying this last | |
| 3911 failed match, e.g., with `(a*)*b' against `ab' for | |
| 3912 regstart[1], and, e.g., with `((a*)*(b*)*)*' | |
| 3913 against `aba' for regend[3]. | |
| 3914 | |
| 3915 Also restore the registers for inner groups for, | |
| 3916 e.g., `((a*)(b*))*' against `aba' (register 3 would | |
| 3917 otherwise get trashed). */ | |
| 3918 | |
| 3919 if (EVER_MATCHED_SOMETHING (reg_info[*p])) | |
| 3920 { | |
| 3921 unsigned r; | |
| 3922 | |
| 3923 EVER_MATCHED_SOMETHING (reg_info[*p]) = 0; | |
| 3924 | |
| 3925 /* Restore this and inner groups' (if any) registers. */ | |
| 3926 for (r = *p; r < *p + *(p + 1); r++) | |
| 3927 { | |
| 3928 regstart[r] = old_regstart[r]; | |
| 3929 | |
| 3930 /* xx why this test? */ | |
| 3931 if ((int) old_regend[r] >= (int) regstart[r]) | |
| 3932 regend[r] = old_regend[r]; | |
| 3933 } | |
| 3934 } | |
| 3935 p1++; | |
| 3936 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p1); | |
| 3937 PUSH_FAILURE_POINT (p1 + mcnt, d, -2); | |
| 3938 | |
| 3939 goto fail; | |
| 3940 } | |
| 3941 } | |
| 3942 | |
| 3943 /* Move past the register number and the inner group count. */ | |
| 3944 p += 2; | |
| 3945 break; | |
| 3946 | |
| 3947 | |
| 3948 /* \<digit> has been turned into a `duplicate' command which is | |
| 3949 followed by the numeric value of <digit> as the register number. */ | |
| 3950 case duplicate: | |
| 3951 { | |
| 3952 register const char *d2, *dend2; | |
| 3953 int regno = *p++; /* Get which register to match against. */ | |
| 3954 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("EXECUTING duplicate %d.\n", regno); | |
| 3955 | |
| 3956 /* Can't back reference a group which we've never matched. */ | |
| 3957 if (REG_UNSET (regstart[regno]) || REG_UNSET (regend[regno])) | |
| 3958 goto fail; | |
| 3959 | |
| 3960 /* Where in input to try to start matching. */ | |
| 3961 d2 = regstart[regno]; | |
| 3962 | |
| 3963 /* Where to stop matching; if both the place to start and | |
| 3964 the place to stop matching are in the same string, then | |
| 3965 set to the place to stop, otherwise, for now have to use | |
| 3966 the end of the first string. */ | |
| 3967 | |
| 3968 dend2 = ((FIRST_STRING_P (regstart[regno]) | |
| 3969 == FIRST_STRING_P (regend[regno])) | |
| 3970 ? regend[regno] : end_match_1); | |
| 3971 for (;;) | |
| 3972 { | |
| 3973 /* If necessary, advance to next segment in register | |
| 3974 contents. */ | |
| 3975 while (d2 == dend2) | |
| 3976 { | |
| 3977 if (dend2 == end_match_2) break; | |
| 3978 if (dend2 == regend[regno]) break; | |
| 3979 | |
| 3980 /* End of string1 => advance to string2. */ | |
| 3981 d2 = string2; | |
| 3982 dend2 = regend[regno]; | |
| 3983 } | |
| 3984 /* At end of register contents => success */ | |
| 3985 if (d2 == dend2) break; | |
| 3986 | |
| 3987 /* If necessary, advance to next segment in data. */ | |
| 3988 PREFETCH (); | |
| 3989 | |
| 3990 /* How many characters left in this segment to match. */ | |
| 3991 mcnt = dend - d; | |
| 3992 | |
| 3993 /* Want how many consecutive characters we can match in | |
| 3994 one shot, so, if necessary, adjust the count. */ | |
| 3995 if (mcnt > dend2 - d2) | |
| 3996 mcnt = dend2 - d2; | |
| 3997 | |
| 3998 /* Compare that many; failure if mismatch, else move | |
| 3999 past them. */ | |
| 4000 if (translate | |
| 4001 ? bcmp_translate (d, d2, mcnt, translate) | |
| 4002 : bcmp (d, d2, mcnt)) | |
| 4003 goto fail; | |
| 4004 d += mcnt, d2 += mcnt; | |
| 4005 } | |
| 4006 } | |
| 4007 break; | |
| 4008 | |
| 4009 | |
| 4010 /* begline matches the empty string at the beginning of the string | |
| 4011 (unless `not_bol' is set in `bufp'), and, if | |
| 4012 `newline_anchor' is set, after newlines. */ | |
| 4013 case begline: | |
| 4014 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING begline.\n"); | |
| 4015 | |
| 1637 | 4016 if (AT_STRINGS_BEG (d)) |
| 1155 | 4017 { |
| 4018 if (!bufp->not_bol) break; | |
| 4019 } | |
| 4020 else if (d[-1] == '\n' && bufp->newline_anchor) | |
| 4021 { | |
| 4022 break; | |
| 4023 } | |
| 4024 /* In all other cases, we fail. */ | |
| 4025 goto fail; | |
| 4026 | |
| 4027 | |
| 4028 /* endline is the dual of begline. */ | |
| 4029 case endline: | |
| 4030 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING endline.\n"); | |
| 4031 | |
| 1637 | 4032 if (AT_STRINGS_END (d)) |
| 1155 | 4033 { |
| 4034 if (!bufp->not_eol) break; | |
| 4035 } | |
| 4036 | |
| 4037 /* We have to ``prefetch'' the next character. */ | |
| 4038 else if ((d == end1 ? *string2 : *d) == '\n' | |
| 4039 && bufp->newline_anchor) | |
| 4040 { | |
| 4041 break; | |
| 4042 } | |
| 4043 goto fail; | |
| 4044 | |
| 4045 | |
| 4046 /* Match at the very beginning of the data. */ | |
| 4047 case begbuf: | |
| 4048 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING begbuf.\n"); | |
| 1637 | 4049 if (AT_STRINGS_BEG (d)) |
| 1155 | 4050 break; |
| 4051 goto fail; | |
| 4052 | |
| 4053 | |
| 4054 /* Match at the very end of the data. */ | |
| 4055 case endbuf: | |
| 4056 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING endbuf.\n"); | |
| 1637 | 4057 if (AT_STRINGS_END (d)) |
| 1155 | 4058 break; |
| 4059 goto fail; | |
| 4060 | |
| 4061 | |
| 4062 /* on_failure_keep_string_jump is used to optimize `.*\n'. It | |
| 4063 pushes NULL as the value for the string on the stack. Then | |
| 4064 `pop_failure_point' will keep the current value for the | |
| 4065 string, instead of restoring it. To see why, consider | |
| 4066 matching `foo\nbar' against `.*\n'. The .* matches the foo; | |
| 4067 then the . fails against the \n. But the next thing we want | |
| 4068 to do is match the \n against the \n; if we restored the | |
| 4069 string value, we would be back at the foo. | |
| 4070 | |
| 4071 Because this is used only in specific cases, we don't need to | |
| 4072 check all the things that `on_failure_jump' does, to make | |
| 4073 sure the right things get saved on the stack. Hence we don't | |
| 4074 share its code. The only reason to push anything on the | |
| 4075 stack at all is that otherwise we would have to change | |
| 4076 `anychar's code to do something besides goto fail in this | |
| 4077 case; that seems worse than this. */ | |
| 4078 case on_failure_keep_string_jump: | |
| 4079 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING on_failure_keep_string_jump"); | |
| 4080 | |
| 4081 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p); | |
| 4082 DEBUG_PRINT3 (" %d (to 0x%x):\n", mcnt, p + mcnt); | |
| 4083 | |
| 4084 PUSH_FAILURE_POINT (p + mcnt, NULL, -2); | |
| 4085 break; | |
| 4086 | |
| 4087 | |
| 4088 /* Uses of on_failure_jump: | |
| 4089 | |
| 4090 Each alternative starts with an on_failure_jump that points | |
| 4091 to the beginning of the next alternative. Each alternative | |
| 4092 except the last ends with a jump that in effect jumps past | |
| 4093 the rest of the alternatives. (They really jump to the | |
| 4094 ending jump of the following alternative, because tensioning | |
| 4095 these jumps is a hassle.) | |
| 4096 | |
| 4097 Repeats start with an on_failure_jump that points past both | |
| 4098 the repetition text and either the following jump or | |
| 4099 pop_failure_jump back to this on_failure_jump. */ | |
| 4100 case on_failure_jump: | |
| 4101 on_failure: | |
| 4102 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING on_failure_jump"); | |
| 4103 | |
| 4104 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p); | |
| 4105 DEBUG_PRINT3 (" %d (to 0x%x)", mcnt, p + mcnt); | |
| 4106 | |
| 4107 /* If this on_failure_jump comes right before a group (i.e., | |
| 4108 the original * applied to a group), save the information | |
| 4109 for that group and all inner ones, so that if we fail back | |
| 4110 to this point, the group's information will be correct. | |
| 1637 | 4111 For example, in \(a*\)*\1, we need the preceding group, |
| 1155 | 4112 and in \(\(a*\)b*\)\2, we need the inner group. */ |
| 4113 | |
| 4114 /* We can't use `p' to check ahead because we push | |
| 4115 a failure point to `p + mcnt' after we do this. */ | |
| 4116 p1 = p; | |
| 4117 | |
| 4118 /* We need to skip no_op's before we look for the | |
| 4119 start_memory in case this on_failure_jump is happening as | |
| 4120 the result of a completed succeed_n, as in \(a\)\{1,3\}b\1 | |
| 4121 against aba. */ | |
| 4122 while (p1 < pend && (re_opcode_t) *p1 == no_op) | |
| 4123 p1++; | |
| 4124 | |
| 4125 if (p1 < pend && (re_opcode_t) *p1 == start_memory) | |
| 4126 { | |
| 4127 /* We have a new highest active register now. This will | |
| 4128 get reset at the start_memory we are about to get to, | |
| 4129 but we will have saved all the registers relevant to | |
| 4130 this repetition op, as described above. */ | |
| 4131 highest_active_reg = *(p1 + 1) + *(p1 + 2); | |
| 4132 if (lowest_active_reg == NO_LOWEST_ACTIVE_REG) | |
| 4133 lowest_active_reg = *(p1 + 1); | |
| 4134 } | |
| 4135 | |
| 4136 DEBUG_PRINT1 (":\n"); | |
| 4137 PUSH_FAILURE_POINT (p + mcnt, d, -2); | |
| 4138 break; | |
| 4139 | |
| 4140 | |
| 1637 | 4141 /* A smart repeat ends with `maybe_pop_jump'. |
| 4142 We change it to either `pop_failure_jump' or `jump'. */ | |
| 1155 | 4143 case maybe_pop_jump: |
| 4144 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p); | |
| 4145 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("EXECUTING maybe_pop_jump %d.\n", mcnt); | |
| 4146 { | |
| 4147 register unsigned char *p2 = p; | |
| 4148 | |
| 4149 /* Compare the beginning of the repeat with what in the | |
| 4150 pattern follows its end. If we can establish that there | |
| 4151 is nothing that they would both match, i.e., that we | |
| 4152 would have to backtrack because of (as in, e.g., `a*a') | |
| 4153 then we can change to pop_failure_jump, because we'll | |
| 4154 never have to backtrack. | |
| 4155 | |
| 4156 This is not true in the case of alternatives: in | |
| 4157 `(a|ab)*' we do need to backtrack to the `ab' alternative | |
| 4158 (e.g., if the string was `ab'). But instead of trying to | |
| 4159 detect that here, the alternative has put on a dummy | |
| 4160 failure point which is what we will end up popping. */ | |
| 4161 | |
|
3541
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parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4162 /* Skip over open/close-group commands. |
|
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parents:
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diff
changeset
|
4163 If what follows this loop is a ...+ construct, |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
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diff
changeset
|
4164 look at what begins its body, since we will have to |
|
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|
4165 match at least one of that. */ |
|
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changeset
|
4166 while (1) |
|
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|
4167 { |
|
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|
4168 if (p2 + 2 < pend |
|
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|
4169 && ((re_opcode_t) *p2 == stop_memory |
|
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|
4170 || (re_opcode_t) *p2 == start_memory)) |
|
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|
4171 p2 += 3; |
|
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|
4172 else if (p2 + 6 < pend |
|
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|
4173 && (re_opcode_t) *p2 == dummy_failure_jump) |
|
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|
4174 p2 += 6; |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
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|
4175 else |
|
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changeset
|
4176 break; |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
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diff
changeset
|
4177 } |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
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changeset
|
4178 |
|
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|
4179 p1 = p + mcnt; |
|
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parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4180 /* p1[0] ... p1[2] are the `on_failure_jump' corresponding |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
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parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4181 to the `maybe_finalize_jump' of this case. Examine what |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
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2952
diff
changeset
|
4182 follows. */ |
| 1155 | 4183 |
| 4184 /* If we're at the end of the pattern, we can change. */ | |
| 4185 if (p2 == pend) | |
| 1669 | 4186 { |
| 4187 /* Consider what happens when matching ":\(.*\)" | |
| 4188 against ":/". I don't really understand this code | |
| 4189 yet. */ | |
| 1155 | 4190 p[-3] = (unsigned char) pop_failure_jump; |
| 1669 | 4191 DEBUG_PRINT1 |
| 4192 (" End of pattern: change to `pop_failure_jump'.\n"); | |
| 1155 | 4193 } |
| 4194 | |
| 4195 else if ((re_opcode_t) *p2 == exactn | |
| 4196 || (bufp->newline_anchor && (re_opcode_t) *p2 == endline)) | |
| 4197 { | |
| 4198 register unsigned char c | |
| 4199 = *p2 == (unsigned char) endline ? '\n' : p2[2]; | |
|
3541
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4200 |
| 1155 | 4201 if ((re_opcode_t) p1[3] == exactn && p1[5] != c) |
| 1637 | 4202 { |
| 4203 p[-3] = (unsigned char) pop_failure_jump; | |
| 4204 DEBUG_PRINT3 (" %c != %c => pop_failure_jump.\n", | |
| 4205 c, p1[5]); | |
| 4206 } | |
| 4207 | |
| 1155 | 4208 else if ((re_opcode_t) p1[3] == charset |
| 4209 || (re_opcode_t) p1[3] == charset_not) | |
| 4210 { | |
| 4211 int not = (re_opcode_t) p1[3] == charset_not; | |
| 4212 | |
| 4213 if (c < (unsigned char) (p1[4] * BYTEWIDTH) | |
| 4214 && p1[5 + c / BYTEWIDTH] & (1 << (c % BYTEWIDTH))) | |
| 4215 not = !not; | |
| 4216 | |
| 4217 /* `not' is equal to 1 if c would match, which means | |
| 4218 that we can't change to pop_failure_jump. */ | |
| 4219 if (!not) | |
| 4220 { | |
| 4221 p[-3] = (unsigned char) pop_failure_jump; | |
| 1637 | 4222 DEBUG_PRINT1 (" No match => pop_failure_jump.\n"); |
| 1155 | 4223 } |
| 4224 } | |
| 4225 } | |
|
3541
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4226 else if ((re_opcode_t) *p2 == charset) |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4227 { |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4228 register unsigned char c |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4229 = *p2 == (unsigned char) endline ? '\n' : p2[2]; |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4230 |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4231 if ((re_opcode_t) p1[3] == exactn |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4232 && ! (p2[1] * BYTEWIDTH > p1[4] |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4233 && (p2[1 + p1[4] / BYTEWIDTH] |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4234 & (1 << (p1[4] % BYTEWIDTH))))) |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4235 { |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4236 p[-3] = (unsigned char) pop_failure_jump; |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4237 DEBUG_PRINT3 (" %c != %c => pop_failure_jump.\n", |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4238 c, p1[5]); |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4239 } |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4240 |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4241 else if ((re_opcode_t) p1[3] == charset_not) |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4242 { |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4243 int idx; |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4244 /* We win if the charset_not inside the loop |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4245 lists every character listed in the charset after. */ |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4246 for (idx = 0; idx < p2[1]; idx++) |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4247 if (! (p2[2 + idx] == 0 |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4248 || (idx < p1[4] |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4249 && ((p2[2 + idx] & ~ p1[5 + idx]) == 0)))) |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4250 break; |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4251 |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4252 if (idx == p2[1]) |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4253 { |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4254 p[-3] = (unsigned char) pop_failure_jump; |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4255 DEBUG_PRINT1 (" No match => pop_failure_jump.\n"); |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4256 } |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4257 } |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4258 else if ((re_opcode_t) p1[3] == charset) |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4259 { |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4260 int idx; |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4261 /* We win if the charset inside the loop |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4262 has no overlap with the one after the loop. */ |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4263 for (idx = 0; idx < p2[1] && idx < p1[4]; idx++) |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4264 if ((p2[2 + idx] & p1[5 + idx]) != 0) |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4265 break; |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4266 |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4267 if (idx == p2[1] || idx == p1[4]) |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4268 { |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4269 p[-3] = (unsigned char) pop_failure_jump; |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4270 DEBUG_PRINT1 (" No match => pop_failure_jump.\n"); |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4271 } |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4272 } |
|
cb4aa2f13edd
*** empty log message ***
Richard M. Stallman <rms@gnu.org>
parents:
2952
diff
changeset
|
4273 } |
| 1155 | 4274 } |
| 4275 p -= 2; /* Point at relative address again. */ | |
| 4276 if ((re_opcode_t) p[-1] != pop_failure_jump) | |
| 4277 { | |
| 4278 p[-1] = (unsigned char) jump; | |
| 1637 | 4279 DEBUG_PRINT1 (" Match => jump.\n"); |
| 1155 | 4280 goto unconditional_jump; |
| 4281 } | |
| 4282 /* Note fall through. */ | |
| 4283 | |
| 4284 | |
| 4285 /* The end of a simple repeat has a pop_failure_jump back to | |
| 4286 its matching on_failure_jump, where the latter will push a | |
| 4287 failure point. The pop_failure_jump takes off failure | |
| 4288 points put on by this pop_failure_jump's matching | |
| 4289 on_failure_jump; we got through the pattern to here from the | |
| 4290 matching on_failure_jump, so didn't fail. */ | |
| 4291 case pop_failure_jump: | |
| 4292 { | |
| 4293 /* We need to pass separate storage for the lowest and | |
| 4294 highest registers, even though we don't care about the | |
| 4295 actual values. Otherwise, we will restore only one | |
| 4296 register from the stack, since lowest will == highest in | |
| 4297 `pop_failure_point'. */ | |
| 4298 unsigned dummy_low_reg, dummy_high_reg; | |
| 4299 unsigned char *pdummy; | |
| 4300 const char *sdummy; | |
| 4301 | |
| 4302 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING pop_failure_jump.\n"); | |
| 4303 POP_FAILURE_POINT (sdummy, pdummy, | |
| 4304 dummy_low_reg, dummy_high_reg, | |
| 4305 reg_dummy, reg_dummy, reg_info_dummy); | |
| 4306 } | |
| 4307 /* Note fall through. */ | |
| 4308 | |
| 4309 | |
| 4310 /* Unconditionally jump (without popping any failure points). */ | |
| 4311 case jump: | |
| 4312 unconditional_jump: | |
| 4313 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p); /* Get the amount to jump. */ | |
| 4314 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("EXECUTING jump %d ", mcnt); | |
| 4315 p += mcnt; /* Do the jump. */ | |
| 4316 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("(to 0x%x).\n", p); | |
| 4317 break; | |
| 4318 | |
| 4319 | |
| 4320 /* We need this opcode so we can detect where alternatives end | |
| 4321 in `group_match_null_string_p' et al. */ | |
| 4322 case jump_past_alt: | |
| 4323 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING jump_past_alt.\n"); | |
| 4324 goto unconditional_jump; | |
| 4325 | |
| 4326 | |
| 4327 /* Normally, the on_failure_jump pushes a failure point, which | |
| 4328 then gets popped at pop_failure_jump. We will end up at | |
| 4329 pop_failure_jump, also, and with a pattern of, say, `a+', we | |
| 4330 are skipping over the on_failure_jump, so we have to push | |
| 4331 something meaningless for pop_failure_jump to pop. */ | |
| 4332 case dummy_failure_jump: | |
| 4333 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING dummy_failure_jump.\n"); | |
| 4334 /* It doesn't matter what we push for the string here. What | |
| 4335 the code at `fail' tests is the value for the pattern. */ | |
| 4336 PUSH_FAILURE_POINT (0, 0, -2); | |
| 4337 goto unconditional_jump; | |
| 4338 | |
| 4339 | |
| 4340 /* At the end of an alternative, we need to push a dummy failure | |
| 1637 | 4341 point in case we are followed by a `pop_failure_jump', because |
| 1155 | 4342 we don't want the failure point for the alternative to be |
| 4343 popped. For example, matching `(a|ab)*' against `aab' | |
| 4344 requires that we match the `ab' alternative. */ | |
| 4345 case push_dummy_failure: | |
| 4346 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING push_dummy_failure.\n"); | |
| 4347 /* See comments just above at `dummy_failure_jump' about the | |
| 4348 two zeroes. */ | |
| 4349 PUSH_FAILURE_POINT (0, 0, -2); | |
| 4350 break; | |
| 4351 | |
| 4352 /* Have to succeed matching what follows at least n times. | |
| 4353 After that, handle like `on_failure_jump'. */ | |
| 4354 case succeed_n: | |
| 4355 EXTRACT_NUMBER (mcnt, p + 2); | |
| 4356 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("EXECUTING succeed_n %d.\n", mcnt); | |
| 4357 | |
| 4358 assert (mcnt >= 0); | |
| 4359 /* Originally, this is how many times we HAVE to succeed. */ | |
| 4360 if (mcnt > 0) | |
| 4361 { | |
| 4362 mcnt--; | |
| 4363 p += 2; | |
| 4364 STORE_NUMBER_AND_INCR (p, mcnt); | |
| 4365 DEBUG_PRINT3 (" Setting 0x%x to %d.\n", p, mcnt); | |
| 4366 } | |
| 4367 else if (mcnt == 0) | |
| 4368 { | |
| 4369 DEBUG_PRINT2 (" Setting two bytes from 0x%x to no_op.\n", p+2); | |
| 4370 p[2] = (unsigned char) no_op; | |
| 4371 p[3] = (unsigned char) no_op; | |
| 4372 goto on_failure; | |
| 4373 } | |
| 4374 break; | |
| 4375 | |
| 4376 case jump_n: | |
| 4377 EXTRACT_NUMBER (mcnt, p + 2); | |
| 4378 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("EXECUTING jump_n %d.\n", mcnt); | |
| 4379 | |
| 4380 /* Originally, this is how many times we CAN jump. */ | |
| 4381 if (mcnt) | |
| 4382 { | |
| 4383 mcnt--; | |
| 4384 STORE_NUMBER (p + 2, mcnt); | |
| 4385 goto unconditional_jump; | |
| 4386 } | |
| 4387 /* If don't have to jump any more, skip over the rest of command. */ | |
| 4388 else | |
| 4389 p += 4; | |
| 4390 break; | |
| 4391 | |
| 4392 case set_number_at: | |
| 4393 { | |
| 4394 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING set_number_at.\n"); | |
| 4395 | |
| 4396 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p); | |
| 4397 p1 = p + mcnt; | |
| 4398 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p); | |
| 4399 DEBUG_PRINT3 (" Setting 0x%x to %d.\n", p1, mcnt); | |
| 4400 STORE_NUMBER (p1, mcnt); | |
| 4401 break; | |
| 4402 } | |
| 4403 | |
| 4404 case wordbound: | |
| 4405 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING wordbound.\n"); | |
| 4406 if (AT_WORD_BOUNDARY (d)) | |
| 4407 break; | |
| 4408 goto fail; | |
| 4409 | |
| 4410 case notwordbound: | |
| 4411 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING notwordbound.\n"); | |
| 4412 if (AT_WORD_BOUNDARY (d)) | |
| 4413 goto fail; | |
| 4414 break; | |
| 4415 | |
| 4416 case wordbeg: | |
| 4417 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING wordbeg.\n"); | |
| 1637 | 4418 if (WORDCHAR_P (d) && (AT_STRINGS_BEG (d) || !WORDCHAR_P (d - 1))) |
| 1155 | 4419 break; |
| 4420 goto fail; | |
| 4421 | |
| 4422 case wordend: | |
| 4423 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING wordend.\n"); | |
| 1637 | 4424 if (!AT_STRINGS_BEG (d) && WORDCHAR_P (d - 1) |
| 4425 && (!WORDCHAR_P (d) || AT_STRINGS_END (d))) | |
| 1155 | 4426 break; |
| 4427 goto fail; | |
| 4428 | |
| 4429 #ifdef emacs | |
| 4430 #ifdef emacs19 | |
| 4431 case before_dot: | |
| 4432 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING before_dot.\n"); | |
| 4433 if (PTR_CHAR_POS ((unsigned char *) d) >= point) | |
| 4434 goto fail; | |
| 4435 break; | |
| 4436 | |
| 4437 case at_dot: | |
| 4438 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING at_dot.\n"); | |
| 4439 if (PTR_CHAR_POS ((unsigned char *) d) != point) | |
| 4440 goto fail; | |
| 4441 break; | |
| 4442 | |
| 4443 case after_dot: | |
| 4444 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING after_dot.\n"); | |
| 4445 if (PTR_CHAR_POS ((unsigned char *) d) <= point) | |
| 4446 goto fail; | |
| 4447 break; | |
| 4448 #else /* not emacs19 */ | |
| 4449 case at_dot: | |
| 4450 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING at_dot.\n"); | |
| 4451 if (PTR_CHAR_POS ((unsigned char *) d) + 1 != point) | |
| 4452 goto fail; | |
| 4453 break; | |
| 4454 #endif /* not emacs19 */ | |
| 4455 | |
| 4456 case syntaxspec: | |
| 4457 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("EXECUTING syntaxspec %d.\n", mcnt); | |
| 4458 mcnt = *p++; | |
| 4459 goto matchsyntax; | |
| 4460 | |
| 4461 case wordchar: | |
| 1637 | 4462 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING Emacs wordchar.\n"); |
| 1155 | 4463 mcnt = (int) Sword; |
| 4464 matchsyntax: | |
| 4465 PREFETCH (); | |
| 1637 | 4466 if (SYNTAX (*d++) != (enum syntaxcode) mcnt) |
| 4467 goto fail; | |
| 1155 | 4468 SET_REGS_MATCHED (); |
| 4469 break; | |
| 4470 | |
| 4471 case notsyntaxspec: | |
| 4472 DEBUG_PRINT2 ("EXECUTING notsyntaxspec %d.\n", mcnt); | |
| 4473 mcnt = *p++; | |
| 4474 goto matchnotsyntax; | |
| 4475 | |
| 4476 case notwordchar: | |
| 1637 | 4477 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING Emacs notwordchar.\n"); |
| 1155 | 4478 mcnt = (int) Sword; |
| 1637 | 4479 matchnotsyntax: |
| 1155 | 4480 PREFETCH (); |
| 1637 | 4481 if (SYNTAX (*d++) == (enum syntaxcode) mcnt) |
| 4482 goto fail; | |
| 1155 | 4483 SET_REGS_MATCHED (); |
| 4484 break; | |
| 4485 | |
| 4486 #else /* not emacs */ | |
| 4487 case wordchar: | |
| 4488 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING non-Emacs wordchar.\n"); | |
| 4489 PREFETCH (); | |
| 1637 | 4490 if (!WORDCHAR_P (d)) |
| 1155 | 4491 goto fail; |
| 4492 SET_REGS_MATCHED (); | |
| 1637 | 4493 d++; |
| 1155 | 4494 break; |
| 4495 | |
| 4496 case notwordchar: | |
| 4497 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("EXECUTING non-Emacs notwordchar.\n"); | |
| 4498 PREFETCH (); | |
| 1637 | 4499 if (WORDCHAR_P (d)) |
| 1155 | 4500 goto fail; |
| 4501 SET_REGS_MATCHED (); | |
| 1637 | 4502 d++; |
| 1155 | 4503 break; |
| 4504 #endif /* not emacs */ | |
| 4505 | |
| 4506 default: | |
| 4507 abort (); | |
| 4508 } | |
| 4509 continue; /* Successfully executed one pattern command; keep going. */ | |
| 4510 | |
| 4511 | |
| 4512 /* We goto here if a matching operation fails. */ | |
| 4513 fail: | |
| 4514 if (!FAIL_STACK_EMPTY ()) | |
| 4515 { /* A restart point is known. Restore to that state. */ | |
| 4516 DEBUG_PRINT1 ("\nFAIL:\n"); | |
| 4517 POP_FAILURE_POINT (d, p, | |
| 4518 lowest_active_reg, highest_active_reg, | |
| 4519 regstart, regend, reg_info); | |
| 4520 | |
| 4521 /* If this failure point is a dummy, try the next one. */ | |
| 4522 if (!p) | |
| 4523 goto fail; | |
| 4524 | |
| 4525 /* If we failed to the end of the pattern, don't examine *p. */ | |
| 4526 assert (p <= pend); | |
| 4527 if (p < pend) | |
| 4528 { | |
| 4529 boolean is_a_jump_n = false; | |
| 4530 | |
| 4531 /* If failed to a backwards jump that's part of a repetition | |
| 4532 loop, need to pop this failure point and use the next one. */ | |
| 4533 switch ((re_opcode_t) *p) | |
| 4534 { | |
| 4535 case jump_n: | |
| 4536 is_a_jump_n = true; | |
| 4537 case maybe_pop_jump: | |
| 4538 case pop_failure_jump: | |
| 4539 case jump: | |
| 4540 p1 = p + 1; | |
| 4541 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p1); | |
| 4542 p1 += mcnt; | |
| 4543 | |
| 4544 if ((is_a_jump_n && (re_opcode_t) *p1 == succeed_n) | |
| 4545 || (!is_a_jump_n | |
| 4546 && (re_opcode_t) *p1 == on_failure_jump)) | |
| 4547 goto fail; | |
| 4548 break; | |
| 4549 default: | |
| 4550 /* do nothing */ ; | |
| 4551 } | |
| 4552 } | |
| 4553 | |
| 4554 if (d >= string1 && d <= end1) | |
| 4555 dend = end_match_1; | |
| 4556 } | |
| 4557 else | |
| 4558 break; /* Matching at this starting point really fails. */ | |
| 4559 } /* for (;;) */ | |
| 4560 | |
| 4561 if (best_regs_set) | |
| 4562 goto restore_best_regs; | |
| 4563 | |
| 4564 FREE_VARIABLES (); | |
| 4565 | |
| 4566 return -1; /* Failure to match. */ | |
| 4567 } /* re_match_2 */ | |
| 4568 | |
| 4569 /* Subroutine definitions for re_match_2. */ | |
| 4570 | |
| 4571 | |
| 4572 /* We are passed P pointing to a register number after a start_memory. | |
| 4573 | |
| 4574 Return true if the pattern up to the corresponding stop_memory can | |
| 4575 match the empty string, and false otherwise. | |
| 4576 | |
| 4577 If we find the matching stop_memory, sets P to point to one past its number. | |
| 4578 Otherwise, sets P to an undefined byte less than or equal to END. | |
| 4579 | |
| 4580 We don't handle duplicates properly (yet). */ | |
| 4581 | |
| 4582 static boolean | |
| 4583 group_match_null_string_p (p, end, reg_info) | |
| 4584 unsigned char **p, *end; | |
| 4585 register_info_type *reg_info; | |
| 4586 { | |
| 4587 int mcnt; | |
| 4588 /* Point to after the args to the start_memory. */ | |
| 4589 unsigned char *p1 = *p + 2; | |
| 4590 | |
| 4591 while (p1 < end) | |
| 4592 { | |
| 4593 /* Skip over opcodes that can match nothing, and return true or | |
| 4594 false, as appropriate, when we get to one that can't, or to the | |
| 4595 matching stop_memory. */ | |
| 4596 | |
| 4597 switch ((re_opcode_t) *p1) | |
| 4598 { | |
| 4599 /* Could be either a loop or a series of alternatives. */ | |
| 4600 case on_failure_jump: | |
| 4601 p1++; | |
| 4602 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p1); | |
| 4603 | |
| 4604 /* If the next operation is not a jump backwards in the | |
| 4605 pattern. */ | |
| 4606 | |
| 4607 if (mcnt >= 0) | |
| 4608 { | |
| 4609 /* Go through the on_failure_jumps of the alternatives, | |
| 4610 seeing if any of the alternatives cannot match nothing. | |
| 4611 The last alternative starts with only a jump, | |
| 4612 whereas the rest start with on_failure_jump and end | |
| 4613 with a jump, e.g., here is the pattern for `a|b|c': | |
| 4614 | |
| 4615 /on_failure_jump/0/6/exactn/1/a/jump_past_alt/0/6 | |
| 4616 /on_failure_jump/0/6/exactn/1/b/jump_past_alt/0/3 | |
| 4617 /exactn/1/c | |
| 4618 | |
| 4619 So, we have to first go through the first (n-1) | |
| 4620 alternatives and then deal with the last one separately. */ | |
| 4621 | |
| 4622 | |
| 4623 /* Deal with the first (n-1) alternatives, which start | |
| 4624 with an on_failure_jump (see above) that jumps to right | |
| 4625 past a jump_past_alt. */ | |
| 4626 | |
| 4627 while ((re_opcode_t) p1[mcnt-3] == jump_past_alt) | |
| 4628 { | |
| 4629 /* `mcnt' holds how many bytes long the alternative | |
| 4630 is, including the ending `jump_past_alt' and | |
| 4631 its number. */ | |
| 4632 | |
| 4633 if (!alt_match_null_string_p (p1, p1 + mcnt - 3, | |
| 4634 reg_info)) | |
| 4635 return false; | |
| 4636 | |
| 4637 /* Move to right after this alternative, including the | |
| 4638 jump_past_alt. */ | |
| 4639 p1 += mcnt; | |
| 4640 | |
| 4641 /* Break if it's the beginning of an n-th alternative | |
| 4642 that doesn't begin with an on_failure_jump. */ | |
| 4643 if ((re_opcode_t) *p1 != on_failure_jump) | |
| 4644 break; | |
| 4645 | |
| 4646 /* Still have to check that it's not an n-th | |
| 4647 alternative that starts with an on_failure_jump. */ | |
| 4648 p1++; | |
| 4649 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p1); | |
| 4650 if ((re_opcode_t) p1[mcnt-3] != jump_past_alt) | |
| 4651 { | |
| 4652 /* Get to the beginning of the n-th alternative. */ | |
| 4653 p1 -= 3; | |
| 4654 break; | |
| 4655 } | |
| 4656 } | |
| 4657 | |
| 4658 /* Deal with the last alternative: go back and get number | |
| 4659 of the `jump_past_alt' just before it. `mcnt' contains | |
| 4660 the length of the alternative. */ | |
| 4661 EXTRACT_NUMBER (mcnt, p1 - 2); | |
| 4662 | |
| 4663 if (!alt_match_null_string_p (p1, p1 + mcnt, reg_info)) | |
| 4664 return false; | |
| 4665 | |
| 4666 p1 += mcnt; /* Get past the n-th alternative. */ | |
| 4667 } /* if mcnt > 0 */ | |
| 4668 break; | |
| 4669 | |
| 4670 | |
| 4671 case stop_memory: | |
| 4672 assert (p1[1] == **p); | |
| 4673 *p = p1 + 2; | |
| 4674 return true; | |
| 4675 | |
| 4676 | |
| 4677 default: | |
| 4678 if (!common_op_match_null_string_p (&p1, end, reg_info)) | |
| 4679 return false; | |
| 4680 } | |
| 4681 } /* while p1 < end */ | |
| 4682 | |
| 4683 return false; | |
| 4684 } /* group_match_null_string_p */ | |
| 4685 | |
| 4686 | |
| 4687 /* Similar to group_match_null_string_p, but doesn't deal with alternatives: | |
| 4688 It expects P to be the first byte of a single alternative and END one | |
| 4689 byte past the last. The alternative can contain groups. */ | |
| 4690 | |
| 4691 static boolean | |
| 4692 alt_match_null_string_p (p, end, reg_info) | |
| 4693 unsigned char *p, *end; | |
| 4694 register_info_type *reg_info; | |
| 4695 { | |
| 4696 int mcnt; | |
| 4697 unsigned char *p1 = p; | |
| 4698 | |
| 4699 while (p1 < end) | |
| 4700 { | |
| 4701 /* Skip over opcodes that can match nothing, and break when we get | |
| 4702 to one that can't. */ | |
| 4703 | |
| 4704 switch ((re_opcode_t) *p1) | |
| 4705 { | |
| 4706 /* It's a loop. */ | |
| 4707 case on_failure_jump: | |
| 4708 p1++; | |
| 4709 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p1); | |
| 4710 p1 += mcnt; | |
| 4711 break; | |
| 4712 | |
| 4713 default: | |
| 4714 if (!common_op_match_null_string_p (&p1, end, reg_info)) | |
| 4715 return false; | |
| 4716 } | |
| 4717 } /* while p1 < end */ | |
| 4718 | |
| 4719 return true; | |
| 4720 } /* alt_match_null_string_p */ | |
| 4721 | |
| 4722 | |
| 4723 /* Deals with the ops common to group_match_null_string_p and | |
| 4724 alt_match_null_string_p. | |
| 4725 | |
| 4726 Sets P to one after the op and its arguments, if any. */ | |
| 4727 | |
| 4728 static boolean | |
| 4729 common_op_match_null_string_p (p, end, reg_info) | |
| 4730 unsigned char **p, *end; | |
| 4731 register_info_type *reg_info; | |
| 4732 { | |
| 4733 int mcnt; | |
| 4734 boolean ret; | |
| 4735 int reg_no; | |
| 4736 unsigned char *p1 = *p; | |
| 4737 | |
| 4738 switch ((re_opcode_t) *p1++) | |
| 4739 { | |
| 4740 case no_op: | |
| 4741 case begline: | |
| 4742 case endline: | |
| 4743 case begbuf: | |
| 4744 case endbuf: | |
| 4745 case wordbeg: | |
| 4746 case wordend: | |
| 4747 case wordbound: | |
| 4748 case notwordbound: | |
| 4749 #ifdef emacs | |
| 4750 case before_dot: | |
| 4751 case at_dot: | |
| 4752 case after_dot: | |
| 4753 #endif | |
| 4754 break; | |
| 4755 | |
| 4756 case start_memory: | |
| 4757 reg_no = *p1; | |
| 4758 assert (reg_no > 0 && reg_no <= MAX_REGNUM); | |
| 4759 ret = group_match_null_string_p (&p1, end, reg_info); | |
| 4760 | |
| 4761 /* Have to set this here in case we're checking a group which | |
| 4762 contains a group and a back reference to it. */ | |
| 4763 | |
| 4764 if (REG_MATCH_NULL_STRING_P (reg_info[reg_no]) == MATCH_NULL_UNSET_VALUE) | |
| 4765 REG_MATCH_NULL_STRING_P (reg_info[reg_no]) = ret; | |
| 4766 | |
| 4767 if (!ret) | |
| 4768 return false; | |
| 4769 break; | |
| 4770 | |
| 4771 /* If this is an optimized succeed_n for zero times, make the jump. */ | |
| 4772 case jump: | |
| 4773 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p1); | |
| 4774 if (mcnt >= 0) | |
| 4775 p1 += mcnt; | |
| 4776 else | |
| 4777 return false; | |
| 4778 break; | |
| 4779 | |
| 4780 case succeed_n: | |
| 4781 /* Get to the number of times to succeed. */ | |
| 4782 p1 += 2; | |
| 4783 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p1); | |
| 4784 | |
| 4785 if (mcnt == 0) | |
| 4786 { | |
| 4787 p1 -= 4; | |
| 4788 EXTRACT_NUMBER_AND_INCR (mcnt, p1); | |
| 4789 p1 += mcnt; | |
| 4790 } | |
| 4791 else | |
| 4792 return false; | |
| 4793 break; | |
| 4794 | |
| 4795 case duplicate: | |
| 4796 if (!REG_MATCH_NULL_STRING_P (reg_info[*p1])) | |
| 4797 return false; | |
| 4798 break; | |
| 4799 | |
| 4800 case set_number_at: | |
| 4801 p1 += 4; | |
| 4802 | |
| 4803 default: | |
| 4804 /* All other opcodes mean we cannot match the empty string. */ | |
| 4805 return false; | |
| 4806 } | |
| 4807 | |
| 4808 *p = p1; | |
| 4809 return true; | |
| 4810 } /* common_op_match_null_string_p */ | |
| 4811 | |
| 4812 | |
| 4813 /* Return zero if TRANSLATE[S1] and TRANSLATE[S2] are identical for LEN | |
| 4814 bytes; nonzero otherwise. */ | |
| 4815 | |
| 4816 static int | |
| 4817 bcmp_translate (s1, s2, len, translate) | |
| 4818 unsigned char *s1, *s2; | |
| 4819 register int len; | |
| 4820 char *translate; | |
| 4821 { | |
| 4822 register unsigned char *p1 = s1, *p2 = s2; | |
| 4823 while (len) | |
| 4824 { | |
| 4825 if (translate[*p1++] != translate[*p2++]) return 1; | |
| 4826 len--; | |
| 4827 } | |
| 4828 return 0; | |
| 4829 } | |
| 4830 | |
| 4831 /* Entry points for GNU code. */ | |
| 4832 | |
| 4833 /* re_compile_pattern is the GNU regular expression compiler: it | |
| 4834 compiles PATTERN (of length SIZE) and puts the result in BUFP. | |
| 4835 Returns 0 if the pattern was valid, otherwise an error string. | |
| 4836 | |
| 4837 Assumes the `allocated' (and perhaps `buffer') and `translate' fields | |
| 4838 are set in BUFP on entry. | |
| 4839 | |
| 4840 We call regex_compile to do the actual compilation. */ | |
| 4841 | |
| 4842 const char * | |
| 4843 re_compile_pattern (pattern, length, bufp) | |
| 4844 const char *pattern; | |
| 4845 int length; | |
| 4846 struct re_pattern_buffer *bufp; | |
| 4847 { | |
| 4848 reg_errcode_t ret; | |
| 4849 | |
| 4850 /* GNU code is written to assume at least RE_NREGS registers will be set | |
| 4851 (and at least one extra will be -1). */ | |
| 4852 bufp->regs_allocated = REGS_UNALLOCATED; | |
| 4853 | |
| 4854 /* And GNU code determines whether or not to get register information | |
| 4855 by passing null for the REGS argument to re_match, etc., not by | |
| 4856 setting no_sub. */ | |
| 4857 bufp->no_sub = 0; | |
| 4858 | |
| 4859 /* Match anchors at newline. */ | |
| 4860 bufp->newline_anchor = 1; | |
| 4861 | |
| 4862 ret = regex_compile (pattern, length, re_syntax_options, bufp); | |
| 4863 | |
| 4864 return re_error_msg[(int) ret]; | |
| 4865 } | |
| 4866 | |
| 4867 /* Entry points compatible with 4.2 BSD regex library. We don't define | |
| 4868 them if this is an Emacs or POSIX compilation. */ | |
| 4869 | |
| 4870 #if !defined (emacs) && !defined (_POSIX_SOURCE) | |
| 4871 | |
| 4872 /* BSD has one and only one pattern buffer. */ | |
| 4873 static struct re_pattern_buffer re_comp_buf; | |
| 4874 | |
| 4875 char * | |
| 4876 re_comp (s) | |
| 4877 const char *s; | |
| 4878 { | |
| 4879 reg_errcode_t ret; | |
| 4880 | |
| 4881 if (!s) | |
| 4882 { | |
| 4883 if (!re_comp_buf.buffer) | |
| 4884 return "No previous regular expression"; | |
| 4885 return 0; | |
| 4886 } | |
| 4887 | |
| 4888 if (!re_comp_buf.buffer) | |
| 4889 { | |
| 4890 re_comp_buf.buffer = (unsigned char *) malloc (200); | |
| 4891 if (re_comp_buf.buffer == NULL) | |
| 4892 return "Memory exhausted"; | |
| 4893 re_comp_buf.allocated = 200; | |
| 4894 | |
| 4895 re_comp_buf.fastmap = (char *) malloc (1 << BYTEWIDTH); | |
| 4896 if (re_comp_buf.fastmap == NULL) | |
| 4897 return "Memory exhausted"; | |
| 4898 } | |
| 4899 | |
| 4900 /* Since `re_exec' always passes NULL for the `regs' argument, we | |
| 4901 don't need to initialize the pattern buffer fields which affect it. */ | |
| 4902 | |
| 4903 /* Match anchors at newlines. */ | |
| 4904 re_comp_buf.newline_anchor = 1; | |
| 4905 | |
| 4906 ret = regex_compile (s, strlen (s), re_syntax_options, &re_comp_buf); | |
| 4907 | |
| 4908 /* Yes, we're discarding `const' here. */ | |
| 4909 return (char *) re_error_msg[(int) ret]; | |
| 4910 } | |
| 4911 | |
| 4912 | |
| 4913 int | |
| 4914 re_exec (s) | |
| 4915 const char *s; | |
| 4916 { | |
| 4917 const int len = strlen (s); | |
| 4918 return | |
| 4919 0 <= re_search (&re_comp_buf, s, len, 0, len, (struct re_registers *) 0); | |
| 4920 } | |
| 4921 #endif /* not emacs and not _POSIX_SOURCE */ | |
| 4922 | |
| 4923 /* POSIX.2 functions. Don't define these for Emacs. */ | |
| 4924 | |
| 4925 #ifndef emacs | |
| 4926 | |
| 4927 /* regcomp takes a regular expression as a string and compiles it. | |
| 4928 | |
| 4929 PREG is a regex_t *. We do not expect any fields to be initialized, | |
| 4930 since POSIX says we shouldn't. Thus, we set | |
| 4931 | |
| 4932 `buffer' to the compiled pattern; | |
| 4933 `used' to the length of the compiled pattern; | |
| 4934 `syntax' to RE_SYNTAX_POSIX_EXTENDED if the | |
| 4935 REG_EXTENDED bit in CFLAGS is set; otherwise, to | |
| 4936 RE_SYNTAX_POSIX_BASIC; | |
| 4937 `newline_anchor' to REG_NEWLINE being set in CFLAGS; | |
| 4938 `fastmap' and `fastmap_accurate' to zero; | |
| 4939 `re_nsub' to the number of subexpressions in PATTERN. | |
| 4940 | |
| 4941 PATTERN is the address of the pattern string. | |
| 4942 | |
| 4943 CFLAGS is a series of bits which affect compilation. | |
| 4944 | |
| 4945 If REG_EXTENDED is set, we use POSIX extended syntax; otherwise, we | |
| 4946 use POSIX basic syntax. | |
| 4947 | |
| 4948 If REG_NEWLINE is set, then . and [^...] don't match newline. | |
| 4949 Also, regexec will try a match beginning after every newline. | |
| 4950 | |
| 4951 If REG_ICASE is set, then we considers upper- and lowercase | |
| 4952 versions of letters to be equivalent when matching. | |
| 4953 | |
| 4954 If REG_NOSUB is set, then when PREG is passed to regexec, that | |
| 4955 routine will report only success or failure, and nothing about the | |
| 4956 registers. | |
| 4957 | |
| 4958 It returns 0 if it succeeds, nonzero if it doesn't. (See regex.h for | |
| 4959 the return codes and their meanings.) */ | |
| 4960 | |
| 4961 int | |
| 4962 regcomp (preg, pattern, cflags) | |
| 4963 regex_t *preg; | |
| 4964 const char *pattern; | |
| 4965 int cflags; | |
| 4966 { | |
| 4967 reg_errcode_t ret; | |
| 4968 unsigned syntax | |
|
1642
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David J. MacKenzie <djm@gnu.org>
parents:
1641
diff
changeset
|
4969 = (cflags & REG_EXTENDED) ? |
|
340feb030df1
*** empty log message ***
David J. MacKenzie <djm@gnu.org>
parents:
1641
diff
changeset
|
4970 RE_SYNTAX_POSIX_EXTENDED : RE_SYNTAX_POSIX_BASIC; |
| 1155 | 4971 |
| 4972 /* regex_compile will allocate the space for the compiled pattern. */ | |
| 4973 preg->buffer = 0; | |
|
1642
340feb030df1
*** empty log message ***
David J. MacKenzie <djm@gnu.org>
parents:
1641
diff
changeset
|
4974 preg->allocated = 0; |
| 2758 | 4975 preg->used = 0; |
| 1155 | 4976 |
| 4977 /* Don't bother to use a fastmap when searching. This simplifies the | |
| 4978 REG_NEWLINE case: if we used a fastmap, we'd have to put all the | |
| 4979 characters after newlines into the fastmap. This way, we just try | |
| 4980 every character. */ | |
| 4981 preg->fastmap = 0; | |
| 4982 | |
| 4983 if (cflags & REG_ICASE) | |
| 4984 { | |
| 4985 unsigned i; | |
| 4986 | |
| 4987 preg->translate = (char *) malloc (CHAR_SET_SIZE); | |
| 4988 if (preg->translate == NULL) | |
| 4989 return (int) REG_ESPACE; | |
| 4990 | |
| 4991 /* Map uppercase characters to corresponding lowercase ones. */ | |
| 4992 for (i = 0; i < CHAR_SET_SIZE; i++) | |
| 1668 | 4993 preg->translate[i] = ISUPPER (i) ? tolower (i) : i; |
| 1155 | 4994 } |
| 4995 else | |
| 4996 preg->translate = NULL; | |
| 4997 | |
| 4998 /* If REG_NEWLINE is set, newlines are treated differently. */ | |
| 4999 if (cflags & REG_NEWLINE) | |
| 5000 { /* REG_NEWLINE implies neither . nor [^...] match newline. */ | |
| 5001 syntax &= ~RE_DOT_NEWLINE; | |
| 5002 syntax |= RE_HAT_LISTS_NOT_NEWLINE; | |
| 5003 /* It also changes the matching behavior. */ | |
| 5004 preg->newline_anchor = 1; | |
| 5005 } | |
| 5006 else | |
| 5007 preg->newline_anchor = 0; | |
| 5008 | |
| 5009 preg->no_sub = !!(cflags & REG_NOSUB); | |
| 5010 | |
| 5011 /* POSIX says a null character in the pattern terminates it, so we | |
| 5012 can use strlen here in compiling the pattern. */ | |
| 5013 ret = regex_compile (pattern, strlen (pattern), syntax, preg); | |
| 5014 | |
| 5015 /* POSIX doesn't distinguish between an unmatched open-group and an | |
| 5016 unmatched close-group: both are REG_EPAREN. */ | |
| 5017 if (ret == REG_ERPAREN) ret = REG_EPAREN; | |
| 5018 | |
| 5019 return (int) ret; | |
| 5020 } | |
| 5021 | |
| 5022 | |
| 5023 /* regexec searches for a given pattern, specified by PREG, in the | |
| 5024 string STRING. | |
| 5025 | |
| 5026 If NMATCH is zero or REG_NOSUB was set in the cflags argument to | |
| 5027 `regcomp', we ignore PMATCH. Otherwise, we assume PMATCH has at | |
| 5028 least NMATCH elements, and we set them to the offsets of the | |
| 5029 corresponding matched substrings. | |
| 5030 | |
| 5031 EFLAGS specifies `execution flags' which affect matching: if | |
| 5032 REG_NOTBOL is set, then ^ does not match at the beginning of the | |
| 5033 string; if REG_NOTEOL is set, then $ does not match at the end. | |
| 5034 | |
| 5035 We return 0 if we find a match and REG_NOMATCH if not. */ | |
| 5036 | |
| 5037 int | |
| 5038 regexec (preg, string, nmatch, pmatch, eflags) | |
| 5039 const regex_t *preg; | |
| 5040 const char *string; | |
| 5041 size_t nmatch; | |
| 5042 regmatch_t pmatch[]; | |
| 5043 int eflags; | |
| 5044 { | |
| 5045 int ret; | |
| 5046 struct re_registers regs; | |
| 5047 regex_t private_preg; | |
| 5048 int len = strlen (string); | |
| 5049 boolean want_reg_info = !preg->no_sub && nmatch > 0; | |
| 5050 | |
| 5051 private_preg = *preg; | |
| 5052 | |
| 5053 private_preg.not_bol = !!(eflags & REG_NOTBOL); | |
| 5054 private_preg.not_eol = !!(eflags & REG_NOTEOL); | |
| 5055 | |
| 5056 /* The user has told us exactly how many registers to return | |
| 5057 information about, via `nmatch'. We have to pass that on to the | |
| 5058 matching routines. */ | |
| 5059 private_preg.regs_allocated = REGS_FIXED; | |
| 5060 | |
| 5061 if (want_reg_info) | |
| 5062 { | |
| 5063 regs.num_regs = nmatch; | |
| 5064 regs.start = TALLOC (nmatch, regoff_t); | |
| 5065 regs.end = TALLOC (nmatch, regoff_t); | |
| 5066 if (regs.start == NULL || regs.end == NULL) | |
| 5067 return (int) REG_NOMATCH; | |
| 5068 } | |
| 5069 | |
| 5070 /* Perform the searching operation. */ | |
| 5071 ret = re_search (&private_preg, string, len, | |
| 5072 /* start: */ 0, /* range: */ len, | |
| 5073 want_reg_info ? ®s : (struct re_registers *) 0); | |
| 5074 | |
| 5075 /* Copy the register information to the POSIX structure. */ | |
| 5076 if (want_reg_info) | |
| 5077 { | |
| 5078 if (ret >= 0) | |
| 5079 { | |
| 5080 unsigned r; | |
| 5081 | |
| 5082 for (r = 0; r < nmatch; r++) | |
| 5083 { | |
| 5084 pmatch[r].rm_so = regs.start[r]; | |
| 5085 pmatch[r].rm_eo = regs.end[r]; | |
| 5086 } | |
| 5087 } | |
| 5088 | |
| 5089 /* If we needed the temporary register info, free the space now. */ | |
| 5090 free (regs.start); | |
| 5091 free (regs.end); | |
| 5092 } | |
| 5093 | |
| 5094 /* We want zero return to mean success, unlike `re_search'. */ | |
| 5095 return ret >= 0 ? (int) REG_NOERROR : (int) REG_NOMATCH; | |
| 5096 } | |
| 5097 | |
| 5098 | |
| 5099 /* Returns a message corresponding to an error code, ERRCODE, returned | |
| 1637 | 5100 from either regcomp or regexec. We don't use PREG here. */ |
| 1155 | 5101 |
| 5102 size_t | |
| 5103 regerror (errcode, preg, errbuf, errbuf_size) | |
| 5104 int errcode; | |
| 5105 const regex_t *preg; | |
| 5106 char *errbuf; | |
| 5107 size_t errbuf_size; | |
| 5108 { | |
| 1738 | 5109 const char *msg; |
| 5110 size_t msg_size; | |
| 5111 | |
| 5112 if (errcode < 0 | |
| 5113 || errcode >= (sizeof (re_error_msg) / sizeof (re_error_msg[0]))) | |
| 5114 /* Only error codes returned by the rest of the code should be passed | |
| 5115 to this routine. If we are given anything else, or if other regex | |
| 5116 code generates an invalid error code, then the program has a bug. | |
| 5117 Dump core so we can fix it. */ | |
| 5118 abort (); | |
| 5119 | |
| 2453 | 5120 msg = re_error_msg[errcode]; |
| 5121 | |
| 5122 /* POSIX doesn't require that we do anything in this case, but why | |
| 5123 not be nice. */ | |
| 5124 if (! msg) | |
| 5125 msg = "Success"; | |
| 5126 | |
| 1738 | 5127 msg_size = strlen (msg) + 1; /* Includes the null. */ |
| 1155 | 5128 |
| 5129 if (errbuf_size != 0) | |
| 5130 { | |
| 5131 if (msg_size > errbuf_size) | |
| 5132 { | |
| 5133 strncpy (errbuf, msg, errbuf_size - 1); | |
| 5134 errbuf[errbuf_size - 1] = 0; | |
| 5135 } | |
| 5136 else | |
| 5137 strcpy (errbuf, msg); | |
| 5138 } | |
| 5139 | |
| 5140 return msg_size; | |
| 5141 } | |
| 5142 | |
| 5143 | |
| 5144 /* Free dynamically allocated space used by PREG. */ | |
| 5145 | |
| 5146 void | |
| 5147 regfree (preg) | |
| 5148 regex_t *preg; | |
| 5149 { | |
| 5150 if (preg->buffer != NULL) | |
| 5151 free (preg->buffer); | |
| 5152 preg->buffer = NULL; | |
| 5153 | |
| 5154 preg->allocated = 0; | |
| 5155 preg->used = 0; | |
| 5156 | |
| 5157 if (preg->fastmap != NULL) | |
| 5158 free (preg->fastmap); | |
| 5159 preg->fastmap = NULL; | |
| 5160 preg->fastmap_accurate = 0; | |
| 5161 | |
| 5162 if (preg->translate != NULL) | |
| 5163 free (preg->translate); | |
| 5164 preg->translate = NULL; | |
| 5165 } | |
| 5166 | |
| 5167 #endif /* not emacs */ | |
| 5168 | |
| 5169 /* | |
| 5170 Local variables: | |
| 5171 make-backup-files: t | |
| 5172 version-control: t | |
| 5173 trim-versions-without-asking: nil | |
| 5174 End: | |
| 5175 */ |
