1 |
<html>
|
2 |
<head>
|
3 |
<title>pcretest specification</title>
|
4 |
</head>
|
5 |
<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
|
6 |
<h1>pcretest man page</h1>
|
7 |
<p>
|
8 |
Return to the <a href="index.html">PCRE index page</a>.
|
9 |
</p>
|
10 |
<p>
|
11 |
This page is part of the PCRE HTML documentation. It was generated automatically
|
12 |
from the original man page. If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the
|
13 |
man page, in case the conversion went wrong.
|
14 |
<br>
|
15 |
<ul>
|
16 |
<li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">SYNOPSIS</a>
|
17 |
<li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">OPTIONS</a>
|
18 |
<li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">DESCRIPTION</a>
|
19 |
<li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">PATTERN MODIFIERS</a>
|
20 |
<li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">DATA LINES</a>
|
21 |
<li><a name="TOC6" href="#SEC6">THE ALTERNATIVE MATCHING FUNCTION</a>
|
22 |
<li><a name="TOC7" href="#SEC7">DEFAULT OUTPUT FROM PCRETEST</a>
|
23 |
<li><a name="TOC8" href="#SEC8">OUTPUT FROM THE ALTERNATIVE MATCHING FUNCTION</a>
|
24 |
<li><a name="TOC9" href="#SEC9">RESTARTING AFTER A PARTIAL MATCH</a>
|
25 |
<li><a name="TOC10" href="#SEC10">CALLOUTS</a>
|
26 |
<li><a name="TOC11" href="#SEC11">NON-PRINTING CHARACTERS</a>
|
27 |
<li><a name="TOC12" href="#SEC12">SAVING AND RELOADING COMPILED PATTERNS</a>
|
28 |
<li><a name="TOC13" href="#SEC13">SEE ALSO</a>
|
29 |
<li><a name="TOC14" href="#SEC14">AUTHOR</a>
|
30 |
<li><a name="TOC15" href="#SEC15">REVISION</a>
|
31 |
</ul>
|
32 |
<br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">SYNOPSIS</a><br>
|
33 |
<P>
|
34 |
<b>pcretest [options] [source] [destination]</b>
|
35 |
<br>
|
36 |
<br>
|
37 |
<b>pcretest</b> was written as a test program for the PCRE regular expression
|
38 |
library itself, but it can also be used for experimenting with regular
|
39 |
expressions. This document describes the features of the test program; for
|
40 |
details of the regular expressions themselves, see the
|
41 |
<a href="pcrepattern.html"><b>pcrepattern</b></a>
|
42 |
documentation. For details of the PCRE library function calls and their
|
43 |
options, see the
|
44 |
<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
|
45 |
documentation.
|
46 |
</P>
|
47 |
<br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">OPTIONS</a><br>
|
48 |
<P>
|
49 |
<b>-b</b>
|
50 |
Behave as if each regex has the <b>/B</b> (show bytecode) modifier; the internal
|
51 |
form is output after compilation.
|
52 |
</P>
|
53 |
<P>
|
54 |
<b>-C</b>
|
55 |
Output the version number of the PCRE library, and all available information
|
56 |
about the optional features that are included, and then exit.
|
57 |
</P>
|
58 |
<P>
|
59 |
<b>-d</b>
|
60 |
Behave as if each regex has the <b>/D</b> (debug) modifier; the internal
|
61 |
form and information about the compiled pattern is output after compilation;
|
62 |
<b>-d</b> is equivalent to <b>-b -i</b>.
|
63 |
</P>
|
64 |
<P>
|
65 |
<b>-dfa</b>
|
66 |
Behave as if each data line contains the \D escape sequence; this causes the
|
67 |
alternative matching function, <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>, to be used instead of the
|
68 |
standard <b>pcre_exec()</b> function (more detail is given below).
|
69 |
</P>
|
70 |
<P>
|
71 |
<b>-help</b>
|
72 |
Output a brief summary these options and then exit.
|
73 |
</P>
|
74 |
<P>
|
75 |
<b>-i</b>
|
76 |
Behave as if each regex has the <b>/I</b> modifier; information about the
|
77 |
compiled pattern is given after compilation.
|
78 |
</P>
|
79 |
<P>
|
80 |
<b>-M</b>
|
81 |
Behave as if each data line contains the \M escape sequence; this causes
|
82 |
PCRE to discover the minimum MATCH_LIMIT and MATCH_LIMIT_RECURSION settings by
|
83 |
calling <b>pcre_exec()</b> repeatedly with different limits.
|
84 |
</P>
|
85 |
<P>
|
86 |
<b>-m</b>
|
87 |
Output the size of each compiled pattern after it has been compiled. This is
|
88 |
equivalent to adding <b>/M</b> to each regular expression. For compatibility
|
89 |
with earlier versions of pcretest, <b>-s</b> is a synonym for <b>-m</b>.
|
90 |
</P>
|
91 |
<P>
|
92 |
<b>-o</b> <i>osize</i>
|
93 |
Set the number of elements in the output vector that is used when calling
|
94 |
<b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b> to be <i>osize</i>. The default value
|
95 |
is 45, which is enough for 14 capturing subexpressions for <b>pcre_exec()</b> or
|
96 |
22 different matches for <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>. The vector size can be
|
97 |
changed for individual matching calls by including \O in the data line (see
|
98 |
below).
|
99 |
</P>
|
100 |
<P>
|
101 |
<b>-p</b>
|
102 |
Behave as if each regex has the <b>/P</b> modifier; the POSIX wrapper API is
|
103 |
used to call PCRE. None of the other options has any effect when <b>-p</b> is
|
104 |
set.
|
105 |
</P>
|
106 |
<P>
|
107 |
<b>-q</b>
|
108 |
Do not output the version number of <b>pcretest</b> at the start of execution.
|
109 |
</P>
|
110 |
<P>
|
111 |
<b>-S</b> <i>size</i>
|
112 |
On Unix-like systems, set the size of the runtime stack to <i>size</i>
|
113 |
megabytes.
|
114 |
</P>
|
115 |
<P>
|
116 |
<b>-t</b>
|
117 |
Run each compile, study, and match many times with a timer, and output
|
118 |
resulting time per compile or match (in milliseconds). Do not set <b>-m</b> with
|
119 |
<b>-t</b>, because you will then get the size output a zillion times, and the
|
120 |
timing will be distorted. You can control the number of iterations that are
|
121 |
used for timing by following <b>-t</b> with a number (as a separate item on the
|
122 |
command line). For example, "-t 1000" would iterate 1000 times. The default is
|
123 |
to iterate 500000 times.
|
124 |
</P>
|
125 |
<P>
|
126 |
<b>-tm</b>
|
127 |
This is like <b>-t</b> except that it times only the matching phase, not the
|
128 |
compile or study phases.
|
129 |
</P>
|
130 |
<br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">DESCRIPTION</a><br>
|
131 |
<P>
|
132 |
If <b>pcretest</b> is given two filename arguments, it reads from the first and
|
133 |
writes to the second. If it is given only one filename argument, it reads from
|
134 |
that file and writes to stdout. Otherwise, it reads from stdin and writes to
|
135 |
stdout, and prompts for each line of input, using "re>" to prompt for regular
|
136 |
expressions, and "data>" to prompt for data lines.
|
137 |
</P>
|
138 |
<P>
|
139 |
When <b>pcretest</b> is built, a configuration option can specify that it should
|
140 |
be linked with the <b>libreadline</b> library. When this is done, if the input
|
141 |
is from a terminal, it is read using the <b>readline()</b> function. This
|
142 |
provides line-editing and history facilities. The output from the <b>-help</b>
|
143 |
option states whether or not <b>readline()</b> will be used.
|
144 |
</P>
|
145 |
<P>
|
146 |
The program handles any number of sets of input on a single input file. Each
|
147 |
set starts with a regular expression, and continues with any number of data
|
148 |
lines to be matched against the pattern.
|
149 |
</P>
|
150 |
<P>
|
151 |
Each data line is matched separately and independently. If you want to do
|
152 |
multi-line matches, you have to use the \n escape sequence (or \r or \r\n,
|
153 |
etc., depending on the newline setting) in a single line of input to encode the
|
154 |
newline sequences. There is no limit on the length of data lines; the input
|
155 |
buffer is automatically extended if it is too small.
|
156 |
</P>
|
157 |
<P>
|
158 |
An empty line signals the end of the data lines, at which point a new regular
|
159 |
expression is read. The regular expressions are given enclosed in any
|
160 |
non-alphanumeric delimiters other than backslash, for example:
|
161 |
<pre>
|
162 |
/(a|bc)x+yz/
|
163 |
</pre>
|
164 |
White space before the initial delimiter is ignored. A regular expression may
|
165 |
be continued over several input lines, in which case the newline characters are
|
166 |
included within it. It is possible to include the delimiter within the pattern
|
167 |
by escaping it, for example
|
168 |
<pre>
|
169 |
/abc\/def/
|
170 |
</pre>
|
171 |
If you do so, the escape and the delimiter form part of the pattern, but since
|
172 |
delimiters are always non-alphanumeric, this does not affect its interpretation.
|
173 |
If the terminating delimiter is immediately followed by a backslash, for
|
174 |
example,
|
175 |
<pre>
|
176 |
/abc/\
|
177 |
</pre>
|
178 |
then a backslash is added to the end of the pattern. This is done to provide a
|
179 |
way of testing the error condition that arises if a pattern finishes with a
|
180 |
backslash, because
|
181 |
<pre>
|
182 |
/abc\/
|
183 |
</pre>
|
184 |
is interpreted as the first line of a pattern that starts with "abc/", causing
|
185 |
pcretest to read the next line as a continuation of the regular expression.
|
186 |
</P>
|
187 |
<br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">PATTERN MODIFIERS</a><br>
|
188 |
<P>
|
189 |
A pattern may be followed by any number of modifiers, which are mostly single
|
190 |
characters. Following Perl usage, these are referred to below as, for example,
|
191 |
"the <b>/i</b> modifier", even though the delimiter of the pattern need not
|
192 |
always be a slash, and no slash is used when writing modifiers. Whitespace may
|
193 |
appear between the final pattern delimiter and the first modifier, and between
|
194 |
the modifiers themselves.
|
195 |
</P>
|
196 |
<P>
|
197 |
The <b>/i</b>, <b>/m</b>, <b>/s</b>, and <b>/x</b> modifiers set the PCRE_CASELESS,
|
198 |
PCRE_MULTILINE, PCRE_DOTALL, or PCRE_EXTENDED options, respectively, when
|
199 |
<b>pcre_compile()</b> is called. These four modifier letters have the same
|
200 |
effect as they do in Perl. For example:
|
201 |
<pre>
|
202 |
/caseless/i
|
203 |
</pre>
|
204 |
The following table shows additional modifiers for setting PCRE options that do
|
205 |
not correspond to anything in Perl:
|
206 |
<pre>
|
207 |
<b>/A</b> PCRE_ANCHORED
|
208 |
<b>/C</b> PCRE_AUTO_CALLOUT
|
209 |
<b>/E</b> PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY
|
210 |
<b>/f</b> PCRE_FIRSTLINE
|
211 |
<b>/J</b> PCRE_DUPNAMES
|
212 |
<b>/N</b> PCRE_NO_AUTO_CAPTURE
|
213 |
<b>/U</b> PCRE_UNGREEDY
|
214 |
<b>/X</b> PCRE_EXTRA
|
215 |
<b>/<JS></b> PCRE_JAVASCRIPT_COMPAT
|
216 |
<b>/<cr></b> PCRE_NEWLINE_CR
|
217 |
<b>/<lf></b> PCRE_NEWLINE_LF
|
218 |
<b>/<crlf></b> PCRE_NEWLINE_CRLF
|
219 |
<b>/<anycrlf></b> PCRE_NEWLINE_ANYCRLF
|
220 |
<b>/<any></b> PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY
|
221 |
<b>/<bsr_anycrlf></b> PCRE_BSR_ANYCRLF
|
222 |
<b>/<bsr_unicode></b> PCRE_BSR_UNICODE
|
223 |
</pre>
|
224 |
Those specifying line ending sequences are literal strings as shown, but the
|
225 |
letters can be in either case. This example sets multiline matching with CRLF
|
226 |
as the line ending sequence:
|
227 |
<pre>
|
228 |
/^abc/m<crlf>
|
229 |
</pre>
|
230 |
Details of the meanings of these PCRE options are given in the
|
231 |
<a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
|
232 |
documentation.
|
233 |
</P>
|
234 |
<br><b>
|
235 |
Finding all matches in a string
|
236 |
</b><br>
|
237 |
<P>
|
238 |
Searching for all possible matches within each subject string can be requested
|
239 |
by the <b>/g</b> or <b>/G</b> modifier. After finding a match, PCRE is called
|
240 |
again to search the remainder of the subject string. The difference between
|
241 |
<b>/g</b> and <b>/G</b> is that the former uses the <i>startoffset</i> argument to
|
242 |
<b>pcre_exec()</b> to start searching at a new point within the entire string
|
243 |
(which is in effect what Perl does), whereas the latter passes over a shortened
|
244 |
substring. This makes a difference to the matching process if the pattern
|
245 |
begins with a lookbehind assertion (including \b or \B).
|
246 |
</P>
|
247 |
<P>
|
248 |
If any call to <b>pcre_exec()</b> in a <b>/g</b> or <b>/G</b> sequence matches an
|
249 |
empty string, the next call is done with the PCRE_NOTEMPTY and PCRE_ANCHORED
|
250 |
flags set in order to search for another, non-empty, match at the same point.
|
251 |
If this second match fails, the start offset is advanced by one, and the normal
|
252 |
match is retried. This imitates the way Perl handles such cases when using the
|
253 |
<b>/g</b> modifier or the <b>split()</b> function.
|
254 |
</P>
|
255 |
<br><b>
|
256 |
Other modifiers
|
257 |
</b><br>
|
258 |
<P>
|
259 |
There are yet more modifiers for controlling the way <b>pcretest</b>
|
260 |
operates.
|
261 |
</P>
|
262 |
<P>
|
263 |
The <b>/+</b> modifier requests that as well as outputting the substring that
|
264 |
matched the entire pattern, pcretest should in addition output the remainder of
|
265 |
the subject string. This is useful for tests where the subject contains
|
266 |
multiple copies of the same substring.
|
267 |
</P>
|
268 |
<P>
|
269 |
The <b>/B</b> modifier is a debugging feature. It requests that <b>pcretest</b>
|
270 |
output a representation of the compiled byte code after compilation. Normally
|
271 |
this information contains length and offset values; however, if <b>/Z</b> is
|
272 |
also present, this data is replaced by spaces. This is a special feature for
|
273 |
use in the automatic test scripts; it ensures that the same output is generated
|
274 |
for different internal link sizes.
|
275 |
</P>
|
276 |
<P>
|
277 |
The <b>/L</b> modifier must be followed directly by the name of a locale, for
|
278 |
example,
|
279 |
<pre>
|
280 |
/pattern/Lfr_FR
|
281 |
</pre>
|
282 |
For this reason, it must be the last modifier. The given locale is set,
|
283 |
<b>pcre_maketables()</b> is called to build a set of character tables for the
|
284 |
locale, and this is then passed to <b>pcre_compile()</b> when compiling the
|
285 |
regular expression. Without an <b>/L</b> modifier, NULL is passed as the tables
|
286 |
pointer; that is, <b>/L</b> applies only to the expression on which it appears.
|
287 |
</P>
|
288 |
<P>
|
289 |
The <b>/I</b> modifier requests that <b>pcretest</b> output information about the
|
290 |
compiled pattern (whether it is anchored, has a fixed first character, and
|
291 |
so on). It does this by calling <b>pcre_fullinfo()</b> after compiling a
|
292 |
pattern. If the pattern is studied, the results of that are also output.
|
293 |
</P>
|
294 |
<P>
|
295 |
The <b>/D</b> modifier is a PCRE debugging feature, and is equivalent to
|
296 |
<b>/BI</b>, that is, both the <b>/B</b> and the <b>/I</b> modifiers.
|
297 |
</P>
|
298 |
<P>
|
299 |
The <b>/F</b> modifier causes <b>pcretest</b> to flip the byte order of the
|
300 |
fields in the compiled pattern that contain 2-byte and 4-byte numbers. This
|
301 |
facility is for testing the feature in PCRE that allows it to execute patterns
|
302 |
that were compiled on a host with a different endianness. This feature is not
|
303 |
available when the POSIX interface to PCRE is being used, that is, when the
|
304 |
<b>/P</b> pattern modifier is specified. See also the section about saving and
|
305 |
reloading compiled patterns below.
|
306 |
</P>
|
307 |
<P>
|
308 |
The <b>/S</b> modifier causes <b>pcre_study()</b> to be called after the
|
309 |
expression has been compiled, and the results used when the expression is
|
310 |
matched.
|
311 |
</P>
|
312 |
<P>
|
313 |
The <b>/M</b> modifier causes the size of memory block used to hold the compiled
|
314 |
pattern to be output.
|
315 |
</P>
|
316 |
<P>
|
317 |
The <b>/P</b> modifier causes <b>pcretest</b> to call PCRE via the POSIX wrapper
|
318 |
API rather than its native API. When this is done, all other modifiers except
|
319 |
<b>/i</b>, <b>/m</b>, and <b>/+</b> are ignored. REG_ICASE is set if <b>/i</b> is
|
320 |
present, and REG_NEWLINE is set if <b>/m</b> is present. The wrapper functions
|
321 |
force PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY always, and PCRE_DOTALL unless REG_NEWLINE is set.
|
322 |
</P>
|
323 |
<P>
|
324 |
The <b>/8</b> modifier causes <b>pcretest</b> to call PCRE with the PCRE_UTF8
|
325 |
option set. This turns on support for UTF-8 character handling in PCRE,
|
326 |
provided that it was compiled with this support enabled. This modifier also
|
327 |
causes any non-printing characters in output strings to be printed using the
|
328 |
\x{hh...} notation if they are valid UTF-8 sequences.
|
329 |
</P>
|
330 |
<P>
|
331 |
If the <b>/?</b> modifier is used with <b>/8</b>, it causes <b>pcretest</b> to
|
332 |
call <b>pcre_compile()</b> with the PCRE_NO_UTF8_CHECK option, to suppress the
|
333 |
checking of the string for UTF-8 validity.
|
334 |
</P>
|
335 |
<br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">DATA LINES</a><br>
|
336 |
<P>
|
337 |
Before each data line is passed to <b>pcre_exec()</b>, leading and trailing
|
338 |
whitespace is removed, and it is then scanned for \ escapes. Some of these are
|
339 |
pretty esoteric features, intended for checking out some of the more
|
340 |
complicated features of PCRE. If you are just testing "ordinary" regular
|
341 |
expressions, you probably don't need any of these. The following escapes are
|
342 |
recognized:
|
343 |
<pre>
|
344 |
\a alarm (BEL, \x07)
|
345 |
\b backspace (\x08)
|
346 |
\e escape (\x27)
|
347 |
\f formfeed (\x0c)
|
348 |
\n newline (\x0a)
|
349 |
\qdd set the PCRE_MATCH_LIMIT limit to dd (any number of digits)
|
350 |
\r carriage return (\x0d)
|
351 |
\t tab (\x09)
|
352 |
\v vertical tab (\x0b)
|
353 |
\nnn octal character (up to 3 octal digits)
|
354 |
\xhh hexadecimal character (up to 2 hex digits)
|
355 |
\x{hh...} hexadecimal character, any number of digits in UTF-8 mode
|
356 |
\A pass the PCRE_ANCHORED option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
357 |
\B pass the PCRE_NOTBOL option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
358 |
\Cdd call pcre_copy_substring() for substring dd after a successful match (number less than 32)
|
359 |
\Cname call pcre_copy_named_substring() for substring "name" after a successful match (name termin-
|
360 |
ated by next non alphanumeric character)
|
361 |
\C+ show the current captured substrings at callout time
|
362 |
\C- do not supply a callout function
|
363 |
\C!n return 1 instead of 0 when callout number n is reached
|
364 |
\C!n!m return 1 instead of 0 when callout number n is reached for the nth time
|
365 |
\C*n pass the number n (may be negative) as callout data; this is used as the callout return value
|
366 |
\D use the <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b> match function
|
367 |
\F only shortest match for <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
368 |
\Gdd call pcre_get_substring() for substring dd after a successful match (number less than 32)
|
369 |
\Gname call pcre_get_named_substring() for substring "name" after a successful match (name termin-
|
370 |
ated by next non-alphanumeric character)
|
371 |
\L call pcre_get_substringlist() after a successful match
|
372 |
\M discover the minimum MATCH_LIMIT and MATCH_LIMIT_RECURSION settings
|
373 |
\N pass the PCRE_NOTEMPTY option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
374 |
\Odd set the size of the output vector passed to <b>pcre_exec()</b> to dd (any number of digits)
|
375 |
\P pass the PCRE_PARTIAL_SOFT option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>; if used twice, pass the
|
376 |
PCRE_PARTIAL_HARD option
|
377 |
\Qdd set the PCRE_MATCH_LIMIT_RECURSION limit to dd (any number of digits)
|
378 |
\R pass the PCRE_DFA_RESTART option to <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
379 |
\S output details of memory get/free calls during matching
|
380 |
\Z pass the PCRE_NOTEOL option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
381 |
\? pass the PCRE_NO_UTF8_CHECK option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
382 |
\>dd start the match at offset dd (any number of digits);
|
383 |
this sets the <i>startoffset</i> argument for <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
384 |
\<cr> pass the PCRE_NEWLINE_CR option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
385 |
\<lf> pass the PCRE_NEWLINE_LF option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
386 |
\<crlf> pass the PCRE_NEWLINE_CRLF option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
387 |
\<anycrlf> pass the PCRE_NEWLINE_ANYCRLF option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
388 |
\<any> pass the PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
|
389 |
</pre>
|
390 |
The escapes that specify line ending sequences are literal strings, exactly as
|
391 |
shown. No more than one newline setting should be present in any data line.
|
392 |
</P>
|
393 |
<P>
|
394 |
A backslash followed by anything else just escapes the anything else. If
|
395 |
the very last character is a backslash, it is ignored. This gives a way of
|
396 |
passing an empty line as data, since a real empty line terminates the data
|
397 |
input.
|
398 |
</P>
|
399 |
<P>
|
400 |
If \M is present, <b>pcretest</b> calls <b>pcre_exec()</b> several times, with
|
401 |
different values in the <i>match_limit</i> and <i>match_limit_recursion</i>
|
402 |
fields of the <b>pcre_extra</b> data structure, until it finds the minimum
|
403 |
numbers for each parameter that allow <b>pcre_exec()</b> to complete. The
|
404 |
<i>match_limit</i> number is a measure of the amount of backtracking that takes
|
405 |
place, and checking it out can be instructive. For most simple matches, the
|
406 |
number is quite small, but for patterns with very large numbers of matching
|
407 |
possibilities, it can become large very quickly with increasing length of
|
408 |
subject string. The <i>match_limit_recursion</i> number is a measure of how much
|
409 |
stack (or, if PCRE is compiled with NO_RECURSE, how much heap) memory is needed
|
410 |
to complete the match attempt.
|
411 |
</P>
|
412 |
<P>
|
413 |
When \O is used, the value specified may be higher or lower than the size set
|
414 |
by the <b>-O</b> command line option (or defaulted to 45); \O applies only to
|
415 |
the call of <b>pcre_exec()</b> for the line in which it appears.
|
416 |
</P>
|
417 |
<P>
|
418 |
If the <b>/P</b> modifier was present on the pattern, causing the POSIX wrapper
|
419 |
API to be used, the only option-setting sequences that have any effect are \B
|
420 |
and \Z, causing REG_NOTBOL and REG_NOTEOL, respectively, to be passed to
|
421 |
<b>regexec()</b>.
|
422 |
</P>
|
423 |
<P>
|
424 |
The use of \x{hh...} to represent UTF-8 characters is not dependent on the use
|
425 |
of the <b>/8</b> modifier on the pattern. It is recognized always. There may be
|
426 |
any number of hexadecimal digits inside the braces. The result is from one to
|
427 |
six bytes, encoded according to the original UTF-8 rules of RFC 2279. This
|
428 |
allows for values in the range 0 to 0x7FFFFFFF. Note that not all of those are
|
429 |
valid Unicode code points, or indeed valid UTF-8 characters according to the
|
430 |
later rules in RFC 3629.
|
431 |
</P>
|
432 |
<br><a name="SEC6" href="#TOC1">THE ALTERNATIVE MATCHING FUNCTION</a><br>
|
433 |
<P>
|
434 |
By default, <b>pcretest</b> uses the standard PCRE matching function,
|
435 |
<b>pcre_exec()</b> to match each data line. From release 6.0, PCRE supports an
|
436 |
alternative matching function, <b>pcre_dfa_test()</b>, which operates in a
|
437 |
different way, and has some restrictions. The differences between the two
|
438 |
functions are described in the
|
439 |
<a href="pcrematching.html"><b>pcrematching</b></a>
|
440 |
documentation.
|
441 |
</P>
|
442 |
<P>
|
443 |
If a data line contains the \D escape sequence, or if the command line
|
444 |
contains the <b>-dfa</b> option, the alternative matching function is called.
|
445 |
This function finds all possible matches at a given point. If, however, the \F
|
446 |
escape sequence is present in the data line, it stops after the first match is
|
447 |
found. This is always the shortest possible match.
|
448 |
</P>
|
449 |
<br><a name="SEC7" href="#TOC1">DEFAULT OUTPUT FROM PCRETEST</a><br>
|
450 |
<P>
|
451 |
This section describes the output when the normal matching function,
|
452 |
<b>pcre_exec()</b>, is being used.
|
453 |
</P>
|
454 |
<P>
|
455 |
When a match succeeds, pcretest outputs the list of captured substrings that
|
456 |
<b>pcre_exec()</b> returns, starting with number 0 for the string that matched
|
457 |
the whole pattern. Otherwise, it outputs "No match" or "Partial match:"
|
458 |
followed by the partially matching substring when <b>pcre_exec()</b> returns
|
459 |
PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH or PCRE_ERROR_PARTIAL, respectively, and otherwise the PCRE
|
460 |
negative error number. Here is an example of an interactive <b>pcretest</b> run.
|
461 |
<pre>
|
462 |
$ pcretest
|
463 |
PCRE version 7.0 30-Nov-2006
|
464 |
|
465 |
re> /^abc(\d+)/
|
466 |
data> abc123
|
467 |
0: abc123
|
468 |
1: 123
|
469 |
data> xyz
|
470 |
No match
|
471 |
</pre>
|
472 |
Note that unset capturing substrings that are not followed by one that is set
|
473 |
are not returned by <b>pcre_exec()</b>, and are not shown by <b>pcretest</b>. In
|
474 |
the following example, there are two capturing substrings, but when the first
|
475 |
data line is matched, the second, unset substring is not shown. An "internal"
|
476 |
unset substring is shown as "<unset>", as for the second data line.
|
477 |
<pre>
|
478 |
re> /(a)|(b)/
|
479 |
data> a
|
480 |
0: a
|
481 |
1: a
|
482 |
data> b
|
483 |
0: b
|
484 |
1: <unset>
|
485 |
2: b
|
486 |
</pre>
|
487 |
If the strings contain any non-printing characters, they are output as \0x
|
488 |
escapes, or as \x{...} escapes if the <b>/8</b> modifier was present on the
|
489 |
pattern. See below for the definition of non-printing characters. If the
|
490 |
pattern has the <b>/+</b> modifier, the output for substring 0 is followed by
|
491 |
the the rest of the subject string, identified by "0+" like this:
|
492 |
<pre>
|
493 |
re> /cat/+
|
494 |
data> cataract
|
495 |
0: cat
|
496 |
0+ aract
|
497 |
</pre>
|
498 |
If the pattern has the <b>/g</b> or <b>/G</b> modifier, the results of successive
|
499 |
matching attempts are output in sequence, like this:
|
500 |
<pre>
|
501 |
re> /\Bi(\w\w)/g
|
502 |
data> Mississippi
|
503 |
0: iss
|
504 |
1: ss
|
505 |
0: iss
|
506 |
1: ss
|
507 |
0: ipp
|
508 |
1: pp
|
509 |
</pre>
|
510 |
"No match" is output only if the first match attempt fails.
|
511 |
</P>
|
512 |
<P>
|
513 |
If any of the sequences <b>\C</b>, <b>\G</b>, or <b>\L</b> are present in a
|
514 |
data line that is successfully matched, the substrings extracted by the
|
515 |
convenience functions are output with C, G, or L after the string number
|
516 |
instead of a colon. This is in addition to the normal full list. The string
|
517 |
length (that is, the return from the extraction function) is given in
|
518 |
parentheses after each string for <b>\C</b> and <b>\G</b>.
|
519 |
</P>
|
520 |
<P>
|
521 |
Note that whereas patterns can be continued over several lines (a plain ">"
|
522 |
prompt is used for continuations), data lines may not. However newlines can be
|
523 |
included in data by means of the \n escape (or \r, \r\n, etc., depending on
|
524 |
the newline sequence setting).
|
525 |
</P>
|
526 |
<br><a name="SEC8" href="#TOC1">OUTPUT FROM THE ALTERNATIVE MATCHING FUNCTION</a><br>
|
527 |
<P>
|
528 |
When the alternative matching function, <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>, is used (by
|
529 |
means of the \D escape sequence or the <b>-dfa</b> command line option), the
|
530 |
output consists of a list of all the matches that start at the first point in
|
531 |
the subject where there is at least one match. For example:
|
532 |
<pre>
|
533 |
re> /(tang|tangerine|tan)/
|
534 |
data> yellow tangerine\D
|
535 |
0: tangerine
|
536 |
1: tang
|
537 |
2: tan
|
538 |
</pre>
|
539 |
(Using the normal matching function on this data finds only "tang".) The
|
540 |
longest matching string is always given first (and numbered zero). After a
|
541 |
PCRE_ERROR_PARTIAL return, the output is "Partial match:", followed by the
|
542 |
partially matching substring.
|
543 |
</P>
|
544 |
<P>
|
545 |
If <b>/g</b> is present on the pattern, the search for further matches resumes
|
546 |
at the end of the longest match. For example:
|
547 |
<pre>
|
548 |
re> /(tang|tangerine|tan)/g
|
549 |
data> yellow tangerine and tangy sultana\D
|
550 |
0: tangerine
|
551 |
1: tang
|
552 |
2: tan
|
553 |
0: tang
|
554 |
1: tan
|
555 |
0: tan
|
556 |
</pre>
|
557 |
Since the matching function does not support substring capture, the escape
|
558 |
sequences that are concerned with captured substrings are not relevant.
|
559 |
</P>
|
560 |
<br><a name="SEC9" href="#TOC1">RESTARTING AFTER A PARTIAL MATCH</a><br>
|
561 |
<P>
|
562 |
When the alternative matching function has given the PCRE_ERROR_PARTIAL return,
|
563 |
indicating that the subject partially matched the pattern, you can restart the
|
564 |
match with additional subject data by means of the \R escape sequence. For
|
565 |
example:
|
566 |
<pre>
|
567 |
re> /^\d?\d(jan|feb|mar|apr|may|jun|jul|aug|sep|oct|nov|dec)\d\d$/
|
568 |
data> 23ja\P\D
|
569 |
Partial match: 23ja
|
570 |
data> n05\R\D
|
571 |
0: n05
|
572 |
</pre>
|
573 |
For further information about partial matching, see the
|
574 |
<a href="pcrepartial.html"><b>pcrepartial</b></a>
|
575 |
documentation.
|
576 |
</P>
|
577 |
<br><a name="SEC10" href="#TOC1">CALLOUTS</a><br>
|
578 |
<P>
|
579 |
If the pattern contains any callout requests, <b>pcretest</b>'s callout function
|
580 |
is called during matching. This works with both matching functions. By default,
|
581 |
the called function displays the callout number, the start and current
|
582 |
positions in the text at the callout time, and the next pattern item to be
|
583 |
tested. For example, the output
|
584 |
<pre>
|
585 |
--->pqrabcdef
|
586 |
0 ^ ^ \d
|
587 |
</pre>
|
588 |
indicates that callout number 0 occurred for a match attempt starting at the
|
589 |
fourth character of the subject string, when the pointer was at the seventh
|
590 |
character of the data, and when the next pattern item was \d. Just one
|
591 |
circumflex is output if the start and current positions are the same.
|
592 |
</P>
|
593 |
<P>
|
594 |
Callouts numbered 255 are assumed to be automatic callouts, inserted as a
|
595 |
result of the <b>/C</b> pattern modifier. In this case, instead of showing the
|
596 |
callout number, the offset in the pattern, preceded by a plus, is output. For
|
597 |
example:
|
598 |
<pre>
|
599 |
re> /\d?[A-E]\*/C
|
600 |
data> E*
|
601 |
--->E*
|
602 |
+0 ^ \d?
|
603 |
+3 ^ [A-E]
|
604 |
+8 ^^ \*
|
605 |
+10 ^ ^
|
606 |
0: E*
|
607 |
</pre>
|
608 |
The callout function in <b>pcretest</b> returns zero (carry on matching) by
|
609 |
default, but you can use a \C item in a data line (as described above) to
|
610 |
change this.
|
611 |
</P>
|
612 |
<P>
|
613 |
Inserting callouts can be helpful when using <b>pcretest</b> to check
|
614 |
complicated regular expressions. For further information about callouts, see
|
615 |
the
|
616 |
<a href="pcrecallout.html"><b>pcrecallout</b></a>
|
617 |
documentation.
|
618 |
</P>
|
619 |
<br><a name="SEC11" href="#TOC1">NON-PRINTING CHARACTERS</a><br>
|
620 |
<P>
|
621 |
When <b>pcretest</b> is outputting text in the compiled version of a pattern,
|
622 |
bytes other than 32-126 are always treated as non-printing characters are are
|
623 |
therefore shown as hex escapes.
|
624 |
</P>
|
625 |
<P>
|
626 |
When <b>pcretest</b> is outputting text that is a matched part of a subject
|
627 |
string, it behaves in the same way, unless a different locale has been set for
|
628 |
the pattern (using the <b>/L</b> modifier). In this case, the <b>isprint()</b>
|
629 |
function to distinguish printing and non-printing characters.
|
630 |
</P>
|
631 |
<br><a name="SEC12" href="#TOC1">SAVING AND RELOADING COMPILED PATTERNS</a><br>
|
632 |
<P>
|
633 |
The facilities described in this section are not available when the POSIX
|
634 |
inteface to PCRE is being used, that is, when the <b>/P</b> pattern modifier is
|
635 |
specified.
|
636 |
</P>
|
637 |
<P>
|
638 |
When the POSIX interface is not in use, you can cause <b>pcretest</b> to write a
|
639 |
compiled pattern to a file, by following the modifiers with > and a file name.
|
640 |
For example:
|
641 |
<pre>
|
642 |
/pattern/im >/some/file
|
643 |
</pre>
|
644 |
See the
|
645 |
<a href="pcreprecompile.html"><b>pcreprecompile</b></a>
|
646 |
documentation for a discussion about saving and re-using compiled patterns.
|
647 |
</P>
|
648 |
<P>
|
649 |
The data that is written is binary. The first eight bytes are the length of the
|
650 |
compiled pattern data followed by the length of the optional study data, each
|
651 |
written as four bytes in big-endian order (most significant byte first). If
|
652 |
there is no study data (either the pattern was not studied, or studying did not
|
653 |
return any data), the second length is zero. The lengths are followed by an
|
654 |
exact copy of the compiled pattern. If there is additional study data, this
|
655 |
follows immediately after the compiled pattern. After writing the file,
|
656 |
<b>pcretest</b> expects to read a new pattern.
|
657 |
</P>
|
658 |
<P>
|
659 |
A saved pattern can be reloaded into <b>pcretest</b> by specifing < and a file
|
660 |
name instead of a pattern. The name of the file must not contain a < character,
|
661 |
as otherwise <b>pcretest</b> will interpret the line as a pattern delimited by <
|
662 |
characters.
|
663 |
For example:
|
664 |
<pre>
|
665 |
re> </some/file
|
666 |
Compiled regex loaded from /some/file
|
667 |
No study data
|
668 |
</pre>
|
669 |
When the pattern has been loaded, <b>pcretest</b> proceeds to read data lines in
|
670 |
the usual way.
|
671 |
</P>
|
672 |
<P>
|
673 |
You can copy a file written by <b>pcretest</b> to a different host and reload it
|
674 |
there, even if the new host has opposite endianness to the one on which the
|
675 |
pattern was compiled. For example, you can compile on an i86 machine and run on
|
676 |
a SPARC machine.
|
677 |
</P>
|
678 |
<P>
|
679 |
File names for saving and reloading can be absolute or relative, but note that
|
680 |
the shell facility of expanding a file name that starts with a tilde (~) is not
|
681 |
available.
|
682 |
</P>
|
683 |
<P>
|
684 |
The ability to save and reload files in <b>pcretest</b> is intended for testing
|
685 |
and experimentation. It is not intended for production use because only a
|
686 |
single pattern can be written to a file. Furthermore, there is no facility for
|
687 |
supplying custom character tables for use with a reloaded pattern. If the
|
688 |
original pattern was compiled with custom tables, an attempt to match a subject
|
689 |
string using a reloaded pattern is likely to cause <b>pcretest</b> to crash.
|
690 |
Finally, if you attempt to load a file that is not in the correct format, the
|
691 |
result is undefined.
|
692 |
</P>
|
693 |
<br><a name="SEC13" href="#TOC1">SEE ALSO</a><br>
|
694 |
<P>
|
695 |
<b>pcre</b>(3), <b>pcreapi</b>(3), <b>pcrecallout</b>(3), <b>pcrematching</b>(3),
|
696 |
<b>pcrepartial</b>(d), <b>pcrepattern</b>(3), <b>pcreprecompile</b>(3).
|
697 |
</P>
|
698 |
<br><a name="SEC14" href="#TOC1">AUTHOR</a><br>
|
699 |
<P>
|
700 |
Philip Hazel
|
701 |
<br>
|
702 |
University Computing Service
|
703 |
<br>
|
704 |
Cambridge CB2 3QH, England.
|
705 |
<br>
|
706 |
</P>
|
707 |
<br><a name="SEC15" href="#TOC1">REVISION</a><br>
|
708 |
<P>
|
709 |
Last updated: 29 August 2009
|
710 |
<br>
|
711 |
Copyright © 1997-2009 University of Cambridge.
|
712 |
<br>
|
713 |
<p>
|
714 |
Return to the <a href="index.html">PCRE index page</a>.
|
715 |
</p>
|