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Revision 514 - (hide annotations) (download)
Mon May 3 12:54:22 2010 UTC (3 years ago) by ph10
File size: 185504 byte(s)
Add support for \N.

1 nigel 3 ChangeLog for PCRE
2     ------------------
3    
4 ph10 513 Version 8.10 03 May-2010
5 ph10 510 ------------------------
6    
7 ph10 512 1. Added support for (*MARK:ARG) and for ARG additions to PRUNE, SKIP, and
8 ph10 510 THEN.
9    
10 ph10 512 2. (*ACCEPT) was not working when inside an atomic group.
11 ph10 510
12 ph10 513 3. Inside a character class, \B is treated as a literal by default, but
13     faulted if PCRE_EXTRA is set. This mimics Perl's behaviour (the -w option
14     causes the error). The code is unchanged, but I tidied the documentation.
15    
16     4. Inside a character class, PCRE always treated \R and \X as literals,
17     whereas Perl faults them if its -w option is set. I have changed PCRE so
18     that it faults them when PCRE_EXTRA is set.
19 ph10 514
20     5. Added support for \N, which always matches any character other than
21     newline. (It is the same as "." when PCRE_DOTALL is not set.)
22 ph10 512
23 ph10 513
24 ph10 508 Version 8.02 19-Mar-2010
25 ph10 491 ------------------------
26    
27     1. The Unicode data tables have been updated to Unicode 5.2.0.
28    
29 ph10 492 2. Added the option --libs-cpp to pcre-config, but only when C++ support is
30     configured.
31 ph10 507
32 ph10 493 3. Updated the licensing terms in the pcregexp.pas file, as agreed with the
33 ph10 507 original author of that file, following a query about its status.
34    
35     4. On systems that do not have stdint.h (e.g. Solaris), check for and include
36 ph10 494 inttypes.h instead. This fixes a bug that was introduced by change 8.01/8.
37 ph10 507
38 ph10 496 5. A pattern such as (?&t)*+(?(DEFINE)(?<t>.)) which has a possessive
39     quantifier applied to a forward-referencing subroutine call, could compile
40     incorrect code or give the error "internal error: previously-checked
41     referenced subpattern not found".
42 ph10 507
43     6. Both MS Visual Studio and Symbian OS have problems with initializing
44 ph10 497 variables to point to external functions. For these systems, therefore,
45     pcre_malloc etc. are now initialized to local functions that call the
46     relevant global functions.
47 ph10 507
48 ph10 498 7. There were two entries missing in the vectors called coptable and poptable
49     in pcre_dfa_exec.c. This could lead to memory accesses outsize the vectors.
50 ph10 507 I've fixed the data, and added a kludgy way of testing at compile time that
51     the lengths are correct (equal to the number of opcodes).
52    
53     8. Following on from 7, I added a similar kludge to check the length of the
54     eint vector in pcreposix.c.
55    
56     9. Error texts for pcre_compile() are held as one long string to avoid too
57     much relocation at load time. To find a text, the string is searched,
58 ph10 499 counting zeros. There was no check for running off the end of the string,
59     which could happen if a new error number was added without updating the
60 ph10 507 string.
61    
62     10. \K gave a compile-time error if it appeared in a lookbehind assersion.
63    
64 ph10 500 11. \K was not working if it appeared in an atomic group or in a group that
65 ph10 507 was called as a "subroutine", or in an assertion. Perl 5.11 documents that
66     \K is "not well defined" if used in an assertion. PCRE now accepts it if
67     the assertion is positive, but not if it is negative.
68    
69 ph10 501 12. Change 11 fortuitously reduced the size of the stack frame used in the
70 ph10 507 "match()" function of pcre_exec.c by one pointer. Forthcoming
71     implementation of support for (*MARK) will need an extra pointer on the
72 ph10 501 stack; I have reserved it now, so that the stack frame size does not
73     decrease.
74 ph10 507
75     13. A pattern such as (?P<L1>(?P<L2>0)|(?P>L2)(?P>L1)) in which the only other
76     item in branch that calls a recursion is a subroutine call - as in the
77 ph10 503 second branch in the above example - was incorrectly given the compile-
78     time error "recursive call could loop indefinitely" because pcre_compile()
79 ph10 507 was not correctly checking the subroutine for matching a non-empty string.
80    
81 ph10 505 14. The checks for overrunning compiling workspace could trigger after an
82 ph10 507 overrun had occurred. This is a "should never occur" error, but it can be
83 ph10 505 triggered by pathological patterns such as hundreds of nested parentheses.
84 ph10 507 The checks now trigger 100 bytes before the end of the workspace.
85 ph10 491
86 ph10 507 15. Fix typo in configure.ac: "srtoq" should be "strtoq".
87 ph10 492
88 ph10 507
89 ph10 489 Version 8.01 19-Jan-2010
90     ------------------------
91 ph10 471
92     1. If a pattern contained a conditional subpattern with only one branch (in
93 ph10 489 particular, this includes all (*DEFINE) patterns), a call to pcre_study()
94 ph10 473 computed the wrong minimum data length (which is of course zero for such
95 ph10 489 subpatterns). This could cause incorrect "no match" results.
96 ph10 473
97     2. For patterns such as (?i)a(?-i)b|c where an option setting at the start of
98 ph10 472 the pattern is reset in the first branch, pcre_compile() failed with
99     "internal error: code overflow at offset...". This happened only when
100 ph10 473 the reset was to the original external option setting. (An optimization
101     abstracts leading options settings into an external setting, which was the
102 ph10 472 cause of this.)
103 ph10 471
104 ph10 473 3. A pattern such as ^(?!a(*SKIP)b) where a negative assertion contained one
105     of the verbs SKIP, PRUNE, or COMMIT, did not work correctly. When the
106     assertion pattern did not match (meaning that the assertion was true), it
107     was incorrectly treated as false if the SKIP had been reached during the
108     matching. This also applied to assertions used as conditions.
109 ph10 471
110 ph10 473 4. If an item that is not supported by pcre_dfa_exec() was encountered in an
111     assertion subpattern, including such a pattern used as a condition,
112     unpredictable results occurred, instead of the error return
113     PCRE_ERROR_DFA_UITEM.
114 ph10 478
115 ph10 474 5. The C++ GlobalReplace function was not working like Perl for the special
116     situation when an empty string is matched. It now does the fancy magic
117 ph10 478 stuff that is necessary.
118    
119     6. In pcre_internal.h, obsolete includes to setjmp.h and stdarg.h have been
120 ph10 475 removed. (These were left over from very, very early versions of PCRE.)
121 ph10 478
122 ph10 475 7. Some cosmetic changes to the code to make life easier when compiling it
123     as part of something else:
124 ph10 478
125     (a) Change DEBUG to PCRE_DEBUG.
126    
127     (b) In pcre_compile(), rename the member of the "branch_chain" structure
128     called "current" as "current_branch", to prevent a collision with the
129 ph10 475 Linux macro when compiled as a kernel module.
130 ph10 478
131     (c) In pcre_study(), rename the function set_bit() as set_table_bit(), to
132     prevent a collision with the Linux macro when compiled as a kernel
133 ph10 475 module.
134 ph10 478
135 ph10 475 8. In pcre_compile() there are some checks for integer overflows that used to
136     cast potentially large values to (double). This has been changed to that
137 ph10 478 when building, a check for int64_t is made, and if it is found, it is used
138     instead, thus avoiding the use of floating point arithmetic. (There is no
139     other use of FP in PCRE.) If int64_t is not found, the fallback is to
140     double.
141    
142     9. Added two casts to avoid signed/unsigned warnings from VS Studio Express
143 ph10 476 2005 (difference between two addresses compared to an unsigned value).
144 ph10 473
145 ph10 478 10. Change the standard AC_CHECK_LIB test for libbz2 in configure.ac to a
146     custom one, because of the following reported problem in Windows:
147 ph10 473
148 ph10 478 - libbz2 uses the Pascal calling convention (WINAPI) for the functions
149 ph10 489 under Win32.
150 ph10 478 - The standard autoconf AC_CHECK_LIB fails to include "bzlib.h",
151 ph10 489 therefore missing the function definition.
152 ph10 478 - The compiler thus generates a "C" signature for the test function.
153     - The linker fails to find the "C" function.
154     - PCRE fails to configure if asked to do so against libbz2.
155 ph10 486
156 ph10 479 11. When running libtoolize from libtool-2.2.6b as part of autogen.sh, these
157     messages were output:
158 ph10 478
159 ph10 479 Consider adding `AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR([m4])' to configure.ac and
160     rerunning libtoolize, to keep the correct libtool macros in-tree.
161     Consider adding `-I m4' to ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS in Makefile.am.
162 ph10 486
163 ph10 479 I have done both of these things.
164 ph10 486
165 ph10 480 12. Although pcre_dfa_exec() does not use nearly as much stack as pcre_exec()
166 ph10 486 most of the time, it *can* run out if it is given a pattern that contains a
167     runaway infinite recursion. I updated the discussion in the pcrestack man
168     page.
169    
170     13. Now that we have gone to the x.xx style of version numbers, the minor
171     version may start with zero. Using 08 or 09 is a bad idea because users
172     might check the value of PCRE_MINOR in their code, and 08 or 09 may be
173     interpreted as invalid octal numbers. I've updated the previous comment in
174     configure.ac, and also added a check that gives an error if 08 or 09 are
175 ph10 481 used.
176 ph10 486
177 ph10 482 14. Change 8.00/11 was not quite complete: code had been accidentally omitted,
178 ph10 483 causing partial matching to fail when the end of the subject matched \W
179     in a UTF-8 pattern where \W was quantified with a minimum of 3.
180 ph10 486
181 ph10 483 15. There were some discrepancies between the declarations in pcre_internal.h
182 ph10 486 of _pcre_is_newline(), _pcre_was_newline(), and _pcre_valid_utf8() and
183 ph10 483 their definitions. The declarations used "const uschar *" and the
184     definitions used USPTR. Even though USPTR is normally defined as "const
185     unsigned char *" (and uschar is typedeffed as "unsigned char"), it was
186     reported that: "This difference in casting confuses some C++ compilers, for
187     example, SunCC recognizes above declarations as different functions and
188 ph10 486 generates broken code for hbpcre." I have changed the declarations to use
189 ph10 483 USPTR.
190 ph10 486
191     16. GNU libtool is named differently on some systems. The autogen.sh script now
192 ph10 484 tries several variants such as glibtoolize (MacOSX) and libtoolize1x
193     (FreeBSD).
194 ph10 478
195 ph10 486 17. Applied Craig's patch that fixes an HP aCC compile error in pcre 8.00
196     (strtoXX undefined when compiling pcrecpp.cc). The patch contains this
197     comment: "Figure out how to create a longlong from a string: strtoll and
198     equivalent. It's not enough to call AC_CHECK_FUNCS: hpux has a strtoll, for
199     instance, but it only takes 2 args instead of 3!"
200 ph10 479
201 ph10 488 18. A subtle bug concerned with back references has been fixed by a change of
202     specification, with a corresponding code fix. A pattern such as
203     ^(xa|=?\1a)+$ which contains a back reference inside the group to which it
204     refers, was giving matches when it shouldn't. For example, xa=xaaa would
205     match that pattern. Interestingly, Perl (at least up to 5.11.3) has the
206     same bug. Such groups have to be quantified to be useful, or contained
207     inside another quantified group. (If there's no repetition, the reference
208     can never match.) The problem arises because, having left the group and
209     moved on to the rest of the pattern, a later failure that backtracks into
210     the group uses the captured value from the final iteration of the group
211     rather than the correct earlier one. I have fixed this in PCRE by forcing
212     any group that contains a reference to itself to be an atomic group; that
213     is, there cannot be any backtracking into it once it has completed. This is
214     similar to recursive and subroutine calls.
215 ph10 486
216 ph10 488
217 ph10 469 Version 8.00 19-Oct-09
218 ph10 418 ----------------------
219    
220     1. The table for translating pcre_compile() error codes into POSIX error codes
221 ph10 461 was out-of-date, and there was no check on the pcre_compile() error code
222     being within the table. This could lead to an OK return being given in
223 ph10 418 error.
224 ph10 461
225     2. Changed the call to open a subject file in pcregrep from fopen(pathname,
226     "r") to fopen(pathname, "rb"), which fixed a problem with some of the tests
227     in a Windows environment.
228    
229 ph10 420 3. The pcregrep --count option prints the count for each file even when it is
230     zero, as does GNU grep. However, pcregrep was also printing all files when
231     --files-with-matches was added. Now, when both options are given, it prints
232     counts only for those files that have at least one match. (GNU grep just
233 ph10 461 prints the file name in this circumstance, but including the count seems
234     more useful - otherwise, why use --count?) Also ensured that the
235 ph10 420 combination -clh just lists non-zero counts, with no names.
236 ph10 461
237     4. The long form of the pcregrep -F option was incorrectly implemented as
238     --fixed_strings instead of --fixed-strings. This is an incompatible change,
239     but it seems right to fix it, and I didn't think it was worth preserving
240     the old behaviour.
241    
242     5. The command line items --regex=pattern and --regexp=pattern were not
243 ph10 422 recognized by pcregrep, which required --regex pattern or --regexp pattern
244 ph10 461 (with a space rather than an '='). The man page documented the '=' forms,
245 ph10 422 which are compatible with GNU grep; these now work.
246 ph10 461
247     6. No libpcreposix.pc file was created for pkg-config; there was just
248 ph10 423 libpcre.pc and libpcrecpp.pc. The omission has been rectified.
249 ph10 461
250 ph10 425 7. Added #ifndef SUPPORT_UCP into the pcre_ucd.c module, to reduce its size
251 ph10 461 when UCP support is not needed, by modifying the Python script that
252 ph10 425 generates it from Unicode data files. This should not matter if the module
253     is correctly used as a library, but I received one complaint about 50K of
254     unwanted data. My guess is that the person linked everything into his
255     program rather than using a library. Anyway, it does no harm.
256 ph10 461
257 ph10 426 8. A pattern such as /\x{123}{2,2}+/8 was incorrectly compiled; the trigger
258 ph10 461 was a minimum greater than 1 for a wide character in a possessive
259 ph10 431 repetition. The same bug could also affect patterns like /(\x{ff}{0,2})*/8
260     which had an unlimited repeat of a nested, fixed maximum repeat of a wide
261     character. Chaos in the form of incorrect output or a compiling loop could
262     result.
263 ph10 461
264 ph10 426 9. The restrictions on what a pattern can contain when partial matching is
265 ph10 461 requested for pcre_exec() have been removed. All patterns can now be
266 ph10 426 partially matched by this function. In addition, if there are at least two
267 ph10 435 slots in the offset vector, the offset of the earliest inspected character
268     for the match and the offset of the end of the subject are set in them when
269 ph10 461 PCRE_ERROR_PARTIAL is returned.
270    
271 ph10 428 10. Partial matching has been split into two forms: PCRE_PARTIAL_SOFT, which is
272     synonymous with PCRE_PARTIAL, for backwards compatibility, and
273     PCRE_PARTIAL_HARD, which causes a partial match to supersede a full match,
274 ph10 462 and may be more useful for multi-segment matching.
275 ph10 461
276     11. Partial matching with pcre_exec() is now more intuitive. A partial match
277     used to be given if ever the end of the subject was reached; now it is
278     given only if matching could not proceed because another character was
279     needed. This makes a difference in some odd cases such as Z(*FAIL) with the
280     string "Z", which now yields "no match" instead of "partial match". In the
281     case of pcre_dfa_exec(), "no match" is given if every matching path for the
282     final character ended with (*FAIL).
283    
284 ph10 428 12. Restarting a match using pcre_dfa_exec() after a partial match did not work
285 ph10 461 if the pattern had a "must contain" character that was already found in the
286 ph10 428 earlier partial match, unless partial matching was again requested. For
287     example, with the pattern /dog.(body)?/, the "must contain" character is
288     "g". If the first part-match was for the string "dog", restarting with
289 ph10 435 "sbody" failed. This bug has been fixed.
290 ph10 461
291     13. The string returned by pcre_dfa_exec() after a partial match has been
292     changed so that it starts at the first inspected character rather than the
293     first character of the match. This makes a difference only if the pattern
294     starts with a lookbehind assertion or \b or \B (\K is not supported by
295     pcre_dfa_exec()). It's an incompatible change, but it makes the two
296 ph10 435 matching functions compatible, and I think it's the right thing to do.
297 ph10 461
298 ph10 435 14. Added a pcredemo man page, created automatically from the pcredemo.c file,
299 ph10 461 so that the demonstration program is easily available in environments where
300     PCRE has not been installed from source.
301    
302 ph10 435 15. Arranged to add -DPCRE_STATIC to cflags in libpcre.pc, libpcreposix.cp,
303 ph10 430 libpcrecpp.pc and pcre-config when PCRE is not compiled as a shared
304     library.
305 ph10 461
306 ph10 435 16. Added REG_UNGREEDY to the pcreposix interface, at the request of a user.
307 ph10 432 It maps to PCRE_UNGREEDY. It is not, of course, POSIX-compatible, but it
308 ph10 461 is not the first non-POSIX option to be added. Clearly some people find
309 ph10 433 these options useful.
310 ph10 461
311     17. If a caller to the POSIX matching function regexec() passes a non-zero
312 ph10 438 value for nmatch with a NULL value for pmatch, the value of
313 ph10 461 nmatch is forced to zero.
314    
315 ph10 437 18. RunGrepTest did not have a test for the availability of the -u option of
316 ph10 461 the diff command, as RunTest does. It now checks in the same way as
317 ph10 437 RunTest, and also checks for the -b option.
318 ph10 461
319 ph10 438 19. If an odd number of negated classes containing just a single character
320     interposed, within parentheses, between a forward reference to a named
321 ph10 461 subpattern and the definition of the subpattern, compilation crashed with
322     an internal error, complaining that it could not find the referenced
323 ph10 438 subpattern. An example of a crashing pattern is /(?&A)(([^m])(?<A>))/.
324 ph10 461 [The bug was that it was starting one character too far in when skipping
325     over the character class, thus treating the ] as data rather than
326     terminating the class. This meant it could skip too much.]
327    
328 ph10 442 20. Added PCRE_NOTEMPTY_ATSTART in order to be able to correctly implement the
329 ph10 461 /g option in pcretest when the pattern contains \K, which makes it possible
330 ph10 442 to have an empty string match not at the start, even when the pattern is
331 ph10 461 anchored. Updated pcretest and pcredemo to use this option.
332    
333 ph10 446 21. If the maximum number of capturing subpatterns in a recursion was greater
334 ph10 461 than the maximum at the outer level, the higher number was returned, but
335     with unset values at the outer level. The correct (outer level) value is
336 ph10 446 now given.
337 ph10 461
338 ph10 447 22. If (*ACCEPT) appeared inside capturing parentheses, previous releases of
339     PCRE did not set those parentheses (unlike Perl). I have now found a way to
340     make it do so. The string so far is captured, making this feature
341     compatible with Perl.
342 ph10 461
343     23. The tests have been re-organized, adding tests 11 and 12, to make it
344 ph10 448 possible to check the Perl 5.10 features against Perl 5.10.
345 ph10 461
346 ph10 454 24. Perl 5.10 allows subroutine calls in lookbehinds, as long as the subroutine
347 ph10 461 pattern matches a fixed length string. PCRE did not allow this; now it
348     does. Neither allows recursion.
349    
350     25. I finally figured out how to implement a request to provide the minimum
351     length of subject string that was needed in order to match a given pattern.
352     (It was back references and recursion that I had previously got hung up
353     on.) This code has now been added to pcre_study(); it finds a lower bound
354 ph10 455 to the length of subject needed. It is not necessarily the greatest lower
355     bound, but using it to avoid searching strings that are too short does give
356     some useful speed-ups. The value is available to calling programs via
357     pcre_fullinfo().
358 ph10 461
359 ph10 455 26. While implementing 25, I discovered to my embarrassment that pcretest had
360     not been passing the result of pcre_study() to pcre_dfa_exec(), so the
361     study optimizations had never been tested with that matching function.
362     Oops. What is worse, even when it was passed study data, there was a bug in
363     pcre_dfa_exec() that meant it never actually used it. Double oops. There
364     were also very few tests of studied patterns with pcre_dfa_exec().
365 ph10 461
366 ph10 457 27. If (?| is used to create subpatterns with duplicate numbers, they are now
367     allowed to have the same name, even if PCRE_DUPNAMES is not set. However,
368     on the other side of the coin, they are no longer allowed to have different
369     names, because these cannot be distinguished in PCRE, and this has caused
370     confusion. (This is a difference from Perl.)
371 ph10 461
372     28. When duplicate subpattern names are present (necessarily with different
373     numbers, as required by 27 above), and a test is made by name in a
374     conditional pattern, either for a subpattern having been matched, or for
375     recursion in such a pattern, all the associated numbered subpatterns are
376 ph10 459 tested, and the overall condition is true if the condition is true for any
377     one of them. This is the way Perl works, and is also more like the way
378     testing by number works.
379 ph10 418
380 ph10 461
381 ph10 412 Version 7.9 11-Apr-09
382 ph10 376 ---------------------
383    
384 ph10 392 1. When building with support for bzlib/zlib (pcregrep) and/or readline
385 ph10 376 (pcretest), all targets were linked against these libraries. This included
386     libpcre, libpcreposix, and libpcrecpp, even though they do not use these
387     libraries. This caused unwanted dependencies to be created. This problem
388 ph10 392 has been fixed, and now only pcregrep is linked with bzlib/zlib and only
389 ph10 376 pcretest is linked with readline.
390 ph10 392
391 ph10 376 2. The "typedef int BOOL" in pcre_internal.h that was included inside the
392     "#ifndef FALSE" condition by an earlier change (probably 7.8/18) has been
393     moved outside it again, because FALSE and TRUE are already defined in AIX,
394     but BOOL is not.
395 ph10 392
396     3. The pcre_config() function was treating the PCRE_MATCH_LIMIT and
397 ph10 409 PCRE_MATCH_LIMIT_RECURSION values as ints, when they should be long ints.
398 ph10 392
399 ph10 376 4. The pcregrep documentation said spaces were inserted as well as colons (or
400     hyphens) following file names and line numbers when outputting matching
401 ph10 392 lines. This is not true; no spaces are inserted. I have also clarified the
402 ph10 376 wording for the --colour (or --color) option.
403 ph10 392
404 ph10 378 5. In pcregrep, when --colour was used with -o, the list of matching strings
405     was not coloured; this is different to GNU grep, so I have changed it to be
406     the same.
407 ph10 392
408 ph10 378 6. When --colo(u)r was used in pcregrep, only the first matching substring in
409 ph10 392 each matching line was coloured. Now it goes on to look for further matches
410     of any of the test patterns, which is the same behaviour as GNU grep.
411    
412     7. A pattern that could match an empty string could cause pcregrep to loop; it
413     doesn't make sense to accept an empty string match in pcregrep, so I have
414 ph10 379 locked it out (using PCRE's PCRE_NOTEMPTY option). By experiment, this
415     seems to be how GNU grep behaves.
416 ph10 392
417 ph10 380 8. The pattern (?(?=.*b)b|^) was incorrectly compiled as "match must be at
418 ph10 392 start or after a newline", because the conditional assertion was not being
419     correctly handled. The rule now is that both the assertion and what follows
420     in the first alternative must satisfy the test.
421    
422 ph10 405 9. If auto-callout was enabled in a pattern with a conditional group whose
423 ph10 399 condition was an assertion, PCRE could crash during matching, both with
424     pcre_exec() and pcre_dfa_exec().
425 ph10 392
426     10. The PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY option was not working when pcre_dfa_exec() was
427     used for matching.
428    
429     11. Unicode property support in character classes was not working for
430 ph10 385 characters (bytes) greater than 127 when not in UTF-8 mode.
431 ph10 388
432 ph10 392 12. Added the -M command line option to pcretest.
433    
434 ph10 388 14. Added the non-standard REG_NOTEMPTY option to the POSIX interface.
435 ph10 389
436     15. Added the PCRE_NO_START_OPTIMIZE match-time option.
437 ph10 390
438 ph10 392 16. Added comments and documentation about mis-use of no_arg in the C++
439 ph10 390 wrapper.
440 ph10 392
441 ph10 391 17. Implemented support for UTF-8 encoding in EBCDIC environments, a patch
442 ph10 392 from Martin Jerabek that uses macro names for all relevant character and
443 ph10 391 string constants.
444 ph10 405
445 ph10 393 18. Added to pcre_internal.h two configuration checks: (a) If both EBCDIC and
446     SUPPORT_UTF8 are set, give an error; (b) If SUPPORT_UCP is set without
447 ph10 405 SUPPORT_UTF8, define SUPPORT_UTF8. The "configure" script handles both of
448     these, but not everybody uses configure.
449    
450     19. A conditional group that had only one branch was not being correctly
451     recognized as an item that could match an empty string. This meant that an
452     enclosing group might also not be so recognized, causing infinite looping
453     (and probably a segfault) for patterns such as ^"((?(?=[a])[^"])|b)*"$
454     with the subject "ab", where knowledge that the repeated group can match
455 ph10 396 nothing is needed in order to break the loop.
456 ph10 405
457 ph10 397 20. If a pattern that was compiled with callouts was matched using pcre_dfa_
458 ph10 405 exec(), but without supplying a callout function, matching went wrong.
459    
460     21. If PCRE_ERROR_MATCHLIMIT occurred during a recursion, there was a memory
461     leak if the size of the offset vector was greater than 30. When the vector
462     is smaller, the saved offsets during recursion go onto a local stack
463     vector, but for larger vectors malloc() is used. It was failing to free
464     when the recursion yielded PCRE_ERROR_MATCH_LIMIT (or any other "abnormal"
465 ph10 400 error, in fact).
466 ph10 405
467 ph10 402 22. There was a missing #ifdef SUPPORT_UTF8 round one of the variables in the
468 ph10 405 heapframe that is used only when UTF-8 support is enabled. This caused no
469     problem, but was untidy.
470 ph10 376
471 ph10 405 23. Steven Van Ingelgem's patch to CMakeLists.txt to change the name
472     CMAKE_BINARY_DIR to PROJECT_BINARY_DIR so that it works when PCRE is
473     included within another project.
474 ph10 411
475 ph10 407 24. Steven Van Ingelgem's patches to add more options to the CMake support,
476     slightly modified by me:
477 ph10 411
478     (a) PCRE_BUILD_TESTS can be set OFF not to build the tests, including
479     not building pcregrep.
480    
481 ph10 407 (b) PCRE_BUILD_PCREGREP can be see OFF not to build pcregrep, but only
482 ph10 411 if PCRE_BUILD_TESTS is also set OFF, because the tests use pcregrep.
483    
484 ph10 408 25. Forward references, both numeric and by name, in patterns that made use of
485     duplicate group numbers, could behave incorrectly or give incorrect errors,
486     because when scanning forward to find the reference group, PCRE was not
487     taking into account the duplicate group numbers. A pattern such as
488     ^X(?3)(a)(?|(b)|(q))(Y) is an example.
489 ph10 411
490     26. Changed a few more instances of "const unsigned char *" to USPTR, making
491     the feature of a custom pointer more persuasive (as requested by a user).
492 ph10 416
493 ph10 411 27. Wrapped the definitions of fileno and isatty for Windows, which appear in
494 ph10 416 pcretest.c, inside #ifndefs, because it seems they are sometimes already
495     pre-defined.
496 ph10 392
497 ph10 416 28. Added support for (*UTF8) at the start of a pattern.
498    
499 ph10 413 29. Arrange for flags added by the "release type" setting in CMake to be shown
500     in the configuration summary.
501 ph10 405
502 ph10 411
503 ph10 374 Version 7.8 05-Sep-08
504 ph10 349 ---------------------
505    
506     1. Replaced UCP searching code with optimized version as implemented for Ad
507     Muncher (http://www.admuncher.com/) by Peter Kankowski. This uses a two-
508 ph10 351 stage table and inline lookup instead of a function, giving speed ups of 2
509     to 5 times on some simple patterns that I tested. Permission was given to
510     distribute the MultiStage2.py script that generates the tables (it's not in
511     the tarball, but is in the Subversion repository).
512 ph10 349
513 ph10 351 2. Updated the Unicode datatables to Unicode 5.1.0. This adds yet more
514     scripts.
515 ph10 358
516 ph10 353 3. Change 12 for 7.7 introduced a bug in pcre_study() when a pattern contained
517     a group with a zero qualifier. The result of the study could be incorrect,
518 ph10 358 or the function might crash, depending on the pattern.
519    
520     4. Caseless matching was not working for non-ASCII characters in back
521 ph10 354 references. For example, /(\x{de})\1/8i was not matching \x{de}\x{fe}.
522 ph10 358 It now works when Unicode Property Support is available.
523    
524 ph10 355 5. In pcretest, an escape such as \x{de} in the data was always generating
525     a UTF-8 string, even in non-UTF-8 mode. Now it generates a single byte in
526     non-UTF-8 mode. If the value is greater than 255, it gives a warning about
527 ph10 358 truncation.
528 ph10 349
529 ph10 358 6. Minor bugfix in pcrecpp.cc (change "" == ... to NULL == ...).
530    
531 ph10 357 7. Added two (int) casts to pcregrep when printing the difference of two
532     pointers, in case they are 64-bit values.
533 ph10 371
534     8. Added comments about Mac OS X stack usage to the pcrestack man page and to
535     test 2 if it fails.
536    
537 ph10 359 9. Added PCRE_CALL_CONVENTION just before the names of all exported functions,
538 ph10 371 and a #define of that name to empty if it is not externally set. This is to
539     allow users of MSVC to set it if necessary.
540    
541     10. The PCRE_EXP_DEFN macro which precedes exported functions was missing from
542 ph10 359 the convenience functions in the pcre_get.c source file.
543 ph10 371
544 ph10 360 11. An option change at the start of a pattern that had top-level alternatives
545     could cause overwriting and/or a crash. This command provoked a crash in
546 ph10 371 some environments:
547    
548     printf "/(?i)[\xc3\xa9\xc3\xbd]|[\xc3\xa9\xc3\xbdA]/8\n" | pcretest
549    
550 ph10 360 This potential security problem was recorded as CVE-2008-2371.
551 ph10 371
552 ph10 361 12. For a pattern where the match had to start at the beginning or immediately
553     after a newline (e.g /.*anything/ without the DOTALL flag), pcre_exec() and
554 ph10 371 pcre_dfa_exec() could read past the end of the passed subject if there was
555 ph10 361 no match. To help with detecting such bugs (e.g. with valgrind), I modified
556     pcretest so that it places the subject at the end of its malloc-ed buffer.
557 ph10 371
558 ph10 364 13. The change to pcretest in 12 above threw up a couple more cases when pcre_
559 ph10 371 exec() might read past the end of the data buffer in UTF-8 mode.
560    
561 ph10 364 14. A similar bug to 7.3/2 existed when the PCRE_FIRSTLINE option was set and
562 ph10 371 the data contained the byte 0x85 as part of a UTF-8 character within its
563     first line. This applied both to normal and DFA matching.
564    
565 ph10 366 15. Lazy qualifiers were not working in some cases in UTF-8 mode. For example,
566 ph10 371 /^[^d]*?$/8 failed to match "abc".
567 ph10 351
568 ph10 371 16. Added a missing copyright notice to pcrecpp_internal.h.
569    
570     17. Make it more clear in the documentation that values returned from
571 ph10 368 pcre_exec() in ovector are byte offsets, not character counts.
572 ph10 357
573 ph10 371 18. Tidied a few places to stop certain compilers from issuing warnings.
574 ph10 368
575 ph10 373 19. Updated the Virtual Pascal + BCC files to compile the latest v7.7, as
576     supplied by Stefan Weber. I made a further small update for 7.8 because
577 ph10 374 there is a change of source arrangements: the pcre_searchfuncs.c module is
578     replaced by pcre_ucd.c.
579 ph10 371
580 ph10 373
581 ph10 347 Version 7.7 07-May-08
582 ph10 321 ---------------------
583    
584     1. Applied Craig's patch to sort out a long long problem: "If we can't convert
585 ph10 345 a string to a long long, pretend we don't even have a long long." This is
586 ph10 321 done by checking for the strtoq, strtoll, and _strtoi64 functions.
587 ph10 345
588 ph10 322 2. Applied Craig's patch to pcrecpp.cc to restore ABI compatibility with
589     pre-7.6 versions, which defined a global no_arg variable instead of putting
590 ph10 332 it in the RE class. (See also #8 below.)
591 ph10 345
592     3. Remove a line of dead code, identified by coverity and reported by Nuno
593     Lopes.
594    
595 ph10 324 4. Fixed two related pcregrep bugs involving -r with --include or --exclude:
596 ph10 321
597 ph10 324 (1) The include/exclude patterns were being applied to the whole pathnames
598 ph10 345 of files, instead of just to the final components.
599    
600 ph10 324 (2) If there was more than one level of directory, the subdirectories were
601     skipped unless they satisfied the include/exclude conditions. This is
602     inconsistent with GNU grep (and could even be seen as contrary to the
603     pcregrep specification - which I improved to make it absolutely clear).
604     The action now is always to scan all levels of directory, and just
605     apply the include/exclude patterns to regular files.
606 ph10 345
607 ph10 325 5. Added the --include_dir and --exclude_dir patterns to pcregrep, and used
608 ph10 345 --exclude_dir in the tests to avoid scanning .svn directories.
609    
610 ph10 326 6. Applied Craig's patch to the QuoteMeta function so that it escapes the
611 ph10 345 NUL character as backslash + 0 rather than backslash + NUL, because PCRE
612 ph10 326 doesn't support NULs in patterns.
613 ph10 345
614     7. Added some missing "const"s to declarations of static tables in
615     pcre_compile.c and pcre_dfa_exec.c.
616    
617 ph10 328 8. Applied Craig's patch to pcrecpp.cc to fix a problem in OS X that was
618 ph10 329 caused by fix #2 above. (Subsequently also a second patch to fix the
619 ph10 345 first patch. And a third patch - this was a messy problem.)
620 ph10 321
621 ph10 345 9. Applied Craig's patch to remove the use of push_back().
622    
623 ph10 332 10. Applied Alan Lehotsky's patch to add REG_STARTEND support to the POSIX
624     matching function regexec().
625 ph10 345
626     11. Added support for the Oniguruma syntax \g<name>, \g<n>, \g'name', \g'n',
627     which, however, unlike Perl's \g{...}, are subroutine calls, not back
628 ph10 333 references. PCRE supports relative numbers with this syntax (I don't think
629     Oniguruma does).
630 ph10 345
631     12. Previously, a group with a zero repeat such as (...){0} was completely
632 ph10 335 omitted from the compiled regex. However, this means that if the group
633     was called as a subroutine from elsewhere in the pattern, things went wrong
634 ph10 345 (an internal error was given). Such groups are now left in the compiled
635     pattern, with a new opcode that causes them to be skipped at execution
636 ph10 335 time.
637 ph10 345
638 ph10 341 13. Added the PCRE_JAVASCRIPT_COMPAT option. This makes the following changes
639     to the way PCRE behaves:
640 ph10 345
641 ph10 336 (a) A lone ] character is dis-allowed (Perl treats it as data).
642 ph10 345
643     (b) A back reference to an unmatched subpattern matches an empty string
644 ph10 336 (Perl fails the current match path).
645 ph10 345
646 ph10 341 (c) A data ] in a character class must be notated as \] because if the
647 ph10 345 first data character in a class is ], it defines an empty class. (In
648 ph10 341 Perl it is not possible to have an empty class.) The empty class []
649     never matches; it forces failure and is equivalent to (*FAIL) or (?!).
650     The negative empty class [^] matches any one character, independently
651     of the DOTALL setting.
652 ph10 345
653     14. A pattern such as /(?2)[]a()b](abc)/ which had a forward reference to a
654 ph10 340 non-existent subpattern following a character class starting with ']' and
655     containing () gave an internal compiling error instead of "reference to
656     non-existent subpattern". Fortunately, when the pattern did exist, the
657 ph10 345 compiled code was correct. (When scanning forwards to check for the
658 ph10 340 existencd of the subpattern, it was treating the data ']' as terminating
659 ph10 345 the class, so got the count wrong. When actually compiling, the reference
660 ph10 340 was subsequently set up correctly.)
661 ph10 345
662 ph10 341 15. The "always fail" assertion (?!) is optimzed to (*FAIL) by pcre_compile;
663 ph10 345 it was being rejected as not supported by pcre_dfa_exec(), even though
664     other assertions are supported. I have made pcre_dfa_exec() support
665     (*FAIL).
666    
667 ph10 342 16. The implementation of 13c above involved the invention of a new opcode,
668 ph10 345 OP_ALLANY, which is like OP_ANY but doesn't check the /s flag. Since /s
669     cannot be changed at match time, I realized I could make a small
670     improvement to matching performance by compiling OP_ALLANY instead of
671     OP_ANY for "." when DOTALL was set, and then removing the runtime tests
672     on the OP_ANY path.
673    
674     17. Compiling pcretest on Windows with readline support failed without the
675 ph10 343 following two fixes: (1) Make the unistd.h include conditional on
676 ph10 345 HAVE_UNISTD_H; (2) #define isatty and fileno as _isatty and _fileno.
677    
678 ph10 344 18. Changed CMakeLists.txt and cmake/FindReadline.cmake to arrange for the
679 ph10 345 ncurses library to be included for pcretest when ReadLine support is
680     requested, but also to allow for it to be overridden. This patch came from
681     Daniel Bergström.
682 ph10 347
683 ph10 346 19. There was a typo in the file ucpinternal.h where f0_rangeflag was defined
684 ph10 347 as 0x00f00000 instead of 0x00800000. Luckily, this would not have caused
685     any errors with the current Unicode tables. Thanks to Peter Kankowski for
686     spotting this.
687 ph10 324
688 ph10 332
689 ph10 319 Version 7.6 28-Jan-08
690 ph10 300 ---------------------
691    
692 ph10 302 1. A character class containing a very large number of characters with
693     codepoints greater than 255 (in UTF-8 mode, of course) caused a buffer
694     overflow.
695 ph10 309
696     2. Patch to cut out the "long long" test in pcrecpp_unittest when
697     HAVE_LONG_LONG is not defined.
698    
699 ph10 303 3. Applied Christian Ehrlicher's patch to update the CMake build files to
700 ph10 304 bring them up to date and include new features. This patch includes:
701 ph10 309
702 ph10 304 - Fixed PH's badly added libz and libbz2 support.
703     - Fixed a problem with static linking.
704 ph10 312 - Added pcredemo. [But later removed - see 7 below.]
705 ph10 304 - Fixed dftables problem and added an option.
706     - Added a number of HAVE_XXX tests, including HAVE_WINDOWS_H and
707     HAVE_LONG_LONG.
708     - Added readline support for pcretest.
709 ph10 309 - Added an listing of the option settings after cmake has run.
710    
711 ph10 314 4. A user submitted a patch to Makefile that makes it easy to create
712     "pcre.dll" under mingw when using Configure/Make. I added stuff to
713     Makefile.am that cause it to include this special target, without
714     affecting anything else. Note that the same mingw target plus all
715     the other distribution libraries and programs are now supported
716     when configuring with CMake (see 6 below) instead of with
717     Configure/Make.
718 ph10 309
719 ph10 308 5. Applied Craig's patch that moves no_arg into the RE class in the C++ code.
720     This is an attempt to solve the reported problem "pcrecpp::no_arg is not
721 ph10 309 exported in the Windows port". It has not yet been confirmed that the patch
722     solves the problem, but it does no harm.
723 ph10 313
724 ph10 311 6. Applied Sheri's patch to CMakeLists.txt to add NON_STANDARD_LIB_PREFIX and
725 ph10 319 NON_STANDARD_LIB_SUFFIX for dll names built with mingw when configured
726 ph10 314 with CMake, and also correct the comment about stack recursion.
727 ph10 313
728 ph10 312 7. Remove the automatic building of pcredemo from the ./configure system and
729 ph10 313 from CMakeLists.txt. The whole idea of pcredemo.c is that it is an example
730     of a program that users should build themselves after PCRE is installed, so
731     building it automatically is not really right. What is more, it gave
732 ph10 312 trouble in some build environments.
733 ph10 300
734 ph10 319 8. Further tidies to CMakeLists.txt from Sheri and Christian.
735 ph10 308
736 ph10 319
737 ph10 298 Version 7.5 10-Jan-08
738 ph10 263 ---------------------
739    
740     1. Applied a patch from Craig: "This patch makes it possible to 'ignore'
741     values in parens when parsing an RE using the C++ wrapper."
742 ph10 286
743 ph10 264 2. Negative specials like \S did not work in character classes in UTF-8 mode.
744     Characters greater than 255 were excluded from the class instead of being
745     included.
746 ph10 286
747     3. The same bug as (2) above applied to negated POSIX classes such as
748 ph10 265 [:^space:].
749 ph10 286
750 ph10 267 4. PCRECPP_STATIC was referenced in pcrecpp_internal.h, but nowhere was it
751     defined or documented. It seems to have been a typo for PCRE_STATIC, so
752 ph10 286 I have changed it.
753    
754 ph10 268 5. The construct (?&) was not diagnosed as a syntax error (it referenced the
755 ph10 286 first named subpattern) and a construct such as (?&a) would reference the
756     first named subpattern whose name started with "a" (in other words, the
757 ph10 272 length check was missing). Both these problems are fixed. "Subpattern name
758     expected" is now given for (?&) (a zero-length name), and this patch also
759     makes it give the same error for \k'' (previously it complained that that
760     was a reference to a non-existent subpattern).
761 ph10 286
762 ph10 269 6. The erroneous patterns (?+-a) and (?-+a) give different error messages;
763 ph10 286 this is right because (?- can be followed by option settings as well as by
764 ph10 269 digits. I have, however, made the messages clearer.
765 ph10 286
766 ph10 270 7. Patterns such as (?(1)a|b) (a pattern that contains fewer subpatterns
767     than the number used in the conditional) now cause a compile-time error.
768     This is actually not compatible with Perl, which accepts such patterns, but
769     treats the conditional as always being FALSE (as PCRE used to), but it
770     seems to me that giving a diagnostic is better.
771 ph10 286
772 ph10 274 8. Change "alphameric" to the more common word "alphanumeric" in comments
773 ph10 275 and messages.
774 ph10 286
775     9. Fix two occurrences of "backslash" in comments that should have been
776     "backspace".
777    
778     10. Remove two redundant lines of code that can never be obeyed (their function
779     was moved elsewhere).
780    
781     11. The program that makes PCRE's Unicode character property table had a bug
782     which caused it to generate incorrect table entries for sequences of
783 ph10 277 characters that have the same character type, but are in different scripts.
784 ph10 286 It amalgamated them into a single range, with the script of the first of
785 ph10 277 them. In other words, some characters were in the wrong script. There were
786     thirteen such cases, affecting characters in the following ranges:
787 ph10 286
788 ph10 277 U+002b0 - U+002c1
789     U+0060c - U+0060d
790 ph10 286 U+0061e - U+00612
791 ph10 277 U+0064b - U+0065e
792     U+0074d - U+0076d
793     U+01800 - U+01805
794     U+01d00 - U+01d77
795     U+01d9b - U+01dbf
796     U+0200b - U+0200f
797     U+030fc - U+030fe
798     U+03260 - U+0327f
799     U+0fb46 - U+0fbb1
800     U+10450 - U+1049d
801 ph10 286
802 ph10 279 12. The -o option (show only the matching part of a line) for pcregrep was not
803     compatible with GNU grep in that, if there was more than one match in a
804     line, it showed only the first of them. It now behaves in the same way as
805     GNU grep.
806 ph10 286
807     13. If the -o and -v options were combined for pcregrep, it printed a blank
808     line for every non-matching line. GNU grep prints nothing, and pcregrep now
809     does the same. The return code can be used to tell if there were any
810     non-matching lines.
811    
812 ph10 289 14. Added --file-offsets and --line-offsets to pcregrep.
813    
814     15. The pattern (?=something)(?R) was not being diagnosed as a potentially
815 ph10 282 infinitely looping recursion. The bug was that positive lookaheads were not
816 ph10 286 being skipped when checking for a possible empty match (negative lookaheads
817     and both kinds of lookbehind were skipped).
818    
819 ph10 289 16. Fixed two typos in the Windows-only code in pcregrep.c, and moved the
820 ph10 284 inclusion of <windows.h> to before rather than after the definition of
821     INVALID_FILE_ATTRIBUTES (patch from David Byron).
822 ph10 263
823 ph10 289 17. Specifying a possessive quantifier with a specific limit for a Unicode
824 ph10 286 character property caused pcre_compile() to compile bad code, which led at
825     runtime to PCRE_ERROR_INTERNAL (-14). Examples of patterns that caused this
826     are: /\p{Zl}{2,3}+/8 and /\p{Cc}{2}+/8. It was the possessive "+" that
827     caused the error; without that there was no problem.
828 ph10 263
829 ph10 289 18. Added --enable-pcregrep-libz and --enable-pcregrep-libbz2.
830 ph10 286
831 ph10 289 19. Added --enable-pcretest-libreadline.
832 ph10 286
833 ph10 289 20. In pcrecpp.cc, the variable 'count' was incremented twice in
834 ph10 288 RE::GlobalReplace(). As a result, the number of replacements returned was
835 ph10 298 double what it should be. I removed one of the increments, but Craig sent a
836     later patch that removed the other one (the right fix) and added unit tests
837     that check the return values (which was not done before).
838 ph10 292
839 ph10 291 21. Several CMake things:
840 ph10 287
841 ph10 291 (1) Arranged that, when cmake is used on Unix, the libraries end up with
842 ph10 292 the names libpcre and libpcreposix, not just pcre and pcreposix.
843 ph10 288
844 ph10 292 (2) The above change means that pcretest and pcregrep are now correctly
845     linked with the newly-built libraries, not previously installed ones.
846 ph10 291
847 ph10 292 (3) Added PCRE_SUPPORT_LIBREADLINE, PCRE_SUPPORT_LIBZ, PCRE_SUPPORT_LIBBZ2.
848 ph10 298
849     22. In UTF-8 mode, with newline set to "any", a pattern such as .*a.*=.b.*
850     crashed when matching a string such as a\x{2029}b (note that \x{2029} is a
851     UTF-8 newline character). The key issue is that the pattern starts .*;
852     this means that the match must be either at the beginning, or after a
853     newline. The bug was in the code for advancing after a failed match and
854     checking that the new position followed a newline. It was not taking
855 ph10 294 account of UTF-8 characters correctly.
856 ph10 298
857     23. PCRE was behaving differently from Perl in the way it recognized POSIX
858     character classes. PCRE was not treating the sequence [:...:] as a
859     character class unless the ... were all letters. Perl, however, seems to
860     allow any characters between [: and :], though of course it rejects as
861     unknown any "names" that contain non-letters, because all the known class
862     names consist only of letters. Thus, Perl gives an error for [[:1234:]],
863     for example, whereas PCRE did not - it did not recognize a POSIX character
864     class. This seemed a bit dangerous, so the code has been changed to be
865     closer to Perl. The behaviour is not identical to Perl, because PCRE will
866     diagnose an unknown class for, for example, [[:l\ower:]] where Perl will
867     treat it as [[:lower:]]. However, PCRE does now give "unknown" errors where
868     Perl does, and where it didn't before.
869    
870 ph10 296 24. Rewrite so as to remove the single use of %n from pcregrep because in some
871     Windows environments %n is disabled by default.
872 ph10 292
873    
874 ph10 260 Version 7.4 21-Sep-07
875 ph10 230 ---------------------
876    
877     1. Change 7.3/28 was implemented for classes by looking at the bitmap. This
878 ph10 231 means that a class such as [\s] counted as "explicit reference to CR or
879     LF". That isn't really right - the whole point of the change was to try to
880     help when there was an actual mention of one of the two characters. So now
881     the change happens only if \r or \n (or a literal CR or LF) character is
882 ph10 230 encountered.
883 ph10 231
884     2. The 32-bit options word was also used for 6 internal flags, but the numbers
885     of both had grown to the point where there were only 3 bits left.
886     Fortunately, there was spare space in the data structure, and so I have
887     moved the internal flags into a new 16-bit field to free up more option
888 ph10 230 bits.
889 ph10 231
890     3. The appearance of (?J) at the start of a pattern set the DUPNAMES option,
891     but did not set the internal JCHANGED flag - either of these is enough to
892     control the way the "get" function works - but the PCRE_INFO_JCHANGED
893     facility is supposed to tell if (?J) was ever used, so now (?J) at the
894 ph10 230 start sets both bits.
895    
896 ph10 231 4. Added options (at build time, compile time, exec time) to change \R from
897     matching any Unicode line ending sequence to just matching CR, LF, or CRLF.
898 ph10 230
899 ph10 243 5. doc/pcresyntax.html was missing from the distribution.
900    
901     6. Put back the definition of PCRE_ERROR_NULLWSLIMIT, for backward
902 ph10 233 compatibility, even though it is no longer used.
903 ph10 243
904     7. Added macro for snprintf to pcrecpp_unittest.cc and also for strtoll and
905 ph10 254 strtoull to pcrecpp.cc to select the available functions in WIN32 when the
906 ph10 259 windows.h file is present (where different names are used). [This was
907 ph10 257 reversed later after testing - see 16 below.]
908 ph10 243
909     8. Changed all #include <config.h> to #include "config.h". There were also
910 ph10 236 some further <pcre.h> cases that I changed to "pcre.h".
911 ph10 243
912 ph10 239 9. When pcregrep was used with the --colour option, it missed the line ending
913 ph10 243 sequence off the lines that it output.
914    
915     10. It was pointed out to me that arrays of string pointers cause lots of
916     relocations when a shared library is dynamically loaded. A technique of
917     using a single long string with a table of offsets can drastically reduce
918     these. I have refactored PCRE in four places to do this. The result is
919 ph10 240 dramatic:
920 ph10 243
921 ph10 240 Originally: 290
922     After changing UCP table: 187
923 ph10 243 After changing error message table: 43
924 ph10 240 After changing table of "verbs" 36
925     After changing table of Posix names 22
926 ph10 243
927 ph10 240 Thanks to the folks working on Gregex for glib for this insight.
928 ph10 247
929 ph10 244 11. --disable-stack-for-recursion caused compiling to fail unless -enable-
930 ph10 247 unicode-properties was also set.
931    
932 ph10 248 12. Updated the tests so that they work when \R is defaulted to ANYCRLF.
933 ph10 231
934 ph10 253 13. Added checks for ANY and ANYCRLF to pcrecpp.cc where it previously
935     checked only for CRLF.
936 ph10 233
937 ph10 259 14. Added casts to pcretest.c to avoid compiler warnings.
938    
939 ph10 256 15. Added Craig's patch to various pcrecpp modules to avoid compiler warnings.
940 ph10 253
941 ph10 257 16. Added Craig's patch to remove the WINDOWS_H tests, that were not working,
942 ph10 259 and instead check for _strtoi64 explicitly, and avoid the use of snprintf()
943     entirely. This removes changes made in 7 above.
944 ph10 256
945 ph10 261 17. The CMake files have been updated, and there is now more information about
946     building with CMake in the NON-UNIX-USE document.
947 ph10 257
948 ph10 261
949 ph10 228 Version 7.3 28-Aug-07
950 ph10 157 ---------------------
951    
952 ph10 189 1. In the rejigging of the build system that eventually resulted in 7.1, the
953     line "#include <pcre.h>" was included in pcre_internal.h. The use of angle
954     brackets there is not right, since it causes compilers to look for an
955     installed pcre.h, not the version that is in the source that is being
956     compiled (which of course may be different). I have changed it back to:
957 ph10 197
958 ph10 189 #include "pcre.h"
959 ph10 197
960     I have a vague recollection that the change was concerned with compiling in
961     different directories, but in the new build system, that is taken care of
962     by the VPATH setting the Makefile.
963    
964 ph10 190 2. The pattern .*$ when run in not-DOTALL UTF-8 mode with newline=any failed
965     when the subject happened to end in the byte 0x85 (e.g. if the last
966     character was \x{1ec5}). *Character* 0x85 is one of the "any" newline
967     characters but of course it shouldn't be taken as a newline when it is part
968     of another character. The bug was that, for an unlimited repeat of . in
969     not-DOTALL UTF-8 mode, PCRE was advancing by bytes rather than by
970     characters when looking for a newline.
971 ph10 197
972     3. A small performance improvement in the DOTALL UTF-8 mode .* case.
973    
974     4. Debugging: adjusted the names of opcodes for different kinds of parentheses
975     in debug output.
976    
977 ph10 201 5. Arrange to use "%I64d" instead of "%lld" and "%I64u" instead of "%llu" for
978     long printing in the pcrecpp unittest when running under MinGW.
979 ph10 189
980 ph10 197 6. ESC_K was left out of the EBCDIC table.
981 ph10 189
982 ph10 197 7. Change 7.0/38 introduced a new limit on the number of nested non-capturing
983     parentheses; I made it 1000, which seemed large enough. Unfortunately, the
984     limit also applies to "virtual nesting" when a pattern is recursive, and in
985     this case 1000 isn't so big. I have been able to remove this limit at the
986     expense of backing off one optimization in certain circumstances. Normally,
987     when pcre_exec() would call its internal match() function recursively and
988     immediately return the result unconditionally, it uses a "tail recursion"
989     feature to save stack. However, when a subpattern that can match an empty
990     string has an unlimited repetition quantifier, it no longer makes this
991     optimization. That gives it a stack frame in which to save the data for
992     checking that an empty string has been matched. Previously this was taken
993     from the 1000-entry workspace that had been reserved. So now there is no
994     explicit limit, but more stack is used.
995 ph10 189
996 ph10 200 8. Applied Daniel's patches to solve problems with the import/export magic
997     syntax that is required for Windows, and which was going wrong for the
998     pcreposix and pcrecpp parts of the library. These were overlooked when this
999     problem was solved for the main library.
1000 ph10 197
1001 ph10 202 9. There were some crude static tests to avoid integer overflow when computing
1002     the size of patterns that contain repeated groups with explicit upper
1003     limits. As the maximum quantifier is 65535, the maximum group length was
1004     set at 30,000 so that the product of these two numbers did not overflow a
1005     32-bit integer. However, it turns out that people want to use groups that
1006     are longer than 30,000 bytes (though not repeat them that many times).
1007     Change 7.0/17 (the refactoring of the way the pattern size is computed) has
1008     made it possible to implement the integer overflow checks in a much more
1009     dynamic way, which I have now done. The artificial limitation on group
1010     length has been removed - we now have only the limit on the total length of
1011     the compiled pattern, which depends on the LINK_SIZE setting.
1012 ph10 208
1013     10. Fixed a bug in the documentation for get/copy named substring when
1014     duplicate names are permitted. If none of the named substrings are set, the
1015     functions return PCRE_ERROR_NOSUBSTRING (7); the doc said they returned an
1016     empty string.
1017    
1018     11. Because Perl interprets \Q...\E at a high level, and ignores orphan \E
1019     instances, patterns such as [\Q\E] or [\E] or even [^\E] cause an error,
1020     because the ] is interpreted as the first data character and the
1021     terminating ] is not found. PCRE has been made compatible with Perl in this
1022     regard. Previously, it interpreted [\Q\E] as an empty class, and [\E] could
1023     cause memory overwriting.
1024    
1025 ph10 206 10. Like Perl, PCRE automatically breaks an unlimited repeat after an empty
1026     string has been matched (to stop an infinite loop). It was not recognizing
1027 ph10 208 a conditional subpattern that could match an empty string if that
1028 ph10 206 subpattern was within another subpattern. For example, it looped when
1029 ph10 208 trying to match (((?(1)X|))*) but it was OK with ((?(1)X|)*) where the
1030 ph10 206 condition was not nested. This bug has been fixed.
1031 ph10 208
1032 ph10 207 12. A pattern like \X?\d or \P{L}?\d in non-UTF-8 mode could cause a backtrack
1033     past the start of the subject in the presence of bytes with the top bit
1034     set, for example "\x8aBCD".
1035 ph10 211
1036 ph10 210 13. Added Perl 5.10 experimental backtracking controls (*FAIL), (*F), (*PRUNE),
1037     (*SKIP), (*THEN), (*COMMIT), and (*ACCEPT).
1038 ph10 200
1039 ph10 211 14. Optimized (?!) to (*FAIL).
1040 ph10 202
1041 ph10 212 15. Updated the test for a valid UTF-8 string to conform to the later RFC 3629.
1042     This restricts code points to be within the range 0 to 0x10FFFF, excluding
1043     the "low surrogate" sequence 0xD800 to 0xDFFF. Previously, PCRE allowed the
1044     full range 0 to 0x7FFFFFFF, as defined by RFC 2279. Internally, it still
1045     does: it's just the validity check that is more restrictive.
1046 ph10 220
1047     16. Inserted checks for integer overflows during escape sequence (backslash)
1048     processing, and also fixed erroneous offset values for syntax errors during
1049     backslash processing.
1050    
1051 ph10 214 17. Fixed another case of looking too far back in non-UTF-8 mode (cf 12 above)
1052 ph10 220 for patterns like [\PPP\x8a]{1,}\x80 with the subject "A\x80".
1053    
1054 ph10 215 18. An unterminated class in a pattern like (?1)\c[ with a "forward reference"
1055     caused an overrun.
1056 ph10 220
1057     19. A pattern like (?:[\PPa*]*){8,} which had an "extended class" (one with
1058     something other than just ASCII characters) inside a group that had an
1059     unlimited repeat caused a loop at compile time (while checking to see
1060     whether the group could match an empty string).
1061    
1062 ph10 217 20. Debugging a pattern containing \p or \P could cause a crash. For example,
1063     [\P{Any}] did so. (Error in the code for printing property names.)
1064 ph10 210
1065 ph10 220 21. An orphan \E inside a character class could cause a crash.
1066    
1067     22. A repeated capturing bracket such as (A)? could cause a wild memory
1068 ph10 218 reference during compilation.
1069 ph10 220
1070     23. There are several functions in pcre_compile() that scan along a compiled
1071     expression for various reasons (e.g. to see if it's fixed length for look
1072 ph10 218 behind). There were bugs in these functions when a repeated \p or \P was
1073 ph10 220 present in the pattern. These operators have additional parameters compared
1074     with \d, etc, and these were not being taken into account when moving along
1075 ph10 218 the compiled data. Specifically:
1076 ph10 220
1077     (a) A item such as \p{Yi}{3} in a lookbehind was not treated as fixed
1078     length.
1079    
1080     (b) An item such as \pL+ within a repeated group could cause crashes or
1081 ph10 218 loops.
1082 ph10 220
1083 ph10 218 (c) A pattern such as \p{Yi}+(\P{Yi}+)(?1) could give an incorrect
1084 ph10 220 "reference to non-existent subpattern" error.
1085    
1086 ph10 221 (d) A pattern like (\P{Yi}{2}\277)? could loop at compile time.
1087    
1088 ph10 219 24. A repeated \S or \W in UTF-8 mode could give wrong answers when multibyte
1089 ph10 220 characters were involved (for example /\S{2}/8g with "A\x{a3}BC").
1090 ph10 211
1091 ph10 222 25. Using pcregrep in multiline, inverted mode (-Mv) caused it to loop.
1092 ph10 218
1093 ph10 227 26. Patterns such as [\P{Yi}A] which include \p or \P and just one other
1094 ph10 223 character were causing crashes (broken optimization).
1095 ph10 227
1096 ph10 224 27. Patterns such as (\P{Yi}*\277)* (group with possible zero repeat containing
1097 ph10 227 \p or \P) caused a compile-time loop.
1098    
1099 ph10 226 28. More problems have arisen in unanchored patterns when CRLF is a valid line
1100     break. For example, the unstudied pattern [\r\n]A does not match the string
1101     "\r\nA" because change 7.0/46 below moves the current point on by two
1102     characters after failing to match at the start. However, the pattern \nA
1103 ph10 227 *does* match, because it doesn't start till \n, and if [\r\n]A is studied,
1104     the same is true. There doesn't seem any very clean way out of this, but
1105     what I have chosen to do makes the common cases work: PCRE now takes note
1106     of whether there can be an explicit match for \r or \n anywhere in the
1107     pattern, and if so, 7.0/46 no longer applies. As part of this change,
1108     there's a new PCRE_INFO_HASCRORLF option for finding out whether a compiled
1109     pattern has explicit CR or LF references.
1110 ph10 222
1111 ph10 227 29. Added (*CR) etc for changing newline setting at start of pattern.
1112 ph10 223
1113 ph10 227
1114 ph10 189 Version 7.2 19-Jun-07
1115     ---------------------
1116    
1117 ph10 157 1. If the fr_FR locale cannot be found for test 3, try the "french" locale,
1118     which is apparently normally available under Windows.
1119 ph10 159
1120     2. Re-jig the pcregrep tests with different newline settings in an attempt
1121     to make them independent of the local environment's newline setting.
1122 ph10 157
1123 ph10 160 3. Add code to configure.ac to remove -g from the CFLAGS default settings.
1124 ph10 165
1125 ph10 161 4. Some of the "internals" tests were previously cut out when the link size
1126     was not 2, because the output contained actual offsets. The recent new
1127 ph10 165 "Z" feature of pcretest means that these can be cut out, making the tests
1128     usable with all link sizes.
1129    
1130 ph10 164 5. Implemented Stan Switzer's goto replacement for longjmp() when not using
1131     stack recursion. This gives a massive performance boost under BSD, but just
1132 ph10 165 a small improvement under Linux. However, it saves one field in the frame
1133 ph10 164 in all cases.
1134 ph10 172
1135 ph10 166 6. Added more features from the forthcoming Perl 5.10:
1136 ph10 172
1137 ph10 166 (a) (?-n) (where n is a string of digits) is a relative subroutine or
1138     recursion call. It refers to the nth most recently opened parentheses.
1139 ph10 172
1140 ph10 166 (b) (?+n) is also a relative subroutine call; it refers to the nth next
1141 ph10 172 to be opened parentheses.
1142    
1143     (c) Conditions that refer to capturing parentheses can be specified
1144 ph10 167 relatively, for example, (?(-2)... or (?(+3)...
1145 ph10 172
1146 ph10 168 (d) \K resets the start of the current match so that everything before
1147 ph10 172 is not part of it.
1148    
1149 ph10 171 (e) \k{name} is synonymous with \k<name> and \k'name' (.NET compatible).
1150 ph10 172
1151 ph10 171 (f) \g{name} is another synonym - part of Perl 5.10's unification of
1152 ph10 172 reference syntax.
1153 ph10 182
1154 ph10 175 (g) (?| introduces a group in which the numbering of parentheses in each
1155 ph10 182 alternative starts with the same number.
1156 ph10 172
1157 ph10 182 (h) \h, \H, \v, and \V match horizontal and vertical whitespace.
1158    
1159 ph10 172 7. Added two new calls to pcre_fullinfo(): PCRE_INFO_OKPARTIAL and
1160     PCRE_INFO_JCHANGED.
1161    
1162     8. A pattern such as (.*(.)?)* caused pcre_exec() to fail by either not
1163     terminating or by crashing. Diagnosed by Viktor Griph; it was in the code
1164 ph10 170 for detecting groups that can match an empty string.
1165 ph10 159
1166 ph10 172 9. A pattern with a very large number of alternatives (more than several
1167     hundred) was running out of internal workspace during the pre-compile
1168     phase, where pcre_compile() figures out how much memory will be needed. A
1169     bit of new cunning has reduced the workspace needed for groups with
1170     alternatives. The 1000-alternative test pattern now uses 12 bytes of
1171     workspace instead of running out of the 4096 that are available.
1172 ph10 182
1173 ph10 176 10. Inserted some missing (unsigned int) casts to get rid of compiler warnings.
1174 ph10 172
1175 ph10 179 11. Applied patch from Google to remove an optimization that didn't quite work.
1176     The report of the bug said:
1177 ph10 182
1178 ph10 179 pcrecpp::RE("a*").FullMatch("aaa") matches, while
1179     pcrecpp::RE("a*?").FullMatch("aaa") does not, and
1180 ph10 182 pcrecpp::RE("a*?\\z").FullMatch("aaa") does again.
1181 ph10 185
1182 ph10 184 12. If \p or \P was used in non-UTF-8 mode on a character greater than 127
1183 ph10 185 it matched the wrong number of bytes.
1184 ph10 172
1185 ph10 179
1186 ph10 155 Version 7.1 24-Apr-07
1187 ph10 98 ---------------------
1188    
1189 ph10 111 1. Applied Bob Rossi and Daniel G's patches to convert the build system to one
1190 ph10 122 that is more "standard", making use of automake and other Autotools. There
1191 ph10 99 is some re-arrangement of the files and adjustment of comments consequent
1192     on this.
1193 ph10 111
1194     2. Part of the patch fixed a problem with the pcregrep tests. The test of -r
1195     for recursive directory scanning broke on some systems because the files
1196     are not scanned in any specific order and on different systems the order
1197     was different. A call to "sort" has been inserted into RunGrepTest for the
1198     approprate test as a short-term fix. In the longer term there may be an
1199 ph10 100 alternative.
1200 ph10 111
1201 ph10 100 3. I had an email from Eric Raymond about problems translating some of PCRE's
1202 ph10 111 man pages to HTML (despite the fact that I distribute HTML pages, some
1203     people do their own conversions for various reasons). The problems
1204     concerned the use of low-level troff macros .br and .in. I have therefore
1205     removed all such uses from the man pages (some were redundant, some could
1206 ph10 113 be replaced by .nf/.fi pairs). The 132html script that I use to generate
1207     HTML has been updated to handle .nf/.fi and to complain if it encounters
1208     .br or .in.
1209 ph10 111
1210 ph10 100 4. Updated comments in configure.ac that get placed in config.h.in and also
1211 ph10 123 arranged for config.h to be included in the distribution, with the name
1212 ph10 111 config.h.generic, for the benefit of those who have to compile without
1213     Autotools (compare pcre.h, which is now distributed as pcre.h.generic).
1214    
1215     5. Updated the support (such as it is) for Virtual Pascal, thanks to Stefan
1216     Weber: (1) pcre_internal.h was missing some function renames; (2) updated
1217 ph10 127 makevp.bat for the current PCRE, using the additional files
1218 ph10 135 makevp_c.txt, makevp_l.txt, and pcregexp.pas.
1219 ph10 111
1220     6. A Windows user reported a minor discrepancy with test 2, which turned out
1221     to be caused by a trailing space on an input line that had got lost in his
1222 ph10 102 copy. The trailing space was an accident, so I've just removed it.
1223 ph10 111
1224 ph10 104 7. Add -Wl,-R... flags in pcre-config.in for *BSD* systems, as I'm told
1225 ph10 111 that is needed.
1226    
1227 ph10 105 8. Mark ucp_table (in ucptable.h) and ucp_gentype (in pcre_ucp_searchfuncs.c)
1228     as "const" (a) because they are and (b) because it helps the PHP
1229     maintainers who have recently made a script to detect big data structures
1230 ph10 111 in the php code that should be moved to the .rodata section. I remembered
1231     to update Builducptable as well, so it won't revert if ucptable.h is ever
1232 ph10 105 re-created.
1233 ph10 111
1234     9. Added some extra #ifdef SUPPORT_UTF8 conditionals into pcretest.c,
1235 ph10 107 pcre_printint.src, pcre_compile.c, pcre_study.c, and pcre_tables.c, in
1236 ph10 111 order to be able to cut out the UTF-8 tables in the latter when UTF-8
1237     support is not required. This saves 1.5-2K of code, which is important in
1238 ph10 107 some applications.
1239 ph10 111
1240 ph10 110 Later: more #ifdefs are needed in pcre_ord2utf8.c and pcre_valid_utf8.c
1241 ph10 111 so as not to refer to the tables, even though these functions will never be
1242     called when UTF-8 support is disabled. Otherwise there are problems with a
1243     shared library.
1244    
1245 ph10 118 10. Fixed two bugs in the emulated memmove() function in pcre_internal.h:
1246    
1247     (a) It was defining its arguments as char * instead of void *.
1248    
1249 ph10 123 (b) It was assuming that all moves were upwards in memory; this was true
1250     a long time ago when I wrote it, but is no longer the case.
1251    
1252 ph10 118 The emulated memove() is provided for those environments that have neither
1253 ph10 123 memmove() nor bcopy(). I didn't think anyone used it these days, but that
1254 ph10 118 is clearly not the case, as these two bugs were recently reported.
1255 ph10 123
1256 ph10 111 11. The script PrepareRelease is now distributed: it calls 132html, CleanTxt,
1257 ph10 123 and Detrail to create the HTML documentation, the .txt form of the man
1258     pages, and it removes trailing spaces from listed files. It also creates
1259     pcre.h.generic and config.h.generic from pcre.h and config.h. In the latter
1260     case, it wraps all the #defines with #ifndefs. This script should be run
1261 ph10 111 before "make dist".
1262 ph10 123
1263 ph10 115 12. Fixed two fairly obscure bugs concerned with quantified caseless matching
1264     with Unicode property support.
1265 ph10 123
1266     (a) For a maximizing quantifier, if the two different cases of the
1267     character were of different lengths in their UTF-8 codings (there are
1268     some cases like this - I found 11), and the matching function had to
1269 ph10 115 back up over a mixture of the two cases, it incorrectly assumed they
1270     were both the same length.
1271 ph10 123
1272     (b) When PCRE was configured to use the heap rather than the stack for
1273     recursion during matching, it was not correctly preserving the data for
1274     the other case of a UTF-8 character when checking ahead for a match
1275     while processing a minimizing repeat. If the check also involved
1276 ph10 115 matching a wide character, but failed, corruption could cause an
1277     erroneous result when trying to check for a repeat of the original
1278     character.
1279 ph10 123
1280 ph10 116 13. Some tidying changes to the testing mechanism:
1281 ph10 98
1282 ph10 116 (a) The RunTest script now detects the internal link size and whether there
1283     is UTF-8 and UCP support by running ./pcretest -C instead of relying on
1284 ph10 123 values substituted by "configure". (The RunGrepTest script already did
1285     this for UTF-8.) The configure.ac script no longer substitutes the
1286     relevant variables.
1287    
1288 ph10 116 (b) The debugging options /B and /D in pcretest show the compiled bytecode
1289     with length and offset values. This means that the output is different
1290     for different internal link sizes. Test 2 is skipped for link sizes
1291     other than 2 because of this, bypassing the problem. Unfortunately,
1292     there was also a test in test 3 (the locale tests) that used /B and
1293 ph10 123 failed for link sizes other than 2. Rather than cut the whole test out,
1294     I have added a new /Z option to pcretest that replaces the length and
1295     offset values with spaces. This is now used to make test 3 independent
1296 ph10 122 of link size. (Test 2 will be tidied up later.)
1297 ph10 123
1298     14. If erroroffset was passed as NULL to pcre_compile, it provoked a
1299 ph10 122 segmentation fault instead of returning the appropriate error message.
1300 ph10 134
1301 ph10 131 15. In multiline mode when the newline sequence was set to "any", the pattern
1302 ph10 134 ^$ would give a match between the \r and \n of a subject such as "A\r\nB".
1303     This doesn't seem right; it now treats the CRLF combination as the line
1304     ending, and so does not match in that case. It's only a pattern such as ^$
1305     that would hit this one: something like ^ABC$ would have failed after \r
1306     and then tried again after \r\n.
1307    
1308 ph10 131 16. Changed the comparison command for RunGrepTest from "diff -u" to "diff -ub"
1309 ph10 134 in an attempt to make files that differ only in their line terminators
1310     compare equal. This works on Linux.
1311 ph10 142
1312 ph10 141 17. Under certain error circumstances pcregrep might try to free random memory
1313     as it exited. This is now fixed, thanks to valgrind.
1314 ph10 142
1315 ph10 141 19. In pcretest, if the pattern /(?m)^$/g<any> was matched against the string
1316 ph10 142 "abc\r\n\r\n", it found an unwanted second match after the second \r. This
1317     was because its rules for how to advance for /g after matching an empty
1318 ph10 143 string at the end of a line did not allow for this case. They now check for
1319     it specially.
1320 ph10 150
1321     20. pcretest is supposed to handle patterns and data of any length, by
1322     extending its buffers when necessary. It was getting this wrong when the
1323 ph10 147 buffer for a data line had to be extended.
1324 ph10 150
1325 ph10 149 21. Added PCRE_NEWLINE_ANYCRLF which is like ANY, but matches only CR, LF, or
1326 ph10 150 CRLF as a newline sequence.
1327 ph10 152
1328 ph10 151 22. Code for handling Unicode properties in pcre_dfa_exec() wasn't being cut
1329 ph10 152 out by #ifdef SUPPORT_UCP. This did no harm, as it could never be used, but
1330     I have nevertheless tidied it up.
1331 ph10 111
1332 ph10 152 23. Added some casts to kill warnings from HP-UX ia64 compiler.
1333 ph10 123
1334 ph10 153 24. Added a man page for pcre-config.
1335 ph10 152
1336 ph10 153
1337 nigel 93 Version 7.0 19-Dec-06
1338     ---------------------
1339    
1340     1. Fixed a signed/unsigned compiler warning in pcre_compile.c, shown up by
1341     moving to gcc 4.1.1.
1342    
1343     2. The -S option for pcretest uses setrlimit(); I had omitted to #include
1344     sys/time.h, which is documented as needed for this function. It doesn't
1345     seem to matter on Linux, but it showed up on some releases of OS X.
1346    
1347     3. It seems that there are systems where bytes whose values are greater than
1348     127 match isprint() in the "C" locale. The "C" locale should be the
1349     default when a C program starts up. In most systems, only ASCII printing
1350     characters match isprint(). This difference caused the output from pcretest
1351     to vary, making some of the tests fail. I have changed pcretest so that:
1352    
1353     (a) When it is outputting text in the compiled version of a pattern, bytes
1354     other than 32-126 are always shown as hex escapes.
1355    
1356     (b) When it is outputting text that is a matched part of a subject string,
1357     it does the same, unless a different locale has been set for the match
1358     (using the /L modifier). In this case, it uses isprint() to decide.
1359    
1360     4. Fixed a major bug that caused incorrect computation of the amount of memory
1361     required for a compiled pattern when options that changed within the
1362     pattern affected the logic of the preliminary scan that determines the
1363     length. The relevant options are -x, and -i in UTF-8 mode. The result was
1364     that the computed length was too small. The symptoms of this bug were
1365     either the PCRE error "internal error: code overflow" from pcre_compile(),
1366     or a glibc crash with a message such as "pcretest: free(): invalid next
1367     size (fast)". Examples of patterns that provoked this bug (shown in
1368     pcretest format) are:
1369    
1370     /(?-x: )/x
1371     /(?x)(?-x: \s*#\s*)/
1372     /((?i)[\x{c0}])/8
1373     /(?i:[\x{c0}])/8
1374    
1375     HOWEVER: Change 17 below makes this fix obsolete as the memory computation
1376     is now done differently.
1377    
1378     5. Applied patches from Google to: (a) add a QuoteMeta function to the C++
1379     wrapper classes; (b) implement a new function in the C++ scanner that is
1380     more efficient than the old way of doing things because it avoids levels of
1381     recursion in the regex matching; (c) add a paragraph to the documentation
1382     for the FullMatch() function.
1383    
1384     6. The escape sequence \n was being treated as whatever was defined as
1385     "newline". Not only was this contrary to the documentation, which states
1386     that \n is character 10 (hex 0A), but it also went horribly wrong when
1387     "newline" was defined as CRLF. This has been fixed.
1388    
1389     7. In pcre_dfa_exec.c the value of an unsigned integer (the variable called c)
1390     was being set to -1 for the "end of line" case (supposedly a value that no
1391     character can have). Though this value is never used (the check for end of
1392     line is "zero bytes in current character"), it caused compiler complaints.
1393     I've changed it to 0xffffffff.
1394    
1395     8. In pcre_version.c, the version string was being built by a sequence of
1396     C macros that, in the event of PCRE_PRERELEASE being defined as an empty
1397     string (as it is for production releases) called a macro with an empty
1398     argument. The C standard says the result of this is undefined. The gcc
1399     compiler treats it as an empty string (which was what was wanted) but it is
1400     reported that Visual C gives an error. The source has been hacked around to
1401     avoid this problem.
1402    
1403     9. On the advice of a Windows user, included <io.h> and <fcntl.h> in Windows
1404     builds of pcretest, and changed the call to _setmode() to use _O_BINARY
1405     instead of 0x8000. Made all the #ifdefs test both _WIN32 and WIN32 (not all
1406     of them did).
1407    
1408     10. Originally, pcretest opened its input and output without "b"; then I was
1409     told that "b" was needed in some environments, so it was added for release
1410     5.0 to both the input and output. (It makes no difference on Unix-like
1411     systems.) Later I was told that it is wrong for the input on Windows. I've
1412     now abstracted the modes into two macros, to make it easier to fiddle with
1413     them, and removed "b" from the input mode under Windows.
1414    
1415     11. Added pkgconfig support for the C++ wrapper library, libpcrecpp.
1416    
1417     12. Added -help and --help to pcretest as an official way of being reminded
1418     of the options.
1419    
1420     13. Removed some redundant semicolons after macro calls in pcrecpparg.h.in
1421     and pcrecpp.cc because they annoy compilers at high warning levels.
1422    
1423     14. A bit of tidying/refactoring in pcre_exec.c in the main bumpalong loop.
1424    
1425     15. Fixed an occurrence of == in configure.ac that should have been = (shell
1426     scripts are not C programs :-) and which was not noticed because it works
1427     on Linux.
1428    
1429     16. pcretest is supposed to handle any length of pattern and data line (as one
1430     line or as a continued sequence of lines) by extending its input buffer if
1431     necessary. This feature was broken for very long pattern lines, leading to
1432     a string of junk being passed to pcre_compile() if the pattern was longer
1433     than about 50K.
1434    
1435     17. I have done a major re-factoring of the way pcre_compile() computes the
1436     amount of memory needed for a compiled pattern. Previously, there was code
1437     that made a preliminary scan of the pattern in order to do this. That was
1438     OK when PCRE was new, but as the facilities have expanded, it has become
1439     harder and harder to keep it in step with the real compile phase, and there
1440     have been a number of bugs (see for example, 4 above). I have now found a
1441     cunning way of running the real compile function in a "fake" mode that
1442     enables it to compute how much memory it would need, while actually only
1443     ever using a few hundred bytes of working memory and without too many
1444     tests of the mode. This should make future maintenance and development
1445     easier. A side effect of this work is that the limit of 200 on the nesting
1446     depth of parentheses has been removed (though this was never a serious
1447     limitation, I suspect). However, there is a downside: pcre_compile() now
1448     runs more slowly than before (30% or more, depending on the pattern). I
1449     hope this isn't a big issue. There is no effect on runtime performance.
1450    
1451     18. Fixed a minor bug in pcretest: if a pattern line was not terminated by a
1452     newline (only possible for the last line of a file) and it was a
1453     pattern that set a locale (followed by /Lsomething), pcretest crashed.
1454    
1455     19. Added additional timing features to pcretest. (1) The -tm option now times
1456     matching only, not compiling. (2) Both -t and -tm can be followed, as a
1457     separate command line item, by a number that specifies the number of
1458     repeats to use when timing. The default is 50000; this gives better
1459     precision, but takes uncomfortably long for very large patterns.
1460    
1461     20. Extended pcre_study() to be more clever in cases where a branch of a
1462     subpattern has no definite first character. For example, (a*|b*)[cd] would
1463     previously give no result from pcre_study(). Now it recognizes that the
1464     first character must be a, b, c, or d.
1465    
1466     21. There was an incorrect error "recursive call could loop indefinitely" if
1467     a subpattern (or the entire pattern) that was being tested for matching an
1468     empty string contained only one non-empty item after a nested subpattern.
1469     For example, the pattern (?>\x{100}*)\d(?R) provoked this error
1470     incorrectly, because the \d was being skipped in the check.
1471    
1472     22. The pcretest program now has a new pattern option /B and a command line
1473     option -b, which is equivalent to adding /B to every pattern. This causes
1474     it to show the compiled bytecode, without the additional information that
1475     -d shows. The effect of -d is now the same as -b with -i (and similarly, /D
1476     is the same as /B/I).
1477    
1478     23. A new optimization is now able automatically to treat some sequences such
1479     as a*b as a*+b. More specifically, if something simple (such as a character
1480     or a simple class like \d) has an unlimited quantifier, and is followed by
1481     something that cannot possibly match the quantified thing, the quantifier
1482     is automatically "possessified".
1483    
1484     24. A recursive reference to a subpattern whose number was greater than 39
1485     went wrong under certain circumstances in UTF-8 mode. This bug could also
1486     have affected the operation of pcre_study().
1487    
1488     25. Realized that a little bit of performance could be had by replacing
1489     (c & 0xc0) == 0xc0 with c >= 0xc0 when processing UTF-8 characters.
1490    
1491     26. Timing data from pcretest is now shown to 4 decimal places instead of 3.
1492    
1493     27. Possessive quantifiers such as a++ were previously implemented by turning
1494     them into atomic groups such as ($>a+). Now they have their own opcodes,
1495     which improves performance. This includes the automatically created ones
1496     from 23 above.
1497    
1498     28. A pattern such as (?=(\w+))\1: which simulates an atomic group using a
1499     lookahead was broken if it was not anchored. PCRE was mistakenly expecting
1500     the first matched character to be a colon. This applied both to named and
1501     numbered groups.
1502    
1503     29. The ucpinternal.h header file was missing its idempotency #ifdef.
1504    
1505     30. I was sent a "project" file called libpcre.a.dev which I understand makes
1506     building PCRE on Windows easier, so I have included it in the distribution.
1507    
1508     31. There is now a check in pcretest against a ridiculously large number being
1509     returned by pcre_exec() or pcre_dfa_exec(). If this happens in a /g or /G
1510     loop, the loop is abandoned.
1511    
1512     32. Forward references to subpatterns in conditions such as (?(2)...) where
1513     subpattern 2 is defined later cause pcre_compile() to search forwards in
1514     the pattern for the relevant set of parentheses. This search went wrong
1515     when there were unescaped parentheses in a character class, parentheses
1516     escaped with \Q...\E, or parentheses in a #-comment in /x mode.
1517    
1518     33. "Subroutine" calls and backreferences were previously restricted to
1519     referencing subpatterns earlier in the regex. This restriction has now
1520     been removed.
1521    
1522     34. Added a number of extra features that are going to be in Perl 5.10. On the
1523     whole, these are just syntactic alternatives for features that PCRE had
1524     previously implemented using the Python syntax or my own invention. The
1525     other formats are all retained for compatibility.
1526    
1527     (a) Named groups can now be defined as (?<name>...) or (?'name'...) as well
1528     as (?P<name>...). The new forms, as well as being in Perl 5.10, are
1529     also .NET compatible.
1530    
1531     (b) A recursion or subroutine call to a named group can now be defined as
1532     (?&name) as well as (?P>name).
1533    
1534     (c) A backreference to a named group can now be defined as \k<name> or
1535     \k'name' as well as (?P=name). The new forms, as well as being in Perl
1536     5.10, are also .NET compatible.
1537    
1538     (d) A conditional reference to a named group can now use the syntax
1539     (?(<name>) or (?('name') as well as (?(name).
1540    
1541     (e) A "conditional group" of the form (?(DEFINE)...) can be used to define
1542     groups (named and numbered) that are never evaluated inline, but can be
1543     called as "subroutines" from elsewhere. In effect, the DEFINE condition
1544     is always false. There may be only one alternative in such a group.
1545    
1546     (f) A test for recursion can be given as (?(R1).. or (?(R&name)... as well
1547     as the simple (?(R). The condition is true only if the most recent
1548     recursion is that of the given number or name. It does not search out
1549     through the entire recursion stack.
1550    
1551     (g) The escape \gN or \g{N} has been added, where N is a positive or
1552     negative number, specifying an absolute or relative reference.
1553    
1554     35. Tidied to get rid of some further signed/unsigned compiler warnings and
1555     some "unreachable code" warnings.
1556    
1557     36. Updated the Unicode property tables to Unicode version 5.0.0. Amongst other
1558     things, this adds five new scripts.
1559    
1560     37. Perl ignores orphaned \E escapes completely. PCRE now does the same.
1561     There were also incompatibilities regarding the handling of \Q..\E inside
1562     character classes, for example with patterns like [\Qa\E-\Qz\E] where the
1563     hyphen was adjacent to \Q or \E. I hope I've cleared all this up now.
1564    
1565     38. Like Perl, PCRE detects when an indefinitely repeated parenthesized group
1566     matches an empty string, and forcibly breaks the loop. There were bugs in
1567     this code in non-simple cases. For a pattern such as ^(a()*)* matched
1568     against aaaa the result was just "a" rather than "aaaa", for example. Two
1569     separate and independent bugs (that affected different cases) have been
1570     fixed.
1571    
1572     39. Refactored the code to abolish the use of different opcodes for small
1573     capturing bracket numbers. This is a tidy that I avoided doing when I
1574     removed the limit on the number of capturing brackets for 3.5 back in 2001.
1575     The new approach is not only tidier, it makes it possible to reduce the
1576     memory needed to fix the previous bug (38).
1577    
1578     40. Implemented PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY to recognize any of the Unicode newline
1579     sequences (http://unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr18/) as "newline" when
1580     processing dot, circumflex, or dollar metacharacters, or #-comments in /x
1581     mode.
1582    
1583     41. Add \R to match any Unicode newline sequence, as suggested in the Unicode
1584     report.
1585    
1586     42. Applied patch, originally from Ari Pollak, modified by Google, to allow
1587     copy construction and assignment in the C++ wrapper.
1588    
1589     43. Updated pcregrep to support "--newline=any". In the process, I fixed a
1590     couple of bugs that could have given wrong results in the "--newline=crlf"
1591     case.
1592    
1593     44. Added a number of casts and did some reorganization of signed/unsigned int
1594     variables following suggestions from Dair Grant. Also renamed the variable
1595     "this" as "item" because it is a C++ keyword.
1596    
1597     45. Arranged for dftables to add
1598    
1599     #include "pcre_internal.h"
1600    
1601     to pcre_chartables.c because without it, gcc 4.x may remove the array
1602     definition from the final binary if PCRE is built into a static library and
1603     dead code stripping is activated.
1604    
1605     46. For an unanchored pattern, if a match attempt fails at the start of a
1606     newline sequence, and the newline setting is CRLF or ANY, and the next two
1607     characters are CRLF, advance by two characters instead of one.
1608    
1609    
1610 nigel 91 Version 6.7 04-Jul-06
1611     ---------------------
1612    
1613     1. In order to handle tests when input lines are enormously long, pcretest has
1614     been re-factored so that it automatically extends its buffers when
1615     necessary. The code is crude, but this _is_ just a test program. The
1616     default size has been increased from 32K to 50K.
1617    
1618     2. The code in pcre_study() was using the value of the re argument before
1619     testing it for NULL. (Of course, in any sensible call of the function, it
1620     won't be NULL.)
1621    
1622     3. The memmove() emulation function in pcre_internal.h, which is used on
1623     systems that lack both memmove() and bcopy() - that is, hardly ever -
1624     was missing a "static" storage class specifier.
1625    
1626     4. When UTF-8 mode was not set, PCRE looped when compiling certain patterns
1627     containing an extended class (one that cannot be represented by a bitmap
1628     because it contains high-valued characters or Unicode property items, e.g.
1629     [\pZ]). Almost always one would set UTF-8 mode when processing such a
1630     pattern, but PCRE should not loop if you do not (it no longer does).
1631     [Detail: two cases were found: (a) a repeated subpattern containing an
1632     extended class; (b) a recursive reference to a subpattern that followed a
1633     previous extended class. It wasn't skipping over the extended class
1634     correctly when UTF-8 mode was not set.]
1635    
1636     5. A negated single-character class was not being recognized as fixed-length
1637     in lookbehind assertions such as (?<=[^f]), leading to an incorrect
1638     compile error "lookbehind assertion is not fixed length".
1639    
1640     6. The RunPerlTest auxiliary script was showing an unexpected difference
1641     between PCRE and Perl for UTF-8 tests. It turns out that it is hard to
1642     write a Perl script that can interpret lines of an input file either as
1643     byte characters or as UTF-8, which is what "perltest" was being required to
1644     do for the non-UTF-8 and UTF-8 tests, respectively. Essentially what you
1645     can't do is switch easily at run time between having the "use utf8;" pragma
1646     or not. In the end, I fudged it by using the RunPerlTest script to insert
1647     "use utf8;" explicitly for the UTF-8 tests.
1648    
1649     7. In multiline (/m) mode, PCRE was matching ^ after a terminating newline at
1650     the end of the subject string, contrary to the documentation and to what
1651     Perl does. This was true of both matching functions. Now it matches only at
1652     the start of the subject and immediately after *internal* newlines.
1653    
1654     8. A call of pcre_fullinfo() from pcretest to get the option bits was passing
1655     a pointer to an int instead of a pointer to an unsigned long int. This
1656     caused problems on 64-bit systems.
1657    
1658     9. Applied a patch from the folks at Google to pcrecpp.cc, to fix "another
1659     instance of the 'standard' template library not being so standard".
1660    
1661     10. There was no check on the number of named subpatterns nor the maximum
1662     length of a subpattern name. The product of these values is used to compute
1663     the size of the memory block for a compiled pattern. By supplying a very
1664     long subpattern name and a large number of named subpatterns, the size
1665     computation could be caused to overflow. This is now prevented by limiting
1666     the length of names to 32 characters, and the number of named subpatterns
1667     to 10,000.
1668    
1669     11. Subpatterns that are repeated with specific counts have to be replicated in
1670     the compiled pattern. The size of memory for this was computed from the
1671     length of the subpattern and the repeat count. The latter is limited to
1672     65535, but there was no limit on the former, meaning that integer overflow
1673     could in principle occur. The compiled length of a repeated subpattern is
1674     now limited to 30,000 bytes in order to prevent this.
1675    
1676     12. Added the optional facility to have named substrings with the same name.
1677    
1678     13. Added the ability to use a named substring as a condition, using the
1679     Python syntax: (?(name)yes|no). This overloads (?(R)... and names that
1680     are numbers (not recommended). Forward references are permitted.
1681    
1682     14. Added forward references in named backreferences (if you see what I mean).
1683    
1684     15. In UTF-8 mode, with the PCRE_DOTALL option set, a quantified dot in the
1685     pattern could run off the end of the subject. For example, the pattern
1686     "(?s)(.{1,5})"8 did this with the subject "ab".
1687    
1688     16. If PCRE_DOTALL or PCRE_MULTILINE were set, pcre_dfa_exec() behaved as if
1689     PCRE_CASELESS was set when matching characters that were quantified with ?
1690     or *.
1691    
1692     17. A character class other than a single negated character that had a minimum
1693     but no maximum quantifier - for example [ab]{6,} - was not handled
1694     correctly by pce_dfa_exec(). It would match only one character.
1695    
1696     18. A valid (though odd) pattern that looked like a POSIX character
1697     class but used an invalid character after [ (for example [[,abc,]]) caused
1698     pcre_compile() to give the error "Failed: internal error: code overflow" or
1699     in some cases to crash with a glibc free() error. This could even happen if
1700     the pattern terminated after [[ but there just happened to be a sequence of
1701     letters, a binary zero, and a closing ] in the memory that followed.
1702    
1703     19. Perl's treatment of octal escapes in the range \400 to \777 has changed
1704     over the years. Originally (before any Unicode support), just the bottom 8
1705     bits were taken. Thus, for example, \500 really meant \100. Nowadays the
1706     output from "man perlunicode" includes this:
1707    
1708     The regular expression compiler produces polymorphic opcodes. That
1709     is, the pattern adapts to the data and automatically switches to
1710     the Unicode character scheme when presented with Unicode data--or
1711     instead uses a traditional byte scheme when presented with byte
1712     data.
1713    
1714     Sadly, a wide octal escape does not cause a switch, and in a string with
1715     no other multibyte characters, these octal escapes are treated as before.
1716     Thus, in Perl, the pattern /\500/ actually matches \100 but the pattern
1717     /\500|\x{1ff}/ matches \500 or \777 because the whole thing is treated as a
1718     Unicode string.
1719    
1720     I have not perpetrated such confusion in PCRE. Up till now, it took just
1721     the bottom 8 bits, as in old Perl. I have now made octal escapes with
1722     values greater than \377 illegal in non-UTF-8 mode. In UTF-8 mode they
1723     translate to the appropriate multibyte character.
1724    
1725     29. Applied some refactoring to reduce the number of warnings from Microsoft
1726     and Borland compilers. This has included removing the fudge introduced
1727     seven years ago for the OS/2 compiler (see 2.02/2 below) because it caused
1728     a warning about an unused variable.
1729    
1730     21. PCRE has not included VT (character 0x0b) in the set of whitespace
1731     characters since release 4.0, because Perl (from release 5.004) does not.
1732     [Or at least, is documented not to: some releases seem to be in conflict
1733     with the documentation.] However, when a pattern was studied with
1734     pcre_study() and all its branches started with \s, PCRE still included VT
1735     as a possible starting character. Of course, this did no harm; it just
1736     caused an unnecessary match attempt.
1737    
1738     22. Removed a now-redundant internal flag bit that recorded the fact that case
1739     dependency changed within the pattern. This was once needed for "required
1740     byte" processing, but is no longer used. This recovers a now-scarce options
1741     bit. Also moved the least significant internal flag bit to the most-
1742     significant bit of the word, which was not previously used (hangover from
1743     the days when it was an int rather than a uint) to free up another bit for
1744     the future.
1745    
1746     23. Added support for CRLF line endings as well as CR and LF. As well as the
1747     default being selectable at build time, it can now be changed at runtime
1748     via the PCRE_NEWLINE_xxx flags. There are now options for pcregrep to
1749     specify that it is scanning data with non-default line endings.
1750    
1751     24. Changed the definition of CXXLINK to make it agree with the definition of
1752     LINK in the Makefile, by replacing LDFLAGS to CXXFLAGS.
1753    
1754     25. Applied Ian Taylor's patches to avoid using another stack frame for tail
1755     recursions. This makes a big different to stack usage for some patterns.
1756    
1757     26. If a subpattern containing a named recursion or subroutine reference such
1758     as (?P>B) was quantified, for example (xxx(?P>B)){3}, the calculation of
1759     the space required for the compiled pattern went wrong and gave too small a
1760     value. Depending on the environment, this could lead to "Failed: internal
1761     error: code overflow at offset 49" or "glibc detected double free or
1762     corruption" errors.
1763    
1764     27. Applied patches from Google (a) to support the new newline modes and (b) to
1765     advance over multibyte UTF-8 characters in GlobalReplace.
1766    
1767     28. Change free() to pcre_free() in pcredemo.c. Apparently this makes a
1768     difference for some implementation of PCRE in some Windows version.
1769    
1770     29. Added some extra testing facilities to pcretest:
1771    
1772     \q<number> in a data line sets the "match limit" value
1773     \Q<number> in a data line sets the "match recursion limt" value
1774     -S <number> sets the stack size, where <number> is in megabytes
1775    
1776     The -S option isn't available for Windows.
1777    
1778    
1779 nigel 89 Version 6.6 06-Feb-06
1780     ---------------------
1781    
1782     1. Change 16(a) for 6.5 broke things, because PCRE_DATA_SCOPE was not defined
1783     in pcreposix.h. I have copied the definition from pcre.h.
1784    
1785     2. Change 25 for 6.5 broke compilation in a build directory out-of-tree
1786     because pcre.h is no longer a built file.
1787    
1788     3. Added Jeff Friedl's additional debugging patches to pcregrep. These are
1789     not normally included in the compiled code.
1790    
1791    
1792 nigel 87 Version 6.5 01-Feb-06
1793     ---------------------
1794    
1795     1. When using the partial match feature with pcre_dfa_exec(), it was not
1796     anchoring the second and subsequent partial matches at the new starting
1797     point. This could lead to incorrect results. For example, with the pattern
1798     /1234/, partially matching against "123" and then "a4" gave a match.
1799    
1800     2. Changes to pcregrep:
1801    
1802     (a) All non-match returns from pcre_exec() were being treated as failures
1803     to match the line. Now, unless the error is PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH, an
1804     error message is output. Some extra information is given for the
1805     PCRE_ERROR_MATCHLIMIT and PCRE_ERROR_RECURSIONLIMIT errors, which are
1806     probably the only errors that are likely to be caused by users (by
1807     specifying a regex that has nested indefinite repeats, for instance).
1808     If there are more than 20 of these errors, pcregrep is abandoned.
1809    
1810     (b) A binary zero was treated as data while matching, but terminated the
1811     output line if it was written out. This has been fixed: binary zeroes
1812     are now no different to any other data bytes.
1813    
1814     (c) Whichever of the LC_ALL or LC_CTYPE environment variables is set is
1815     used to set a locale for matching. The --locale=xxxx long option has
1816     been added (no short equivalent) to specify a locale explicitly on the
1817     pcregrep command, overriding the environment variables.
1818    
1819     (d) When -B was used with -n, some line numbers in the output were one less
1820     than they should have been.
1821    
1822     (e) Added the -o (--only-matching) option.
1823    
1824     (f) If -A or -C was used with -c (count only), some lines of context were
1825     accidentally printed for the final match.
1826    
1827     (g) Added the -H (--with-filename) option.
1828    
1829     (h) The combination of options -rh failed to suppress file names for files
1830     that were found from directory arguments.
1831    
1832     (i) Added the -D (--devices) and -d (--directories) options.
1833    
1834     (j) Added the -F (--fixed-strings) option.
1835    
1836     (k) Allow "-" to be used as a file name for -f as well as for a data file.
1837    
1838     (l) Added the --colo(u)r option.
1839    
1840     (m) Added Jeffrey Friedl's -S testing option, but within #ifdefs so that it
1841     is not present by default.
1842    
1843     3. A nasty bug was discovered in the handling of recursive patterns, that is,
1844     items such as (?R) or (?1), when the recursion could match a number of
1845     alternatives. If it matched one of the alternatives, but subsequently,
1846     outside the recursion, there was a failure, the code tried to back up into
1847     the recursion. However, because of the way PCRE is implemented, this is not
1848     possible, and the result was an incorrect result from the match.
1849    
1850     In order to prevent this happening, the specification of recursion has
1851     been changed so that all such subpatterns are automatically treated as
1852     atomic groups. Thus, for example, (?R) is treated as if it were (?>(?R)).
1853    
1854     4. I had overlooked the fact that, in some locales, there are characters for
1855     which isalpha() is true but neither isupper() nor islower() are true. In
1856     the fr_FR locale, for instance, the \xAA and \xBA characters (ordmasculine
1857     and ordfeminine) are like this. This affected the treatment of \w and \W
1858     when they appeared in character classes, but not when they appeared outside
1859     a character class. The bit map for "word" characters is now created
1860     separately from the results of isalnum() instead of just taking it from the
1861     upper, lower, and digit maps. (Plus the underscore character, of course.)
1862    
1863     5. The above bug also affected the handling of POSIX character classes such as
1864     [[:alpha:]] and [[:alnum:]]. These do not have their own bit maps in PCRE's
1865     permanent tables. Instead, the bit maps for such a class were previously
1866     created as the appropriate unions of the upper, lower, and digit bitmaps.
1867     Now they are created by subtraction from the [[:word:]] class, which has
1868     its own bitmap.
1869    
1870     6. The [[:blank:]] character class matches horizontal, but not vertical space.
1871     It is created by subtracting the vertical space characters (\x09, \x0a,
1872     \x0b, \x0c) from the [[:space:]] bitmap. Previously, however, the
1873     subtraction was done in the overall bitmap for a character class, meaning
1874     that a class such as [\x0c[:blank:]] was incorrect because \x0c would not
1875     be recognized. This bug has been fixed.
1876    
1877     7. Patches from the folks at Google:
1878    
1879     (a) pcrecpp.cc: "to handle a corner case that may or may not happen in
1880     real life, but is still worth protecting against".
1881    
1882     (b) pcrecpp.cc: "corrects a bug when negative radixes are used with
1883     regular expressions".
1884    
1885     (c) pcre_scanner.cc: avoid use of std::count() because not all systems
1886     have it.
1887    
1888     (d) Split off pcrecpparg.h from pcrecpp.h and had the former built by
1889     "configure" and the latter not, in order to fix a problem somebody had
1890     with compiling the Arg class on HP-UX.
1891    
1892     (e) Improve the error-handling of the C++ wrapper a little bit.
1893    
1894     (f) New tests for checking recursion limiting.
1895    
1896     8. The pcre_memmove() function, which is used only if the environment does not
1897     have a standard memmove() function (and is therefore rarely compiled),
1898     contained two bugs: (a) use of int instead of size_t, and (b) it was not
1899     returning a result (though PCRE never actually uses the result).
1900    
1901     9. In the POSIX regexec() interface, if nmatch is specified as a ridiculously
1902     large number - greater than INT_MAX/(3*sizeof(int)) - REG_ESPACE is
1903     returned instead of calling malloc() with an overflowing number that would
1904     most likely cause subsequent chaos.
1905    
1906     10. The debugging option of pcretest was not showing the NO_AUTO_CAPTURE flag.
1907    
1908     11. The POSIX flag REG_NOSUB is now supported. When a pattern that was compiled
1909     with this option is matched, the nmatch and pmatch options of regexec() are
1910     ignored.
1911    
1912     12. Added REG_UTF8 to the POSIX interface. This is not defined by POSIX, but is
1913     provided in case anyone wants to the the POSIX interface with UTF-8
1914     strings.
1915    
1916     13. Added CXXLDFLAGS to the Makefile parameters to provide settings only on the
1917     C++ linking (needed for some HP-UX environments).
1918    
1919     14. Avoid compiler warnings in get_ucpname() when compiled without UCP support
1920     (unused parameter) and in the pcre_printint() function (omitted "default"
1921     switch label when the default is to do nothing).
1922    
1923     15. Added some code to make it possible, when PCRE is compiled as a C++
1924     library, to replace subject pointers for pcre_exec() with a smart pointer
1925     class, thus making it possible to process discontinuous strings.
1926    
1927     16. The two macros PCRE_EXPORT and PCRE_DATA_SCOPE are confusing, and perform
1928     much the same function. They were added by different people who were trying
1929     to make PCRE easy to compile on non-Unix systems. It has been suggested
1930     that PCRE_EXPORT be abolished now that there is more automatic apparatus
1931     for compiling on Windows systems. I have therefore replaced it with
1932     PCRE_DATA_SCOPE. This is set automatically for Windows; if not set it
1933     defaults to "extern" for C or "extern C" for C++, which works fine on
1934     Unix-like systems. It is now possible to override the value of PCRE_DATA_
1935     SCOPE with something explicit in config.h. In addition:
1936    
1937     (a) pcreposix.h still had just "extern" instead of either of these macros;
1938     I have replaced it with PCRE_DATA_SCOPE.
1939    
1940     (b) Functions such as _pcre_xclass(), which are internal to the library,
1941     but external in the C sense, all had PCRE_EXPORT in their definitions.
1942     This is apparently wrong for the Windows case, so I have removed it.
1943     (It makes no difference on Unix-like systems.)
1944    
1945     17. Added a new limit, MATCH_LIMIT_RECURSION, which limits the depth of nesting
1946     of recursive calls to match(). This is different to MATCH_LIMIT because
1947     that limits the total number of calls to match(), not all of which increase
1948     the depth of recursion. Limiting the recursion depth limits the amount of
1949     stack (or heap if NO_RECURSE is set) that is used. The default can be set
1950     when PCRE is compiled, and changed at run time. A patch from Google adds
1951     this functionality to the C++ interface.
1952    
1953     18. Changes to the handling of Unicode character properties:
1954    
1955     (a) Updated the table to Unicode 4.1.0.
1956    
1957     (b) Recognize characters that are not in the table as "Cn" (undefined).
1958    
1959     (c) I revised the way the table is implemented to a much improved format
1960     which includes recognition of ranges. It now supports the ranges that
1961     are defined in UnicodeData.txt, and it also amalgamates other
1962     characters into ranges. This has reduced the number of entries in the
1963     table from around 16,000 to around 3,000, thus reducing its size
1964     considerably. I realized I did not need to use a tree structure after
1965     all - a binary chop search is just as efficient. Having reduced the
1966     number of entries, I extended their size from 6 bytes to 8 bytes to
1967     allow for more data.
1968    
1969     (d) Added support for Unicode script names via properties such as \p{Han}.
1970    
1971     19. In UTF-8 mode, a backslash followed by a non-Ascii character was not
1972     matching that character.
1973    
1974     20. When matching a repeated Unicode property with a minimum greater than zero,
1975     (for example \pL{2,}), PCRE could look past the end of the subject if it
1976     reached it while seeking the minimum number of characters. This could
1977     happen only if some of the characters were more than one byte long, because
1978     there is a check for at least the minimum number of bytes.
1979    
1980     21. Refactored the implementation of \p and \P so as to be more general, to
1981     allow for more different types of property in future. This has changed the
1982     compiled form incompatibly. Anybody with saved compiled patterns that use
1983     \p or \P will have to recompile them.
1984    
1985     22. Added "Any" and "L&" to the supported property types.
1986    
1987     23. Recognize \x{...} as a code point specifier, even when not in UTF-8 mode,
1988     but give a compile time error if the value is greater than 0xff.
1989    
1990     24. The man pages for pcrepartial, pcreprecompile, and pcre_compile2 were
1991     accidentally not being installed or uninstalled.
1992    
1993     25. The pcre.h file was built from pcre.h.in, but the only changes that were
1994     made were to insert the current release number. This seemed silly, because
1995     it made things harder for people building PCRE on systems that don't run
1996     "configure". I have turned pcre.h into a distributed file, no longer built
1997     by "configure", with the version identification directly included. There is
1998     no longer a pcre.h.in file.
1999    
2000     However, this change necessitated a change to the pcre-config script as
2001     well. It is built from pcre-config.in, and one of the substitutions was the
2002     release number. I have updated configure.ac so that ./configure now finds
2003     the release number by grepping pcre.h.
2004    
2005     26. Added the ability to run the tests under valgrind.
2006    
2007    
2008 nigel 85 Version 6.4 05-Sep-05
2009     ---------------------
2010    
2011     1. Change 6.0/10/(l) to pcregrep introduced a bug that caused separator lines
2012     "--" to be printed when multiple files were scanned, even when none of the
2013     -A, -B, or -C options were used. This is not compatible with Gnu grep, so I
2014     consider it to be a bug, and have restored the previous behaviour.
2015    
2016     2. A couple of code tidies to get rid of compiler warnings.
2017    
2018     3. The pcretest program used to cheat by referring to symbols in the library
2019     whose names begin with _pcre_. These are internal symbols that are not
2020     really supposed to be visible externally, and in some environments it is
2021     possible to suppress them. The cheating is now confined to including
2022     certain files from the library's source, which is a bit cleaner.
2023    
2024     4. Renamed pcre.in as pcre.h.in to go with pcrecpp.h.in; it also makes the
2025     file's purpose clearer.
2026    
2027     5. Reorganized pcre_ucp_findchar().
2028    
2029    
2030 nigel 83 Version 6.3 15-Aug-05
2031     ---------------------
2032    
2033     1. The file libpcre.pc.in did not have general read permission in the tarball.
2034    
2035     2. There were some problems when building without C++ support:
2036    
2037     (a) If C++ support was not built, "make install" and "make test" still
2038     tried to test it.
2039    
2040     (b) There were problems when the value of CXX was explicitly set. Some
2041     changes have been made to try to fix these, and ...
2042    
2043     (c) --disable-cpp can now be used to explicitly disable C++ support.
2044    
2045     (d) The use of @CPP_OBJ@ directly caused a blank line preceded by a
2046     backslash in a target when C++ was disabled. This confuses some
2047     versions of "make", apparently. Using an intermediate variable solves
2048     this. (Same for CPP_LOBJ.)
2049    
2050     3. $(LINK_FOR_BUILD) now includes $(CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD) and $(LINK)
2051     (non-Windows) now includes $(CFLAGS) because these flags are sometimes
2052     necessary on certain architectures.
2053    
2054     4. Added a setting of -export-symbols-regex to the link command to remove
2055     those symbols that are exported in the C sense, but actually are local
2056     within the library, and not documented. Their names all begin with
2057     "_pcre_". This is not a perfect job, because (a) we have to except some
2058     symbols that pcretest ("illegally") uses, and (b) the facility isn't always
2059     available (and never for static libraries). I have made a note to try to
2060     find a way round (a) in the future.
2061    
2062    
2063 nigel 81 Version 6.2 01-Aug-05
2064     ---------------------
2065    
2066     1. There was no test for integer overflow of quantifier values. A construction
2067     such as {1111111111111111} would give undefined results. What is worse, if
2068     a minimum quantifier for a parenthesized subpattern overflowed and became
2069     negative, the calculation of the memory size went wrong. This could have
2070     led to memory overwriting.
2071    
2072     2. Building PCRE using VPATH was broken. Hopefully it is now fixed.
2073    
2074     3. Added "b" to the 2nd argument of fopen() in dftables.c, for non-Unix-like
2075     operating environments where this matters.
2076    
2077     4. Applied Giuseppe Maxia's patch to add additional features for controlling
2078     PCRE options from within the C++ wrapper.
2079    
2080     5. Named capturing subpatterns were not being correctly counted when a pattern
2081     was compiled. This caused two problems: (a) If there were more than 100
2082     such subpatterns, the calculation of the memory needed for the whole
2083     compiled pattern went wrong, leading to an overflow error. (b) Numerical
2084     back references of the form \12, where the number was greater than 9, were
2085     not recognized as back references, even though there were sufficient
2086     previous subpatterns.
2087    
2088     6. Two minor patches to pcrecpp.cc in order to allow it to compile on older
2089     versions of gcc, e.g. 2.95.4.
2090    
2091    
2092 nigel 79 Version 6.1 21-Jun-05
2093     ---------------------
2094    
2095     1. There was one reference to the variable "posix" in pcretest.c that was not
2096     surrounded by "#if !defined NOPOSIX".
2097    
2098     2. Make it possible to compile pcretest without DFA support, UTF8 support, or
2099     the cross-check on the old pcre_info() function, for the benefit of the
2100     cut-down version of PCRE that is currently imported into Exim.
2101    
2102     3. A (silly) pattern starting with (?i)(?-i) caused an internal space
2103     allocation error. I've done the easy fix, which wastes 2 bytes for sensible
2104     patterns that start (?i) but I don't think that matters. The use of (?i) is
2105     just an example; this all applies to the other options as well.
2106    
2107     4. Since libtool seems to echo the compile commands it is issuing, the output
2108     from "make" can be reduced a bit by putting "@" in front of each libtool
2109     compile command.
2110    
2111     5. Patch from the folks at Google for configure.in to be a bit more thorough
2112     in checking for a suitable C++ installation before trying to compile the
2113     C++ stuff. This should fix a reported problem when a compiler was present,
2114     but no suitable headers.
2115    
2116     6. The man pages all had just "PCRE" as their title. I have changed them to
2117     be the relevant file name. I have also arranged that these names are
2118     retained in the file doc/pcre.txt, which is a concatenation in text format
2119     of all the man pages except the little individual ones for each function.
2120    
2121     7. The NON-UNIX-USE file had not been updated for the different set of source
2122     files that come with release 6. I also added a few comments about the C++
2123     wrapper.
2124    
2125    
2126 nigel 77 Version 6.0 07-Jun-05
2127     ---------------------
2128    
2129     1. Some minor internal re-organization to help with my DFA experiments.
2130    
2131     2. Some missing #ifdef SUPPORT_UCP conditionals in pcretest and printint that
2132     didn't matter for the library itself when fully configured, but did matter
2133     when compiling without UCP support, or within Exim, where the ucp files are
2134     not imported.
2135    
2136     3. Refactoring of the library code to split up the various functions into
2137     different source modules. The addition of the new DFA matching code (see
2138     below) to a single monolithic source would have made it really too
2139     unwieldy, quite apart from causing all the code to be include in a
2140     statically linked application, when only some functions are used. This is
2141     relevant even without the DFA addition now that patterns can be compiled in
2142     one application and matched in another.
2143    
2144     The downside of splitting up is that there have to be some external
2145     functions and data tables that are used internally in different modules of
2146     the library but which are not part of the API. These have all had their
2147     names changed to start with "_pcre_" so that they are unlikely to clash
2148     with other external names.
2149    
2150     4. Added an alternate matching function, pcre_dfa_exec(), which matches using
2151     a different (DFA) algorithm. Although it is slower than the original
2152     function, it does have some advantages for certain types of matching
2153     problem.
2154    
2155     5. Upgrades to pcretest in order to test the features of pcre_dfa_exec(),
2156     including restarting after a partial match.
2157    
2158     6. A patch for pcregrep that defines INVALID_FILE_ATTRIBUTES if it is not
2159     defined when compiling for Windows was sent to me. I have put it into the
2160     code, though I have no means of testing or verifying it.
2161    
2162     7. Added the pcre_refcount() auxiliary function.
2163    
2164     8. Added the PCRE_FIRSTLINE option. This constrains an unanchored pattern to
2165     match before or at the first newline in the subject string. In pcretest,
2166     the /f option on a pattern can be used to set this.
2167    
2168     9. A repeated \w when used in UTF-8 mode with characters greater than 256
2169     would behave wrongly. This has been present in PCRE since release 4.0.
2170    
2171     10. A number of changes to the pcregrep command:
2172    
2173     (a) Refactored how -x works; insert ^(...)$ instead of setting
2174     PCRE_ANCHORED and checking the length, in preparation for adding
2175     something similar for -w.
2176    
2177     (b) Added the -w (match as a word) option.
2178    
2179     (c) Refactored the way lines are read and buffered so as to have more
2180     than one at a time available.
2181    
2182     (d) Implemented a pcregrep test script.
2183    
2184     (e) Added the -M (multiline match) option. This allows patterns to match
2185     over several lines of the subject. The buffering ensures that at least
2186     8K, or the rest of the document (whichever is the shorter) is available
2187     for matching (and similarly the previous 8K for lookbehind assertions).
2188    
2189     (f) Changed the --help output so that it now says
2190    
2191     -w, --word-regex(p)
2192    
2193     instead of two lines, one with "regex" and the other with "regexp"
2194     because that confused at least one person since the short forms are the
2195     same. (This required a bit of code, as the output is generated
2196     automatically from a table. It wasn't just a text change.)
2197    
2198     (g) -- can be used to terminate pcregrep options if the next thing isn't an
2199     option but starts with a hyphen. Could be a pattern or a path name
2200     starting with a hyphen, for instance.
2201    
2202     (h) "-" can be given as a file name to represent stdin.
2203    
2204     (i) When file names are being printed, "(standard input)" is used for
2205     the standard input, for compatibility with GNU grep. Previously
2206     "<stdin>" was used.
2207    
2208     (j) The option --label=xxx can be used to supply a name to be used for
2209     stdin when file names are being printed. There is no short form.
2210    
2211     (k) Re-factored the options decoding logic because we are going to add
2212     two more options that take data. Such options can now be given in four
2213     different ways, e.g. "-fname", "-f name", "--file=name", "--file name".
2214    
2215     (l) Added the -A, -B, and -C options for requesting that lines of context
2216     around matches be printed.
2217    
2218     (m) Added the -L option to print the names of files that do not contain
2219     any matching lines, that is, the complement of -l.
2220    
2221     (n) The return code is 2 if any file cannot be opened, but pcregrep does
2222     continue to scan other files.
2223    
2224     (o) The -s option was incorrectly implemented. For compatibility with other
2225     greps, it now suppresses the error message for a non-existent or non-
2226     accessible file (but not the return code). There is a new option called
2227     -q that suppresses the output of matching lines, which was what -s was
2228     previously doing.
2229    
2230     (p) Added --include and --exclude options to specify files for inclusion
2231     and exclusion when recursing.
2232    
2233     11. The Makefile was not using the Autoconf-supported LDFLAGS macro properly.
2234     Hopefully, it now does.
2235    
2236     12. Missing cast in pcre_study().
2237    
2238     13. Added an "uninstall" target to the makefile.
2239    
2240     14. Replaced "extern" in the function prototypes in Makefile.in with
2241     "PCRE_DATA_SCOPE", which defaults to 'extern' or 'extern "C"' in the Unix
2242     world, but is set differently for Windows.
2243    
2244     15. Added a second compiling function called pcre_compile2(). The only
2245     difference is that it has an extra argument, which is a pointer to an
2246     integer error code. When there is a compile-time failure, this is set
2247     non-zero, in addition to the error test pointer being set to point to an
2248     error message. The new argument may be NULL if no error number is required
2249     (but then you may as well call pcre_compile(), which is now just a
2250     wrapper). This facility is provided because some applications need a
2251     numeric error indication, but it has also enabled me to tidy up the way
2252     compile-time errors are handled in the POSIX wrapper.
2253    
2254     16. Added VPATH=.libs to the makefile; this should help when building with one
2255     prefix path and installing with another. (Or so I'm told by someone who
2256     knows more about this stuff than I do.)
2257    
2258     17. Added a new option, REG_DOTALL, to the POSIX function regcomp(). This
2259     passes PCRE_DOTALL to the pcre_compile() function, making the "." character
2260     match everything, including newlines. This is not POSIX-compatible, but
2261     somebody wanted the feature. From pcretest it can be activated by using
2262     both the P and the s flags.
2263    
2264     18. AC_PROG_LIBTOOL appeared twice in Makefile.in. Removed one.
2265    
2266     19. libpcre.pc was being incorrectly installed as executable.
2267    
2268     20. A couple of places in pcretest check for end-of-line by looking for '\n';
2269     it now also looks for '\r' so that it will work unmodified on Windows.
2270    
2271     21. Added Google's contributed C++ wrapper to the distribution.
2272    
2273     22. Added some untidy missing memory free() calls in pcretest, to keep
2274     Electric Fence happy when testing.
2275    
2276    
2277    
2278 nigel 75 Version 5.0 13-Sep-04
2279     ---------------------
2280    
2281     1. Internal change: literal characters are no longer packed up into items
2282     containing multiple characters in a single byte-string. Each character
2283     is now matched using a separate opcode. However, there may be more than one
2284     byte in the character in UTF-8 mode.
2285    
2286     2. The pcre_callout_block structure has two new fields: pattern_position and
2287     next_item_length. These contain the offset in the pattern to the next match
2288     item, and its length, respectively.
2289    
2290     3. The PCRE_AUTO_CALLOUT option for pcre_compile() requests the automatic
2291     insertion of callouts before each pattern item. Added the /C option to
2292     pcretest to make use of this.
2293    
2294     4. On the advice of a Windows user, the lines
2295    
2296     #if defined(_WIN32) || defined(WIN32)
2297     _setmode( _fileno( stdout ), 0x8000 );
2298     #endif /* defined(_WIN32) || defined(WIN32) */
2299    
2300     have been added to the source of pcretest. This apparently does useful
2301     magic in relation to line terminators.
2302    
2303     5. Changed "r" and "w" in the calls to fopen() in pcretest to "rb" and "wb"
2304     for the benefit of those environments where the "b" makes a difference.
2305    
2306     6. The icc compiler has the same options as gcc, but "configure" doesn't seem
2307     to know about it. I have put a hack into configure.in that adds in code
2308     to set GCC=yes if CC=icc. This seems to end up at a point in the
2309     generated configure script that is early enough to affect the setting of
2310     compiler options, which is what is needed, but I have no means of testing
2311     whether it really works. (The user who reported this had patched the
2312     generated configure script, which of course I cannot do.)
2313    
2314     LATER: After change 22 below (new libtool files), the configure script
2315     seems to know about icc (and also ecc). Therefore, I have commented out
2316     this hack in configure.in.
2317    
2318     7. Added support for pkg-config (2 patches were sent in).
2319    
2320     8. Negated POSIX character classes that used a combination of internal tables
2321     were completely broken. These were [[:^alpha:]], [[:^alnum:]], and
2322     [[:^ascii]]. Typically, they would match almost any characters. The other
2323     POSIX classes were not broken in this way.
2324    
2325     9. Matching the pattern "\b.*?" against "ab cd", starting at offset 1, failed
2326     to find the match, as PCRE was deluded into thinking that the match had to
2327     start at the start point or following a newline. The same bug applied to
2328     patterns with negative forward assertions or any backward assertions
2329     preceding ".*" at the start, unless the pattern required a fixed first
2330     character. This was a failing pattern: "(?!.bcd).*". The bug is now fixed.
2331    
2332     10. In UTF-8 mode, when moving forwards in the subject after a failed match
2333     starting at the last subject character, bytes beyond the end of the subject
2334     string were read.
2335    
2336     11. Renamed the variable "class" as "classbits" to make life easier for C++
2337     users. (Previously there was a macro definition, but it apparently wasn't
2338     enough.)
2339    
2340     12. Added the new field "tables" to the extra data so that tables can be passed
2341     in at exec time, or the internal tables can be re-selected. This allows
2342     a compiled regex to be saved and re-used at a later time by a different
2343     program that might have everything at different addresses.
2344    
2345     13. Modified the pcre-config script so that, when run on Solaris, it shows a
2346     -R library as well as a -L library.
2347    
2348     14. The debugging options of pcretest (-d on the command line or D on a
2349     pattern) showed incorrect output for anything following an extended class
2350     that contained multibyte characters and which was followed by a quantifier.
2351    
2352     15. Added optional support for general category Unicode character properties
2353     via the \p, \P, and \X escapes. Unicode property support implies UTF-8
2354     support. It adds about 90K to the size of the library. The meanings of the
2355     inbuilt class escapes such as \d and \s have NOT been changed.
2356    
2357     16. Updated pcredemo.c to include calls to free() to release the memory for the
2358     compiled pattern.
2359    
2360     17. The generated file chartables.c was being created in the source directory
2361     instead of in the building directory. This caused the build to fail if the
2362     source directory was different from the building directory, and was
2363     read-only.
2364    
2365     18. Added some sample Win commands from Mark Tetrode into the NON-UNIX-USE
2366     file. No doubt somebody will tell me if they don't make sense... Also added
2367     Dan Mooney's comments about building on OpenVMS.
2368    
2369     19. Added support for partial matching via the PCRE_PARTIAL option for
2370     pcre_exec() and the \P data escape in pcretest.
2371    
2372     20. Extended pcretest with 3 new pattern features:
2373    
2374     (i) A pattern option of the form ">rest-of-line" causes pcretest to
2375     write the compiled pattern to the file whose name is "rest-of-line".
2376     This is a straight binary dump of the data, with the saved pointer to
2377     the character tables forced to be NULL. The study data, if any, is
2378     written too. After writing, pcretest reads a new pattern.
2379    
2380     (ii) If, instead of a pattern, "<rest-of-line" is given, pcretest reads a
2381     compiled pattern from the given file. There must not be any
2382     occurrences of "<" in the file name (pretty unlikely); if there are,
2383     pcretest will instead treat the initial "<" as a pattern delimiter.
2384     After reading in the pattern, pcretest goes on to read data lines as
2385     usual.
2386    
2387     (iii) The F pattern option causes pcretest to flip the bytes in the 32-bit
2388     and 16-bit fields in a compiled pattern, to simulate a pattern that
2389     was compiled on a host of opposite endianness.
2390    
2391     21. The pcre-exec() function can now cope with patterns that were compiled on
2392     hosts of opposite endianness, with this restriction:
2393    
2394     As for any compiled expression that is saved and used later, the tables
2395     pointer field cannot be preserved; the extra_data field in the arguments
2396     to pcre_exec() should be used to pass in a tables address if a value
2397     other than the default internal tables were used at compile time.
2398    
2399     22. Calling pcre_exec() with a negative value of the "ovecsize" parameter is
2400     now diagnosed as an error. Previously, most of the time, a negative number
2401     would have been treated as zero, but if in addition "ovector" was passed as
2402     NULL, a crash could occur.
2403    
2404     23. Updated the files ltmain.sh, config.sub, config.guess, and aclocal.m4 with
2405     new versions from the libtool 1.5 distribution (the last one is a copy of
2406     a file called libtool.m4). This seems to have fixed the need to patch
2407     "configure" to support Darwin 1.3 (which I used to do). However, I still
2408     had to patch ltmain.sh to ensure that ${SED} is set (it isn't on my
2409     workstation).
2410    
2411     24. Changed the PCRE licence to be the more standard "BSD" licence.
2412    
2413    
2414 nigel 73 Version 4.5 01-Dec-03
2415     ---------------------
2416    
2417     1. There has been some re-arrangement of the code for the match() function so
2418     that it can be compiled in a version that does not call itself recursively.
2419     Instead, it keeps those local variables that need separate instances for
2420     each "recursion" in a frame on the heap, and gets/frees frames whenever it
2421     needs to "recurse". Keeping track of where control must go is done by means
2422     of setjmp/longjmp. The whole thing is implemented by a set of macros that
2423     hide most of the details from the main code, and operates only if
2424     NO_RECURSE is defined while compiling pcre.c. If PCRE is built using the
2425     "configure" mechanism, "--disable-stack-for-recursion" turns on this way of
2426     operating.
2427    
2428     To make it easier for callers to provide specially tailored get/free
2429     functions for this usage, two new functions, pcre_stack_malloc, and
2430     pcre_stack_free, are used. They are always called in strict stacking order,
2431     and the size of block requested is always the same.
2432    
2433     The PCRE_CONFIG_STACKRECURSE info parameter can be used to find out whether
2434     PCRE has been compiled to use the stack or the heap for recursion. The
2435     -C option of pcretest uses this to show which version is compiled.
2436    
2437     A new data escape \S, is added to pcretest; it causes the amounts of store
2438     obtained and freed by both kinds of malloc/free at match time to be added
2439     to the output.
2440    
2441     2. Changed the locale test to use "fr_FR" instead of "fr" because that's
2442     what's available on my current Linux desktop machine.
2443    
2444     3. When matching a UTF-8 string, the test for a valid string at the start has
2445     been extended. If start_offset is not zero, PCRE now checks that it points
2446     to a byte that is the start of a UTF-8 character. If not, it returns
2447     PCRE_ERROR_BADUTF8_OFFSET (-11). Note: the whole string is still checked;
2448     this is necessary because there may be backward assertions in the pattern.
2449     When matching the same subject several times, it may save resources to use
2450     PCRE_NO_UTF8_CHECK on all but the first call if the string is long.
2451    
2452     4. The code for checking the validity of UTF-8 strings has been tightened so
2453     that it rejects (a) strings containing 0xfe or 0xff bytes and (b) strings
2454     containing "overlong sequences".
2455    
2456     5. Fixed a bug (appearing twice) that I could not find any way of exploiting!
2457     I had written "if ((digitab[*p++] && chtab_digit) == 0)" where the "&&"
2458     should have been "&", but it just so happened that all the cases this let
2459     through by mistake were picked up later in the function.
2460    
2461     6. I had used a variable called "isblank" - this is a C99 function, causing
2462     some compilers to warn. To avoid this, I renamed it (as "blankclass").
2463    
2464     7. Cosmetic: (a) only output another newline at the end of pcretest if it is
2465     prompting; (b) run "./pcretest /dev/null" at the start of the test script
2466     so the version is shown; (c) stop "make test" echoing "./RunTest".
2467    
2468     8. Added patches from David Burgess to enable PCRE to run on EBCDIC systems.
2469    
2470     9. The prototype for memmove() for systems that don't have it was using
2471     size_t, but the inclusion of the header that defines size_t was later. I've
2472     moved the #includes for the C headers earlier to avoid this.
2473    
2474     10. Added some adjustments to the code to make it easier to compiler on certain
2475     special systems:
2476    
2477     (a) Some "const" qualifiers were missing.
2478     (b) Added the macro EXPORT before all exported functions; by default this
2479     is defined to be empty.
2480     (c) Changed the dftables auxiliary program (that builds chartables.c) so
2481     that it reads its output file name as an argument instead of writing
2482     to the standard output and assuming this can be redirected.
2483    
2484     11. In UTF-8 mode, if a recursive reference (e.g. (?1)) followed a character
2485     class containing characters with values greater than 255, PCRE compilation
2486     went into a loop.
2487    
2488     12. A recursive reference to a subpattern that was within another subpattern
2489     that had a minimum quantifier of zero caused PCRE to crash. For example,
2490     (x(y(?2))z)? provoked this bug with a subject that got as far as the
2491     recursion. If the recursively-called subpattern itself had a zero repeat,
2492     that was OK.
2493    
2494     13. In pcretest, the buffer for reading a data line was set at 30K, but the
2495     buffer into which it was copied (for escape processing) was still set at
2496     1024, so long lines caused crashes.
2497    
2498     14. A pattern such as /[ab]{1,3}+/ failed to compile, giving the error
2499     "internal error: code overflow...". This applied to any character class
2500     that was followed by a possessive quantifier.
2501    
2502     15. Modified the Makefile to add libpcre.la as a prerequisite for
2503     libpcreposix.la because I was told this is needed for a parallel build to
2504     work.
2505    
2506     16. If a pattern that contained .* following optional items at the start was
2507     studied, the wrong optimizing data was generated, leading to matching
2508     errors. For example, studying /[ab]*.*c/ concluded, erroneously, that any
2509     matching string must start with a or b or c. The correct conclusion for
2510     this pattern is that a match can start with any character.
2511    
2512    
2513 nigel 71 Version 4.4 13-Aug-03
2514     ---------------------
2515    
2516     1. In UTF-8 mode, a character class containing characters with values between
2517     127 and 255 was not handled correctly if the compiled pattern was studied.
2518     In fixing this, I have also improved the studying algorithm for such
2519     classes (slightly).
2520    
2521     2. Three internal functions had redundant arguments passed to them. Removal
2522     might give a very teeny performance improvement.
2523    
2524     3. Documentation bug: the value of the capture_top field in a callout is *one
2525     more than* the number of the hightest numbered captured substring.
2526    
2527     4. The Makefile linked pcretest and pcregrep with -lpcre, which could result
2528     in incorrectly linking with a previously installed version. They now link
2529     explicitly with libpcre.la.
2530    
2531     5. configure.in no longer needs to recognize Cygwin specially.
2532    
2533     6. A problem in pcre.in for Windows platforms is fixed.
2534    
2535     7. If a pattern was successfully studied, and the -d (or /D) flag was given to
2536     pcretest, it used to include the size of the study block as part of its
2537     output. Unfortunately, the structure contains a field that has a different
2538     size on different hardware architectures. This meant that the tests that
2539     showed this size failed. As the block is currently always of a fixed size,
2540     this information isn't actually particularly useful in pcretest output, so
2541     I have just removed it.
2542    
2543     8. Three pre-processor statements accidentally did not start in column 1.
2544     Sadly, there are *still* compilers around that complain, even though
2545     standard C has not required this for well over a decade. Sigh.
2546    
2547     9. In pcretest, the code for checking callouts passed small integers in the
2548     callout_data field, which is a void * field. However, some picky compilers
2549     complained about the casts involved for this on 64-bit systems. Now
2550     pcretest passes the address of the small integer instead, which should get
2551     rid of the warnings.
2552    
2553     10. By default, when in UTF-8 mode, PCRE now checks for valid UTF-8 strings at
2554     both compile and run time, and gives an error if an invalid UTF-8 sequence
2555     is found. There is a option for disabling this check in cases where the
2556     string is known to be correct and/or the maximum performance is wanted.
2557    
2558     11. In response to a bug report, I changed one line in Makefile.in from
2559    
2560     -Wl,--out-implib,.libs/lib@WIN_PREFIX@pcreposix.dll.a \
2561     to
2562     -Wl,--out-implib,.libs/@WIN_PREFIX@libpcreposix.dll.a \
2563    
2564     to look similar to other lines, but I have no way of telling whether this
2565     is the right thing to do, as I do not use Windows. No doubt I'll get told
2566     if it's wrong...
2567    
2568    
2569 nigel 69 Version 4.3 21-May-03
2570     ---------------------
2571    
2572     1. Two instances of @WIN_PREFIX@ omitted from the Windows targets in the
2573     Makefile.
2574    
2575     2. Some refactoring to improve the quality of the code:
2576    
2577     (i) The utf8_table... variables are now declared "const".
2578    
2579     (ii) The code for \cx, which used the "case flipping" table to upper case
2580     lower case letters, now just substracts 32. This is ASCII-specific,
2581     but the whole concept of \cx is ASCII-specific, so it seems
2582     reasonable.
2583    
2584     (iii) PCRE was using its character types table to recognize decimal and
2585     hexadecimal digits in the pattern. This is silly, because it handles
2586     only 0-9, a-f, and A-F, but the character types table is locale-
2587     specific, which means strange things might happen. A private
2588     table is now used for this - though it costs 256 bytes, a table is
2589     much faster than multiple explicit tests. Of course, the standard
2590     character types table is still used for matching digits in subject
2591     strings against \d.
2592    
2593     (iv) Strictly, the identifier ESC_t is reserved by POSIX (all identifiers
2594     ending in _t are). So I've renamed it as ESC_tee.
2595    
2596     3. The first argument for regexec() in the POSIX wrapper should have been
2597     defined as "const".
2598    
2599     4. Changed pcretest to use malloc() for its buffers so that they can be
2600     Electric Fenced for debugging.
2601    
2602     5. There were several places in the code where, in UTF-8 mode, PCRE would try
2603     to read one or more bytes before the start of the subject string. Often this
2604     had no effect on PCRE's behaviour, but in some circumstances it could
2605     provoke a segmentation fault.
2606    
2607     6. A lookbehind at the start of a pattern in UTF-8 mode could also cause PCRE
2608     to try to read one or more bytes before the start of the subject string.
2609    
2610     7. A lookbehind in a pattern matched in non-UTF-8 mode on a PCRE compiled with
2611     UTF-8 support could misbehave in various ways if the subject string
2612     contained bytes with the 0x80 bit set and the 0x40 bit unset in a lookbehind
2613     area. (PCRE was not checking for the UTF-8 mode flag, and trying to move
2614     back over UTF-8 characters.)
2615    
2616    
2617 nigel 67 Version 4.2 14-Apr-03
2618     ---------------------
2619    
2620     1. Typo "#if SUPPORT_UTF8" instead of "#ifdef SUPPORT_UTF8" fixed.
2621    
2622     2. Changes to the building process, supplied by Ronald Landheer-Cieslak
2623     [ON_WINDOWS]: new variable, "#" on non-Windows platforms
2624     [NOT_ON_WINDOWS]: new variable, "#" on Windows platforms
2625     [WIN_PREFIX]: new variable, "cyg" for Cygwin
2626     * Makefile.in: use autoconf substitution for OBJEXT, EXEEXT, BUILD_OBJEXT
2627     and BUILD_EXEEXT
2628     Note: automatic setting of the BUILD variables is not yet working
2629     set CPPFLAGS and BUILD_CPPFLAGS (but don't use yet) - should be used at
2630     compile-time but not at link-time
2631     [LINK]: use for linking executables only
2632     make different versions for Windows and non-Windows
2633     [LINKLIB]: new variable, copy of UNIX-style LINK, used for linking
2634     libraries
2635     [LINK_FOR_BUILD]: new variable
2636     [OBJEXT]: use throughout
2637     [EXEEXT]: use throughout
2638     <winshared>: new target
2639     <wininstall>: new target
2640     <dftables.o>: use native compiler
2641     <dftables>: use native linker
2642     <install>: handle Windows platform correctly
2643     <clean>: ditto
2644     <check>: ditto
2645     copy DLL to top builddir before testing
2646    
2647     As part of these changes, -no-undefined was removed again. This was reported
2648     to give trouble on HP-UX 11.0, so getting rid of it seems like a good idea
2649     in any case.
2650    
2651     3. Some tidies to get rid of compiler warnings:
2652    
2653     . In the match_data structure, match_limit was an unsigned long int, whereas
2654     match_call_count was an int. I've made them both unsigned long ints.
2655    
2656     . In pcretest the fact that a const uschar * doesn't automatically cast to
2657     a void * provoked a warning.
2658    
2659     . Turning on some more compiler warnings threw up some "shadow" variables
2660     and a few more missing casts.
2661    
2662     4. If PCRE was complied with UTF-8 support, but called without the PCRE_UTF8
2663     option, a class that contained a single character with a value between 128
2664     and 255 (e.g. /[\xFF]/) caused PCRE to crash.
2665    
2666     5. If PCRE was compiled with UTF-8 support, but called without the PCRE_UTF8
2667     option, a class that contained several characters, but with at least one
2668     whose value was between 128 and 255 caused PCRE to crash.
2669    
2670    
2671 nigel 65 Version 4.1 12-Mar-03
2672     ---------------------
2673 nigel 63
2674 nigel 65 1. Compiling with gcc -pedantic found a couple of places where casts were
2675     needed, and a string in dftables.c that was longer than standard compilers are
2676     required to support.
2677    
2678     2. Compiling with Sun's compiler found a few more places where the code could
2679     be tidied up in order to avoid warnings.
2680    
2681     3. The variables for cross-compiling were called HOST_CC and HOST_CFLAGS; the
2682     first of these names is deprecated in the latest Autoconf in favour of the name
2683     CC_FOR_BUILD, because "host" is typically used to mean the system on which the
2684     compiled code will be run. I can't find a reference for HOST_CFLAGS, but by
2685     analogy I have changed it to CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD.
2686    
2687     4. Added -no-undefined to the linking command in the Makefile, because this is
2688     apparently helpful for Windows. To make it work, also added "-L. -lpcre" to the
2689     linking step for the pcreposix library.
2690    
2691     5. PCRE was failing to diagnose the case of two named groups with the same
2692     name.
2693    
2694     6. A problem with one of PCRE's optimizations was discovered. PCRE remembers a
2695     literal character that is needed in the subject for a match, and scans along to
2696     ensure that it is present before embarking on the full matching process. This
2697     saves time in cases of nested unlimited repeats that are never going to match.
2698     Problem: the scan can take a lot of time if the subject is very long (e.g.
2699     megabytes), thus penalizing straightforward matches. It is now done only if the
2700     amount of subject to be scanned is less than 1000 bytes.
2701    
2702     7. A lesser problem with the same optimization is that it was recording the
2703     first character of an anchored pattern as "needed", thus provoking a search
2704     right along the subject, even when the first match of the pattern was going to
2705     fail. The "needed" character is now not set for anchored patterns, unless it
2706     follows something in the pattern that is of non-fixed length. Thus, it still
2707     fulfils its original purpose of finding quick non-matches in cases of nested
2708     unlimited repeats, but isn't used for simple anchored patterns such as /^abc/.
2709    
2710    
2711     Version 4.0 17-Feb-03
2712     ---------------------
2713    
2714 nigel 63 1. If a comment in an extended regex that started immediately after a meta-item
2715     extended to the end of string, PCRE compiled incorrect data. This could lead to
2716     all kinds of weird effects. Example: /#/ was bad; /()#/ was bad; /a#/ was not.
2717    
2718     2. Moved to autoconf 2.53 and libtool 1.4.2.
2719    
2720     3. Perl 5.8 no longer needs "use utf8" for doing UTF-8 things. Consequently,
2721     the special perltest8 script is no longer needed - all the tests can be run
2722     from a single perltest script.
2723    
2724     4. From 5.004, Perl has not included the VT character (0x0b) in the set defined
2725     by \s. It has now been removed in PCRE. This means it isn't recognized as
2726     whitespace in /x regexes too, which is the same as Perl. Note that the POSIX
2727     class [:space:] *does* include VT, thereby creating a mess.
2728    
2729     5. Added the class [:blank:] (a GNU extension from Perl 5.8) to match only
2730     space and tab.
2731    
2732     6. Perl 5.005 was a long time ago. It's time to amalgamate the tests that use
2733     its new features into the main test script, reducing the number of scripts.
2734    
2735     7. Perl 5.8 has changed the meaning of patterns like /a(?i)b/. Earlier versions
2736     were backward compatible, and made the (?i) apply to the whole pattern, as if
2737     /i were given. Now it behaves more logically, and applies the option setting
2738     only to what follows. PCRE has been changed to follow suit. However, if it
2739     finds options settings right at the start of the pattern, it extracts them into
2740     the global options, as before. Thus, they show up in the info data.
2741    
2742     8. Added support for the \Q...\E escape sequence. Characters in between are
2743     treated as literals. This is slightly different from Perl in that $ and @ are
2744     also handled as literals inside the quotes. In Perl, they will cause variable
2745     interpolation. Note the following examples:
2746    
2747     Pattern PCRE matches Perl matches
2748    
2749     \Qabc$xyz\E abc$xyz abc followed by the contents of $xyz
2750     \Qabc\$xyz\E abc\$xyz abc\$xyz
2751     \Qabc\E\$\Qxyz\E abc$xyz abc$xyz
2752    
2753     For compatibility with Perl, \Q...\E sequences are recognized inside character
2754     classes as well as outside them.
2755    
2756     9. Re-organized 3 code statements in pcretest to avoid "overflow in
2757     floating-point constant arithmetic" warnings from a Microsoft compiler. Added a
2758     (size_t) cast to one statement in pcretest and one in pcreposix to avoid
2759     signed/unsigned warnings.
2760    
2761     10. SunOS4 doesn't have strtoul(). This was used only for unpicking the -o
2762     option for pcretest, so I've replaced it by a simple function that does just
2763     that job.
2764    
2765     11. pcregrep was ending with code 0 instead of 2 for the commands "pcregrep" or
2766     "pcregrep -".
2767    
2768     12. Added "possessive quantifiers" ?+, *+, ++, and {,}+ which come from Sun's
2769     Java package. This provides some syntactic sugar for simple cases of what my
2770     documentation calls "once-only subpatterns". A pattern such as x*+ is the same
2771     as (?>x*). In other words, if what is inside (?>...) is just a single repeated
2772     item, you can use this simplified notation. Note that only makes sense with
2773     greedy quantifiers. Consequently, the use of the possessive quantifier forces
2774     greediness, whatever the setting of the PCRE_UNGREEDY option.
2775    
2776     13. A change of greediness default within a pattern was not taking effect at
2777     the current level for patterns like /(b+(?U)a+)/. It did apply to parenthesized
2778     subpatterns that followed. Patterns like /b+(?U)a+/ worked because the option
2779     was abstracted outside.
2780    
2781     14. PCRE now supports the \G assertion. It is true when the current matching
2782     position is at the start point of the match. This differs from \A when the
2783     starting offset is non-zero. Used with the /g option of pcretest (or similar
2784     code), it works in the same way as it does for Perl's /g option. If all
2785     alternatives of a regex begin with \G, the expression is anchored to the start
2786     match position, and the "anchored" flag is set in the compiled expression.
2787    
2788     15. Some bugs concerning the handling of certain option changes within patterns
2789     have been fixed. These applied to options other than (?ims). For example,
2790     "a(?x: b c )d" did not match "XabcdY" but did match "Xa b c dY". It should have
2791     been the other way round. Some of this was related to change 7 above.
2792    
2793     16. PCRE now gives errors for /[.x.]/ and /[=x=]/ as unsupported POSIX
2794     features, as Perl does. Previously, PCRE gave the warnings only for /[[.x.]]/
2795     and /[[=x=]]/. PCRE now also gives an error for /[:name:]/ because it supports
2796     POSIX classes only within a class (e.g. /[[:alpha:]]/).
2797    
2798     17. Added support for Perl's \C escape. This matches one byte, even in UTF8
2799     mode. Unlike ".", it always matches newline, whatever the setting of
2800     PCRE_DOTALL. However, PCRE does not permit \C to appear in lookbehind
2801     assertions. Perl allows it, but it doesn't (in general) work because it can't
2802     calculate the length of the lookbehind. At least, that's the case for Perl
2803     5.8.0 - I've been told they are going to document that it doesn't work in
2804     future.
2805    
2806     18. Added an error diagnosis for escapes that PCRE does not support: these are
2807     \L, \l, \N, \P, \p, \U, \u, and \X.
2808    
2809     19. Although correctly diagnosing a missing ']' in a character class, PCRE was
2810     reading past the end of the pattern in cases such as /[abcd/.
2811    
2812     20. PCRE was getting more memory than necessary for patterns with classes that
2813     contained both POSIX named classes and other characters, e.g. /[[:space:]abc/.
2814    
2815     21. Added some code, conditional on #ifdef VPCOMPAT, to make life easier for
2816     compiling PCRE for use with Virtual Pascal.
2817    
2818     22. Small fix to the Makefile to make it work properly if the build is done
2819     outside the source tree.
2820    
2821     23. Added a new extension: a condition to go with recursion. If a conditional
2822     subpattern starts with (?(R) the "true" branch is used if recursion has
2823     happened, whereas the "false" branch is used only at the top level.
2824    
2825     24. When there was a very long string of literal characters (over 255 bytes
2826     without UTF support, over 250 bytes with UTF support), the computation of how
2827     much memory was required could be incorrect, leading to segfaults or other
2828     strange effects.
2829    
2830     25. PCRE was incorrectly assuming anchoring (either to start of subject or to
2831     start of line for a non-DOTALL pattern) when a pattern started with (.*) and
2832     there was a subsequent back reference to those brackets. This meant that, for
2833     example, /(.*)\d+\1/ failed to match "abc123bc". Unfortunately, it isn't
2834     possible to check for precisely this case. All we can do is abandon the
2835     optimization if .* occurs inside capturing brackets when there are any back
2836     references whatsoever. (See below for a better fix that came later.)
2837    
2838     26. The handling of the optimization for finding the first character of a
2839     non-anchored pattern, and for finding a character that is required later in the
2840     match were failing in some cases. This didn't break the matching; it just
2841     failed to optimize when it could. The way this is done has been re-implemented.
2842    
2843     27. Fixed typo in error message for invalid (?R item (it said "(?p").
2844    
2845     28. Added a new feature that provides some of the functionality that Perl
2846     provides with (?{...}). The facility is termed a "callout". The way it is done
2847     in PCRE is for the caller to provide an optional function, by setting
2848     pcre_callout to its entry point. Like pcre_malloc and pcre_free, this is a
2849     global variable. By default it is unset, which disables all calling out. To get
2850     the function called, the regex must include (?C) at appropriate points. This
2851     is, in fact, equivalent to (?C0), and any number <= 255 may be given with (?C).
2852     This provides a means of identifying different callout points. When PCRE
2853     reaches such a point in the regex, if pcre_callout has been set, the external
2854     function is called. It is provided with data in a structure called
2855     pcre_callout_block, which is defined in pcre.h. If the function returns 0,
2856     matching continues; if it returns a non-zero value, the match at the current
2857     point fails. However, backtracking will occur if possible. [This was changed
2858     later and other features added - see item 49 below.]
2859    
2860     29. pcretest is upgraded to test the callout functionality. It provides a
2861     callout function that displays information. By default, it shows the start of
2862     the match and the current position in the text. There are some new data escapes
2863     to vary what happens:
2864    
2865     \C+ in addition, show current contents of captured substrings
2866     \C- do not supply a callout function
2867     \C!n return 1 when callout number n is reached
2868     \C!n!m return 1 when callout number n is reached for the mth time
2869    
2870     30. If pcregrep was called with the -l option and just a single file name, it
2871     output "<stdin>" if a match was found, instead of the file name.
2872    
2873     31. Improve the efficiency of the POSIX API to PCRE. If the number of capturing
2874     slots is less than POSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD, use a block on the stack to pass to
2875     pcre_exec(). This saves a malloc/free per call. The default value of
2876     POSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD is 10; it can be changed by --with-posix-malloc-threshold
2877     when configuring.
2878    
2879     32. The default maximum size of a compiled pattern is 64K. There have been a
2880     few cases of people hitting this limit. The code now uses macros to handle the
2881     storing of links as offsets within the compiled pattern. It defaults to 2-byte
2882     links, but this can be changed to 3 or 4 bytes by --with-link-size when
2883     configuring. Tests 2 and 5 work only with 2-byte links because they output
2884     debugging information about compiled patterns.
2885    
2886     33. Internal code re-arrangements:
2887    
2888     (a) Moved the debugging function for printing out a compiled regex into
2889     its own source file (printint.c) and used #include to pull it into
2890     pcretest.c and, when DEBUG is defined, into pcre.c, instead of having two
2891     separate copies.
2892    
2893     (b) Defined the list of op-code names for debugging as a macro in
2894     internal.h so that it is next to the definition of the opcodes.
2895    
2896     (c) Defined a table of op-code lengths for simpler skipping along compiled
2897     code. This is again a macro in internal.h so that it is next to the
2898     definition of the opcodes.
2899    
2900     34. Added support for recursive calls to individual subpatterns, along the
2901     lines of Robin Houston's patch (but implemented somewhat differently).
2902    
2903     35. Further mods to the Makefile to help Win32. Also, added code to pcregrep to
2904     allow it to read and process whole directories in Win32. This code was
2905     contributed by Lionel Fourquaux; it has not been tested by me.
2906    
2907     36. Added support for named subpatterns. The Python syntax (?P<name>...) is
2908     used to name a group. Names consist of alphanumerics and underscores, and must
2909     be unique. Back references use the syntax (?P=name) and recursive calls use
2910     (?P>name) which is a PCRE extension to the Python extension. Groups still have
2911     numbers. The function pcre_fullinfo() can be used after compilation to extract
2912     a name/number map. There are three relevant calls:
2913    
2914     PCRE_INFO_NAMEENTRYSIZE yields the size of each entry in the map
2915     PCRE_INFO_NAMECOUNT yields the number of entries
2916     PCRE_INFO_NAMETABLE yields a pointer to the map.
2917    
2918     The map is a vector of fixed-size entries. The size of each entry depends on
2919     the length of the longest name used. The first two bytes of each entry are the
2920     group number, most significant byte first. There follows the corresponding
2921     name, zero terminated. The names are in alphabetical order.
2922    
2923     37. Make the maximum literal string in the compiled code 250 for the non-UTF-8
2924     case instead of 255. Making it the same both with and without UTF-8 support
2925     means that the same test output works with both.
2926    
2927     38. There was a case of malloc(0) in the POSIX testing code in pcretest. Avoid
2928     calling malloc() with a zero argument.
2929    
2930     39. Change 25 above had to resort to a heavy-handed test for the .* anchoring
2931     optimization. I've improved things by keeping a bitmap of backreferences with
2932     numbers 1-31 so that if .* occurs inside capturing brackets that are not in
2933     fact referenced, the optimization can be applied. It is unlikely that a
2934     relevant occurrence of .* (i.e. one which might indicate anchoring or forcing
2935     the match to follow \n) will appear inside brackets with a number greater than
2936     31, but if it does, any back reference > 31 suppresses the optimization.
2937    
2938     40. Added a new compile-time option PCRE_NO_AUTO_CAPTURE. This has the effect
2939     of disabling numbered capturing parentheses. Any opening parenthesis that is
2940     not followed by ? behaves as if it were followed by ?: but named parentheses
2941     can still be used for capturing (and they will acquire numbers in the usual
2942     way).
2943    
2944     41. Redesigned the return codes from the match() function into yes/no/error so
2945     that errors can be passed back from deep inside the nested calls. A malloc
2946     failure while inside a recursive subpattern call now causes the
2947     PCRE_ERROR_NOMEMORY return instead of quietly going wrong.
2948    
2949     42. It is now possible to set a limit on the number of times the match()
2950     function is called in a call to pcre_exec(). This facility makes it possible to
2951     limit the amount of recursion and backtracking, though not in a directly
2952     obvious way, because the match() function is used in a number of different
2953     circumstances. The count starts from zero for each position in the subject
2954     string (for non-anchored patterns). The default limit is, for compatibility, a
2955     large number, namely 10 000 000. You can change this in two ways:
2956    
2957     (a) When configuring PCRE before making, you can use --with-match-limit=n
2958     to set a default value for the compiled library.
2959    
2960     (b) For each call to pcre_exec(), you can pass a pcre_extra block in which
2961     a different value is set. See 45 below.
2962    
2963     If the limit is exceeded, pcre_exec() returns PCRE_ERROR_MATCHLIMIT.
2964    
2965     43. Added a new function pcre_config(int, void *) to enable run-time extraction
2966     of things that can be changed at compile time. The first argument specifies
2967     what is wanted and the second points to where the information is to be placed.
2968     The current list of available information is:
2969    
2970     PCRE_CONFIG_UTF8
2971    
2972     The output is an integer that is set to one if UTF-8 support is available;
2973     otherwise it is set to zero.
2974    
2975     PCRE_CONFIG_NEWLINE
2976    
2977     The output is an integer that it set to the value of the code that is used for
2978     newline. It is either LF (10) or CR (13).
2979    
2980     PCRE_CONFIG_LINK_SIZE
2981    
2982     The output is an integer that contains the number of bytes used for internal
2983     linkage in compiled expressions. The value is 2, 3, or 4. See item 32 above.
2984    
2985     PCRE_CONFIG_POSIX_MALLOC_THRESHOLD
2986    
2987     The output is an integer that contains the threshold above which the POSIX
2988     interface uses malloc() for output vectors. See item 31 above.
2989    
2990     PCRE_CONFIG_MATCH_LIMIT
2991    
2992     The output is an unsigned integer that contains the default limit of the number
2993     of match() calls in a pcre_exec() execution. See 42 above.
2994    
2995     44. pcretest has been upgraded by the addition of the -C option. This causes it
2996     to extract all the available output from the new pcre_config() function, and to
2997     output it. The program then exits immediately.
2998    
2999     45. A need has arisen to pass over additional data with calls to pcre_exec() in
3000     order to support additional features. One way would have been to define
3001     pcre_exec2() (for example) with extra arguments, but this would not have been
3002     extensible, and would also have required all calls to the original function to
3003     be mapped to the new one. Instead, I have chosen to extend the mechanism that
3004     is used for passing in "extra" data from pcre_study().
3005    
3006     The pcre_extra structure is now exposed and defined in pcre.h. It currently
3007     contains the following fields:
3008    
3009     flags a bitmap indicating which of the following fields are set
3010     study_data opaque data from pcre_study()
3011     match_limit a way of specifying a limit on match() calls for a specific
3012     call to pcre_exec()
3013     callout_data data for callouts (see 49 below)
3014    
3015     The flag bits are also defined in pcre.h, and are
3016    
3017     PCRE_EXTRA_STUDY_DATA
3018     PCRE_EXTRA_MATCH_LIMIT
3019     PCRE_EXTRA_CALLOUT_DATA
3020    
3021     The pcre_study() function now returns one of these new pcre_extra blocks, with
3022     the actual study data pointed to by the study_data field, and the
3023     PCRE_EXTRA_STUDY_DATA flag set. This can be passed directly to pcre_exec() as
3024     before. That is, this change is entirely upwards-compatible and requires no
3025     change to existing code.
3026    
3027     If you want to pass in additional data to pcre_exec(), you can either place it
3028     in a pcre_extra block provided by pcre_study(), or create your own pcre_extra
3029     block.
3030    
3031     46. pcretest has been extended to test the PCRE_EXTRA_MATCH_LIMIT feature. If a
3032     data string contains the escape sequence \M, pcretest calls pcre_exec() several
3033     times with different match limits, until it finds the minimum value needed for
3034     pcre_exec() to complete. The value is then output. This can be instructive; for
3035     most simple matches the number is quite small, but for pathological cases it
3036     gets very large very quickly.
3037    
3038     47. There's a new option for pcre_fullinfo() called PCRE_INFO_STUDYSIZE. It
3039     returns the size of the data block pointed to by the study_data field in a
3040     pcre_extra block, that is, the value that was passed as the argument to
3041     pcre_malloc() when PCRE was getting memory in which to place the information
3042     created by pcre_study(). The fourth argument should point to a size_t variable.
3043     pcretest has been extended so that this information is shown after a successful
3044     pcre_study() call when information about the compiled regex is being displayed.
3045    
3046     48. Cosmetic change to Makefile: there's no need to have / after $(DESTDIR)
3047     because what follows is always an absolute path. (Later: it turns out that this
3048     is more than cosmetic for MinGW, because it doesn't like empty path
3049     components.)
3050    
3051     49. Some changes have been made to the callout feature (see 28 above):
3052    
3053     (i) A callout function now has three choices for what it returns:
3054    
3055     0 => success, carry on matching
3056     > 0 => failure at this point, but backtrack if possible
3057     < 0 => serious error, return this value from pcre_exec()
3058    
3059     Negative values should normally be chosen from the set of PCRE_ERROR_xxx
3060     values. In particular, returning PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH forces a standard
3061     "match failed" error. The error number PCRE_ERROR_CALLOUT is reserved for
3062     use by callout functions. It will never be used by PCRE itself.
3063    
3064     (ii) The pcre_extra structure (see 45 above) has a void * field called
3065     callout_data, with corresponding flag bit PCRE_EXTRA_CALLOUT_DATA. The
3066     pcre_callout_block structure has a field of the same name. The contents of
3067     the field passed in the pcre_extra structure are passed to the callout
3068     function in the corresponding field in the callout block. This makes it
3069     easier to use the same callout-containing regex from multiple threads. For
3070     testing, the pcretest program has a new data escape
3071    
3072     \C*n pass the number n (may be negative) as callout_data
3073    
3074     If the callout function in pcretest receives a non-zero value as
3075     callout_data, it returns that value.
3076    
3077     50. Makefile wasn't handling CFLAGS properly when compiling dftables. Also,
3078     there were some redundant $(CFLAGS) in commands that are now specified as
3079     $(LINK), which already includes $(CFLAGS).
3080    
3081     51. Extensions to UTF-8 support are listed below. These all apply when (a) PCRE
3082     has been compiled with UTF-8 support *and* pcre_compile() has been compiled
3083     with the PCRE_UTF8 flag. Patterns that are compiled without that flag assume
3084     one-byte characters throughout. Note that case-insensitive matching applies
3085     only to characters whose values are less than 256. PCRE doesn't support the
3086     notion of cases for higher-valued characters.
3087    
3088     (i) A character class whose characters are all within 0-255 is handled as
3089     a bit map, and the map is inverted for negative classes. Previously, a
3090     character > 255 always failed to match such a class; however it should
3091     match if the class was a negative one (e.g. [^ab]). This has been fixed.
3092    
3093     (ii) A negated character class with a single character < 255 is coded as
3094     "not this character" (OP_NOT). This wasn't working properly when the test
3095     character was multibyte, either singly or repeated.
3096    
3097     (iii) Repeats of multibyte characters are now handled correctly in UTF-8
3098     mode, for example: \x{100}{2,3}.
3099    
3100     (iv) The character escapes \b, \B, \d, \D, \s, \S, \w, and \W (either
3101     singly or repeated) now correctly test multibyte characters. However,
3102     PCRE doesn't recognize any characters with values greater than 255 as
3103     digits, spaces, or word characters. Such characters always match \D, \S,
3104     and \W, and never match \d, \s, or \w.
3105    
3106     (v) Classes may now contain characters and character ranges with values
3107     greater than 255. For example: [ab\x{100}-\x{400}].
3108    
3109     (vi) pcregrep now has a --utf-8 option (synonym -u) which makes it call
3110     PCRE in UTF-8 mode.
3111    
3112     52. The info request value PCRE_INFO_FIRSTCHAR has been renamed
3113     PCRE_INFO_FIRSTBYTE because it is a byte value. However, the old name is
3114     retained for backwards compatibility. (Note that LASTLITERAL is also a byte
3115     value.)
3116    
3117     53. The single man page has become too large. I have therefore split it up into
3118     a number of separate man pages. These also give rise to individual HTML pages;
3119     these are now put in a separate directory, and there is an index.html page that
3120     lists them all. Some hyperlinking between the pages has been installed.
3121    
3122     54. Added convenience functions for handling named capturing parentheses.
3123    
3124     55. Unknown escapes inside character classes (e.g. [\M]) and escapes that
3125     aren't interpreted therein (e.g. [\C]) are literals in Perl. This is now also
3126     true in PCRE, except when the PCRE_EXTENDED option is set, in which case they
3127     are faulted.
3128    
3129     56. Introduced HOST_CC and HOST_CFLAGS which can be set in the environment when
3130     calling configure. These values are used when compiling the dftables.c program
3131     which is run to generate the source of the default character tables. They
3132     default to the values of CC and CFLAGS. If you are cross-compiling PCRE,
3133     you will need to set these values.
3134    
3135     57. Updated the building process for Windows DLL, as provided by Fred Cox.
3136    
3137    
3138     Version 3.9 02-Jan-02
3139 nigel 61 ---------------------
3140    
3141     1. A bit of extraneous text had somehow crept into the pcregrep documentation.
3142    
3143     2. If --disable-static was given, the building process failed when trying to
3144     build pcretest and pcregrep. (For some reason it was using libtool to compile
3145     them, which is not right, as they aren't part of the library.)
3146    
3147    
3148 nigel 59 Version 3.8 18-Dec-01
3149     ---------------------
3150    
3151     1. The experimental UTF-8 code was completely screwed up. It was packing the
3152     bytes in the wrong order. How dumb can you get?
3153    
3154    
3155 nigel 57 Version 3.7 29-Oct-01
3156     ---------------------
3157    
3158     1. In updating pcretest to check change 1 of version 3.6, I screwed up.
3159     This caused pcretest, when used on the test data, to segfault. Unfortunately,
3160     this didn't happen under Solaris 8, where I normally test things.
3161    
3162 nigel 59 2. The Makefile had to be changed to make it work on BSD systems, where 'make'
3163     doesn't seem to recognize that ./xxx and xxx are the same file. (This entry
3164     isn't in ChangeLog distributed with 3.7 because I forgot when I hastily made
3165     this fix an hour or so after the initial 3.7 release.)
3166 nigel 57
3167 nigel 59
3168 nigel 55 Version 3.6 23-Oct-01
3169     ---------------------
3170    
3171     1. Crashed with /(sens|respons)e and \1ibility/ and "sense and sensibility" if
3172     offsets passed as NULL with zero offset count.
3173    
3174     2. The config.guess and config.sub files had not been updated when I moved to
3175     the latest autoconf.
3176    
3177    
3178 nigel 53 Version 3.5 15-Aug-01
3179     ---------------------
3180 nigel 5
3181 nigel 53 1. Added some missing #if !defined NOPOSIX conditionals in pcretest.c that
3182     had been forgotten.
3183    
3184     2. By using declared but undefined structures, we can avoid using "void"
3185     definitions in pcre.h while keeping the internal definitions of the structures
3186     private.
3187    
3188     3. The distribution is now built using autoconf 2.50 and libtool 1.4. From a
3189     user point of view, this means that both static and shared libraries are built
3190     by default, but this can be individually controlled. More of the work of
3191     handling this static/shared cases is now inside libtool instead of PCRE's make
3192     file.
3193    
3194     4. The pcretest utility is now installed along with pcregrep because it is
3195     useful for users (to test regexs) and by doing this, it automatically gets
3196     relinked by libtool. The documentation has been turned into a man page, so
3197     there are now .1, .txt, and .html versions in /doc.
3198    
3199     5. Upgrades to pcregrep:
3200     (i) Added long-form option names like gnu grep.
3201     (ii) Added --help to list all options with an explanatory phrase.
3202     (iii) Added -r, --recursive to recurse into sub-directories.
3203     (iv) Added -f, --file to read patterns from a file.
3204    
3205     6. pcre_exec() was referring to its "code" argument before testing that
3206     argument for NULL (and giving an error if it was NULL).
3207    
3208     7. Upgraded Makefile.in to allow for compiling in a different directory from
3209     the source directory.
3210    
3211     8. Tiny buglet in pcretest: when pcre_fullinfo() was called to retrieve the
3212     options bits, the pointer it was passed was to an int instead of to an unsigned
3213     long int. This mattered only on 64-bit systems.
3214    
3215     9. Fixed typo (3.4/1) in pcre.h again. Sigh. I had changed pcre.h (which is
3216     generated) instead of pcre.in, which it its source. Also made the same change
3217     in several of the .c files.
3218    
3219     10. A new release of gcc defines printf() as a macro, which broke pcretest
3220     because it had an ifdef in the middle of a string argument for printf(). Fixed
3221     by using separate calls to printf().
3222    
3223     11. Added --enable-newline-is-cr and --enable-newline-is-lf to the configure
3224     script, to force use of CR or LF instead of \n in the source. On non-Unix
3225     systems, the value can be set in config.h.
3226    
3227     12. The limit of 200 on non-capturing parentheses is a _nesting_ limit, not an
3228     absolute limit. Changed the text of the error message to make this clear, and
3229     likewise updated the man page.
3230    
3231     13. The limit of 99 on the number of capturing subpatterns has been removed.
3232     The new limit is 65535, which I hope will not be a "real" limit.
3233    
3234    
3235 nigel 51 Version 3.4 22-Aug-00
3236     ---------------------
3237    
3238     1. Fixed typo in pcre.h: unsigned const char * changed to const unsigned char *.
3239    
3240     2. Diagnose condition (?(0) as an error instead of crashing on matching.
3241    
3242    
3243 nigel 49 Version 3.3 01-Aug-00
3244     ---------------------
3245    
3246     1. If an octal character was given, but the value was greater than \377, it
3247     was not getting masked to the least significant bits, as documented. This could
3248     lead to crashes in some systems.
3249    
3250     2. Perl 5.6 (if not earlier versions) accepts classes like [a-\d] and treats
3251     the hyphen as a literal. PCRE used to give an error; it now behaves like Perl.
3252    
3253     3. Added the functions pcre_free_substring() and pcre_free_substring_list().
3254     These just pass their arguments on to (pcre_free)(), but they are provided
3255     because some uses of PCRE bind it to non-C systems that can call its functions,
3256     but cannot call free() or pcre_free() directly.
3257    
3258     4. Add "make test" as a synonym for "make check". Corrected some comments in
3259     the Makefile.
3260    
3261     5. Add $(DESTDIR)/ in front of all the paths in the "install" target in the
3262     Makefile.
3263    
3264     6. Changed the name of pgrep to pcregrep, because Solaris has introduced a
3265     command called pgrep for grepping around the active processes.
3266    
3267     7. Added the beginnings of support for UTF-8 character strings.
3268    
3269     8. Arranged for the Makefile to pass over the settings of CC, CFLAGS, and
3270     RANLIB to ./ltconfig so that they are used by libtool. I think these are all
3271     the relevant ones. (AR is not passed because ./ltconfig does its own figuring
3272     out for the ar command.)
3273    
3274    
3275 nigel 47 Version 3.2 12-May-00
3276     ---------------------
3277    
3278     This is purely a bug fixing release.
3279    
3280     1. If the pattern /((Z)+|A)*/ was matched agained ZABCDEFG it matched Z instead
3281     of ZA. This was just one example of several cases that could provoke this bug,
3282     which was introduced by change 9 of version 2.00. The code for breaking
3283     infinite loops after an iteration that matches an empty string was't working
3284     correctly.
3285    
3286     2. The pcretest program was not imitating Perl correctly for the pattern /a*/g
3287     when matched against abbab (for example). After matching an empty string, it
3288     wasn't forcing anchoring when setting PCRE_NOTEMPTY for the next attempt; this
3289     caused it to match further down the string than it should.
3290    
3291     3. The code contained an inclusion of sys/types.h. It isn't clear why this
3292     was there because it doesn't seem to be needed, and it causes trouble on some
3293     systems, as it is not a Standard C header. It has been removed.
3294    
3295     4. Made 4 silly changes to the source to avoid stupid compiler warnings that
3296     were reported on the Macintosh. The changes were from
3297    
3298     while ((c = *(++ptr)) != 0 && c != '\n');
3299     to
3300     while ((c = *(++ptr)) != 0 && c != '\n') ;
3301    
3302     Totally extraordinary, but if that's what it takes...
3303    
3304     5. PCRE is being used in one environment where neither memmove() nor bcopy() is
3305     available. Added HAVE_BCOPY and an autoconf test for it; if neither
3306     HAVE_MEMMOVE nor HAVE_BCOPY is set, use a built-in emulation function which
3307     assumes the way PCRE uses memmove() (always moving upwards).
3308    
3309     6. PCRE is being used in one environment where strchr() is not available. There
3310     was only one use in pcre.c, and writing it out to avoid strchr() probably gives
3311     faster code anyway.
3312    
3313    
3314 nigel 45 Version 3.1 09-Feb-00
3315     ---------------------
3316    
3317     The only change in this release is the fixing of some bugs in Makefile.in for
3318     the "install" target:
3319    
3320     (1) It was failing to install pcreposix.h.
3321    
3322     (2) It was overwriting the pcre.3 man page with the pcreposix.3 man page.
3323    
3324    
3325 nigel 43 Version 3.0 01-Feb-00
3326     ---------------------
3327 nigel 41
3328     1. Add support for the /+ modifier to perltest (to output $` like it does in
3329     pcretest).
3330    
3331     2. Add support for the /g modifier to perltest.
3332    
3333     3. Fix pcretest so that it behaves even more like Perl for /g when the pattern
3334     matches null strings.
3335    
3336     4. Fix perltest so that it doesn't do unwanted things when fed an empty
3337     pattern. Perl treats empty patterns specially - it reuses the most recent
3338     pattern, which is not what we want. Replace // by /(?#)/ in order to avoid this
3339     effect.
3340    
3341     5. The POSIX interface was broken in that it was just handing over the POSIX
3342     captured string vector to pcre_exec(), but (since release 2.00) PCRE has
3343     required a bigger vector, with some working space on the end. This means that
3344     the POSIX wrapper now has to get and free some memory, and copy the results.
3345    
3346 nigel 43 6. Added some simple autoconf support, placing the test data and the
3347     documentation in separate directories, re-organizing some of the
3348     information files, and making it build pcre-config (a GNU standard). Also added
3349     libtool support for building PCRE as a shared library, which is now the
3350     default.
3351 nigel 41
3352 nigel 43 7. Got rid of the leading zero in the definition of PCRE_MINOR because 08 and
3353     09 are not valid octal constants. Single digits will be used for minor values
3354     less than 10.
3355    
3356     8. Defined REG_EXTENDED and REG_NOSUB as zero in the POSIX header, so that
3357     existing programs that set these in the POSIX interface can use PCRE without
3358     modification.
3359    
3360     9. Added a new function, pcre_fullinfo() with an extensible interface. It can
3361     return all that pcre_info() returns, plus additional data. The pcre_info()
3362     function is retained for compatibility, but is considered to be obsolete.
3363    
3364     10. Added experimental recursion feature (?R) to handle one common case that
3365     Perl 5.6 will be able to do with (?p{...}).
3366    
3367     11. Added support for POSIX character classes like [:alpha:], which Perl is
3368     adopting.
3369    
3370    
3371 nigel 39 Version 2.08 31-Aug-99
3372     ----------------------
3373    
3374     1. When startoffset was not zero and the pattern began with ".*", PCRE was not
3375     trying to match at the startoffset position, but instead was moving forward to
3376     the next newline as if a previous match had failed.
3377    
3378     2. pcretest was not making use of PCRE_NOTEMPTY when repeating for /g and /G,
3379     and could get into a loop if a null string was matched other than at the start
3380     of the subject.
3381    
3382     3. Added definitions of PCRE_MAJOR and PCRE_MINOR to pcre.h so the version can
3383     be distinguished at compile time, and for completeness also added PCRE_DATE.
3384    
3385     5. Added Paul Sokolovsky's minor changes to make it easy to compile a Win32 DLL
3386     in GnuWin32 environments.
3387    
3388    
3389 nigel 37 Version 2.07 29-Jul-99
3390     ----------------------
3391    
3392     1. The documentation is now supplied in plain text form and HTML as well as in
3393     the form of man page sources.
3394    
3395     2. C++ compilers don't like assigning (void *) values to other pointer types.
3396     In particular this affects malloc(). Although there is no problem in Standard
3397     C, I've put in casts to keep C++ compilers happy.
3398    
3399     3. Typo on pcretest.c; a cast of (unsigned char *) in the POSIX regexec() call
3400     should be (const char *).
3401    
3402     4. If NOPOSIX is defined, pcretest.c compiles without POSIX support. This may
3403     be useful for non-Unix systems who don't want to bother with the POSIX stuff.
3404     However, I haven't made this a standard facility. The documentation doesn't
3405     mention it, and the Makefile doesn't support it.
3406    
3407     5. The Makefile now contains an "install" target, with editable destinations at
3408     the top of the file. The pcretest program is not installed.
3409    
3410     6. pgrep -V now gives the PCRE version number and date.
3411    
3412     7. Fixed bug: a zero repetition after a literal string (e.g. /abcde{0}/) was
3413     causing the entire string to be ignored, instead of just the last character.
3414    
3415     8. If a pattern like /"([^\\"]+|\\.)*"/ is applied in the normal way to a
3416     non-matching string, it can take a very, very long time, even for strings of
3417     quite modest length, because of the nested recursion. PCRE now does better in
3418     some of these cases. It does this by remembering the last required literal
3419     character in the pattern, and pre-searching the subject to ensure it is present
3420     before running the real match. In other words, it applies a heuristic to detect
3421     some types of certain failure quickly, and in the above example, if presented
3422     with a string that has no trailing " it gives "no match" very quickly.
3423    
3424     9. A new runtime option PCRE_NOTEMPTY causes null string matches to be ignored;
3425     other alternatives are tried instead.
3426    
3427    
3428 nigel 35 Version 2.06 09-Jun-99
3429     ----------------------
3430    
3431     1. Change pcretest's output for amount of store used to show just the code
3432     space, because the remainder (the data block) varies in size between 32-bit and
3433     64-bit systems.
3434    
3435     2. Added an extra argument to pcre_exec() to supply an offset in the subject to
3436     start matching at. This allows lookbehinds to work when searching for multiple
3437     occurrences in a string.
3438    
3439     3. Added additional options to pcretest for testing multiple occurrences:
3440    
3441     /+ outputs the rest of the string that follows a match
3442     /g loops for multiple occurrences, using the new startoffset argument
3443     /G loops for multiple occurrences by passing an incremented pointer
3444    
3445     4. PCRE wasn't doing the "first character" optimization for patterns starting
3446     with \b or \B, though it was doing it for other lookbehind assertions. That is,
3447     it wasn't noticing that a match for a pattern such as /\bxyz/ has to start with
3448     the letter 'x'. On long subject strings, this gives a significant speed-up.
3449    
3450    
3451 nigel 33 Version 2.05 21-Apr-99
3452     ----------------------
3453    
3454     1. Changed the type of magic_number from int to long int so that it works
3455     properly on 16-bit systems.
3456    
3457     2. Fixed a bug which caused patterns starting with .* not to work correctly
3458     when the subject string contained newline characters. PCRE was assuming
3459     anchoring for such patterns in all cases, which is not correct because .* will
3460     not pass a newline unless PCRE_DOTALL is set. It now assumes anchoring only if
3461     DOTALL is set at top level; otherwise it knows that patterns starting with .*
3462     must be retried after every newline in the subject.
3463    
3464    
3465 nigel 31 Version 2.04 18-Feb-99
3466     ----------------------
3467    
3468     1. For parenthesized subpatterns with repeats whose minimum was zero, the
3469     computation of the store needed to hold the pattern was incorrect (too large).
3470     If such patterns were nested a few deep, this could multiply and become a real
3471     problem.
3472    
3473     2. Added /M option to pcretest to show the memory requirement of a specific
3474     pattern. Made -m a synonym of -s (which does this globally) for compatibility.
3475    
3476     3. Subpatterns of the form (regex){n,m} (i.e. limited maximum) were being
3477     compiled in such a way that the backtracking after subsequent failure was
3478     pessimal. Something like (a){0,3} was compiled as (a)?(a)?(a)? instead of
3479     ((a)((a)(a)?)?)? with disastrous performance if the maximum was of any size.
3480    
3481    
3482 nigel 29 Version 2.03 02-Feb-99
3483     ----------------------
3484    
3485     1. Fixed typo and small mistake in man page.
3486    
3487 nigel 31 2. Added 4th condition (GPL supersedes if conflict) and created separate
3488     LICENCE file containing the conditions.
3489 nigel 29
3490     3. Updated pcretest so that patterns such as /abc\/def/ work like they do in
3491     Perl, that is the internal \ allows the delimiter to be included in the
3492     pattern. Locked out the use of \ as a delimiter. If \ immediately follows
3493     the final delimiter, add \ to the end of the pattern (to test the error).
3494    
3495     4. Added the convenience functions for extracting substrings after a successful
3496     match. Updated pcretest to make it able to test these functions.
3497    
3498    
3499 nigel 27 Version 2.02 14-Jan-99
3500     ----------------------
3501    
3502     1. Initialized the working variables associated with each extraction so that
3503     their saving and restoring doesn't refer to uninitialized store.
3504    
3505     2. Put dummy code into study.c in order to trick the optimizer of the IBM C
3506     compiler for OS/2 into generating correct code. Apparently IBM isn't going to
3507     fix the problem.
3508    
3509     3. Pcretest: the timing code wasn't using LOOPREPEAT for timing execution
3510     calls, and wasn't printing the correct value for compiling calls. Increased the
3511     default value of LOOPREPEAT, and the number of significant figures in the
3512     times.
3513    
3514     4. Changed "/bin/rm" in the Makefile to "-rm" so it works on Windows NT.
3515    
3516     5. Renamed "deftables" as "dftables" to get it down to 8 characters, to avoid
3517     a building problem on Windows NT with a FAT file system.
3518    
3519    
3520 nigel 25 Version 2.01 21-Oct-98
3521     ----------------------
3522    
3523     1. Changed the API for pcre_compile() to allow for the provision of a pointer
3524     to character tables built by pcre_maketables() in the current locale. If NULL
3525     is passed, the default tables are used.
3526    
3527    
3528 nigel 23 Version 2.00 24-Sep-98
3529 nigel 21 ----------------------
3530    
3531 nigel 23 1. Since the (>?) facility is in Perl 5.005, don't require PCRE_EXTRA to enable
3532     it any more.
3533    
3534     2. Allow quantification of (?>) groups, and make it work correctly.
3535    
3536     3. The first character computation wasn't working for (?>) groups.
3537    
3538     4. Correct the implementation of \Z (it is permitted to match on the \n at the
3539     end of the subject) and add 5.005's \z, which really does match only at the
3540     very end of the subject.
3541    
3542     5. Remove the \X "cut" facility; Perl doesn't have it, and (?> is neater.
3543    
3544     6. Remove the ability to specify CASELESS, MULTILINE, DOTALL, and
3545     DOLLAR_END_ONLY at runtime, to make it possible to implement the Perl 5.005
3546     localized options. All options to pcre_study() were also removed.
3547    
3548     7. Add other new features from 5.005:
3549    
3550     $(?<= positive lookbehind
3551     $(?<! negative lookbehind
3552     (?imsx-imsx) added the unsetting capability
3553     such a setting is global if at outer level; local otherwise
3554     (?imsx-imsx:) non-capturing groups with option setting
3555     (?(cond)re|re) conditional pattern matching
3556    
3557     A backreference to itself in a repeated group matches the previous
3558     captured string.
3559    
3560     8. General tidying up of studying (both automatic and via "study")
3561     consequential on the addition of new assertions.
3562    
3563     9. As in 5.005, unlimited repeated groups that could match an empty substring
3564     are no longer faulted at compile time. Instead, the loop is forcibly broken at
3565     runtime if any iteration does actually match an empty substring.
3566    
3567     10. Include the RunTest script in the distribution.
3568    
3569     11. Added tests from the Perl 5.005_02 distribution. This showed up a few
3570     discrepancies, some of which were old and were also with respect to 5.004. They
3571     have now been fixed.
3572    
3573    
3574     Version 1.09 28-Apr-98
3575     ----------------------
3576    
3577 nigel 21 1. A negated single character class followed by a quantifier with a minimum
3578     value of one (e.g. [^x]{1,6} ) was not compiled correctly. This could lead to
3579     program crashes, or just wrong answers. This did not apply to negated classes
3580     containing more than one character, or to minima other than one.
3581    
3582    
3583 nigel 19 Version 1.08 27-Mar-98
3584     ----------------------
3585    
3586     1. Add PCRE_UNGREEDY to invert the greediness of quantifiers.
3587    
3588     2. Add (?U) and (?X) to set PCRE_UNGREEDY and PCRE_EXTRA respectively. The
3589     latter must appear before anything that relies on it in the pattern.
3590    
3591    
3592 nigel 17 Version 1.07 16-Feb-98
3593     ----------------------
3594    
3595     1. A pattern such as /((a)*)*/ was not being diagnosed as in error (unlimited
3596     repeat of a potentially empty string).
3597    
3598    
3599 nigel 15 Version 1.06 23-Jan-98
3600     ----------------------
3601    
3602     1. Added Markus Oberhumer's little patches for C++.
3603    
3604     2. Literal strings longer than 255 characters were broken.
3605    
3606    
3607 nigel 13 Version 1.05 23-Dec-97
3608     ----------------------
3609    
3610     1. Negated character classes containing more than one character were failing if
3611     PCRE_CASELESS was set at run time.
3612    
3613    
3614 nigel 11 Version 1.04 19-Dec-97
3615     ----------------------
3616    
3617     1. Corrected the man page, where some "const" qualifiers had been omitted.
3618    
3619     2. Made debugging output print "{0,xxx}" instead of just "{,xxx}" to agree with
3620     input syntax.
3621    
3622     3. Fixed memory leak which occurred when a regex with back references was
3623     matched with an offsets vector that wasn't big enough. The temporary memory
3624     that is used in this case wasn't being freed if the match failed.
3625    
3626     4. Tidied pcretest to ensure it frees memory that it gets.
3627    
3628     5. Temporary memory was being obtained in the case where the passed offsets
3629     vector was exactly big enough.
3630    
3631     6. Corrected definition of offsetof() from change 5 below.
3632    
3633     7. I had screwed up change 6 below and broken the rules for the use of
3634     setjmp(). Now fixed.
3635    
3636    
3637 nigel 9 Version 1.03 18-Dec-97
3638     ----------------------
3639    
3640     1. A erroneous regex with a missing opening parenthesis was correctly
3641     diagnosed, but PCRE attempted to access brastack[-1], which could cause crashes
3642     on some systems.
3643    
3644     2. Replaced offsetof(real_pcre, code) by offsetof(real_pcre, code[0]) because
3645     it was reported that one broken compiler failed on the former because "code" is
3646     also an independent variable.
3647    
3648     3. The erroneous regex a[]b caused an array overrun reference.
3649    
3650     4. A regex ending with a one-character negative class (e.g. /[^k]$/) did not
3651     fail on data ending with that character. (It was going on too far, and checking
3652     the next character, typically a binary zero.) This was specific to the
3653     optimized code for single-character negative classes.
3654    
3655     5. Added a contributed patch from the TIN world which does the following:
3656    
3657     + Add an undef for memmove, in case the the system defines a macro for it.
3658    
3659     + Add a definition of offsetof(), in case there isn't one. (I don't know
3660     the reason behind this - offsetof() is part of the ANSI standard - but
3661     it does no harm).
3662    
3663     + Reduce the ifdef's in pcre.c using macro DPRINTF, thereby eliminating
3664     most of the places where whitespace preceded '#'. I have given up and
3665     allowed the remaining 2 cases to be at the margin.
3666    
3667     + Rename some variables in pcre to eliminate shadowing. This seems very
3668     pedantic, but does no harm, of course.
3669    
3670     6. Moved the call to setjmp() into its own function, to get rid of warnings
3671     from gcc -Wall, and avoided calling it at all unless PCRE_EXTRA is used.
3672    
3673     7. Constructs such as \d{8,} were compiling into the equivalent of
3674 nigel 11 \d{8}\d{0,65527} instead of \d{8}\d* which didn't make much difference to the
3675 nigel 9 outcome, but in this particular case used more store than had been allocated,
3676     which caused the bug to be discovered because it threw up an internal error.
3677    
3678     8. The debugging code in both pcre and pcretest for outputting the compiled
3679     form of a regex was going wrong in the case of back references followed by
3680     curly-bracketed repeats.
3681    
3682    
3683 nigel 7 Version 1.02 12-Dec-97
3684     ----------------------
3685    
3686     1. Typos in pcre.3 and comments in the source fixed.
3687    
3688     2. Applied a contributed patch to get rid of places where it used to remove
3689     'const' from variables, and fixed some signed/unsigned and uninitialized
3690     variable warnings.
3691    
3692     3. Added the "runtest" target to Makefile.
3693    
3694     4. Set default compiler flag to -O2 rather than just -O.
3695    
3696    
3697 nigel 5 Version 1.01 19-Nov-97
3698     ----------------------
3699    
3700     1. PCRE was failing to diagnose unlimited repeat of empty string for patterns
3701     like /([ab]*)*/, that is, for classes with more than one character in them.
3702    
3703     2. Likewise, it wasn't diagnosing patterns with "once-only" subpatterns, such
3704     as /((?>a*))*/ (a PCRE_EXTRA facility).
3705    
3706    
3707     Version 1.00 18-Nov-97
3708     ----------------------
3709    
3710     1. Added compile-time macros to support systems such as SunOS4 which don't have
3711     memmove() or strerror() but have other things that can be used instead.
3712    
3713     2. Arranged that "make clean" removes the executables.
3714    
3715    
3716 nigel 3 Version 0.99 27-Oct-97
3717     ----------------------
3718    
3719     1. Fixed bug in code for optimizing classes with only one character. It was
3720     initializing a 32-byte map regardless, which could cause it to run off the end
3721     of the memory it had got.
3722    
3723     2. Added, conditional on PCRE_EXTRA, the proposed (?>REGEX) construction.
3724    
3725    
3726     Version 0.98 22-Oct-97
3727     ----------------------
3728    
3729     1. Fixed bug in code for handling temporary memory usage when there are more
3730     back references than supplied space in the ovector. This could cause segfaults.
3731    
3732    
3733     Version 0.97 21-Oct-97
3734     ----------------------
3735    
3736     1. Added the \X "cut" facility, conditional on PCRE_EXTRA.
3737    
3738     2. Optimized negated single characters not to use a bit map.
3739    
3740     3. Brought error texts together as macro definitions; clarified some of them;
3741     fixed one that was wrong - it said "range out of order" when it meant "invalid
3742     escape sequence".
3743    
3744     4. Changed some char * arguments to const char *.
3745    
3746     5. Added PCRE_NOTBOL and PCRE_NOTEOL (from POSIX).
3747    
3748     6. Added the POSIX-style API wrapper in pcreposix.a and testing facilities in
3749     pcretest.
3750    
3751    
3752     Version 0.96 16-Oct-97
3753     ----------------------
3754    
3755     1. Added a simple "pgrep" utility to the distribution.
3756    
3757     2. Fixed an incompatibility with Perl: "{" is now treated as a normal character
3758     unless it appears in one of the precise forms "{ddd}", "{ddd,}", or "{ddd,ddd}"
3759     where "ddd" means "one or more decimal digits".
3760    
3761     3. Fixed serious bug. If a pattern had a back reference, but the call to
3762     pcre_exec() didn't supply a large enough ovector to record the related
3763     identifying subpattern, the match always failed. PCRE now remembers the number
3764     of the largest back reference, and gets some temporary memory in which to save
3765     the offsets during matching if necessary, in order to ensure that
3766     backreferences always work.
3767    
3768     4. Increased the compatibility with Perl in a number of ways:
3769    
3770     (a) . no longer matches \n by default; an option PCRE_DOTALL is provided
3771     to request this handling. The option can be set at compile or exec time.
3772    
3773     (b) $ matches before a terminating newline by default; an option
3774     PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY is provided to override this (but not in multiline
3775     mode). The option can be set at compile or exec time.
3776    
3777     (c) The handling of \ followed by a digit other than 0 is now supposed to be
3778     the same as Perl's. If the decimal number it represents is less than 10
3779     or there aren't that many previous left capturing parentheses, an octal
3780     escape is read. Inside a character class, it's always an octal escape,
3781     even if it is a single digit.
3782    
3783     (d) An escaped but undefined alphabetic character is taken as a literal,
3784     unless PCRE_EXTRA is set. Currently this just reserves the remaining
3785     escapes.
3786    
3787     (e) {0} is now permitted. (The previous item is removed from the compiled
3788     pattern).
3789    
3790     5. Changed all the names of code files so that the basic parts are no longer
3791     than 10 characters, and abolished the teeny "globals.c" file.
3792    
3793     6. Changed the handling of character classes; they are now done with a 32-byte
3794     bit map always.
3795    
3796     7. Added the -d and /D options to pcretest to make it possible to look at the
3797     internals of compilation without having to recompile pcre.
3798    
3799    
3800     Version 0.95 23-Sep-97
3801     ----------------------
3802    
3803     1. Fixed bug in pre-pass concerning escaped "normal" characters such as \x5c or
3804     \x20 at the start of a run of normal characters. These were being treated as
3805     real characters, instead of the source characters being re-checked.
3806