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1  ChangeLog for PCRE  ChangeLog for PCRE
2  ------------------  ------------------
3    
4    Version 8.31
5    -----------------------------
6    1.  Fixing a wrong JIT test case and some compiler warnings.
7    
8    
9    Version 8.30 04-February-2012
10    -----------------------------
11    
12    1.  Renamed "isnumber" as "is_a_number" because in some Mac environments this
13        name is defined in ctype.h.
14    
15    2.  Fixed a bug in fixed-length calculation for lookbehinds that would show up
16        only in quite long subpatterns.
17    
18    3.  Removed the function pcre_info(), which has been obsolete and deprecated
19        since it was replaced by pcre_fullinfo() in February 2000.
20    
21    4.  For a non-anchored pattern, if (*SKIP) was given with a name that did not
22        match a (*MARK), and the match failed at the start of the subject, a
23        reference to memory before the start of the subject could occur. This bug
24        was introduced by fix 17 of release 8.21.
25    
26    5.  A reference to an unset group with zero minimum repetition was giving
27        totally wrong answers (in non-JavaScript-compatibility mode). For example,
28        /(another)?(\1?)test/ matched against "hello world test". This bug was
29        introduced in release 8.13.
30    
31    6.  Add support for 16-bit character strings (a large amount of work involving
32        many changes and refactorings).
33    
34    7.  RunGrepTest failed on msys because \r\n was replaced by whitespace when the
35        command "pattern=`printf 'xxx\r\njkl'`" was run. The pattern is now taken
36        from a file.
37    
38    8.  Ovector size of 2 is also supported by JIT based pcre_exec (the ovector size
39        rounding is not applied in this particular case).
40    
41    9.  The invalid Unicode surrogate codepoints U+D800 to U+DFFF are now rejected
42        if they appear, or are escaped, in patterns.
43    
44    10. Get rid of a number of -Wunused-but-set-variable warnings.
45    
46    11. The pattern /(?=(*:x))(q|)/ matches an empty string, and returns the mark
47        "x". The similar pattern /(?=(*:x))((*:y)q|)/ did not return a mark at all.
48        Oddly, Perl behaves the same way. PCRE has been fixed so that this pattern
49        also returns the mark "x". This bug applied to capturing parentheses,
50        non-capturing parentheses, and atomic parentheses. It also applied to some
51        assertions.
52    
53    12. Stephen Kelly's patch to CMakeLists.txt allows it to parse the version
54        information out of configure.ac instead of relying on pcre.h.generic, which
55        is not stored in the repository.
56    
57    13. Applied Dmitry V. Levin's patch for a more portable method for linking with
58        -lreadline.
59    
60    14. ZH added PCRE_CONFIG_JITTARGET; added its output to pcretest -C.
61    
62    15. Applied Graycode's patch to put the top-level frame on the stack rather
63        than the heap when not using the stack for recursion. This gives a
64        performance improvement in many cases when recursion is not deep.
65    
66    16. Experimental code added to "pcretest -C" to output the stack frame size.
67    
68    
69    Version 8.21 12-Dec-2011
70    ------------------------
71    
72    1.  Updating the JIT compiler.
73    
74    2.  JIT compiler now supports OP_NCREF, OP_RREF and OP_NRREF. New test cases
75        are added as well.
76    
77    3.  Fix cache-flush issue on PowerPC (It is still an experimental JIT port).
78        PCRE_EXTRA_TABLES is not suported by JIT, and should be checked before
79        calling _pcre_jit_exec. Some extra comments are added.
80    
81    4.  (*MARK) settings inside atomic groups that do not contain any capturing
82        parentheses, for example, (?>a(*:m)), were not being passed out. This bug
83        was introduced by change 18 for 8.20.
84    
85    5.  Supporting of \x, \U and \u in JavaScript compatibility mode based on the
86        ECMA-262 standard.
87    
88    6.  Lookbehinds such as (?<=a{2}b) that contained a fixed repetition were
89        erroneously being rejected as "not fixed length" if PCRE_CASELESS was set.
90        This bug was probably introduced by change 9 of 8.13.
91    
92    7.  While fixing 6 above, I noticed that a number of other items were being
93        incorrectly rejected as "not fixed length". This arose partly because newer
94        opcodes had not been added to the fixed-length checking code. I have (a)
95        corrected the bug and added tests for these items, and (b) arranged for an
96        error to occur if an unknown opcode is encountered while checking for fixed
97        length instead of just assuming "not fixed length". The items that were
98        rejected were: (*ACCEPT), (*COMMIT), (*FAIL), (*MARK), (*PRUNE), (*SKIP),
99        (*THEN), \h, \H, \v, \V, and single character negative classes with fixed
100        repetitions, e.g. [^a]{3}, with and without PCRE_CASELESS.
101    
102    8.  A possessively repeated conditional subpattern such as (?(?=c)c|d)++ was
103        being incorrectly compiled and would have given unpredicatble results.
104    
105    9.  A possessively repeated subpattern with minimum repeat count greater than
106        one behaved incorrectly. For example, (A){2,}+ behaved as if it was
107        (A)(A)++ which meant that, after a subsequent mismatch, backtracking into
108        the first (A) could occur when it should not.
109    
110    10. Add a cast and remove a redundant test from the code.
111    
112    11. JIT should use pcre_malloc/pcre_free for allocation.
113    
114    12. Updated pcre-config so that it no longer shows -L/usr/lib, which seems
115        best practice nowadays, and helps with cross-compiling. (If the exec_prefix
116        is anything other than /usr, -L is still shown).
117    
118    13. In non-UTF-8 mode, \C is now supported in lookbehinds and DFA matching.
119    
120    14. Perl does not support \N without a following name in a [] class; PCRE now
121        also gives an error.
122    
123    15. If a forward reference was repeated with an upper limit of around 2000,
124        it caused the error "internal error: overran compiling workspace". The
125        maximum number of forward references (including repeats) was limited by the
126        internal workspace, and dependent on the LINK_SIZE. The code has been
127        rewritten so that the workspace expands (via pcre_malloc) if necessary, and
128        the default depends on LINK_SIZE. There is a new upper limit (for safety)
129        of around 200,000 forward references. While doing this, I also speeded up
130        the filling in of repeated forward references.
131    
132    16. A repeated forward reference in a pattern such as (a)(?2){2}(.) was
133        incorrectly expecting the subject to contain another "a" after the start.
134    
135    17. When (*SKIP:name) is activated without a corresponding (*MARK:name) earlier
136        in the match, the SKIP should be ignored. This was not happening; instead
137        the SKIP was being treated as NOMATCH. For patterns such as
138        /A(*MARK:A)A+(*SKIP:B)Z|AAC/ this meant that the AAC branch was never
139        tested.
140    
141    18. The behaviour of (*MARK), (*PRUNE), and (*THEN) has been reworked and is
142        now much more compatible with Perl, in particular in cases where the result
143        is a non-match for a non-anchored pattern. For example, if
144        /b(*:m)f|a(*:n)w/ is matched against "abc", the non-match returns the name
145        "m", where previously it did not return a name. A side effect of this
146        change is that for partial matches, the last encountered mark name is
147        returned, as for non matches. A number of tests that were previously not
148        Perl-compatible have been moved into the Perl-compatible test files. The
149        refactoring has had the pleasing side effect of removing one argument from
150        the match() function, thus reducing its stack requirements.
151    
152    19. If the /S+ option was used in pcretest to study a pattern using JIT,
153        subsequent uses of /S (without +) incorrectly behaved like /S+.
154    
155    21. Retrieve executable code size support for the JIT compiler and fixing
156        some warnings.
157    
158    22. A caseless match of a UTF-8 character whose other case uses fewer bytes did
159        not work when the shorter character appeared right at the end of the
160        subject string.
161    
162    23. Added some (int) casts to non-JIT modules to reduce warnings on 64-bit
163        systems.
164    
165    24. Added PCRE_INFO_JITSIZE to pass on the value from (21) above, and also
166        output it when the /M option is used in pcretest.
167    
168    25. The CheckMan script was not being included in the distribution. Also, added
169        an explicit "perl" to run Perl scripts from the PrepareRelease script
170        because this is reportedly needed in Windows.
171    
172    26. If study data was being save in a file and studying had not found a set of
173        "starts with" bytes for the pattern, the data written to the file (though
174        never used) was taken from uninitialized memory and so caused valgrind to
175        complain.
176    
177    27. Updated RunTest.bat as provided by Sheri Pierce.
178    
179    28. Fixed a possible uninitialized memory bug in pcre_jit_compile.c.
180    
181    29. Computation of memory usage for the table of capturing group names was
182        giving an unnecessarily large value.
183    
184    
185    Version 8.20 21-Oct-2011
186    ------------------------
187    
188    1.  Change 37 of 8.13 broke patterns like [:a]...[b:] because it thought it had
189        a POSIX class. After further experiments with Perl, which convinced me that
190        Perl has bugs and confusions, a closing square bracket is no longer allowed
191        in a POSIX name. This bug also affected patterns with classes that started
192        with full stops.
193    
194    2.  If a pattern such as /(a)b|ac/ is matched against "ac", there is no
195        captured substring, but while checking the failing first alternative,
196        substring 1 is temporarily captured. If the output vector supplied to
197        pcre_exec() was not big enough for this capture, the yield of the function
198        was still zero ("insufficient space for captured substrings"). This cannot
199        be totally fixed without adding another stack variable, which seems a lot
200        of expense for a edge case. However, I have improved the situation in cases
201        such as /(a)(b)x|abc/ matched against "abc", where the return code
202        indicates that fewer than the maximum number of slots in the ovector have
203        been set.
204    
205    3.  Related to (2) above: when there are more back references in a pattern than
206        slots in the output vector, pcre_exec() uses temporary memory during
207        matching, and copies in the captures as far as possible afterwards. It was
208        using the entire output vector, but this conflicts with the specification
209        that only 2/3 is used for passing back captured substrings. Now it uses
210        only the first 2/3, for compatibility. This is, of course, another edge
211        case.
212    
213    4.  Zoltan Herczeg's just-in-time compiler support has been integrated into the
214        main code base, and can be used by building with --enable-jit. When this is
215        done, pcregrep automatically uses it unless --disable-pcregrep-jit or the
216        runtime --no-jit option is given.
217    
218    5.  When the number of matches in a pcre_dfa_exec() run exactly filled the
219        ovector, the return from the function was zero, implying that there were
220        other matches that did not fit. The correct "exactly full" value is now
221        returned.
222    
223    6.  If a subpattern that was called recursively or as a subroutine contained
224        (*PRUNE) or any other control that caused it to give a non-standard return,
225        invalid errors such as "Error -26 (nested recursion at the same subject
226        position)" or even infinite loops could occur.
227    
228    7.  If a pattern such as /a(*SKIP)c|b(*ACCEPT)|/ was studied, it stopped
229        computing the minimum length on reaching *ACCEPT, and so ended up with the
230        wrong value of 1 rather than 0. Further investigation indicates that
231        computing a minimum subject length in the presence of *ACCEPT is difficult
232        (think back references, subroutine calls), and so I have changed the code
233        so that no minimum is registered for a pattern that contains *ACCEPT.
234    
235    8.  If (*THEN) was present in the first (true) branch of a conditional group,
236        it was not handled as intended. [But see 16 below.]
237    
238    9.  Replaced RunTest.bat and CMakeLists.txt with improved versions provided by
239        Sheri Pierce.
240    
241    10. A pathological pattern such as /(*ACCEPT)a/ was miscompiled, thinking that
242        the first byte in a match must be "a".
243    
244    11. Change 17 for 8.13 increased the recursion depth for patterns like
245        /a(?:.)*?a/ drastically. I've improved things by remembering whether a
246        pattern contains any instances of (*THEN). If it does not, the old
247        optimizations are restored. It would be nice to do this on a per-group
248        basis, but at the moment that is not feasible.
249    
250    12. In some environments, the output of pcretest -C is CRLF terminated. This
251        broke RunTest's code that checks for the link size. A single white space
252        character after the value is now allowed for.
253    
254    13. RunTest now checks for the "fr" locale as well as for "fr_FR" and "french".
255        For "fr", it uses the Windows-specific input and output files.
256    
257    14. If (*THEN) appeared in a group that was called recursively or as a
258        subroutine, it did not work as intended. [But see next item.]
259    
260    15. Consider the pattern /A (B(*THEN)C) | D/ where A, B, C, and D are complex
261        pattern fragments (but not containing any | characters). If A and B are
262        matched, but there is a failure in C so that it backtracks to (*THEN), PCRE
263        was behaving differently to Perl. PCRE backtracked into A, but Perl goes to
264        D. In other words, Perl considers parentheses that do not contain any |
265        characters to be part of a surrounding alternative, whereas PCRE was
266        treading (B(*THEN)C) the same as (B(*THEN)C|(*FAIL)) -- which Perl handles
267        differently. PCRE now behaves in the same way as Perl, except in the case
268        of subroutine/recursion calls such as (?1) which have in any case always
269        been different (but PCRE had them first :-).
270    
271    16. Related to 15 above: Perl does not treat the | in a conditional group as
272        creating alternatives. Such a group is treated in the same way as an
273        ordinary group without any | characters when processing (*THEN). PCRE has
274        been changed to match Perl's behaviour.
275    
276    17. If a user had set PCREGREP_COLO(U)R to something other than 1:31, the
277        RunGrepTest script failed.
278    
279    18. Change 22 for version 13 caused atomic groups to use more stack. This is
280        inevitable for groups that contain captures, but it can lead to a lot of
281        stack use in large patterns. The old behaviour has been restored for atomic
282        groups that do not contain any capturing parentheses.
283    
284    19. If the PCRE_NO_START_OPTIMIZE option was set for pcre_compile(), it did not
285        suppress the check for a minimum subject length at run time. (If it was
286        given to pcre_exec() or pcre_dfa_exec() it did work.)
287    
288    20. Fixed an ASCII-dependent infelicity in pcretest that would have made it
289        fail to work when decoding hex characters in data strings in EBCDIC
290        environments.
291    
292    21. It appears that in at least one Mac OS environment, the isxdigit() function
293        is implemented as a macro that evaluates to its argument more than once,
294        contravening the C 90 Standard (I haven't checked a later standard). There
295        was an instance in pcretest which caused it to go wrong when processing
296        \x{...} escapes in subject strings. The has been rewritten to avoid using
297        things like p++ in the argument of isxdigit().
298    
299    
300    Version 8.13 16-Aug-2011
301    ------------------------
302    
303    1.  The Unicode data tables have been updated to Unicode 6.0.0.
304    
305    2.  Two minor typos in pcre_internal.h have been fixed.
306    
307    3.  Added #include <string.h> to pcre_scanner_unittest.cc, pcrecpp.cc, and
308        pcrecpp_unittest.cc. They are needed for strcmp(), memset(), and strchr()
309        in some environments (e.g. Solaris 10/SPARC using Sun Studio 12U2).
310    
311    4.  There were a number of related bugs in the code for matching backrefences
312        caselessly in UTF-8 mode when codes for the characters concerned were
313        different numbers of bytes. For example, U+023A and U+2C65 are an upper
314        and lower case pair, using 2 and 3 bytes, respectively. The main bugs were:
315        (a) A reference to 3 copies of a 2-byte code matched only 2 of a 3-byte
316        code. (b) A reference to 2 copies of a 3-byte code would not match 2 of a
317        2-byte code at the end of the subject (it thought there wasn't enough data
318        left).
319    
320    5.  Comprehensive information about what went wrong is now returned by
321        pcre_exec() and pcre_dfa_exec() when the UTF-8 string check fails, as long
322        as the output vector has at least 2 elements. The offset of the start of
323        the failing character and a reason code are placed in the vector.
324    
325    6.  When the UTF-8 string check fails for pcre_compile(), the offset that is
326        now returned is for the first byte of the failing character, instead of the
327        last byte inspected. This is an incompatible change, but I hope it is small
328        enough not to be a problem. It makes the returned offset consistent with
329        pcre_exec() and pcre_dfa_exec().
330    
331    7.  pcretest now gives a text phrase as well as the error number when
332        pcre_exec() or pcre_dfa_exec() fails; if the error is a UTF-8 check
333        failure, the offset and reason code are output.
334    
335    8.  When \R was used with a maximizing quantifier it failed to skip backwards
336        over a \r\n pair if the subsequent match failed. Instead, it just skipped
337        back over a single character (\n). This seems wrong (because it treated the
338        two characters as a single entity when going forwards), conflicts with the
339        documentation that \R is equivalent to (?>\r\n|\n|...etc), and makes the
340        behaviour of \R* different to (\R)*, which also seems wrong. The behaviour
341        has been changed.
342    
343    9.  Some internal refactoring has changed the processing so that the handling
344        of the PCRE_CASELESS and PCRE_MULTILINE options is done entirely at compile
345        time (the PCRE_DOTALL option was changed this way some time ago: version
346        7.7 change 16). This has made it possible to abolish the OP_OPT op code,
347        which was always a bit of a fudge. It also means that there is one less
348        argument for the match() function, which reduces its stack requirements
349        slightly. This change also fixes an incompatibility with Perl: the pattern
350        (?i:([^b]))(?1) should not match "ab", but previously PCRE gave a match.
351    
352    10. More internal refactoring has drastically reduced the number of recursive
353        calls to match() for possessively repeated groups such as (abc)++ when
354        using pcre_exec().
355    
356    11. While implementing 10, a number of bugs in the handling of groups were
357        discovered and fixed:
358    
359        (?<=(a)+) was not diagnosed as invalid (non-fixed-length lookbehind).
360        (a|)*(?1) gave a compile-time internal error.
361        ((a|)+)+  did not notice that the outer group could match an empty string.
362        (^a|^)+   was not marked as anchored.
363        (.*a|.*)+ was not marked as matching at start or after a newline.
364    
365    12. Yet more internal refactoring has removed another argument from the match()
366        function. Special calls to this function are now indicated by setting a
367        value in a variable in the "match data" data block.
368    
369    13. Be more explicit in pcre_study() instead of relying on "default" for
370        opcodes that mean there is no starting character; this means that when new
371        ones are added and accidentally left out of pcre_study(), testing should
372        pick them up.
373    
374    14. The -s option of pcretest has been documented for ages as being an old
375        synonym of -m (show memory usage). I have changed it to mean "force study
376        for every regex", that is, assume /S for every regex. This is similar to -i
377        and -d etc. It's slightly incompatible, but I'm hoping nobody is still
378        using it. It makes it easier to run collections of tests with and without
379        study enabled, and thereby test pcre_study() more easily. All the standard
380        tests are now run with and without -s (but some patterns can be marked as
381        "never study" - see 20 below).
382    
383    15. When (*ACCEPT) was used in a subpattern that was called recursively, the
384        restoration of the capturing data to the outer values was not happening
385        correctly.
386    
387    16. If a recursively called subpattern ended with (*ACCEPT) and matched an
388        empty string, and PCRE_NOTEMPTY was set, pcre_exec() thought the whole
389        pattern had matched an empty string, and so incorrectly returned a no
390        match.
391    
392    17. There was optimizing code for the last branch of non-capturing parentheses,
393        and also for the obeyed branch of a conditional subexpression, which used
394        tail recursion to cut down on stack usage. Unfortunately, now that there is
395        the possibility of (*THEN) occurring in these branches, tail recursion is
396        no longer possible because the return has to be checked for (*THEN). These
397        two optimizations have therefore been removed. [But see 8.20/11 above.]
398    
399    18. If a pattern containing \R was studied, it was assumed that \R always
400        matched two bytes, thus causing the minimum subject length to be
401        incorrectly computed because \R can also match just one byte.
402    
403    19. If a pattern containing (*ACCEPT) was studied, the minimum subject length
404        was incorrectly computed.
405    
406    20. If /S is present twice on a test pattern in pcretest input, it now
407        *disables* studying, thereby overriding the use of -s on the command line
408        (see 14 above). This is necessary for one or two tests to keep the output
409        identical in both cases.
410    
411    21. When (*ACCEPT) was used in an assertion that matched an empty string and
412        PCRE_NOTEMPTY was set, PCRE applied the non-empty test to the assertion.
413    
414    22. When an atomic group that contained a capturing parenthesis was
415        successfully matched, but the branch in which it appeared failed, the
416        capturing was not being forgotten if a higher numbered group was later
417        captured. For example, /(?>(a))b|(a)c/ when matching "ac" set capturing
418        group 1 to "a", when in fact it should be unset. This applied to multi-
419        branched capturing and non-capturing groups, repeated or not, and also to
420        positive assertions (capturing in negative assertions does not happen
421        in PCRE) and also to nested atomic groups.
422    
423    23. Add the ++ qualifier feature to pcretest, to show the remainder of the
424        subject after a captured substring, to make it easier to tell which of a
425        number of identical substrings has been captured.
426    
427    24. The way atomic groups are processed by pcre_exec() has been changed so that
428        if they are repeated, backtracking one repetition now resets captured
429        values correctly. For example, if ((?>(a+)b)+aabab) is matched against
430        "aaaabaaabaabab" the value of captured group 2 is now correctly recorded as
431        "aaa". Previously, it would have been "a". As part of this code
432        refactoring, the way recursive calls are handled has also been changed.
433    
434    25. If an assertion condition captured any substrings, they were not passed
435        back unless some other capturing happened later. For example, if
436        (?(?=(a))a) was matched against "a", no capturing was returned.
437    
438    26. When studying a pattern that contained subroutine calls or assertions,
439        the code for finding the minimum length of a possible match was handling
440        direct recursions such as (xxx(?1)|yyy) but not mutual recursions (where
441        group 1 called group 2 while simultaneously a separate group 2 called group
442        1). A stack overflow occurred in this case. I have fixed this by limiting
443        the recursion depth to 10.
444    
445    27. Updated RunTest.bat in the distribution to the version supplied by Tom
446        Fortmann. This supports explicit test numbers on the command line, and has
447        argument validation and error reporting.
448    
449    28. An instance of \X with an unlimited repeat could fail if at any point the
450        first character it looked at was a mark character.
451    
452    29. Some minor code refactoring concerning Unicode properties and scripts
453        should reduce the stack requirement of match() slightly.
454    
455    30. Added the '=' option to pcretest to check the setting of unused capturing
456        slots at the end of the pattern, which are documented as being -1, but are
457        not included in the return count.
458    
459    31. If \k was not followed by a braced, angle-bracketed, or quoted name, PCRE
460        compiled something random. Now it gives a compile-time error (as does
461        Perl).
462    
463    32. A *MARK encountered during the processing of a positive assertion is now
464        recorded and passed back (compatible with Perl).
465    
466    33. If --only-matching or --colour was set on a pcregrep call whose pattern
467        had alternative anchored branches, the search for a second match in a line
468        was done as if at the line start. Thus, for example, /^01|^02/ incorrectly
469        matched the line "0102" twice. The same bug affected patterns that started
470        with a backwards assertion. For example /\b01|\b02/ also matched "0102"
471        twice.
472    
473    34. Previously, PCRE did not allow quantification of assertions. However, Perl
474        does, and because of capturing effects, quantifying parenthesized
475        assertions may at times be useful. Quantifiers are now allowed for
476        parenthesized assertions.
477    
478    35. A minor code tidy in pcre_compile() when checking options for \R usage.
479    
480    36. \g was being checked for fancy things in a character class, when it should
481        just be a literal "g".
482    
483    37. PCRE was rejecting [:a[:digit:]] whereas Perl was not. It seems that the
484        appearance of a nested POSIX class supersedes an apparent external class.
485        For example, [:a[:digit:]b:] matches "a", "b", ":", or a digit. Also,
486        unescaped square brackets may also appear as part of class names. For
487        example, [:a[:abc]b:] gives unknown class "[:abc]b:]". PCRE now behaves
488        more like Perl. (But see 8.20/1 above.)
489    
490    38. PCRE was giving an error for \N with a braced quantifier such as {1,} (this
491        was because it thought it was \N{name}, which is not supported).
492    
493    39. Add minix to OS list not supporting the -S option in pcretest.
494    
495    40. PCRE tries to detect cases of infinite recursion at compile time, but it
496        cannot analyze patterns in sufficient detail to catch mutual recursions
497        such as ((?1))((?2)). There is now a runtime test that gives an error if a
498        subgroup is called recursively as a subpattern for a second time at the
499        same position in the subject string. In previous releases this might have
500        been caught by the recursion limit, or it might have run out of stack.
501    
502    41. A pattern such as /(?(R)a+|(?R)b)/ is quite safe, as the recursion can
503        happen only once. PCRE was, however incorrectly giving a compile time error
504        "recursive call could loop indefinitely" because it cannot analyze the
505        pattern in sufficient detail. The compile time test no longer happens when
506        PCRE is compiling a conditional subpattern, but actual runaway loops are
507        now caught at runtime (see 40 above).
508    
509    42. It seems that Perl allows any characters other than a closing parenthesis
510        to be part of the NAME in (*MARK:NAME) and other backtracking verbs. PCRE
511        has been changed to be the same.
512    
513    43. Updated configure.ac to put in more quoting round AC_LANG_PROGRAM etc. so
514        as not to get warnings when autogen.sh is called. Also changed
515        AC_PROG_LIBTOOL (deprecated) to LT_INIT (the current macro).
516    
517    44. To help people who use pcregrep to scan files containing exceedingly long
518        lines, the following changes have been made:
519    
520        (a) The default value of the buffer size parameter has been increased from
521            8K to 20K. (The actual buffer used is three times this size.)
522    
523        (b) The default can be changed by ./configure --with-pcregrep-bufsize when
524            PCRE is built.
525    
526        (c) A --buffer-size=n option has been added to pcregrep, to allow the size
527            to be set at run time.
528    
529        (d) Numerical values in pcregrep options can be followed by K or M, for
530            example --buffer-size=50K.
531    
532        (e) If a line being scanned overflows pcregrep's buffer, an error is now
533            given and the return code is set to 2.
534    
535    45. Add a pointer to the latest mark to the callout data block.
536    
537    46. The pattern /.(*F)/, when applied to "abc" with PCRE_PARTIAL_HARD, gave a
538        partial match of an empty string instead of no match. This was specific to
539        the use of ".".
540    
541    47. The pattern /f.*/8s, when applied to "for" with PCRE_PARTIAL_HARD, gave a
542        complete match instead of a partial match. This bug was dependent on both
543        the PCRE_UTF8 and PCRE_DOTALL options being set.
544    
545    48. For a pattern such as /\babc|\bdef/ pcre_study() was failing to set up the
546        starting byte set, because \b was not being ignored.
547    
548    
549    Version 8.12 15-Jan-2011
550    ------------------------
551    
552    1.  Fixed some typos in the markup of the man pages, and wrote a script that
553        checks for such things as part of the documentation building process.
554    
555    2.  On a big-endian 64-bit system, pcregrep did not correctly process the
556        --match-limit and --recursion-limit options (added for 8.11). In
557        particular, this made one of the standard tests fail. (The integer value
558        went into the wrong half of a long int.)
559    
560    3.  If the --colour option was given to pcregrep with -v (invert match), it
561        did strange things, either producing crazy output, or crashing. It should,
562        of course, ignore a request for colour when reporting lines that do not
563        match.
564    
565    4.  Another pcregrep bug caused similar problems if --colour was specified with
566        -M (multiline) and the pattern match finished with a line ending.
567    
568    5.  In pcregrep, when a pattern that ended with a literal newline sequence was
569        matched in multiline mode, the following line was shown as part of the
570        match. This seems wrong, so I have changed it.
571    
572    6.  Another pcregrep bug in multiline mode, when --colour was specified, caused
573        the check for further matches in the same line (so they could be coloured)
574        to overrun the end of the current line. If another match was found, it was
575        incorrectly shown (and then shown again when found in the next line).
576    
577    7.  If pcregrep was compiled under Windows, there was a reference to the
578        function pcregrep_exit() before it was defined. I am assuming this was
579        the cause of the "error C2371: 'pcregrep_exit' : redefinition;" that was
580        reported by a user. I've moved the definition above the reference.
581    
582    
583    Version 8.11 10-Dec-2010
584    ------------------------
585    
586    1.  (*THEN) was not working properly if there were untried alternatives prior
587        to it in the current branch. For example, in ((a|b)(*THEN)(*F)|c..) it
588        backtracked to try for "b" instead of moving to the next alternative branch
589        at the same level (in this case, to look for "c"). The Perl documentation
590        is clear that when (*THEN) is backtracked onto, it goes to the "next
591        alternative in the innermost enclosing group".
592    
593    2.  (*COMMIT) was not overriding (*THEN), as it does in Perl. In a pattern
594        such as   (A(*COMMIT)B(*THEN)C|D)  any failure after matching A should
595        result in overall failure. Similarly, (*COMMIT) now overrides (*PRUNE) and
596        (*SKIP), (*SKIP) overrides (*PRUNE) and (*THEN), and (*PRUNE) overrides
597        (*THEN).
598    
599    3.  If \s appeared in a character class, it removed the VT character from
600        the class, even if it had been included by some previous item, for example
601        in [\x00-\xff\s]. (This was a bug related to the fact that VT is not part
602        of \s, but is part of the POSIX "space" class.)
603    
604    4.  A partial match never returns an empty string (because you can always
605        match an empty string at the end of the subject); however the checking for
606        an empty string was starting at the "start of match" point. This has been
607        changed to the "earliest inspected character" point, because the returned
608        data for a partial match starts at this character. This means that, for
609        example, /(?<=abc)def/ gives a partial match for the subject "abc"
610        (previously it gave "no match").
611    
612    5.  Changes have been made to the way PCRE_PARTIAL_HARD affects the matching
613        of $, \z, \Z, \b, and \B. If the match point is at the end of the string,
614        previously a full match would be given. However, setting PCRE_PARTIAL_HARD
615        has an implication that the given string is incomplete (because a partial
616        match is preferred over a full match). For this reason, these items now
617        give a partial match in this situation. [Aside: previously, the one case
618        /t\b/ matched against "cat" with PCRE_PARTIAL_HARD set did return a partial
619        match rather than a full match, which was wrong by the old rules, but is
620        now correct.]
621    
622    6.  There was a bug in the handling of #-introduced comments, recognized when
623        PCRE_EXTENDED is set, when PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY and PCRE_UTF8 were also set.
624        If a UTF-8 multi-byte character included the byte 0x85 (e.g. +U0445, whose
625        UTF-8 encoding is 0xd1,0x85), this was misinterpreted as a newline when
626        scanning for the end of the comment. (*Character* 0x85 is an "any" newline,
627        but *byte* 0x85 is not, in UTF-8 mode). This bug was present in several
628        places in pcre_compile().
629    
630    7.  Related to (6) above, when pcre_compile() was skipping #-introduced
631        comments when looking ahead for named forward references to subpatterns,
632        the only newline sequence it recognized was NL. It now handles newlines
633        according to the set newline convention.
634    
635    8.  SunOS4 doesn't have strerror() or strtoul(); pcregrep dealt with the
636        former, but used strtoul(), whereas pcretest avoided strtoul() but did not
637        cater for a lack of strerror(). These oversights have been fixed.
638    
639    9.  Added --match-limit and --recursion-limit to pcregrep.
640    
641    10. Added two casts needed to build with Visual Studio when NO_RECURSE is set.
642    
643    11. When the -o option was used, pcregrep was setting a return code of 1, even
644        when matches were found, and --line-buffered was not being honoured.
645    
646    12. Added an optional parentheses number to the -o and --only-matching options
647        of pcregrep.
648    
649    13. Imitating Perl's /g action for multiple matches is tricky when the pattern
650        can match an empty string. The code to do it in pcretest and pcredemo
651        needed fixing:
652    
653        (a) When the newline convention was "crlf", pcretest got it wrong, skipping
654            only one byte after an empty string match just before CRLF (this case
655            just got forgotten; "any" and "anycrlf" were OK).
656    
657        (b) The pcretest code also had a bug, causing it to loop forever in UTF-8
658            mode when an empty string match preceded an ASCII character followed by
659            a non-ASCII character. (The code for advancing by one character rather
660            than one byte was nonsense.)
661    
662        (c) The pcredemo.c sample program did not have any code at all to handle
663            the cases when CRLF is a valid newline sequence.
664    
665    14. Neither pcre_exec() nor pcre_dfa_exec() was checking that the value given
666        as a starting offset was within the subject string. There is now a new
667        error, PCRE_ERROR_BADOFFSET, which is returned if the starting offset is
668        negative or greater than the length of the string. In order to test this,
669        pcretest is extended to allow the setting of negative starting offsets.
670    
671    15. In both pcre_exec() and pcre_dfa_exec() the code for checking that the
672        starting offset points to the beginning of a UTF-8 character was
673        unnecessarily clumsy. I tidied it up.
674    
675    16. Added PCRE_ERROR_SHORTUTF8 to make it possible to distinguish between a
676        bad UTF-8 sequence and one that is incomplete when using PCRE_PARTIAL_HARD.
677    
678    17. Nobody had reported that the --include_dir option, which was added in
679        release 7.7 should have been called --include-dir (hyphen, not underscore)
680        for compatibility with GNU grep. I have changed it to --include-dir, but
681        left --include_dir as an undocumented synonym, and the same for
682        --exclude-dir, though that is not available in GNU grep, at least as of
683        release 2.5.4.
684    
685    18. At a user's suggestion, the macros GETCHAR and friends (which pick up UTF-8
686        characters from a string of bytes) have been redefined so as not to use
687        loops, in order to improve performance in some environments. At the same
688        time, I abstracted some of the common code into auxiliary macros to save
689        repetition (this should not affect the compiled code).
690    
691    19. If \c was followed by a multibyte UTF-8 character, bad things happened. A
692        compile-time error is now given if \c is not followed by an ASCII
693        character, that is, a byte less than 128. (In EBCDIC mode, the code is
694        different, and any byte value is allowed.)
695    
696    20. Recognize (*NO_START_OPT) at the start of a pattern to set the PCRE_NO_
697        START_OPTIMIZE option, which is now allowed at compile time - but just
698        passed through to pcre_exec() or pcre_dfa_exec(). This makes it available
699        to pcregrep and other applications that have no direct access to PCRE
700        options. The new /Y option in pcretest sets this option when calling
701        pcre_compile().
702    
703    21. Change 18 of release 8.01 broke the use of named subpatterns for recursive
704        back references. Groups containing recursive back references were forced to
705        be atomic by that change, but in the case of named groups, the amount of
706        memory required was incorrectly computed, leading to "Failed: internal
707        error: code overflow". This has been fixed.
708    
709    22. Some patches to pcre_stringpiece.h, pcre_stringpiece_unittest.cc, and
710        pcretest.c, to avoid build problems in some Borland environments.
711    
712    
713    Version 8.10 25-Jun-2010
714    ------------------------
715    
716    1.  Added support for (*MARK:ARG) and for ARG additions to PRUNE, SKIP, and
717        THEN.
718    
719    2.  (*ACCEPT) was not working when inside an atomic group.
720    
721    3.  Inside a character class, \B is treated as a literal by default, but
722        faulted if PCRE_EXTRA is set. This mimics Perl's behaviour (the -w option
723        causes the error). The code is unchanged, but I tidied the documentation.
724    
725    4.  Inside a character class, PCRE always treated \R and \X as literals,
726        whereas Perl faults them if its -w option is set. I have changed PCRE so
727        that it faults them when PCRE_EXTRA is set.
728    
729    5.  Added support for \N, which always matches any character other than
730        newline. (It is the same as "." when PCRE_DOTALL is not set.)
731    
732    6.  When compiling pcregrep with newer versions of gcc which may have
733        FORTIFY_SOURCE set, several warnings "ignoring return value of 'fwrite',
734        declared with attribute warn_unused_result" were given. Just casting the
735        result to (void) does not stop the warnings; a more elaborate fudge is
736        needed. I've used a macro to implement this.
737    
738    7.  Minor change to pcretest.c to avoid a compiler warning.
739    
740    8.  Added four artifical Unicode properties to help with an option to make
741        \s etc use properties (see next item). The new properties are: Xan
742        (alphanumeric), Xsp (Perl space), Xps (POSIX space), and Xwd (word).
743    
744    9.  Added PCRE_UCP to make \b, \d, \s, \w, and certain POSIX character classes
745        use Unicode properties. (*UCP) at the start of a pattern can be used to set
746        this option. Modified pcretest to add /W to test this facility. Added
747        REG_UCP to make it available via the POSIX interface.
748    
749    10. Added --line-buffered to pcregrep.
750    
751    11. In UTF-8 mode, if a pattern that was compiled with PCRE_CASELESS was
752        studied, and the match started with a letter with a code point greater than
753        127 whose first byte was different to the first byte of the other case of
754        the letter, the other case of this starting letter was not recognized
755        (#976).
756    
757    12. If a pattern that was studied started with a repeated Unicode property
758        test, for example, \p{Nd}+, there was the theoretical possibility of
759        setting up an incorrect bitmap of starting bytes, but fortunately it could
760        not have actually happened in practice until change 8 above was made (it
761        added property types that matched character-matching opcodes).
762    
763    13. pcre_study() now recognizes \h, \v, and \R when constructing a bit map of
764        possible starting bytes for non-anchored patterns.
765    
766    14. Extended the "auto-possessify" feature of pcre_compile(). It now recognizes
767        \R, and also a number of cases that involve Unicode properties, both
768        explicit and implicit when PCRE_UCP is set.
769    
770    15. If a repeated Unicode property match (e.g. \p{Lu}*) was used with non-UTF-8
771        input, it could crash or give wrong results if characters with values
772        greater than 0xc0 were present in the subject string. (Detail: it assumed
773        UTF-8 input when processing these items.)
774    
775    16. Added a lot of (int) casts to avoid compiler warnings in systems where
776        size_t is 64-bit (#991).
777    
778    17. Added a check for running out of memory when PCRE is compiled with
779        --disable-stack-for-recursion (#990).
780    
781    18. If the last data line in a file for pcretest does not have a newline on
782        the end, a newline was missing in the output.
783    
784    19. The default pcre_chartables.c file recognizes only ASCII characters (values
785        less than 128) in its various bitmaps. However, there is a facility for
786        generating tables according to the current locale when PCRE is compiled. It
787        turns out that in some environments, 0x85 and 0xa0, which are Unicode space
788        characters, are recognized by isspace() and therefore were getting set in
789        these tables, and indeed these tables seem to approximate to ISO 8859. This
790        caused a problem in UTF-8 mode when pcre_study() was used to create a list
791        of bytes that can start a match. For \s, it was including 0x85 and 0xa0,
792        which of course cannot start UTF-8 characters. I have changed the code so
793        that only real ASCII characters (less than 128) and the correct starting
794        bytes for UTF-8 encodings are set for characters greater than 127 when in
795        UTF-8 mode. (When PCRE_UCP is set - see 9 above - the code is different
796        altogether.)
797    
798    20. Added the /T option to pcretest so as to be able to run tests with non-
799        standard character tables, thus making it possible to include the tests
800        used for 19 above in the standard set of tests.
801    
802    21. A pattern such as (?&t)(?#()(?(DEFINE)(?<t>a)) which has a forward
803        reference to a subpattern the other side of a comment that contains an
804        opening parenthesis caused either an internal compiling error, or a
805        reference to the wrong subpattern.
806    
807    
808    Version 8.02 19-Mar-2010
809    ------------------------
810    
811    1.  The Unicode data tables have been updated to Unicode 5.2.0.
812    
813    2.  Added the option --libs-cpp to pcre-config, but only when C++ support is
814        configured.
815    
816    3.  Updated the licensing terms in the pcregexp.pas file, as agreed with the
817        original author of that file, following a query about its status.
818    
819    4.  On systems that do not have stdint.h (e.g. Solaris), check for and include
820        inttypes.h instead. This fixes a bug that was introduced by change 8.01/8.
821    
822    5.  A pattern such as (?&t)*+(?(DEFINE)(?<t>.)) which has a possessive
823        quantifier applied to a forward-referencing subroutine call, could compile
824        incorrect code or give the error "internal error: previously-checked
825        referenced subpattern not found".
826    
827    6.  Both MS Visual Studio and Symbian OS have problems with initializing
828        variables to point to external functions. For these systems, therefore,
829        pcre_malloc etc. are now initialized to local functions that call the
830        relevant global functions.
831    
832    7.  There were two entries missing in the vectors called coptable and poptable
833        in pcre_dfa_exec.c. This could lead to memory accesses outsize the vectors.
834        I've fixed the data, and added a kludgy way of testing at compile time that
835        the lengths are correct (equal to the number of opcodes).
836    
837    8.  Following on from 7, I added a similar kludge to check the length of the
838        eint vector in pcreposix.c.
839    
840    9.  Error texts for pcre_compile() are held as one long string to avoid too
841        much relocation at load time. To find a text, the string is searched,
842        counting zeros. There was no check for running off the end of the string,
843        which could happen if a new error number was added without updating the
844        string.
845    
846    10. \K gave a compile-time error if it appeared in a lookbehind assersion.
847    
848    11. \K was not working if it appeared in an atomic group or in a group that
849        was called as a "subroutine", or in an assertion. Perl 5.11 documents that
850        \K is "not well defined" if used in an assertion. PCRE now accepts it if
851        the assertion is positive, but not if it is negative.
852    
853    12. Change 11 fortuitously reduced the size of the stack frame used in the
854        "match()" function of pcre_exec.c by one pointer. Forthcoming
855        implementation of support for (*MARK) will need an extra pointer on the
856        stack; I have reserved it now, so that the stack frame size does not
857        decrease.
858    
859    13. A pattern such as (?P<L1>(?P<L2>0)|(?P>L2)(?P>L1)) in which the only other
860        item in branch that calls a recursion is a subroutine call - as in the
861        second branch in the above example - was incorrectly given the compile-
862        time error "recursive call could loop indefinitely" because pcre_compile()
863        was not correctly checking the subroutine for matching a non-empty string.
864    
865    14. The checks for overrunning compiling workspace could trigger after an
866        overrun had occurred. This is a "should never occur" error, but it can be
867        triggered by pathological patterns such as hundreds of nested parentheses.
868        The checks now trigger 100 bytes before the end of the workspace.
869    
870    15. Fix typo in configure.ac: "srtoq" should be "strtoq".
871    
872    
873    Version 8.01 19-Jan-2010
874    ------------------------
875    
876    1.  If a pattern contained a conditional subpattern with only one branch (in
877        particular, this includes all (*DEFINE) patterns), a call to pcre_study()
878        computed the wrong minimum data length (which is of course zero for such
879        subpatterns). This could cause incorrect "no match" results.
880    
881    2.  For patterns such as (?i)a(?-i)b|c where an option setting at the start of
882        the pattern is reset in the first branch, pcre_compile() failed with
883        "internal error: code overflow at offset...". This happened only when
884        the reset was to the original external option setting. (An optimization
885        abstracts leading options settings into an external setting, which was the
886        cause of this.)
887    
888    3.  A pattern such as ^(?!a(*SKIP)b) where a negative assertion contained one
889        of the verbs SKIP, PRUNE, or COMMIT, did not work correctly. When the
890        assertion pattern did not match (meaning that the assertion was true), it
891        was incorrectly treated as false if the SKIP had been reached during the
892        matching. This also applied to assertions used as conditions.
893    
894    4.  If an item that is not supported by pcre_dfa_exec() was encountered in an
895        assertion subpattern, including such a pattern used as a condition,
896        unpredictable results occurred, instead of the error return
897        PCRE_ERROR_DFA_UITEM.
898    
899    5.  The C++ GlobalReplace function was not working like Perl for the special
900        situation when an empty string is matched. It now does the fancy magic
901        stuff that is necessary.
902    
903    6.  In pcre_internal.h, obsolete includes to setjmp.h and stdarg.h have been
904        removed. (These were left over from very, very early versions of PCRE.)
905    
906    7.  Some cosmetic changes to the code to make life easier when compiling it
907        as part of something else:
908    
909        (a) Change DEBUG to PCRE_DEBUG.
910    
911        (b) In pcre_compile(), rename the member of the "branch_chain" structure
912            called "current" as "current_branch", to prevent a collision with the
913            Linux macro when compiled as a kernel module.
914    
915        (c) In pcre_study(), rename the function set_bit() as set_table_bit(), to
916            prevent a collision with the Linux macro when compiled as a kernel
917            module.
918    
919    8.  In pcre_compile() there are some checks for integer overflows that used to
920        cast potentially large values to (double). This has been changed to that
921        when building, a check for int64_t is made, and if it is found, it is used
922        instead, thus avoiding the use of floating point arithmetic. (There is no
923        other use of FP in PCRE.) If int64_t is not found, the fallback is to
924        double.
925    
926    9.  Added two casts to avoid signed/unsigned warnings from VS Studio Express
927        2005 (difference between two addresses compared to an unsigned value).
928    
929    10. Change the standard AC_CHECK_LIB test for libbz2 in configure.ac to a
930        custom one, because of the following reported problem in Windows:
931    
932          - libbz2 uses the Pascal calling convention (WINAPI) for the functions
933              under Win32.
934          - The standard autoconf AC_CHECK_LIB fails to include "bzlib.h",
935              therefore missing the function definition.
936          - The compiler thus generates a "C" signature for the test function.
937          - The linker fails to find the "C" function.
938          - PCRE fails to configure if asked to do so against libbz2.
939    
940    11. When running libtoolize from libtool-2.2.6b as part of autogen.sh, these
941        messages were output:
942    
943          Consider adding `AC_CONFIG_MACRO_DIR([m4])' to configure.ac and
944          rerunning libtoolize, to keep the correct libtool macros in-tree.
945          Consider adding `-I m4' to ACLOCAL_AMFLAGS in Makefile.am.
946    
947        I have done both of these things.
948    
949    12. Although pcre_dfa_exec() does not use nearly as much stack as pcre_exec()
950        most of the time, it *can* run out if it is given a pattern that contains a
951        runaway infinite recursion. I updated the discussion in the pcrestack man
952        page.
953    
954    13. Now that we have gone to the x.xx style of version numbers, the minor
955        version may start with zero. Using 08 or 09 is a bad idea because users
956        might check the value of PCRE_MINOR in their code, and 08 or 09 may be
957        interpreted as invalid octal numbers. I've updated the previous comment in
958        configure.ac, and also added a check that gives an error if 08 or 09 are
959        used.
960    
961    14. Change 8.00/11 was not quite complete: code had been accidentally omitted,
962        causing partial matching to fail when the end of the subject matched \W
963        in a UTF-8 pattern where \W was quantified with a minimum of 3.
964    
965    15. There were some discrepancies between the declarations in pcre_internal.h
966        of _pcre_is_newline(), _pcre_was_newline(), and _pcre_valid_utf8() and
967        their definitions. The declarations used "const uschar *" and the
968        definitions used USPTR. Even though USPTR is normally defined as "const
969        unsigned char *" (and uschar is typedeffed as "unsigned char"), it was
970        reported that: "This difference in casting confuses some C++ compilers, for
971        example, SunCC recognizes above declarations as different functions and
972        generates broken code for hbpcre." I have changed the declarations to use
973        USPTR.
974    
975    16. GNU libtool is named differently on some systems. The autogen.sh script now
976        tries several variants such as glibtoolize (MacOSX) and libtoolize1x
977        (FreeBSD).
978    
979    17. Applied Craig's patch that fixes an HP aCC compile error in pcre 8.00
980        (strtoXX undefined when compiling pcrecpp.cc). The patch contains this
981        comment: "Figure out how to create a longlong from a string: strtoll and
982        equivalent. It's not enough to call AC_CHECK_FUNCS: hpux has a strtoll, for
983        instance, but it only takes 2 args instead of 3!"
984    
985    18. A subtle bug concerned with back references has been fixed by a change of
986        specification, with a corresponding code fix. A pattern such as
987        ^(xa|=?\1a)+$ which contains a back reference inside the group to which it
988        refers, was giving matches when it shouldn't. For example, xa=xaaa would
989        match that pattern. Interestingly, Perl (at least up to 5.11.3) has the
990        same bug. Such groups have to be quantified to be useful, or contained
991        inside another quantified group. (If there's no repetition, the reference
992        can never match.) The problem arises because, having left the group and
993        moved on to the rest of the pattern, a later failure that backtracks into
994        the group uses the captured value from the final iteration of the group
995        rather than the correct earlier one. I have fixed this in PCRE by forcing
996        any group that contains a reference to itself to be an atomic group; that
997        is, there cannot be any backtracking into it once it has completed. This is
998        similar to recursive and subroutine calls.
999    
1000    
1001    Version 8.00 19-Oct-09
1002    ----------------------
1003    
1004    1.  The table for translating pcre_compile() error codes into POSIX error codes
1005        was out-of-date, and there was no check on the pcre_compile() error code
1006        being within the table. This could lead to an OK return being given in
1007        error.
1008    
1009    2.  Changed the call to open a subject file in pcregrep from fopen(pathname,
1010        "r") to fopen(pathname, "rb"), which fixed a problem with some of the tests
1011        in a Windows environment.
1012    
1013    3.  The pcregrep --count option prints the count for each file even when it is
1014        zero, as does GNU grep. However, pcregrep was also printing all files when
1015        --files-with-matches was added. Now, when both options are given, it prints
1016        counts only for those files that have at least one match. (GNU grep just
1017        prints the file name in this circumstance, but including the count seems
1018        more useful - otherwise, why use --count?) Also ensured that the
1019        combination -clh just lists non-zero counts, with no names.
1020    
1021    4.  The long form of the pcregrep -F option was incorrectly implemented as
1022        --fixed_strings instead of --fixed-strings. This is an incompatible change,
1023        but it seems right to fix it, and I didn't think it was worth preserving
1024        the old behaviour.
1025    
1026    5.  The command line items --regex=pattern and --regexp=pattern were not
1027        recognized by pcregrep, which required --regex pattern or --regexp pattern
1028        (with a space rather than an '='). The man page documented the '=' forms,
1029        which are compatible with GNU grep; these now work.
1030    
1031    6.  No libpcreposix.pc file was created for pkg-config; there was just
1032        libpcre.pc and libpcrecpp.pc. The omission has been rectified.
1033    
1034    7.  Added #ifndef SUPPORT_UCP into the pcre_ucd.c module, to reduce its size
1035        when UCP support is not needed, by modifying the Python script that
1036        generates it from Unicode data files. This should not matter if the module
1037        is correctly used as a library, but I received one complaint about 50K of
1038        unwanted data. My guess is that the person linked everything into his
1039        program rather than using a library. Anyway, it does no harm.
1040    
1041    8.  A pattern such as /\x{123}{2,2}+/8 was incorrectly compiled; the trigger
1042        was a minimum greater than 1 for a wide character in a possessive
1043        repetition. The same bug could also affect patterns like /(\x{ff}{0,2})*/8
1044        which had an unlimited repeat of a nested, fixed maximum repeat of a wide
1045        character. Chaos in the form of incorrect output or a compiling loop could
1046        result.
1047    
1048    9.  The restrictions on what a pattern can contain when partial matching is
1049        requested for pcre_exec() have been removed. All patterns can now be
1050        partially matched by this function. In addition, if there are at least two
1051        slots in the offset vector, the offset of the earliest inspected character
1052        for the match and the offset of the end of the subject are set in them when
1053        PCRE_ERROR_PARTIAL is returned.
1054    
1055    10. Partial matching has been split into two forms: PCRE_PARTIAL_SOFT, which is
1056        synonymous with PCRE_PARTIAL, for backwards compatibility, and
1057        PCRE_PARTIAL_HARD, which causes a partial match to supersede a full match,
1058        and may be more useful for multi-segment matching.
1059    
1060    11. Partial matching with pcre_exec() is now more intuitive. A partial match
1061        used to be given if ever the end of the subject was reached; now it is
1062        given only if matching could not proceed because another character was
1063        needed. This makes a difference in some odd cases such as Z(*FAIL) with the
1064        string "Z", which now yields "no match" instead of "partial match". In the
1065        case of pcre_dfa_exec(), "no match" is given if every matching path for the
1066        final character ended with (*FAIL).
1067    
1068    12. Restarting a match using pcre_dfa_exec() after a partial match did not work
1069        if the pattern had a "must contain" character that was already found in the
1070        earlier partial match, unless partial matching was again requested. For
1071        example, with the pattern /dog.(body)?/, the "must contain" character is
1072        "g". If the first part-match was for the string "dog", restarting with
1073        "sbody" failed. This bug has been fixed.
1074    
1075    13. The string returned by pcre_dfa_exec() after a partial match has been
1076        changed so that it starts at the first inspected character rather than the
1077        first character of the match. This makes a difference only if the pattern
1078        starts with a lookbehind assertion or \b or \B (\K is not supported by
1079        pcre_dfa_exec()). It's an incompatible change, but it makes the two
1080        matching functions compatible, and I think it's the right thing to do.
1081    
1082    14. Added a pcredemo man page, created automatically from the pcredemo.c file,
1083        so that the demonstration program is easily available in environments where
1084        PCRE has not been installed from source.
1085    
1086    15. Arranged to add -DPCRE_STATIC to cflags in libpcre.pc, libpcreposix.cp,
1087        libpcrecpp.pc and pcre-config when PCRE is not compiled as a shared
1088        library.
1089    
1090    16. Added REG_UNGREEDY to the pcreposix interface, at the request of a user.
1091        It maps to PCRE_UNGREEDY. It is not, of course, POSIX-compatible, but it
1092        is not the first non-POSIX option to be added. Clearly some people find
1093        these options useful.
1094    
1095    17. If a caller to the POSIX matching function regexec() passes a non-zero
1096        value for nmatch with a NULL value for pmatch, the value of
1097        nmatch is forced to zero.
1098    
1099    18. RunGrepTest did not have a test for the availability of the -u option of
1100        the diff command, as RunTest does. It now checks in the same way as
1101        RunTest, and also checks for the -b option.
1102    
1103    19. If an odd number of negated classes containing just a single character
1104        interposed, within parentheses, between a forward reference to a named
1105        subpattern and the definition of the subpattern, compilation crashed with
1106        an internal error, complaining that it could not find the referenced
1107        subpattern. An example of a crashing pattern is /(?&A)(([^m])(?<A>))/.
1108        [The bug was that it was starting one character too far in when skipping
1109        over the character class, thus treating the ] as data rather than
1110        terminating the class. This meant it could skip too much.]
1111    
1112    20. Added PCRE_NOTEMPTY_ATSTART in order to be able to correctly implement the
1113        /g option in pcretest when the pattern contains \K, which makes it possible
1114        to have an empty string match not at the start, even when the pattern is
1115        anchored. Updated pcretest and pcredemo to use this option.
1116    
1117    21. If the maximum number of capturing subpatterns in a recursion was greater
1118        than the maximum at the outer level, the higher number was returned, but
1119        with unset values at the outer level. The correct (outer level) value is
1120        now given.
1121    
1122    22. If (*ACCEPT) appeared inside capturing parentheses, previous releases of
1123        PCRE did not set those parentheses (unlike Perl). I have now found a way to
1124        make it do so. The string so far is captured, making this feature
1125        compatible with Perl.
1126    
1127    23. The tests have been re-organized, adding tests 11 and 12, to make it
1128        possible to check the Perl 5.10 features against Perl 5.10.
1129    
1130    24. Perl 5.10 allows subroutine calls in lookbehinds, as long as the subroutine
1131        pattern matches a fixed length string. PCRE did not allow this; now it
1132        does. Neither allows recursion.
1133    
1134    25. I finally figured out how to implement a request to provide the minimum
1135        length of subject string that was needed in order to match a given pattern.
1136        (It was back references and recursion that I had previously got hung up
1137        on.) This code has now been added to pcre_study(); it finds a lower bound
1138        to the length of subject needed. It is not necessarily the greatest lower
1139        bound, but using it to avoid searching strings that are too short does give
1140        some useful speed-ups. The value is available to calling programs via
1141        pcre_fullinfo().
1142    
1143    26. While implementing 25, I discovered to my embarrassment that pcretest had
1144        not been passing the result of pcre_study() to pcre_dfa_exec(), so the
1145        study optimizations had never been tested with that matching function.
1146        Oops. What is worse, even when it was passed study data, there was a bug in
1147        pcre_dfa_exec() that meant it never actually used it. Double oops. There
1148        were also very few tests of studied patterns with pcre_dfa_exec().
1149    
1150    27. If (?| is used to create subpatterns with duplicate numbers, they are now
1151        allowed to have the same name, even if PCRE_DUPNAMES is not set. However,
1152        on the other side of the coin, they are no longer allowed to have different
1153        names, because these cannot be distinguished in PCRE, and this has caused
1154        confusion. (This is a difference from Perl.)
1155    
1156    28. When duplicate subpattern names are present (necessarily with different
1157        numbers, as required by 27 above), and a test is made by name in a
1158        conditional pattern, either for a subpattern having been matched, or for
1159        recursion in such a pattern, all the associated numbered subpatterns are
1160        tested, and the overall condition is true if the condition is true for any
1161        one of them. This is the way Perl works, and is also more like the way
1162        testing by number works.
1163    
1164    
1165    Version 7.9 11-Apr-09
1166    ---------------------
1167    
1168    1.  When building with support for bzlib/zlib (pcregrep) and/or readline
1169        (pcretest), all targets were linked against these libraries. This included
1170        libpcre, libpcreposix, and libpcrecpp, even though they do not use these
1171        libraries. This caused unwanted dependencies to be created. This problem
1172        has been fixed, and now only pcregrep is linked with bzlib/zlib and only
1173        pcretest is linked with readline.
1174    
1175    2.  The "typedef int BOOL" in pcre_internal.h that was included inside the
1176        "#ifndef FALSE" condition by an earlier change (probably 7.8/18) has been
1177        moved outside it again, because FALSE and TRUE are already defined in AIX,
1178        but BOOL is not.
1179    
1180    3.  The pcre_config() function was treating the PCRE_MATCH_LIMIT and
1181        PCRE_MATCH_LIMIT_RECURSION values as ints, when they should be long ints.
1182    
1183    4.  The pcregrep documentation said spaces were inserted as well as colons (or
1184        hyphens) following file names and line numbers when outputting matching
1185        lines. This is not true; no spaces are inserted. I have also clarified the
1186        wording for the --colour (or --color) option.
1187    
1188    5.  In pcregrep, when --colour was used with -o, the list of matching strings
1189        was not coloured; this is different to GNU grep, so I have changed it to be
1190        the same.
1191    
1192    6.  When --colo(u)r was used in pcregrep, only the first matching substring in
1193        each matching line was coloured. Now it goes on to look for further matches
1194        of any of the test patterns, which is the same behaviour as GNU grep.
1195    
1196    7.  A pattern that could match an empty string could cause pcregrep to loop; it
1197        doesn't make sense to accept an empty string match in pcregrep, so I have
1198        locked it out (using PCRE's PCRE_NOTEMPTY option). By experiment, this
1199        seems to be how GNU grep behaves.
1200    
1201    8.  The pattern (?(?=.*b)b|^) was incorrectly compiled as "match must be at
1202        start or after a newline", because the conditional assertion was not being
1203        correctly handled. The rule now is that both the assertion and what follows
1204        in the first alternative must satisfy the test.
1205    
1206    9.  If auto-callout was enabled in a pattern with a conditional group whose
1207        condition was an assertion, PCRE could crash during matching, both with
1208        pcre_exec() and pcre_dfa_exec().
1209    
1210    10. The PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY option was not working when pcre_dfa_exec() was
1211        used for matching.
1212    
1213    11. Unicode property support in character classes was not working for
1214        characters (bytes) greater than 127 when not in UTF-8 mode.
1215    
1216    12. Added the -M command line option to pcretest.
1217    
1218    14. Added the non-standard REG_NOTEMPTY option to the POSIX interface.
1219    
1220    15. Added the PCRE_NO_START_OPTIMIZE match-time option.
1221    
1222    16. Added comments and documentation about mis-use of no_arg in the C++
1223        wrapper.
1224    
1225    17. Implemented support for UTF-8 encoding in EBCDIC environments, a patch
1226        from Martin Jerabek that uses macro names for all relevant character and
1227        string constants.
1228    
1229    18. Added to pcre_internal.h two configuration checks: (a) If both EBCDIC and
1230        SUPPORT_UTF8 are set, give an error; (b) If SUPPORT_UCP is set without
1231        SUPPORT_UTF8, define SUPPORT_UTF8. The "configure" script handles both of
1232        these, but not everybody uses configure.
1233    
1234    19. A conditional group that had only one branch was not being correctly
1235        recognized as an item that could match an empty string. This meant that an
1236        enclosing group might also not be so recognized, causing infinite looping
1237        (and probably a segfault) for patterns such as ^"((?(?=[a])[^"])|b)*"$
1238        with the subject "ab", where knowledge that the repeated group can match
1239        nothing is needed in order to break the loop.
1240    
1241    20. If a pattern that was compiled with callouts was matched using pcre_dfa_
1242        exec(), but without supplying a callout function, matching went wrong.
1243    
1244    21. If PCRE_ERROR_MATCHLIMIT occurred during a recursion, there was a memory
1245        leak if the size of the offset vector was greater than 30. When the vector
1246        is smaller, the saved offsets during recursion go onto a local stack
1247        vector, but for larger vectors malloc() is used. It was failing to free
1248        when the recursion yielded PCRE_ERROR_MATCH_LIMIT (or any other "abnormal"
1249        error, in fact).
1250    
1251    22. There was a missing #ifdef SUPPORT_UTF8 round one of the variables in the
1252        heapframe that is used only when UTF-8 support is enabled. This caused no
1253        problem, but was untidy.
1254    
1255    23. Steven Van Ingelgem's patch to CMakeLists.txt to change the name
1256        CMAKE_BINARY_DIR to PROJECT_BINARY_DIR so that it works when PCRE is
1257        included within another project.
1258    
1259    24. Steven Van Ingelgem's patches to add more options to the CMake support,
1260        slightly modified by me:
1261    
1262          (a) PCRE_BUILD_TESTS can be set OFF not to build the tests, including
1263              not building pcregrep.
1264    
1265          (b) PCRE_BUILD_PCREGREP can be see OFF not to build pcregrep, but only
1266              if PCRE_BUILD_TESTS is also set OFF, because the tests use pcregrep.
1267    
1268    25. Forward references, both numeric and by name, in patterns that made use of
1269        duplicate group numbers, could behave incorrectly or give incorrect errors,
1270        because when scanning forward to find the reference group, PCRE was not
1271        taking into account the duplicate group numbers. A pattern such as
1272        ^X(?3)(a)(?|(b)|(q))(Y) is an example.
1273    
1274    26. Changed a few more instances of "const unsigned char *" to USPTR, making
1275        the feature of a custom pointer more persuasive (as requested by a user).
1276    
1277    27. Wrapped the definitions of fileno and isatty for Windows, which appear in
1278        pcretest.c, inside #ifndefs, because it seems they are sometimes already
1279        pre-defined.
1280    
1281    28. Added support for (*UTF8) at the start of a pattern.
1282    
1283    29. Arrange for flags added by the "release type" setting in CMake to be shown
1284        in the configuration summary.
1285    
1286    
1287    Version 7.8 05-Sep-08
1288    ---------------------
1289    
1290    1.  Replaced UCP searching code with optimized version as implemented for Ad
1291        Muncher (http://www.admuncher.com/) by Peter Kankowski. This uses a two-
1292        stage table and inline lookup instead of a function, giving speed ups of 2
1293        to 5 times on some simple patterns that I tested. Permission was given to
1294        distribute the MultiStage2.py script that generates the tables (it's not in
1295        the tarball, but is in the Subversion repository).
1296    
1297    2.  Updated the Unicode datatables to Unicode 5.1.0. This adds yet more
1298        scripts.
1299    
1300    3.  Change 12 for 7.7 introduced a bug in pcre_study() when a pattern contained
1301        a group with a zero qualifier. The result of the study could be incorrect,
1302        or the function might crash, depending on the pattern.
1303    
1304    4.  Caseless matching was not working for non-ASCII characters in back
1305        references. For example, /(\x{de})\1/8i was not matching \x{de}\x{fe}.
1306        It now works when Unicode Property Support is available.
1307    
1308    5.  In pcretest, an escape such as \x{de} in the data was always generating
1309        a UTF-8 string, even in non-UTF-8 mode. Now it generates a single byte in
1310        non-UTF-8 mode. If the value is greater than 255, it gives a warning about
1311        truncation.
1312    
1313    6.  Minor bugfix in pcrecpp.cc (change "" == ... to NULL == ...).
1314    
1315    7.  Added two (int) casts to pcregrep when printing the difference of two
1316        pointers, in case they are 64-bit values.
1317    
1318    8.  Added comments about Mac OS X stack usage to the pcrestack man page and to
1319        test 2 if it fails.
1320    
1321    9.  Added PCRE_CALL_CONVENTION just before the names of all exported functions,
1322        and a #define of that name to empty if it is not externally set. This is to
1323        allow users of MSVC to set it if necessary.
1324    
1325    10. The PCRE_EXP_DEFN macro which precedes exported functions was missing from
1326        the convenience functions in the pcre_get.c source file.
1327    
1328    11. An option change at the start of a pattern that had top-level alternatives
1329        could cause overwriting and/or a crash. This command provoked a crash in
1330        some environments:
1331    
1332          printf "/(?i)[\xc3\xa9\xc3\xbd]|[\xc3\xa9\xc3\xbdA]/8\n" | pcretest
1333    
1334        This potential security problem was recorded as CVE-2008-2371.
1335    
1336    12. For a pattern where the match had to start at the beginning or immediately
1337        after a newline (e.g /.*anything/ without the DOTALL flag), pcre_exec() and
1338        pcre_dfa_exec() could read past the end of the passed subject if there was
1339        no match. To help with detecting such bugs (e.g. with valgrind), I modified
1340        pcretest so that it places the subject at the end of its malloc-ed buffer.
1341    
1342    13. The change to pcretest in 12 above threw up a couple more cases when pcre_
1343        exec() might read past the end of the data buffer in UTF-8 mode.
1344    
1345    14. A similar bug to 7.3/2 existed when the PCRE_FIRSTLINE option was set and
1346        the data contained the byte 0x85 as part of a UTF-8 character within its
1347        first line. This applied both to normal and DFA matching.
1348    
1349    15. Lazy qualifiers were not working in some cases in UTF-8 mode. For example,
1350        /^[^d]*?$/8 failed to match "abc".
1351    
1352    16. Added a missing copyright notice to pcrecpp_internal.h.
1353    
1354    17. Make it more clear in the documentation that values returned from
1355        pcre_exec() in ovector are byte offsets, not character counts.
1356    
1357    18. Tidied a few places to stop certain compilers from issuing warnings.
1358    
1359    19. Updated the Virtual Pascal + BCC files to compile the latest v7.7, as
1360        supplied by Stefan Weber. I made a further small update for 7.8 because
1361        there is a change of source arrangements: the pcre_searchfuncs.c module is
1362        replaced by pcre_ucd.c.
1363    
1364    
1365    Version 7.7 07-May-08
1366    ---------------------
1367    
1368    1.  Applied Craig's patch to sort out a long long problem: "If we can't convert
1369        a string to a long long, pretend we don't even have a long long." This is
1370        done by checking for the strtoq, strtoll, and _strtoi64 functions.
1371    
1372    2.  Applied Craig's patch to pcrecpp.cc to restore ABI compatibility with
1373        pre-7.6 versions, which defined a global no_arg variable instead of putting
1374        it in the RE class. (See also #8 below.)
1375    
1376    3.  Remove a line of dead code, identified by coverity and reported by Nuno
1377        Lopes.
1378    
1379    4.  Fixed two related pcregrep bugs involving -r with --include or --exclude:
1380    
1381        (1) The include/exclude patterns were being applied to the whole pathnames
1382            of files, instead of just to the final components.
1383    
1384        (2) If there was more than one level of directory, the subdirectories were
1385            skipped unless they satisfied the include/exclude conditions. This is
1386            inconsistent with GNU grep (and could even be seen as contrary to the
1387            pcregrep specification - which I improved to make it absolutely clear).
1388            The action now is always to scan all levels of directory, and just
1389            apply the include/exclude patterns to regular files.
1390    
1391    5.  Added the --include_dir and --exclude_dir patterns to pcregrep, and used
1392        --exclude_dir in the tests to avoid scanning .svn directories.
1393    
1394    6.  Applied Craig's patch to the QuoteMeta function so that it escapes the
1395        NUL character as backslash + 0 rather than backslash + NUL, because PCRE
1396        doesn't support NULs in patterns.
1397    
1398    7.  Added some missing "const"s to declarations of static tables in
1399        pcre_compile.c and pcre_dfa_exec.c.
1400    
1401    8.  Applied Craig's patch to pcrecpp.cc to fix a problem in OS X that was
1402        caused by fix #2  above. (Subsequently also a second patch to fix the
1403        first patch. And a third patch - this was a messy problem.)
1404    
1405    9.  Applied Craig's patch to remove the use of push_back().
1406    
1407    10. Applied Alan Lehotsky's patch to add REG_STARTEND support to the POSIX
1408        matching function regexec().
1409    
1410    11. Added support for the Oniguruma syntax \g<name>, \g<n>, \g'name', \g'n',
1411        which, however, unlike Perl's \g{...}, are subroutine calls, not back
1412        references. PCRE supports relative numbers with this syntax (I don't think
1413        Oniguruma does).
1414    
1415    12. Previously, a group with a zero repeat such as (...){0} was completely
1416        omitted from the compiled regex. However, this means that if the group
1417        was called as a subroutine from elsewhere in the pattern, things went wrong
1418        (an internal error was given). Such groups are now left in the compiled
1419        pattern, with a new opcode that causes them to be skipped at execution
1420        time.
1421    
1422    13. Added the PCRE_JAVASCRIPT_COMPAT option. This makes the following changes
1423        to the way PCRE behaves:
1424    
1425        (a) A lone ] character is dis-allowed (Perl treats it as data).
1426    
1427        (b) A back reference to an unmatched subpattern matches an empty string
1428            (Perl fails the current match path).
1429    
1430        (c) A data ] in a character class must be notated as \] because if the
1431            first data character in a class is ], it defines an empty class. (In
1432            Perl it is not possible to have an empty class.) The empty class []
1433            never matches; it forces failure and is equivalent to (*FAIL) or (?!).
1434            The negative empty class [^] matches any one character, independently
1435            of the DOTALL setting.
1436    
1437    14. A pattern such as /(?2)[]a()b](abc)/ which had a forward reference to a
1438        non-existent subpattern following a character class starting with ']' and
1439        containing () gave an internal compiling error instead of "reference to
1440        non-existent subpattern". Fortunately, when the pattern did exist, the
1441        compiled code was correct. (When scanning forwards to check for the
1442        existencd of the subpattern, it was treating the data ']' as terminating
1443        the class, so got the count wrong. When actually compiling, the reference
1444        was subsequently set up correctly.)
1445    
1446    15. The "always fail" assertion (?!) is optimzed to (*FAIL) by pcre_compile;
1447        it was being rejected as not supported by pcre_dfa_exec(), even though
1448        other assertions are supported. I have made pcre_dfa_exec() support
1449        (*FAIL).
1450    
1451    16. The implementation of 13c above involved the invention of a new opcode,
1452        OP_ALLANY, which is like OP_ANY but doesn't check the /s flag. Since /s
1453        cannot be changed at match time, I realized I could make a small
1454        improvement to matching performance by compiling OP_ALLANY instead of
1455        OP_ANY for "." when DOTALL was set, and then removing the runtime tests
1456        on the OP_ANY path.
1457    
1458    17. Compiling pcretest on Windows with readline support failed without the
1459        following two fixes: (1) Make the unistd.h include conditional on
1460        HAVE_UNISTD_H; (2) #define isatty and fileno as _isatty and _fileno.
1461    
1462    18. Changed CMakeLists.txt and cmake/FindReadline.cmake to arrange for the
1463        ncurses library to be included for pcretest when ReadLine support is
1464        requested, but also to allow for it to be overridden. This patch came from
1465        Daniel Bergström.
1466    
1467    19. There was a typo in the file ucpinternal.h where f0_rangeflag was defined
1468        as 0x00f00000 instead of 0x00800000. Luckily, this would not have caused
1469        any errors with the current Unicode tables. Thanks to Peter Kankowski for
1470        spotting this.
1471    
1472    
1473    Version 7.6 28-Jan-08
1474    ---------------------
1475    
1476    1.  A character class containing a very large number of characters with
1477        codepoints greater than 255 (in UTF-8 mode, of course) caused a buffer
1478        overflow.
1479    
1480    2.  Patch to cut out the "long long" test in pcrecpp_unittest when
1481        HAVE_LONG_LONG is not defined.
1482    
1483    3.  Applied Christian Ehrlicher's patch to update the CMake build files to
1484        bring them up to date and include new features. This patch includes:
1485    
1486        - Fixed PH's badly added libz and libbz2 support.
1487        - Fixed a problem with static linking.
1488        - Added pcredemo. [But later removed - see 7 below.]
1489        - Fixed dftables problem and added an option.
1490        - Added a number of HAVE_XXX tests, including HAVE_WINDOWS_H and
1491            HAVE_LONG_LONG.
1492        - Added readline support for pcretest.
1493        - Added an listing of the option settings after cmake has run.
1494    
1495    4.  A user submitted a patch to Makefile that makes it easy to create
1496        "pcre.dll" under mingw when using Configure/Make. I added stuff to
1497        Makefile.am that cause it to include this special target, without
1498        affecting anything else. Note that the same mingw target plus all
1499        the other distribution libraries and programs are now supported
1500        when configuring with CMake (see 6 below) instead of with
1501        Configure/Make.
1502    
1503    5.  Applied Craig's patch that moves no_arg into the RE class in the C++ code.
1504        This is an attempt to solve the reported problem "pcrecpp::no_arg is not
1505        exported in the Windows port". It has not yet been confirmed that the patch
1506        solves the problem, but it does no harm.
1507    
1508    6.  Applied Sheri's patch to CMakeLists.txt to add NON_STANDARD_LIB_PREFIX and
1509        NON_STANDARD_LIB_SUFFIX for dll names built with mingw when configured
1510        with CMake, and also correct the comment about stack recursion.
1511    
1512    7.  Remove the automatic building of pcredemo from the ./configure system and
1513        from CMakeLists.txt. The whole idea of pcredemo.c is that it is an example
1514        of a program that users should build themselves after PCRE is installed, so
1515        building it automatically is not really right. What is more, it gave
1516        trouble in some build environments.
1517    
1518    8.  Further tidies to CMakeLists.txt from Sheri and Christian.
1519    
1520    
1521    Version 7.5 10-Jan-08
1522    ---------------------
1523    
1524    1.  Applied a patch from Craig: "This patch makes it possible to 'ignore'
1525        values in parens when parsing an RE using the C++ wrapper."
1526    
1527    2.  Negative specials like \S did not work in character classes in UTF-8 mode.
1528        Characters greater than 255 were excluded from the class instead of being
1529        included.
1530    
1531    3.  The same bug as (2) above applied to negated POSIX classes such as
1532        [:^space:].
1533    
1534    4.  PCRECPP_STATIC was referenced in pcrecpp_internal.h, but nowhere was it
1535        defined or documented. It seems to have been a typo for PCRE_STATIC, so
1536        I have changed it.
1537    
1538    5.  The construct (?&) was not diagnosed as a syntax error (it referenced the
1539        first named subpattern) and a construct such as (?&a) would reference the
1540        first named subpattern whose name started with "a" (in other words, the
1541        length check was missing). Both these problems are fixed. "Subpattern name
1542        expected" is now given for (?&) (a zero-length name), and this patch also
1543        makes it give the same error for \k'' (previously it complained that that
1544        was a reference to a non-existent subpattern).
1545    
1546    6.  The erroneous patterns (?+-a) and (?-+a) give different error messages;
1547        this is right because (?- can be followed by option settings as well as by
1548        digits. I have, however, made the messages clearer.
1549    
1550    7.  Patterns such as (?(1)a|b) (a pattern that contains fewer subpatterns
1551        than the number used in the conditional) now cause a compile-time error.
1552        This is actually not compatible with Perl, which accepts such patterns, but
1553        treats the conditional as always being FALSE (as PCRE used to), but it
1554        seems to me that giving a diagnostic is better.
1555    
1556    8.  Change "alphameric" to the more common word "alphanumeric" in comments
1557        and messages.
1558    
1559    9.  Fix two occurrences of "backslash" in comments that should have been
1560        "backspace".
1561    
1562    10. Remove two redundant lines of code that can never be obeyed (their function
1563        was moved elsewhere).
1564    
1565    11. The program that makes PCRE's Unicode character property table had a bug
1566        which caused it to generate incorrect table entries for sequences of
1567        characters that have the same character type, but are in different scripts.
1568        It amalgamated them into a single range, with the script of the first of
1569        them. In other words, some characters were in the wrong script. There were
1570        thirteen such cases, affecting characters in the following ranges:
1571    
1572          U+002b0 - U+002c1
1573          U+0060c - U+0060d
1574          U+0061e - U+00612
1575          U+0064b - U+0065e
1576          U+0074d - U+0076d
1577          U+01800 - U+01805
1578          U+01d00 - U+01d77
1579          U+01d9b - U+01dbf
1580          U+0200b - U+0200f
1581          U+030fc - U+030fe
1582          U+03260 - U+0327f
1583          U+0fb46 - U+0fbb1
1584          U+10450 - U+1049d
1585    
1586    12. The -o option (show only the matching part of a line) for pcregrep was not
1587        compatible with GNU grep in that, if there was more than one match in a
1588        line, it showed only the first of them. It now behaves in the same way as
1589        GNU grep.
1590    
1591    13. If the -o and -v options were combined for pcregrep, it printed a blank
1592        line for every non-matching line. GNU grep prints nothing, and pcregrep now
1593        does the same. The return code can be used to tell if there were any
1594        non-matching lines.
1595    
1596    14. Added --file-offsets and --line-offsets to pcregrep.
1597    
1598    15. The pattern (?=something)(?R) was not being diagnosed as a potentially
1599        infinitely looping recursion. The bug was that positive lookaheads were not
1600        being skipped when checking for a possible empty match (negative lookaheads
1601        and both kinds of lookbehind were skipped).
1602    
1603    16. Fixed two typos in the Windows-only code in pcregrep.c, and moved the
1604        inclusion of <windows.h> to before rather than after the definition of
1605        INVALID_FILE_ATTRIBUTES (patch from David Byron).
1606    
1607    17. Specifying a possessive quantifier with a specific limit for a Unicode
1608        character property caused pcre_compile() to compile bad code, which led at
1609        runtime to PCRE_ERROR_INTERNAL (-14). Examples of patterns that caused this
1610        are: /\p{Zl}{2,3}+/8 and /\p{Cc}{2}+/8. It was the possessive "+" that
1611        caused the error; without that there was no problem.
1612    
1613    18. Added --enable-pcregrep-libz and --enable-pcregrep-libbz2.
1614    
1615    19. Added --enable-pcretest-libreadline.
1616    
1617    20. In pcrecpp.cc, the variable 'count' was incremented twice in
1618        RE::GlobalReplace(). As a result, the number of replacements returned was
1619        double what it should be. I removed one of the increments, but Craig sent a
1620        later patch that removed the other one (the right fix) and added unit tests
1621        that check the return values (which was not done before).
1622    
1623    21. Several CMake things:
1624    
1625        (1) Arranged that, when cmake is used on Unix, the libraries end up with
1626            the names libpcre and libpcreposix, not just pcre and pcreposix.
1627    
1628        (2) The above change means that pcretest and pcregrep are now correctly
1629            linked with the newly-built libraries, not previously installed ones.
1630    
1631        (3) Added PCRE_SUPPORT_LIBREADLINE, PCRE_SUPPORT_LIBZ, PCRE_SUPPORT_LIBBZ2.
1632    
1633    22. In UTF-8 mode, with newline set to "any", a pattern such as .*a.*=.b.*
1634        crashed when matching a string such as a\x{2029}b (note that \x{2029} is a
1635        UTF-8 newline character). The key issue is that the pattern starts .*;
1636        this means that the match must be either at the beginning, or after a
1637        newline. The bug was in the code for advancing after a failed match and
1638        checking that the new position followed a newline. It was not taking
1639        account of UTF-8 characters correctly.
1640    
1641    23. PCRE was behaving differently from Perl in the way it recognized POSIX
1642        character classes. PCRE was not treating the sequence [:...:] as a
1643        character class unless the ... were all letters. Perl, however, seems to
1644        allow any characters between [: and :], though of course it rejects as
1645        unknown any "names" that contain non-letters, because all the known class
1646        names consist only of letters. Thus, Perl gives an error for [[:1234:]],
1647        for example, whereas PCRE did not - it did not recognize a POSIX character
1648        class. This seemed a bit dangerous, so the code has been changed to be
1649        closer to Perl. The behaviour is not identical to Perl, because PCRE will
1650        diagnose an unknown class for, for example, [[:l\ower:]] where Perl will
1651        treat it as [[:lower:]]. However, PCRE does now give "unknown" errors where
1652        Perl does, and where it didn't before.
1653    
1654    24. Rewrite so as to remove the single use of %n from pcregrep because in some
1655        Windows environments %n is disabled by default.
1656    
1657    
1658    Version 7.4 21-Sep-07
1659    ---------------------
1660    
1661    1.  Change 7.3/28 was implemented for classes by looking at the bitmap. This
1662        means that a class such as [\s] counted as "explicit reference to CR or
1663        LF". That isn't really right - the whole point of the change was to try to
1664        help when there was an actual mention of one of the two characters. So now
1665        the change happens only if \r or \n (or a literal CR or LF) character is
1666        encountered.
1667    
1668    2.  The 32-bit options word was also used for 6 internal flags, but the numbers
1669        of both had grown to the point where there were only 3 bits left.
1670        Fortunately, there was spare space in the data structure, and so I have
1671        moved the internal flags into a new 16-bit field to free up more option
1672        bits.
1673    
1674    3.  The appearance of (?J) at the start of a pattern set the DUPNAMES option,
1675        but did not set the internal JCHANGED flag - either of these is enough to
1676        control the way the "get" function works - but the PCRE_INFO_JCHANGED
1677        facility is supposed to tell if (?J) was ever used, so now (?J) at the
1678        start sets both bits.
1679    
1680    4.  Added options (at build time, compile time, exec time) to change \R from
1681        matching any Unicode line ending sequence to just matching CR, LF, or CRLF.
1682    
1683    5.  doc/pcresyntax.html was missing from the distribution.
1684    
1685    6.  Put back the definition of PCRE_ERROR_NULLWSLIMIT, for backward
1686        compatibility, even though it is no longer used.
1687    
1688    7.  Added macro for snprintf to pcrecpp_unittest.cc and also for strtoll and
1689        strtoull to pcrecpp.cc to select the available functions in WIN32 when the
1690        windows.h file is present (where different names are used). [This was
1691        reversed later after testing - see 16 below.]
1692    
1693    8.  Changed all #include <config.h> to #include "config.h". There were also
1694        some further <pcre.h> cases that I changed to "pcre.h".
1695    
1696    9.  When pcregrep was used with the --colour option, it missed the line ending
1697        sequence off the lines that it output.
1698    
1699    10. It was pointed out to me that arrays of string pointers cause lots of
1700        relocations when a shared library is dynamically loaded. A technique of
1701        using a single long string with a table of offsets can drastically reduce
1702        these. I have refactored PCRE in four places to do this. The result is
1703        dramatic:
1704    
1705          Originally:                          290
1706          After changing UCP table:            187
1707          After changing error message table:   43
1708          After changing table of "verbs"       36
1709          After changing table of Posix names   22
1710    
1711        Thanks to the folks working on Gregex for glib for this insight.
1712    
1713    11. --disable-stack-for-recursion caused compiling to fail unless -enable-
1714        unicode-properties was also set.
1715    
1716    12. Updated the tests so that they work when \R is defaulted to ANYCRLF.
1717    
1718    13. Added checks for ANY and ANYCRLF to pcrecpp.cc where it previously
1719        checked only for CRLF.
1720    
1721    14. Added casts to pcretest.c to avoid compiler warnings.
1722    
1723    15. Added Craig's patch to various pcrecpp modules to avoid compiler warnings.
1724    
1725    16. Added Craig's patch to remove the WINDOWS_H tests, that were not working,
1726        and instead check for _strtoi64 explicitly, and avoid the use of snprintf()
1727        entirely. This removes changes made in 7 above.
1728    
1729    17. The CMake files have been updated, and there is now more information about
1730        building with CMake in the NON-UNIX-USE document.
1731    
1732    
1733    Version 7.3 28-Aug-07
1734    ---------------------
1735    
1736     1. In the rejigging of the build system that eventually resulted in 7.1, the
1737        line "#include <pcre.h>" was included in pcre_internal.h. The use of angle
1738        brackets there is not right, since it causes compilers to look for an
1739        installed pcre.h, not the version that is in the source that is being
1740        compiled (which of course may be different). I have changed it back to:
1741    
1742          #include "pcre.h"
1743    
1744        I have a vague recollection that the change was concerned with compiling in
1745        different directories, but in the new build system, that is taken care of
1746        by the VPATH setting the Makefile.
1747    
1748     2. The pattern .*$ when run in not-DOTALL UTF-8 mode with newline=any failed
1749        when the subject happened to end in the byte 0x85 (e.g. if the last
1750        character was \x{1ec5}). *Character* 0x85 is one of the "any" newline
1751        characters but of course it shouldn't be taken as a newline when it is part
1752        of another character. The bug was that, for an unlimited repeat of . in
1753        not-DOTALL UTF-8 mode, PCRE was advancing by bytes rather than by
1754        characters when looking for a newline.
1755    
1756     3. A small performance improvement in the DOTALL UTF-8 mode .* case.
1757    
1758     4. Debugging: adjusted the names of opcodes for different kinds of parentheses
1759        in debug output.
1760    
1761     5. Arrange to use "%I64d" instead of "%lld" and "%I64u" instead of "%llu" for
1762        long printing in the pcrecpp unittest when running under MinGW.
1763    
1764     6. ESC_K was left out of the EBCDIC table.
1765    
1766     7. Change 7.0/38 introduced a new limit on the number of nested non-capturing
1767        parentheses; I made it 1000, which seemed large enough. Unfortunately, the
1768        limit also applies to "virtual nesting" when a pattern is recursive, and in
1769        this case 1000 isn't so big. I have been able to remove this limit at the
1770        expense of backing off one optimization in certain circumstances. Normally,
1771        when pcre_exec() would call its internal match() function recursively and
1772        immediately return the result unconditionally, it uses a "tail recursion"
1773        feature to save stack. However, when a subpattern that can match an empty
1774        string has an unlimited repetition quantifier, it no longer makes this
1775        optimization. That gives it a stack frame in which to save the data for
1776        checking that an empty string has been matched. Previously this was taken
1777        from the 1000-entry workspace that had been reserved. So now there is no
1778        explicit limit, but more stack is used.
1779    
1780     8. Applied Daniel's patches to solve problems with the import/export magic
1781        syntax that is required for Windows, and which was going wrong for the
1782        pcreposix and pcrecpp parts of the library. These were overlooked when this
1783        problem was solved for the main library.
1784    
1785     9. There were some crude static tests to avoid integer overflow when computing
1786        the size of patterns that contain repeated groups with explicit upper
1787        limits. As the maximum quantifier is 65535, the maximum group length was
1788        set at 30,000 so that the product of these two numbers did not overflow a
1789        32-bit integer. However, it turns out that people want to use groups that
1790        are longer than 30,000 bytes (though not repeat them that many times).
1791        Change 7.0/17 (the refactoring of the way the pattern size is computed) has
1792        made it possible to implement the integer overflow checks in a much more
1793        dynamic way, which I have now done. The artificial limitation on group
1794        length has been removed - we now have only the limit on the total length of
1795        the compiled pattern, which depends on the LINK_SIZE setting.
1796    
1797    10. Fixed a bug in the documentation for get/copy named substring when
1798        duplicate names are permitted. If none of the named substrings are set, the
1799        functions return PCRE_ERROR_NOSUBSTRING (7); the doc said they returned an
1800        empty string.
1801    
1802    11. Because Perl interprets \Q...\E at a high level, and ignores orphan \E
1803        instances, patterns such as [\Q\E] or [\E] or even [^\E] cause an error,
1804        because the ] is interpreted as the first data character and the
1805        terminating ] is not found. PCRE has been made compatible with Perl in this
1806        regard. Previously, it interpreted [\Q\E] as an empty class, and [\E] could
1807        cause memory overwriting.
1808    
1809    10. Like Perl, PCRE automatically breaks an unlimited repeat after an empty
1810        string has been matched (to stop an infinite loop). It was not recognizing
1811        a conditional subpattern that could match an empty string if that
1812        subpattern was within another subpattern. For example, it looped when
1813        trying to match  (((?(1)X|))*)  but it was OK with  ((?(1)X|)*)  where the
1814        condition was not nested. This bug has been fixed.
1815    
1816    12. A pattern like \X?\d or \P{L}?\d in non-UTF-8 mode could cause a backtrack
1817        past the start of the subject in the presence of bytes with the top bit
1818        set, for example "\x8aBCD".
1819    
1820    13. Added Perl 5.10 experimental backtracking controls (*FAIL), (*F), (*PRUNE),
1821        (*SKIP), (*THEN), (*COMMIT), and (*ACCEPT).
1822    
1823    14. Optimized (?!) to (*FAIL).
1824    
1825    15. Updated the test for a valid UTF-8 string to conform to the later RFC 3629.
1826        This restricts code points to be within the range 0 to 0x10FFFF, excluding
1827        the "low surrogate" sequence 0xD800 to 0xDFFF. Previously, PCRE allowed the
1828        full range 0 to 0x7FFFFFFF, as defined by RFC 2279. Internally, it still
1829        does: it's just the validity check that is more restrictive.
1830    
1831    16. Inserted checks for integer overflows during escape sequence (backslash)
1832        processing, and also fixed erroneous offset values for syntax errors during
1833        backslash processing.
1834    
1835    17. Fixed another case of looking too far back in non-UTF-8 mode (cf 12 above)
1836        for patterns like [\PPP\x8a]{1,}\x80 with the subject "A\x80".
1837    
1838    18. An unterminated class in a pattern like (?1)\c[ with a "forward reference"
1839        caused an overrun.
1840    
1841    19. A pattern like (?:[\PPa*]*){8,} which had an "extended class" (one with
1842        something other than just ASCII characters) inside a group that had an
1843        unlimited repeat caused a loop at compile time (while checking to see
1844        whether the group could match an empty string).
1845    
1846    20. Debugging a pattern containing \p or \P could cause a crash. For example,
1847        [\P{Any}] did so. (Error in the code for printing property names.)
1848    
1849    21. An orphan \E inside a character class could cause a crash.
1850    
1851    22. A repeated capturing bracket such as (A)? could cause a wild memory
1852        reference during compilation.
1853    
1854    23. There are several functions in pcre_compile() that scan along a compiled
1855        expression for various reasons (e.g. to see if it's fixed length for look
1856        behind). There were bugs in these functions when a repeated \p or \P was
1857        present in the pattern. These operators have additional parameters compared
1858        with \d, etc, and these were not being taken into account when moving along
1859        the compiled data. Specifically:
1860    
1861        (a) A item such as \p{Yi}{3} in a lookbehind was not treated as fixed
1862            length.
1863    
1864        (b) An item such as \pL+ within a repeated group could cause crashes or
1865            loops.
1866    
1867        (c) A pattern such as \p{Yi}+(\P{Yi}+)(?1) could give an incorrect
1868            "reference to non-existent subpattern" error.
1869    
1870        (d) A pattern like (\P{Yi}{2}\277)? could loop at compile time.
1871    
1872    24. A repeated \S or \W in UTF-8 mode could give wrong answers when multibyte
1873        characters were involved (for example /\S{2}/8g with "A\x{a3}BC").
1874    
1875    25. Using pcregrep in multiline, inverted mode (-Mv) caused it to loop.
1876    
1877    26. Patterns such as [\P{Yi}A] which include \p or \P and just one other
1878        character were causing crashes (broken optimization).
1879    
1880    27. Patterns such as (\P{Yi}*\277)* (group with possible zero repeat containing
1881        \p or \P) caused a compile-time loop.
1882    
1883    28. More problems have arisen in unanchored patterns when CRLF is a valid line
1884        break. For example, the unstudied pattern [\r\n]A does not match the string
1885        "\r\nA" because change 7.0/46 below moves the current point on by two
1886        characters after failing to match at the start. However, the pattern \nA
1887        *does* match, because it doesn't start till \n, and if [\r\n]A is studied,
1888        the same is true. There doesn't seem any very clean way out of this, but
1889        what I have chosen to do makes the common cases work: PCRE now takes note
1890        of whether there can be an explicit match for \r or \n anywhere in the
1891        pattern, and if so, 7.0/46 no longer applies. As part of this change,
1892        there's a new PCRE_INFO_HASCRORLF option for finding out whether a compiled
1893        pattern has explicit CR or LF references.
1894    
1895    29. Added (*CR) etc for changing newline setting at start of pattern.
1896    
1897    
1898    Version 7.2 19-Jun-07
1899    ---------------------
1900    
1901     1. If the fr_FR locale cannot be found for test 3, try the "french" locale,
1902        which is apparently normally available under Windows.
1903    
1904     2. Re-jig the pcregrep tests with different newline settings in an attempt
1905        to make them independent of the local environment's newline setting.
1906    
1907     3. Add code to configure.ac to remove -g from the CFLAGS default settings.
1908    
1909     4. Some of the "internals" tests were previously cut out when the link size
1910        was not 2, because the output contained actual offsets. The recent new
1911        "Z" feature of pcretest means that these can be cut out, making the tests
1912        usable with all link sizes.
1913    
1914     5. Implemented Stan Switzer's goto replacement for longjmp() when not using
1915        stack recursion. This gives a massive performance boost under BSD, but just
1916        a small improvement under Linux. However, it saves one field in the frame
1917        in all cases.
1918    
1919     6. Added more features from the forthcoming Perl 5.10:
1920    
1921        (a) (?-n) (where n is a string of digits) is a relative subroutine or
1922            recursion call. It refers to the nth most recently opened parentheses.
1923    
1924        (b) (?+n) is also a relative subroutine call; it refers to the nth next
1925            to be opened parentheses.
1926    
1927        (c) Conditions that refer to capturing parentheses can be specified
1928            relatively, for example, (?(-2)... or (?(+3)...
1929    
1930        (d) \K resets the start of the current match so that everything before
1931            is not part of it.
1932    
1933        (e) \k{name} is synonymous with \k<name> and \k'name' (.NET compatible).
1934    
1935        (f) \g{name} is another synonym - part of Perl 5.10's unification of
1936            reference syntax.
1937    
1938        (g) (?| introduces a group in which the numbering of parentheses in each
1939            alternative starts with the same number.
1940    
1941        (h) \h, \H, \v, and \V match horizontal and vertical whitespace.
1942    
1943     7. Added two new calls to pcre_fullinfo(): PCRE_INFO_OKPARTIAL and
1944        PCRE_INFO_JCHANGED.
1945    
1946     8. A pattern such as  (.*(.)?)*  caused pcre_exec() to fail by either not
1947        terminating or by crashing. Diagnosed by Viktor Griph; it was in the code
1948        for detecting groups that can match an empty string.
1949    
1950     9. A pattern with a very large number of alternatives (more than several
1951        hundred) was running out of internal workspace during the pre-compile
1952        phase, where pcre_compile() figures out how much memory will be needed. A
1953        bit of new cunning has reduced the workspace needed for groups with
1954        alternatives. The 1000-alternative test pattern now uses 12 bytes of
1955        workspace instead of running out of the 4096 that are available.
1956    
1957    10. Inserted some missing (unsigned int) casts to get rid of compiler warnings.
1958    
1959    11. Applied patch from Google to remove an optimization that didn't quite work.
1960        The report of the bug said:
1961    
1962          pcrecpp::RE("a*").FullMatch("aaa") matches, while
1963          pcrecpp::RE("a*?").FullMatch("aaa") does not, and
1964          pcrecpp::RE("a*?\\z").FullMatch("aaa") does again.
1965    
1966    12. If \p or \P was used in non-UTF-8 mode on a character greater than 127
1967        it matched the wrong number of bytes.
1968    
1969    
1970    Version 7.1 24-Apr-07
1971    ---------------------
1972    
1973     1. Applied Bob Rossi and Daniel G's patches to convert the build system to one
1974        that is more "standard", making use of automake and other Autotools. There
1975        is some re-arrangement of the files and adjustment of comments consequent
1976        on this.
1977    
1978     2. Part of the patch fixed a problem with the pcregrep tests. The test of -r
1979        for recursive directory scanning broke on some systems because the files
1980        are not scanned in any specific order and on different systems the order
1981        was different. A call to "sort" has been inserted into RunGrepTest for the
1982        approprate test as a short-term fix. In the longer term there may be an
1983        alternative.
1984    
1985     3. I had an email from Eric Raymond about problems translating some of PCRE's
1986        man pages to HTML (despite the fact that I distribute HTML pages, some
1987        people do their own conversions for various reasons). The problems
1988        concerned the use of low-level troff macros .br and .in. I have therefore
1989        removed all such uses from the man pages (some were redundant, some could
1990        be replaced by .nf/.fi pairs). The 132html script that I use to generate
1991        HTML has been updated to handle .nf/.fi and to complain if it encounters
1992        .br or .in.
1993    
1994     4. Updated comments in configure.ac that get placed in config.h.in and also
1995        arranged for config.h to be included in the distribution, with the name
1996        config.h.generic, for the benefit of those who have to compile without
1997        Autotools (compare pcre.h, which is now distributed as pcre.h.generic).
1998    
1999     5. Updated the support (such as it is) for Virtual Pascal, thanks to Stefan
2000        Weber: (1) pcre_internal.h was missing some function renames; (2) updated
2001        makevp.bat for the current PCRE, using the additional files
2002        makevp_c.txt, makevp_l.txt, and pcregexp.pas.
2003    
2004     6. A Windows user reported a minor discrepancy with test 2, which turned out
2005        to be caused by a trailing space on an input line that had got lost in his
2006        copy. The trailing space was an accident, so I've just removed it.
2007    
2008     7. Add -Wl,-R... flags in pcre-config.in for *BSD* systems, as I'm told
2009        that is needed.
2010    
2011     8. Mark ucp_table (in ucptable.h) and ucp_gentype (in pcre_ucp_searchfuncs.c)
2012        as "const" (a) because they are and (b) because it helps the PHP
2013        maintainers who have recently made a script to detect big data structures
2014        in the php code that should be moved to the .rodata section. I remembered
2015        to update Builducptable as well, so it won't revert if ucptable.h is ever
2016        re-created.
2017    
2018     9. Added some extra #ifdef SUPPORT_UTF8 conditionals into pcretest.c,
2019        pcre_printint.src, pcre_compile.c, pcre_study.c, and pcre_tables.c, in
2020        order to be able to cut out the UTF-8 tables in the latter when UTF-8
2021        support is not required. This saves 1.5-2K of code, which is important in
2022        some applications.
2023    
2024        Later: more #ifdefs are needed in pcre_ord2utf8.c and pcre_valid_utf8.c
2025        so as not to refer to the tables, even though these functions will never be
2026        called when UTF-8 support is disabled. Otherwise there are problems with a
2027        shared library.
2028    
2029    10. Fixed two bugs in the emulated memmove() function in pcre_internal.h:
2030    
2031        (a) It was defining its arguments as char * instead of void *.
2032    
2033        (b) It was assuming that all moves were upwards in memory; this was true
2034            a long time ago when I wrote it, but is no longer the case.
2035    
2036        The emulated memove() is provided for those environments that have neither
2037        memmove() nor bcopy(). I didn't think anyone used it these days, but that
2038        is clearly not the case, as these two bugs were recently reported.
2039    
2040    11. The script PrepareRelease is now distributed: it calls 132html, CleanTxt,
2041        and Detrail to create the HTML documentation, the .txt form of the man
2042        pages, and it removes trailing spaces from listed files. It also creates
2043        pcre.h.generic and config.h.generic from pcre.h and config.h. In the latter
2044        case, it wraps all the #defines with #ifndefs. This script should be run
2045        before "make dist".
2046    
2047    12. Fixed two fairly obscure bugs concerned with quantified caseless matching
2048        with Unicode property support.
2049    
2050        (a) For a maximizing quantifier, if the two different cases of the
2051            character were of different lengths in their UTF-8 codings (there are
2052            some cases like this - I found 11), and the matching function had to
2053            back up over a mixture of the two cases, it incorrectly assumed they
2054            were both the same length.
2055    
2056        (b) When PCRE was configured to use the heap rather than the stack for
2057            recursion during matching, it was not correctly preserving the data for
2058            the other case of a UTF-8 character when checking ahead for a match
2059            while processing a minimizing repeat. If the check also involved
2060            matching a wide character, but failed, corruption could cause an
2061            erroneous result when trying to check for a repeat of the original
2062            character.
2063    
2064    13. Some tidying changes to the testing mechanism:
2065    
2066        (a) The RunTest script now detects the internal link size and whether there
2067            is UTF-8 and UCP support by running ./pcretest -C instead of relying on
2068            values substituted by "configure". (The RunGrepTest script already did
2069            this for UTF-8.) The configure.ac script no longer substitutes the
2070            relevant variables.
2071    
2072        (b) The debugging options /B and /D in pcretest show the compiled bytecode
2073            with length and offset values. This means that the output is different
2074            for different internal link sizes. Test 2 is skipped for link sizes
2075            other than 2 because of this, bypassing the problem. Unfortunately,
2076            there was also a test in test 3 (the locale tests) that used /B and
2077            failed for link sizes other than 2. Rather than cut the whole test out,
2078            I have added a new /Z option to pcretest that replaces the length and
2079            offset values with spaces. This is now used to make test 3 independent
2080            of link size. (Test 2 will be tidied up later.)
2081    
2082    14. If erroroffset was passed as NULL to pcre_compile, it provoked a
2083        segmentation fault instead of returning the appropriate error message.
2084    
2085    15. In multiline mode when the newline sequence was set to "any", the pattern
2086        ^$ would give a match between the \r and \n of a subject such as "A\r\nB".
2087        This doesn't seem right; it now treats the CRLF combination as the line
2088        ending, and so does not match in that case. It's only a pattern such as ^$
2089        that would hit this one: something like ^ABC$ would have failed after \r
2090        and then tried again after \r\n.
2091    
2092    16. Changed the comparison command for RunGrepTest from "diff -u" to "diff -ub"
2093        in an attempt to make files that differ only in their line terminators
2094        compare equal. This works on Linux.
2095    
2096    17. Under certain error circumstances pcregrep might try to free random memory
2097        as it exited. This is now fixed, thanks to valgrind.
2098    
2099    19. In pcretest, if the pattern /(?m)^$/g<any> was matched against the string
2100        "abc\r\n\r\n", it found an unwanted second match after the second \r. This
2101        was because its rules for how to advance for /g after matching an empty
2102        string at the end of a line did not allow for this case. They now check for
2103        it specially.
2104    
2105    20. pcretest is supposed to handle patterns and data of any length, by
2106        extending its buffers when necessary. It was getting this wrong when the
2107        buffer for a data line had to be extended.
2108    
2109    21. Added PCRE_NEWLINE_ANYCRLF which is like ANY, but matches only CR, LF, or
2110        CRLF as a newline sequence.
2111    
2112    22. Code for handling Unicode properties in pcre_dfa_exec() wasn't being cut
2113        out by #ifdef SUPPORT_UCP. This did no harm, as it could never be used, but
2114        I have nevertheless tidied it up.
2115    
2116    23. Added some casts to kill warnings from HP-UX ia64 compiler.
2117    
2118    24. Added a man page for pcre-config.
2119    
2120    
2121    Version 7.0 19-Dec-06
2122    ---------------------
2123    
2124     1. Fixed a signed/unsigned compiler warning in pcre_compile.c, shown up by
2125        moving to gcc 4.1.1.
2126    
2127     2. The -S option for pcretest uses setrlimit(); I had omitted to #include
2128        sys/time.h, which is documented as needed for this function. It doesn't
2129        seem to matter on Linux, but it showed up on some releases of OS X.
2130    
2131     3. It seems that there are systems where bytes whose values are greater than
2132        127 match isprint() in the "C" locale. The "C" locale should be the
2133        default when a C program starts up. In most systems, only ASCII printing
2134        characters match isprint(). This difference caused the output from pcretest
2135        to vary, making some of the tests fail. I have changed pcretest so that:
2136    
2137        (a) When it is outputting text in the compiled version of a pattern, bytes
2138            other than 32-126 are always shown as hex escapes.
2139    
2140        (b) When it is outputting text that is a matched part of a subject string,
2141            it does the same, unless a different locale has been set for the match
2142            (using the /L modifier). In this case, it uses isprint() to decide.
2143    
2144     4. Fixed a major bug that caused incorrect computation of the amount of memory
2145        required for a compiled pattern when options that changed within the
2146        pattern affected the logic of the preliminary scan that determines the
2147        length. The relevant options are -x, and -i in UTF-8 mode. The result was
2148        that the computed length was too small. The symptoms of this bug were
2149        either the PCRE error "internal error: code overflow" from pcre_compile(),
2150        or a glibc crash with a message such as "pcretest: free(): invalid next
2151        size (fast)". Examples of patterns that provoked this bug (shown in
2152        pcretest format) are:
2153    
2154          /(?-x: )/x
2155          /(?x)(?-x: \s*#\s*)/
2156          /((?i)[\x{c0}])/8
2157          /(?i:[\x{c0}])/8
2158    
2159        HOWEVER: Change 17 below makes this fix obsolete as the memory computation
2160        is now done differently.
2161    
2162     5. Applied patches from Google to: (a) add a QuoteMeta function to the C++
2163        wrapper classes; (b) implement a new function in the C++ scanner that is
2164        more efficient than the old way of doing things because it avoids levels of
2165        recursion in the regex matching; (c) add a paragraph to the documentation
2166        for the FullMatch() function.
2167    
2168     6. The escape sequence \n was being treated as whatever was defined as
2169        "newline". Not only was this contrary to the documentation, which states
2170        that \n is character 10 (hex 0A), but it also went horribly wrong when
2171        "newline" was defined as CRLF. This has been fixed.
2172    
2173     7. In pcre_dfa_exec.c the value of an unsigned integer (the variable called c)
2174        was being set to -1 for the "end of line" case (supposedly a value that no
2175        character can have). Though this value is never used (the check for end of
2176        line is "zero bytes in current character"), it caused compiler complaints.
2177        I've changed it to 0xffffffff.
2178    
2179     8. In pcre_version.c, the version string was being built by a sequence of
2180        C macros that, in the event of PCRE_PRERELEASE being defined as an empty
2181        string (as it is for production releases) called a macro with an empty
2182        argument. The C standard says the result of this is undefined. The gcc
2183        compiler treats it as an empty string (which was what was wanted) but it is
2184        reported that Visual C gives an error. The source has been hacked around to
2185        avoid this problem.
2186    
2187     9. On the advice of a Windows user, included <io.h> and <fcntl.h> in Windows
2188        builds of pcretest, and changed the call to _setmode() to use _O_BINARY
2189        instead of 0x8000. Made all the #ifdefs test both _WIN32 and WIN32 (not all
2190        of them did).
2191    
2192    10. Originally, pcretest opened its input and output without "b"; then I was
2193        told that "b" was needed in some environments, so it was added for release
2194        5.0 to both the input and output. (It makes no difference on Unix-like
2195        systems.) Later I was told that it is wrong for the input on Windows. I've
2196        now abstracted the modes into two macros, to make it easier to fiddle with
2197        them, and removed "b" from the input mode under Windows.
2198    
2199    11. Added pkgconfig support for the C++ wrapper library, libpcrecpp.
2200    
2201    12. Added -help and --help to pcretest as an official way of being reminded
2202        of the options.
2203    
2204    13. Removed some redundant semicolons after macro calls in pcrecpparg.h.in
2205        and pcrecpp.cc because they annoy compilers at high warning levels.
2206    
2207    14. A bit of tidying/refactoring in pcre_exec.c in the main bumpalong loop.
2208    
2209    15. Fixed an occurrence of == in configure.ac that should have been = (shell
2210        scripts are not C programs :-) and which was not noticed because it works
2211        on Linux.
2212    
2213    16. pcretest is supposed to handle any length of pattern and data line (as one
2214        line or as a continued sequence of lines) by extending its input buffer if
2215        necessary. This feature was broken for very long pattern lines, leading to
2216        a string of junk being passed to pcre_compile() if the pattern was longer
2217        than about 50K.
2218    
2219    17. I have done a major re-factoring of the way pcre_compile() computes the
2220        amount of memory needed for a compiled pattern. Previously, there was code
2221        that made a preliminary scan of the pattern in order to do this. That was
2222        OK when PCRE was new, but as the facilities have expanded, it has become
2223        harder and harder to keep it in step with the real compile phase, and there
2224        have been a number of bugs (see for example, 4 above). I have now found a
2225        cunning way of running the real compile function in a "fake" mode that
2226        enables it to compute how much memory it would need, while actually only
2227        ever using a few hundred bytes of working memory and without too many
2228        tests of the mode. This should make future maintenance and development
2229        easier. A side effect of this work is that the limit of 200 on the nesting
2230        depth of parentheses has been removed (though this was never a serious
2231        limitation, I suspect). However, there is a downside: pcre_compile() now
2232        runs more slowly than before (30% or more, depending on the pattern). I
2233        hope this isn't a big issue. There is no effect on runtime performance.
2234    
2235    18. Fixed a minor bug in pcretest: if a pattern line was not terminated by a
2236        newline (only possible for the last line of a file) and it was a
2237        pattern that set a locale (followed by /Lsomething), pcretest crashed.
2238    
2239    19. Added additional timing features to pcretest. (1) The -tm option now times
2240        matching only, not compiling. (2) Both -t and -tm can be followed, as a
2241        separate command line item, by a number that specifies the number of
2242        repeats to use when timing. The default is 50000; this gives better
2243        precision, but takes uncomfortably long for very large patterns.
2244    
2245    20. Extended pcre_study() to be more clever in cases where a branch of a
2246        subpattern has no definite first character. For example, (a*|b*)[cd] would
2247        previously give no result from pcre_study(). Now it recognizes that the
2248        first character must be a, b, c, or d.
2249    
2250    21. There was an incorrect error "recursive call could loop indefinitely" if
2251        a subpattern (or the entire pattern) that was being tested for matching an
2252        empty string contained only one non-empty item after a nested subpattern.
2253        For example, the pattern (?>\x{100}*)\d(?R) provoked this error
2254        incorrectly, because the \d was being skipped in the check.
2255    
2256    22. The pcretest program now has a new pattern option /B and a command line
2257        option -b, which is equivalent to adding /B to every pattern. This causes
2258        it to show the compiled bytecode, without the additional information that
2259        -d shows. The effect of -d is now the same as -b with -i (and similarly, /D
2260        is the same as /B/I).
2261    
2262    23. A new optimization is now able automatically to treat some sequences such
2263        as a*b as a*+b. More specifically, if something simple (such as a character
2264        or a simple class like \d) has an unlimited quantifier, and is followed by
2265        something that cannot possibly match the quantified thing, the quantifier
2266        is automatically "possessified".
2267    
2268    24. A recursive reference to a subpattern whose number was greater than 39
2269        went wrong under certain circumstances in UTF-8 mode. This bug could also
2270        have affected the operation of pcre_study().
2271    
2272    25. Realized that a little bit of performance could be had by replacing
2273        (c & 0xc0) == 0xc0 with c >= 0xc0 when processing UTF-8 characters.
2274    
2275    26. Timing data from pcretest is now shown to 4 decimal places instead of 3.
2276    
2277    27. Possessive quantifiers such as a++ were previously implemented by turning
2278        them into atomic groups such as ($>a+). Now they have their own opcodes,
2279        which improves performance. This includes the automatically created ones
2280        from 23 above.
2281    
2282    28. A pattern such as (?=(\w+))\1: which simulates an atomic group using a
2283        lookahead was broken if it was not anchored. PCRE was mistakenly expecting
2284        the first matched character to be a colon. This applied both to named and
2285        numbered groups.
2286    
2287    29. The ucpinternal.h header file was missing its idempotency #ifdef.
2288    
2289    30. I was sent a "project" file called libpcre.a.dev which I understand makes
2290        building PCRE on Windows easier, so I have included it in the distribution.
2291    
2292    31. There is now a check in pcretest against a ridiculously large number being
2293        returned by pcre_exec() or pcre_dfa_exec(). If this happens in a /g or /G
2294        loop, the loop is abandoned.
2295    
2296    32. Forward references to subpatterns in conditions such as (?(2)...) where
2297        subpattern 2 is defined later cause pcre_compile() to search forwards in
2298        the pattern for the relevant set of parentheses. This search went wrong
2299        when there were unescaped parentheses in a character class, parentheses
2300        escaped with \Q...\E, or parentheses in a #-comment in /x mode.
2301    
2302    33. "Subroutine" calls and backreferences were previously restricted to
2303        referencing subpatterns earlier in the regex. This restriction has now
2304        been removed.
2305    
2306    34. Added a number of extra features that are going to be in Perl 5.10. On the
2307        whole, these are just syntactic alternatives for features that PCRE had
2308        previously implemented using the Python syntax or my own invention. The
2309        other formats are all retained for compatibility.
2310    
2311        (a) Named groups can now be defined as (?<name>...) or (?'name'...) as well
2312            as (?P<name>...). The new forms, as well as being in Perl 5.10, are
2313            also .NET compatible.
2314    
2315        (b) A recursion or subroutine call to a named group can now be defined as
2316            (?&name) as well as (?P>name).
2317    
2318        (c) A backreference to a named group can now be defined as \k<name> or
2319            \k'name' as well as (?P=name). The new forms, as well as being in Perl
2320            5.10, are also .NET compatible.
2321    
2322        (d) A conditional reference to a named group can now use the syntax
2323            (?(<name>) or (?('name') as well as (?(name).
2324    
2325        (e) A "conditional group" of the form (?(DEFINE)...) can be used to define
2326            groups (named and numbered) that are never evaluated inline, but can be
2327            called as "subroutines" from elsewhere. In effect, the DEFINE condition
2328            is always false. There may be only one alternative in such a group.
2329    
2330        (f) A test for recursion can be given as (?(R1).. or (?(R&name)... as well
2331            as the simple (?(R). The condition is true only if the most recent
2332            recursion is that of the given number or name. It does not search out
2333            through the entire recursion stack.
2334    
2335        (g) The escape \gN or \g{N} has been added, where N is a positive or
2336            negative number, specifying an absolute or relative reference.
2337    
2338    35. Tidied to get rid of some further signed/unsigned compiler warnings and
2339        some "unreachable code" warnings.
2340    
2341    36. Updated the Unicode property tables to Unicode version 5.0.0. Amongst other
2342        things, this adds five new scripts.
2343    
2344    37. Perl ignores orphaned \E escapes completely. PCRE now does the same.
2345        There were also incompatibilities regarding the handling of \Q..\E inside
2346        character classes, for example with patterns like [\Qa\E-\Qz\E] where the
2347        hyphen was adjacent to \Q or \E. I hope I've cleared all this up now.
2348    
2349    38. Like Perl, PCRE detects when an indefinitely repeated parenthesized group
2350        matches an empty string, and forcibly breaks the loop. There were bugs in
2351        this code in non-simple cases. For a pattern such as  ^(a()*)*  matched
2352        against  aaaa  the result was just "a" rather than "aaaa", for example. Two
2353        separate and independent bugs (that affected different cases) have been
2354        fixed.
2355    
2356    39. Refactored the code to abolish the use of different opcodes for small
2357        capturing bracket numbers. This is a tidy that I avoided doing when I
2358        removed the limit on the number of capturing brackets for 3.5 back in 2001.
2359        The new approach is not only tidier, it makes it possible to reduce the
2360        memory needed to fix the previous bug (38).
2361    
2362    40. Implemented PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY to recognize any of the Unicode newline
2363        sequences (http://unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr18/) as "newline" when
2364        processing dot, circumflex, or dollar metacharacters, or #-comments in /x
2365        mode.
2366    
2367    41. Add \R to match any Unicode newline sequence, as suggested in the Unicode
2368        report.
2369    
2370    42. Applied patch, originally from Ari Pollak, modified by Google, to allow
2371        copy construction and assignment in the C++ wrapper.
2372    
2373    43. Updated pcregrep to support "--newline=any". In the process, I fixed a
2374        couple of bugs that could have given wrong results in the "--newline=crlf"
2375        case.
2376    
2377    44. Added a number of casts and did some reorganization of signed/unsigned int
2378        variables following suggestions from Dair Grant. Also renamed the variable
2379        "this" as "item" because it is a C++ keyword.
2380    
2381    45. Arranged for dftables to add
2382    
2383          #include "pcre_internal.h"
2384    
2385        to pcre_chartables.c because without it, gcc 4.x may remove the array
2386        definition from the final binary if PCRE is built into a static library and
2387        dead code stripping is activated.
2388    
2389    46. For an unanchored pattern, if a match attempt fails at the start of a
2390        newline sequence, and the newline setting is CRLF or ANY, and the next two
2391        characters are CRLF, advance by two characters instead of one.
2392    
2393    
2394    Version 6.7 04-Jul-06
2395    ---------------------
2396    
2397     1. In order to handle tests when input lines are enormously long, pcretest has
2398        been re-factored so that it automatically extends its buffers when
2399        necessary. The code is crude, but this _is_ just a test program. The
2400        default size has been increased from 32K to 50K.
2401    
2402     2. The code in pcre_study() was using the value of the re argument before
2403        testing it for NULL. (Of course, in any sensible call of the function, it
2404        won't be NULL.)
2405    
2406     3. The memmove() emulation function in pcre_internal.h, which is used on
2407        systems that lack both memmove() and bcopy() - that is, hardly ever -
2408        was missing a "static" storage class specifier.
2409    
2410     4. When UTF-8 mode was not set, PCRE looped when compiling certain patterns
2411        containing an extended class (one that cannot be represented by a bitmap
2412        because it contains high-valued characters or Unicode property items, e.g.
2413        [\pZ]). Almost always one would set UTF-8 mode when processing such a
2414        pattern, but PCRE should not loop if you do not (it no longer does).
2415        [Detail: two cases were found: (a) a repeated subpattern containing an
2416        extended class; (b) a recursive reference to a subpattern that followed a
2417        previous extended class. It wasn't skipping over the extended class
2418        correctly when UTF-8 mode was not set.]
2419    
2420     5. A negated single-character class was not being recognized as fixed-length
2421        in lookbehind assertions such as (?<=[^f]), leading to an incorrect
2422        compile error "lookbehind assertion is not fixed length".
2423    
2424     6. The RunPerlTest auxiliary script was showing an unexpected difference
2425        between PCRE and Perl for UTF-8 tests. It turns out that it is hard to
2426        write a Perl script that can interpret lines of an input file either as
2427        byte characters or as UTF-8, which is what "perltest" was being required to
2428        do for the non-UTF-8 and UTF-8 tests, respectively. Essentially what you
2429        can't do is switch easily at run time between having the "use utf8;" pragma
2430        or not. In the end, I fudged it by using the RunPerlTest script to insert
2431        "use utf8;" explicitly for the UTF-8 tests.
2432    
2433     7. In multiline (/m) mode, PCRE was matching ^ after a terminating newline at
2434        the end of the subject string, contrary to the documentation and to what
2435        Perl does. This was true of both matching functions. Now it matches only at
2436        the start of the subject and immediately after *internal* newlines.
2437    
2438     8. A call of pcre_fullinfo() from pcretest to get the option bits was passing
2439        a pointer to an int instead of a pointer to an unsigned long int. This
2440        caused problems on 64-bit systems.
2441    
2442     9. Applied a patch from the folks at Google to pcrecpp.cc, to fix "another
2443        instance of the 'standard' template library not being so standard".
2444    
2445    10. There was no check on the number of named subpatterns nor the maximum
2446        length of a subpattern name. The product of these values is used to compute
2447        the size of the memory block for a compiled pattern. By supplying a very
2448        long subpattern name and a large number of named subpatterns, the size
2449        computation could be caused to overflow. This is now prevented by limiting
2450        the length of names to 32 characters, and the number of named subpatterns
2451        to 10,000.
2452    
2453    11. Subpatterns that are repeated with specific counts have to be replicated in
2454        the compiled pattern. The size of memory for this was computed from the
2455        length of the subpattern and the repeat count. The latter is limited to
2456        65535, but there was no limit on the former, meaning that integer overflow
2457        could in principle occur. The compiled length of a repeated subpattern is
2458        now limited to 30,000 bytes in order to prevent this.
2459    
2460    12. Added the optional facility to have named substrings with the same name.
2461    
2462    13. Added the ability to use a named substring as a condition, using the
2463        Python syntax: (?(name)yes|no). This overloads (?(R)... and names that
2464        are numbers (not recommended). Forward references are permitted.
2465    
2466    14. Added forward references in named backreferences (if you see what I mean).
2467    
2468    15. In UTF-8 mode, with the PCRE_DOTALL option set, a quantified dot in the
2469        pattern could run off the end of the subject. For example, the pattern
2470        "(?s)(.{1,5})"8 did this with the subject "ab".
2471    
2472    16. If PCRE_DOTALL or PCRE_MULTILINE were set, pcre_dfa_exec() behaved as if
2473        PCRE_CASELESS was set when matching characters that were quantified with ?
2474        or *.
2475    
2476    17. A character class other than a single negated character that had a minimum
2477        but no maximum quantifier - for example [ab]{6,} - was not handled
2478        correctly by pce_dfa_exec(). It would match only one character.
2479    
2480    18. A valid (though odd) pattern that looked like a POSIX character
2481        class but used an invalid character after [ (for example [[,abc,]]) caused
2482        pcre_compile() to give the error "Failed: internal error: code overflow" or
2483        in some cases to crash with a glibc free() error. This could even happen if
2484        the pattern terminated after [[ but there just happened to be a sequence of
2485        letters, a binary zero, and a closing ] in the memory that followed.
2486    
2487    19. Perl's treatment of octal escapes in the range \400 to \777 has changed
2488        over the years. Originally (before any Unicode support), just the bottom 8
2489        bits were taken. Thus, for example, \500 really meant \100. Nowadays the
2490        output from "man perlunicode" includes this:
2491    
2492          The regular expression compiler produces polymorphic opcodes.  That
2493          is, the pattern adapts to the data and automatically switches to
2494          the Unicode character scheme when presented with Unicode data--or
2495          instead uses a traditional byte scheme when presented with byte
2496          data.
2497    
2498        Sadly, a wide octal escape does not cause a switch, and in a string with
2499        no other multibyte characters, these octal escapes are treated as before.
2500        Thus, in Perl, the pattern  /\500/ actually matches \100 but the pattern
2501        /\500|\x{1ff}/ matches \500 or \777 because the whole thing is treated as a
2502        Unicode string.
2503    
2504        I have not perpetrated such confusion in PCRE. Up till now, it took just
2505        the bottom 8 bits, as in old Perl. I have now made octal escapes with
2506        values greater than \377 illegal in non-UTF-8 mode. In UTF-8 mode they
2507        translate to the appropriate multibyte character.
2508    
2509    29. Applied some refactoring to reduce the number of warnings from Microsoft
2510        and Borland compilers. This has included removing the fudge introduced
2511        seven years ago for the OS/2 compiler (see 2.02/2 below) because it caused
2512        a warning about an unused variable.
2513    
2514    21. PCRE has not included VT (character 0x0b) in the set of whitespace
2515        characters since release 4.0, because Perl (from release 5.004) does not.
2516        [Or at least, is documented not to: some releases seem to be in conflict
2517        with the documentation.] However, when a pattern was studied with
2518        pcre_study() and all its branches started with \s, PCRE still included VT
2519        as a possible starting character. Of course, this did no harm; it just
2520        caused an unnecessary match attempt.
2521    
2522    22. Removed a now-redundant internal flag bit that recorded the fact that case
2523        dependency changed within the pattern. This was once needed for "required
2524        byte" processing, but is no longer used. This recovers a now-scarce options
2525        bit. Also moved the least significant internal flag bit to the most-
2526        significant bit of the word, which was not previously used (hangover from
2527        the days when it was an int rather than a uint) to free up another bit for
2528        the future.
2529    
2530    23. Added support for CRLF line endings as well as CR and LF. As well as the
2531        default being selectable at build time, it can now be changed at runtime
2532        via the PCRE_NEWLINE_xxx flags. There are now options for pcregrep to
2533        specify that it is scanning data with non-default line endings.
2534    
2535    24. Changed the definition of CXXLINK to make it agree with the definition of
2536        LINK in the Makefile, by replacing LDFLAGS to CXXFLAGS.
2537    
2538    25. Applied Ian Taylor's patches to avoid using another stack frame for tail
2539        recursions. This makes a big different to stack usage for some patterns.
2540    
2541    26. If a subpattern containing a named recursion or subroutine reference such
2542        as (?P>B) was quantified, for example (xxx(?P>B)){3}, the calculation of
2543        the space required for the compiled pattern went wrong and gave too small a
2544        value. Depending on the environment, this could lead to "Failed: internal
2545        error: code overflow at offset 49" or "glibc detected double free or
2546        corruption" errors.
2547    
2548    27. Applied patches from Google (a) to support the new newline modes and (b) to
2549        advance over multibyte UTF-8 characters in GlobalReplace.
2550    
2551    28. Change free() to pcre_free() in pcredemo.c. Apparently this makes a
2552        difference for some implementation of PCRE in some Windows version.
2553    
2554    29. Added some extra testing facilities to pcretest:
2555    
2556        \q<number>   in a data line sets the "match limit" value
2557        \Q<number>   in a data line sets the "match recursion limt" value
2558        -S <number>  sets the stack size, where <number> is in megabytes
2559    
2560        The -S option isn't available for Windows.
2561    
2562    
2563    Version 6.6 06-Feb-06
2564    ---------------------
2565    
2566     1. Change 16(a) for 6.5 broke things, because PCRE_DATA_SCOPE was not defined
2567        in pcreposix.h. I have copied the definition from pcre.h.
2568    
2569     2. Change 25 for 6.5 broke compilation in a build directory out-of-tree
2570        because pcre.h is no longer a built file.
2571    
2572     3. Added Jeff Friedl's additional debugging patches to pcregrep. These are
2573        not normally included in the compiled code.
2574    
2575    
2576    Version 6.5 01-Feb-06
2577    ---------------------
2578    
2579     1. When using the partial match feature with pcre_dfa_exec(), it was not
2580        anchoring the second and subsequent partial matches at the new starting
2581        point. This could lead to incorrect results. For example, with the pattern
2582        /1234/, partially matching against "123" and then "a4" gave a match.
2583    
2584     2. Changes to pcregrep:
2585    
2586        (a) All non-match returns from pcre_exec() were being treated as failures
2587            to match the line. Now, unless the error is PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH, an
2588            error message is output. Some extra information is given for the
2589            PCRE_ERROR_MATCHLIMIT and PCRE_ERROR_RECURSIONLIMIT errors, which are
2590            probably the only errors that are likely to be caused by users (by
2591            specifying a regex that has nested indefinite repeats, for instance).
2592            If there are more than 20 of these errors, pcregrep is abandoned.
2593    
2594        (b) A binary zero was treated as data while matching, but terminated the
2595            output line if it was written out. This has been fixed: binary zeroes
2596            are now no different to any other data bytes.
2597    
2598        (c) Whichever of the LC_ALL or LC_CTYPE environment variables is set is
2599            used to set a locale for matching. The --locale=xxxx long option has
2600            been added (no short equivalent) to specify a locale explicitly on the
2601            pcregrep command, overriding the environment variables.
2602    
2603        (d) When -B was used with -n, some line numbers in the output were one less
2604            than they should have been.
2605    
2606        (e) Added the -o (--only-matching) option.
2607    
2608        (f) If -A or -C was used with -c (count only), some lines of context were
2609            accidentally printed for the final match.
2610    
2611        (g) Added the -H (--with-filename) option.
2612    
2613        (h) The combination of options -rh failed to suppress file names for files
2614            that were found from directory arguments.
2615    
2616        (i) Added the -D (--devices) and -d (--directories) options.
2617    
2618        (j) Added the -F (--fixed-strings) option.
2619    
2620        (k) Allow "-" to be used as a file name for -f as well as for a data file.
2621    
2622        (l) Added the --colo(u)r option.
2623    
2624        (m) Added Jeffrey Friedl's -S testing option, but within #ifdefs so that it
2625            is not present by default.
2626    
2627     3. A nasty bug was discovered in the handling of recursive patterns, that is,
2628        items such as (?R) or (?1), when the recursion could match a number of
2629        alternatives. If it matched one of the alternatives, but subsequently,
2630        outside the recursion, there was a failure, the code tried to back up into
2631        the recursion. However, because of the way PCRE is implemented, this is not
2632        possible, and the result was an incorrect result from the match.
2633    
2634        In order to prevent this happening, the specification of recursion has
2635        been changed so that all such subpatterns are automatically treated as
2636        atomic groups. Thus, for example, (?R) is treated as if it were (?>(?R)).
2637    
2638     4. I had overlooked the fact that, in some locales, there are characters for
2639        which isalpha() is true but neither isupper() nor islower() are true. In
2640        the fr_FR locale, for instance, the \xAA and \xBA characters (ordmasculine
2641        and ordfeminine) are like this. This affected the treatment of \w and \W
2642        when they appeared in character classes, but not when they appeared outside
2643        a character class. The bit map for "word" characters is now created
2644        separately from the results of isalnum() instead of just taking it from the
2645        upper, lower, and digit maps. (Plus the underscore character, of course.)
2646    
2647     5. The above bug also affected the handling of POSIX character classes such as
2648        [[:alpha:]] and [[:alnum:]]. These do not have their own bit maps in PCRE's
2649        permanent tables. Instead, the bit maps for such a class were previously
2650        created as the appropriate unions of the upper, lower, and digit bitmaps.
2651        Now they are created by subtraction from the [[:word:]] class, which has
2652        its own bitmap.
2653    
2654     6. The [[:blank:]] character class matches horizontal, but not vertical space.
2655        It is created by subtracting the vertical space characters (\x09, \x0a,
2656        \x0b, \x0c) from the [[:space:]] bitmap. Previously, however, the
2657        subtraction was done in the overall bitmap for a character class, meaning
2658        that a class such as [\x0c[:blank:]] was incorrect because \x0c would not
2659        be recognized. This bug has been fixed.
2660    
2661     7. Patches from the folks at Google:
2662    
2663          (a) pcrecpp.cc: "to handle a corner case that may or may not happen in
2664          real life, but is still worth protecting against".
2665    
2666          (b) pcrecpp.cc: "corrects a bug when negative radixes are used with
2667          regular expressions".
2668    
2669          (c) pcre_scanner.cc: avoid use of std::count() because not all systems
2670          have it.
2671    
2672          (d) Split off pcrecpparg.h from pcrecpp.h and had the former built by
2673          "configure" and the latter not, in order to fix a problem somebody had
2674          with compiling the Arg class on HP-UX.
2675    
2676          (e) Improve the error-handling of the C++ wrapper a little bit.
2677    
2678          (f) New tests for checking recursion limiting.
2679    
2680     8. The pcre_memmove() function, which is used only if the environment does not
2681        have a standard memmove() function (and is therefore rarely compiled),
2682        contained two bugs: (a) use of int instead of size_t, and (b) it was not
2683        returning a result (though PCRE never actually uses the result).
2684    
2685     9. In the POSIX regexec() interface, if nmatch is specified as a ridiculously
2686        large number - greater than INT_MAX/(3*sizeof(int)) - REG_ESPACE is
2687        returned instead of calling malloc() with an overflowing number that would
2688        most likely cause subsequent chaos.
2689    
2690    10. The debugging option of pcretest was not showing the NO_AUTO_CAPTURE flag.
2691    
2692    11. The POSIX flag REG_NOSUB is now supported. When a pattern that was compiled
2693        with this option is matched, the nmatch and pmatch options of regexec() are
2694        ignored.
2695    
2696    12. Added REG_UTF8 to the POSIX interface. This is not defined by POSIX, but is
2697        provided in case anyone wants to the the POSIX interface with UTF-8
2698        strings.
2699    
2700    13. Added CXXLDFLAGS to the Makefile parameters to provide settings only on the
2701        C++ linking (needed for some HP-UX environments).
2702    
2703    14. Avoid compiler warnings in get_ucpname() when compiled without UCP support
2704        (unused parameter) and in the pcre_printint() function (omitted "default"
2705        switch label when the default is to do nothing).
2706    
2707    15. Added some code to make it possible, when PCRE is compiled as a C++
2708        library, to replace subject pointers for pcre_exec() with a smart pointer
2709        class, thus making it possible to process discontinuous strings.
2710    
2711    16. The two macros PCRE_EXPORT and PCRE_DATA_SCOPE are confusing, and perform
2712        much the same function. They were added by different people who were trying
2713        to make PCRE easy to compile on non-Unix systems. It has been suggested
2714        that PCRE_EXPORT be abolished now that there is more automatic apparatus
2715        for compiling on Windows systems. I have therefore replaced it with
2716        PCRE_DATA_SCOPE. This is set automatically for Windows; if not set it
2717        defaults to "extern" for C or "extern C" for C++, which works fine on
2718        Unix-like systems. It is now possible to override the value of PCRE_DATA_
2719        SCOPE with something explicit in config.h. In addition:
2720    
2721        (a) pcreposix.h still had just "extern" instead of either of these macros;
2722            I have replaced it with PCRE_DATA_SCOPE.
2723    
2724        (b) Functions such as _pcre_xclass(), which are internal to the library,
2725            but external in the C sense, all had PCRE_EXPORT in their definitions.
2726            This is apparently wrong for the Windows case, so I have removed it.
2727            (It makes no difference on Unix-like systems.)
2728    
2729    17. Added a new limit, MATCH_LIMIT_RECURSION, which limits the depth of nesting
2730        of recursive calls to match(). This is different to MATCH_LIMIT because
2731        that limits the total number of calls to match(), not all of which increase
2732        the depth of recursion. Limiting the recursion depth limits the amount of
2733        stack (or heap if NO_RECURSE is set) that is used. The default can be set
2734        when PCRE is compiled, and changed at run time. A patch from Google adds
2735        this functionality to the C++ interface.
2736    
2737    18. Changes to the handling of Unicode character properties:
2738    
2739        (a) Updated the table to Unicode 4.1.0.
2740    
2741        (b) Recognize characters that are not in the table as "Cn" (undefined).
2742    
2743        (c) I revised the way the table is implemented to a much improved format
2744            which includes recognition of ranges. It now supports the ranges that
2745            are defined in UnicodeData.txt, and it also amalgamates other
2746            characters into ranges. This has reduced the number of entries in the
2747            table from around 16,000 to around 3,000, thus reducing its size
2748            considerably. I realized I did not need to use a tree structure after
2749            all - a binary chop search is just as efficient. Having reduced the
2750            number of entries, I extended their size from 6 bytes to 8 bytes to
2751            allow for more data.
2752    
2753        (d) Added support for Unicode script names via properties such as \p{Han}.
2754    
2755    19. In UTF-8 mode, a backslash followed by a non-Ascii character was not
2756        matching that character.
2757    
2758    20. When matching a repeated Unicode property with a minimum greater than zero,
2759        (for example \pL{2,}), PCRE could look past the end of the subject if it
2760        reached it while seeking the minimum number of characters. This could
2761        happen only if some of the characters were more than one byte long, because
2762        there is a check for at least the minimum number of bytes.
2763    
2764    21. Refactored the implementation of \p and \P so as to be more general, to
2765        allow for more different types of property in future. This has changed the
2766        compiled form incompatibly. Anybody with saved compiled patterns that use
2767        \p or \P will have to recompile them.
2768    
2769    22. Added "Any" and "L&" to the supported property types.
2770    
2771    23. Recognize \x{...} as a code point specifier, even when not in UTF-8 mode,
2772        but give a compile time error if the value is greater than 0xff.
2773    
2774    24. The man pages for pcrepartial, pcreprecompile, and pcre_compile2 were
2775        accidentally not being installed or uninstalled.
2776    
2777    25. The pcre.h file was built from pcre.h.in, but the only changes that were
2778        made were to insert the current release number. This seemed silly, because
2779        it made things harder for people building PCRE on systems that don't run
2780        "configure". I have turned pcre.h into a distributed file, no longer built
2781        by "configure", with the version identification directly included. There is
2782        no longer a pcre.h.in file.
2783    
2784        However, this change necessitated a change to the pcre-config script as
2785        well. It is built from pcre-config.in, and one of the substitutions was the
2786        release number. I have updated configure.ac so that ./configure now finds
2787        the release number by grepping pcre.h.
2788    
2789    26. Added the ability to run the tests under valgrind.
2790    
2791    
2792    Version 6.4 05-Sep-05
2793    ---------------------
2794    
2795     1. Change 6.0/10/(l) to pcregrep introduced a bug that caused separator lines
2796        "--" to be printed when multiple files were scanned, even when none of the
2797        -A, -B, or -C options were used. This is not compatible with Gnu grep, so I
2798        consider it to be a bug, and have restored the previous behaviour.
2799    
2800     2. A couple of code tidies to get rid of compiler warnings.
2801    
2802     3. The pcretest program used to cheat by referring to symbols in the library
2803        whose names begin with _pcre_. These are internal symbols that are not
2804        really supposed to be visible externally, and in some environments it is
2805        possible to suppress them. The cheating is now confined to including
2806        certain files from the library's source, which is a bit cleaner.
2807    
2808     4. Renamed pcre.in as pcre.h.in to go with pcrecpp.h.in; it also makes the
2809        file's purpose clearer.
2810    
2811     5. Reorganized pcre_ucp_findchar().
2812    
2813    
2814    Version 6.3 15-Aug-05
2815    ---------------------
2816    
2817     1. The file libpcre.pc.in did not have general read permission in the tarball.
2818    
2819     2. There were some problems when building without C++ support:
2820    
2821        (a) If C++ support was not built, "make install" and "make test" still
2822            tried to test it.
2823    
2824        (b) There were problems when the value of CXX was explicitly set. Some
2825            changes have been made to try to fix these, and ...
2826    
2827        (c) --disable-cpp can now be used to explicitly disable C++ support.
2828    
2829        (d) The use of @CPP_OBJ@ directly caused a blank line preceded by a
2830            backslash in a target when C++ was disabled. This confuses some
2831            versions of "make", apparently. Using an intermediate variable solves
2832            this. (Same for CPP_LOBJ.)
2833    
2834     3. $(LINK_FOR_BUILD) now includes $(CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD) and $(LINK)
2835        (non-Windows) now includes $(CFLAGS) because these flags are sometimes
2836        necessary on certain architectures.
2837    
2838     4. Added a setting of -export-symbols-regex to the link command to remove
2839        those symbols that are exported in the C sense, but actually are local
2840        within the library, and not documented. Their names all begin with
2841        "_pcre_". This is not a perfect job, because (a) we have to except some
2842        symbols that pcretest ("illegally") uses, and (b) the facility isn't always
2843        available (and never for static libraries). I have made a note to try to
2844        find a way round (a) in the future.
2845    
2846    
2847    Version 6.2 01-Aug-05
2848    ---------------------
2849    
2850     1. There was no test for integer overflow of quantifier values. A construction
2851        such as {1111111111111111} would give undefined results. What is worse, if
2852        a minimum quantifier for a parenthesized subpattern overflowed and became
2853        negative, the calculation of the memory size went wrong. This could have
2854        led to memory overwriting.
2855    
2856     2. Building PCRE using VPATH was broken. Hopefully it is now fixed.
2857    
2858     3. Added "b" to the 2nd argument of fopen() in dftables.c, for non-Unix-like
2859        operating environments where this matters.
2860    
2861     4. Applied Giuseppe Maxia's patch to add additional features for controlling
2862        PCRE options from within the C++ wrapper.
2863    
2864     5. Named capturing subpatterns were not being correctly counted when a pattern
2865        was compiled. This caused two problems: (a) If there were more than 100
2866        such subpatterns, the calculation of the memory needed for the whole
2867        compiled pattern went wrong, leading to an overflow error. (b) Numerical
2868        back references of the form \12, where the number was greater than 9, were
2869        not recognized as back references, even though there were sufficient
2870        previous subpatterns.
2871    
2872     6. Two minor patches to pcrecpp.cc in order to allow it to compile on older
2873        versions of gcc, e.g. 2.95.4.
2874    
2875    
2876    Version 6.1 21-Jun-05
2877    ---------------------
2878    
2879     1. There was one reference to the variable "posix" in pcretest.c that was not
2880        surrounded by "#if !defined NOPOSIX".
2881    
2882     2. Make it possible to compile pcretest without DFA support, UTF8 support, or
2883        the cross-check on the old pcre_info() function, for the benefit of the
2884        cut-down version of PCRE that is currently imported into Exim.
2885    
2886     3. A (silly) pattern starting with (?i)(?-i) caused an internal space
2887        allocation error. I've done the easy fix, which wastes 2 bytes for sensible
2888        patterns that start (?i) but I don't think that matters. The use of (?i) is
2889        just an example; this all applies to the other options as well.
2890    
2891     4. Since libtool seems to echo the compile commands it is issuing, the output
2892        from "make" can be reduced a bit by putting "@" in front of each libtool
2893        compile command.
2894    
2895     5. Patch from the folks at Google for configure.in to be a bit more thorough
2896        in checking for a suitable C++ installation before trying to compile the
2897        C++ stuff. This should fix a reported problem when a compiler was present,
2898        but no suitable headers.
2899    
2900     6. The man pages all had just "PCRE" as their title. I have changed them to
2901        be the relevant file name. I have also arranged that these names are
2902        retained in the file doc/pcre.txt, which is a concatenation in text format
2903        of all the man pages except the little individual ones for each function.
2904    
2905     7. The NON-UNIX-USE file had not been updated for the different set of source
2906        files that come with release 6. I also added a few comments about the C++
2907        wrapper.
2908    
2909    
2910    Version 6.0 07-Jun-05
2911    ---------------------
2912    
2913     1. Some minor internal re-organization to help with my DFA experiments.
2914    
2915     2. Some missing #ifdef SUPPORT_UCP conditionals in pcretest and printint that
2916        didn't matter for the library itself when fully configured, but did matter
2917        when compiling without UCP support, or within Exim, where the ucp files are
2918        not imported.
2919    
2920     3. Refactoring of the library code to split up the various functions into
2921        different source modules. The addition of the new DFA matching code (see
2922        below) to a single monolithic source would have made it really too
2923        unwieldy, quite apart from causing all the code to be include in a
2924        statically linked application, when only some functions are used. This is
2925        relevant even without the DFA addition now that patterns can be compiled in
2926        one application and matched in another.
2927    
2928        The downside of splitting up is that there have to be some external
2929        functions and data tables that are used internally in different modules of
2930        the library but which are not part of the API. These have all had their
2931        names changed to start with "_pcre_" so that they are unlikely to clash
2932        with other external names.
2933    
2934     4. Added an alternate matching function, pcre_dfa_exec(), which matches using
2935        a different (DFA) algorithm. Although it is slower than the original
2936        function, it does have some advantages for certain types of matching
2937        problem.
2938    
2939     5. Upgrades to pcretest in order to test the features of pcre_dfa_exec(),
2940        including restarting after a partial match.
2941    
2942     6. A patch for pcregrep that defines INVALID_FILE_ATTRIBUTES if it is not
2943        defined when compiling for Windows was sent to me. I have put it into the
2944        code, though I have no means of testing or verifying it.
2945    
2946     7. Added the pcre_refcount() auxiliary function.
2947    
2948     8. Added the PCRE_FIRSTLINE option. This constrains an unanchored pattern to
2949        match before or at the first newline in the subject string. In pcretest,
2950        the /f option on a pattern can be used to set this.
2951    
2952     9. A repeated \w when used in UTF-8 mode with characters greater than 256
2953        would behave wrongly. This has been present in PCRE since release 4.0.
2954    
2955    10. A number of changes to the pcregrep command:
2956    
2957        (a) Refactored how -x works; insert ^(...)$ instead of setting
2958            PCRE_ANCHORED and checking the length, in preparation for adding
2959            something similar for -w.
2960    
2961        (b) Added the -w (match as a word) option.
2962    
2963        (c) Refactored the way lines are read and buffered so as to have more
2964            than one at a time available.
2965    
2966        (d) Implemented a pcregrep test script.
2967    
2968        (e) Added the -M (multiline match) option. This allows patterns to match
2969            over several lines of the subject. The buffering ensures that at least
2970            8K, or the rest of the document (whichever is the shorter) is available
2971            for matching (and similarly the previous 8K for lookbehind assertions).
2972    
2973        (f) Changed the --help output so that it now says
2974    
2975              -w, --word-regex(p)
2976    
2977            instead of two lines, one with "regex" and the other with "regexp"
2978            because that confused at least one person since the short forms are the
2979            same. (This required a bit of code, as the output is generated
2980            automatically from a table. It wasn't just a text change.)
2981    
2982        (g) -- can be used to terminate pcregrep options if the next thing isn't an
2983            option but starts with a hyphen. Could be a pattern or a path name
2984            starting with a hyphen, for instance.
2985    
2986        (h) "-" can be given as a file name to represent stdin.
2987    
2988        (i) When file names are being printed, "(standard input)" is used for
2989            the standard input, for compatibility with GNU grep. Previously
2990            "<stdin>" was used.
2991    
2992        (j) The option --label=xxx can be used to supply a name to be used for
2993            stdin when file names are being printed. There is no short form.
2994    
2995        (k) Re-factored the options decoding logic because we are going to add
2996            two more options that take data. Such options can now be given in four
2997            different ways, e.g. "-fname", "-f name", "--file=name", "--file name".
2998    
2999        (l) Added the -A, -B, and -C options for requesting that lines of context
3000            around matches be printed.
3001    
3002        (m) Added the -L option to print the names of files that do not contain
3003            any matching lines, that is, the complement of -l.
3004    
3005        (n) The return code is 2 if any file cannot be opened, but pcregrep does
3006            continue to scan other files.
3007    
3008        (o) The -s option was incorrectly implemented. For compatibility with other
3009            greps, it now suppresses the error message for a non-existent or non-
3010            accessible file (but not the return code). There is a new option called
3011            -q that suppresses the output of matching lines, which was what -s was
3012            previously doing.
3013    
3014        (p) Added --include and --exclude options to specify files for inclusion
3015            and exclusion when recursing.
3016    
3017    11. The Makefile was not using the Autoconf-supported LDFLAGS macro properly.
3018        Hopefully, it now does.
3019    
3020    12. Missing cast in pcre_study().
3021    
3022    13. Added an "uninstall" target to the makefile.
3023    
3024    14. Replaced "extern" in the function prototypes in Makefile.in with
3025        "PCRE_DATA_SCOPE", which defaults to 'extern' or 'extern "C"' in the Unix
3026        world, but is set differently for Windows.
3027    
3028    15. Added a second compiling function called pcre_compile2(). The only
3029        difference is that it has an extra argument, which is a pointer to an
3030        integer error code. When there is a compile-time failure, this is set
3031        non-zero, in addition to the error test pointer being set to point to an
3032        error message. The new argument may be NULL if no error number is required
3033        (but then you may as well call pcre_compile(), which is now just a
3034        wrapper). This facility is provided because some applications need a
3035        numeric error indication, but it has also enabled me to tidy up the way
3036        compile-time errors are handled in the POSIX wrapper.
3037    
3038    16. Added VPATH=.libs to the makefile; this should help when building with one
3039        prefix path and installing with another. (Or so I'm told by someone who
3040        knows more about this stuff than I do.)
3041    
3042    17. Added a new option, REG_DOTALL, to the POSIX function regcomp(). This
3043        passes PCRE_DOTALL to the pcre_compile() function, making the "." character
3044        match everything, including newlines. This is not POSIX-compatible, but
3045        somebody wanted the feature. From pcretest it can be activated by using
3046        both the P and the s flags.
3047    
3048    18. AC_PROG_LIBTOOL appeared twice in Makefile.in. Removed one.
3049    
3050    19. libpcre.pc was being incorrectly installed as executable.
3051    
3052    20. A couple of places in pcretest check for end-of-line by looking for '\n';
3053        it now also looks for '\r' so that it will work unmodified on Windows.
3054    
3055    21. Added Google's contributed C++ wrapper to the distribution.
3056    
3057    22. Added some untidy missing memory free() calls in pcretest, to keep
3058        Electric Fence happy when testing.
3059    
3060    
3061    
3062    Version 5.0 13-Sep-04
3063    ---------------------
3064    
3065     1. Internal change: literal characters are no longer packed up into items
3066        containing multiple characters in a single byte-string. Each character
3067        is now matched using a separate opcode. However, there may be more than one
3068        byte in the character in UTF-8 mode.
3069    
3070     2. The pcre_callout_block structure has two new fields: pattern_position and
3071        next_item_length. These contain the offset in the pattern to the next match
3072        item, and its length, respectively.
3073    
3074     3. The PCRE_AUTO_CALLOUT option for pcre_compile() requests the automatic
3075        insertion of callouts before each pattern item. Added the /C option to
3076        pcretest to make use of this.
3077    
3078     4. On the advice of a Windows user, the lines
3079    
3080          #if defined(_WIN32) || defined(WIN32)
3081          _setmode( _fileno( stdout ), 0x8000 );
3082          #endif  /* defined(_WIN32) || defined(WIN32) */
3083    
3084        have been added to the source of pcretest. This apparently does useful
3085        magic in relation to line terminators.
3086    
3087     5. Changed "r" and "w" in the calls to fopen() in pcretest to "rb" and "wb"
3088        for the benefit of those environments where the "b" makes a difference.
3089    
3090     6. The icc compiler has the same options as gcc, but "configure" doesn't seem
3091        to know about it. I have put a hack into configure.in that adds in code
3092        to set GCC=yes if CC=icc. This seems to end up at a point in the
3093        generated configure script that is early enough to affect the setting of
3094        compiler options, which is what is needed, but I have no means of testing
3095        whether it really works. (The user who reported this had patched the
3096        generated configure script, which of course I cannot do.)
3097    
3098        LATER: After change 22 below (new libtool files), the configure script
3099        seems to know about icc (and also ecc). Therefore, I have commented out
3100        this hack in configure.in.
3101    
3102     7. Added support for pkg-config (2 patches were sent in).
3103    
3104     8. Negated POSIX character classes that used a combination of internal tables
3105        were completely broken. These were [[:^alpha:]], [[:^alnum:]], and
3106        [[:^ascii]]. Typically, they would match almost any characters. The other
3107        POSIX classes were not broken in this way.
3108    
3109     9. Matching the pattern "\b.*?" against "ab cd", starting at offset 1, failed
3110        to find the match, as PCRE was deluded into thinking that the match had to
3111        start at the start point or following a newline. The same bug applied to
3112        patterns with negative forward assertions or any backward assertions
3113        preceding ".*" at the start, unless the pattern required a fixed first
3114        character. This was a failing pattern: "(?!.bcd).*". The bug is now fixed.
3115    
3116    10. In UTF-8 mode, when moving forwards in the subject after a failed match
3117        starting at the last subject character, bytes beyond the end of the subject
3118        string were read.
3119    
3120    11. Renamed the variable "class" as "classbits" to make life easier for C++
3121        users. (Previously there was a macro definition, but it apparently wasn't
3122        enough.)
3123    
3124    12. Added the new field "tables" to the extra data so that tables can be passed
3125        in at exec time, or the internal tables can be re-selected. This allows
3126        a compiled regex to be saved and re-used at a later time by a different
3127        program that might have everything at different addresses.
3128    
3129    13. Modified the pcre-config script so that, when run on Solaris, it shows a
3130        -R library as well as a -L library.
3131    
3132    14. The debugging options of pcretest (-d on the command line or D on a
3133        pattern) showed incorrect output for anything following an extended class
3134        that contained multibyte characters and which was followed by a quantifier.
3135    
3136    15. Added optional support for general category Unicode character properties
3137        via the \p, \P, and \X escapes. Unicode property support implies UTF-8
3138        support. It adds about 90K to the size of the library. The meanings of the
3139        inbuilt class escapes such as \d and \s have NOT been changed.
3140    
3141    16. Updated pcredemo.c to include calls to free() to release the memory for the
3142        compiled pattern.
3143    
3144    17. The generated file chartables.c was being created in the source directory
3145        instead of in the building directory. This caused the build to fail if the
3146        source directory was different from the building directory, and was
3147        read-only.
3148    
3149    18. Added some sample Win commands from Mark Tetrode into the NON-UNIX-USE
3150        file. No doubt somebody will tell me if they don't make sense... Also added
3151        Dan Mooney's comments about building on OpenVMS.
3152    
3153    19. Added support for partial matching via the PCRE_PARTIAL option for
3154        pcre_exec() and the \P data escape in pcretest.
3155    
3156    20. Extended pcretest with 3 new pattern features:
3157    
3158        (i)   A pattern option of the form ">rest-of-line" causes pcretest to
3159              write the compiled pattern to the file whose name is "rest-of-line".
3160              This is a straight binary dump of the data, with the saved pointer to
3161              the character tables forced to be NULL. The study data, if any, is
3162              written too. After writing, pcretest reads a new pattern.
3163    
3164        (ii)  If, instead of a pattern, "<rest-of-line" is given, pcretest reads a
3165              compiled pattern from the given file. There must not be any
3166              occurrences of "<" in the file name (pretty unlikely); if there are,
3167              pcretest will instead treat the initial "<" as a pattern delimiter.
3168              After reading in the pattern, pcretest goes on to read data lines as
3169              usual.
3170    
3171        (iii) The F pattern option causes pcretest to flip the bytes in the 32-bit
3172              and 16-bit fields in a compiled pattern, to simulate a pattern that
3173              was compiled on a host of opposite endianness.
3174    
3175    21. The pcre-exec() function can now cope with patterns that were compiled on
3176        hosts of opposite endianness, with this restriction:
3177    
3178          As for any compiled expression that is saved and used later, the tables
3179          pointer field cannot be preserved; the extra_data field in the arguments
3180          to pcre_exec() should be used to pass in a tables address if a value
3181          other than the default internal tables were used at compile time.
3182    
3183    22. Calling pcre_exec() with a negative value of the "ovecsize" parameter is
3184        now diagnosed as an error. Previously, most of the time, a negative number
3185        would have been treated as zero, but if in addition "ovector" was passed as
3186        NULL, a crash could occur.
3187    
3188    23. Updated the files ltmain.sh, config.sub, config.guess, and aclocal.m4 with
3189        new versions from the libtool 1.5 distribution (the last one is a copy of
3190        a file called libtool.m4). This seems to have fixed the need to patch
3191        "configure" to support Darwin 1.3 (which I used to do). However, I still
3192        had to patch ltmain.sh to ensure that ${SED} is set (it isn't on my
3193        workstation).
3194    
3195    24. Changed the PCRE licence to be the more standard "BSD" licence.
3196    
3197    
3198    Version 4.5 01-Dec-03
3199    ---------------------
3200    
3201     1. There has been some re-arrangement of the code for the match() function so
3202        that it can be compiled in a version that does not call itself recursively.
3203        Instead, it keeps those local variables that need separate instances for
3204        each "recursion" in a frame on the heap, and gets/frees frames whenever it
3205        needs to "recurse". Keeping track of where control must go is done by means
3206        of setjmp/longjmp. The whole thing is implemented by a set of macros that
3207        hide most of the details from the main code, and operates only if
3208        NO_RECURSE is defined while compiling pcre.c. If PCRE is built using the
3209        "configure" mechanism, "--disable-stack-for-recursion" turns on this way of
3210        operating.
3211    
3212        To make it easier for callers to provide specially tailored get/free
3213        functions for this usage, two new functions, pcre_stack_malloc, and
3214        pcre_stack_free, are used. They are always called in strict stacking order,
3215        and the size of block requested is always the same.
3216    
3217        The PCRE_CONFIG_STACKRECURSE info parameter can be used to find out whether
3218        PCRE has been compiled to use the stack or the heap for recursion. The
3219        -C option of pcretest uses this to show which version is compiled.
3220    
3221        A new data escape \S, is added to pcretest; it causes the amounts of store
3222        obtained and freed by both kinds of malloc/free at match time to be added
3223        to the output.
3224    
3225     2. Changed the locale test to use "fr_FR" instead of "fr" because that's
3226        what's available on my current Linux desktop machine.
3227    
3228     3. When matching a UTF-8 string, the test for a valid string at the start has
3229        been extended. If start_offset is not zero, PCRE now checks that it points
3230        to a byte that is the start of a UTF-8 character. If not, it returns
3231        PCRE_ERROR_BADUTF8_OFFSET (-11). Note: the whole string is still checked;
3232        this is necessary because there may be backward assertions in the pattern.
3233        When matching the same subject several times, it may save resources to use
3234        PCRE_NO_UTF8_CHECK on all but the first call if the string is long.
3235    
3236     4. The code for checking the validity of UTF-8 strings has been tightened so
3237        that it rejects (a) strings containing 0xfe or 0xff bytes and (b) strings
3238        containing "overlong sequences".
3239    
3240     5. Fixed a bug (appearing twice) that I could not find any way of exploiting!
3241        I had written "if ((digitab[*p++] && chtab_digit) == 0)" where the "&&"
3242        should have been "&", but it just so happened that all the cases this let
3243        through by mistake were picked up later in the function.
3244    
3245     6. I had used a variable called "isblank" - this is a C99 function, causing
3246        some compilers to warn. To avoid this, I renamed it (as "blankclass").
3247    
3248     7. Cosmetic: (a) only output another newline at the end of pcretest if it is
3249        prompting; (b) run "./pcretest /dev/null" at the start of the test script
3250        so the version is shown; (c) stop "make test" echoing "./RunTest".
3251    
3252     8. Added patches from David Burgess to enable PCRE to run on EBCDIC systems.
3253    
3254     9. The prototype for memmove() for systems that don't have it was using
3255        size_t, but the inclusion of the header that defines size_t was later. I've
3256        moved the #includes for the C headers earlier to avoid this.
3257    
3258    10. Added some adjustments to the code to make it easier to compiler on certain
3259        special systems:
3260    
3261          (a) Some "const" qualifiers were missing.
3262          (b) Added the macro EXPORT before all exported functions; by default this
3263              is defined to be empty.
3264          (c) Changed the dftables auxiliary program (that builds chartables.c) so
3265              that it reads its output file name as an argument instead of writing
3266              to the standard output and assuming this can be redirected.
3267    
3268    11. In UTF-8 mode, if a recursive reference (e.g. (?1)) followed a character
3269        class containing characters with values greater than 255, PCRE compilation
3270        went into a loop.
3271    
3272    12. A recursive reference to a subpattern that was within another subpattern
3273        that had a minimum quantifier of zero caused PCRE to crash. For example,
3274        (x(y(?2))z)? provoked this bug with a subject that got as far as the
3275        recursion. If the recursively-called subpattern itself had a zero repeat,
3276        that was OK.
3277    
3278    13. In pcretest, the buffer for reading a data line was set at 30K, but the
3279        buffer into which it was copied (for escape processing) was still set at
3280        1024, so long lines caused crashes.
3281    
3282    14. A pattern such as /[ab]{1,3}+/ failed to compile, giving the error
3283        "internal error: code overflow...". This applied to any character class
3284        that was followed by a possessive quantifier.
3285    
3286    15. Modified the Makefile to add libpcre.la as a prerequisite for
3287        libpcreposix.la because I was told this is needed for a parallel build to
3288        work.
3289    
3290    16. If a pattern that contained .* following optional items at the start was
3291        studied, the wrong optimizing data was generated, leading to matching
3292        errors. For example, studying /[ab]*.*c/ concluded, erroneously, that any
3293        matching string must start with a or b or c. The correct conclusion for
3294        this pattern is that a match can start with any character.
3295    
3296    
3297    Version 4.4 13-Aug-03
3298    ---------------------
3299    
3300     1. In UTF-8 mode, a character class containing characters with values between
3301        127 and 255 was not handled correctly if the compiled pattern was studied.
3302        In fixing this, I have also improved the studying algorithm for such
3303        classes (slightly).
3304    
3305     2. Three internal functions had redundant arguments passed to them. Removal
3306        might give a very teeny performance improvement.
3307    
3308     3. Documentation bug: the value of the capture_top field in a callout is *one
3309        more than* the number of the hightest numbered captured substring.
3310    
3311     4. The Makefile linked pcretest and pcregrep with -lpcre, which could result
3312        in incorrectly linking with a previously installed version. They now link
3313        explicitly with libpcre.la.
3314    
3315     5. configure.in no longer needs to recognize Cygwin specially.
3316    
3317     6. A problem in pcre.in for Windows platforms is fixed.
3318    
3319     7. If a pattern was successfully studied, and the -d (or /D) flag was given to
3320        pcretest, it used to include the size of the study block as part of its
3321        output. Unfortunately, the structure contains a field that has a different
3322        size on different hardware architectures. This meant that the tests that
3323        showed this size failed. As the block is currently always of a fixed size,
3324        this information isn't actually particularly useful in pcretest output, so
3325        I have just removed it.
3326    
3327     8. Three pre-processor statements accidentally did not start in column 1.
3328        Sadly, there are *still* compilers around that complain, even though
3329        standard C has not required this for well over a decade. Sigh.
3330    
3331     9. In pcretest, the code for checking callouts passed small integers in the
3332        callout_data field, which is a void * field. However, some picky compilers
3333        complained about the casts involved for this on 64-bit systems. Now
3334        pcretest passes the address of the small integer instead, which should get
3335        rid of the warnings.
3336    
3337    10. By default, when in UTF-8 mode, PCRE now checks for valid UTF-8 strings at
3338        both compile and run time, and gives an error if an invalid UTF-8 sequence
3339        is found. There is a option for disabling this check in cases where the
3340        string is known to be correct and/or the maximum performance is wanted.
3341    
3342    11. In response to a bug report, I changed one line in Makefile.in from
3343    
3344            -Wl,--out-implib,.libs/lib@WIN_PREFIX@pcreposix.dll.a \
3345        to
3346            -Wl,--out-implib,.libs/@WIN_PREFIX@libpcreposix.dll.a \
3347    
3348        to look similar to other lines, but I have no way of telling whether this
3349        is the right thing to do, as I do not use Windows. No doubt I'll get told
3350        if it's wrong...
3351    
3352    
3353    Version 4.3 21-May-03
3354    ---------------------
3355    
3356    1. Two instances of @WIN_PREFIX@ omitted from the Windows targets in the
3357       Makefile.
3358    
3359    2. Some refactoring to improve the quality of the code:
3360    
3361       (i)   The utf8_table... variables are now declared "const".
3362    
3363       (ii)  The code for \cx, which used the "case flipping" table to upper case
3364             lower case letters, now just substracts 32. This is ASCII-specific,
3365             but the whole concept of \cx is ASCII-specific, so it seems
3366             reasonable.
3367    
3368       (iii) PCRE was using its character types table to recognize decimal and
3369             hexadecimal digits in the pattern. This is silly, because it handles
3370             only 0-9, a-f, and A-F, but the character types table is locale-
3371             specific, which means strange things might happen. A private
3372             table is now used for this - though it costs 256 bytes, a table is
3373             much faster than multiple explicit tests. Of course, the standard
3374             character types table is still used for matching digits in subject
3375             strings against \d.
3376    
3377       (iv)  Strictly, the identifier ESC_t is reserved by POSIX (all identifiers
3378             ending in _t are). So I've renamed it as ESC_tee.
3379    
3380    3. The first argument for regexec() in the POSIX wrapper should have been
3381       defined as "const".
3382    
3383    4. Changed pcretest to use malloc() for its buffers so that they can be
3384       Electric Fenced for debugging.
3385    
3386    5. There were several places in the code where, in UTF-8 mode, PCRE would try
3387       to read one or more bytes before the start of the subject string. Often this
3388       had no effect on PCRE's behaviour, but in some circumstances it could
3389       provoke a segmentation fault.
3390    
3391    6. A lookbehind at the start of a pattern in UTF-8 mode could also cause PCRE
3392       to try to read one or more bytes before the start of the subject string.
3393    
3394    7. A lookbehind in a pattern matched in non-UTF-8 mode on a PCRE compiled with
3395       UTF-8 support could misbehave in various ways if the subject string
3396       contained bytes with the 0x80 bit set and the 0x40 bit unset in a lookbehind
3397       area. (PCRE was not checking for the UTF-8 mode flag, and trying to move
3398       back over UTF-8 characters.)
3399    
3400    
3401    Version 4.2 14-Apr-03
3402    ---------------------
3403    
3404    1. Typo "#if SUPPORT_UTF8" instead of "#ifdef SUPPORT_UTF8" fixed.
3405    
3406    2. Changes to the building process, supplied by Ronald Landheer-Cieslak
3407         [ON_WINDOWS]: new variable, "#" on non-Windows platforms
3408         [NOT_ON_WINDOWS]: new variable, "#" on Windows platforms
3409         [WIN_PREFIX]: new variable, "cyg" for Cygwin
3410         * Makefile.in: use autoconf substitution for OBJEXT, EXEEXT, BUILD_OBJEXT
3411           and BUILD_EXEEXT
3412         Note: automatic setting of the BUILD variables is not yet working
3413         set CPPFLAGS and BUILD_CPPFLAGS (but don't use yet) - should be used at
3414           compile-time but not at link-time
3415         [LINK]: use for linking executables only
3416         make different versions for Windows and non-Windows
3417         [LINKLIB]: new variable, copy of UNIX-style LINK, used for linking
3418           libraries
3419         [LINK_FOR_BUILD]: new variable
3420         [OBJEXT]: use throughout
3421         [EXEEXT]: use throughout
3422         <winshared>: new target
3423         <wininstall>: new target
3424         <dftables.o>: use native compiler
3425         <dftables>: use native linker
3426         <install>: handle Windows platform correctly
3427         <clean>: ditto
3428         <check>: ditto
3429         copy DLL to top builddir before testing
3430    
3431       As part of these changes, -no-undefined was removed again. This was reported
3432       to give trouble on HP-UX 11.0, so getting rid of it seems like a good idea
3433       in any case.
3434    
3435    3. Some tidies to get rid of compiler warnings:
3436    
3437       . In the match_data structure, match_limit was an unsigned long int, whereas
3438         match_call_count was an int. I've made them both unsigned long ints.
3439    
3440       . In pcretest the fact that a const uschar * doesn't automatically cast to
3441         a void * provoked a warning.
3442    
3443       . Turning on some more compiler warnings threw up some "shadow" variables
3444         and a few more missing casts.
3445    
3446    4. If PCRE was complied with UTF-8 support, but called without the PCRE_UTF8
3447       option, a class that contained a single character with a value between 128
3448       and 255 (e.g. /[\xFF]/) caused PCRE to crash.
3449    
3450    5. If PCRE was compiled with UTF-8 support, but called without the PCRE_UTF8
3451       option, a class that contained several characters, but with at least one
3452       whose value was between 128 and 255 caused PCRE to crash.
3453    
3454    
3455    Version 4.1 12-Mar-03
3456    ---------------------
3457    
3458    1. Compiling with gcc -pedantic found a couple of places where casts were
3459    needed, and a string in dftables.c that was longer than standard compilers are
3460    required to support.
3461    
3462    2. Compiling with Sun's compiler found a few more places where the code could
3463    be tidied up in order to avoid warnings.
3464    
3465    3. The variables for cross-compiling were called HOST_CC and HOST_CFLAGS; the
3466    first of these names is deprecated in the latest Autoconf in favour of the name
3467    CC_FOR_BUILD, because "host" is typically used to mean the system on which the
3468    compiled code will be run. I can't find a reference for HOST_CFLAGS, but by
3469    analogy I have changed it to CFLAGS_FOR_BUILD.
3470    
3471    4. Added -no-undefined to the linking command in the Makefile, because this is
3472    apparently helpful for Windows. To make it work, also added "-L. -lpcre" to the
3473    linking step for the pcreposix library.
3474    
3475    5. PCRE was failing to diagnose the case of two named groups with the same
3476    name.
3477    
3478    6. A problem with one of PCRE's optimizations was discovered. PCRE remembers a
3479    literal character that is needed in the subject for a match, and scans along to
3480    ensure that it is present before embarking on the full matching process. This
3481    saves time in cases of nested unlimited repeats that are never going to match.
3482    Problem: the scan can take a lot of time if the subject is very long (e.g.
3483    megabytes), thus penalizing straightforward matches. It is now done only if the
3484    amount of subject to be scanned is less than 1000 bytes.
3485    
3486    7. A lesser problem with the same optimization is that it was recording the
3487    first character of an anchored pattern as "needed", thus provoking a search
3488    right along the subject, even when the first match of the pattern was going to
3489    fail. The "needed" character is now not set for anchored patterns, unless it
3490    follows something in the pattern that is of non-fixed length. Thus, it still
3491    fulfils its original purpose of finding quick non-matches in cases of nested
3492    unlimited repeats, but isn't used for simple anchored patterns such as /^abc/.
3493    
3494    
3495    Version 4.0 17-Feb-03
3496    ---------------------
3497    
3498    1. If a comment in an extended regex that started immediately after a meta-item
3499    extended to the end of string, PCRE compiled incorrect data. This could lead to
3500    all kinds of weird effects. Example: /#/ was bad; /()#/ was bad; /a#/ was not.
3501    
3502    2. Moved to autoconf 2.53 and libtool 1.4.2.
3503    
3504    3. Perl 5.8 no longer needs "use utf8" for doing UTF-8 things. Consequently,
3505    the special perltest8 script is no longer needed - all the tests can be run
3506    from a single perltest script.
3507    
3508    4. From 5.004, Perl has not included the VT character (0x0b) in the set defined
3509    by \s. It has now been removed in PCRE. This means it isn't recognized as
3510    whitespace in /x regexes too, which is the same as Perl. Note that the POSIX
3511    class [:space:] *does* include VT, thereby creating a mess.
3512    
3513    5. Added the class [:blank:] (a GNU extension from Perl 5.8) to match only
3514    space and tab.
3515    
3516    6. Perl 5.005 was a long time ago. It's time to amalgamate the tests that use
3517    its new features into the main test script, reducing the number of scripts.
3518    
3519    7. Perl 5.8 has changed the meaning of patterns like /a(?i)b/. Earlier versions
3520    were backward compatible, and made the (?i) apply to the whole pattern, as if
3521    /i were given. Now it behaves more logically, and applies the option setting
3522    only to what follows. PCRE has been changed to follow suit. However, if it
3523    finds options settings right at the start of the pattern, it extracts them into
3524    the global