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1 nigel 63 <html>
2     <head>
3     <title>pcretest specification</title>
4     </head>
5     <body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" text="#00005A" link="#0066FF" alink="#3399FF" vlink="#2222BB">
6 nigel 75 <h1>pcretest man page</h1>
7     <p>
8     Return to the <a href="index.html">PCRE index page</a>.
9     </p>
10 ph10 111 <p>
11 nigel 75 This page is part of the PCRE HTML documentation. It was generated automatically
12     from the original man page. If there is any nonsense in it, please consult the
13     man page, in case the conversion went wrong.
14 ph10 111 <br>
15 nigel 63 <ul>
16     <li><a name="TOC1" href="#SEC1">SYNOPSIS</a>
17     <li><a name="TOC2" href="#SEC2">OPTIONS</a>
18     <li><a name="TOC3" href="#SEC3">DESCRIPTION</a>
19     <li><a name="TOC4" href="#SEC4">PATTERN MODIFIERS</a>
20 nigel 75 <li><a name="TOC5" href="#SEC5">DATA LINES</a>
21 nigel 77 <li><a name="TOC6" href="#SEC6">THE ALTERNATIVE MATCHING FUNCTION</a>
22     <li><a name="TOC7" href="#SEC7">DEFAULT OUTPUT FROM PCRETEST</a>
23     <li><a name="TOC8" href="#SEC8">OUTPUT FROM THE ALTERNATIVE MATCHING FUNCTION</a>
24     <li><a name="TOC9" href="#SEC9">RESTARTING AFTER A PARTIAL MATCH</a>
25     <li><a name="TOC10" href="#SEC10">CALLOUTS</a>
26 nigel 93 <li><a name="TOC11" href="#SEC11">NON-PRINTING CHARACTERS</a>
27     <li><a name="TOC12" href="#SEC12">SAVING AND RELOADING COMPILED PATTERNS</a>
28     <li><a name="TOC13" href="#SEC13">SEE ALSO</a>
29     <li><a name="TOC14" href="#SEC14">AUTHOR</a>
30 ph10 99 <li><a name="TOC15" href="#SEC15">REVISION</a>
31 nigel 63 </ul>
32     <br><a name="SEC1" href="#TOC1">SYNOPSIS</a><br>
33     <P>
34 nigel 91 <b>pcretest [options] [source] [destination]</b>
35     <br>
36     <br>
37 nigel 63 <b>pcretest</b> was written as a test program for the PCRE regular expression
38     library itself, but it can also be used for experimenting with regular
39     expressions. This document describes the features of the test program; for
40     details of the regular expressions themselves, see the
41     <a href="pcrepattern.html"><b>pcrepattern</b></a>
42 nigel 75 documentation. For details of the PCRE library function calls and their
43     options, see the
44 nigel 63 <a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
45     documentation.
46     </P>
47     <br><a name="SEC2" href="#TOC1">OPTIONS</a><br>
48     <P>
49 nigel 93 <b>-b</b>
50     Behave as if each regex has the <b>/B</b> (show bytecode) modifier; the internal
51     form is output after compilation.
52     </P>
53     <P>
54 nigel 63 <b>-C</b>
55     Output the version number of the PCRE library, and all available information
56     about the optional features that are included, and then exit.
57     </P>
58     <P>
59     <b>-d</b>
60 nigel 77 Behave as if each regex has the <b>/D</b> (debug) modifier; the internal
61 nigel 93 form and information about the compiled pattern is output after compilation;
62     <b>-d</b> is equivalent to <b>-b -i</b>.
63 nigel 63 </P>
64     <P>
65 nigel 77 <b>-dfa</b>
66     Behave as if each data line contains the \D escape sequence; this causes the
67     alternative matching function, <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>, to be used instead of the
68     standard <b>pcre_exec()</b> function (more detail is given below).
69     </P>
70     <P>
71 nigel 93 <b>-help</b>
72     Output a brief summary these options and then exit.
73     </P>
74     <P>
75 nigel 63 <b>-i</b>
76 nigel 77 Behave as if each regex has the <b>/I</b> modifier; information about the
77 nigel 63 compiled pattern is given after compilation.
78     </P>
79     <P>
80     <b>-m</b>
81     Output the size of each compiled pattern after it has been compiled. This is
82 nigel 75 equivalent to adding <b>/M</b> to each regular expression. For compatibility
83     with earlier versions of pcretest, <b>-s</b> is a synonym for <b>-m</b>.
84 nigel 63 </P>
85     <P>
86     <b>-o</b> <i>osize</i>
87 nigel 75 Set the number of elements in the output vector that is used when calling
88 nigel 93 <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b> to be <i>osize</i>. The default value
89     is 45, which is enough for 14 capturing subexpressions for <b>pcre_exec()</b> or
90     22 different matches for <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>. The vector size can be
91     changed for individual matching calls by including \O in the data line (see
92     below).
93 nigel 63 </P>
94     <P>
95     <b>-p</b>
96 nigel 77 Behave as if each regex has the <b>/P</b> modifier; the POSIX wrapper API is
97     used to call PCRE. None of the other options has any effect when <b>-p</b> is
98     set.
99 nigel 63 </P>
100     <P>
101 nigel 91 <b>-q</b>
102 nigel 87 Do not output the version number of <b>pcretest</b> at the start of execution.
103     </P>
104     <P>
105 nigel 91 <b>-S</b> <i>size</i>
106     On Unix-like systems, set the size of the runtime stack to <i>size</i>
107     megabytes.
108     </P>
109     <P>
110 nigel 63 <b>-t</b>
111     Run each compile, study, and match many times with a timer, and output
112 nigel 75 resulting time per compile or match (in milliseconds). Do not set <b>-m</b> with
113     <b>-t</b>, because you will then get the size output a zillion times, and the
114 nigel 93 timing will be distorted. You can control the number of iterations that are
115     used for timing by following <b>-t</b> with a number (as a separate item on the
116     command line). For example, "-t 1000" would iterate 1000 times. The default is
117     to iterate 500000 times.
118 nigel 63 </P>
119 nigel 93 <P>
120     <b>-tm</b>
121     This is like <b>-t</b> except that it times only the matching phase, not the
122     compile or study phases.
123     </P>
124 nigel 63 <br><a name="SEC3" href="#TOC1">DESCRIPTION</a><br>
125     <P>
126     If <b>pcretest</b> is given two filename arguments, it reads from the first and
127     writes to the second. If it is given only one filename argument, it reads from
128     that file and writes to stdout. Otherwise, it reads from stdin and writes to
129     stdout, and prompts for each line of input, using "re&#62;" to prompt for regular
130     expressions, and "data&#62;" to prompt for data lines.
131     </P>
132     <P>
133     The program handles any number of sets of input on a single input file. Each
134     set starts with a regular expression, and continues with any number of data
135     lines to be matched against the pattern.
136     </P>
137     <P>
138 nigel 75 Each data line is matched separately and independently. If you want to do
139 nigel 91 multi-line matches, you have to use the \n escape sequence (or \r or \r\n,
140 nigel 93 etc., depending on the newline setting) in a single line of input to encode the
141     newline sequences. There is no limit on the length of data lines; the input
142 nigel 91 buffer is automatically extended if it is too small.
143 nigel 63 </P>
144     <P>
145     An empty line signals the end of the data lines, at which point a new regular
146     expression is read. The regular expressions are given enclosed in any
147 nigel 91 non-alphanumeric delimiters other than backslash, for example:
148 nigel 63 <pre>
149     /(a|bc)x+yz/
150 nigel 75 </pre>
151 nigel 63 White space before the initial delimiter is ignored. A regular expression may
152     be continued over several input lines, in which case the newline characters are
153     included within it. It is possible to include the delimiter within the pattern
154     by escaping it, for example
155     <pre>
156     /abc\/def/
157 nigel 75 </pre>
158 nigel 63 If you do so, the escape and the delimiter form part of the pattern, but since
159 nigel 75 delimiters are always non-alphanumeric, this does not affect its interpretation.
160 nigel 63 If the terminating delimiter is immediately followed by a backslash, for
161     example,
162     <pre>
163     /abc/\
164 nigel 75 </pre>
165 nigel 63 then a backslash is added to the end of the pattern. This is done to provide a
166     way of testing the error condition that arises if a pattern finishes with a
167     backslash, because
168     <pre>
169     /abc\/
170 nigel 75 </pre>
171 nigel 63 is interpreted as the first line of a pattern that starts with "abc/", causing
172     pcretest to read the next line as a continuation of the regular expression.
173     </P>
174     <br><a name="SEC4" href="#TOC1">PATTERN MODIFIERS</a><br>
175     <P>
176 nigel 75 A pattern may be followed by any number of modifiers, which are mostly single
177     characters. Following Perl usage, these are referred to below as, for example,
178     "the <b>/i</b> modifier", even though the delimiter of the pattern need not
179     always be a slash, and no slash is used when writing modifiers. Whitespace may
180     appear between the final pattern delimiter and the first modifier, and between
181     the modifiers themselves.
182 nigel 63 </P>
183     <P>
184 nigel 75 The <b>/i</b>, <b>/m</b>, <b>/s</b>, and <b>/x</b> modifiers set the PCRE_CASELESS,
185     PCRE_MULTILINE, PCRE_DOTALL, or PCRE_EXTENDED options, respectively, when
186     <b>pcre_compile()</b> is called. These four modifier letters have the same
187     effect as they do in Perl. For example:
188 nigel 63 <pre>
189     /caseless/i
190 nigel 75 </pre>
191     The following table shows additional modifiers for setting PCRE options that do
192     not correspond to anything in Perl:
193     <pre>
194 ph10 150 <b>/A</b> PCRE_ANCHORED
195     <b>/C</b> PCRE_AUTO_CALLOUT
196     <b>/E</b> PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY
197     <b>/f</b> PCRE_FIRSTLINE
198     <b>/J</b> PCRE_DUPNAMES
199     <b>/N</b> PCRE_NO_AUTO_CAPTURE
200     <b>/U</b> PCRE_UNGREEDY
201     <b>/X</b> PCRE_EXTRA
202     <b>/&#60;cr&#62;</b> PCRE_NEWLINE_CR
203     <b>/&#60;lf&#62;</b> PCRE_NEWLINE_LF
204     <b>/&#60;crlf&#62;</b> PCRE_NEWLINE_CRLF
205 ph10 152 <b>/&#60;anycrlf&#62;</b> PCRE_NEWLINE_ANYCRLF
206 ph10 150 <b>/&#60;any&#62;</b> PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY
207 nigel 75 </pre>
208 ph10 227 Those specifying line ending sequences are literal strings as shown, but the
209     letters can be in either case. This example sets multiline matching with CRLF
210     as the line ending sequence:
211 nigel 93 <pre>
212     /^abc/m&#60;crlf&#62;
213     </pre>
214     Details of the meanings of these PCRE options are given in the
215 nigel 91 <a href="pcreapi.html"><b>pcreapi</b></a>
216     documentation.
217     </P>
218     <br><b>
219     Finding all matches in a string
220     </b><br>
221     <P>
222 nigel 63 Searching for all possible matches within each subject string can be requested
223     by the <b>/g</b> or <b>/G</b> modifier. After finding a match, PCRE is called
224     again to search the remainder of the subject string. The difference between
225     <b>/g</b> and <b>/G</b> is that the former uses the <i>startoffset</i> argument to
226     <b>pcre_exec()</b> to start searching at a new point within the entire string
227     (which is in effect what Perl does), whereas the latter passes over a shortened
228     substring. This makes a difference to the matching process if the pattern
229     begins with a lookbehind assertion (including \b or \B).
230     </P>
231     <P>
232     If any call to <b>pcre_exec()</b> in a <b>/g</b> or <b>/G</b> sequence matches an
233     empty string, the next call is done with the PCRE_NOTEMPTY and PCRE_ANCHORED
234     flags set in order to search for another, non-empty, match at the same point.
235     If this second match fails, the start offset is advanced by one, and the normal
236     match is retried. This imitates the way Perl handles such cases when using the
237     <b>/g</b> modifier or the <b>split()</b> function.
238     </P>
239 nigel 91 <br><b>
240     Other modifiers
241     </b><br>
242 nigel 63 <P>
243 nigel 75 There are yet more modifiers for controlling the way <b>pcretest</b>
244 nigel 63 operates.
245     </P>
246     <P>
247     The <b>/+</b> modifier requests that as well as outputting the substring that
248     matched the entire pattern, pcretest should in addition output the remainder of
249     the subject string. This is useful for tests where the subject contains
250     multiple copies of the same substring.
251     </P>
252     <P>
253 nigel 93 The <b>/B</b> modifier is a debugging feature. It requests that <b>pcretest</b>
254 ph10 123 output a representation of the compiled byte code after compilation. Normally
255     this information contains length and offset values; however, if <b>/Z</b> is
256     also present, this data is replaced by spaces. This is a special feature for
257     use in the automatic test scripts; it ensures that the same output is generated
258     for different internal link sizes.
259 nigel 93 </P>
260     <P>
261 nigel 63 The <b>/L</b> modifier must be followed directly by the name of a locale, for
262     example,
263     <pre>
264 nigel 75 /pattern/Lfr_FR
265     </pre>
266     For this reason, it must be the last modifier. The given locale is set,
267 nigel 63 <b>pcre_maketables()</b> is called to build a set of character tables for the
268     locale, and this is then passed to <b>pcre_compile()</b> when compiling the
269     regular expression. Without an <b>/L</b> modifier, NULL is passed as the tables
270     pointer; that is, <b>/L</b> applies only to the expression on which it appears.
271     </P>
272     <P>
273     The <b>/I</b> modifier requests that <b>pcretest</b> output information about the
274 nigel 75 compiled pattern (whether it is anchored, has a fixed first character, and
275     so on). It does this by calling <b>pcre_fullinfo()</b> after compiling a
276     pattern. If the pattern is studied, the results of that are also output.
277 nigel 63 </P>
278     <P>
279 nigel 93 The <b>/D</b> modifier is a PCRE debugging feature, and is equivalent to
280 ph10 148 <b>/BI</b>, that is, both the <b>/B</b> and the <b>/I</b> modifiers.
281 nigel 63 </P>
282     <P>
283 nigel 75 The <b>/F</b> modifier causes <b>pcretest</b> to flip the byte order of the
284     fields in the compiled pattern that contain 2-byte and 4-byte numbers. This
285     facility is for testing the feature in PCRE that allows it to execute patterns
286     that were compiled on a host with a different endianness. This feature is not
287     available when the POSIX interface to PCRE is being used, that is, when the
288     <b>/P</b> pattern modifier is specified. See also the section about saving and
289     reloading compiled patterns below.
290     </P>
291     <P>
292 nigel 63 The <b>/S</b> modifier causes <b>pcre_study()</b> to be called after the
293     expression has been compiled, and the results used when the expression is
294     matched.
295     </P>
296     <P>
297     The <b>/M</b> modifier causes the size of memory block used to hold the compiled
298     pattern to be output.
299     </P>
300     <P>
301     The <b>/P</b> modifier causes <b>pcretest</b> to call PCRE via the POSIX wrapper
302     API rather than its native API. When this is done, all other modifiers except
303     <b>/i</b>, <b>/m</b>, and <b>/+</b> are ignored. REG_ICASE is set if <b>/i</b> is
304     present, and REG_NEWLINE is set if <b>/m</b> is present. The wrapper functions
305     force PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY always, and PCRE_DOTALL unless REG_NEWLINE is set.
306     </P>
307     <P>
308     The <b>/8</b> modifier causes <b>pcretest</b> to call PCRE with the PCRE_UTF8
309     option set. This turns on support for UTF-8 character handling in PCRE,
310     provided that it was compiled with this support enabled. This modifier also
311     causes any non-printing characters in output strings to be printed using the
312     \x{hh...} notation if they are valid UTF-8 sequences.
313     </P>
314 nigel 71 <P>
315     If the <b>/?</b> modifier is used with <b>/8</b>, it causes <b>pcretest</b> to
316     call <b>pcre_compile()</b> with the PCRE_NO_UTF8_CHECK option, to suppress the
317     checking of the string for UTF-8 validity.
318     </P>
319 nigel 75 <br><a name="SEC5" href="#TOC1">DATA LINES</a><br>
320 nigel 63 <P>
321     Before each data line is passed to <b>pcre_exec()</b>, leading and trailing
322     whitespace is removed, and it is then scanned for \ escapes. Some of these are
323     pretty esoteric features, intended for checking out some of the more
324     complicated features of PCRE. If you are just testing "ordinary" regular
325     expressions, you probably don't need any of these. The following escapes are
326     recognized:
327     <pre>
328 nigel 93 \a alarm (BEL, \x07)
329     \b backspace (\x08)
330     \e escape (\x27)
331     \f formfeed (\x0c)
332     \n newline (\x0a)
333 nigel 91 \qdd set the PCRE_MATCH_LIMIT limit to dd (any number of digits)
334 nigel 93 \r carriage return (\x0d)
335     \t tab (\x09)
336     \v vertical tab (\x0b)
337 nigel 63 \nnn octal character (up to 3 octal digits)
338     \xhh hexadecimal character (up to 2 hex digits)
339 nigel 75 \x{hh...} hexadecimal character, any number of digits in UTF-8 mode
340 nigel 91 \A pass the PCRE_ANCHORED option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
341     \B pass the PCRE_NOTBOL option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
342 nigel 75 \Cdd call pcre_copy_substring() for substring dd after a successful match (number less than 32)
343     \Cname call pcre_copy_named_substring() for substring "name" after a successful match (name termin-
344 nigel 63 ated by next non alphanumeric character)
345 nigel 75 \C+ show the current captured substrings at callout time
346 nigel 63 \C- do not supply a callout function
347 nigel 75 \C!n return 1 instead of 0 when callout number n is reached
348     \C!n!m return 1 instead of 0 when callout number n is reached for the nth time
349     \C*n pass the number n (may be negative) as callout data; this is used as the callout return value
350 nigel 77 \D use the <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b> match function
351     \F only shortest match for <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
352 nigel 75 \Gdd call pcre_get_substring() for substring dd after a successful match (number less than 32)
353     \Gname call pcre_get_named_substring() for substring "name" after a successful match (name termin-
354 nigel 63 ated by next non-alphanumeric character)
355 nigel 75 \L call pcre_get_substringlist() after a successful match
356 nigel 91 \M discover the minimum MATCH_LIMIT and MATCH_LIMIT_RECURSION settings
357     \N pass the PCRE_NOTEMPTY option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
358 nigel 75 \Odd set the size of the output vector passed to <b>pcre_exec()</b> to dd (any number of digits)
359 nigel 77 \P pass the PCRE_PARTIAL option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
360 nigel 91 \Qdd set the PCRE_MATCH_LIMIT_RECURSION limit to dd (any number of digits)
361 nigel 77 \R pass the PCRE_DFA_RESTART option to <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
362 nigel 73 \S output details of memory get/free calls during matching
363 nigel 91 \Z pass the PCRE_NOTEOL option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
364     \? pass the PCRE_NO_UTF8_CHECK option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
365 nigel 75 \&#62;dd start the match at offset dd (any number of digits);
366 nigel 91 this sets the <i>startoffset</i> argument for <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
367     \&#60;cr&#62; pass the PCRE_NEWLINE_CR option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
368     \&#60;lf&#62; pass the PCRE_NEWLINE_LF option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
369     \&#60;crlf&#62; pass the PCRE_NEWLINE_CRLF option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
370 ph10 150 \&#60;anycrlf&#62; pass the PCRE_NEWLINE_ANYCRLF option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
371 nigel 93 \&#60;any&#62; pass the PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY option to <b>pcre_exec()</b> or <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>
372 nigel 75 </pre>
373 nigel 93 The escapes that specify line ending sequences are literal strings, exactly as
374     shown. No more than one newline setting should be present in any data line.
375 nigel 63 </P>
376     <P>
377 nigel 93 A backslash followed by anything else just escapes the anything else. If
378     the very last character is a backslash, it is ignored. This gives a way of
379     passing an empty line as data, since a real empty line terminates the data
380     input.
381     </P>
382     <P>
383 nigel 63 If \M is present, <b>pcretest</b> calls <b>pcre_exec()</b> several times, with
384 nigel 87 different values in the <i>match_limit</i> and <i>match_limit_recursion</i>
385     fields of the <b>pcre_extra</b> data structure, until it finds the minimum
386     numbers for each parameter that allow <b>pcre_exec()</b> to complete. The
387     <i>match_limit</i> number is a measure of the amount of backtracking that takes
388     place, and checking it out can be instructive. For most simple matches, the
389     number is quite small, but for patterns with very large numbers of matching
390     possibilities, it can become large very quickly with increasing length of
391     subject string. The <i>match_limit_recursion</i> number is a measure of how much
392     stack (or, if PCRE is compiled with NO_RECURSE, how much heap) memory is needed
393     to complete the match attempt.
394 nigel 63 </P>
395     <P>
396 nigel 75 When \O is used, the value specified may be higher or lower than the size set
397     by the <b>-O</b> command line option (or defaulted to 45); \O applies only to
398     the call of <b>pcre_exec()</b> for the line in which it appears.
399 nigel 63 </P>
400     <P>
401 nigel 75 If the <b>/P</b> modifier was present on the pattern, causing the POSIX wrapper
402 nigel 87 API to be used, the only option-setting sequences that have any effect are \B
403     and \Z, causing REG_NOTBOL and REG_NOTEOL, respectively, to be passed to
404     <b>regexec()</b>.
405 nigel 63 </P>
406     <P>
407     The use of \x{hh...} to represent UTF-8 characters is not dependent on the use
408     of the <b>/8</b> modifier on the pattern. It is recognized always. There may be
409     any number of hexadecimal digits inside the braces. The result is from one to
410 ph10 211 six bytes, encoded according to the original UTF-8 rules of RFC 2279. This
411     allows for values in the range 0 to 0x7FFFFFFF. Note that not all of those are
412     valid Unicode code points, or indeed valid UTF-8 characters according to the
413     later rules in RFC 3629.
414 nigel 63 </P>
415 nigel 77 <br><a name="SEC6" href="#TOC1">THE ALTERNATIVE MATCHING FUNCTION</a><br>
416 nigel 63 <P>
417 nigel 77 By default, <b>pcretest</b> uses the standard PCRE matching function,
418     <b>pcre_exec()</b> to match each data line. From release 6.0, PCRE supports an
419     alternative matching function, <b>pcre_dfa_test()</b>, which operates in a
420     different way, and has some restrictions. The differences between the two
421     functions are described in the
422     <a href="pcrematching.html"><b>pcrematching</b></a>
423     documentation.
424     </P>
425     <P>
426     If a data line contains the \D escape sequence, or if the command line
427     contains the <b>-dfa</b> option, the alternative matching function is called.
428     This function finds all possible matches at a given point. If, however, the \F
429     escape sequence is present in the data line, it stops after the first match is
430     found. This is always the shortest possible match.
431     </P>
432     <br><a name="SEC7" href="#TOC1">DEFAULT OUTPUT FROM PCRETEST</a><br>
433     <P>
434     This section describes the output when the normal matching function,
435     <b>pcre_exec()</b>, is being used.
436     </P>
437     <P>
438 nigel 63 When a match succeeds, pcretest outputs the list of captured substrings that
439     <b>pcre_exec()</b> returns, starting with number 0 for the string that matched
440 nigel 75 the whole pattern. Otherwise, it outputs "No match" or "Partial match"
441     when <b>pcre_exec()</b> returns PCRE_ERROR_NOMATCH or PCRE_ERROR_PARTIAL,
442     respectively, and otherwise the PCRE negative error number. Here is an example
443 nigel 77 of an interactive <b>pcretest</b> run.
444 nigel 63 <pre>
445     $ pcretest
446 nigel 93 PCRE version 7.0 30-Nov-2006
447 nigel 75
448 nigel 63 re&#62; /^abc(\d+)/
449     data&#62; abc123
450     0: abc123
451     1: 123
452     data&#62; xyz
453     No match
454 nigel 75 </pre>
455 nigel 63 If the strings contain any non-printing characters, they are output as \0x
456     escapes, or as \x{...} escapes if the <b>/8</b> modifier was present on the
457 nigel 93 pattern. See below for the definition of non-printing characters. If the
458     pattern has the <b>/+</b> modifier, the output for substring 0 is followed by
459     the the rest of the subject string, identified by "0+" like this:
460 nigel 63 <pre>
461     re&#62; /cat/+
462     data&#62; cataract
463     0: cat
464     0+ aract
465 nigel 75 </pre>
466 nigel 63 If the pattern has the <b>/g</b> or <b>/G</b> modifier, the results of successive
467     matching attempts are output in sequence, like this:
468     <pre>
469     re&#62; /\Bi(\w\w)/g
470     data&#62; Mississippi
471     0: iss
472     1: ss
473     0: iss
474     1: ss
475     0: ipp
476     1: pp
477 nigel 75 </pre>
478 nigel 63 "No match" is output only if the first match attempt fails.
479     </P>
480     <P>
481     If any of the sequences <b>\C</b>, <b>\G</b>, or <b>\L</b> are present in a
482     data line that is successfully matched, the substrings extracted by the
483     convenience functions are output with C, G, or L after the string number
484     instead of a colon. This is in addition to the normal full list. The string
485     length (that is, the return from the extraction function) is given in
486     parentheses after each string for <b>\C</b> and <b>\G</b>.
487     </P>
488     <P>
489 nigel 93 Note that whereas patterns can be continued over several lines (a plain "&#62;"
490 nigel 63 prompt is used for continuations), data lines may not. However newlines can be
491 nigel 93 included in data by means of the \n escape (or \r, \r\n, etc., depending on
492     the newline sequence setting).
493 nigel 63 </P>
494 nigel 77 <br><a name="SEC8" href="#TOC1">OUTPUT FROM THE ALTERNATIVE MATCHING FUNCTION</a><br>
495 nigel 63 <P>
496 nigel 77 When the alternative matching function, <b>pcre_dfa_exec()</b>, is used (by
497     means of the \D escape sequence or the <b>-dfa</b> command line option), the
498     output consists of a list of all the matches that start at the first point in
499     the subject where there is at least one match. For example:
500     <pre>
501     re&#62; /(tang|tangerine|tan)/
502     data&#62; yellow tangerine\D
503     0: tangerine
504     1: tang
505     2: tan
506     </pre>
507     (Using the normal matching function on this data finds only "tang".) The
508     longest matching string is always given first (and numbered zero).
509     </P>
510     <P>
511 nigel 93 If <b>/g</b> is present on the pattern, the search for further matches resumes
512 nigel 77 at the end of the longest match. For example:
513     <pre>
514     re&#62; /(tang|tangerine|tan)/g
515     data&#62; yellow tangerine and tangy sultana\D
516     0: tangerine
517     1: tang
518     2: tan
519     0: tang
520     1: tan
521     0: tan
522     </pre>
523     Since the matching function does not support substring capture, the escape
524     sequences that are concerned with captured substrings are not relevant.
525     </P>
526     <br><a name="SEC9" href="#TOC1">RESTARTING AFTER A PARTIAL MATCH</a><br>
527     <P>
528     When the alternative matching function has given the PCRE_ERROR_PARTIAL return,
529     indicating that the subject partially matched the pattern, you can restart the
530     match with additional subject data by means of the \R escape sequence. For
531     example:
532     <pre>
533     re&#62; /^\d?\d(jan|feb|mar|apr|may|jun|jul|aug|sep|oct|nov|dec)\d\d$/
534     data&#62; 23ja\P\D
535     Partial match: 23ja
536     data&#62; n05\R\D
537     0: n05
538     </pre>
539     For further information about partial matching, see the
540     <a href="pcrepartial.html"><b>pcrepartial</b></a>
541     documentation.
542     </P>
543     <br><a name="SEC10" href="#TOC1">CALLOUTS</a><br>
544     <P>
545 nigel 75 If the pattern contains any callout requests, <b>pcretest</b>'s callout function
546 nigel 77 is called during matching. This works with both matching functions. By default,
547     the called function displays the callout number, the start and current
548     positions in the text at the callout time, and the next pattern item to be
549     tested. For example, the output
550 nigel 75 <pre>
551     ---&#62;pqrabcdef
552     0 ^ ^ \d
553     </pre>
554     indicates that callout number 0 occurred for a match attempt starting at the
555     fourth character of the subject string, when the pointer was at the seventh
556     character of the data, and when the next pattern item was \d. Just one
557     circumflex is output if the start and current positions are the same.
558     </P>
559     <P>
560     Callouts numbered 255 are assumed to be automatic callouts, inserted as a
561     result of the <b>/C</b> pattern modifier. In this case, instead of showing the
562     callout number, the offset in the pattern, preceded by a plus, is output. For
563     example:
564     <pre>
565     re&#62; /\d?[A-E]\*/C
566     data&#62; E*
567     ---&#62;E*
568     +0 ^ \d?
569     +3 ^ [A-E]
570     +8 ^^ \*
571     +10 ^ ^
572     0: E*
573     </pre>
574     The callout function in <b>pcretest</b> returns zero (carry on matching) by
575 nigel 77 default, but you can use a \C item in a data line (as described above) to
576 nigel 75 change this.
577     </P>
578     <P>
579     Inserting callouts can be helpful when using <b>pcretest</b> to check
580     complicated regular expressions. For further information about callouts, see
581     the
582     <a href="pcrecallout.html"><b>pcrecallout</b></a>
583     documentation.
584     </P>
585 nigel 93 <br><a name="SEC11" href="#TOC1">NON-PRINTING CHARACTERS</a><br>
586 nigel 75 <P>
587 nigel 93 When <b>pcretest</b> is outputting text in the compiled version of a pattern,
588     bytes other than 32-126 are always treated as non-printing characters are are
589     therefore shown as hex escapes.
590     </P>
591     <P>
592     When <b>pcretest</b> is outputting text that is a matched part of a subject
593     string, it behaves in the same way, unless a different locale has been set for
594     the pattern (using the <b>/L</b> modifier). In this case, the <b>isprint()</b>
595     function to distinguish printing and non-printing characters.
596     </P>
597     <br><a name="SEC12" href="#TOC1">SAVING AND RELOADING COMPILED PATTERNS</a><br>
598     <P>
599 nigel 75 The facilities described in this section are not available when the POSIX
600     inteface to PCRE is being used, that is, when the <b>/P</b> pattern modifier is
601     specified.
602     </P>
603     <P>
604     When the POSIX interface is not in use, you can cause <b>pcretest</b> to write a
605     compiled pattern to a file, by following the modifiers with &#62; and a file name.
606     For example:
607     <pre>
608     /pattern/im &#62;/some/file
609     </pre>
610     See the
611     <a href="pcreprecompile.html"><b>pcreprecompile</b></a>
612     documentation for a discussion about saving and re-using compiled patterns.
613     </P>
614     <P>
615     The data that is written is binary. The first eight bytes are the length of the
616     compiled pattern data followed by the length of the optional study data, each
617     written as four bytes in big-endian order (most significant byte first). If
618     there is no study data (either the pattern was not studied, or studying did not
619     return any data), the second length is zero. The lengths are followed by an
620     exact copy of the compiled pattern. If there is additional study data, this
621     follows immediately after the compiled pattern. After writing the file,
622     <b>pcretest</b> expects to read a new pattern.
623     </P>
624     <P>
625     A saved pattern can be reloaded into <b>pcretest</b> by specifing &#60; and a file
626     name instead of a pattern. The name of the file must not contain a &#60; character,
627     as otherwise <b>pcretest</b> will interpret the line as a pattern delimited by &#60;
628     characters.
629     For example:
630     <pre>
631     re&#62; &#60;/some/file
632     Compiled regex loaded from /some/file
633     No study data
634     </pre>
635     When the pattern has been loaded, <b>pcretest</b> proceeds to read data lines in
636     the usual way.
637     </P>
638     <P>
639     You can copy a file written by <b>pcretest</b> to a different host and reload it
640     there, even if the new host has opposite endianness to the one on which the
641     pattern was compiled. For example, you can compile on an i86 machine and run on
642     a SPARC machine.
643     </P>
644     <P>
645     File names for saving and reloading can be absolute or relative, but note that
646     the shell facility of expanding a file name that starts with a tilde (~) is not
647     available.
648     </P>
649     <P>
650     The ability to save and reload files in <b>pcretest</b> is intended for testing
651     and experimentation. It is not intended for production use because only a
652     single pattern can be written to a file. Furthermore, there is no facility for
653     supplying custom character tables for use with a reloaded pattern. If the
654     original pattern was compiled with custom tables, an attempt to match a subject
655     string using a reloaded pattern is likely to cause <b>pcretest</b> to crash.
656     Finally, if you attempt to load a file that is not in the correct format, the
657     result is undefined.
658     </P>
659 nigel 93 <br><a name="SEC13" href="#TOC1">SEE ALSO</a><br>
660 nigel 75 <P>
661 nigel 93 <b>pcre</b>(3), <b>pcreapi</b>(3), <b>pcrecallout</b>(3), <b>pcrematching</b>(3),
662 ph10 148 <b>pcrepartial</b>(d), <b>pcrepattern</b>(3), <b>pcreprecompile</b>(3).
663 nigel 93 </P>
664     <br><a name="SEC14" href="#TOC1">AUTHOR</a><br>
665     <P>
666 nigel 77 Philip Hazel
667 nigel 63 <br>
668 ph10 99 University Computing Service
669 nigel 63 <br>
670 nigel 93 Cambridge CB2 3QH, England.
671 ph10 99 <br>
672 nigel 63 </P>
673 ph10 99 <br><a name="SEC15" href="#TOC1">REVISION</a><br>
674 nigel 63 <P>
675 ph10 227 Last updated: 21 August 2007
676 nigel 63 <br>
677 ph10 99 Copyright &copy; 1997-2007 University of Cambridge.
678     <br>
679 nigel 75 <p>
680     Return to the <a href="index.html">PCRE index page</a>.
681     </p>

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