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/*************************************************
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* Perl-Compatible Regular Expressions *
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*************************************************/
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/* PCRE is a library of functions to support regular expressions whose syntax
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and semantics are as close as possible to those of the Perl 5 language.
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Written by Philip Hazel
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Copyright (c) 1997-2007 University of Cambridge
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
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* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
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this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
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notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
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documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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* Neither the name of the University of Cambridge nor the names of its
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contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
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this software without specific prior written permission.
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THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
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AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
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IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
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ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
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LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
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CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
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SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
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INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
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CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
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ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
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POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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*/
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/* This header contains definitions that are shared between the different
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modules, but which are not relevant to the exported API. This includes some
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functions whose names all begin with "_pcre_". */
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#ifndef PCRE_INTERNAL_H
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#define PCRE_INTERNAL_H
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/* Define DEBUG to get debugging output on stdout. */
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#if 0
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#define DEBUG
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#endif
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/* Use a macro for debugging printing, 'cause that eliminates the use of #ifdef
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inline, and there are *still* stupid compilers about that don't like indented
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pre-processor statements, or at least there were when I first wrote this. After
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all, it had only been about 10 years then...
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It turns out that the Mac Debugging.h header also defines the macro DPRINTF, so
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be absolutely sure we get our version. */
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#undef DPRINTF
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#ifdef DEBUG
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#define DPRINTF(p) printf p
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#else
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#define DPRINTF(p) /* Nothing */
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#endif
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/* Get the definitions provided by running "configure" */
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#include "config.h"
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/* Standard C headers plus the external interface definition. The only time
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setjmp and stdarg are used is when NO_RECURSE is set. */
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#include <ctype.h>
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#include <limits.h>
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#include <setjmp.h>
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#include <stdarg.h>
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#include <stddef.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include <string.h>
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#ifndef PCRE_SPY
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#define PCRE_DEFINITION /* Win32 __declspec(export) trigger for .dll */
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#endif
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/* We need to have types that specify unsigned 16-bit and 32-bit integers. We
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cannot determine these outside the compilation (e.g. by running a program as
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part of "configure") because PCRE is often cross-compiled for use on other
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systems. Instead we make use of the maximum sizes that are available at
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preprocessor time in standard C environments. */
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#if USHRT_MAX == 65535
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typedef unsigned short pcre_uint16;
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#elif UINT_MAX == 65535
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typedef unsigned int pcre_uint16;
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#else
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#error Cannot determine a type for 16-bit unsigned integers
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#endif
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#if UINT_MAX == 4294967295
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typedef unsigned int pcre_uint32;
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#elif ULONG_MAX == 4294967295
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typedef unsigned long int pcre_uint32;
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#else
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#error Cannot determine a type for 32-bit unsigned integers
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#endif
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/* All character handling must be done as unsigned characters. Otherwise there
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are problems with top-bit-set characters and functions such as isspace().
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However, we leave the interface to the outside world as char *, because that
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should make things easier for callers. We define a short type for unsigned char
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to save lots of typing. I tried "uchar", but it causes problems on Digital
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Unix, where it is defined in sys/types, so use "uschar" instead. */
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typedef unsigned char uschar;
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/* This is an unsigned int value that no character can ever have. UTF-8
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characters only go up to 0x7fffffff (though Unicode doesn't go beyond
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0x0010ffff). */
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#define NOTACHAR 0xffffffff
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/* PCRE is able to support several different kinds of newline (CR, LF, CRLF,
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and "all" at present). The following macros are used to package up testing for
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newlines. NLBLOCK, PSSTART, and PSEND are defined in the various modules to
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indicate in which datablock the parameters exist, and what the start/end of
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string field names are. */
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#define NLTYPE_FIXED 0 /* Newline is a fixed length string */
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#define NLTYPE_ANY 1 /* Newline is any Unicode line ending */
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/* This macro checks for a newline at the given position */
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#define IS_NEWLINE(p) \
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((NLBLOCK->nltype != NLTYPE_FIXED)? \
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((p) < NLBLOCK->PSEND && \
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_pcre_is_newline((p), NLBLOCK->PSEND, &(NLBLOCK->nllen), utf8) \
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) \
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: \
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((p) <= NLBLOCK->PSEND - NLBLOCK->nllen && \
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(p)[0] == NLBLOCK->nl[0] && \
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(NLBLOCK->nllen == 1 || (p)[1] == NLBLOCK->nl[1]) \
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) \
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)
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/* This macro checks for a newline immediately preceding the given position */
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#define WAS_NEWLINE(p) \
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((NLBLOCK->nltype != NLTYPE_FIXED)? \
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((p) > NLBLOCK->PSSTART && \
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_pcre_was_newline((p), NLBLOCK->PSSTART, &(NLBLOCK->nllen), utf8) \
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) \
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: \
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((p) >= NLBLOCK->PSSTART + NLBLOCK->nllen && \
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(p)[-NLBLOCK->nllen] == NLBLOCK->nl[0] && \
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(NLBLOCK->nllen == 1 || (p)[-NLBLOCK->nllen+1] == NLBLOCK->nl[1]) \
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) \
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)
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/* When PCRE is compiled as a C++ library, the subject pointer can be replaced
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with a custom type. This makes it possible, for example, to allow pcre_exec()
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to process subject strings that are discontinuous by using a smart pointer
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class. It must always be possible to inspect all of the subject string in
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pcre_exec() because of the way it backtracks. Two macros are required in the
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normal case, for sign-unspecified and unsigned char pointers. The former is
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used for the external interface and appears in pcre.h, which is why its name
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must begin with PCRE_. */
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#ifdef CUSTOM_SUBJECT_PTR
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#define PCRE_SPTR CUSTOM_SUBJECT_PTR
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#define USPTR CUSTOM_SUBJECT_PTR
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#else
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#define PCRE_SPTR const char *
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#define USPTR const unsigned char *
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#endif
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/* Include the public PCRE header and the definitions of UCP character property
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values. */
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#include <pcre.h>
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#include "ucp.h"
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/* When compiling for use with the Virtual Pascal compiler, these functions
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need to have their names changed. PCRE must be compiled with the -DVPCOMPAT
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option on the command line. */
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#ifdef VPCOMPAT
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#define strlen(s) _strlen(s)
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#define strncmp(s1,s2,m) _strncmp(s1,s2,m)
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#define memcmp(s,c,n) _memcmp(s,c,n)
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#define memcpy(d,s,n) _memcpy(d,s,n)
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#define memmove(d,s,n) _memmove(d,s,n)
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#define memset(s,c,n) _memset(s,c,n)
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#else /* VPCOMPAT */
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/* To cope with SunOS4 and other systems that lack memmove() but have bcopy(),
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define a macro for memmove() if HAVE_MEMMOVE is false, provided that HAVE_BCOPY
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is set. Otherwise, include an emulating function for those systems that have
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neither (there some non-Unix environments where this is the case). */
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#ifndef HAVE_MEMMOVE
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#undef memmove /* some systems may have a macro */
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#ifdef HAVE_BCOPY
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#define memmove(a, b, c) bcopy(b, a, c)
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#else /* HAVE_BCOPY */
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static void *
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pcre_memmove(void *d, const void *s, size_t n)
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{
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size_t i;
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unsigned char *dest = (unsigned char *)d;
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const unsigned char *src = (const unsigned char *)s;
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if (dest > src)
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{
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dest += n;
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src += n;
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for (i = 0; i < n; ++i) *(--dest) = *(--src);
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return (void *)dest;
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}
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else
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{
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for (i = 0; i < n; ++i) *dest++ = *src++;
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return (void *)(dest - n);
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}
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}
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#define memmove(a, b, c) pcre_memmove(a, b, c)
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#endif /* not HAVE_BCOPY */
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#endif /* not HAVE_MEMMOVE */
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#endif /* not VPCOMPAT */
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/* PCRE keeps offsets in its compiled code as 2-byte quantities (always stored
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in big-endian order) by default. These are used, for example, to link from the
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start of a subpattern to its alternatives and its end. The use of 2 bytes per
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offset limits the size of the compiled regex to around 64K, which is big enough
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for almost everybody. However, I received a request for an even bigger limit.
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For this reason, and also to make the code easier to maintain, the storing and
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loading of offsets from the byte string is now handled by the macros that are
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defined here.
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The macros are controlled by the value of LINK_SIZE. This defaults to 2 in
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the config.h file, but can be overridden by using -D on the command line. This
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is automated on Unix systems via the "configure" command. */
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#if LINK_SIZE == 2
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#define PUT(a,n,d) \
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(a[n] = (d) >> 8), \
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(a[(n)+1] = (d) & 255)
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#define GET(a,n) \
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(((a)[n] << 8) | (a)[(n)+1])
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#define MAX_PATTERN_SIZE (1 << 16)
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#elif LINK_SIZE == 3
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#define PUT(a,n,d) \
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(a[n] = (d) >> 16), \
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(a[(n)+1] = (d) >> 8), \
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(a[(n)+2] = (d) & 255)
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#define GET(a,n) \
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(((a)[n] << 16) | ((a)[(n)+1] << 8) | (a)[(n)+2])
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#define MAX_PATTERN_SIZE (1 << 24)
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#elif LINK_SIZE == 4
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#define PUT(a,n,d) \
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(a[n] = (d) >> 24), \
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(a[(n)+1] = (d) >> 16), \
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(a[(n)+2] = (d) >> 8), \
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(a[(n)+3] = (d) & 255)
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#define GET(a,n) \
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(((a)[n] << 24) | ((a)[(n)+1] << 16) | ((a)[(n)+2] << 8) | (a)[(n)+3])
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#define MAX_PATTERN_SIZE (1 << 30) /* Keep it positive */
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#else
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#error LINK_SIZE must be either 2, 3, or 4
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#endif
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/* Convenience macro defined in terms of the others */
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#define PUTINC(a,n,d) PUT(a,n,d), a += LINK_SIZE
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/* PCRE uses some other 2-byte quantities that do not change when the size of
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offsets changes. There are used for repeat counts and for other things such as
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capturing parenthesis numbers in back references. */
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#define PUT2(a,n,d) \
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a[n] = (d) >> 8; \
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a[(n)+1] = (d) & 255
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#define GET2(a,n) \
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(((a)[n] << 8) | (a)[(n)+1])
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#define PUT2INC(a,n,d) PUT2(a,n,d), a += 2
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/* When UTF-8 encoding is being used, a character is no longer just a single
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byte. The macros for character handling generate simple sequences when used in
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byte-mode, and more complicated ones for UTF-8 characters. */
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#ifndef SUPPORT_UTF8
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#define GETCHAR(c, eptr) c = *eptr;
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#define GETCHARTEST(c, eptr) c = *eptr;
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#define GETCHARINC(c, eptr) c = *eptr++;
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#define GETCHARINCTEST(c, eptr) c = *eptr++;
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#define GETCHARLEN(c, eptr, len) c = *eptr;
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#define BACKCHAR(eptr)
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#else /* SUPPORT_UTF8 */
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/* Get the next UTF-8 character, not advancing the pointer. This is called when
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we know we are in UTF-8 mode. */
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#define GETCHAR(c, eptr) \
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c = *eptr; \
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if (c >= 0xc0) \
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{ \
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int gcii; \
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int gcaa = _pcre_utf8_table4[c & 0x3f]; /* Number of additional bytes */ \
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int gcss = 6*gcaa; \
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c = (c & _pcre_utf8_table3[gcaa]) << gcss; \
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for (gcii = 1; gcii <= gcaa; gcii++) \
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{ \
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gcss -= 6; \
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c |= (eptr[gcii] & 0x3f) << gcss; \
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} \
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}
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/* Get the next UTF-8 character, testing for UTF-8 mode, and not advancing the
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pointer. */
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#define GETCHARTEST(c, eptr) \
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c = *eptr; \
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if (utf8 && c >= 0xc0) \
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{ \
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int gcii; \
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int gcaa = _pcre_utf8_table4[c & 0x3f]; /* Number of additional bytes */ \
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int gcss = 6*gcaa; \
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c = (c & _pcre_utf8_table3[gcaa]) << gcss; \
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for (gcii = 1; gcii <= gcaa; gcii++) \
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{ \
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gcss -= 6; \
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c |= (eptr[gcii] & 0x3f) << gcss; \
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} \
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}
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/* Get the next UTF-8 character, advancing the pointer. This is called when we
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know we are in UTF-8 mode. */
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#define GETCHARINC(c, eptr) \
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c = *eptr++; \
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if (c >= 0xc0) \
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{ \
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int gcaa = _pcre_utf8_table4[c & 0x3f]; /* Number of additional bytes */ \
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int gcss = 6*gcaa; \
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c = (c & _pcre_utf8_table3[gcaa]) << gcss; \
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while (gcaa-- > 0) \
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{ \
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gcss -= 6; \
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c |= (*eptr++ & 0x3f) << gcss; \
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} \
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}
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/* Get the next character, testing for UTF-8 mode, and advancing the pointer */
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#define GETCHARINCTEST(c, eptr) \
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c = *eptr++; \
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if (utf8 && c >= 0xc0) \
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{ \
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int gcaa = _pcre_utf8_table4[c & 0x3f]; /* Number of additional bytes */ \
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int gcss = 6*gcaa; \
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c = (c & _pcre_utf8_table3[gcaa]) << gcss; \
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while (gcaa-- > 0) \
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{ \
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gcss -= 6; \
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c |= (*eptr++ & 0x3f) << gcss; \
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} \
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}
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/* Get the next UTF-8 character, not advancing the pointer, incrementing length
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if there are extra bytes. This is called when we know we are in UTF-8 mode. */
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#define GETCHARLEN(c, eptr, len) \
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c = *eptr; \
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if (c >= 0xc0) \
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{ \
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int gcii; \
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int gcaa = _pcre_utf8_table4[c & 0x3f]; /* Number of additional bytes */ \
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int gcss = 6*gcaa; \
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c = (c & _pcre_utf8_table3[gcaa]) << gcss; \
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for (gcii = 1; gcii <= gcaa; gcii++) \
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{ \
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gcss -= 6; \
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c |= (eptr[gcii] & 0x3f) << gcss; \
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} \
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len += gcaa; \
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}
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/* If the pointer is not at the start of a character, move it back until
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it is. Called only in UTF-8 mode. */
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#define BACKCHAR(eptr) while((*eptr & 0xc0) == 0x80) eptr--;
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#endif
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/* In case there is no definition of offsetof() provided - though any proper
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Standard C system should have one. */
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#ifndef offsetof
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#define offsetof(p_type,field) ((size_t)&(((p_type *)0)->field))
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#endif
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/* These are the public options that can change during matching. */
|
| 430 |
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#define PCRE_IMS (PCRE_CASELESS|PCRE_MULTILINE|PCRE_DOTALL)
|
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/* Private options flags start at the most significant end of the four bytes.
|
| 434 |
The public options defined in pcre.h start at the least significant end. Make
|
| 435 |
sure they don't overlap! The bits are getting a bit scarce now -- when we run
|
| 436 |
out, there is a dummy word in the structure that could be used for the private
|
| 437 |
bits. */
|
| 438 |
|
| 439 |
#define PCRE_NOPARTIAL 0x80000000 /* can't use partial with this regex */
|
| 440 |
#define PCRE_FIRSTSET 0x40000000 /* first_byte is set */
|
| 441 |
#define PCRE_REQCHSET 0x20000000 /* req_byte is set */
|
| 442 |
#define PCRE_STARTLINE 0x10000000 /* start after \n for multiline */
|
| 443 |
#define PCRE_JCHANGED 0x08000000 /* j option changes within regex */
|
| 444 |
|
| 445 |
/* Options for the "extra" block produced by pcre_study(). */
|
| 446 |
|
| 447 |
#define PCRE_STUDY_MAPPED 0x01 /* a map of starting chars exists */
|
| 448 |
|
| 449 |
/* Masks for identifying the public options that are permitted at compile
|
| 450 |
time, run time, or study time, respectively. */
|
| 451 |
|
| 452 |
#define PCRE_NEWLINE_BITS (PCRE_NEWLINE_CR|PCRE_NEWLINE_LF|PCRE_NEWLINE_ANY)
|
| 453 |
|
| 454 |
#define PUBLIC_OPTIONS \
|
| 455 |
(PCRE_CASELESS|PCRE_EXTENDED|PCRE_ANCHORED|PCRE_MULTILINE| \
|
| 456 |
PCRE_DOTALL|PCRE_DOLLAR_ENDONLY|PCRE_EXTRA|PCRE_UNGREEDY|PCRE_UTF8| \
|
| 457 |
PCRE_NO_AUTO_CAPTURE|PCRE_NO_UTF8_CHECK|PCRE_AUTO_CALLOUT|PCRE_FIRSTLINE| \
|
| 458 |
PCRE_DUPNAMES|PCRE_NEWLINE_BITS)
|
| 459 |
|
| 460 |
#define PUBLIC_EXEC_OPTIONS \
|
| 461 |
(PCRE_ANCHORED|PCRE_NOTBOL|PCRE_NOTEOL|PCRE_NOTEMPTY|PCRE_NO_UTF8_CHECK| \
|
| 462 |
PCRE_PARTIAL|PCRE_NEWLINE_BITS)
|
| 463 |
|
| 464 |
#define PUBLIC_DFA_EXEC_OPTIONS \
|
| 465 |
(PCRE_ANCHORED|PCRE_NOTBOL|PCRE_NOTEOL|PCRE_NOTEMPTY|PCRE_NO_UTF8_CHECK| \
|
| 466 |
PCRE_PARTIAL|PCRE_DFA_SHORTEST|PCRE_DFA_RESTART|PCRE_NEWLINE_BITS)
|
| 467 |
|
| 468 |
#define PUBLIC_STUDY_OPTIONS 0 /* None defined */
|
| 469 |
|
| 470 |
/* Magic number to provide a small check against being handed junk. Also used
|
| 471 |
to detect whether a pattern was compiled on a host of different endianness. */
|
| 472 |
|
| 473 |
#define MAGIC_NUMBER 0x50435245UL /* 'PCRE' */
|
| 474 |
|
| 475 |
/* Negative values for the firstchar and reqchar variables */
|
| 476 |
|
| 477 |
#define REQ_UNSET (-2)
|
| 478 |
#define REQ_NONE (-1)
|
| 479 |
|
| 480 |
/* The maximum remaining length of subject we are prepared to search for a
|
| 481 |
req_byte match. */
|
| 482 |
|
| 483 |
#define REQ_BYTE_MAX 1000
|
| 484 |
|
| 485 |
/* Flags added to firstbyte or reqbyte; a "non-literal" item is either a
|
| 486 |
variable-length repeat, or a anything other than literal characters. */
|
| 487 |
|
| 488 |
#define REQ_CASELESS 0x0100 /* indicates caselessness */
|
| 489 |
#define REQ_VARY 0x0200 /* reqbyte followed non-literal item */
|
| 490 |
|
| 491 |
/* Miscellaneous definitions */
|
| 492 |
|
| 493 |
typedef int BOOL;
|
| 494 |
|
| 495 |
#define FALSE 0
|
| 496 |
#define TRUE 1
|
| 497 |
|
| 498 |
/* Escape items that are just an encoding of a particular data value. */
|
| 499 |
|
| 500 |
#ifndef ESC_e
|
| 501 |
#define ESC_e 27
|
| 502 |
#endif
|
| 503 |
|
| 504 |
#ifndef ESC_f
|
| 505 |
#define ESC_f '\f'
|
| 506 |
#endif
|
| 507 |
|
| 508 |
#ifndef ESC_n
|
| 509 |
#define ESC_n '\n'
|
| 510 |
#endif
|
| 511 |
|
| 512 |
#ifndef ESC_r
|
| 513 |
#define ESC_r '\r'
|
| 514 |
#endif
|
| 515 |
|
| 516 |
/* We can't officially use ESC_t because it is a POSIX reserved identifier
|
| 517 |
(presumably because of all the others like size_t). */
|
| 518 |
|
| 519 |
#ifndef ESC_tee
|
| 520 |
#define ESC_tee '\t'
|
| 521 |
#endif
|
| 522 |
|
| 523 |
/* Codes for different types of Unicode property */
|
| 524 |
|
| 525 |
#define PT_ANY 0 /* Any property - matches all chars */
|
| 526 |
#define PT_LAMP 1 /* L& - the union of Lu, Ll, Lt */
|
| 527 |
#define PT_GC 2 /* General characteristic (e.g. L) */
|
| 528 |
#define PT_PC 3 /* Particular characteristic (e.g. Lu) */
|
| 529 |
#define PT_SC 4 /* Script (e.g. Han) */
|
| 530 |
|
| 531 |
/* Flag bits and data types for the extended class (OP_XCLASS) for classes that
|
| 532 |
contain UTF-8 characters with values greater than 255. */
|
| 533 |
|
| 534 |
#define XCL_NOT 0x01 /* Flag: this is a negative class */
|
| 535 |
#define XCL_MAP 0x02 /* Flag: a 32-byte map is present */
|
| 536 |
|
| 537 |
#define XCL_END 0 /* Marks end of individual items */
|
| 538 |
#define XCL_SINGLE 1 /* Single item (one multibyte char) follows */
|
| 539 |
#define XCL_RANGE 2 /* A range (two multibyte chars) follows */
|
| 540 |
#define XCL_PROP 3 /* Unicode property (2-byte property code follows) */
|
| 541 |
#define XCL_NOTPROP 4 /* Unicode inverted property (ditto) */
|
| 542 |
|
| 543 |
/* These are escaped items that aren't just an encoding of a particular data
|
| 544 |
value such as \n. They must have non-zero values, as check_escape() returns
|
| 545 |
their negation. Also, they must appear in the same order as in the opcode
|
| 546 |
definitions below, up to ESC_z. There's a dummy for OP_ANY because it
|
| 547 |
corresponds to "." rather than an escape sequence. The final one must be
|
| 548 |
ESC_REF as subsequent values are used for backreferences (\1, \2, \3, etc).
|
| 549 |
There are two tests in the code for an escape greater than ESC_b and less than
|
| 550 |
ESC_Z to detect the types that may be repeated. These are the types that
|
| 551 |
consume characters. If any new escapes are put in between that don't consume a
|
| 552 |
character, that code will have to change. */
|
| 553 |
|
| 554 |
enum { ESC_A = 1, ESC_G, ESC_B, ESC_b, ESC_D, ESC_d, ESC_S, ESC_s, ESC_W,
|
| 555 |
ESC_w, ESC_dum1, ESC_C, ESC_P, ESC_p, ESC_R, ESC_X, ESC_Z, ESC_z,
|
| 556 |
ESC_E, ESC_Q, ESC_k, ESC_REF };
|
| 557 |
|
| 558 |
|
| 559 |
/* Opcode table: OP_BRA must be last, as all values >= it are used for brackets
|
| 560 |
that extract substrings. Starting from 1 (i.e. after OP_END), the values up to
|
| 561 |
OP_EOD must correspond in order to the list of escapes immediately above.
|
| 562 |
|
| 563 |
To keep stored, compiled patterns compatible, new opcodes should be added
|
| 564 |
immediately before OP_BRA, where (since release 7.0) a gap is left for this
|
| 565 |
purpose.
|
| 566 |
|
| 567 |
*** NOTE NOTE NOTE *** Whenever this list is updated, the two macro definitions
|
| 568 |
that follow must also be updated to match. There is also a table called
|
| 569 |
"coptable" in pcre_dfa_exec.c that must be updated. */
|
| 570 |
|
| 571 |
enum {
|
| 572 |
OP_END, /* 0 End of pattern */
|
| 573 |
|
| 574 |
/* Values corresponding to backslashed metacharacters */
|
| 575 |
|
| 576 |
OP_SOD, /* 1 Start of data: \A */
|
| 577 |
OP_SOM, /* 2 Start of match (subject + offset): \G */
|
| 578 |
OP_NOT_WORD_BOUNDARY, /* 3 \B */
|
| 579 |
OP_WORD_BOUNDARY, /* 4 \b */
|
| 580 |
OP_NOT_DIGIT, /* 5 \D */
|
| 581 |
OP_DIGIT, /* 6 \d */
|
| 582 |
OP_NOT_WHITESPACE, /* 7 \S */
|
| 583 |
OP_WHITESPACE, /* 8 \s */
|
| 584 |
OP_NOT_WORDCHAR, /* 9 \W */
|
| 585 |
OP_WORDCHAR, /* 10 \w */
|
| 586 |
OP_ANY, /* 11 Match any character */
|
| 587 |
OP_ANYBYTE, /* 12 Match any byte (\C); different to OP_ANY for UTF-8 */
|
| 588 |
OP_NOTPROP, /* 13 \P (not Unicode property) */
|
| 589 |
OP_PROP, /* 14 \p (Unicode property) */
|
| 590 |
OP_ANYNL, /* 15 \R (any newline sequence) */
|
| 591 |
OP_EXTUNI, /* 16 \X (extended Unicode sequence */
|
| 592 |
OP_EODN, /* 17 End of data or \n at end of data: \Z. */
|
| 593 |
OP_EOD, /* 18 End of data: \z */
|
| 594 |
|
| 595 |
OP_OPT, /* 19 Set runtime options */
|
| 596 |
OP_CIRC, /* 20 Start of line - varies with multiline switch */
|
| 597 |
OP_DOLL, /* 21 End of line - varies with multiline switch */
|
| 598 |
OP_CHAR, /* 22 Match one character, casefully */
|
| 599 |
OP_CHARNC, /* 23 Match one character, caselessly */
|
| 600 |
OP_NOT, /* 24 Match one character, not the following one */
|
| 601 |
|
| 602 |
OP_STAR, /* 25 The maximizing and minimizing versions of */
|
| 603 |
OP_MINSTAR, /* 26 these six opcodes must come in pairs, with */
|
| 604 |
OP_PLUS, /* 27 the minimizing one second. */
|
| 605 |
OP_MINPLUS, /* 28 This first set applies to single characters.*/
|
| 606 |
OP_QUERY, /* 29 */
|
| 607 |
OP_MINQUERY, /* 30 */
|
| 608 |
|
| 609 |
OP_UPTO, /* 31 From 0 to n matches */
|
| 610 |
OP_MINUPTO, /* 32 */
|
| 611 |
OP_EXACT, /* 33 Exactly n matches */
|
| 612 |
|
| 613 |
OP_POSSTAR, /* 34 Possessified star */
|
| 614 |
OP_POSPLUS, /* 35 Possessified plus */
|
| 615 |
OP_POSQUERY, /* 36 Posesssified query */
|
| 616 |
OP_POSUPTO, /* 37 Possessified upto */
|
| 617 |
|
| 618 |
OP_NOTSTAR, /* 38 The maximizing and minimizing versions of */
|
| 619 |
OP_NOTMINSTAR, /* 39 these six opcodes must come in pairs, with */
|
| 620 |
OP_NOTPLUS, /* 40 the minimizing one second. They must be in */
|
| 621 |
OP_NOTMINPLUS, /* 41 exactly the same order as those above. */
|
| 622 |
OP_NOTQUERY, /* 42 This set applies to "not" single characters. */
|
| 623 |
OP_NOTMINQUERY, /* 43 */
|
| 624 |
|
| 625 |
OP_NOTUPTO, /* 44 From 0 to n matches */
|
| 626 |
OP_NOTMINUPTO, /* 45 */
|
| 627 |
OP_NOTEXACT, /* 46 Exactly n matches */
|
| 628 |
|
| 629 |
OP_NOTPOSSTAR, /* 47 Possessified versions */
|
| 630 |
OP_NOTPOSPLUS, /* 48 */
|
| 631 |
OP_NOTPOSQUERY, /* 49 */
|
| 632 |
OP_NOTPOSUPTO, /* 50 */
|
| 633 |
|
| 634 |
OP_TYPESTAR, /* 51 The maximizing and minimizing versions of */
|
| 635 |
OP_TYPEMINSTAR, /* 52 these six opcodes must come in pairs, with */
|
| 636 |
OP_TYPEPLUS, /* 53 the minimizing one second. These codes must */
|
| 637 |
OP_TYPEMINPLUS, /* 54 be in exactly the same order as those above. */
|
| 638 |
OP_TYPEQUERY, /* 55 This set applies to character types such as \d */
|
| 639 |
OP_TYPEMINQUERY, /* 56 */
|
| 640 |
|
| 641 |
OP_TYPEUPTO, /* 57 From 0 to n matches */
|
| 642 |
OP_TYPEMINUPTO, /* 58 */
|
| 643 |
OP_TYPEEXACT, /* 59 Exactly n matches */
|
| 644 |
|
| 645 |
OP_TYPEPOSSTAR, /* 60 Possessified versions */
|
| 646 |
OP_TYPEPOSPLUS, /* 61 */
|
| 647 |
OP_TYPEPOSQUERY, /* 62 */
|
| 648 |
OP_TYPEPOSUPTO, /* 63 */
|
| 649 |
|
| 650 |
OP_CRSTAR, /* 64 The maximizing and minimizing versions of */
|
| 651 |
OP_CRMINSTAR, /* 65 all these opcodes must come in pairs, with */
|
| 652 |
OP_CRPLUS, /* 66 the minimizing one second. These codes must */
|
| 653 |
OP_CRMINPLUS, /* 67 be in exactly the same order as those above. */
|
| 654 |
OP_CRQUERY, /* 68 These are for character classes and back refs */
|
| 655 |
OP_CRMINQUERY, /* 69 */
|
| 656 |
OP_CRRANGE, /* 70 These are different to the three sets above. */
|
| 657 |
OP_CRMINRANGE, /* 71 */
|
| 658 |
|
| 659 |
OP_CLASS, /* 72 Match a character class, chars < 256 only */
|
| 660 |
OP_NCLASS, /* 73 Same, but the bitmap was created from a negative
|
| 661 |
class - the difference is relevant only when a UTF-8
|
| 662 |
character > 255 is encountered. */
|
| 663 |
|
| 664 |
OP_XCLASS, /* 74 Extended class for handling UTF-8 chars within the
|
| 665 |
class. This does both positive and negative. */
|
| 666 |
|
| 667 |
OP_REF, /* 75 Match a back reference */
|
| 668 |
OP_RECURSE, /* 76 Match a numbered subpattern (possibly recursive) */
|
| 669 |
OP_CALLOUT, /* 77 Call out to external function if provided */
|
| 670 |
|
| 671 |
OP_ALT, /* 78 Start of alternation */
|
| 672 |
OP_KET, /* 79 End of group that doesn't have an unbounded repeat */
|
| 673 |
OP_KETRMAX, /* 80 These two must remain together and in this */
|
| 674 |
OP_KETRMIN, /* 81 order. They are for groups the repeat for ever. */
|
| 675 |
|
| 676 |
/* The assertions must come before BRA, CBRA, ONCE, and COND.*/
|
| 677 |
|
| 678 |
OP_ASSERT, /* 82 Positive lookahead */
|
| 679 |
OP_ASSERT_NOT, /* 83 Negative lookahead */
|
| 680 |
OP_ASSERTBACK, /* 84 Positive lookbehind */
|
| 681 |
OP_ASSERTBACK_NOT, /* 85 Negative lookbehind */
|
| 682 |
OP_REVERSE, /* 86 Move pointer back - used in lookbehind assertions */
|
| 683 |
|
| 684 |
/* ONCE, BRA, CBRA, and COND must come after the assertions, with ONCE first,
|
| 685 |
as there's a test for >= ONCE for a subpattern that isn't an assertion. */
|
| 686 |
|
| 687 |
OP_ONCE, /* 87 Atomic group */
|
| 688 |
OP_BRA, /* 88 Start of non-capturing bracket */
|
| 689 |
OP_CBRA, /* 89 Start of capturing bracket */
|
| 690 |
OP_COND, /* 90 Conditional group */
|
| 691 |
|
| 692 |
/* These three must follow the previous three, in the same order. There's a
|
| 693 |
check for >= SBRA to distinguish the two sets. */
|
| 694 |
|
| 695 |
OP_SBRA, /* 91 Start of non-capturing bracket, check empty */
|
| 696 |
OP_SCBRA, /* 92 Start of capturing bracket, check empty */
|
| 697 |
OP_SCOND, /* 93 Conditional group, check empty */
|
| 698 |
|
| 699 |
OP_CREF, /* 94 Used to hold a capture number as condition */
|
| 700 |
OP_RREF, /* 95 Used to hold a recursion number as condition */
|
| 701 |
OP_DEF, /* 96 The DEFINE condition */
|
| 702 |
|
| 703 |
OP_BRAZERO, /* 97 These two must remain together and in this */
|
| 704 |
OP_BRAMINZERO /* 98 order. */
|
| 705 |
};
|
| 706 |
|
| 707 |
|
| 708 |
/* This macro defines textual names for all the opcodes. These are used only
|
| 709 |
for debugging. The macro is referenced only in pcre_printint.c. */
|
| 710 |
|
| 711 |
#define OP_NAME_LIST \
|
| 712 |
"End", "\\A", "\\G", "\\B", "\\b", "\\D", "\\d", \
|
| 713 |
"\\S", "\\s", "\\W", "\\w", "Any", "Anybyte", \
|
| 714 |
"notprop", "prop", "anynl", "extuni", \
|
| 715 |
"\\Z", "\\z", \
|
| 716 |
"Opt", "^", "$", "char", "charnc", "not", \
|
| 717 |
"*", "*?", "+", "+?", "?", "??", "{", "{", "{", \
|
| 718 |
"*+","++", "?+", "{", \
|
| 719 |
"*", "*?", "+", "+?", "?", "??", "{", "{", "{", \
|
| 720 |
"*+","++", "?+", "{", \
|
| 721 |
"*", "*?", "+", "+?", "?", "??", "{", "{", "{", \
|
| 722 |
"*+","++", "?+", "{", \
|
| 723 |
"*", "*?", "+", "+?", "?", "??", "{", "{", \
|
| 724 |
"class", "nclass", "xclass", "Ref", "Recurse", "Callout", \
|
| 725 |
"Alt", "Ket", "KetRmax", "KetRmin", "Assert", "Assert not", \
|
| 726 |
"AssertB", "AssertB not", "Reverse", \
|
| 727 |
"Once", "Bra 0", "Bra", "Cond", "SBra 0", "SBra", "SCond", \
|
| 728 |
"Cond ref", "Cond rec", "Cond def", "Brazero", "Braminzero"
|
| 729 |
|
| 730 |
|
| 731 |
/* This macro defines the length of fixed length operations in the compiled
|
| 732 |
regex. The lengths are used when searching for specific things, and also in the
|
| 733 |
debugging printing of a compiled regex. We use a macro so that it can be
|
| 734 |
defined close to the definitions of the opcodes themselves.
|
| 735 |
|
| 736 |
As things have been extended, some of these are no longer fixed lenths, but are
|
| 737 |
minima instead. For example, the length of a single-character repeat may vary
|
| 738 |
in UTF-8 mode. The code that uses this table must know about such things. */
|
| 739 |
|
| 740 |
#define OP_LENGTHS \
|
| 741 |
1, /* End */ \
|
| 742 |
1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, /* \A, \G, \B, \B, \D, \d, \S, \s, \W, \w */ \
|
| 743 |
1, 1, /* Any, Anybyte */ \
|
| 744 |
3, 3, 1, 1, /* NOTPROP, PROP, EXTUNI, ANYNL */ \
|
| 745 |
1, 1, 2, 1, 1, /* \Z, \z, Opt, ^, $ */ \
|
| 746 |
2, /* Char - the minimum length */ \
|
| 747 |
2, /* Charnc - the minimum length */ \
|
| 748 |
2, /* not */ \
|
| 749 |
/* Positive single-char repeats ** These are */ \
|
| 750 |
2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, /* *, *?, +, +?, ?, ?? ** minima in */ \
|
| 751 |
4, 4, 4, /* upto, minupto, exact ** UTF-8 mode */ \
|
| 752 |
2, 2, 2, 4, /* *+, ++, ?+, upto+ */ \
|
| 753 |
/* Negative single-char repeats - only for chars < 256 */ \
|
| 754 |
2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, /* NOT *, *?, +, +?, ?, ?? */ \
|
| 755 |
4, 4, 4, /* NOT upto, minupto, exact */ \
|
| 756 |
2, 2, 2, 4, /* Possessive *, +, ?, upto */ \
|
| 757 |
/* Positive type repeats */ \
|
| 758 |
2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, /* Type *, *?, +, +?, ?, ?? */ \
|
| 759 |
4, 4, 4, /* Type upto, minupto, exact */ \
|
| 760 |
2, 2, 2, 4, /* Possessive *+, ++, ?+, upto+ */ \
|
| 761 |
/* Character class & ref repeats */ \
|
| 762 |
1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, /* *, *?, +, +?, ?, ?? */ \
|
| 763 |
5, 5, /* CRRANGE, CRMINRANGE */ \
|
| 764 |
33, /* CLASS */ \
|
| 765 |
33, /* NCLASS */ \
|
| 766 |
0, /* XCLASS - variable length */ \
|
| 767 |
3, /* REF */ \
|
| 768 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* RECURSE */ \
|
| 769 |
2+2*LINK_SIZE, /* CALLOUT */ \
|
| 770 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* Alt */ \
|
| 771 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* Ket */ \
|
| 772 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* KetRmax */ \
|
| 773 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* KetRmin */ \
|
| 774 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* Assert */ \
|
| 775 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* Assert not */ \
|
| 776 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* Assert behind */ \
|
| 777 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* Assert behind not */ \
|
| 778 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* Reverse */ \
|
| 779 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* ONCE */ \
|
| 780 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* BRA */ \
|
| 781 |
3+LINK_SIZE, /* CBRA */ \
|
| 782 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* COND */ \
|
| 783 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* SBRA */ \
|
| 784 |
3+LINK_SIZE, /* SCBRA */ \
|
| 785 |
1+LINK_SIZE, /* SCOND */ \
|
| 786 |
3, /* CREF */ \
|
| 787 |
3, /* RREF */ \
|
| 788 |
1, /* DEF */ \
|
| 789 |
1, 1, /* BRAZERO, BRAMINZERO */ \
|
| 790 |
|
| 791 |
|
| 792 |
/* A magic value for OP_RREF to indicate the "any recursion" condition. */
|
| 793 |
|
| 794 |
#define RREF_ANY 0xffff
|
| 795 |
|
| 796 |
/* Error code numbers. They are given names so that they can more easily be
|
| 797 |
tracked. */
|
| 798 |
|
| 799 |
enum { ERR0, ERR1, ERR2, ERR3, ERR4, ERR5, ERR6, ERR7, ERR8, ERR9,
|
| 800 |
ERR10, ERR11, ERR12, ERR13, ERR14, ERR15, ERR16, ERR17, ERR18, ERR19,
|
| 801 |
ERR20, ERR21, ERR22, ERR23, ERR24, ERR25, ERR26, ERR27, ERR28, ERR29,
|
| 802 |
ERR30, ERR31, ERR32, ERR33, ERR34, ERR35, ERR36, ERR37, ERR38, ERR39,
|
| 803 |
ERR40, ERR41, ERR42, ERR43, ERR44, ERR45, ERR46, ERR47, ERR48, ERR49,
|
| 804 |
ERR50, ERR51, ERR52, ERR53, ERR54, ERR55, ERR56, ERR57 };
|
| 805 |
|
| 806 |
/* The real format of the start of the pcre block; the index of names and the
|
| 807 |
code vector run on as long as necessary after the end. We store an explicit
|
| 808 |
offset to the name table so that if a regex is compiled on one host, saved, and
|
| 809 |
then run on another where the size of pointers is different, all might still
|
| 810 |
be well. For the case of compiled-on-4 and run-on-8, we include an extra
|
| 811 |
pointer that is always NULL. For future-proofing, a few dummy fields were
|
| 812 |
originally included - even though you can never get this planning right - but
|
| 813 |
there is only one left now.
|
| 814 |
|
| 815 |
NOTE NOTE NOTE:
|
| 816 |
Because people can now save and re-use compiled patterns, any additions to this
|
| 817 |
structure should be made at the end, and something earlier (e.g. a new
|
| 818 |
flag in the options or one of the dummy fields) should indicate that the new
|
| 819 |
fields are present. Currently PCRE always sets the dummy fields to zero.
|
| 820 |
NOTE NOTE NOTE:
|
| 821 |
*/
|
| 822 |
|
| 823 |
typedef struct real_pcre {
|
| 824 |
pcre_uint32 magic_number;
|
| 825 |
pcre_uint32 size; /* Total that was malloced */
|
| 826 |
pcre_uint32 options;
|
| 827 |
pcre_uint32 dummy1; /* For future use, maybe */
|
| 828 |
|
| 829 |
pcre_uint16 top_bracket;
|
| 830 |
pcre_uint16 top_backref;
|
| 831 |
pcre_uint16 first_byte;
|
| 832 |
pcre_uint16 req_byte;
|
| 833 |
pcre_uint16 name_table_offset; /* Offset to name table that follows */
|
| 834 |
pcre_uint16 name_entry_size; /* Size of any name items */
|
| 835 |
pcre_uint16 name_count; /* Number of name items */
|
| 836 |
pcre_uint16 ref_count; /* Reference count */
|
| 837 |
|
| 838 |
const unsigned char *tables; /* Pointer to tables or NULL for std */
|
| 839 |
const unsigned char *nullpad; /* NULL padding */
|
| 840 |
} real_pcre;
|
| 841 |
|
| 842 |
/* The format of the block used to store data from pcre_study(). The same
|
| 843 |
remark (see NOTE above) about extending this structure applies. */
|
| 844 |
|
| 845 |
typedef struct pcre_study_data {
|
| 846 |
pcre_uint32 size; /* Total that was malloced */
|
| 847 |
pcre_uint32 options;
|
| 848 |
uschar start_bits[32];
|
| 849 |
} pcre_study_data;
|
| 850 |
|
| 851 |
/* Structure for passing "static" information around between the functions
|
| 852 |
doing the compiling, so that they are thread-safe. */
|
| 853 |
|
| 854 |
typedef struct compile_data {
|
| 855 |
const uschar *lcc; /* Points to lower casing table */
|
| 856 |
const uschar *fcc; /* Points to case-flipping table */
|
| 857 |
const uschar *cbits; /* Points to character type table */
|
| 858 |
const uschar *ctypes; /* Points to table of type maps */
|
| 859 |
const uschar *start_workspace;/* The start of working space */
|
| 860 |
const uschar *start_code; /* The start of the compiled code */
|
| 861 |
const uschar *start_pattern; /* The start of the pattern */
|
| 862 |
const uschar *end_pattern; /* The end of the pattern */
|
| 863 |
uschar *hwm; /* High watermark of workspace */
|
| 864 |
uschar *name_table; /* The name/number table */
|
| 865 |
int names_found; /* Number of entries so far */
|
| 866 |
int name_entry_size; /* Size of each entry */
|
| 867 |
int bracount; /* Count of capturing parens */
|
| 868 |
int top_backref; /* Maximum back reference */
|
| 869 |
unsigned int backref_map; /* Bitmap of low back refs */
|
| 870 |
int external_options; /* External (initial) options */
|
| 871 |
int req_varyopt; /* "After variable item" flag for reqbyte */
|
| 872 |
BOOL nopartial; /* Set TRUE if partial won't work */
|
| 873 |
int nltype; /* Newline type */
|
| 874 |
int nllen; /* Newline string length */
|
| 875 |
uschar nl[4]; /* Newline string when fixed length */
|
| 876 |
} compile_data;
|
| 877 |
|
| 878 |
/* Structure for maintaining a chain of pointers to the currently incomplete
|
| 879 |
branches, for testing for left recursion. */
|
| 880 |
|
| 881 |
typedef struct branch_chain {
|
| 882 |
struct branch_chain *outer;
|
| 883 |
uschar *current;
|
| 884 |
} branch_chain;
|
| 885 |
|
| 886 |
/* Structure for items in a linked list that represents an explicit recursive
|
| 887 |
call within the pattern. */
|
| 888 |
|
| 889 |
typedef struct recursion_info {
|
| 890 |
struct recursion_info *prevrec; /* Previous recursion record (or NULL) */
|
| 891 |
int group_num; /* Number of group that was called */
|
| 892 |
const uschar *after_call; /* "Return value": points after the call in the expr */
|
| 893 |
USPTR save_start; /* Old value of md->start_match */
|
| 894 |
int *offset_save; /* Pointer to start of saved offsets */
|
| 895 |
int saved_max; /* Number of saved offsets */
|
| 896 |
} recursion_info;
|
| 897 |
|
| 898 |
/* When compiling in a mode that doesn't use recursive calls to match(),
|
| 899 |
a structure is used to remember local variables on the heap. It is defined in
|
| 900 |
pcre_exec.c, close to the match() function, so that it is easy to keep it in
|
| 901 |
step with any changes of local variable. However, the pointer to the current
|
| 902 |
frame must be saved in some "static" place over a longjmp(). We declare the
|
| 903 |
structure here so that we can put a pointer in the match_data structure. NOTE:
|
| 904 |
This isn't used for a "normal" compilation of pcre. */
|
| 905 |
|
| 906 |
struct heapframe;
|
| 907 |
|
| 908 |
/* Structure for building a chain of data for holding the values of the subject
|
| 909 |
pointer at the start of each subpattern, so as to detect when an empty string
|
| 910 |
has been matched by a subpattern - to break infinite loops. */
|
| 911 |
|
| 912 |
typedef struct eptrblock {
|
| 913 |
struct eptrblock *epb_prev;
|
| 914 |
USPTR epb_saved_eptr;
|
| 915 |
} eptrblock;
|
| 916 |
|
| 917 |
|
| 918 |
/* Structure for passing "static" information around between the functions
|
| 919 |
doing traditional NFA matching, so that they are thread-safe. */
|
| 920 |
|
| 921 |
typedef struct match_data {
|
| 922 |
unsigned long int match_call_count; /* As it says */
|
| 923 |
unsigned long int match_limit; /* As it says */
|
| 924 |
unsigned long int match_limit_recursion; /* As it says */
|
| 925 |
int *offset_vector; /* Offset vector */
|
| 926 |
int offset_end; /* One past the end */
|
| 927 |
int offset_max; /* The maximum usable for return data */
|
| 928 |
int nltype; /* Newline type */
|
| 929 |
int nllen; /* Newline string length */
|
| 930 |
uschar nl[4]; /* Newline string when fixed */
|
| 931 |
const uschar *lcc; /* Points to lower casing table */
|
| 932 |
const uschar *ctypes; /* Points to table of type maps */
|
| 933 |
BOOL offset_overflow; /* Set if too many extractions */
|
| 934 |
BOOL notbol; /* NOTBOL flag */
|
| 935 |
BOOL noteol; /* NOTEOL flag */
|
| 936 |
BOOL utf8; /* UTF8 flag */
|
| 937 |
BOOL endonly; /* Dollar not before final \n */
|
| 938 |
BOOL notempty; /* Empty string match not wanted */
|
| 939 |
BOOL partial; /* PARTIAL flag */
|
| 940 |
BOOL hitend; /* Hit the end of the subject at some point */
|
| 941 |
const uschar *start_code; /* For use when recursing */
|
| 942 |
USPTR start_subject; /* Start of the subject string */
|
| 943 |
USPTR end_subject; /* End of the subject string */
|
| 944 |
USPTR start_match; /* Start of this match attempt */
|
| 945 |
USPTR end_match_ptr; /* Subject position at end match */
|
| 946 |
int end_offset_top; /* Highwater mark at end of match */
|
| 947 |
int capture_last; /* Most recent capture number */
|
| 948 |
int start_offset; /* The start offset value */
|
| 949 |
eptrblock *eptrchain; /* Chain of eptrblocks for tail recursions */
|
| 950 |
int eptrn; /* Next free eptrblock */
|
| 951 |
recursion_info *recursive; /* Linked list of recursion data */
|
| 952 |
void *callout_data; /* To pass back to callouts */
|
| 953 |
struct heapframe *thisframe; /* Used only when compiling for no recursion */
|
| 954 |
} match_data;
|
| 955 |
|
| 956 |
/* A similar structure is used for the same purpose by the DFA matching
|
| 957 |
functions. */
|
| 958 |
|
| 959 |
typedef struct dfa_match_data {
|
| 960 |
const uschar *start_code; /* Start of the compiled pattern */
|
| 961 |
const uschar *start_subject; /* Start of the subject string */
|
| 962 |
const uschar *end_subject; /* End of subject string */
|
| 963 |
const uschar *tables; /* Character tables */
|
| 964 |
int moptions; /* Match options */
|
| 965 |
int poptions; /* Pattern options */
|
| 966 |
int nltype; /* Newline type */
|
| 967 |
int nllen; /* Newline string length */
|
| 968 |
uschar nl[4]; /* Newline string when fixed */
|
| 969 |
void *callout_data; /* To pass back to callouts */
|
| 970 |
} dfa_match_data;
|
| 971 |
|
| 972 |
/* Bit definitions for entries in the pcre_ctypes table. */
|
| 973 |
|
| 974 |
#define ctype_space 0x01
|
| 975 |
#define ctype_letter 0x02
|
| 976 |
#define ctype_digit 0x04
|
| 977 |
#define ctype_xdigit 0x08
|
| 978 |
#define ctype_word 0x10 /* alphameric or '_' */
|
| 979 |
#define ctype_meta 0x80 /* regexp meta char or zero (end pattern) */
|
| 980 |
|
| 981 |
/* Offsets for the bitmap tables in pcre_cbits. Each table contains a set
|
| 982 |
of bits for a class map. Some classes are built by combining these tables. */
|
| 983 |
|
| 984 |
#define cbit_space 0 /* [:space:] or \s */
|
| 985 |
#define cbit_xdigit 32 /* [:xdigit:] */
|
| 986 |
#define cbit_digit 64 /* [:digit:] or \d */
|
| 987 |
#define cbit_upper 96 /* [:upper:] */
|
| 988 |
#define cbit_lower 128 /* [:lower:] */
|
| 989 |
#define cbit_word 160 /* [:word:] or \w */
|
| 990 |
#define cbit_graph 192 /* [:graph:] */
|
| 991 |
#define cbit_print 224 /* [:print:] */
|
| 992 |
#define cbit_punct 256 /* [:punct:] */
|
| 993 |
#define cbit_cntrl 288 /* [:cntrl:] */
|
| 994 |
#define cbit_length 320 /* Length of the cbits table */
|
| 995 |
|
| 996 |
/* Offsets of the various tables from the base tables pointer, and
|
| 997 |
total length. */
|
| 998 |
|
| 999 |
#define lcc_offset 0
|
| 1000 |
#define fcc_offset 256
|
| 1001 |
#define cbits_offset 512
|
| 1002 |
#define ctypes_offset (cbits_offset + cbit_length)
|
| 1003 |
#define tables_length (ctypes_offset + 256)
|
| 1004 |
|
| 1005 |
/* Layout of the UCP type table that translates property names into types and
|
| 1006 |
codes. */
|
| 1007 |
|
| 1008 |
typedef struct {
|
| 1009 |
const char *name;
|
| 1010 |
pcre_uint16 type;
|
| 1011 |
pcre_uint16 value;
|
| 1012 |
} ucp_type_table;
|
| 1013 |
|
| 1014 |
|
| 1015 |
/* Internal shared data tables. These are tables that are used by more than one
|
| 1016 |
of the exported public functions. They have to be "external" in the C sense,
|
| 1017 |
but are not part of the PCRE public API. The data for these tables is in the
|
| 1018 |
pcre_tables.c module. */
|
| 1019 |
|
| 1020 |
extern const int _pcre_utf8_table1[];
|
| 1021 |
extern const int _pcre_utf8_table2[];
|
| 1022 |
extern const int _pcre_utf8_table3[];
|
| 1023 |
extern const uschar _pcre_utf8_table4[];
|
| 1024 |
|
| 1025 |
extern const int _pcre_utf8_table1_size;
|
| 1026 |
|
| 1027 |
extern const ucp_type_table _pcre_utt[];
|
| 1028 |
extern const int _pcre_utt_size;
|
| 1029 |
|
| 1030 |
extern const uschar _pcre_default_tables[];
|
| 1031 |
|
| 1032 |
extern const uschar _pcre_OP_lengths[];
|
| 1033 |
|
| 1034 |
|
| 1035 |
/* Internal shared functions. These are functions that are used by more than
|
| 1036 |
one of the exported public functions. They have to be "external" in the C
|
| 1037 |
sense, but are not part of the PCRE public API. */
|
| 1038 |
|
| 1039 |
extern BOOL _pcre_is_newline(const uschar *, const uschar *, int *,
|
| 1040 |
BOOL);
|
| 1041 |
extern int _pcre_ord2utf8(int, uschar *);
|
| 1042 |
extern real_pcre *_pcre_try_flipped(const real_pcre *, real_pcre *,
|
| 1043 |
const pcre_study_data *, pcre_study_data *);
|
| 1044 |
extern int _pcre_ucp_findprop(const unsigned int, int *, int *);
|
| 1045 |
extern unsigned int _pcre_ucp_othercase(const unsigned int);
|
| 1046 |
extern int _pcre_valid_utf8(const uschar *, int);
|
| 1047 |
extern BOOL _pcre_was_newline(const uschar *, const uschar *, int *,
|
| 1048 |
BOOL);
|
| 1049 |
extern BOOL _pcre_xclass(int, const uschar *);
|
| 1050 |
|
| 1051 |
#endif
|
| 1052 |
|
| 1053 |
/* End of pcre_internal.h */
|